{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0425847":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-02-07","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1951-07-04","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0425847\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" Move Afoot to Adapt\nN\/Denver Sanitorium\nFor Children's Care\nTurnbull Indicates Favor of Plan\n\u2022   To Organize Kootenay Solarium;\nDistrict-Wide Directorate Suggested\nTRAIL, B.C., July 3\u2014A meeting was held in the board-\n\u00bb*oom of the C. S. Williams Clinic in Trail of all those interested in the formation of an organization to be known as the\nKootenay Solarium.\nThe intention is to take over title to the New Denver\nSanitorium, and to operate it as a home for children suffering from spastic paralysis, cerebral palsy, and other similar\nor allied conditions. It is expected that it will develop into\na combination home, school and hospital, serving the East\nand West Kootenay.\nIt was suggested that the headquarters would be at New Denver,\nand the home governed by a board\nof directors, one to be elected from\neach town, municipality or village.\nEach director would be elected from\na general committee in each town\nformed from all labor, church, fraternal, social, educational, professional, or other groups. All questions\nrelating to organization, finance,\nand operating are being investigated,\nby the Trail committee for submission to the first full organizing\nmeeting which it is expected can\nbe held ln the latter part of July.\nHon. A. D. Turnbull. Minister of\nHealth and Welfare, has indicated\nof such a home, and it is hoped lo\nhave a further interview with him\non his next visit to Trail, probably\nabout July 5.\nH. W. Herridge, M.P., has also\nexpressed a favorable opinion, and\nhas' promised his fui support.\nJames Byrnes, M.P., Leo T. Nimsick, M.L.A., Rupert Haggen, M.L.A..\nRonald Harding, M.L.A., and Walter\nHendricks, M.L.A., have been ad\nvised of developments but have not\nyet had time to reply.\nDr. W. J. Endicott of Trail is\ntemporarily chairman of the organ\nizing committee. Information is\navailable from the Kootenay Solar\nthat he is in favor of the formation ium, 910 Portland Street, Trail, B.C.\nFasf Decision To Be Handed Down\nOn B.C. Telephone Rale Application\nOTTAWA, July 3 (CP) \u2014 An\napplication of the British Columbia\nTelephone Company for an immediate \"interim\" rate increase of\nabout 10 per cent was taken under\nadvisement today by the Board of\nTransport Commissioners.\nThe increase was sought to enable the Company to meet higher\nwage costs and taxation, and it\ntold the Board its financial position indicates \"serious urgency\"\nOver getting higher rates.\nDeputy Chairman Armand Syl-\nvestre, who headed a panel of the\nBoard on the case in the one-day\nhearing, told the Company a decision would be handed down \"as\nexpeditiously as possible.\" He also\n(set Oct. 9 as the date for hearings\nto open in Vancouver ijri an application for a more permanent rate\nincrease the Company seeks.\nThere Is a difference of $314,000\na year in the amount of gross rev-\n. enjve theCprnrjarjy^asJts now In.the\n\"ihtjerim increase and what it'wduld\nwant in the final application.\nIn the interim case, it seeks new\nrevenues   annually   of   $1,881,644,\nmade up of a 12-per-cent Increase\nin long-distance tolls .and one of\n9.2 per cent in local service.\nIn the' later application, it will\nseek to have the total hoisted to\n$2,166,626, to consist of the same\nlong-distance increase along with\none of J1.8.per cent in local rates.\nThe    $314,000    difference     was\nknocked off for the interim  case\nthrough an understanding with the\ncities  of  Vancouver  and  Victoria\nand  some other  municipalities.  It\nrepresents largely an amount asked\nfor  as  corporate  surplus   by  the\nCompany. Senator J. W. Deb. Farrls, representing the Company, told\nthe Board today the municipalities\nhad agreed not to oppose the Interim  boost  if the   amount  were\nknocked off for the time being.\nThe Board also was told today\nthat the province of British Columbia Is not opposing the Inter\nIm application but Is registering\n\"absence of consent\" and reserv\nIng rights lo'put In opposition to\nthe larger Increase, This Information came from William Robert,\nson, Ottawa lawyer representing\nthe Provincial Government.\nCanadian Defence To Share Scarce\nMaterials Equally Wilh U.S.\nOTTAWA, July 3 (CP) \u2014 Canadian manufacturers working on defence contracts have been placed on\nan equal footing with United States\nmanufacturers for allocation of\nscarce materials, it was announced\ntoday.\nThe new American priority and\nallocation program, known as the\ncontrolled materials plan, went\nInto effect formally July 1. It will\nallow Canadian industry to share\nequally with Americans the scarce\nsupplies of American goods.\nEssentially, the plan, embracing\nallocations of materials for three\nmonths at a time, Es not expected\nto cause any drastic reduction in\nthe production of consumer goods.\n, The scheme Is designed to make\nbig blocks of allocations at once\nrather than on a piecemeal, day-\nto-day basis,\nThe U.S. Government has Issued\ns priority scale covering three\nessential materials; steel, aluminum\nand copper, Canada buys some\ncopper and aluminum from the U.S.,\nbut mainly she is interested in\nUnited States steel.\nThe manufacturers who get a\npriority rating on U.S. steel for defence purposes, also get priority on\ncomponent parts.\nFor example, if a Canadian manufacturer gets a priority rating on\nparts of U.S. military trucks, his\nrating is good on all materials that\nare required to make those parts,\nincluding tin, electrical goods, instruments and so on.\nCanada hat nothing similar to\nthe controlled, materials plan, but\nassures, through an economic\npact signed last Fall, that Amerl\ncan flrma seeking materials In\nCanada will get treatment equal\nto that received by Canadian\nfirms.\nThis is done through a defence\nproduction department priority system that embraces compulsory\ncontrols on steel, aluminum, nickel,\ncopper and sulphur and voluntary\ncontrols on a number of other\ngoods.\nThere Is another essential difference between the controls in the\ntwo countries. On passenger car\nproduction, for example, the U.S.\nhas ordered a reduction to 65 per\ncent of last year's output. No simi\nlar reduction has been ordered in\nCanada. Rather the Government\ndepending on credit restrictions\nand higher taxes to cut down on\nsales and thereby discourage output.\nPROVINCIAL\nLIBRARY\n\u25a0<*\u00ab\/>\nufUkiln Jfontf.\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY\nCloudy   and   cooler.   Scattered   j\nthunderstaorms  in  the  afternoon.\nWind light Low and high Cranbrook 60 and 75i Crescent Valley\n60 and 78,    .\nNELSON. B.C., CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MOHNING, JULY 4, 1951\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo. 61\ni\\ed as Red Reply Waited\nNew $2 Million Structure Spans Columbia at Northport\nFOR THE FIRST TIME in five years, travel over the\nColumbia River at Northport is a treat, rather than a\ntime-taking chore. The new bridge, above, dedicated\nTuesday, has been completed just in time for July 4\nAmerican holidayers, and viewed on a long-term basis,\nwill serve as a vital link between the Canadian No. 3\nhighway and U.S. No. 22. The giant structure replaces the\nhistoric Red Mountain bridge,'condemned in 1946, and\na ferry which burned earlier this year.\nDignitaries of the two countries Tuesday participated\nin dedication ceremonies sponsored by the Northport\nChamber of Commerce.\nJuly 24 Sef\nFor Vole on\nMoney Bylaws\nJuly 24 has been set as the date\nNelson property owners will vote\non two money bylaws totalling\n$350,000.\nCity Council Tuesday night, in\nsetting the date, gave third reading\nto bylaws which would authorize\nthe borrowing'of $300,000 at four\nper cent for a hew transmission line\nfrom Nelson power plant and $50,000\nfor Civic Centre improvements.\nVoting will take place between\n8 a.m. and 8 p.m., .with city comptroller W.; A. Gordon and. Reeve\nHarper, \u25a0sd^'plei'lt?'. as- returning officers;\nCouncil also gave final readings\nto two easement bylaws.\nNURSE SHORTAGE\nCLOSES HOSPITAL\nVANCOUVER, July 3 (CP) \u2014 A\nshortage -of nurses today forced\nclosure of one wing of the children's\nhospital here.\nHospital officials said they expected the wing to reopen Saturday\nwhen the nursing staff will be reorganized. Ten nurses' have vomn-\nteered to help out in the emergency.\nCharged With Murder\nOf Brother-in-law\nWEST SUMMERLAND, B.C., July\n3 (CP) \u2014 George Clark, 28, today\nwas charged with murder in the\ndeath of his brother-in-law, who\ndied early Sunday after a wild gun\nand fist fight.\nHarold L, Tavender, 43, was found\ndying at the foot of a 300-fodt cliff\nnear his home in this Okanagan\nValley town 150 miles East of Vancouver.\nClarke appeared in court today.\nHe was remanded to July 10 without\nplea.\nPolice said the fruit rancher gasped out a statement before he died in\nhospital of head injuries..\nPolice said an argument preceded\nthe brawl. Clarke was arrested near\nthe foot of the cliff where Tavender\nwas found.\nR.C.M.P. were summoned by\nLome Perry, Tavender's nearest\nneighbor. He said he had heard\nangry shouts' and two gunshots\nfrom Tavender's home.\nSTRANGE LADY\nHANGS SELF IN\nTHEIR APARTMENT\nTORONTO, July 3 (CP) \u2014\nMembers of Leo Mitchell's\nfamily have been driven almost\nout of their wits by an unexplained suicide In their apartment.\nSaturday night, 41-year-old\nMrs, Eugenia Hotline\u2014unknown\nto anyone In the house\u2014walked\nupstairs In the Mitchell apartment and hanged herself In a\nroom where seven-month-old\nLeo Jr., was sleeping. The apartment Is on a downtown street\nover a store. Access to the building Is easy, the apartment was\nunlatched.     . \u25a0\u25a0'.'\u25a0'\u25a0 '\n\u2022   The bvrfy ,wa?;dlsopVered- by.'\n' 16-year-old\" Ron Mitchell.\nMrs. Mitchell said the woman's\nhusband  claimed  that  a  $1200\nring, a wristwatch and $601  In\ncash   were   missing   from   his\nwife's body.\n\"Neither my wife nor I had\never seen her before,\" Leo Mitchell said.\n\"Startled\" ls the way one Nelson\nJunior Chamber of Commerce member described Americans' .reaction\nto the \"Jaycee Welcome to Canada\"\nTuesday.\nAfter the visitors found out what\nit was all about, however, they\nthought the goodwill gesture well\nworthwhile.\nFor the Information of anyone\nelse who doesn't know of the project, Nelson and Trail Junior Chambers of Commerce were welcoming\nAmerican tourists at Nelway and\n70TH B-29 TO\nBRITAIN TODAY\nLONDON, July 3 (Reuters) \u2014\nThe United States will deliver Its\n70th B-29 Superfortress to the\nR.A.F. today, the American Embassy announced last night. The\nannouncement said that \"during\nthe last 15 months the United\ngtates has been quietly delivering\nB-29 Superfortresses to Britain as\nrapidly as the R.A.F. completed\ntraining the highly - specialized\ncrews.\"\nJaycee Border Welcome Surprises\nVisitors, buf Goes Over Wild Bang\nPaterson entry ports. They staged\nthe afternoon and night stunt as a\nprelude to an all-day handshake today, Independence Day In the United States.\nThe Incoming motorists are greeted, given information, receive i\nwindshield wipe and a sticker bear\ning the words. \"Jaycee Guest\". To\nday a red-coated Mountle will be\nstationed with the Jaycees. Visiting\nyoungsters will get ice cream.\nNelson Jaycees are also extending\ngreetings at the South entrance to\nNelson. ,  <\nPEARSON IN OSLO\nOSLO, Norway, July 3 (Reuters)\u2014L. B. Pearson, Canada's External Affairs Minister, arrived In\nOslo today by air from The\nHague, The Netherlands.\nHe will stay two days and go\non to Stockholm,\nPROBE METEOR CRATER\nOTTAWA, July 3 (CP)-A Government scientific party is to leave\nhere tomorrow to Investigate the\npossible existence of a sizeable meteor crater in Ontario's Algonquin\nPark, Mines Minister Prudham announced today..\nVANCOUVER, July 3 (CP) \u2014\nInquiry board into the British Columbia Labor Act will start Vancouver hearings July 10.\nFLIES FASTER,\nHIGHER THAN ANY\nOTHER AIRCRAFT\nLOS ANGELES July 3 (AP)\u2014\nThe Douglas Skyrocket, a supersonic research plane, has flown\n\"faster and higher\" than any\nknown aircraft, the navy announced today.\nThe accepted speed record la\n670,981 miles an hour, established\nSept. 18, 1948, by a North American  F-86.\nThe Bell X-1 In 1949 was reported to have reached about 1000\nmiles an hour for brief periods in\nIts excursions Into the range beyond the speed of sound. It\ntravelled at altitudes mdrs than\n10 miles high,\nTho navy said exact speed and\nheight at which the swept-wlng\nskyrocket has operated are being\nwitheld for security  reasons,\nMarvin Miles, aviation editor of\nthe Los Angeles Times, estimated\nthe plane's actual speed was Just\nshort of 1300 miles an hour. He\nsaid his information was that the\ncraft was shooting for twice the\nspeed of sound\u20141320 miles an\nhour at high altitudes\u2014and barely\nmissed.\nHe put the altitude around\n70,000 feet, pointing out that the\nnavy specified the mark was for\na piloted plane. The altitude\nrecord for a piloted balloon Is\n72,394 feet.\nThailand Naval\nOfficers Fired\n(jJalsA. ^jwhIa.\nNelson \t\nRevelstoke\nTrail    \t\nMission \t\nMonday\n    11.08\nTuesday\n11.0\n23.7\n31.13\n14.67\nBANGKOK, July 3 (AP) -\nThailand's Royal Navy was all but\nliquidated today for rebelling last\nweek. Most ranking officers, in\neluding the commander-in-chief,\nwere dismissed and jailed.\nApproximately 75 per cent of\nnaval personnel were dropped from\nthe service, at least for six months.\nA general took over control of what\nwas left of the Navy.\nPremier Pibulsonggram, kidnapped by the,plotters last Friday, hit\nback swiftly.\nIn suppressing the revolt ln three\ndays of fighting, the Army already\nhad struck a serious blow at the\nNavy. Artillery fire sank a torpedo\nboat and the gunboat Sri Ayuthla,\nflagship of the Thai Navy. Pibulsonggram had been held prisoner\naboard the flagship.\nSome stubborn naval units still\nheld out in a fort at the mouth of\nthe Chao Phraya River, which\nflows past Bangkok but naval establishments elsewhere were under\narmy control.\nAdmiral Luang Slrrgu Songgram-\nchal,   Navy    Commander-in-Chief,\n! who    accompanied    the    Premier\nback to Bangkok after his escape,\nwas among those under arrest.\nHalf-a-dozen key officers still\nwere at large.\nRear-Admiral Polasind Thavanat,\nDeputy Minister of Defence, was\nnamed Acting Navy Commande:\nBut the Navy actually was put\nunder the control of Lt.-Gen. Ph'in\nVhunhawa, Commander-in-Chief of\nthe Army.\n\u25a0181\n;;:.^\/0 ;\u25a0;:..:\u25a0\nROBES OF HER OFFICE as Trail Golden Jubilee queen are here bestowed on attractive Lodl\nBressanutl by Mayor J. G. Fletcher In one of the\nhighlight ceremonies of the first days of the Sliver\nCity's week-long celebration. .\nPrincesses are, from left,  Mollle Lou Nesblt,\nJune Montpellier, Irene Ford and Jean Brennan.\n\u2014Msrvyn Rowlands photo.\nRhee Won't Accept\nPeace at Parallel\nBy WILLIAM C. BARNARD   .\nTOKYO, July 4 (Wednesday) (AP)-The Allied command today hoped for a possible preliminary cease-fire meeting Thursday but as (he hours ticked away the Communists\nin Korea remained silent.\nGen. Matthew B. Ridgway proposed the preliminary\nconference when he informed the Communists Tuesday that\nhe agreed with their plan to hold an armistice conference at\nKaesong, near the 38th parallel, July 10.\nHe suggested both sides send liaison officers Thursday to Kaesong,\n30 miles Northwest of Seoul, to lay\nplans for the major conference.\nThe United Nations commander-\nin-chief emphasized in his message\nthat delay in starting the meetings\nmeant more bloodshed. Meanwhile,\nblood was being shed. Allied forces\nlashed out at scattered points along\nlhe front. U.N. warplanes pounded\nRed installations.\nThe Allied forces were alert for\nany Red surprise attacks. The Peiping radio said the Communist forces\nalso were warned against possible\nAllied attacks.\nThe  radio quoted an editorial\nIn the Peiping People's Dally as\nsaying the cease-fire line would\nbe on the 38th parallel. The editorial said that a cease-fire would\nbe  only  the  first  step  toward\nsettling tho Korean question. And\nIt added that the Chinese must\ncontinue to build  up their defences even after an armistice.\nAt   Pusan,   President. Syngman\nRhee said South Korea could not\naccept an armistice at the parallel,\n\"We want a cease-fire as soon as\npossible,\"  he said,  \"but the 38th\nparallel  ls  something  we  cannot\naccept.\" .     \u25a0 i\nIn a broadcast Tuesday night, ths\nPeiping radio again blasted at tha\nUnited Statea. It charged that\n\"American imperialism is developing a propaganda offensive\" to forca\nthe use of Japanese manpower \"for\naggression against Korea and other\nparts of Asia.\"\nA pooled dispatch from the Central front'said exhausted Allied Infantrymen Tuesday captured tha\nhighest peak in the key mountain\nrange of the Chorwon-Kumhwa-\nPyonggang triangle. They stormed\nthe North slope of the peak and\ntook it after three days of fighting\nagainst fierce resistance.\nBut other Allied troops failed ln\nhand-to-hand fighting to push well\ndug-ln Reds from the rugged slopes\nof neighboring mountains.\nConcealed Chinese mortars North\nof the mountain range pounded at\nAllied positions throughout the day.\nAllied tanks searched in vain for\nthe mortar'positions.\nEighth Army heavy artillery and\nair strikes sought to block Chlnesa\nreinforcements ln the Pyonggang\narea. Allied tanks attacked in this\nsector.\nReporting from the Eastern\nfront, AP correspondent Gcorgo\nMcArthur said an artillery duel\nbetween Allied and Red guns raged for three hours\u2014longest of the\nwar.\nThe downtown airfield at\nPyongyang, North Korean capital,\nwas bombed, rocketted and strafed by 60 U.S. Jets and six B-29\nSu'perforts, Carrier planes worked over Chlnnampo, port of\nPyongyang.\nRain Welcomed\nWilh Glee by\nTired Firefighters\nCAMPBELL RIVER, B.C., July 3\n(CP)\u2014Rain splattered down on the\nseething Campbell River forest fire\ntonight\u201420,000 acres too late.\nBut the rain\u2014a one-hour downpour which then subsided into little\nmore than a sprinkle\u2014was a godsend to firefighters.\nA logger battling spot fires In the\nUpper Qulnsam Lake area put down\nhis shovel when the rain started.\n\"That stuff's worth $2,000,000,\" he\nsaid as he lifted his head skyward\nand let the rain\u2014the first in 20 days\n\u2014beat against his grimy face. All\nalong the fire line, the firefighters\nstripped off shirts soggy wilh sweat.\nBut they didn't stop work. Although\nmore showers were forecast, a\nstrong wind could still fan the fire\nover the defence lines and Into untouched timber. ..\nThe rain was also expected to\naid the campaign against two lesser\n\u2014but still serious\u2014fires.\nOne of them was burning along\ninacoessible \u25a0 bluffs in the hole-in-,\nthe-wall sector of Sonora Island, 25\nmiles North of here, while 125 men\nwere fighting a slash blaze on Giro-\nday Logging Company property ln\nthe Redonda Islands, 30 miles to the\nNortheast,\n.The^Campbell River fire grew\nfrom a spark flung by a logging\nrailway engine nearly three weeks\nago. Forestry officials said the situation was critical from a few days\nlater until Sunday night, A drop in\nthe wind gave firefighters their first\nbreak.\nForestry officials said there would\nbe no reduction in the firefighting\nforce, estimated at 700 men.\nPrepare Indictment\nAgainst Oil Officers\nTEHRAN, July 3 (CP) \u2014 The\npublic prosecutors office is preparing a preliminary indictment\nagainst officials of the Anglo-Iran\nIan Oil Company, the newspaper\nBakhtar Emroos said tonight.\nThe paper, owned and edited by\nDeputy Premier Hussein Fatemi\nand usually considered authoritative ln Government matters, added\nthat the indictment would charge\nthem with \"illegal operations.\"\nIt was being prepared after examination of documents discovered\nin police raids on the nationalized\ncompany's information office and\non the town house of the Com\npany's chief representative, Richard Seddon. \u201e\nAnd In This Corner, \u2666 \u2666 >\nBALTIMORE, July 3 (AP)\u2014North Is moving West, Eaiterly South\nand Southern Is standing still,\nConfusing?\nThat's the way It was In police court yesterday.\nThe Messrs. Southern, Easterly and North were before the bar\nof Justice on charges of disturbing the peace.\nNorth was dismissed on a promise he'd go West. Easterly followed\non a promise to go South, back home to Georgia. However, Southern\nmarked time while trying to raise a $100 fine.\nBALTIMORE, July 3 (API\u2014Never let it be said Patrolman Edward\nBlaney isn't loyal to his work.\nBlaney was rushing to hospital yesterday when he heard a burglar\nalarm and saw a man running from a tavern. He collared the runner\nand booked him on suspicion of stealing $18.\nBlaney then continued to the hospital where his wife gave birth\nto a son.\nDETROIT, July 3 (AP)-For the fourth time, Robert McGlnnls, 20,\nwas back behind bars today after escaping from Jail.\nFor thB fourth time, he had been caught while In the company\nof the \"same 19-ycar-old girl.\n\"It's the same old story,\" sighed McGlnnls as he was led back\nto jail to await a burglary sentence. \"They just follow her around\nuntil I show up.\"\nNEW YORK. July 3 (AP)\u2014Traffic offenders yesterday went before\na machine\u2014instead of a judge\u2014to pay their fines.\nThe new \"mechanical court,\" made by the National Cash Register\nCompany, was put to use in the Bronx for the first time.\nIn assembly-line fashioif, 177 traffic violators paid fines totalling\n$798.\nAs each presented his summons, a clerk tapped a series of buttons,\nand out popped a receipt showing the fine, the date, the offence, the\ndocket and court numbers and a code number for the judge who\nwasn't there.\nWILLIAMSON, W. Va., July 3 (AP)\u2014For years the people of Pike\nCounty, Ky., which Is dry, have been crossing the Tug River to buy\ntheir whisky.\nNow they're meeting their West Virginia neighbors on the way\nto buy soda pop.\nThe folks In Williamson started their river crossings Sunday to\ndodge West Virginia's new soft-drink tax of one-cent a bottle.\nESTABLISHMENT AND GROWTH of Christian congregations In Trail from pioneer days and\nthe arrival of the famous and beloved Father Pat\n\u2014Rev. Henry Irvin\u2014to today were depicted In a\nGolden Jubilee religious pageant. The cast Is pictured above.\u2014Mervyn Rowlands ehoto.\nBALTIMORE, Me., July 3 (AP)\u2014An old white shepherd dog that\nbummed around the woods on estates outside Baltimore today has\nchosen a life of captivity with his vagrant pal, a five-year-old bay\nhorse.\nThe Humane Society caught the horse and loaded him irr%i truck.\nWithout so much as hesitating or looking back, the dog jumped in\nalong with him, and trotted into a corral with the steed.\nThe horse and dog had grubbed (or. food off lhe land in Summer\nand lived off handouts from friendly farmers in Winter Humane\nSociety officials say they may use tha horse for riding classes, and\nthey'll let his canine pal stay wilh him. t\n-*.\n^yj\n -*\u25a0*\u25a0\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1951\nLAST SHOWING 7:00 and 9:00\nNewt\nCartoon\nBowlers Fair\nStarting Thursday: ALAN LADD in \"BRANDED\"\nFirst Taxpayer, Wafer Seller Recalls\nEarly Fire Scorching Trail Hillside\nBy LOUIS FRYLINQ\nft was eighty-seven years ago\nthat Nick Wilmes came into the\nworld* He was one of a large family ol 12 boys and three girls, living on a farm in Wisconsin. At the\naga of 19 he decided to leave home\nand earn his own living. Puring\nthe course of his different labors,\nhe hauled the first load of lumber\nln Glendale, then six miles out of\nLon Angeles.\nMr. Nicholas (Old Nick) Wllmea\ncame to Trail In 1885. Around that\ntime he panned gold with Al\nYoung, another oldtlmer, who passed on about three years ago.\nHe recounts many experiences\nduring hie early days In the district and remembers his first job,\nthat of hauling a safe for the Bank\nof British North America, now the\nOwens Block, and claims the bank's\nname can still be seen upon close\nobservation. Another job was hauling water from the river and sell-\nIng it for 25 cents a barrel.\nOne time ha worked for a mining company for three dollars a day.\n7$* company put in $30,000 and got\nback $300 worth of gold. Another\ntime he hauled cordwood for three\nand a half' a cord paying two of\nthat to get lt cut\nA contract Job that he was on at\none time employed tha use of a\nfotir horse team. Every day he\nhauled a load of coke from Seward\n(Columbia Gardens) and every day\nhauled back a load of meat.\nBeing among the first taxpayers\nin the district he was levied the\nheavy amount of two dollars a year\nwhich was sent to Victoria. At that\ntime land in East Trail could be\nbought for $25 an acre.\nMr. Wilmes decided to start up\nhis  own store  n'nd  bought out  i\nsecondhand store. Later, this bum\ned to the ground and out of the\n$12,000 loss he salvaged $2000 with\nwhich to start again. He bought a\nbuilding on Bay Avenue and proceeded to haul it back to his own\nsite. A rope,  holding  to  a  post,\nslipped and the building skipped\ndown   hill   for  50   feet   and   was\nsmashed askew. It was braced together with old Wagon tires which\nhave been there to this very day.\n\"There   was  a  fine stand   of\ntimber on the hillside until the\nbig fire In 1S17,\" stated Mr. Wilmes,  \"Nobody  was   much'   concerned while It was burning on\nthe East side but when It Jumped\nacross the river the whole town\nturned out It took three or four\ndays to put It out.\"\nMr.  Wilmes  ls living with his\ndaughter and son-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Sam Stewart of Trail. He has\na son, Dr, Malcolm Nicholas (Little\nNick) Wilmes, six feet four inches,\nliving in Spokane. His wife, Margaret, also from Wisconsin, died a\nyear ago last May.\nDecision Today\nOn Freight,\nRate Applications\nrjr-j\nwill be given tomorrow at !):30 a.m.\non the railways' application for\nfreight-rate increases aggregating\n$99,000,000 a year.\nlbs Board of Transport Commissioners announced today lt will\nhand down an Interim judgment\nthen on railway requests for increases of five and 15 per cent\nThe judgment will deal with the\nquestion of the railways' Immediate\nneed for revenue. Hearings on an\nincrease of a more permanent\nnature will be held starting next\nNor. 11\nThe increases ware asjted try the\nrailways chiefly to meet higher\nlabor costs resulting from last\nAugust's general rail strike and its\nsubsequent settlement involving a\nwage increase and a shortened\nwork week for employees.\nThey were opposed before the\nBoard by the governments of eight\nprovinces \u2014 all except Ontario and\nQuebec \u2014 which argued that the\nrailways had failed to show they\nneed extra money now.\nA Tree*\nfor Yen and Your Friends\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpan 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St. Nelson\nSIX CANADIANS\nTO WORLD TRADE\nUNION MEETING\n\u2022 MILAN, July 8 (AP) \u2014'The\nInternational Confederation of Tree\nTrade Unions, representing more\nthan. 44,000,000 antK*ommunlst\nworkers, will deal with everything\nfrom poverty to peace treaties at\nits second World Congress here this\nweek.\nThe big international organization, with affiliated labor groups\nfrom 60 countries and territories,\nopens a nine-day conference In the\nbig Italian Industrial metropolis\nWednesday,\nCanada will hava six delegates.\nThey are:\nTrades and Labor Congress of\nCanada; Claude Jodoln, Montreal,\nQuebec vice-president; James A.\nWhltebpne, Saint John, N.B., Marl-\ntimes vice-president\nCanadian Congress ot Labor; Pat\nConroy, Ottawa, C.C.L. secretary-\ntreasurer; Fred Dowling, Toronto,\nCanadian director of the United\nPackinghouse Workers of America;\nJames E. McGuire, Ottawa, secretary-treasurer of the Canadian\nBrotherhood of Railway Employees,\nBnd Sllby Barrett, Toronto, Canadian director of District 50 of the\nUnited Mine Workers of America.\nPOWER PLANT\nOUTPUT GAINS\nProduction at Nelson power plant\nincreased 7.5 per cent in June over\nthe same month last year.\nOutput was 1,735,600 kilowatt\n\u2022hours compared with 1,613,350 in\nJune, 1050, and the average load\nincreased correspondingly. The\npeak load was up 8.1 per cent, from\n370O to 4000 kilowatts, and the\nminimum load was down 4.7 per\ncent, from 1260 to 1200 kilowatts.\nStation service declined 51 per\ncent, from 17,330 to 8390 kilowatts.\nThe installation of a new transformer to supply seven staff houses\naccounts for the sharp decrease.\nTRAIL\nCAFE\n1499 Bay Avenue, Trail, B.C.\nIs now\nRE-OPENING FOR BUSINESS\nto cater to their many patrons and friends after almost\nd week of closing for alteration and decoration. Come\nto Trail to see our Golden 'Jubilee Celebration! and\nvisit the Trail Cafe, Wh.eije you' will find a modern\nrestaurant with friendly atmosphere: Delicious American and Chines^ foods are prepared by our expert\ncht^ that will satisfy your most fastidious appetite.\nOur courteous and efficient service is available day\nand night.\n\u00bb JOHN CHOW, Proprietor.\nMan On Bridge Was Accused, Two\nTestify al Davidoff Murder Trial\nTwd witnesses testified in Supreme Court Tuesday to seeing, .the\naccused, John Davidoff, on the Hsbo-\ntenay .River bridge at Brilliant\nabout 10 p.m. April 16, the night\nJoe Davidoff was murdered.\nMike Koochin, nephew 0\/ the\naccused, told the court he saw Davidoff on the bridge while crossing\nto Ootischenia in a friend's car. He\nsaid Davidoff was on the upstream\nside near the centre of the bridge,\nwalking towards the Brilliant side.\nThe witness said he saw the man's\nface clearly and that he was wearing a hat and a grey suit. He did\nnot notice if the man was carrying\nanything, he added.\nAnother passenger ln the car,\nSergle Popoff, also Identified the\nman on the bridge as Davidoff,\nwhom he said he had known at\nleast a year and a half.   .--\nHe said he was wearing a hat and\nwas carrying a blue overcoat.\nPopoff and Koochin were passengers in a 1948 model car driven\nby Mike Kolesnikoff who with a\nfourth passenger, George Pozdnikoff, will testify today.\nEarlier, three Castlegar youths\ntestified to seeing a man carrying\na parti8lly-covered rifle within 50\nfeet of the bridge on the Ootischenia\nside.\nThe boys, Ivor Ostrom, William\nOzeroff and Bjarne Aasland, fixed\nthe time at about 10 p.m. They were\nsitting In a 1942 model car driven\nby Aasland and were returning to\nCastlegar from a concert'at Ootischenia.\nAll three witnesses said the man\nwas on the left-hand side of the\nroad as they approached the bridge\nand that he was carrying the partly-\ncovered rifle under his right arm.\nOstrum said the man was \"irregularly\" dressed and was wearing a\n\"shabby and Irregular\" hat. He stated the man was \"packing\" a rifle\nand that the stock was protruding\nfrom the rear. The front of the rifle\nwas covered by \"dark material\", he\nsaid.\nOzeroff testified he saw the'man's\nfeatures as they were passing but\ndid not recognize him. He said he\nhad known the accused \"casually\"\nfor about a year.\nAasland described the man as\nwearing \"rough\" clothes and an\n\"old\" hat. Both he and Ostrum said\nthey did not see his features and\ntestified he had stepped off the road\nwhen they approached.\nAll three passengers In the Aasland ear testified that a \"late model\"\ncar had waited on the Brilliant side\nwhile their car crossed from the\nOotischenia side.\nKoochin and Popoff, passengers\nIn the Kolesnikoff vehicle, both tes\ntified to waiting on the Brilliant\nend of the bridge while-another car\ncrossed from the'Ootischenia side.\nIDENTIFIES RIFLE\nKoochin also Identified the .303\nrifle entered'as evidence as belong.-\ning to him and told of a conversation in March in which Davidoff\nwas said to have asked to borrow\nthe rifle to shoot a dog.\nHe said he asked the accused why\nhe wanted the .303 rather than a\n.22 calibre rifle which he also owned. Davidoff was said to have replied he wanted to \"make sure.\"\nIn the end Davidoff did not use lt,\nhe said. He explained that the rifle\nwas kept In the'eorner of his bedroom and that he had not missed\nit until the morning of April 16.\nSgt. Andrew Mason-Rooke of the\nR.C.M.P. crime detection laboratory\nat ^tegina, said it was \"probable\"\nthat the slug taken from the body\nof the deceased had been fired from\nthe .303 calibre rifle taken from the\nKootenay River at the Brilliant\nbridge and sent to.him for comparison.\nHowever, \"unquestionable opinion\" was precluded by the rusted\ncondition of the bore which altered\ncertain characteristics and caused\nimportant differences in firearm\nsignatures.\nAn empty cartridge case sent to\nhim for examination had been fired\nfrom the rifle In question, he said.\nHe found that the bullet area on\nthe quilt taken from the death-bed\nshowed the effect of a muzzle blast\nfrom a rifle held \"at very close\nrange.\" To reproduce this effect the\nmuzzle of the weapon would have\nto be held at a distance of not more\nthan two inches from the quilt, he\nsaid.\nPeter Goollaff of Grand Forks\ntold the court of a land sale deal\nhe and the accused were said to\nhave discussed early in April. Davidoff had agreed to pay him $1000\ndown and another $600 In payments,\nfor a property on the outskirts of\nGrand Forks.\nThe witness said Davidoff told\nhim he was going back to the Kootenay to get the money and would\nbe back shortly after.\nWilliam Goresky, pay-roll clerk at\nWm. Waldie & Sons in Castlegar,\nwas called by the Crown to give\nevidence on the accused's earnings\nthere last year. He had worked\nseven-and-a-half months, from mid-\nApril until the end of November In\n1950. earning a gross of $1158.58 and\na net of $981.99, the witness said.\nTwenty-six of the 38 witnesses to\nbe called by Crown have been\nheard, Indicating the defence may\nopen its case some time Thursday.\nStandings\nBy The Canadian  Press\nNATIONAL\nBrooklyn ...\n44\n26\n.628\nNew York __\t\n41\n32\n.562\nSt. Louis\t\n36\n33\n.522\nCincinnati    \t\n98\n36\n.478\nPhiladelphia    \t\n33\n37\n.471\n32\n36\n4.71\nChicago   \t\n30\n35\n.462\nPittsburgh    \t\n27\n41\n.397\nAMERICAN\nNew York  \t\n44\n24\n.657\n45\n26\n.634\nBoston  \t\n41\n29\n.586\nCleveland  __..-\t\n39\n31\n.557\nDetroit  \t\n31\n34\n.477\n28\n42\n.400\n26\n42\n.382\nSt. Louis\t\n.21\n47\n.309\nProposed Weigh\nScale Fee\nHoist Protested\nProposed increase in City weigh\nscale fees ls still only under consideration. City Council stated-Monday night after reading-of a letter\nstating the new fees would be excessive and in some instances out\nof line. Other complaints had been\nheard, City Controller W. A. Gordon said.\nThe increases would add materially to expenses and it would prob\nably necessitate higher cost to the\nconsumers, the letter from John\nTowler of Towler Fuel and Transfer\nsaid.\nHe felt the increases should be\nmodified. Had the minimum charge\nof 20 cents been retained and an\nadditional five cents charged for all\nloads over one ton, it would have\nresulted In a very substantial in-\nI crease  in  revenue  of  the  weigh\nI scales he felt. After studying records\nj it was indicated that under the\nrates suggested by his company, an\nincrease in revenue of at least 35\nto 40 per cent would be enjoyed.\nHa hoped it -would be' possible\nto make a revision so the increase\n, would be moderate and' the fact\nkept in mind that possible delivery\nof coal had been more drastically\naffected by Increased operating\ncosts than most businesses due to\n; the large percentage of labor In-\ni volved.\n' Present rate ls a straight 20 cents\nper truck. Under the new rates,\n15 cents would be charged for the\nfirst ton and' 10 cents for each additional load.\nPleads Guilty\nTo Check Charges\nGordon W.1 Slater of Edmonton\nand Willow Point pleaded guilty to\nthree separate charges of forging\nchecks totalling $32.75 in Provincial\nCourt Tuesday and was remanded\nfor sentence until July 7 by Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans\nThe first offence occurred April\n7 when he allegedly forged a cheek\nfor the amount of $6.75, receiving\n$5 of the total in merchandise from\na South Slocan Garage. The other\ntwo checks, totalling $16, Were\ncashed April 14 in local business\nestablishments.\nSlater was taken Into custody by\nR.C.MTP. in Calgary early last week\nand returned to Nelson for trial.\nTRAIL JUBILEE\nTEA POPULAR\nTRAIL, B.C., July 3 \u2014 A simple,\nbut charming tea was Staged near\nColumbia' River bridge under the\ntrees at Murray Park here today by\nthe Elks Lodge ladies. Held in connection with Golden Jubilee celebrations, it proved popular, and\nwas well attended from three to\nsix ln the afternoon.\nThe ladies met many old friends\nand enjoyed the respite from the\nfast pace set at the celebrations.\nTo Appeal\nDriving Conviction\nBert Dewey Buerge of South\nSlocan was fined $50 and had his\ndriver's licence suspended for six\nmonthSjWhen he was convicted on\na dangerous driving charge by\nStipendiary Magistrate William\nEvans in Provincial Court Tuesday.\nWilliam Kapak, counsel for the defense, gave notice of appeal.\nThe charge arose when a truck\ndriven by Buerge left the highway\nand rolled down a 60 foot embankment one mile West of Nelson\nJune 23.\nA witness to the accident, Alfred\nFarenholtz, stated that the truck\nwas travelling at a moderate rate\nof speed when the accident occurred. Buerge, said that the rear\ntire went flat and before he realized\nwhat had happened the truck left\nthe road. The truck was severely\ndamaged, although the driver and\nother passenger escaped uninjured.\nConstable N. H. Elphick testified\nto a broken bottle being found' in\nBuerge's pocket and the pocket area\nsaturated with beer. The constable\nsaid he found one of the rear tires\nsoft, but not a blowout,\nLeo Albert DesireSu, Nelson tire\nrepair man, testfied that he found\na nail through both tire and tube,\nbut could not state how long It\nwould take for the air to escape.\nHospital Driveway\nRepairs Asked\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nSociety is going after repairs for\nthe driveway in front of the\nhospital.\nThe Society asked City Council\nfor repair work in a letter read at\nTuesday night's Council meeting,\nand the matter waB referred to the\npublic works committee.\nThe Society said pot holes and\nruts in the driveway made driving\ndetrimental to patients leaving the\nhospital.\nCivic Centre* Is\nAdvanced $1000\nCity Council Tuesday night advanced the Civic Centre $1000 to\ncover an overdraft existing at June\n30 and to permit payment of accounts for July.\nRequest Tabled\nCity Council tabled for further\nconsideration Tuesday nigHt a (request from B.C. Association ' of\nAssessors for representation at. its\nsecond annual conference in Nanaimo Sept 8 and 7.\nSeek Equipment\nFor lakeside\nPark Lifeguard\nNeed for equipment to be used iii\nlifeguard and swimming instruction\nwork at Lakeside Park was placed\nbefore City Council Monday night.\nA list prepared by Eddie Wares,\nRecreational Council director, was\nleft in the hands of City Controller\nW. A. Gordon, with authority to\nmake purchases if he felt the equipment was required.\nMr. Wares asked for an elevated\nchair for the lifeguard so that a\ngood view of swimmers could be\nobtained; repair of the one metre\ndiving board and covering of all\nboards with coco matting; repair of\nthree ladders at the side of the\nfloat and installing of two more, and\nside boarding along the walk nearest the float for turning in the instruction of. swimming classes:\ninforming swimmers the lifeguard\ninforming sfimmers the lifeguard\nwas not on duty beyond the point\nand another informing the public\nthat the lifeguard was not on duty\nwhen a red flag was put up, was\nalso suggested.\nThe life guard boat was badly ln\nneed of repair and a paddle board\nshould be used Instead because it\nwas easier to handle and would\nspeed up rescues. About eight small\npaddle boards should be on hand\nfor swimming Instruction.\nFloorboards at the checking\nbuilding needed repair and also\nneeded were first aid kit, rake,\nmarking for lifeguard and a gong\nfor clearing the swimming pool.\nDuring the questioning of Mr.\nWare's duties, it was explained that\nwhile he would not act either as\nlifeguard or swimming instructor,\nhe would be supervising the whole\nSummer recreational program.\nHe Didn't Want\nTo Bother People\nNEW YORK, July 3 (AP)-Two\nbirthday cards. A small, half-eaten\nstore-bought chocolate cake. Two\ncandy ice-cream cones. Three partly-burned candles. A few jelly\nbeans. A few crumbs.'\nThey found them today, the\nhumble remains of Anthony Sanchez' 60th birthday party.\nThe cards were addressed to Sanchez, inscribed in childish handwriting \"To Daddy\u2014Happy Birthday.\" They were from his daughter, Evelyn, 11, and his boy, Anthony, Jr., seven,\nSanchez moved Into the bare\nBronx apartment a few days ago as\nbuilding superintendent.\n' Somebody apparently said the\nwrong thing as they watched Sanchez move ih with his two children. He was estranged from his\nwife\u2014their mother.\nSo with careful precision, Sanchez went to work on a small, win-\ndowless room in the apartment\nHe sealed all crevices, bored\nholes into the room, ran in hoses\nfrom the kitchen gas range.\nThen he wrote notes and thumb-\ntacked them ti> the wall. One of\nthem, to the landlord, read;\n\"I'm sorry. Somebody in the\nbuilding do not like I bring my\nbabies here. She said now we go\nhave more trouble with kids. I do\nnot like to bring trouble to nobody\nthat is In the place.\n\"Goodbye.\"\nLast night, with the chocolate\nbirthday cake partly-eaten, Sanchez snuffed out the birthday\ncandles.\nHe led his \"babies\" Into the\nsealed room. When they slept, he\nturned on the gas, switched off the\nlight and lay down beside them.\nThey found the bodies today.\nSanchez' birthday party was over.\nSinovic Continues\nBatting Lead\nTACOMA, July 3 (AP)\u2014Although\nhis average fell off three points to\n.378 during the week of play which\nended \u2022 Slnday, Vancouver's Dick\nSinovic lost none of. his lead In the\nWestern International League batting race.\nTeammate John Ritchey, catcher\nfor the league-leading Capilanos and\nrunner-up in the willow competition, likewise dropped three points\nto .858,! it was revealed ln statistics\nreleased today from the office of\nRobert B. Abel, League President.\nRunning a strong third was Len\nNeal, Wenatchee catcher, at .357,\ndown a single point from a week\nago.\nCity Will Take Over\nCivic Centre Books\nCity Council Tuesday night authorized city comptroller W. A.\nGordon to arrange for Civic Centre\nbooks' to be handled at the City\nHall.\nMayor N. C. Stibbs said the switch\nhad been agreed to by the Civic\nCentre Commission.\nRequest for $10,000\nFor Airport to Go\nBefore Parliament\nRequest for an additional grant\nof $10,000 for improvements to\nCastlegar airport Is being placed\nbefore Parliament by Hon. Lionel\nChevrier, Minister of Transport.\nThis advice was received by. City\nCouncil, Monday night. Similar advice had been forwarded to R. A. D.\nWest of Castlegar, Chairman of the\nairport committee, the letter from\nthe minister's office said.\nIf obtained, the money will be\nused to lay asphalt on the surface.\nA grant of $25,000 had been received last year for airport improvement.\nJhsi U)swi]vi\/L\nSYNOPSIS;\nThere was a general Increase in\nclouds over the Western sections\nof B. C. Along the coast and in the\nCentral and Northern Interior\nmaximum temperatures were in\nthe Sixties, ten degrees lower. In\nthe Okanagan and Kootenay Valleys however, it was another hot\nday. Penticton reported a high of\n91.\nSkies will be cloudy over the\nprovince with scattered showers\nalong the coast and occasional\nthunderstorms in the Interior. Temperatures will be cooler In the\nSouthern Interior with little change\nexpected elsewhere.\nNelson        54   88   .\u2014\nMontreal      59   74   .\u2014\nWinnipeg       51   76   \u2014\nRegina           46   75    \u2014\nMedicine Hat    52   80   \u2014\nLethbridge     51   82   \u2014\nKamloops    56   85   \u2014\nPenticton       51   91    \u2014\nVancouver    54   65    \u2014\nKimberley        53   83    \u2014\nCrescent Valley     48   B8   \u2014\nGrand Forks     51   90   \u2014\nSpokane          57   89    \u2014\nLos Angeles     62   69    \u2014\nNew York     69   88   '\u2014\nWhitehorse     50   74    \u2014\nBrand Inspector\nLectures Here\nThomas Moore, 'brand recorder\nfor the Department of Agriculture\nat Victoria, spent July 2 in Nelson.\nMr. Moore is conducting lectures\nthroughout the Interior pf B.C. to\nBrand Recorders in tlie various\ndistricts.\nA short lecture on branding of\ncattle and horses was given to the\nNelson Brand Inspectors during his\nstay here.\nOrganizations\nTo Hold Picnics\nAt least two organizations will\nhold their annual picnics ln Lakeside Park this month.\nCity Council Tuesday night gave\npermission for Park use to Loyal\nOrange: Association and L.O.B'.A. to\nhold their annual picnic and social\nthere July 12, and Queen City\nRebekah Lodge No. 18, I.O.O.F., to\nhold its picnic there July 19.\n50 Trailites Jubilee Queen\nAffend Norlhporf Bridge Opening\nTRAIL, B.C., July 3 - Trail old-\ntimers, about 50 in number, attended dedication of the new $2,000,000\nNorthport, Wash., bridge today,\nThey travelled to the U.S. customs\ncentre by bus and car. \u25a0\nAfter tea at the Northport Hotel,\nthey took their places with hundreds of spectators who lined the\napproaches on both sides of the\nbridge to hear American officials\nOver (000 See\nTrail Pageant\nIn Two Days\nTRAIL, B.C., July 3 \u2014 Approximately 2800 persons attended the\nsecond night showing of \"King of\nlhe Kootenays\", Trail Golden Jubilee pageant, at the Cominco arena\ntonight.\nIt brought the attendance total to\nwell over 6000. More than 2000 attended Monday night and 1500 a\nmorning showing today.\nThousands of celebrants filled the\nstreets today and a record crowd\nis expected at the final showing of\nthe pageant.\nNelson Parking\nGels Overhaul\nProtests of \"permanent\" parking\non some Nelson business streets\nwere heard by City Council Monday night.\nSteps would he taken to correct\nparking conditions on the West\nside of Kootenay Street between\nBaker and Victoria Streets, Council will advise J. B. M. Barnum,\nManager of the Bank of Montreal.\nOn busy days, a number of cars\nand trucks parked all day, allowing no loom for others to park for\nbrief periods, Mr. Barnum said in\na letter.\nA new bylaw would take care\nof a situation outlined by Paragon\nSupplies, Ltd., 301 Victoria Street,\nCouncil said. The Company had\nasked for a loading zone, but it\nwas explained that under the new\nparking bylaw being prepared, no\nparking will be permitted on the\nNorth side of Victoria Street in the\nbusiness area to relieve congestion\ncaused by parking on both sides\nof the street.\nAid. Alex Sutherland said he had\nbeen asked why parking \u2022 should\nbe restricted in front of some business places after hours. Council\ndecided to have this situation taken\ncare of in the bylaw.' Signs restricting parking in front of business places open only during a\nspecified period will be required\nto set out the hours of restriciton.\nand Hon. A. D. Turnbull, B.C.\nMinister of Health and Welfare and\nM.L.A. for Nelson-Trail, give\nspeeches. , '        ,\nMr. Turnbull expressed his appreciation for the undertaking on\nbehalf of British Columbia. Further\ncementing of American-Canadian\nfriendship would follow opening of\nthe bridge, he said.\nTrail's Golden Jubilee queen and\nprincesses were there and Queen\nLodi Bressanuttl thanked the Chamber of Commerce for the hospitality\nextended. Also speaking briefly\nwere Vic Rogers of Trail, representing the Associated Boards of Trade,\nand Mayor J. R. Corner of Rossland.\nThe bridge was declared open\nafter cutting of a ribbon.\nSAFE MOVING\nis a SCIENCE!\nLet our trained, Courteous,\nprofessional movers \"take tha\nload off your mind!\" Yonr\nfinest furniture, dishes and\nother possessions will bo\nscientifically peeked and\nhandled with the utmost car*.\nPhone for estimate.\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\nPhone 33\n719 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C.\nAINSLO INCORPORATED\nNotice appeared In the B.C. Gazette that the Ainslo Mining Company Limited was incorporated under the Companies Act..\nThe authorised capital of the\nCompany is $50,000.\nThe object is to acquire mining\nlands; to drill. and dispose of ore\nas the company sees fit; and to purchase timber lands and other real\nor personal property.\nUSE  SECOND  PLANE\nThe regular Canadian Pacific\nAirlines plane leaving for the coast\nfrom Castlegar airport Tuesday\nafternoon was turned back due to\nengine trouble. Another plane sent\nout from Vancouver completed the\nflight\nLord Calvert\nCALVERT DISTILLERS (Canada) LIMITED\nAM HER ST BURG   \u2022    ONTARIO\nQflhis advertisement is not published or (displayed by the Liquor Control Board or\nbv the Government of British Columbia.\n %(ol\nSpsdtahfL\nfiumpLL\nBy  SLATER\nSmart Spectator pumps in brown\nahd white with dress cuban\nheels. AA-B.\n$12.95\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\n553 Baker St.\n\"March of Music\"\nPleases\nKaslo Audience\nKASLO, B. C, July 2\u2014Kaslo was\ntreated to an afternoon and evening\nof musical entertainment when the\nHalleran music pupils presented\nthe \"March of Music\".\nIn the afternoon the program consisted of! the pre-school group in\nsong and rhythm, followed by piano\nsolos by Irma MacLeod, Pat Forman, Thelma MacLeod, Cathie Ty-\ners, Irene Riley, Gloria Greensword, Ruth Aldous, Cecile Nucha,\nBetty Bonacci, Ronnie Garner, Don\nBedwell, Nan Matsuzaki, Linda\nPerkins, Mary Ann Murphy, Ruth\nShimizu, Mary Jane Abey, Thelma\nLogan, Florence Bedwell, Marjorie\nMcGregor, Marjorie Iwanik, Doreen Bacon, Claire Ogden and Kathleen Murphy.\nThe evening program opened\nwith a play \"Half an Hour a Day'\nby the Junior members followed by\npiano solos by the more advanced\npupils, Helen Forman, Florence\nAllen, Agnes Webber and Pat Halleran.\nA rhythm play \"Indians\" was portrayed by pre-school and junior\nrhythm groups, Terry Fyfe made\na hit with a ballet dance. Folk\ndances and tap dancing numbers\nwere presented.\nHISTORIC TUNES RECALLED\n\"Development of song\" featured\nthe senior students in selections\nfrom well known operas, and in religious songs.\n\"Fifty years of war songs\" was\nanother interesting item on the\nmusical menu, and brought back to\nthe audience songs from the Boer\nWar and the two World Wars.\n\"Fifty years of popular music\" featured the senior students, the band\nand the orchestra in ragtime, jazz,\nswing and blues.\nA band selection and a clarinet\nsolo by Ron Chandler rounded out\nthe evening's entertainment\nMrs. C. C. Halleran was honored\nby two little girls\u2014Beth Waugh and\nJo-Anne Drayton, who presented\nher with a bouquet of flowers. Mr.\nand Mrs.\u00bbC. C. Halleran were the\naccpmpanists for the entire program.\nTrail Just Two Narrow Streets\nWhen Mrs. McQaughey Arrived\nPresent\nVariety Show\nCASCADE, B.C., July 3 \u2014 The\nyoungsters of Cascade took the\nentertainment field into their own\nhands when they produced, directed\nand presented an evening of song,\ndance and dramatics.\nThe children, none of them yet\nteen-agers, offered a varied program, featuring skits, a highland\ndance by Clair Carloson, a dance\nby Bernadette Bedard, vocal solo by\nDonna MacGregor and Clara Carlson.\nAnother feature was the C.G.I.T.\ngirls choir.\nOscar Bedard came out on top\nin the boxing match with W. MacGregor.\nSirdar Teacher\nGiven Gift\nSIRDAR, B.C., July 3\u2014The school\nchildren had a \"breaking up party\"\nfor their parents, when Doris\nKollman presented their teacher,\nMrs. Arnold, with a gift on behalf\nof the pupils.\nGames and ice cream were en-\nJoyed.\nBy LOUIS FRYLING\nThe long, lean river boat pulled\ninto shore and Miss Elizabeth Bullock cautiously walked down the\ngangplank on to the sandy beach,\nthere being no dock. Most of the\npeople had alighted at Nakusp, and\na strange feeling possessed her as,\npractically alone, she reached the\noutposts of civilization, the end of\nthe trail, with nothing more to see\nthan two little narrow streets with\na creek running down the middle.\nBut her heart filled with joy as\nshe spied her mother and sister\nNellie, and to quote her own words:\n\"The   people   of  Trail   vvere\nfriendly and so good that it was impossible not to be happy.\"\nNext year, in February, 1897, she\nmarried George McGaUghey, owner\nof the Pacific Hotel.\nThe wedding was a gala affair.\nCol. E. S. Topping, father of Trail,\nwas there as best man, and enthusiastically delivered the first kiss to\nthe blushing bride. Rev. Mr. Irving,\nEpiscopalian minister, known as\n\"Father Pat\", performed the ceremony in the Pacific Hotel.\nMr. Hannah, prominent mining\nman, was there with Mrs. Hannah,\nwho acted as bridesmaid. Also present for the occasion were Cap\nRitchie of the Ritchie Hotel, Mr. and\nMrs. White of the White's Hotel, Mr.\nand Mrs. Kaiser of the Kaiser Hotel,\nand Mr. and Mrs, Snyder of the\nSnyder Hotel. The Crown Point was\nalso represented. It might be\npointed out that Trail was booming\nat that time and was a stepping-off\nplace to Rossland.\nA year or so later Dr. William\nTrophies Awarded\nAl Graduation\nDinner in Kaslo\nKASLO, B.C., July 23\u2014A banquet honoring the graduation class\nof the Kaslo High School was held\nin the King George Hotel. Graduates, members of the School Board\nof Trustees, teachers and parents\nwere entertained at dinner. Schools\nInspector E. E. Hyndman was the\nguest speaker of the evening.\nFollowing a delicious dinner, the\ntoast to the King was proposed by\nMiss Fumi Matsuzaki, Mayor G. S.\nBaker on behalf of the City extended greetings and congratulations.\nMiss June Nomland proposed a\ntoast to the Board of School Trustees  to  which   Chairman  of\nBoard,   J.   Cochran   replied.\nIftil\nH. Logan, Mrs. John Wrinkle and\nMrs. George McGaughey\nHoyes, who passed on two or three\nyears ago, brought his first baby into the world, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. George McGaughey. This\ndaughter is now Mrs. H. H. Logan\nof Nelson.\nMrs. McGaughey's 9ister, Nellie\nBullock, now Mrs. John Wrinkle,\nresided in Nelson until 1912, and is\nnow at the Coast. Her father left\nTrail for Nelson to start a brickyard here. His friends of those days\nincluded John Houston, Mayor; R.\nG. Joy, still in -Nelson, and Ven.\nArchdeacon F. H. Graham, now in\nTrail.\nMrs. McGaughey can recall many\nhumorous incidents, too numerous\nto mention here. Several of them\nconcern Father Pat, and with\ntwinkle in her eyes she remembers\nthe time on Sunday, no congregation having turned out to the community church, he loudly rang a\ncowbell, with obvious results. Often\nhe would enter into saloons to ask\nthe people if they were going to\nchurch.\nMine, Mill Executive Urges Gov't\nTo Accept Malik (ease-Fire Proposals\nExecutive board of B.C. district\nunion, International Union of Mine,\nMill and Smelter Workers, has wired Prime Minister St. Laurent urging the Canadian government to adopt Jacob Malik's proposals for ending the Korean war.\nThe   executive,   at a meeting in\nthe Trail,  unanimously endorsed pro-\nMiss P\u00b0sa's of the Peace Council for\n-   -...  -_  a\nPat Halleran favored the party with pact o\u00a3 tne five Sreat powers to en-\na violoncello solo. sure world peace, according to a re-\nValedictory  address  by  Donald 8*5? from tha Union's district office.\nCunningham was replied to by D.\nKay on behalf of the teaching staff.\nAWARDS RECEIVED\nAn interesting feature of the program was the presenting of various\ntrophies.\nThe P.T.A. Cup awarded for the\nhighest score obtained on Field\nDay was presented by the President, Mrs. W. V. Drayton to Murdith Moody, who accepted the\ntrophy on behalf of the House of\nBlack Hawks. The K.R.A, trophy,\nawarded for best score during the\nyear in sports, was presented by\nPrincipal G. J. Dickson to Gilbert\nLind who represented the House\nof Cardinals.\nThe Student Council cups awarded for highest individual scores\nmade on Field Day were presented\nby Mr. Dickson to Gail MacPherson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. H.\nMacPherson, and Clarke Bowker,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Bowker.\nAt the close of the program Miss\nLeona Riley, on behalf of the High\nSchool students presented Principal\nG. J. Dickson with a fine leather\nbrief case.\nIn   the   graduating   class   were\nDonald Cunningham, Mikio Shin-\nmotor, June Nomland\nsuzaki,\nBendis,\nIt dispatched the following tele\ngram to the Prime Minister: \"The\nB.C. District Executive Board, International Union of Mine Mill and\nSmelter Workers urge that the Canadian government take immediate\nsteps to end the, useless waste of\nCanadian lives in Korea by adopting\nthe proposals of Jacob Malik to end\nthe Korean conflict.\"   ..\nThe board also registered protest\nagainst what it termed \"the recently\nenacted amendment to the Criminal\nCode which infringe on civil liberties even to the extent that criticism\nof .government is punishable by-\nseven years imprisonment.\"\nThe board authorized a leave of\nabsence from board duty for district secretary David McGhee, formerly of Kimberley, to enable him\nto work as international representative, and directed district president\nKen Smith, who has for the past\nseveral months been attached to the\nNelson and district local, to return\nto the Vancouver office.\nA report by regional director Har.\nvey Murphy told of bargaining, organizational work in Canada and\nresults for the United Steel Workers of America ih their \"raids\" or\nMine, Mill locals in Canada and the\nUnited States. Mine, Mill, it was re,\nported, has grown to be one of the\nlargest unions in Canada, with more\nthan 30,000 members.\nThe Board discussed the effect of\nwidespread construction work in\nthe Province, and authorized the re\nglonal director . to continue talks\nwith the A.F.L. building trades with\na view to avoiding jurisdictional\ndisputes and at the same time assur.\ning maintenance of good working\nconditions for members working on\nthe .projects. '\nFined on H.I.S. Charge\nCRANBROOK, B. C, July S \u2014\nCharles Wormington of Kimberley\npleaded guilty to a charge of failure to pay Hospital Insurance\nwhen he appeared in City Court\nbefore Stipendiary Magistrate, A,\nK. Cartwright.\nFred W. Barry, barrister of Kimberley,  appeared for the  accused\nand  requested  a  suspended  sentence. No excuse was offered by\nFumi Mat-1 Mr. Wormington.\nLeona    Riley,    Margaret     A fine of $5 or five days in jail,\nMaureen    Syddall,    and' and 30 days was given in which\nAgnes Webber. After the banquet\nthe party adjourned to the School\nAuditorium  where   a  dance\nheld.\nREASONS\nWHY\nits your best\nGIN BUY\nHIRAM\nWALKERS DRYGIN\n\u2014   O I.S 1111 I D    AND    BOTTLED    IN    CANADA\nto pay back premiums of I\nHerridge Back\nFrom Ottawa\nNAKUSP, B. \u00ab*., July 3- H. W.\nHerridge, M. P. for Kootenay West,\nhas returned from the Parliamentary sessions in Ottawa.\nKootenay Pioneer\nDies at Coast\nROSS SPUR, B.C., July S \u2014 One\nof Kootenay's pioneers, Mrs. Jean-\nnette I. Scovil, has died in Vancouver.\n\" The 89-year-old woman ls survived by two daughters, Mrs.\nCharles Harding of Grantham Landing and Mrs. Leonard Wood of Ross\nSpur, 12 grandchildren, 32 greatgrandchildren and two great greatgrandchildren.\nMrs. Scovil came to Appledale in\n1915, with her husband James W.\nScovil. They bought a store and\npost office there, operating it until\nthey bought a farm at Perrys, B.C.\nAfter the death of her husband,\nMrs. Scovil lived with her daughter,\nMrs. Harding at Grantham Landing.\nIn the early period, Mrs. Scovil\non her New Brunswick farm, lived\na pioneer life, shearing sheep, spinning the wool into yarn, knitting\nthe yarn in[o socks, sweaters and\nmen's underwear, weaving it into\ndresses, blankets, into cloth for\nmen's pants, shirts.\nIn her loom she wove cotton for\ntablecloths, towels, bedspreads; she\nwove rags into quilts and rugs.\nShe gathered the wheat straw\nI from the harvest in the Fall and\nmade hats for the family. She made\nher own soap. She made sugar and\nsyrup for the year round from\nmaple sap. She knitted bedspreads,\npieced and quilted quilts, hooked\nrugs for the floor. Gathered herbs\nfrom the fields for medicines.\nShe was superintendent of the\nlocal Sunday School.\nShe lived on a 200-acre farm,\nwith cows, horses, sheep and\nchickens. On that ' 200 acres of\ntimberland, Mr. and Mrs. Scovil\nchopped down trees for space to\nbuild a house, and hauled the brush\naway with oxen.\nJob Sludy Awards\nTo Six\nDisfricf Sf udenfs\nF. Gunderson of Stanley Humphries Junior-Senior High School\nat Castlegar won first prize in the\nNelson, Trail, Creston, Castlegar,\nArrow Lakes and Grand Forks Inspectoral Districts of the Vancouver' Board of Trade, B. C. Products\nBureau Job Study competition for\n1951. His prize-winning job study\nwas \"The Stenographer in Business.\"\nSecond honors for the district\nwent to a Rossland Junior-Senior\nHigh School boy, Leone Lawlis who\nwrote on \"Industrial Medicine\"\nwhile Margaret Tsujimura of Nelson High School took third prize\nwith her study of the \"Textile Industry.\"\nIn the Kimberley, Cranbrook Inspectoral District, Bernice Wolver-\nton took top honors for the Kimberley Junior-Senior High School with\nher essay on the \"Mining Industry,\"\nTo Inga Carlson, also of Kimberley High, went second place for her\nwork on the \"Salmon Fisheries\"\nwhile a Fernie student, Margaret\nParker, received third standing.\nOver 8000, representing every\nschool district in the province, took\npart in the job study'program\nwhich, in its fifth year, is designed\nto acquaint students with the.wide\nrange of industrial, commercial, and\nagricultural activity, and the great\nmany employment possibilities\navailable to them in British Columbia.\nAll winners of first prize bursaries are eligible to compete for the\nBoard of Trade-Pacific National\nExhibition grand award of $250 for\nvocational training after graduation.\nThe school attended by the winner\nstudent will receive the Vocational\nGuidance Shield, recently presented\nto the Department of Education for\nannual competition between schools.\nJeane Matthews\nComing Here\nJeane Matthews, Ice Cycles star,\nwill pay a brief call on Nelson this\nSummer before joining the show in\nAtlantic City.\nThis was announced by Mary\nRose Thacker, whose annual Summer figure skating school opened\nMonday. The Vancouver girl who\nrose in the figure skating world was\na pupil of Miss Thacker when an\namateur.\nMiss Thacker has added ballet to\nthe course in figures, free skating\nand dancing this season, and\nhas an enrolment of about 70\nbladesters from various parts of\nCanada and the United States. This\nis approximately the same number\nshe has had in previous seasons^\nThis season housing problems for\nthe skaters have been partially\nsolved in a novel way. A girls' residence has been established complete\nwith house mother and cook, for\ny o u n g er, unaccompanied girls.\nAbout a dozen girls are living there.\nThe system, which no other such\nschbol has adopted, is being \"well\nreceived\" by the girls' parents.\nRadio Men\nTo Meet Here\nMajor-Genera! Stein, provincial\ndirector of civil defence, will be the\nmain speaker when B.C. Association\nof Broadcasters holds its Summer\nconvention in Nelson July 23 and\n24.\nAt least 25 representatives from\nprovincial broadcast stations, companies serving the stations, and\nPress News Service and national\nsales representatives will arrive for\nthe meeting.\nRadio stations CKLN at Nelson\nand CJAT at Trail will be co-hosts\nto the visitors.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor j\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.   I\nMrs. John Hlntx\nOLDTIMER of Trail Is Mrs.\nJohn Hlnti, now of Nelson, who\nsince her arrival by boat In May,\n1896, has seen the Silver City,\nnow celebrating Its golden jubilee,\ndevelop.\nHer husband, the late John\nHlntz, operated a dairy at War-\nfield for some years,\n17-Year-Old\nCrowned Queen of\nArrow Lakes\nNAKUSP, B.C., July 3\u2014Queen\nof the Arrow Lakes for 1951-52 Is\nLorraine Wensley. The young\ngirl, who was celebrating her 17th\nbirthday Dominion Day, was\ncrowned at the gigantic celebrations In Nakusp.\nH. CHESTER, ONCE\nOF DISTRICT,\nPROMOTED IN CPR\nWINNIPEG, July 3\u2014A. B. Burpee, Superintendent of Transportation here for the Canadian Pacific\nRailway's Prairie and Pacific Regions since 1942, went on holidays\nFriday prior to retirement Aug. 1\nwith better than 50 years' service.\nHis- move to the pensioners' list will\nmark the first time since 1876 that\nthere has not been a Burpee on the\nactive C.P.R. payroll. His grandfather was first agent at Edmunds-\nton, N. B., for the New Brunswick\nRailway, later taken over by the\nCanadian Pacific; his father retired\nas Superintendent at Brownville,\nMaine.\nHe will be succeeded by Henry\nChester, of Montreal, presently assistant to the General Superintendent of Transportation, and who\nworked under Mr. Burpee as Inspector of Transportation. Mr. Chester's appointment takes effect August 1.\nMr. Chester has been with the\nroad since 1916, joining at Cranbrook. He was chief dispatcher at\nNelson for three years before coming here in 1944 as Inspector of\nTransportation, and has been in\nMontreal since last March as assistant to the General Superintendent\nof Transportation there.\nH.  B. PENNY \u2022;';'\n. . . Dominion Government District Inspector of Electricity and\nGas for the past 29 years, Is retiring early in July. Prior to\ncoming here Mr. Penny spent four\nyears In Calgary where he was\nemployed In the same capacity.\nOn his last visit to East Kootenay, the Cranbrook and Kimberley electrical department staffs\npresented him with two checks\nin appreciation of services \"beyond the call of duty.\"\nMr. Penny plans to remain In\nNelBon for the time being.\nJ. F. Clark of Vancouver Is\ncoming here to take over the\nduties of Inspector temporarily.\nBread Prices Up\n2 Cents a Loaf\nThe price of a loaf of bread has\nrisen to 16 cents in Nelson.\nThe two-cent increase on a loaf\nhas been put into effect because of\nincreased prices of flour and\npowdered milk supplied the bakeries.\nBread prices have moved up from\nVancouver to Eastern Canada In\nthe first increase in a year.\nEx-Nelsonite Passes\nAccountants Exams\nA former Nelson man, Robert\nMorrow, has passed his final examinations in accountancy.\nMr. Morrow, son of Mrs. Margaret Morrow, 1101 Carbonate\nStreet, attended Nelson schools and\nserved in the Royal Canadian Navy\nin the Second World War.\nHe has a public accounting practice in Vancouver.\nSALES AND SERVICE\nIS INCORPORATED\nNotice that the Nelosn Sales and\nService Ltd. was Incorporated under\nthe Companies Act is given in the\nB.C. Gazette.\nAuthorized capital is ?40,000.\nThe company was established to\ndeal to retail and wholesale merchandise, and to service and repair\nall kinds of electrical and mechanical goods.\nBurslem in Staffordshire, England, birthplace of Josiah Wedgwood in 1730, is known as the\n\"Mother of the Potteries.\".\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4,  IMI \u2014 **\nBuggies Play Tunes\/\nTrains Chug About\nAt Trail Hobby Show\nBy   LOUIS   FRYLING\nThe fsurth annual Trail and District hobby and handicraft exhibition, sponsored and managed by the\nJunior Chamber of Commerce in\nconjunction with the Jubilee\nSociety, is proving popular.\nVisitors, not only saw the results\nof the hard work of ardent hobbyists\nbut actually were able to watch\nsome of them busy at their various\ncrafts. More than 100 contributors\nentereoVseven or eight hundred individual items, one or two exhibiting as many as forty or fifty pieces.\nThe purpose of the show is to encourage people to develop worthwhile activities for their leisure\nhours.\nA wealth of art, photography,\npainted portraits and scenes, sketches, plaques, needle and embroidery\nworks, Mexican coats, woven pictures, copper foil pictures, cartoons,\nand items too many to begin to\nmention, adorned the walls of the\nhigh  school   gym.\nOne set of pictures of groat interest was painted in watercolors by\nstudents and depicted the history of\nTrail.\nTables set up throughout the\ngym carried a variety of hobby articles, to mention a few at random,\ncarved, ancient treasure chests,\nglass houses (one made \"of discarded\nCreston Firm\nGets Contract\nFor Remac School\nREMAC, B.C., July 3- \u2014 Inland\nConstruction Company of Creston\nhas been awarded the contract for\nconstruction of an elementary\nschool here.\nThe firm's bid was for $10,785.\nThe only other tender received by\nboard of trustees of Nelson School\nDistrict No. 7 was from Reeves\nMacDonald Mine for $12,500.\nThe Creston firm buiit an addition to* the Salmo high school last\nyear.\nTo Unveil\nCairn JulyS\nTRAIL, B. C, July 3 -' Unveiling and dedication services of the\ncairn built, by the Kinsmen of\nTrail, at the site of historic old\nFort Sheppard will be held July 5.\nA lengthy discussion of projects\nto be undertaken by the club this\nFall was held at the Kinsmen Club\nmeeting and members decided to\nadopt the annual Hallowe'en parties, in a modified form and to hold\nradio auctions.\nMembers also agreed to donate\n$50 to the local Red Cross for their\n\"loan cupboard.\"\ndental tubes), pottery, airplanes,\nspeed boats, electric trains, woodwork of every description, card\ntable with adjustable built-in ash\ntrays and beverage holders, many\ntypes of collections, leather work,\nstep-by-step course in embroidery\nand even a radio station.\nYes, a real radio broadcasting system was set up for everyone to,\nwatch in operation. C.J.A.T. were\nunable to bring their soundproof\nglass broadcasting room in the dpor\nof the gym, but they agreed to\noperate anyway, requesting silence\nonly on certain programs.\nMUSICAL\nCONVEYANCES\nIn another corner could be seen\na variety of musical, pioneer conveyances including covered wagons,\nbuckboards, stage coaches, fringed\nsurreys, top buggies, each capable\nof playing its individual tune either\nby plugging into the wall socket or\nwinding by hand. Such tunes as\n\"Wagon Wheels\", \"Buttons and\nBows,\" emit in a melodius tone from,\nthe depths of these artistic little\ncarts to the response of the operator.\nA hobbyist tying flies right before your very eyes! Watch close\nand you may be able to do it yourself. That is if you get the necessary equipment, can find the right\nkind of feathers and have the patience to spend hours and hours\npracticing. W. E. Wallington tied\nthem in an average of about five\nminutes each. There was one variety\nthough, with a curled tail, called\nthe Sail Fly, which took half an\nhour  to  complete.\nIn a floor area of about 12 feet\nby 20 feet sit Ed. Johnson and his\nson Dick working on their model\nelectric train with its three hundred and fifty feet of traok, 'seven\nlocomotives, hoboes riding free and\na town at one end.\nDonilie-\nby VALDA SHERMAN\nMany mysterious cliangca\ntake place in yonr body as\nyon mature. Now, th\u00ab\nglands nnder your arms begin to secrete daily a net*\ntype of perspiration containing sub?\nstances which will\u2014if they reach yoiif\ndress-u.causeugly stains and clinging odot\nYou'll face this problem throughout\nWomanhood. It's not enough jnerely to\nstop the odor of this perspiration. Yoa\nmust now UBe a deodorant that stops tha\nperspiration itself before it reaches \u2014\nand ruins\u2014your clothes.\nAs doctors know, hot all deodorants\nptop both perspiration and odor. But\nArrid doesF It's been proved that the\nnew cream deodorant Arrid stops underarm perspiration 1 to 3 days safely\n-keeps underarms dry and sweet.\nRemember this, too. Arrid's antiseptic\naction kills odor on contact \u2014 provents\nformation of odor up to 48 hours and\nkeeps you \"shower-bath\" fresh. And it's\nsafe for skin\u2014safe for fabrics.\nSo, don't bo' half-sofa. Don't risk\nnaif-safe deodorants. Be Arrid-atifet Vbs\nArrid ia be sure. Arrid with Creamogen\n\u2022will not dry out, and it's so pleasant and\nsasy to apply. Get Arrid-Canada'a larg.\nist selling deodorant\u2014today!\nNew Denver Man's\nMother Dies\nNEW DENVER, B.C., July 3 \u2014\nMrs. Mary Campbell of Toronto,\nOnt, 90-year-old mother of Les R.\nCampbell of New Denver, has died.\nMr. Campbell, postmaster here,\nhas gone to Toronto for the funeral\nservices.\nMrs. Campbell is survived by two\nsons and three daughters.\nSew Swiss Discovery\nfor Eczemas, Boils, Psoriasis, Leg Ulcers\nAuthentic photoaroph of Mr. I. Ciller on November IsSth,\nsuffering   tor  20   ycors  from   Eczema  oil   over  the  body,\nbefore the f \"99\" Treatment.\nPMINENT Scientists have discovered\n\u25a0M that the lack of unsaturated fatty acids\nin human nutrition is one of the main\ncauses of skin diseases, such as Eczemas,\nBoils, Leg Ulcers and Psoriasis. The\nmodern diet, in which these essential\nsubstances are often completely lacking,\nhave brought about a deficiency in a great\nnumber of individuals.\nRemarkable Swiss Discovery\nA Swiss chemist, Dr. W. Schmitz, succeeded\nafter 10 years of research work in extracting from pure vegetable oils an unsaturated fatty acid in a concentration of 99%\nand therefore named F \"99\". Thanks to\nthis hitherto unattained purity, F\"99\" is\nso readily absorbed into the blood stream,\nthat it has a decisive biological activity in\nthe treatment of skin diseases.\nAuthentic photograph of Mr  J. Blllor on  February 11th.\nThe Eczema was completely cleared up offer H  .cots of\nf\"99\" Treatment.\nNatural way to clear up skin troubles\nF \"99\" is not a synthetic drug but a\nconcentrate of natural nutritive substances.\nIt is so harmless that it may be given\neven to infants without any hesitation.\nIte remarkable efficiency in the treatment\nof Eczemas, Boils, Leg Ulcers and Psoriasis\nhas astonished even Skin Specialists of\ninternational reputation. As its name\nsuggests, the F \"99\" Two-Way Treatment\nacts internally as well as externally. While\nF 99 Capsules or Liquid give the body\nthe power to suppress the cause and\n\u00ab>mbat successfully skin disease, the F\n99 Ointment treats its external, visible\nsymptoms. To many thousands of skin\nsufferers all over the world, F \"99\" Two-\nWay Treatment has already proved its\ntremendous value and is being used with\noutstanding results even on cases where all\nordinary treatments have failed.\nIllustrated Booklet on F\"99\"\ncontaining all the Interesting JacU concerning this\nremarkable new Swim Discovery which will bring\nnew health and happiness to Innumerable akin\nsufferers, can be obtained freo ot charge from any\ngood drag store or by sending your name and\naddress to Diva Laboratories, DepL.30 p.o. Box\n116, Victoria. B. C.\nM\nF99\nTwo-Way Treatment\nfor Skin Diseases\nNow Available At All Drug Stores\n 4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, I9SJ\n. \"AWestem-a-Night\" Is TV and\nCowboy's Success Menu\u2014Tim McCoy\n. By BOB THOMAS was visiting some old Indian friends\nHOLLYWOOD, July 3 (AP) -on lne \"Warbonnet\" set. Why have\nWestern (tors\u2014today's and yestor- \u00ab,\u201e.,\u201e\u201e\u201e. \u201e\u201et,u,\u201en \u201e.,s, .\u201e\u201e\u201e#\u201e\u201e\u201e\nday's-are   enjoying   their   biggest Wr-1 0n tv? S\"=at P\u00b0Pu*\nboom, thanks to television. \"3 on JV?,    , \u201e u     ,A \u201e,\u201eu\nThe pattern was set by Bill Boyd,,;\"\u00bb\u00ab *H*\u00abe simple,\" he said. \"When\nwho rose to fame with the new me- kids went to the movies to see\ndium. Others soon followed suit. Westerns, they went once a week,\nGene Autry got into T Va year ago,on Saturday. But now kids can see\nRoy Rogers is planning a plunge, Westerns every day of .the week.\"\nnow that he is free of his studio Paramount has Imported some au-\ncontract. ' thentic  Indians  for  \"Warbonnet\",\nAmong the. others seen regularly and the troupe is headed by Chief\non TV by horse-opera addicts: Bob Ben American Horse, Chairman of\nSteele, Hoot Gibson, Gabby Hayes, the Eight Reservations Council of\nJohn Wayne, Guy Madison, Johnny the Sioux Tribe, from Pine Ridge,\nMack Brown, Andy Devine, Tim S. D. Also In the film is Chief John\nTyler and Tim McCoy. Sitting Bull, 01-year-old son of Slt-\nI encountered McCoy while hetlnfi Bull.\nKaslo Notes\nI Kimberley Woman's\n'Mother Passes\nlowing    an\nmonths.\nIllness    of    several\nKASLO,  B.C.\u2014Mrs.  R.  Hughes\nreturned from a visit with relatives    KIMBERLEY, B. C, July 3\u2014Mr.\nin Spokane. and Mrs. W. E. Leaman of Chap\nMrs. C. Cameron and young ion man Crimp have been called to Spo\nTeddy   and   daughter   Colleen   of kane by the death of the latter's\nWasa, are visiting Mrs. Comerons mother, Mrs. Zella Peckenpaugh.\nmother,  Mrs.- M.  McQueen. I    Well known ln Chapman Camp\nMiss Heather Abey, who was a!'nd ^}mh\"]ey' h,aying ,visJ'e5\nstudent in Notre Dame College lni^ff \u00bb\u00ab*? Mrs. Peckinpaugh died\nNelson, is spending her holidays! !n the 0 Brian Nursing Home fol\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nR. Abey.\nMrs, R. Hughes has as guest Mrs.\nC. G. Metzler of Beaton.\nThe Hon, H. C. Green, eit route to\nMl home in Vancouver, ls spending a lew days with his mother,\nMrs. S. H. Green,\nMin Alice Augustine, teacher ht\nTrail, is planning to spend her holidays here as guest of her brothers,\nPaul and Ernest Augustine.\n' Mrs, 3. Stocking returned from a\ntwo months visit with relatives near\nDes Moines, Iowa.\nMn. T. Holme has as guests, Mr.\nind Mrs. Hunter Woodbourne formerly of Trail, now of Victoria.\nMrs. Q, J. Dickson, Principal of\nthe Kaslo Schools, left for Victoria\nwhere he will assist in marking examination papers.\nDr. Shi-mo-Takahara returned\nfrom an extended visit with his two\nsons hi Montreal. On his return he\nmotored, from Montreal to Kaslo,\naceompanied by his nephew Lloyd\nSHtmo-Takahara.\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Coot* and two\nChildren of Calgary are guests at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Mc\nDerby at Mirror Lake. Mrs. Coote\nls a daughter of Mrs, R. O. German.\nMrs, L. P. Gormley of Nelson,\nvisited at the home of Mr. and Mrs,\nJ. L. Humphrey for a few days.\nMrs. B. S. Spragg of London, Ing.\naunt of Mrs. F. C. Yoxall, Is spending a three-month6' holiday at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. P. V. Yoxall\nat; Mirror Lake..        ..\nMiss Virginia Sarina of Shutty\nBench spent a holiday with friends\nln Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Butler of Medicine Hat, were guests at the home\nof Capt. and Mrs. West at Shutty\nBench.\nR. WaDac* of the Forestry staff\nat Howser spent a few days at his\nhome at Shutty Bench.\nMies May Meers of Nelson h\n\u2022pending the long weekend with\nher mother, Mrs. M, Mean at Shutty\nBench.\nSirdar Notes\nSIRDAR, B. C. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nBjorge of Edmonton were guests\nof Mrs. Homaeth.\nMr, and Mrs. Art Lombardo and\nchildren, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nLombardo and children of Vancouver are visiting their father and\ngrandfather, Pete Lombardo.\nMb?, and Mrs. T. Wacolchik visited\nrelatives in Riondel.\nMr. and Mrs. Jim Paseusso of\nCranbrook are visiting the former's\nmother, and brother and family.\nL. Wright and daughter, Grace,\nattended the wedding of Marlene\nBicotun at Creston.\nM, MeBeath, C.P.R. operator, wife\nand baby have left for Mission, B.C.,\nwhere he has been transferred.\nMrs. L. Wright is visiting her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. C, Murnane in Vancouver.\nEdgar Hornseth of Wardner, B.C.,\nhas been visiting Mrs. Hornseth and\nArlene'for a few days.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nFOR FLAVOUR WITH ZEST\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-H. R. Allyn\nwas a guest of his brother-in-law\nand sister, Mr. and Mrs. Norman\nF. Brookes, a.nd was accompanied\nback to Oliver, B.C., by his wife and\ndaughter Allison, who were visiting here for six weeks.\nMiss Florence A. Moss, who spent\nher two weeks holidays in Nelson\nand Rossland returned home accompanied by Mr, and Mrs. Ernest\n0. Beaulieu and two daughters\nJeanette and Mary Ann of Rossland,\nwho visited Mrs. A. D. Kelsall during the weekend,\nNEW DENVER, B, C.-Mr. and\nMri. James A. Greer and Mr. and\nMrs. Charles W. Nelson returned\nfrom Salmon Arm, whera they at-\ntended tlie wedding of Mr. Nelson's\nniece, Miss Muriel Jean Nelson, and\nRobert Ramsey. They also visited\nMrs. Stuart Nelson and Mr. and Mrs.\nKenneth Nelson In Vernon.\nInspector and Mrs. R. S. Nelson of\nWinnipeg, Man., who attended the\nwedding of their daughter, Miss\nMuriel Jean Nelson, at Salmon Arm,\nare visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Nelson and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Greer\nen route home.\nNEW DENVER, B.C. \u2014 Mrs. V.\nPlager and baby daughter of Silverton have left Slocan. Community Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Schnaebele\nof Great Foils, Montana, were\nguests of the former's brother, Mr.\nand Mrs, Andrew Schnaebele.\nGus Schnaebele of New Westminster visited his brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew\nSchnaebele and daughter, Sharon.\nMr. and Mrs. Ernest Doney have\nreturned from Vancouver where\nthey visited friends.\nThe Turner Memorial United\nsSfourch Women's Association -are\nsponsoring Miss Velma Jean George\nfor a leadership course at the Naramata Christisn Leadership Youth\nTraining School. Miss George will\nleave on Saturday for Naramata.\nNEW DENVER, B.C. \u2014 Kay Aoy-\nama, who was a patient in Slocan\nCommunity Hospital, has been discharged.\nWilliam Hamm of the Western\nExploration Mines. Silverton, is a\npatient in Slocan Community Hospital.\nJ. Stevenson of Van Roi Mines.\nSilverton, has left Slocan Community Hospital.\nMiss Marion Ross, \"High School\nteacher, left for West Vancouver to\nvisit her mother, Mrs. Hoss.\nMrs. F. B. Tessman and son Terry\nleft for Mankota, Sask., to visit the\nformer's mother, Mrs. A. Scott and\nsister, Miss D, Scott. They were accompanied by Miss Ruby Dunn,\nPublic Health Nurse, who will visit\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman\nDunn, at Ogema, Sask. They will\nmotor via Yellowstone National\nPark and will be gone one month.\nKiyonl Oikawa, who was a. patient ln Slocan Community Hospital, has been discharged.\nMiss Joy McPhaii left to visit her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. McPhaii\nat Corra Lynn before leaving for\nVictoria to attend Summer schopl.\nWilliam Jupp and son, Gary, and\n! David Johnson and son, Barry of\nNakusp, were-visitors at the Butlin\nhome.\nMakiko Oikawa, who was a patient in Slocan Community Hospital, has been discharged.\nMrs. C, Raymond Tippie and family left for Invermere where Mr.\nTippie is Forest Ranger.\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Leblanc of\nLumby are guests of the latters parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Balbirnie.\nMiss D. Leblanc, who attends\nschool ln Nelson, is visiting Mr. and\nMrs. W. G. Balbirnie en route to\nher home at Lumby.\nHerbert Crellin is a patient in\nSlocan Community Hospital.\nMIsb Cathrine Worth of Lumby ls\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Balbirnie for the Summer months. ,\nJack Cornwall and Trevor Maloney, both of Ashcroft, are visiting\nMrs. D. Pearson and son Tommy\nand Mrs. Belle Pendry and brother,\nHerbert Crellin.\nMr. and Mrs. Les Balbirnie and\ndaughter Ileen of Abbotsford are\nvisiting the former's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. G. Balbirnie.\nDistilled, Blended and\nBottled in Scotland\nNEW   LISKEARD,   Ont.   (CP)\u2014\nWolf signs are numerous in Temis-\n26(4 ot bodies    kaming and there, has been considerable loss of game, according, to\nBoard or by the Government of Fred Widdifieid, wolf bounty offi\nThis advertisement is not published cer. Prospectors and hunters report\nor displayed by the Liquor Control I a considerable number of wolves\nBritish Columbia.      ; | in lhe nearby townships.\nNakusp Notes\nNAKUSP, B. C. - Mr. and Mrs,\nEdward Munn have as their holiday guests, Mrs, Munh's brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr, and Mrs, R, J,\nTaylor and Mr. Bob Foote, all of\nCranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs, George H. Keys returned from Trail where they were\nguests ot their son and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. nnd Mrs. Horace Keys.\nMr. and Mrs, Paul It, Henke,\ntheir daughter Lorraine and young\nson Darrel left to spend the. holiday\nwekend in Vernon, They were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. G. W.\nBattershall, who spent the holidays\nwith their son-in-law and daughter,\nMr, and Mri. Gordon Watson of\nSalmon Arm.\nW. Claridge of Arrow Park, who\nhas been a patient in the Arrow\nLakes Hospital, returned to his\nhome,\nMrs. W, H, Davies, who attended\nthe funeral of the late A, Peachy of\nSilverton, accompanied by Mr. and\nMrs. Albert Johnson of Burton, re\nturned Tuesday.\nClem Buesnel has as his house\nguests his niece, Mrs. A. E. Crocker\nand daughters, Esther, Doris and\nMrs. P. Llbeck, of' Fresno,. Calif.,\nMiss Martha Harlln of Oakland,\nCalif., and Miss Yuk Yau Chun of\nHonolulu, Hawaii.\nMr. and Mrs. Ed Munn had as\ntheir guests Mrs. Munn's brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Agler of Pasadena, Call.\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Roder ret-\nturned from Henna, Alta,, where\nthey visited their former home,\nBernard Oxenham, who has just\ncompleted his High School is being\nemployed by the Department of\nMines and Technical Department\ngroup who are engaged ln the district.\nMiss A, Anderson spent the holt-\nday weekend in Trail, guest of Mr.\nand Mrs, Gordon Henke.\nRev. and Mrs, Thomas MiteheH,\naccompanied by Mn. T. W. Harvey\nand her sl6ter, Mrs. M, L, Barnes,\nwho is visiting her from England\nwere visitors to New Denver.\nVisiting Nakusp over the holiday\nweekend were Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nRushton, Mrs. J. Argyle and daughter Karen and Miss Beth Rushton of\nPenticton.\nBobby Gaites of Vancouver Is the\nholiday guest of his grandparents,\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Wensley.\nMrs. M. Coulter of Vancouver h\nthe guest of her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Howell Jordan.\nGay Bailey and her oousln\nYvonne Gregory have left for Van\ncouver. They were accompanied by\nMiss Rae LaRue as far as Arrowhead.^\nMrs\". Splerman and daughter Marie of Revelstoke are the holiday\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson.\nMrs. W. Durrant of Revelstoke\nwas a Nakusp visitor en route to\nNelson where she will be the guest\nof her daughter and son-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. H. Doyle.\nMrs, Ernest Masters, who has\nbeen the guest of her brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. N. A,\nHerridge, left for her home in\nCampbell River.\nMrs. Ralph Islip and Mrs. Robert\nMcWhlrter returned from the Coast\nwhere they attended the Eastern\nStar Convention.\nDr. F. Allen, LL.D. of Winnipeg,\naccompanied by his sister, Miss A.\nA. Allen returned form Vancouver,\nwhere they have spent an extended\nholiday. Dr. Allen will visit here\nfor the Summer months.\nMr. Charles Wood returned from\nRevelstoke Saturday.\nMiss Winnifred Keys, R.N., of\nSpokane is the holiday guest of\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. H.\nKeys.\nMr. and Mrs. Jim Wiseman' and\nyoung daughter of Nelson are guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Hempseed.\nMr. and Mrs. A. B. S. Stanley\nhave as their house guests, Mrs.\nStanley's brother-in-law, Mr. Tom\nReid, and two daughters, Miss Betty\nand Miss Phyllis Reid of Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Grieve and baby\nson of Vancouver are holiday guests\nof Mrs. Grieve's brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mr\u00bb. Cyril Kershaw.\nProcter Notes\nPROCTER, B.C.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. R.\nA. Hibberd have left for Vancouver\nwhere they will spend the Summer\nholidays,\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Brady and son\nGordon have left by car for Regina,\naccompanied by their son William\nof Prince George.\nJ. Mucha has returned home from\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\nG. A. Harris has been a patient ln\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\nMrs. M. J. McDonald has as her\nguest her sister, Mrs. I. Burrows\nof Prince Albert, Sask.\nCapt. and Mrs. J. McLeod have\nas guests their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs, Erie Denny\nof Willow Point.\nMrs. D. Stewart is spending a few\ndays ln Trail, visiting her ion and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. G.\nStewart.\nJim Donaldson of Rldhdel spent\nthe holiday weekend at his home\nhere,\nBy MARGARET CARR\nSpring tables can take on all the\nbright freih colon of the out-of-\ndoors,\nA good example Is Colonial ham\nplatter, a hearty mixture of spaghetti and rosy cubed ham, with a\nspicy red cherry sauce and g crisp\ngreen parsley garnish.\nThis happy blend of three favorite foods makes a thrifty main dish\nthat has all the appearance of an\nexpensive one. The gentle bland-\nness of spaghetti picks up the flavors of the ham and cherry sauce\nso that each bite is rich in flavor.\nFor this tempting Colonial ham\nplatter, cube cooked ham and brown\nit ln a frying pan. Then make tho\ncherry sauce. Toss the ham with\ncooked elbow spaghetti and serve\nwith the sauce in > separate bowl\nor blended together.\nGood warm weather companions\nfor Colonial ham platter are crisp\nrelishes and rye bread with butter\nor margarine. A serving dish of\nstring beans completes the main\npart of the meal. For dessert, serve\nrhubarb shortcake.\nCOLONIAL HAM PLATTER\n2  cups cooked cubed ham\n(about % pound)\n1  tablespoon fat or drippings\nU4 cups cherry Juice (or cherry\nColonial Ham Platter\nA Colorful, Tasty Treat\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C. \u2014 Mrs.\nCotter, Vancouver, is visiting Mrs.\nM. A. Mooney.\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Palmer and\nbaby daughter of Kamloops visited\nthe former's mother and sisters here.\nBob Dunlop was taken to the Kootenay Lake General Hospital for\ntreatment.- - .  . .\nWalter Griffith,. Mrs. Sylvia Og-\nloff and baby son, and sisters Beatrice and Patricia Ring, West Creston, motored to the king residence\nhere, Beatrice staying with her mother for a week.\nMrs. L. Johnson and Rueben of\nVancouver have come to spend the\nSummer with her son-in-law and'\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. L. Pratte.\nMiss Eileen Reilly, who has completed her year at Normal school,\nVictoria, is home for the Summer.\nJuice and water to mske up\nthat amount)\n2  tablespoons lemon Juice\n1 pleoe stick cinnamon\n2 tablespoons cornstarch\n*4 teaspoon salt\nDash allspice\n3 tablespoons water\n2 cups soured pitted cherries\n6 ouncei elbow ipaghotti,\nBrown ham ln fat or drippings in\nheavy frying pan. Add cherry Juice,\nlemon Jules' and stick-cinnamon and\nbring to boll. Combine cornstarch\nsalt, allspice and water and mix\nwell, Gradually stir Into boiling\njuice and cook until thick and clear,\nstirring constantly, Fold ln cherries.\nCook spaghetti in boiling salted\nwater until tender (about 8 minutes). Drain and rinse. Stir lightly\nin.to ham mixture and heat thoroughly. Makes 5 to 6 servings.\nThere's good news in this new\nshortcake recipe you can make \"on\nthe double\" to provide de luxe\nshortcake desserts quickly for your\nfamily and guests. Serve double-\nquick shortcake de luxe with such\nrefreshing springtime fruits as rhubarb, pineapple and strawberries.\nDOUBLE-QUICK .\nSHORTCAKE DE LUXE\n1V4 cups Bitted pastty flour\nH cup sugar\nHarrop Notes\nHARROP, B.C. - F, Neale spent\na few days in Nelson visiting relatives,\nMiss K. Renton of Nelson visited\nMrs, J. Berry,\nMrs. D. Fairbank ond her young\nson have arrived home from Koo-\ntoney Lake General Hospital in\nNelson.\nHARROP, B.C. - Mrs, T. Neale\nvisited her son and daughter-in-law,\nMr, and Mrs. F. Neale of North\nShore.\nMrs. T. C. Cooke from Crane Valley, Sask., Is visiting Mr, and Mrs.\nT. Neale.\nMiss Roberta Stevenson is spending a few days at Trail, gucBt of\nMr, and Mrs, Georgo Swanson.\nMr. and Mrs, F. Lippingwell and\nchildren visited Mr, and Mrs. V, C.\nRowley.\n2    teaspoons baking powder\n% teaspoon salt\ni   tit\n2-3 cup shortening, melted\n.Mix and sift the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. Add the egg\nmilk and shortening, Mix until thii\nbatter is smooth (1 minute). Pour\ninto greased 8-inch layer pan. Bake\nin moderately hot oven (400 deg. F.\n251 minutes. Cut into pie-shaped\nwedges, then split into 2 layers.\nSpread bottom layer lightly with\nbutler or margarine, cover with desired fruit or berries. Replace top,\nadd more fruit and whipped cream.\nSpouse-Switching \u2022\nPlan Botched\nPORT ANGELES, Wash., July 3\n(AP)\u2014Two couples who planned to\nswitch spouses had their plans interrupted yesterday by the judge\nwho gave them their divorces.\nLast Friday Judge Max Church\ngranted Elnora Rondeau, 21, a divorce from hor husband, Virgil T,\nRondeau, 20, and Elizabeth Fraker,\n20, a divorce from William A, Fraker.\nA few minutes later the couples\nappeared in the County Auditor's\noffice to fill out applications for\nmarriage licences with a switch of\nspouses.\nAfter the required three-day wait\nthe two men went to the Auditor's\noffice today to pick up their licences, They wore told that Judge\nChurch had directed the licences\nnot bo issued. The judge,' meanwhile, had issued an order vacating\nthe divorce decrees for tho two\ncouples. He said he acted after\nlearning of their marriage plans.\nThe London School of Medicine\nfor Women, was founded in 1874\nby Sophia Jex-Blake\nAuxiliary Adjourns\nROSSLAND, B.C., July 3 \u2014\nMothers' Auxiliary to the Scouts\nand Cubs has wound up Its business\nuntil Fall. Mrs. H. Knudsgaardi\npresident, thanked members for\ntheir help on catering for the opening of the new Junior-Senior high\nschool when a report on thii pro-\nject was read.\nLEEDS, England (CP)\u2014Food Inspectors here discovered a loaf of\nbread containing part of a dead\nmouse. The bakery that sold it wai\nfined \u00a3200.\nNO CONSTIPATION\nSINGE 1919!\n\"Way back in 1919 . ; , I wai\ntroubled with chronic constipation. Then I started eating ALL-\nBRAN every day.\nI've been regular\never since!\" Harold\nHall, 113 Somerset\nSt., St John, N.B.\nJust one of many\nunsolicited letters\nfrom ALL-BRAN\nusers. If you are\ntroubled with con- - -\natinntion, due to lack of dietary\nDullc, do as this man docs. Eat an\nounce of tasty Kellogg's al\u00bbbbaj\u00bb\ndaily, and drink plenty of water.\nIf not completely satisfied after 10\ndays, return empty carton to\nKellogg's, London, Ont. Gat\nDOUBLE YOUB MONET \u00abAOsjrJ .\nIt's built for\nthe years ahead!\nFord's famous \"Lifeguonf\" Body is bafc of\nheavy gauge steel... boA for the vcaa ahead\nwith extra strength and durability.\nUiuiiJ brings Vou\n43look-ahead\"features\nIfs Ac Ford that forward planning created\u2014built for the fears ahead\nwith 43 Took-ahead\" features that bring you lasting comfort, fine\nperformance and economy.\nOne look and you'll realize why Ford is years ahead in beauty. \"Fashion\nCar\" styling! New \"Bakt-on\" body colors I New Luxury-Lounge interiors,\n\"color-keyed\" to harmonize with exterior colors!\nOnt? Test-Drip** and youH learn the silent, thrifty power of Ford's V-8\nengine with Automatic Mileage Maker\u2014the ease and dependability of its\nKey-Torn Starting\u2014the smooth-riding comfort\nwith Ford's Automatic Ride Control 1\nYoaH agree... you can pay more, but yon\ncan't buy better.. .jor the years ahead.\nAutomatic Posture Control\nfor complete comfort for al\ndriven. Tcwch a lever... fent\nseat automatically mores forward\u2014tilts ap far shorter\ndriven. More it back and ir\nadjusts for taller drivers.\nAutomatic Rids Control\ncoordinates Variable-Rate\nRear Spring Suspension,\n\"Viscous Control\" Shock\nAbsorbers and Advanced\n\"Hydra-Coil\" Front\nSprings\u2014for die smoothest\nride evert\nPsrtfi 109-Hp.  V-8\nBnpm... tmtr-pmved,\nrcaJ-pnpiJ through million! tf mil a. .\nJtn   tuts   txchiiri\n\"adpana chips\"features.\nAutomatic Mileage Maker\ncombines ignition, carbwetoc\nand combustion\u2014matches\ntiming to foe! charges\u2014completely self-regulating\u2014*%m\nmiliars per gallon\u2014httttr\nperformance]\nTEST-DRIVE'' ILsee your ford dealer\nQueen City Motors Limited\n561 Josephine Street\nPhone 43\n %<&\nSpecial\nB. F. Goodorich\nWomen's\nCanvas\nCasuals\nClosed backs, elastic side, open\ntoe, wedge heels.\nWhite and wheat ties,\nWedge heels, closed toe.\nNarrow and medium widths.\n$3.77\nRegular to $4.95\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nSherratt--Wallace Vows\nPledged at Boswell\nBOSWELL, B.C., July 8\u2014All Boswell and Sanca families were\nrepresented at the noon wedding in Boswell Memorial Hall Monday\nof the former Muriel Pattie Wallace, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wallace of Boswell, and Herbert Owen Sherratt of Cranbrook,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sherratt of South Slocan, Rev. A. R.\nEagles of Kimberley officiated.\nBride-to-Be Is\n[Feted af Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., July 3\u2014Miss\nI Gene Bailey, bride-elect of% this\n[week, was honored at a miscellan-\nleous shower at the home of Mrs. J,\n|0. Trinder.\nCourt whist prizes went to Mrs.\nJR. Johnson, and Miss Bailey, and\n| Mrs. J. Barnum received a lucky\nI prize. Presentation of gifts was\nI made by Beverley Bailey and\nI Wayne Trinder.\n0MAL VfL U)Uk\nynajJan. WaMbi\nYOU NEED THIS\nMake three or four! If s the wonderful Wrap-Onl Sews up quickly\nfor a smart qool sundress, for backyard pionics you'll use it as a cover-\nill apron-! THREE pieces plus pock-\n\u00abts, straps, ties!\nPattern 9106 comes in sizes 13, 14,\n16, 18, 20; 40. Size 10 takes 4 yards\nJ5-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete .illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins, (stamps cannot be\naccepted) f6r this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept., Nelson, B. C.\nOur Marian Martin Summer\nPattern Book is the best ever! Send\n;Twenty-five Cents today for your\n'copy. You'll sew the smartest most\n'practical wardrobes for your family and yourself with patterns chosen from this book. A Free Pattern\nof a beachrobe for Misses is printed\nin book.\nLOVELY HATS\nIn\nALL STYLES AND COLORS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nCOAL\nV* TOWLER\nFuel  & Transfer\nPhone 889 Nelson, B.C.\nJne,U)ch]jlt$\nWomen\nThe bride was exquisite in her\nwhite bridal satin gown which featured lily point sleeves and a sweetheart neckline. Orange blossoms,\ntraditionally associated with weddings, formed her coronet, and white\nkid sandals and a string of pearls,\na gift from the groom( completed\nher ensemble.\nmauve And yellow\nDelicate shades of mauve and yellow were reflected in the gowns of\nher trio of attendants and made a\npretty foil for the bridal gown. Miss\nFlorence Jones,'maid of honor, was\nin pale mauve nylon sheer, and Miss\nElva Wiklund, bridesmaid, wore\npale yellow nylon sheer. Both gowns\nwere floor length and were accompanied by small caps to match and\nbouquets of honeysuckle', Tlie flower girl, Betty Thuveson of Vancouver, was in pale yellow taffeta and\ncarried columbines. '\nBest man was Mr. Arnold Hess\nof Cranbrook, and Mr. Terry Sullivan seated the guests.\nMrs. W. L. Hepher played the\nwedding music and special hymns\nwere sung. During the signing of\nthe register, Mrs. I.. Foster played\nseveral special piano solos.\nThe spacious lawns of the bride's\nhome overlooking Kootenay Lake\nformed the setting, for the reception,\nat which 170 guests were served a\nbuffet lunch. Mr. Eagles proposed\ntoasts to the bride and groom, and\nthe bride's father congratulated the\ncouple. Miss Joan Anderson of Creston caught the bridels bouquet.\n; The bride's mother wore a light\nGlen check suit with white accessories and a corsage of red rose\nbuds, and- Mr*. Sherratt wore sheer\ncrepe in powder blue with accessories of a deeper shade. Her corsage was of sweetpeas..\nA motor trip through the United\nStates to Vancouver Island was the\ncouple's honeymoon plan. The bride\nchose for going-away a beige suit\nwith white accessories and a corsage\nof cream roses.\nCRANBROOK   HOME\nThe newlyweds will make their\nhome in Cranbrook.\nOut-of-town guests were Mr. and\nMrs. R. Dempsey of South Slocan,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Thuveson and Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Shewan of Vancouver,\nMiss Edna Rose and Mr. Newman\nof Edmonton, Mr. and Mrs. W. M.\nGate of Coleman, Alta., Mrs. R. J.\nGray of Winnipeg, Miss J. Stewart\nof Gray Creek, Mrs. R. F. Bayliss\nand Mrs. A. Walker of Crawford\nBay, IWrs. C. R. Richardson and son.\nMrs. A. D. Oliver, Mr. and Mrs. G.\nH. Thompson and Mr. Norman\nThompson and A. E. Duford of Nelson, Mrs. Maisie Linton, Mr. Paul\nHolm, Mr. and Mrs. J. Pascuzzo and\nfamily^ Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Viker\nand family, Miss Minnie Howard\nand Mr. Jack Ritter, all of Cranbrook; Mrs. A. R. Eagles of Kimberley, and Mr. Fred Klingensmith,\nMr. and Mrs. H. Buckna, Miss Grace\nFrolak, Mrs. A. B. Craig and Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry Jones and Louise\nJones of Creston.\nElizabeth Finds Life\nIsn't Like Fairy Tale\nLONDON, July 3 (AP)\u2014Princess Elizabeth finds that\nliving up to a fairy tale is a hard job.\nIt's difficult enough doing all the work expected of\nan heiress to the crown. Now, with her father ailing, she\nmust take over many of the burdens of the sovereign, too.\nThe King has had to cancel his engagements for weeks ahead.\nPrivately,\nRossland\nNewlyweds\nGo to Banff\nNelson\nSocial. .\n... By MRS*M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Dr. and Mrs. Norman R. Jen-\nnejohn and their children have returned from a holiday at the Coast,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Henry Murton\nof Edgewood were weekend visitors\nin Nelson.\nj Marvin , Wilson, Gyro Park\nRoad, has left to visit relatives in\nthe Okanagan Valley.\n\u2022 . Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hall have\nreturned to their home in Portland,\nOre., after spending a'few days in\nNelson, having come on: account of\nthe death of Mrs. Hall's brother,\nCharles F. Gigot. They were accompanied as far as,Rossland by Mrs.\nHall's sister, Miss Betty Gigot of\nRevelstoke.\n\u2022 Mrs. Gordon Hallett, Medical\nArts Apartments, left Sunday to\nvisit her son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. Stlohn Madeley in\nPrince George.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Peter Winstan-\nIey and their young daughter visited Mr. Winstanley's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. William Winstanley, Crescent Valley,  during the weekertd.\n\u2022 Nelson residents attending the\nwedding in Vancouver o(_ the former Barbara Jean Fisher and\nFranklin Ilu'fferin Ward, were the\ngroom's mother, Mrs. G. C. Ward,\nMr. and Mrs. A, F. Ward and daughter Darlene, Kurt Thomas and Miss\nKatherine MacLean, bridesmaid.\n, \u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George A.\nBrown, 924 Silica Street, entertained\nat dinner Sunday night when covers\nwere laid for ten. Out-of-town\nguests included Mr. and Mrs. David\nBrown of Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. Sadie McClelland, Silica\nStreet, has returned from Banff,\nwhere she spent several days attending the convention of the Allied\nFlorists of Canada and design school\nclasses.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Croft Haynes,\nHoover Street, are spending a few\ndays at the Coast\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Reid, 712\nHoover Street, and their family\nvisited in Spokane at the weekend.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Longden\nof Kelowna, ex-residents of Nelson,\nare spending a couple of days in\nthe dity. Returning home they will\nbe accompanied by their son Donald, who will spend his vacation\nwith them.\n\u2022 Mrs. Basil Dawes, 223 Houston\nStreet, has as guests her neice Mrs,\nChellif and daughter Sharon from\nCalgary.\nROSSLAND, B.C., July 3\u2014Banff\nand other points were, on the honeymoon itinerary of Andrea Elizabeth,\nyoungest daughter of Mrs. Hazel\nDavidson and the late Mr. A. Davidson, and Gordon Percy Paul, eldest\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Paul,\nall of Rossland, who were principals\nin' a quiet wedding ceremony performed in East Trail United Church\nby Rev. D. W. More.\nThe bride chose a light blue pic\nand pic suit trimmed with navy\nblue inset and \"accented by a pale\npink blouse. She wore a navy blue\nstraw hat with a tiny veil and pink\nflowers, and her accessories were\nnavy blue. Her corsage was made\nup of pale pink sweetheart roses'.\nMiss Joyce Davidson, sister of the\nbride, was her only attendant. She\nwore a navy blue and white check\nfitted jacket with a navy blue skirt.\nHer h'at was navy bide and white\nwith white flowers and her accessories were white except for her\nnavy blue shoes. Best man was Mr.\nJohn Williams.\nHEIRLOOM BELL\nA reception was held at the home\nDf the groom's parents with immediate relatives present. Bouquets of\norange blossoms and white peonies\nfilled the room and the bride's table\nwas centred with a three-tiered\nwedding cake iced with pockets to\nhold pansies and lillies of the valley. On top of the cake was a tiny\nwedding bell which the bride's\nmother had used on her wedding\ncake while on either side was a\npurple Jacobean candle matching\nthe color of the pansies.\nMrs. Davidson wore a black afternoon dress set off with bronze braid\non the mandarin collar and on the\nfront of the blouse. Her hat was\nblack with a small veil and her\naccessories were bronze. She carried\na corsage of Talisman roses. Mrs.\nPaul chose a wine afternoon dress\ncomplimented by a jacket featuring\na scalloped-edged neplin. Her hat\nwas white with navy trim and her\naccessories were navy blue. She carried a pink and white carnation\ncorsage.\nMr. Gordon Posey, brother-in-law\nof the bride, proposed a toast to\nher and Mrs. Charles Paul cut the\ncake after the bride and groom.\nFor her wedding trip the bride\nwore a navy blue topcoat over her\nsuit. On their return Mr. and Mrs.\nPaul will reside in Rossland;\nhis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nlonfrol Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n... she- often chafes at\nwearisome trekj through factories\nand public institutions. But in public she is the perfect princess w.ith\na smile for dullards as well as for\nordinary people.\nElizabeth has bubbling energy.\nHer oomplexion is soft, dear and\nradiant. She has grey-blue eyes,\nwell-kept brown hair worn-wither\nfull in a flowing permanent wave,\nand a nose just tilted enough to\nescape classic straightness.\nShe likes fun, games, and friends\ndancing, American jazz, riding, and\nhorse racing.\nShe bets modestly when she goes\nto the races. She doeBn't smoke,\nHer drinking is limited almost exclusively to champagne and not\nmuch of that.\nIn the last three years, her shortlived days of carefree gaiety have\nbeen slipping swiftly away under\nthe weight of motherhood and the\nresponsibility of having to represent royalty.\nIn 1947, on her 21st birthday, she\nmade a world-wide radio broadcast in which she clearly mapped a\nforbidding future of responsibility;\n,\"I declare before you all that my\nwhole life, whether it be long or\nshort, shall be devoted to your\nservice and the service of our great\nimperial family to which we all\nbelong.\"\nCRITICIZED\nSubjects of her father, however,\nsometimes. criticize her conduct.\nShortly after their marriage, in\n1848, Elizabeth and Prince Philip\nmade an official visit to Frnce. One\nSunday they went to church twice:\nthen, as guests of French officials,\nto the races. In the evening they\nwent dancing.\nThe cries of puritanical Scottish\nchurchmen filled the air.\nFour times Elizabeth has been to\nMalta to visit Philip, stationed there\nas captain of a frigate. Critics have\nyelped that she is neglecting her\nfamily. Small Protestant groups\ncomplained about her private visit\nto the Pope and that she broke the\nlaws of God by watching Philip\nplay polo on a Sunday.\nWhile she's away, her two children \u2014 Prince Charles, 2%, and\nPrincess Anne, 10 months, are cared\nfor by a capable nurse,\n' Even without the burden of appearing for the King, Elizabeth is\nbusy. Her life has been increasingly\nso for nine years, since she got her\nfirst public appointment \u2014 as a\ncolonel of the Grenadier Guards\u2014\nin February, 1942.\nAnd the . girl whose girlhood\nblossomed into a fairy-tale romance\nwith a handsome Greek prince\nalready knows also that the last\nline in the story is this: \". . . and\nshe worked hard ever after.\"\nGarbo, Self-Styled Recluse\nMay Again Sally Into Films\nHOLLYWOOD, July 3  (AP)\u2014Hollywood's silent Swede wants\nto talk again\u2014but only on the screen.\nAfter a decade of professional inactivity, Greta Garbo, now 45,\n\u25a0is moving toward a comeback. She recently signed with a new agent,\nhigh-powered Charles Feldman. He has represented her in talks with\ntop-level executives of several\nstudios.        .'\u25a0-'\"\u25a0:.\nThe best bet is that she will return to - her old studio, M.G.M.\nwhere she made more than a score\nof films between 1926 and 1041. Production Chief Dore Schary and\nauthor John Gunther are tailoring\na story especially for her.\nMeanwhile, the tall, timid, angular girl who came here unheralded 25 years ago and blossomed into\na living legend of the screen remains\nas remote as ever.\nPARADOX\nDespite her self-imposed seclusion\nand long absence from the screen,\nGarbo is still the international\nfavorite of millions. Her old films\nhave had frequent revivals. In\nHolly wand, she is still the paragon\nwith whom ail other actresses are\ncompared.\nWhy husky-voiced Greta shuns\ncontact with any but a chosen few\nis a question she has never satisfactorily answered. It is a paradox\nthat by doging publicity she has\nbecome one of the most publicized\nwomen of the world.\nGarbo lives alone, sheltered from\ninstrusion by high walls around\nher home. She sees only a handful\nof intimates who form a sort of\nroyal bodyguard.\nNO HUMAN ICEBERG\nTo the public she's a phantom.\nThosa who know her say she is\nquiet and retiring, a complete.intro-\nvert, but not a human iceberg.\nAmong her few friends\u2014mostly\nmarried couples conected with the\nmovie industry\u2014she can be gay,\ncharming and witty. She goes out\nsocially about three evenings a\nweek, usually to small private\ngatherings, never to public places.\nShe sometim&s has an escort, but\nthere is no romance in her life.\nMiss Garbo is now a United States\ncitizen. She took the oath last\nFebruary.\nBorn Lovlsa Gustafsson in Stockholm, the daughter of a merchant,\nshe was a barber's helper and department store clerk. A small part\n25-Year Pin\nGiven at Social\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. July 3\u2014Carpet bowling,- darts, bingo and dancing provided a pleasant evening\nfor the large crowd of Moose Lodge\nmembers and friends who attended\na social evening.\nDuring the evening Past Governor E. Stone presented Secretary\nE. Turner with a 25-year club pin.\nWATERTON, Alta. (CP)-A new\ncompany has been organized in\nSouthern Alebrta to develop Water-\nton Park and make it a'year-round\ntourist attraction, with emphasis on\ngolf and skiing.\nRossland Notes\nROSSLAND, B.C. \u2014 The Misses\nBlanche Roth, Betty Fredericksbn,\nMarianne Martin and Merle Gordon of the Sunday School have left\nfor the two-week 'United Church\nLeadership Training School at Naramata on tho shores of Okanagan\nLake. - -   \u2022*\u25a0    \"   *   '    :\nMir. and Mrs. Fetter have returned from a motor kip to Medicine\nHat, and points in Saskatchewan\nand the U.S.A.\nNorman Waters of Port Alberni,\na former resident of Trail is renewing acquaintances in Trail and district He spent a day in Rossland at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. E. Triggs.\nMrs. Triggs spent a week in Trail\nvisiting her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. C, Blaihut.\nMr. J. Draper, supreme representative of the Knights of Pythias of\nB.C., and Mrs. Draper of New Denver attended the 50th anniversary\nof the Pythian Sisters here,\nMrs. N. Ratcliffe of Vancouver,\nwho is Grand Supreme Alternate of\nB.C., was in town to attend the 50th\nanniversary of the Pythian Sisters.\nShe was house guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nF. M. MacKenzie.\nMr. and Mrs. Ted Jackman and\ntwo children have left to take up\nresidence in Harrop, B.C.\nMr. and Mrs. Les Riley have returned from the Coast and were\naccompanied home by their son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nHoward Adams and two children\nRichard and Delores.\nMrs. G. Lemma and three children, Allan, Douglas and Shirley-\nAnn have left for Silverton to spend\na holiday with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. O. L. Lindstein.\nRev. and Mrs. T. B. McMillan\nhave left to make their home at1\nBurnaby, B.C.\nJ. E. Gordon has returned from a\ntrip to Telsequah.\nMiss Shirley Pat Perkins has left\nlo spend the Summer months at Radium Hot Springs.\nMiss M. M. C. Mackay of the High\nSchool teaching staff, left for Vancouver where she will holiday with\nher parents and attend U.B.C. Summer School.\nMiss P. Gallo on the teaching staff\nof MacLean School left for Princeton, to spend the Summer months.\nMr. and Mrs. W. V. Dynes and\nthree children Sonia, Verna and\nWendy left for Vancouver to spend\nthree weeks holiday. While there\nthey will visit Mr. Dynes father, W.\nJ. Dynes in Burnaby and relatives\nin Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon Posey and\nfamily from Victoria accompanied\nby Mr. Posey's mother, Mrs. M. Posey attended the wedding of Mrs,\nPosey' Jr., sister Miss Andrea Davidson.\nFormer E. Kootenay\nResident Dies\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., July 3\u2014E.\nForster of 'Chapman Camp was called to Lethbridge by the death of\nhis father, E. R. J. Forster, long\ntime resident of that city. Mr. Forster, who was 79, was a former resi,\ndent of Kimberley and Fernie.\nInterment was in the family plot\nin the Banff cemetery.\nGLACE BAY, N. S. (CP) \u2014 A\nblind girl who never attended public school before stands sixth in the\n12th grade at Morrison High School\nhere with an average of 89. Pearl\nCampbell, 21, is a graduate of the\nHalifax School for the Blind.\nin an advertising film made in her\nstore launched her career.\nThereafter she haunted \u25a0 Swedish\nstudios, taking small roles and\nstudying at a dramatic school. Then\nMauritz Stiller, Sweden's greatest\ndirector, made her his protege.\nWhen Stiller was brought to Hollywood by M.G.M. he insisted that\nthey import her with him.\nAt Stiller's insistence, Lovisa, now\nGreta Garbo (it sounded better)\nwas assigned a role in \"The Torrent\"\nShe was a standout\nThere was no stopping Garbo.\nMatinee Idol John Gilbert took her\nunder his wing. She was his co-star\nin her third picture, \"Flesh and the\nDevil.\" With its release she was\nfamous.\nGarbo and Gilbert became the\ngreat lovers of the screen. They\nbecame inseparable off screen, too.\nThe period was Garbo's only social\nwhirl.\nGILBERT A SUITOR\nGilbert is supposed to have proposed repeatedly, but'wedding bells\nnever rang. They split suddenly and\nhandsome John married Ina Claire.\nGarbo stopped going to parties\nand began the almost monastic seclusion she has fancied ever since.\nCareerwise, however, she soared.\nPlaying opposite the cream of Hollywood's leading men she sizzled the\nsilent screen in \"Love,\" \"The Divine\nWoman,\" Wild Orchids,\" \"The Kiss,\"\nand \"The Single Standard.\"\nThere was talk that sound would\nstop her because of her Swedish\naccent. Her first talkie, \"Anna\nChristie,\" was one of her best. During the 30s she reached her peak\nin \"Romance,\" \"Mata Hari\", \"The\nPainted Veil,\" \"Anna Karenina,\"\n\"Camille,\" and \"Ninotchka:\"\nDuring her first dozen Hollywood\nyears she earned'an estimated $2,-\n500,000. In 1937 her Income was\n$472,602. She apparently is still well\noff. Her investments are handled\nby a New York firm.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1951 \u2014 5\n\u25a0 11 \u25a0 \u25a0 111111 ii i \u25a0 t \u25a0 ii 111111 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 i ii 11111 \u25a0 f ti ii \u25a0 ill i i\nWatch This Space\nTomorrow\nfor our\n\"Advantage Days\"\nAd\nJ>MSUffUWlL\\\nFURNITURE CO.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nNewlyweds\nTo Live in\nKimberley\nCRANBROOK, B.C., July 3 -\nDorothy Ismay, only daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. R. T. Churchill of\nCranbrook, and Grenville Angus\nMusser, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. G.\nMusser of Kimberley were married\nat the United Church here by Rev.\nW. H. McDannold.\nThe bride's gown was of white\nsatin with a skirt of alternating\nlace and net panels and her veil was\ntrain-length illusion net.\nAs bridesmaid Miss Sheila MacDonald wore powder blue nylon\nwith a fingertip veil. Groomsman\nwas Mr. Larry Musser, and ushers,\nGarth Little and Bob Stuart, all of\nKimberley.\nGuests were received by the\ncouple and their parents at the Masonic hall after the ceremony.\nThe couple will travel to various\nUnited States points on their wedding trip. The bride's going-away\ncostume was a short white coat over\nnavy nylon sheer. The couple will\nmake their home in Kimberley\nwhere the groom is employed by\nCominco.\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30e line, 40o line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nThe finest in flowers and floral\nartistry at VALENTINE'S.\nLADIES'  AUXILIARY TO F.O.B.\nMEET TONIGHT AT 8:00 P.M.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nFine supply of Mrs. Gray's and\n'loir's Chocolates at WAIT'S.\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL\nFor Sale\u2014Man's C.C.M. bike, Just\nlike new. Priced at $38. Ph. 1332-R.\nGOOD   FIREWOOD   FOR   SALE\nMostly tamarac. Ph, 632-Y; Box 367.\nGet your fishing- license at Jack\nBoyce's Men's Shop. '\nELECTROLUX SALES \u2022 SERVICE\nPHONE NELSON  1108 OR 683\nEnough insurance in sound companies is sound  business. \u2014 See\nBLACKWOOD AGENCY\nRONSON  LIGHTERS\nWe carry a full stock of parts\nSAM BROWN, NELSON, B.C.\nFLOOR SANDING and FINISHING\nHardwoods supplied, laid.\nPhone 1108\nFor faded awnings, or any canvas\narticles, SETFAST CANVAS PAINT\n\u2014Quarts $2.35.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nTwo popular sizes of cream sep\narators'now on hand. One or two\nand three or four cow sizes at\n$34.00 and $43.00. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S,\nPatients In the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital can have the Dally\nNews sent to them every morning.\nPhone 144, Circulation Dept,, Dally\nNews.\nRubber floor tile in many attractive colors. Tile and linoleum laying expertly done.\nT. H. WATER8 & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St\u201e Nelson, B.C., Phone 156\nEverything   for   a   fine-looking\nlawn. \u2014 Lawn mowers in all sizes,\n2-4-D Weed Killer, turf edgers, gra6s\nclippers, bamboo rakes, etc.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nHome of Holiday Togs for children of all ages! All your kiddies'\nholiday-wear requirements can be\nfound most reasonably at\nTHE CHILDREN'8 SHOP.\nChimneys, stoves, furnaces cleaned; chimneys topped; thimbles applied; hot and cold air ducts cjeanod\nby vacuum. \u2014 Pounder's Chimney\nService; Phone 1541-L.\nDrop in to see our gifts for the\nbride. \u2014 Lace tablecloths, Wabasso\nbed sets, chesterfield sets and boxed\ntowels.\nSTERLING,HOME FURNISHERS\nExperienced baby sitters of all\nages desirous of registering for paid\nbaby-sitting for Bonspiel visitors\nfrjifm July 9th to 14th, contact the\nCivic Centre Office before Friday,\nJuly 6th.\n1 only square Grand Piano, genuine Rosewood. A real bargain.\nWe buy and sell ,new and used\nfurniture and antiques.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\nPHONE 1560 413 HALL ST.\nWe feature made-to-measure suits\nof Koala Gabardines and Charmaine\nWorsteds. Order now for Fall delivery.\nTICKNER TAIL0R8\n461. JOSEPHINE ST. \u2014 PHONE 107\nThis week's specials on Fishing\nTackle;\nNipigon Bate, 39c;\nWonder Spoon, 15of\nJune Bug Spinner, 15c;\nRuby Eye Wiggler, 49c.\nMc & Me (NEL80N) LTD.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral services for the late William John McLean wil lbe held from\nthe Thompson Funeral Home Thursday at 2:00- p.m. Rev. Allan Dixon\nwill officiate. Interment will be in\nNelson Memorial Park.\nNety Minister\nFor Kaslo Church\nKASLO, B.C., July 2-The Rev.\nW. C. and Mrs. Mawhinney have\nleft for the Coast, where Mr. Mawhinney plans to spend a holiday\nof one year. Mr. Mawhinney served\nas pastor in St. Andrew's United\nChurch for two years and is to be\nsucceeded by the Rev. W. B. Mcintosh of Hatzic, B. C. who will assume the duties of pastor in the\nUnited Church early in July.\nKimberley Tea\nMarked Success\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, July 3 \u2014\nWomen's executive of the United\nChurch held a successful tea in\nMark Creek store under the convenership of Mrs. J. Noble.\nMrs. G. D. Garden and Mrs. J. T.\nWalker poured from a flower-\nqentred tea table, and serviteurs\nwere Mrs. J. Andrews, Mrs. N.\nGlover, Mrs. Scott and Mrs. L.\nMiller. Mrs. W. B. Miller and Mrs.\nH. Nordlund sold home cooking;\nMrs. R. B. McLeod, Mrs. G. Mc-\nCallum and Mrs. J. G. Williams\nhandled a sewing booth, and Mrs.\nE. Nesbitt, Mrs. J. Noble and Mrs.\nE. Elliott shared kitchen duties.\nKimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. \u2014 Miss Gwen\nFarcmharson, public health nurse,\n.Miss C. Longand Miss Jane Thompson were honored at a tea at the\nhome of Mrs. H. W. Poole at Chapman Camp when teachers, their\nwives and Parent-Teacher Association executive bade them farewell.\nMrs. R. F. Aikins, P.-T.A. president and Miss C. Mercier, poured at\na lace-covered tea table centred\nwith a low bowl of iris, and the\nguests of honor were presented\nwith corsages by Mrs. Poole.\nMiss Farquharson leaves soon for.\nDuncan, where she has been appointed public health nurse. Miss\nLong, home economics teacher, at*\nMcKim high school has accepted a\nsimilar position in Vancouver, and\nMiss Thompson will be teaching in\nher home city of Winnipeg.\nA charter for McGill University,\nMontreal, was granted in 1821 and\nteaching began in arts and medicine\nin 1829.\nNakusp Notes\nNAKUSP, B.C. \u2014Miss June Gardner and Miss Shirley Oxenham left\nfor the \"Canadian Girls in Training\" Camp Council get together at\nOcean Park, Vancouver.\nRev. and Mrs. David Stone of\nVancouver have arrived. Rev. Stone\nwill be the resident minister of the\nRobertson Memorial United Church.\nMr. and Mrs. Falkensteine of Medicine Hat, who have been guests\nof their son-in-law daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. Ed Walsh, have left.\nMrs. Muren Fowler of Nelson, accompanied by Miss Maud Kleef,\nwere visitors of Miss Fowler's\ngrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E.\nFowler, Pine Lodge, en route to\nEdgewood.\nMr. and Mrs. Albert De Yaeger of\nInonoaklin Valley were visitors of\nMrs. E. E. Ferrie. Mr. De Yaeger was\na patient in Arrow Lakes Hospital.\nMrs. G. W. Battershall returned\nfrom Nelson where she was guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. Walter Waite.\nA. A. Lidberg is a patient in Arrow Lakes Hospital.\nHugh Bolstad, who has been a patient in Arrow Lakes Hospital, returned to his home.\nTleedtecAaft\nbif 3ouml Wkeeiex\nV.:,.U\n\u2022it '*.xMm\nC725\nFUN TO EMBROIDER\nArt for your home; Your family\nwill be delighted with this peaceful\nscene. Embroider it in wool or cotton, frame or line it\nThriftiest way to have a new\npicture! Simple to make. Pattern\nC725 has transfer 15xl9i4 inches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENT8 in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Dally\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, 286 Baker\nStreet. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nSend Twenty-Five Cents more (in\ncoins) for our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book. Illustrations of\npatterns for crochet embroidery,\nknitting, household accessories,\ndolls, toys . . . many hobby and, gift\nideas. Al free pattern is printed in\nthe boolt\nDESMOND   T.\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor to J. O. Patenaude\nPHONE 293 NELSON, B. C.\nMAYONNAISE\nGIVES A\n' flavour to\nSAL\/IDS\nMUSTARD MAYONNAISE\n2oggs\n2 teaspooni Colman's mustard\n1 teaspoon talt\n1 teaspoon powdered sugar\n2 tablespoons lemon juico\n2 cups salad oil\nInto well beaten yolks of 2\neggs, stir mustard, salt, sugar\nand lemon juice. Then add\noil gradually while beating\nconstantly. If too thick, to\nbeat, add extra lemon juice,\nthen balance of oil.\nColman's\n\u25a0MUSTfrRl*\nIK299\nIt's not only the WEDDING GOWN you wear\nfor this exciting moment of your life, your\nwedding.\nAmong the hundred little things that make\nit a perfect day are the INVITATIONS you\nsend out to your relatives and friends.\nWe will gladly assist you in choosing the\nri . WEDDING STATIONERY, etc., for the\nlatest style in wedding invitations.\nCALL 144\nCOMMERCIAL I 7,P\\RT.   I'.f'T\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1951\nMIDSUMMER\nThursday - Friday - Saturday\n9 A.M. THURSDAY\nDOOR OPENING SPECIALS\nReg. 3.95\nWOMEN'S BLOUSES\nLong and short sleeves ln sizes 12 to 18.       aq\nDoor Opening Special        ,jrJF\nReg. 2.98\nWOMEN'S NIGHTIES\nAssorted voile and krlnlcle crepe. Small,  i   a p.\nmedium and large. Door Opening Special I a\"T7\nKeg. .59\nCHILDS'SUNSUITS\nAssorted cotton prints. Sizes 2 to 8. \u00bb\u00bb Q\nDoor Opening Special  .1*7\nReg. 1.79\n'LIL ABNER T-SHIRTS\nFor girls 8 to 14 years. Well made T-Shirts with\nwashable L'il Abner figures. qq\nDoor Opening Special  .**\nReg. 1.10\nCURTAIN NET\nChoice of patterns in ecru curtain net.        a{\\\n42\" width. Door Opening Special  ,*T7\nReg. 1.69\nCOCOMATS\nHandy cocomats for the porch or doorway. A\nmust in wet weather. Size 14x27.   - qa\nDoor Opening Special  ,J*\nReg. 10.95\nSMOKING STANDS\nSmartly styled bronze smoking stands with heavy\nbase and large ash tray. m  ap\nDoor Opening Special     \/ \u201e^tj\nReg. 3.98\nLADIES' HANDBAGS\nAn attractive handbag of bengaline in colors of\ngrey, green and light wine. 1   qa\nDoor Opening Special   I e 77\nReg. 2.99 and 3.99\nWOMEN'S PLAY SHOES\nSummer play shoes and loafers. Styles, Neolite\n 1.99\nand leather soles.\nDoor Opening Special\nReg. .29\nTEA TOWELS\nCotton tea towels in a check pattern color.     | f\\\nRed, green and blue. Door Opening Special   J 7\nReg. 2.29\nBOYS' DENIM PANTS\nFully sanforized shrunk, reinforced pockets,\ndouble stitched seams. Broken sizes 8-14. | Q ft\nDoor Opening Special  1,0\/\nReg. .69\nMEN'S HALF HOSE\nFancy knit cotton and wool mixture, regular half\nhose length, Sizes 10 to 12.     . A ft\nDoor Opening Special  <\u201e__\u00bb\u201e..._ .\"ty\nReg. 7.99\nMEN'S GABARDINE PANTS\nFancy gabardine pants to match your sport coat.\nWater repellent and crease resistant A OO\nBroken sizes. Door Opening Special  'T.,3'5'\nReg. .69\nBOYS' HALF HOSE\nAssorted fancy patterns. Regular sizes 8-10. | ft\nDoor Opening Special ,.  , | jr\nReg. 1.49\nUTILITY BAGS\nA plaid bag with rubberized lining. Ideal far\ncarrying that wet bathing suit home. ftft\nDoor Opening Special \u201e...\u201e w77\nReg. 6.95\nELECTRIC TOASTERS\nA very attractive chrome toaster with \/TOO\nwell made element. Door Opening Spec. *f ,0 3*'\nMEN'S TENNIS OXFORDS\nWhite canvas lace style.\nDoor Opening Specia} \u201e\u201e..\nReg. 2.98\nGIRLS'PAJAMAS\nBroadcloth ln assorted stripes. Sizes \u00ab a ft\n8 to 14. Door Opening Special _.'... I ,\"T7\nReg.,3.50\nLUNCHEON CLOTHS\n54x54 cotton luncheon cloths in a choice | \/\u2022 ft\nof attractive patterns. Door Opening Spec. 1,0?\nReg. .79\nLINOLEUM\nDeluxe Rexoleum and Baroleum In I wide selection of attractive patterns. 6-foot width.\nDoor Opening Special, sq. yd\t\n1.49\n.5$\nREG. 10.95 ond 9.95\nWomen's Dress Casuals\nOpen heel, open toe, wedge heel, sling styles and closed heel, closed toe\nstyles. Smooth leathers and suedes. Colors wine, black, blue and green.\nSizes in the lot 4% to 9. Widths AA to B\t\nWomen's Style Shoes\nSmooth glazed leathers. Suede for daytime dress wear. Open toe, open or\nclosed heel with open toe styles. Dressy Cuban heels. Popular shades of\ngrey, blue, wine or rust. Widths AA and B. Sizes 4% to 9 \t\nMen's Crepe Sole Oxfords\nMen's popular crepe sole oxfords. Pliable brown elk uppers or plain toe       ^-\nvamp, Neolitesole. Sport oxfords for your Summer time leisure. Light and       t~  AX\nflexible for Summer comfort. Sizes 6 to 11        ^fc\nREG. 3.95 AND 4.50\nMisses' Crepe Sole Oxfords\nCrepe soles for comfort and long wear. Pliable brown a,nd red elk leather      **h    Afg.\nuppers, lace style. Sizes 11 to 3 \u201e.   \u2122         -<%*V7\n5\"\n4.49\nBoys- Scampers\nSturdy hard wearing Pancord or Neolite soles, sturdy brown elk leather A   A A\nuppers. Popular moccasin vamp, Ghillie or plain lace style. Sizes 1 to iVi  <&* ww\nREG. 2.95 AND 3.29\nChildren's and Misses' Sandals\nWomen's Leather Sandals\nPliable smooth leather sandal. Elk leather uppers, open toe, open heel. - JM a4Q\nColors wine, green and black  flu ^\nElk leather uppers, two strap or one strap styles. Neolite and crepe soles.\nSizes 11 to 3\t\nA  STORE-WIDE  CLEARANCE  OF  SPRING  AND   SUMMER   LINES   AND   ODDMENTS,   AS   WELL!\nAS MERCHANDISE  SPECIALLY  BOUGHT  FOR   OUR   BIGGEST   SUMMER   CLEARANCE   EVER!   I\nSave Up fo $9\nWOMEN'S SUMMER DRESSES\nREG. 9.95 ahd 10.95\n65 women's Summer dresses in--top quality\ncottons and spuns offered for quick sale! A\ngrand selection of colors and styles in sizes for\nmisses, women and juniors\t\n5\n.99\nREG. 12.95 to 17.95\n55 better quality dresses in silks, crepes and\nnylons offered at way below cost! Gay new\nSummer prints in1 attractive prints in attractive styles. Sizes for misses, women and juniors.\n8\"\nCotton Housecoats\nWrap around style in quality crinkle crepe. Sizes 14 to 18 **  ' >n\nto pink, blue and yellow dots on white background  JI \u2022\"\"\nREG. 6.98\nBoys'& Girls' Coat Sets\n'Tween season outfits for boys and girls 1 to 3 years. Coat am   a A\nwith matching hat or bonnet in pink, blue and green.!  ^t\u00abV\u2122\nREG. 2.49\nRayon Briefs\n.59\nMade from fine quality rayon in pink, blue and white.\nCuffed. Sizes small, medium and large. Clearance\t\nREG. 5.95\nGirls' Plaid Raincoats\nDressy plaids, in a rubberized fabric completely water-    gm   aa!\nproof. Detachable hood. Sizes 3 to 6. Clearance     ^^\u00ab\"\u2122 |\nREG. 1.25\nBoys' B'cloth Pyjamas        Boys' Swim Trunks\nFine quality broadcloth pyjamas for boys 2 to 6 years.\nAssorted stripes. Clearance\t\nREG. 1.59\nWool Bathing Suits\nSizes 2 to 6 years in warm wool suits. Colors of red and\nblue. Clearance  !\t\n\u00a3.29\n<99\n.89\nA timely offering of boys' trunks in sizes 2 to 6 years.\nElasticized top. Colors wine and blue\t\nREG. .29\nTraining Pants\nFirst quality in sizes 2 to 6 years, Assorted colors of       ' fLHt\n\"\u25a0white, -pink, blue and maize  5 \u00abOP      JI\nREG. 20.95\nW^Wtk*f**tk3fsW^    <fiVI*sfi   A 43-piece dinner service of nicely decorated fine old English china,\nPrice,\" per set\nREG. 14.95\nExtra Values in Chinaware\n1595\n4.9s\nA service for six. A fine set of English china with plain design.\nJ2 Pc. DINNER SETS pp\nREG. 6.95\n<\u25a0-\u00bb\u00ab* ITI A WJTY3 A CM   sfiWC  A nicelv decorated 32-pioce breakfast sat of English china,\nBKIiiAKr As 1 att A a p\u00ab\u00ab. p\u00ab \u00ab*\t\nLOOK FOR\nNON-ADVERTISED\nSPECIALS\nlHylOn    HOSe   45 Gauge, 30 Denier Summer's most popular shades. Sizes 9 to 11. Pair     \u00ab99\nREG. .59 REG. .19 \/\nCups and Saucers Ladies' Belts\nAn ideal cup and saucer for everyday use. White \u00ab-\u00bb           $ <* ,%a        Assorted sizes and designs. Colors, red, blue, brown, green     mfm\\^d^s\\\nwith gold band.  ^P !o*     A     \" and black. Each  \u2022 V JF\nREG  1 98 REG 2'98\nStraw Handbags Straw Handbags\nA finely woven, nicely decorated bag that will complete   4   4Q\nA nicely woven, attractive handbag. Made of Italian straw.     -*    m\u00ab       your Summer dress. Each Mf***\nEach ; \u2022      pW       rhg.7.45     m\nreg 79.\u201e\u00ab. 98 Garden Hose\nBathing Caps\nA tight fitting rubber bathing hat in colors of- red, white      A-^^mV\nor blue Each  \u00a9%P 2F REG' *4' and '69\nreg.10.95 Li'l Abner Hose\n*90Kf|MMAjH    Hot    Plftttfi A cotton ankle sock with your child's favorite Li'l Abner character on\nm \u2022\u00bb\u2022\u2022\u00bb \u25a0\u25a0*\u2022\u00bb\u00bb    \u00bb-\u00bbw\u00bb   * \u00ab\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0*\u2022** it Bright Smmer colorSi \u25a0\nA serviceable hot-plate with two burners and a single    tttWAS         Sizes                     3           OQ       Sizes \"f QQ'\nswitch. Each _.      J*W9.       8% to 8%.:    3 pr.   .\u00bb      8% to 10%    Apr.   .7^\nREG. 14.95\nELECTRIC FANS a heav>r duty *\u00b0ng iife 2 speed fan-Wfial f oi1 hot dayi*to <-\u00b0n*e*Kaih \u25a0\u2022\u2022 9\nMlflf flinniTtfi   WF A ST* sf%t\\lm^ A sturdily constructed wagon with a steel frame, hardwood box     \u2022*% .QC\nIflULllnElM   9   WA-UUJN9 roller bearing wheels. Eitih     ^\n50-foot rubber hose, complete with couplings. \u2014\nPrice, complete .\". ! '.\t\n5\n.95\n*% (latttjmtt^\nMAIL ORDERS\nPROMPTLY FILLED\nINCORPORATED   2*9 MAY 1670.\n \u00abw-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1951 \u2014 7\nCLEARANCE\nJULY 5-6-7\nMEN'S SUITS 34\n35 | 36 | 37 I 38 [ 39 | 4TJ        Men, check your size and come a-running. . . Single and double breasted U ^HT\n'   i.|   51   T\"j  ST'-S\" I \u2022;2'[       models...'. No phone orders please  ^,\\W      |]\nReg. 14.95\nCORDUROY SPORT COATS\nMen! Don't miss this exceptional savings in men's casual jackets. Single-\nbreasted models\/ patch pockets, three quarter lining. Sizes 36 to 42 :\u201e_\n9-95\n1.29\nReg. 1.69\nMEN'S TEE SHIRTS\nFancy stripe and plain shades. Interlock\ncotton knit, styled with short sleeves, crew\nneck. Colors of blue, tan, grey, white. Sizes\nsmall, medium and large. Each\t\nReg. 3.69\nMEN'S PYJAMAS\nShop now for your camping and holiday plans! Colorful, fancy stripe patterns in blue, grey\nand tan. Full cut jacket; trousers have    *%   JA\ndraw string waist. Sizes 36 to 42. Price,    ^fc\nper pair     **W\n.99\nReg. 2.95 to 3.50\nMEN'S STRAW HATS\nShop early for this grand saving in men's\nSummer headwear. Bangora and washable c\nstraws. Cool colors, with all-leather head- )\n. band. Sizes 67\/8 to 7V4. Each  *\nReg. 3.29 to 3.95\nWashable Sport Shirts\nStyled with two-way collars, in holiday colors of blue,\ngrey, maroon, navy, green. Tailored from\nrayon and wool gabardine with two pockets and full button front. Sizes small, medium and large. Each _\n2\u00ab99\nEXTRA SPECIAL \u2014 Reg. 2.79\n200\nA very fortunate factory purchase of those, beautiful quality, large size pastel towels. Slight imperfections are hardly noticeable. Size 24 x 46. Be early for these. Each\t\no3?Y CANNON PASTEL TOWELS\n1.98\n5\u00bbs\nFLANNELETTE SHEETS\nOnce again we bring you a saving in flannelette sheets. Top quality English flannelette, very soft\nto the touch. Plain white. Size 80 x 90. Pair ,  \u201e.\nSAVE$$$ \u2014Reg. 9.50\nCOTTON SHEETS\nThe' famous Lady Jane sheets in a strong American cotton. Size 81 x !\nton prices take advantage of this saving. Paif\t\n. With steadily rising cot-\n6-6*\na. 1.49   .\nUnbleached Sheeting\nSave precious dollars with this exceptionally fine offer in unbleached sheeting. \u2014\nGood, heavy quality. 82\" width. Yard ....\nFRILLED CURTAINS\nSnowy-white frilled marquisette curtains.\nA good size, 44 x 81. Brighten the bedroom with fresh new curtains.'Pair\t\nReg. .89 Yd.\n.98\n2-98\nCHAMBRAY\nLong wearing, attractive, sanforized chambray in 36\" width. Available in plain\ncolors or with stripes. Makes smart sun\nor Summer dresses. Yard\t\nReg. .59 Yd.\nCOTTON\n.65\nPRINTS\n.47\nA wide variety of patterns to choose from\nin Glenwood quality cotton prints. Ideal\nfor skirts, sundresses, housedresses, etc.\n36-inch, width. Yard \t\n- REG. 2.95\nRAYON PANELS\nLovely rayon panels in all the pastel gm^ m-gk\nshades. A good size, 42x81. Buy now and ^9*39\nlave. Each       mW\nREG. 4.50\nTABLE CLOTHS\nAn attractive damask tablecloth in a lovely design with colored border. Size 53x6fi.\nEach \t\nk.95\nReg. 4.95\nINDIAN BLANKETS\n.See our complete range of the famous \"Bolo'\nblankets, well known for their bright colors and patterns. Ideal for the beach, on\npicnics, or at the Summer cotWge. Price,\neach\t\nReg. 11.95\nWOOL AUTO RUGS\nBright, attractive plaid patterns in an all-\nwool rug. A good selection to choose from.\nWith rising wool prices this is an exceptionally good offer. Each\t\nReg. 3.50\nBATH MAT SETS\nSoftly tufted baby chenille bath mat sets\nin a wide range of beautiful pastel shades\nand floral patterns. Shop now and save.\nSet\t\nReg. 12.95\nCHENILLE SPREADS\nAnother special offer in a top quality\nbaby chenille 'spread. Attractive pastel\nshades and white with distinctive floral designs.' Double bed size. Each\t\nReg. 1.79\nRAYON CREPE\nA large selection of beautiful plain colors,\nideal for Summer or Fall wear. 36-inch\nwidth. Shop now and save. Yard\t\nREG. .89\nPILLOW TUBING\nA good saving in bleached pillow tubing.\n42 inches wide. Yard \"\nIndian\n4\n.39\ng\u00ab\n2-M\n10\"\nlw\nReg. 7.95\nMEN'S GREY FLANNEL PANTS\nLook Men! Summer flannels for dress or sportswear. Styled with pleats,\nloops, zippers and regular pockets. Tailored from cotton and wool flannel.\nSizes 30 to 42     .\t\n4\n.99\nReg. 10.50\nShowerproof JACKETS\nIdeal for golf, fishing and general sports\nwear. Tailored from cotton gabardine. Full\nzipper, slash pockets and adjustable waistband. Sizes 30 to 42. Each\t\nBOYS' ANKLE SOX\nBuy now for those Summer camping trips. Fancy stripe\npatterns with elastic tops. Colors\nof wine, brown, blue and navy.    ,   \\ -.,,-,\nSizes 8 to 10    J Pf*\nReg. 219.50\ng.99\n-\u201e    ,-. J'ancy stripe\n3pr.*l\nReg. 3.9S to 4.95\nBOYS' DRESS PANTS\nChoose from a grand assortment of gabardine and tweed pants.  Styled just like 4Wk 00\nDad's with pleats and zippers; drop loops. Ma\nSizes 6 to 16. Pair   *aW\nReg. 3.95\nMEN'S BOXER TRUNKS\nGreat Summer savings for men. Boxer-\nstyle swim trunks, styled with full elastic \u2022*>%   AO\nwaistband; draw string waist. Sizes 36 to Mf***\n38. Pair  ^\n4-PCE. BEDROOM SUITE\nLimed oak, 4-piece suite, consisting of vanity with large plate glass\nmirror, vanity bench, large roomy chiffoniere and 4' x 6' bed. Made *M JM\u00a3% \u00ab*\nby one of Canada's leading manufacturers. This is an exceptionally 1 (     y-ftflaSO\ngood offer , _ . __*_'\u25a0*   M  W\nReg. 159.50 <\n5-PCE. CHESTERFIELD SUITE\nMade by Kroehler, this 5-piece suite consists of chesterfield and\nchair, two matching cushion?, and matching ottoman. Covered in\nhard-wearing tapest,ry in either red or green .\u201e. .\t\n129.50\nReg. 129.50\nDAVENPORT SUITE\nAttractive, modern style two-piece davenport suite. Davenport looks like a\nchesterfield by day and makes down Into\na comfortable beef at night Large, comfortable matching chair. Tapestry covering in wine or green , ...,.....\u201e...._.....\nReg. 18.95\nKITCHEN TABLES\nHandy type kitchen table with folding leaves.\nTakes up small space when down. Finished\nIn a natural finish. \u2014 An Ideal table for\nsmall kitchens. Each\t\nReg. 4.69\nGARDEN CHAIRS\nStrongly constructed recllner type garden chair\nwith reinforced back and seat Complete with\narms. Each ,\t\n109-so\nReg. 69.50\nSTUDIO LOUNGE\nThree or two-cushion style studio lounges,\nideal for that odd room, Summer porch or\ncottBge up the lake. Makes down into comfortable bed. Tapestry covering in choice of\nwine or green _\n49\n\u2022SO\nReg. 15.95\nPLATE GLASS MIRRORS\n14\n95\n2-9\u00bb\nLarge, attractive plate glass mirrors in a\nvariety of shapes. Attractive scroll designs.\nIdeal for gifts. Each  .......\nReg. 14.95\nReversible WOOL RUGS\nThe ever-popular reversible wool rug ln a\nwide variety of colors. Can be worn both\nsides. Ideal for hallways, bedrooms, etc. Size\n30 x 60. Each  \u00bb\t\nIO'*\n11'*\nMIDSUMMER SPECIALS IN GROCERIES\nHalf er\nwhole  .\nCottage Rolls\nPeanut Butter1\n' 4 Ib. tin\nCompfira.\n16 ox. tin\nRice Krispies KW\nSausage\nMargarine\nGinger Ale S-Att\nCookies\nMargene.\n1 Ib. carton\n30 01. bottle (plus bottle)\nPeanut Butter.\nLarge pkg. _\nSTORE HOURS\n. Mon.,  Tues.,  Thurs.,   Frl.,\n0:00 a.m.\u20145:00 p.m.\nWednesday\n0:00 .i.m.\u201412 noon\nI Saturday \u2014 9:00 a.m.\u20146:00 p.m.\n#60    Kraft Dinner\nCooks In 7 minute*.\n7Vx ox. pkg _\n\u2014 Lb. 84c\nea. 91c\nPkg. 16c\nTin 56c\n2 for 85c\n3 for 84c\nPkg. 35c\nPkg. 13c\n\\\\ i&00i>$% (Kroqwitg.\nPHONES\nI Drygoods     ..\nIReady-toWear \t\nI Hosiery  \t\nI Groceries   _.,___....._\n| Men's Wear \u2014 \u2014\t\n...   49\n 49\n...... 62\n 193\nINCORPORATED   2-**\"?   MAY  I6 70.\n ifolflim Satig $3Vtit3   Random Corner\nEstaolished April 22, 1902\nBrilish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS FUBLISHINQ COMPANV, LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail\nPost Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nWednesday, July 4, 1951\nJaycees Set a Good\nExample With\nBorder Courtesies\n. There will be no means of placing\na value on the Jaycees' \"welcome to\nCanada\" effort being conducted at two\nKootenay international border entry\nports today. There can be no dollars\nand cents tag on it. However, though\nimmeasurable, its effect, it can be sure,\nwill be far-reaching. It is just such\nnovel courtesy to visitors that has made\nother tourist areas famous.\nIt is altogether fitting, as well, that\nred-coated Mounties will also be on\nduty at the border. The Red Coats by\ntradition represent all that is the best\nin this nation's manhood and institutions. Their organization is thoroughly\nCanadian; a fact that can be fully appreciated by visitors enjoying their\nown' greatest patriotic holiday.\nThe courtesies of the Junior .Chamber of Commerce greeters will pay off.\nOf'that there is no doubt. They will be\nremembered, and the story carried\nback home by the visitors.\nBut perhaps the greatest value of\nthe border gestures is the fact that it\nindicates an awareness by a group of\nbusy citizens that the visitor industry\nis everybody's industry, that the goodwill, friendships and dollars that it\nreaps are important to every one of us\njust as to, for instance the resort-\nowner.\n. The greatest benefit of the tourist\nindustry, outside of the imponderables,\nis the fact that it creates employment.\nNot a one of us has to be told how\nimportant are jobs. A portion of every\ntourist dollar\u2014and a good many of\nthem are new dollars entering the\neconomy of our communities\u2014goes into wages. And money for wages starts\non a never-ending journey.\n, The tourist industry was worth $275\nmillion to Canadians in 1950. Of this,\n94 per cent or $260 million was spent\nby Americans. The remaining $15 million\u2014an important figure in' itself\u2014\nwas spent by interprovincial and overseas visitors. These figures compare to\nU.S. tourist spendings of $267 million\nin 1948 and $268 million in 1949.\nThe fact that there has been a .decline in the dollar volume despite the\nfact that more foreign cars than ever\u2014\n7,032,900 entries\u2014crossed our borders\nin 1950, indicates that there is slack to\nbe taken up if our visitor industry is to\nmaintain its place. That job can be done\nlargely by the ordinary citizen participating With, the'host of gestures to our\nguests that is possible to him alone, and\ndisplaying his awareness of his part in\nthis Canadian and Kootenay industry.-\nThe Junior Chamber of Commerce\nmembers, in this regard, are setting a\ngood example at NelWay and Paterson.\nOlder workers have demonstrated they\nhave assets, sometimes lacking in younger\npeople\u2014experience, loyalty to the job, and\nrealization that they have more to lose it they\nare laid off or discharged.\u2014Dr. Murray B.\nFerderber, of U. of Pittsburgh School of Medl-'\nclnes.\nBy GRETCHEN GIBSON\nThis is the season of \"happy holidays\"\u2014\nthe highlight of the year to the worker, the\nexciting no-school period for the student.\nThere is a magic about the word \"holiday\". It\nhas such a scope for enjoyment!\u2014the anticipation, the actuality, the memory! #.\nThe dictionaries define \"holiday\" as any\nseason devoted to pleasure or amusement; but\nthe word \"devote\" sounds to me (and doesn't\nit to you?) too demanding to indicate the true\nspirit of a holiday, which should, if it does\nnothing else, release us from obligations, even\nthe obligations of a round of pleasures. Freedom from habitual routine; a relaxation from\nthe strain and restrictions of our daily duties\u2014\nthat, it seems to me, is the true holiday.\n\"Sarah wants me to stay with her,\" said a\nbusy housewife who was planning a week's\nvacation in the city. \"Says she'll just treat me\nlike one of the family. It's kind of her, but I'm\nstaying at a hotel; I don't want to be treated\nlike one of the family when I'm on a vacation.\nI want a change.\"\nOddly enough, holidayers often enjoy\nhanging around the places where they work.\n(Is this a sadistic tendency, or What?) WeTiave\nall heard of street car conductors and bus\ndrivers spending their holidays taking long\nrides on their respective vehicles.' Children\nwill often rush home the morning school\ncloses with a \"Hurrah, school's over!\" And\nwhat do they spend the rest of the morning\nplaying?\u2014School!\nAlthough a change of scene and environment is desirable for a vacation, the fact that\nwe cannot take a trip should never be allowed\nto spoil our holiday. For even if we cannot\nhave a change of scene we can, if we will, have\na change of mind. We can find something to\ndo, some form of work or recreation for which\nwe have had the urge, but not the opportunity.\nDuring our holidays might be a good time to\nexperiment.\nWe, in Nelson, are particularly fortunate\nin having nearby resorts and a variety of\nthings we can do right at home. We have the\nparks, the lake and the mountains, tennis, golf,\nbaseball, etc., or if we prefer mid-Winter\nsports in mid-Summer, the rink\u2014all vacation\nattractions,     v.\nBut no matter what we do, whether we\nfare abroad to see the sights, or stay at home\nand sit under a tree, the gist of a good holiday\nis the liberty it offers us to do as we please.\n\".. . And as for .the weather, there^is a saying,\n\"The weather is within you!\"\u2014So, probably, to\na degree, is your holiday.\nTimes Do Change\nThe following reproduction of a notice\n\u25a0 posted in the Amboy, Illinois, store operated\nby the founders of what is now the Carson\nPirie Scott & Co. Stores of Chicago has been\nrepeated by the Commercial News, a Canadian\ncontracting paper. However, in the 1880's and\nthereabouts, a set of operating rules and regulations such as these for employees of many\na business enterprise were not considered exceptional, and as such it is worthy of repetition.\n1. Store must be open from 6 a.m. to 9\np.m. the year round.\n2. Store must be swept, counters, shelves\nand showcases dusted; lamps trimmed and\nfilled and chimneys cleaned; pens made; doors\nand windows opened; a pail of water and a\nbucket of coal brought in before breakfast\n(If there, is time to do so, attend to customers\nwho call.)\n3. The store must not be opened on the\nSabbath unless necessary, and then only for\na few minutes.\n4. The employee who is in the habit of\nsmoking Spanish cigars, being shaved at the\nbarber's, going to dances and other places of\namusement will assuredly give his employer\nreason to be suspicious of his integrity and\nhonesty.  '\n5. Each employee must, pay not less than\n$5 per year to the church, and must attend\nSunday School regularly.\n6. Men employees are given one evening\na week for courting; two if they go to prayer\nmeeting.\n7.' After 14 hours in the store, the leisure\nhours should be spent for the most part in\nreading.\nRights\nWe believe that human beings have certain\ninalienable rights\u2014that is, rights that cannot\nbe given or taken away. They involve 'the right\nof every individual to develop his own mind\nand his own soul in the ways of his own choice.\nFree from fear and coercion, providing always that he does not interfere with the rights\nof others.\nTo us a society is not free if law-abiding\ncitizens live in -fear of being denied the right\nto work, or deprived of life, liberty, and the\npursuit of happiness.\u2014Gen. George Marshall.\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not be published,\nThere Is no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBV MAIL except where there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy.\nM. M., Kimberley\u2014I have a very old watch,\nmade in London, 1245. Do you know of a\ndealer who buys antiques of this kind?\nWe invite you to write to Birks, Jewellers,\nGranville and Georgia, Vancouver; or Birks,\nJewellers, Eighth Avenud, Calgary.\nC. C.'j Nelson\u2014Is there ap easy way to stiffen\nfeltjiats?\nTake borax, five ounces; potassium carbonate, 1% ounces; shellac, 25 ounces; water. The\nborax and potassium carbonate should be dissolved in hot water enough to immerse hat\neventually, and while in solution the shellac\nshould be added and boiled until shellac has\ndissolved. Theh remove from heat. Apply to\nhat with either sponge or brush, finally dipping hat In very dilute solution of sulphuric\nacid or acetic acid. The hat must then be\nshaped and allowed to dry.      i\nF. C, Nelson\u2014What year did the railway come\ninto Nelson?\nThe Columbia-Kootenay Railway from\nRobson to Nelson was operating in 1892; in\n1895 the Fort Sheppard Railway came in from'\nthe States; in 1896 the Canadian Pacific took\nover the Columbia-Kootenay and next year\nput in the branch line to Slocan City.\nReader, New Denver\u2014Who was it said, \"Take\n1 up the white man's burden\"?\nRudyard Kipling.\nLooking Backward\n.    10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of July 4, 1941\nPte. Howard McLellan, son of Mr. and\nMrs. McLellan, 414 Silica Street, is home on\nsick leave after receiving a knee injury when\nsand caved upon him.\nBylaws setting in motion the legal machinery for the City of Nelson to acquire land\nfor widening the Western road entrance to\nthe city were read twice b^ title at Thursday\nnight's Council meeting,\n25 YEARS  AGO\nFrom The Dally News of July 4, 1926\nRossland took the Trail team 17 to 8 with\nCosgriff opening It with a two-bagger, and\nBurke hitting a home run.\nMisses Wolverton, Wilson and Water,\ngraduates of the Kootenay Lake General Hospital, have successfully written their R.N.\nexaminations,\nJ. P. McGoldrick, the Spokane lumberman,\narrived in Nelson Saturday to attend the mining convention.\n40 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom The Dally News of July 4, 1911\nMrs. H. G. Neelands left Saturday night\nfor a visit to the Coast.\nJ. F. Armstrong of Cranbrook has been\ngazetted as acting chief water commissioner\nin place pf W. S. Drewry, who has resigned.\nBorn on July 3, to Mr. and Mrs. J. Colter\nof High Street, Fairview, a daughter.\nPress Comment\nTOO MUCH LAW?\nQuebec Province's ban on margarine is\nproducing some odd effects. One of them is\npointed up' by a charge of selling 4000 pounds\nof margarine as butter which is faced by three\nProvincial dealers.\nThis is believed to be the first misrepresentation of its kind to have been exposed in\nCanada since sale of margarine was legalized\nin March, 1949. Is it strange that it turned up\nin a Province which is attempting to exclude\nthe artificial product entirely?\nThere are those who will say it is not\u2014\nthat it is possible to have too much restrictive\nlaw in some things. If that is so, Quebec has\npassed the point of diminishing returns on\nmargarine.\u2014Windsor Daily Star.\nDrainage of swamps can go too far, warns\nthe Farmer's Advocate (London, Ont.). \"This\nill-guided action is one reason why floods are\nincreasing in frequency and severity and why\nunderground water resources are shrinking.\nConservation authorities. in Ontario are proceeding to restore the swamps to their natural\nstate and to that end Federal aid should be\ndirected rather than to the continued drying\nup of the countryside.\" '    .\n! Hieyi Do It Every .turn\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nThese as horseshoe\nBENPERS Aim^S\nTIME THEIR VISITS\nWITH BABY& E4TlN*5\nSCHECU.E\nToday's Bible Thought\nIt Is bad enough to boast of yesterday. Humility will win more\nfriends than boatstfulness.\u2014Boast\nnot thyself of tomorrow; for thou\nknowest not what a day may bring\nforth\u2014 Prov. 27:1.\nGjjwL K&L\nYou read.a lot about mother-in-\nlaw trouble, but no mother-in-law\ncan spoil a home unless the one she\nis mother of is a spoiled and silly\nbrat.\nLetters to\nThe Editor\nLetters to the Editor of sufficient interest, but of too great\nlength for the usual letters column will, on occasion be reproduced in news columns. AJ1 letters to the Editor must Be signed,\nthough a ,nom-de-plume may be\nused for publication.\nSays Wage Earner\nCan Pay More; Cow\nPopulation Fading\nTo the Editor;\nSir\u2014The following letter has been\nmailed to Hon. J. G. Gardiner, Minister of Agriculture, in Ottawa; Hon.\nH. R. Bowman, Minister of Agriculture, in Victoria; J. Turnbull, Presi\ndent, National Dairy Council, in\nOttawa; Erie Kitchen, Secretary of\nthe Dairy Farmers of Canada, in Toronto; and to H. A. Hanam, President of the Canadian Federation of\nAgriculture, in Ottawa, in an effort\nto coordinate the efforts of these organizations with those of the B. C,\nDairymen's Association.\nDear Sir:\nThe dairy industry of Canada ls\nfacing a very serious situation. Recent statistics show that the dairy\ncow population has decreased\naround 74,000 in the last year, and\nthere are no signs or prospects of\nthe decline ending. Surely the time\nhas come when something must be\ndone.about it to protect the tremendous investment that has been\nmade in the industry, not only in\nmoney, but the lifelong work of\nthousands of men and women across\nthis country who find themselves\ntoday getting on in years with their\nlife work invested in farms and\ndairy herds, and, owing to too low\nreturns compared to other industries, unable to pay hired help or\ntheir own sons the wages they can\nobtain elsewhere for considerably\nless hours.\nI had a vivid example of this this\nweek out here in the Okanagan Valley. Two well-dressed, good-mannered boys around 18 to 20 years\nold were resting under a tree outside my gate trying to thumb a ride.\nIn conversation with them I learned\nthat their parents were dairy farmers in Ontario. I asked them why\nthey were not home, and the answer\nwas that their Dads could not afford\nto pay them the wages they could\nget at almost anything else but\nfarming. This is happening in every\nsection of Canada, and is the answer\nto why the boys don't stay on the\nfarm, and, frankly, is a disgrace to\nthe country.\nMillions are invested in plants\nand equipment, ahd if this decline\nin dairy cows and the driving of\nfarmers' sons away from home is\nnot halted at once, these plants and\nequipment ahd the thousands who\nwork in them are going to be reduced considerably, along* with the\nmen and women over 60 who cannot\ncarry on alone, much as they would\nlike to.\nTrue, they can sell out for half\nwhat they put into lt and see some\ninexperienced person mine the land\nthey have spent a lifetime to clear\nand build up. Even the experienced\nfarmer is forced today, owing to low\nreturns, to do considerable land\nmining to make ends meet. This can\nonly last so long, and'the time is\nshort.\nThis is a gloomy, picture, and so\nis the dairy business today, but it is\nthe plain truth, jvhich will soon\nhave to be brought out into the\nlight in spite of what the ..experts\nmay say. They cannot fool we\npeople Who have had our feet in\nthe soil for half a century or more.\nAs President of the Shuswap-\nOkanagan Dairy Co-Op., whose\nmembers have around $400,000 invested in plant and equipment, and\na director in other farm organizations, and-especially as a cow milker\nfor 50 years, I think it is a great\nmistake for us to quit in disgust and\nsacrifice our life work and investment. We should put up a fight to\nprotect the most vital industry in\nCanada and the millions invested by\nprocessors and distributors across\nthe country.        \"\nThe excuse that the wage earner\ncannot pay more for dairy products\nis not true. An hour's wages today\nwill buy two to three times as much\nas it did 10 years ago, and there was\nno Family Allowance then, either.\nOrganized labor and consumers are\ndetermined to have cheap food, and\nwe must be just as determined that\nwe won't be sacrificed any longer to\nprovide that cheap food or lay down\nand quit. We cannot delay any longer if our cow population is to be\nsaved and experienced farmers kept\non the land. Our only hope lies in\neveryone connected with the industry \u2014 processors, distributors, producers and officials of our departments\u2014getting together in one solid\ndirection if we are to preserve a\ndairy industry for Canada and raise\na healthy next generation.\nI am taking the liberty of writing\nto you as a leader in your branch of\nthe industry to ask if you will be\ngood enough to think over the\npoints I have raised as a cow milker\nand one who is very seriously concerned for the welfare of the industry we have worked so hard to\nbuild up. Any suggestions and help\nyou can give as to the best way for\nall those involved in the dairy industry to get together will be greatly appreciated by the B. C. Dairymen's Association.\nS, E. HALKSWORTH, Chairman,\nCoordinating Committee.\nOATIS DENIES\nTAKING OVER\n\"SPY NETWORK\"\nBy.DONALD DOANE\nFRANKFURT, Germany, July 3\n(AP)\u2014William Oatis denied a Communist prosecutor's charge yesterday that he had taken over an \"espionage network\" when he became\nAssociated Press Bureau Chief in\nPrague. But he told the court trying him on anti-state ^arges that\nhe had been a spy.\nThe prosecutor, who depicted Oatis as a link in a spy ring 'including\nformer Prague correspondents of\nReuters News Agency, United Press\nand Alence France-Presse, indicated\nhe would call 11 witnesses to the\nstand today.\nAmong them are several Czech\nwriters, former employees of Pan-\nAmerican Airways and the United\nPress; Josef Havelka, alleged murderer of a Czech security officer;\nLydia Votavova, former AP employee, and Matej Kublk, former\nHotel Alcrpn bartender.\nOatis, first American newspaper\nman to be tried behind the Iron\nCurtain in Europe, testified yesterday in gloomy Pankrac prison,\nwhere he has been held incommunicado since April 23. He is charged\nwith activities hostile to the state.\nThe 37-year-old native of Marion,\nInd., looked pal'' and strained as he\ntook the stand. Led into the courtroom without the glasses he usually\nwears, he spoke slowly and in a firm\nvoice, never looking at the spectators.\nSince his arrest, American Embassy officials and The Associated\nPress have been unable to communicate with Oatis or provide him\nwith counsel. His defence counsel is\na Czech, appointed by the Government.\nTwo United States Embassy employees admitted to the trial are reporting his testimony to the American High Commissioner's office in\nFrankfurt. There are no Western\nnewsmen left in Czechoslovakia to\ncover the trial.\nReports from the trial room said\nOatis spoke in careful phrases which\nsuggested that he had been carefully coached.\nv Three Ciech writers, formerly\nemployed by the AP, are on trial\nwith Oatis. They testified yesterday that they also  engaged   In\nspying. The are Tomas Svoboda,\nPavel Wojdlnek and Peter Muntz.\nAlthough warned by the court\nthat admissions of guilt \"would\nhave  a   bearing   on   their  sentences\",   they   said   they   \"felt\nguilty\".\nAsked If he agreed with their\ntestimony, Oatis said, \"Generally\nspeaking, yes.\"\nThe Government charged in a\nstatement before the trial that Oatis\nand the three postwar AP Bureau\nChiefs who preceded him in Prague\nhad organized .the Bureau into a spy\ncentre that worked closely with\nUnited States Government officials.\nOVER 100 FILE CLAIMS\nIN NORONIC FIRE\nCLEVELAND, O, July 3 (API-\nAll claims were in today in the S.S.\nNoronic ,fire, but it probably will\nbe six months or more before the\ntrial for damages totalling nearly\n$17,000,000 comes up in Federal\nCourt.\nThe deadline for filing claims was\nyesterday and suits were on file for\nall but about 10 of the 119 persons\nwho died when the Noronic burned\nat a Toronto pier, S\"ept. 17, K49.\nOnly a few claims came in the final\nday.\nColumbia Bridge Part\nOf History of Trail\nThe bridge, May 24, 1912\nBy LOUIS FRYLING-\nTRAIL, B. C, June 29 \u2014 A lot of\ninteresting and unusual things happen on and around a bridge. Happy\nromances are started by the mystic\nspell cast by the music of the swirling water and magic of moonlight.\nAgain, down below the iron girders,\nthe continental flow of the current\nhas hypnotically beckoned to the\ndesperate. For fishing, diving or\njust serene contemplation, endless\npossibilities are available from a\nbridge, whether it be a large one\ncrossing a mighty river or a modest\naffair reaching aoross a   stream.\nThe bridge in. Trail crossing the\nColumbia, the only link between\ntwo important sections of the city,\nhas had its full share of romance,\npathos, drama and despair. There is\nno official record of how many- happy vows have been pledged from its\nwooden deck, but from all indications the number is high. Several\nbrave Trailites have used it for high\ndiving and on one occasion a chap\nscraped an overhanging wire and\nplunged the 60 feet out of balance.\nForunately he' came out of it all\nright.' Another fellow fell in while\ntrying some silly antics but happily\nwas fished out. Still another jumped\nin with intentions of ending it all,\nbut the water was too cold so he\nswam ashore.\nMore than once the tension has\nbeen high as it was feared the\nbridge would be washed away. In\nfact, when being built, the first cais-\nsoi; was swept away by the current.\nIn 1948 the sway was as much it\ntwo feet as the water climbed t\u00bb\nwithin four feet from the dock.\nA high dramatic moment rami\nwhen an old boathouse became lodged and had to be dynamited away.\nOn May 24, 1912, the bridge wai\naccepted by James H. Schofield,\nMLA, in the name of the government of British Columbia and thi\nribbon was cut by Mrs. Schofield\nallowing the crowd to surge through\nto the East side, as pictured. Strings\nof flags were lined along thi '\nstreets and buildings were decorated. It was indeed a great occasion\nand crowds come from Rossland,\nWaneta, Fruitvale, Nelson, Grand\nForks and the rest,of the surrounding district.\nIt will be of great interest to thi\nGolden Jubilee guests to learn that\nMiss Schofield, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. James H, Scholfield wai\nchosen to cut the ribbon in the\nbridge scene of the Trail pageant\nEach member of the United Nations is entitled 'to five representa>\ntives in the Geenral Assembly, but\nhas only one vote.\nem\nWORK REFRESHED\nPHONE 144 FOR-CLASSIFIED\nNEWSPAPERS BUY MILL\nTULSA, Okla., July 3 (AP)\u2014Purchase of the Hennepin Paper Co.\nmill at Little Falls, Minn., by seven\nnewspapers and a New York newsprint broker was disclosed Monday.\nThe mill was sold by the St. Regis\nPaper Co. for approximately $1,-\n500,000.\nThe purchasers expect to take\nover the mill about Aug. 1.\nSTRIKE   AVERTED\nE\u00a7SEN, Germany, July 3 (AP)\u2014\nA strike of Western Germany's 400,-\n000 Ruhr miners was^ averted today\nwhen mine delegates accepted a 12-\nper-cent wage increase.\n\/ta\n\/U^_ a^\n\\\t\n1951,\nJULY\n1951\nSUN\nMON\nTUE\nWED\nTHO\nFBI\nSAT\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n9\n10\n11\n12\n13\n14\n15\n16\n17\n18\n1.9\n20\n21\n22 23 24 25 26 27 28\n29 3Q 31\nHave\nYou\nChecked\n\/\nYour\nHolidays\n\u2014 and planned\nyour TRIP?\nFor a  Perfect1  Holiday\nyou will want to have\nyour DAILY NEWS \u2014\nfor added pleasure, and\nto keep up with LOCAL *\nand WORLD  NEWS\nwhile  you  are  away.\n-I\nTell your Carrier Salesman ar News Agent, where you want\nyour paper sent, or write or phone 144.\nRATE   BY   MAIL   OR   CARRIER   \u2014   25-J   PER   WEEK\n\u25a0    CIRCULATION  DEPARTMENT\n \/3es7 ocp)\n%1V\nSnead Wins Third\nPQE Championship\nBy WILL GRIMSLEY\nOAKMONT, Pa., July 3 (AP)\u2014Sam Snead, West Virginia's silky-stroking hillbilly, climaxed one of the most\nspectacular sub-par streaks in golf history today to smother\nWalter Burkemo of Franklin, Mich., 7 and 6, for his third\nProfessional Golf Association championship,\nIt was the second-worst, defeat recorded in 33 P.G.A.\nfinals\u2014outranked only by the humiliating 8 and 7 licking\nSnead took from Paul Run-  \u2014 --\nTHE KIDS are not neglected In Trail's Golden\nJubilee celebrating, Here wai i big moment for\nJohn Barron as the enmorn caught him going before the Judges during the kiddles- parade content.\nHli mobile hot dog stand placed seoond to Parry\nWeaver's flrit prize Mounted Police costume, The\nwinner oan be seen it the extreme loft\u2014 Mervyn\nRowlands photo.\nIrs. Dupont Eliminated\nIn Wimbledon Tennis\nBy BEN PHLEGAR\nWHUHLBDOW, England, July 3\nlAP)\u2014Pretty Beverly Baker of\nBanta Monica, Calif., provided topaz's big thrill ln the Wimbledon\nnis championships by upsetting\nleoond-seeded Mrs. Margaret Os-\npomt Dupont in a rousing three-\nmatch as she and three other\nAmerican girls filled tha semi-final\nkit\nTho 38-year-old Miss Baker, who\ni pound a ball equally hard with\ndthcr hand, gave a tremendous\nlilvfag exhibition to defeat the\n[reigning- American champion from\nTilmington, Del., 8-1, 4-6, 6-3.\nAccompanying her into Thurs-\nUay's semi-finals were Louise\nBrough of Beverly Hills, Calif., de-\n[faidhig champion,and No. 1 seeded\nJplayer; Doris Hart of Miami, Fla.,\nSeeded No. 3, and Shirley Fry of\nAltron, O., recent winner of the\nFrench women's titlo.\nSemi-final pairings will pit Miss\nBaker against Miss Hart, and Miss\nFry against Miss Brough when women's play resumes Thursday! The\nmen's semi-finals \u2014 Herbie Flam\nvs Dick Savitt, and Ken McGregor\nvs Eric Sturgess \u2014 are scheduled\nfor tomorrow,\nMACKEN, MAIN LOSE\nGardnar Mulloy and Dick Savitt,\nAmerica's best hope for the men's\ndoubles title, reached the semifinals with a 6-2, 6-1, 6-4 victory\nover Brendan Macken and Lome\nMain of Canada. Two other high-\nseeded pairs, Frank Sedgman and\nKen McGregor of Australia, and\nJaroslav Drobny, Egypt, and Eric\nSturgess, South Africa, also advanced easily.\nIN. Denver Shortstop Robs Tigers\nOf Tying Run With Spectacular Cafch\nNelson  Tigers  dropped  a  close\nJit the Civic  Hecreation  Grounds\n\u25a0baseball diamond Sunday when the\nTsnappy New Denver Seniors took\nphe game by a 9-8 score. The loss\nnade the  third game the  Tigers\nhave given up by a single run this\nPear.\nThe two ball clubs gave the ball\nans a good game, and it was touch\nind go all the way, with Ron Brown\njetting, eight strikeouts to K. Hay-\nishi's six.\nThe Tigers scored in their half of\nhe first to take a. 1-0 lead, only to\nlave New Denver score three in\nhi second, a lead that was short\nived, es the locals tied it up with\nwo runs in their half of the third.\n3oth clubs went scoreless in the\nourth until the New Denver Japa-\niese boys put on a splurge of base\ntinning that was tops and drew a\narge hand from the crowd as they\nicored two in the fourth and added\niingles in the sixth, eighth and\nlinth.\nNelson came to bat, down 9-5 in\nhe last inning and sprang, to life to\nicore three runs on hits by Kraft,\nYash and Christenson.\nWith bases loaded, two out, and\nhe home club down one run, Dozzi\nlaught an inside pitch for what\nooked like a sure safety. With all\nha Tiger'base runners headed for\nlome, Hayashi, at short got away\njack and made a spectacular one-\nlanded catch to end the game and\njive the visitors a well earned win,\nLineups were:\nNew Denver\u2014J. Teteishi, one run,\nti Sarnyona one run, A. Hayashi,\nI. Gawnyletz one run, T. Takenaka,\nme run, W. Thring two runs, T.\nKireto, one run, T. Pearson one run,\nK. Hayashi, R. Adyana.\nNelson\u2014A. Abrosimo, D. Kraft,\none run, D. Porteous, two runs,\nR. Nash, two runs, C. Christenson,\none run, L. Irwin, one run, J.\nBachynski, one run, C. Christerson,\none run, Dozzi, K. White and R.\nBrown.\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nWithout Calomel-And You'll lump Out of\nBed in the Morning Hariri' lo Go\nThis liver should pour out about 2 plnta of\nBu EiS! '!\"\u2022\" your 'i'BMtivo tract overy day.\nIf thss brio ir, not flowsne Ircoly your food may\nf,\u201e , fW\"- \" m\"?J\"\" <lec\u00bby I\" tho cligestivi\ntract, 1 hon trait bloats up your nromach. You\nsot conatipatod. You fool now, sunk and lh\u00ab\nworld looks punk.\nnil1*1\u2122,\" l,hoM \u2122lld- P\"\"\"\" Carter's Littlo\niEll \"\\to Bet. *\u2022* 2 I\u21221\" of hilo flotr-\nUiR.frooly to mnko you fool \"up and up \"\nGot a pockaco today. ErToctlvo in snakin,\nmu.%7i.y- A5k !or C'\"i\u2122'\u2022 UM\u00b0 Liv\u00ab'\nI'lus, 36* at any drugstore.\nA.C.T. Tourney\nPlanned Friday\nAssociated Canadian Travellers\nof Nelson golf tournament will be\nheld at Nelson Golf and Country\nClub Friday afternoon. A banquet\nat the clubhouse will follow.\nFriends of members are also being\ninvited to play and post entries are\nbeing accepted. The handicap event\nwill see prizes posted for low net-\nscore, best dressed golfer, longest\ndrive, and so on.\nM. A. Browne is chairman and\nassisting are A. J. MacDonald and\nN. G. Storey.\nRossland Circle\nHas Sports Day\nROSSLAND, B.C., July 3\u2014The\nFriendly Circle of St. Andrew's\nUnited Church met in Esling Park\nfor its annual picnic and sports\nday. Races were run by the women\nand children. Results were:\nPeanut race\u2014first heat, Mrs. 0. H.\nOwen, first; Mrs. H. S. Donaldson,\nsecond. Second heat \u2014 Mrs. D.\nThompson, first; Mrs. T. Kalhovd,\nsecond.\nNeedle threading \u2014 Mrs. Owen\nand Mrs. G. Jorgenson, first; Mrs,\nW. Torry and Mrs. Donaldson, second.\nFifteen peg on a line\u2014Mrs. Donaldson, Mrs. Kalhovd and Mrs, G.\nCulling.\nChildren's:\nThree to five years\u2014first, Shirley\nOwen.\nIn the two years and under, all\nthe children raced and all won\nprizes.\nA peanut scramble was then held\nwith all the children partaking. The\nwinners of the women's races each\nreceived a lapel corsage of daises\nand pansies.  - -\nTlie most powerful gasoline your car can use.\n'activated'Shell Premium!\nWhite Sox,\nQiants\nQain Qround\nBy the Canadian Press\nLittle Billy Pierce pitched Chicago White Sox to within a half\ngame of the American League lead\nTuesday and New York Giants\npicked up valuable ground in the\nNational League chase.\nPierce hurled the White Sox to a\n4-1 three-hit victory over Cleveland Indians, enabling the Sox to\npick up a half a game on the pace\nsetting New York Yankees who\nwere idle.\nThe Giants scored a nip and tuck\n9-8 13-inning victory over Phlladel\nphia Phillies to pull to within 4tt\ngames of Brooklyn Dodgers. The\nDodgers dropped a 4-3 decision to\nthe Braves in Boston. The Giants\nand Dodgers open a three-game\nseries Wednesday.\nIn other games, Washington Senators upset Boston Red Sox 4-1,\nCincinnati Reds trounced St. Louis\nCardinals 10-4 and Pittsburgh\nPirates defeated Chicago Cubs 2-0,\nThe Yonks, Detroit Tigers, Philadelphia Athletics and St. Louis Browns\nwere idle. .\nPierce, staked to a 3-0 lead in two\ninnings, had little trouble posting\nhis eighth victory.\nBREAKS WINNING STREAK\nSingles by Bob Dlllinger, Orestes\nMinoso, Ed Robinson and Al Zarilla\ngave the Sox two runs in the first\ninning off Bob Lemon. They picked\nup another in the second \"on Gus\nNiarhos' single, a sacrifice and a\nsingle by Dillinger. Successive\ndoubles by Jim Busby and Chico\nCarrasquel produced Chicago's\nfourth run in the sixth.\nThe loss snapped Cleveland's\nseven  game  winning streak.\nSid Hudson checked the Hed Sox\non five hits to halt Washington's\nseven-game losing spell. The Senators banged out 10 hits with Irv\nNoren hitting a double and two\nsingles.\nThe Giants came from behind\nfive times before gaining the nod\nover the Phillies. Whitey Lockman\nsingled home pinch-runner Clint\nHartung with the payoff tally after\nWillie Mays homered to tie the\nscore at 8-8.\nThe Phil's edged ahead for the*\nlast time, 8-7 In the 13th on two\ntingles, a walk and fly ball only\nto have Mays and Lockman oome\nthrough  In the  last half,  Larry\nJansen, making his second relief\nappearance, gained oredlt for the\nvictory, hli 10th.\nSir Gordon singled witli the bases\nloaded in the ninth inning to beat\nthe Dodgers. Max Surkont went all\nthe way for the Braves and helped\nhis own cause by driving in a run.\nVern Law, who hadn't pitched a\ncomplete game since April 2B, turned in a brilliant five-hitter in beating the Cubs. Joe Garagiola singled\nin a run in the second and George\nMctkovich tripled across the second\nin the eighth.\nUmpire Jocko Conlan banished\nfour    Pirates    Including    Ralph\nKiner,   pitcher   Bob   Friend  and\ncoaches   Bill   Posedel   and   Milt\nStock,   Klner'ii  ejection  was the\nfirst of his six-year majpr league\ncareer.  He  was thrown  out for\ndisputing a play at first base.\nThe  Cincinnati Reds  scored six\nruns with two out Jn the sixth inning to hand Harry Brecheen of\nthe Cards his first defeat of the\nseason.   Pinch-hitter   Barney   Mc-\nCoscky's three-run double was the\nbig blow of the rally.\nyan in 1938.\nBen Hogan, who decided his legs\nwould no longer carry him ln this\neven's\", trounced Mike Turnesa 7 and\n6 in 1948.\n.  When Snead closed the door on\nthe popular, pug-nosed battler from\nMichigan on the 30th hole, he was\n22 under par for 188 match play\nholes over the Oakmont monster\nwhosa par 37-35\u201472 has withstood\nprolonged assaults for years.\nIn 10 major tournaments, Including two United 8tatei opens,\nnone of thi.golf greats \u2014 Bobby\nJones, Walter Hagen or Hogan\u2014\never gave thi broad, hilly layout\n\u2022uch \u2022 shellacking ai It took during the last week from Snead's\nsizzling clubs.\nThe  37-year-old  White  Sulphur\nSprings expert, who has won more\nthan $200,000 on the golf trail since\nhe came out of the hills 16 years\nago, pocketed $3500 for his triumph.\nBurkemo   as   runner-up   earned\n$1500.\nIn hanging up thi 33rd championship  beside  the  titles won  in in the afternoon.\nBRITISH CRICKET\nLONDON, July 3 (Reuters) \u2014\nEnglish first-class cricket results\ntoday:\nSouth Africans 454 for eight declared. Yorkshire 579. Match drawn.\nLancashire 441 for six declared,\nSussex   124   and   184.   Lancashire\nI won by innings and 153 runs.\nI   Surrey 389 and nine for two. Ox\nford University 159 and 238. Surrey\nwon by eight wickets.\nI Glamorgan 330. Nottinghamshire\n172 and 260 for seven. Match drawn.\nI    Somerset 196 and 200. Kent 208\nand 176. Somerset won by 12 runs.\nGloucestershire 163 and 328. War-\nI wickshire  313  and  179 for  seven.\nj Warwickshire won by three wickets.\nj    Leicestershire   330   and   232   for\n! eight declared. Essex 262 and 220\n- for nine. Match drawn,\nI Northamptonshire 294 and 280 for\nfive declared. Middlesex 345 for five\ndeclared and 178 for eight. Match\ndrawn.\nI   Hampshire 313 for nine declared\n. and 214 for six declared.\nI   Cambridge University 314 for six\nI declared and 124. Hampshire won\nI by 89 runs.\nSPORTS\nNELSON PAILY NJWS, WKDNISDAY, JULY 4, 1951 \u2014 9\n1942 and 1840, Snead became, the\nthird man in history to win as many\nas three P.G.A. crowns, Hagen won\nfive times, Gene Sarazen three,.\nTo   all   Intents  and   purposes,\nSnead won the final match on tho\nfirst  hole.  After two  ponderous\npokes down the 483-yard fairway,\nhe chipped home from 45 feet for\nan eagle three.\nThat put Burkemo, playing In\nhli first P.G.A. championship, In\na hole from which he never law\ndaylight  Ripping old  Oakmont\napart with i three-under-pir 34\non the front line, Snead built up\n\u25a0 five-hole advantage,\nBurkemo, Michigan open champion, cut that margin to three holes\nwith a strong spurt on the Incoming\nnine, but he was just prolonging the\ninevitable.\nSnead played the morning round\nln 34-38\u201470, two under par, and\nwas two under regulation for the\n12 holes in the afternoon.\nBurkemo had a 41-34\u201475 for the\nmorning round and was two over\nWife's Pleadings Over Phone Fail\nTo Stop Death of Former Baseball Star\nATLANTA, Ga\u201e July S (AP)-A shotgun blast, heard\nclearly by his wife over a' phone line, early today killed\nformer baseball star Hugh Casey a few seconds after he\ndenied anew that he fathered an illegitimate son',\nThe 38-year-old onetime relief pitching ace of Brooklyn\nDodgers fired a charge from a 16-gauge shotgun into his neck\nat 1 a,m.\nThe roar out short his estranged\nwife's desperate arguments against\nsuicide and lt was heard also by a\nclose friend hurrying to Casey's\nhotel room to balk tha killing.\nLast words of the veteran of 11\nyears in the major leagues, as re-\nported'by his estranged wife, Kathleen, were:\n\"I am completely Innocent of\nthose charges.\"\nHe referred to a claim by Hilda\nWeissman of Brooklyn that he was\nintimate with her in February, 1949,\nand fathered her child, born out of\nwedlock. A court in New York upheld her claims last year.\nAt her home, Miss Weissman, 25,\nsaid \"I'm very sorry, very sorry \u2014\nit's all so terrible.\" She now ls\nmarried to Philip Weinstein, 24.\nCasey's last denial, followed immediately by the crash of the shotgun's discharge, ended 15 minutes\nof dramatic pleadings by Mrs.\nCasey. This met laughing assurances\nfrom the athlete that he was \"ready\nPitching Reserve Gave Kimberley\nBall Victory; Nelsen Shews Well\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., July J - A\ncrowd of well over 1500 saw Kimberley's first big baseball tournament almost turned Into a route\nhere Monday when the home-town\nsquad eliminated Tekoa, Wash., and\nNelson in high scoring contests that\nwere below the calibre of the early\nround contests.\nKimberley's reserve in pitching\nstrength gave them the $1000 first\nprize. Both Tekoa and Nelson threw\ntheir remaining mound strength\ninto the first game of the round\nrobin final and the local team held\nback for the crucial game they expected against Nelson's fading club.\nAs a result, the final game between\nthe two Kootenay clubs ended in\nthe seventh with Kimberley running away.\nThe first game of the third round\nsaw Nelson' ahd Tekoa fight to a\n2-2 deadlock in nine innings in the\nbest game of the round. Then in\nthe tenth, Bill Haldane reached first\non an error, and three Nelson bunts\nsent him home with the winning\ntrun. The finish \"was a brilliant\nclimax to a terrific series.\nEarly game scoring had seen Nelson a first inning 2-0 lead on two\nerrors and a double, with the American club tying the count in the first\nof the fourth on two doubles and\ntwo sacrifices.\n10 HIT  BURST\nnine errors and eight walks check\nthe gome to a slow movnig affair\nhigh-lighted only by two big home\nruns of Tekoa's Jimmy Lyden, Down\n3-0 in the third' inning, the Kimberley club splurged into a ten-hit\nbatting attack to win 13-7.\nNelson simply ran out of pitching\nstrength in the final game.\nA huge crowd and a combined\nband from Kimberley-Fernie-Cran-\nbrook built the fans enthusiasm to a\nhigh pitch but the calibre of ball\nquieted things down for the most\npart. Both teams earned ten hits\nbut seven big Nelson errors helped\nmake Sandy Sanderson and team\nthe \"one grand\" richeB.\n... Tournament chatter;\nWhere only.a few hundred saw\nthe first game of the tourney Saturday morning at nine o'clock\nevery place in the park was taken\nSunday evening, and that 2-0 Nelson win in the tourney opener was\nfar superior ball to the final game.\nImports played a large .part in\nevery victory. Most startling newcomer to Kimberley was Catcher\nSud Heathcote, a long ball hitter.\nTourists by the scores witnessed\nthe three big days of sport activity.\nUpset of the whole competition was\nthe elimination of Trail, while the\nbiggest surprise was the powerhouses the other Kootenay teams\nthrew into the battles. Twelve teams\ntook part and all were fairly evenly\nThe Kimberley-Tekoa contest saw matched.\nHolder's Record\nKeeps Him in Lead\nOf W.I.L. Pitchers\nTACOMA, July 3 (AP) w Spokane's Jim Holder failed to Increase\nhis Western International Leagife\nwin string during the last week but\nhis 9-0 season's record keeps him\ncomfortably ahead of the pack.\nHolder seems certain, to cling to\nthe top spot for at least a couple\nof weeks\u2014by reason of misfortune.\nThe unbeaten Spokane Elbower suffered a shoulder injury Saturday\nnight while pitching against Wenatchee and will be incapacitated for a\nfortnight.\nA ninth-inning rally by his mates\nsaved Holder's perfect record, incidentally, the Indians scoring twice\nin the final frame to come from behind, although the victory went to\nReliefer Bob Roberts.\nThe leaders:\nW L SO Pet\nHolder, Spok  9 0 48 1.000\nSnyder, V  16 2 59   .889\nHernandez, V   J 1 26   .875\nTlsnerat,   V   - 4 1 25   .800\nRaimondi, W  4 1 24   .800\nStone. T-C   4 1 13   .800\nWhyte, V    8 2 9   714\nCostello,   T-C    6 3 SB   .677\nBevens, Sal    11 6 70   .647\nBishop, Spok   B 5 38   .643\nEATS HUGE TROUT\nWASHINGTON,-N.H., Julys (AP)\n\u2014An Arlington, Mass., fisherman\nwas eating a huge trout today because he didn't know he had caught\nwhat may be a world's record golden\ntrout.\nCharles Cleveland landed tha 10\n%-pound 30-inch fish in Lake Suna-\npee Sunday after a 20-mlnute fight\nat the end of a copper line.\nCleveland said he had no idea\nhe had caught a record fish. He\nsaid had he known it, he would have\nhad it mounted, rather than eating\nit.\nPrevious record for a golden trout\nis claimed by Wallace Leavitt,\nlocal guide, who was with Cleveland\nwhen he sanded his catch.\nLeavitt boated a 9 %-pounder\ntwo years ago on the same lake.\nRECORDS BROKEN\nPORTRUSH, Northern Ireland,\nJuly 3 (AP) \u2014 Records tumbled all\nover the sprawling dunes of the\nRoyal Portrush Golf Course today\nas Antonio Cerda of the Argentine\nled 97 other qualifiers in the British\nOpen Championship.\nCerda, 29, took some of the attention away from the more famous\nshotmakers, including defending\ntitleholder, Bobby Locke of South\nAfrica. However, the qualifying\nplay doesn't mean a thing unless it\nindicates some smart golf in prospect for the 72-hole tournament\nproper beginning tomorrow with\n100 qualifiers.\nCerda shot a 69 for the second day\nin a row for a total,of 138,-\nPreviously, Locke, gunning for his\nthird British open in a row, blasted\na 67 to crack the course record and\nend the two-day warm-up affair\nwith 139. Then Jack Hargreaves, a\nBirmingham, England, pro scorched\nhome with 66 for a total of 142. Par\nat Portrush is 72.\nBASEBALL'S BIG SIX\nBy The Associated Press\nG AB R H Pet.\nMuslal, Cardinals 68 253 56 93 .888\nRobinson, Dodgers 70 250 54 80 .360\nMinoso, White Sox 69 237 85 85 .350\nAshburn, Phillies   70 291 45104.357\nFain, Athletics   70 253 32 89 .352\nWilliams, Red Sox 70 247 64 83 .336\nRuns batted in: National League:\nWestlake, Cardinals, 56; American\nLeague: Williams, Red Sox, 70.\nHome runs: National League: Gil\nHodges, Dodgers, 25; American\nLeague: Zernial, Athletics, 19.\nHugh Casey Kills Self\nto die\u2014ready to go.\"\nShortly before phoning Mrs.\nCasey from his hotel room, Casey\ncalled a friend, Gordon McNabb,\nto tell him of his suicide plans.\nMrs, Casey, 34, said her husband\nreturned repeatedly to the paternity action and once said:\n\"I can't eat or sleep since going\nthrough all the embarrassment . . .\nnnd I had  to  drag you through\nA bellhop at the hotel said Casey\ntold him he had only a few days\nto live because of a heart valve\nleakage but his wife said he never\nhad complained to her.\n\"What he seemed to feel most\nwas-that this was his first year out\nof -baseball,\" she said, adding that\nhe had expressed,some concern because his restaurant In Brooklyn\nwas not doing as well as he.had\nhoped.\nIn the 1847 World Series, Casey\nset two records which still stand\u2014\nfor most games pitched in a single\nseries, six, and for most games\nfinished in a series, also six.\nGuest in First\nDiamond Sculls\nRound Today\nHENLEY-ON-THAMES, England,\nJuly 3 (CP)\u2014In the full noon of a\nsweltering Summer day, young Jack\nGuest of Toronto stroked slowly up\nthe Thames River today pondering\ntwo apprehensive questions.\nIn a straight test of skill and\nstrength, can raw youth beat age\nand experience?\nHow will a long, slow, sweeping\nstroke stack up against a rival noted\nfor a faster rate of \"striking\" the\nwater?\nThe answers will be made known\ntomorrow at 6:45 a.m. PDT when\nthe 18-year-old Canadian rowing\nprodigy climbs into a borrowed boat\nand skims over this famed regatta\ncourse in the first round of the\nDiamond Sculls competition.\nIf Jack gets by that first test, the\nconsensus Is he'll go all the way to\nSaturday's final\u2014and maybe write\na chip-off-the-old-block footnote into Henley history. His father, Jack\nGuest, Sr,, won the Diamonds in\n1930.\ns\nSt. Louis Deal\nST.. LOUIS, July 3 (AP)- Bill\nVeeck, the man with the golden\ntouch who combines fireworks with\nbaseball, will celebrate the fourth\nof July Independence Day holiday\ntoday assured of the ownership of\nthe St. Louis Browns.\nVeeck, who brought winning\nbaseball to Cleveland and crowds\nout to see it, clinched the deal today, just 12 hours before the deadline he had set for acquiring 75\nper cent of the Browns' stock.'\n\"I'm very pleased,\" Veeck said\nin Chicago when informed the way\nhad been cleared for his ownership.\n\"The deal Is to be closed Thursday morning, if everything is in\nshape,\" he added.\nFans were eager to get a look\nat Veecks way of doing things. He\nhas promised them \"plenty of fun\"\nand tomorrow the Browns' to liven\nup their twin bill have scheduled\na fireworks display at their home\nin Sportsman's Park.\nHerbert W. Waltke, who had, been\na stubborn hold-out on the deal,\nchanged his mind as the deadline\nneared and decided to let Veeck\nhave his stock.\nWaltke is a member of the\nBrowns' board of directors. He had\nhoped to be a stockholder in the\nnew company. He tossed in his\n8572 shares at noon, giving Veeck\nslightly more than 75 per cent he\nhad needed.\nAnother substantial shareholder\nalso sold his 7800 shores. He was\nWalter J. Crecly, St. Louis broker.\nDoubled Earnings\nOAKMONT, Pa., July 3 (AP) \u2014\nSammy Snead, who has been having\na comparatively-unprofitable year\non the golf links, nearly doubled\nhis tournament earnings for 1951'\nwhen he won the Professional\nGolfers Association Championship\ntoday.\nSnead collected \u00a53500 for his easy\n7-and-6 victory over Walter Burkemo of Franklin, Mich. This\nbrought his total for the year to\n$7762.50 and moved him up to fifth\nplace on the official P.G.A. money-\nwinning list.\nBefore the tournament he was\n10th with $4262.50. Last year he\ntopped   the   list  wilh   $35,758.83.\nHarwoods Rye\nIhls advertisement Is not published or displayed t\n' Board <  '\nis not published or displayed by (he Liqui\nr by the Government 4 British Columbli.\nllic Liquor Conirol\nBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nBoston   000 000 001\u20141   J   0\nWashington .... 200 020 OOx\u20144 10   0\nScarborough, Taylor (8) and Ro-\nsar, Moss (8); Hudson and Grasso.\nCleveland  000 010 000\u20141   3  0\nChicago     310 001 OOx\u20144 12\nLemon, Rozak  (8)  and Hegan;\nPierce and Niarhos.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn    000 100 101-3   T   4\nBoston   100 100 011\u20144 11   2\nSchmitz, Erskine (7) and Campanella; Surkont and Mueller.\nSt. Louis  000 103 000\u2014 4   7 1\nCincinnati   000 006 13x\u201410 13 1\nBrecheen,   Crlmian   (6),   Brazle\n(6) and Rice; Raffensberger, Fox\n(7) and Howell.\nChicago  000 000 000\u20140   8   1\nPittsburgh   010 000 Olx\u20142   8   1\nRush and Burgess; Law and\nGaragiola.\nPhil'phia   003 000 020 101 1\u20148 12 1\nNew York 001 002 011 101 3\u20149 16 3\nJohnson, Konstanty (6), Meyer\n(10), J. Thompson (13) and Wilber;\nJones, Kennedy (7), Spencer (8),\nGettel (9), Jansen (11) and Noble,\nWestrum (10).\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nToronto 1, Springfield 2\nBaltimore 5, Buffalo 6\nOttawa 4, Rochester 6\nMontreal 5, Syracuse 4\nWESTERN INTERNATIONAL\nVictoria 5, Tri-City 2\nPCL\nPortland 3, Los Angeles 1,\nSeattle 3, Oakland 2.\nSan Francisco 2, San Diego 1.\nFeels Free to Sign\nWith Alouettes\nBy VICTOR MORRIS, JR.\nMONTREAL, July 3 (CP) \u2014 I\nHusky George Ratterman of New\nYork, said to be the most shining\nfootball star so far signed by Montreal Alouettes, told the Press late\ntoday he Intends to do his grid\nwork in Canada henceforth and\nfeels legally free to do so.\n\"I feel I am a free agent,\" the\nquarterback told reporters. \"My!\nlawyer has confirmed that I am\nnot legally bound to New York\nYankees,\"\nThe 25-year-old football star's\ncomment came in the wake of news\nstories from Lake Placid, N. Y.,\nwhich quoted Ted Collins, owner of\nNew York Yankees of the National\nFootball League, as saying he\nwould take court action against\nRatterman should he switch to the\nAlouettes of the Big Four Football\nLeague. '\nDodgers Place\nMost Players on\nAll-Star Squad\nBy JACK HAND\nNEW YORK, July 3 (AP) - Be-\ncause no neglected National League\npitcher threw a no-hitter recently,\nManager Eddie Sawyer's Ail-Star\nsquad was accepted today with a\nminimum of tumult and shouting.\nWith seven members of the\nleague-leading Brooklyn Dodgers\non the club, the National team represented a solid cross-section of\nleague strength for the July 10 test\nat Detroit with the American\nLeague.\nNo St. Louis or Pittsburgh pitcher\nmade the eight-man staff, top-\nheavy with Dodger and Giant\ncurvers. Preacher Roe and Don\nNewcombe of the Brooks and Sal\nMaglie and Larry Jansen of the\nGiants make up half the list. Ewell\nBlackwoll of Cincinnati, Warren\nSpahn of Boston, Robin Roberts of\nthe Phils and veteran Dutch Leonard of Chicago were the others.\nAmong the missing was Jim Konstanty of the Phils, most valuable\nplayer last season and one of the\nstars In tha National's 14-inning\nAil-Star victory at Comiskey Park.\nThe pitching staff is heavily\nweighted with righthanders. Roa\nand Spahn are the only southpaws.\nWith the starting American American lineup loaded with left-handed\nhitters, Roe is considered as a\nlikely starting choice.\nRalph Kiner of Pittsburgh and\nWally Westlake of St. Louis, two'\nlong-distance hitters, were picked\nby Sawyer after they failed to maka\nthe team on the fans' votes.\nTho starting lineup was set by\nthe fans \u2014 Gil Hodges of Brook-\nlyn at first, Jackie Robinson of\nBrooklyn at second, Alvln Dark\nof New York at shortstop, Bob\nElliott of Boston at third base,\nStan Muslal of 8t, Louis In left,\nRichie Ashburn of the Phils In\ncentre, Del Ennls of the Phils in\nright field and Roy Campanella\nof. Brooklyn catoher.\nSOURIS, Man. (CP) - On his\nsecond try 72-year-old Albert Berry\nscored a 97-yard hole-in-one in the\nlocal service club's contest, winning\nan electric refrigerator. He said \"I'm\nnot much of a golfer.\"\nThe coupon bestow it the actml \u00ab\u2022*\nof tbjs amazing hearing aid. The Mi-\naxxone Sealed Power Ten is so much\nswisT to srms-. Fits almcet anywhere, no\n\u00ab*\u00ab\u00abie bulges. Light a a fctttbor.\nToss just won't know yoa ate wearing\na hearing aid Now on denxsntstratioo\nat our office, or in yonr home by *r>\nMicrotone\nWITH DUO-CiRCUfT\nJames M. Malcolm\nwill be at\n, The Hume Hotel\nOn Friday and 8aturday\nJuly 6 and 7\nFrom 9 a.m. to 8 p.m..\nTo personally demonstrate\nthis new Microtone discovery.\nPriced within the range, of\nall.\nFree clinical analysis of\nyour hearing problem. Demonstration in your home or\nat hotel. r\n fc.   \u25a0: Si\nFOR THE FIRST TIME since brain surgery was performed on\n4-year-old Donny Morton at Pasadena, Calif., Arthur Morton holds\nhis little son In his arms again. The father had carried the lad in his\narms on a tedious bus trip from his farm In Saskatchewan, seeking\nrelief for a malady which wasted Donny away to 20 pounds and\nrobbed him of the power of speech. The surgery relieved the pressure of excess'fluids on hli brain and he now Is expected to recover.\n\u2014APWIrephoto\nA SMALL KOREAN BOY who has attached himself to a U.N.\nregiment dishes out bread to soldiers on the chow line somewheri\nin the Hwachon area, not far from the front lines. While aiding tha\nV'.N. soldiers to get speedy service, the youngster Is busily feeding\nhimself with his free hand. Months of privation have taught Korean\nchildren new tricks In eating as much as they can as quickly as possible, lest the precious food disappear Central Press Canadian.\nHEDY   LAMARR\nErneBt  \"Ted\"  Stuffer,\nand  her fourth   husband,\nhoneymooning  In  Carmel\nValley, Calif,, look on as Denise, 5,'Hedy's daugh\nter by a former marriage, strings beads. The couple\nwere wed in a surprise ceremony in Los Angeles.\n\u2014AP Wirephoto\non the Air\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nWEDNESDAY,. JULY 4, 1951\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of file Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of Morning\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n:45\u2014Towler, Serenade\n:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n:00\u2014News\n:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n1:15\u2014Western Tunes\n:45\u2014Your Musical Appointment\ni:59\u2014Time Signal\n;00\u2014Ne*s\n01\u2014Ladies' Choice\n15\u2014Sons of the Pioneers\n30\u2014Oliver's Choice\n45\u2014Invitation to Walti\n:00\u2014News\ni\u2014Piano Prelude\n:15\u2014For You, Madame\n:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n:45\u2014Notice Board\n:00\u2014New\"s \u25a0\u25a0- .\n::01\u2014Notice Board\n15\u2014News\n;25\u2014Sports News\n;30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n:55\u2014From Parliament Hill\n;00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Wednesday Serenade\n1:59\u2014News\n2:00\u2014Easy Listening\n2:30\u2014Intermission\n2:45-HSummer Picnic\n3:00\u2014News\n,01\u2014Easy Listening\n14\u2014Train Time\n00\u2014Don Messer\n30\u2014Musical Roundup\n45\u2014Pacific News\n59\u2014News\n00\u2014Stars of the CBC Opera\n15\u2014Music  by  Goodman\n30\u2014Favorite Stories\n:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n00\u2014News\n:01\u2014Superman\n15\u2014News\n:20\u2014Sports News\n:25\u2014Canadian Open Golf\n:30\u2014Question Time\n:45\u2014Easy Aces\n:00\u2014Dinner Date\n30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n00\u2014News\n:15\u2014News Roundup\n30\u2014The Battle of Try To GoH\n00\u2014News ' [\n15\u2014Let's Find Out.\n:30\u2014CKLN Sports Report\n45\u2014Musicale\n55\u2014News Nite Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nTHURSDAY, JULY 5, 1951\n8:00\u2014News\n4:30\u201420,000 Leagues Under the Sea\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n4:45\u2014To Be Announced\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n5:0p\u2014International Commentary\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes\n5:10\u2014The Westons\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n5:25\u2014Canadian Open Golf\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n5:30\u2014Intimate Review\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n5:45\u2014Young Man With a Song\n9:45\u2014Your Musical Appointment\n5:55\u2014News\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n6:00\u2014Guestin' With Kcsten\n10:15\u2014Strike It Rich\n6:30\u2014Wayne and Shuster\n10:45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n7:00\u2014News\n11:00\u2014A Man and His Music\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n12:15\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Eventide\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n8:00\u2014Radio Cartoon:\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n8:15\u2014Points of View\n12:55^-Five To One\n8:30\u2014Tales of the Seven Seas\n1:00\u2014The Concert Hour\n9:00\u2014Arthur Godfrey\n2:00\u2014Easy Listening\n9:30\u2014Vancouver \"oncert Orchestra\n2:30\u2014Program Resume\n10:00\u2014News\n2:45\u2014A Book I Like\n10:15\u2014Let's Find Out\n2:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n10:30\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage\n11:00\u2014UN Today\n3:15\u2014Western Five\n11:15\u2014Fine Arts  Quartet\n3:30\u2014Step Lightly\n11:45\u2014Nightcap\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society^\n11:55\u2014News\nKOREAN CIVILIANS like thi*B\nmother and child, swarming Into!\nSeoul, epitomize the misery borrtl\nof war as they try to eke out aril\nexistence In the b&ttle-scarredl\nSouth Korean capital which hasl\nchanged hands three times In th* j\nyear-old struggle of U.N. force*!\nagainst the Communist aggressorsif\nBegging in the streets Is common-*!\nplace even among the kindergar*!\nten age'youngsters, black market!!\nflourish and starvation and dls-T\nease are prevalent. The little girl|\nis suffering from smallpox.\n\u201e \u2014Central Press Canadlaif'\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nDOWN     23. Ribbonlike\n1. Beacon flag\n2. Beard of rye 26, An age .\n3. Walking      28. A wing-\nstick 29. Raising\n4. Rascal 30. Early\n5. Make choice      morning\n6. Wayward services\n7. Sprite (Eccl.>\n(Shake-       32. Anglo-\nM t A e|[ ii ( mm\n1 c * s EgA \u00a3 1 ai\nL A T HFMLA M E D\nAOEg0ALL|cO\nperhaps|gaT\ni|AKt|cAMi\nSTARK|PUMPS\nH i ff Im a s. Hi\n0 1  l| P   1  NTA 1  L\nup|lax||loo\nrurj i c 00 U T T A\nH00  HUB     1\nSaxon letter\n(var.)\n34. Quantity\nof paper\n35. Disease\nof rye\nherb (Haw.) 36. Musical\n21. Leap instrument\nspearian)\n8. Cant\n9. Frightens\n11. Thin\n16. Perform\nYesterday's Answer\n87. Auctions\n41. Volcanic\nrock\n44. Affirmative\nvote\n46. Denary\n%\n&\n'&\n%\nACROSS\n\" >.\u2022 Bag\n6. Precious\nstone\nI. Algonquian\nwampum\n,0. Danger\n12. Large,\nshowy\nflower\n3. Threefold\nA. Part of\n\"to be\"\n15. Girl's name\n17. Brightest\nstar in Lyra 19. Perennial\n18. Knock\n20. Arrangement of\nvessels\n(Navy)\n22. Goddess Of\ndiscord\n24. High,\ncraggy Hill\n25. Kind of ray\n27. Sacred\nsong    -\n31. Spawn of\nfish\n33. Pen-name ol\nCharles\nLamb\n34. Feels regrel\n38. Astern\n39. Assam\nsilkworn\n40. Boy's\nnickname\n42. Music note\n43. Lizard\n45. Ancient\nlanguage\n47. Cash\n48. Levels\n49. Ripped\n60. Carolled\nr-s-\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\nA X IDL B A A X R\nIs L 0< N G F E L L O W\nOne letter simply stand? for another. In this example a is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two\" O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints,\n^ach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotatloi\nLCFFCK    WH    N    EW-AACK    XI    DCKLH\nP D C K C    UXSC    WH,    FDNA    N    HFNUUCE\nXG    NAE    DNFKCE    F D C K C P W F D \u2014V K X S-\n*8 K L H.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS wriu.u uuil a Has.,\nSHOULD BE A MAN OF GOOD MEMORY\u2014QUINTILIAN.-\n Tl\/\n1 PERSowomsoti'trWrm\nj    FORQU\/CK RFSVOZ \/\nTORONTO STOCKS\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nMcIVOR\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. James\nilclvor, 125 Silica St., in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, June 29, a\nfirl.\nMISKO\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Walter\nvlisko, 805 Nelson Avenue, in Koote-\nhay Lake General Hospital, June 20,\nboy.\nSHLAKOFF\u2014To Mr. and Mrs,\nVilllam Shlakoff, Shoreacres, in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\n[Tune 30, a boy.\nLESLIE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Ronald\nLeslie, Vallican, in Kootenay Lake\njeAeral Hospital, June 30, a girl.\nARICHUK\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. John\nfirichuk, R.R.I, Nelson, in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, July 2,\nfeirl.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nFor Economy Plus\nBeauty in\nWalls\nHELP WANTED\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nand USED\nMACHINERY\nSPECIFY\nFurniture and\nliances -\nAppli\nThis ls an opportunity for capable men to advance with our\norganization.\nAPPLY BETWEEN\n10:00 AND 12:00 A.M.\nHudson's Bay Co.\nItEASERS WANTED \u2014 FOR ZION\nsilver, lead, zinc group 3 miles\nfrom Ymir; 2 miles by road, one\nmile by trail. Cabin, blacksmith\nshop, some tools, plenty of timber\nand water. Box 1352, Daily News.\n|WANTED \u2014 CAREFUL DRIVER\nfor city delivery. Must be willing\nworker. Right person can start\nimmediately. Box 1371, Daily\nNews.\t\n|female bookeeper requir-\ned; should haye some experience\non accounts receivable, ledger\nwork. Apply Box 1494, Dally\nNews, or phone 122.\t\nIWANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED STEN-\nographer\u2014office clerk for large\nNelson wholesale office. Box 1812,\nDaily News.     \t\nIWANTED\u2014ALERT, NEAT YOUNG\nman for front end work at garage.\nMust have driver's licence. Apply\nP.O. Box 420. Nelson, B.C.\nCHECK THESE FEATURES\n1. Can be papered, painted\nor textured with Murastone\nPlaster. No joints show even\non close inspection.\n2. Rigid, durable, fireproof,\nand will not shrink or expand.\n3. Easily cut to shape and\nnailed in place without\nspecial tools.\nDISTRIBUTING AGENTS\nMINERS WANTED\nNickel Plate  Mine. Apply  Kelowna Mines Hedley Limited, Hedley, B.C.\nlAXEMAN WANTED. \u2014 APPLY\nStorms Contracting Co. office,\nMcNabb Cabins, Ymir Road.\nIWANTED - MAN WITH OUTFIT\nto cut, log and haul 2 million feet\nof logs. S. P. Pond, Nelson.\nIWANTED \u2014 HOUSEKEEPER.\nApply after 5 p.m., Wilfred Long,\n124 Chatham Street. Phone 599-X3.\nIWANTED \u2014 MAN WITH GOOD\ntruck to haul lumber and load on\ncars. S. P. Pond, Nelson.\nMachinery\nCompany, Ltd.\n214 Hall St.     '\/ Phone 18\nMining. Milling and Sawmill\nMachinery, Building and\nContractors' Supplies.\nIf It's machinery ybu want,\nconsult us.   $\nSPECIALS\nNew Austin Sedan\nNew Pontiac Sedan\nNew Dodge Coach\nNew Buick Sedan\n1951  Anglia Coach\n1951  Hillman Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan   .\n1950 Austin Station Wagon\n1,949 Meteor Coach\n19*49 Austin Sedan\n1947 Monarch Sedan\n1942 DeSoto Sedan\n1941. Chevrolet Sedan\n1940 Ford Sedan\n1940 'Dodge Sedan\n1938 Dodge Sedan    \u25a0\n1938 Ford Coupe\n1933 Ford \"B\" Coupe\n1937 Ford Sedan\nModel \"A\" Coupe\nCONTRACTORS - SAWMILL\nLOGGING & MINING\nSEND  YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY   -\nEQUIPMENT\n.    .   CO., LTD.\nGranville Island M.A. 1251\nVancouver, B C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 500 ORE SACKS 12c\neach; 300- ft. heavy galvanized 10\ninch mine ventilation pipe, 10 ft.\nlengths, 40c per ft. J. R. Tinkess,\nKaslo.\n07 TRACKS AND REBUILT\nrollers, D6 tracks, angledozer for\nRD7, 4\" portable pump with engine. Bayes Equipment Co., Cranbrook  B.C.\n1949 Ford 2 Ton Flat Deck\n1935 Ford 2 Ton Flat Deck\n1947 Mercury 1 Ton L.D.\n1946 Ford Vi Ton L.D.\n1941 Ford 1 Ton L.D.\nTERMS AND TRADES\nOR SALE - ONE MAN P.M.\nChain Saw in excellent shape to\nhighest offer over $150. Apply\nTony Ewasiuk, Beaver Falls, B.C.\n(Between Trail and Fruitvale.)\nFOR SALE-ONE LARGE ALICE\nChalmers bulldozer. 10-fdot blade\nand spare parts. Contact Jack\nGreenwood, Nelson, B.C\nFOR HIRE OK CONTRACT-D-4\ncat equipped for excavating,\nroadbiillding, etc. C. Ross, phone\n1500 Nelson.\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN*\nsurance Co., D. L. Kerr. Agent.\nCRESS CALLOUS SALVE - NOW\nget relief. Your Druggist sells\nCress\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium  N 21V*\nAkaltcho             1.00\nAmal Larder \u25a0      .15\nAmerican Y. K.         HW\nArjon IB\nAumaqus      .20\nBagamao  -      .1514\nBarymin - 95\nBase Metals  BS\nBobjo ...\u201e...,.     -.12\nBonetal _      .56\nBralorne     6.25\nBuff. Can _       .18\nCalliman   22\nCampbell R. L.      2.37   \u25a0\nCan. Mal _      .60\nCentral Patricia  60\nChesklrk          5%\nCochenour      1.55\nConlaurum        58%\nCons. Beatty  45,\nConwost  2.58\nCresturUm 11\nDetta R. L.  14\nDscovery       .32\nDonalda  49\nEast Malartic '.     1.10\nEast Sullivan  _    7.00\nElder Gold  - 60\nFalconbridge      9.40\nLake of Wi bets .\nLaura Secord...\nLoblaw A .. \u2022.\t\nLoblaw B\n30'\/.\nla\u00abi\n30\n        32\nMaple Leaf Milling       1314\nMassey Harris ,     12   i\nM & O Paper        28%\nMont. Loco       15%\nMoore Corp.         25   i\nMcCol Frontenae         29%\nNat. Steel Car .\nPage Hershey ...\nPowell River\t\nPower Corp\t\nRuss. Industries\nShawinigan '.,.....\nShea Brew\t\nSicks Brew\t\nSimpsons A\t\nSimpsons pld ...\nSoutham \t\nSteel of Canada\nSteel of Can pfd\nI NELSON DAILY N2Y\/5, WEDNESi\nTo Open Second Mil\nAY, j:,'LY Hi, 1531 _11\nm\n27%\n50\n77\n24\n23%,\n34\n81\nPermam\ns Kootenay Belie Asm\nCarrying forward its plans for full\ntime operation of the Whitewater\nmill at Retallack 12 months ot the^.w.s.vu .   \u2014\nyear,  Kootenay Belle Gold  Mines vanced at several of the properties\nLtd. has initiated an intensified un '*\u25a0* -\u25a0\u25a0'-'-\u25a0'- *\t\nsion of operations on ore from the\ndumps, the company expects to have\nunderground work sufficiently ad-\n  18\n  30%\n  31\nStandard Paving  13\nStandard Chemical  1514\nUnion Gas of Can  20%\nUnited Corp A  29\nUnited Corp B  40\nUnited Fuel A  .'  22\nFrobisher .\nGod's Lake\n3.10\n.32\nGoldale 17\nGoldcrest\nGolden Manitou\nHalcrow      \t\nHardrock ...'. 15\nHasaga        .40\nHedley Mas 53\n6 'A\n15\n11\nHeva\n12\nEmpire\n803 Baker St.\nMotors\nPhone 1135\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. Atlas Iron & Metals'Ltd., 250 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pacific 6357.\nFOR SALE-1949 FORD TUDOR,\nperfect condition. Radio, heater,\netc., Priced for quick sale. Owner\nleaving. Can be financed. Phone\n1108-X.\t\nFOR SALE\u2014'46 IviERCURY SEDAN\n'49 engine, radio, heater, etc., or\nwill trade for older car and cash.\nPhone 161-L2.        ~\nFOR SALE \u2014 1947 MORRIS. NEW\nrings. A-l condition. $800. Apply T.\nNichols, Kinnaird.\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R.\nDepot. Clean rooms and moderate\nrates. $1.50 to $2.00 single, $2.50 to\n$3:00 doubles.   Vancouver.   B,  C.\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order immediately. Daily News Printing\nDept., Nelson, British- Columbia.\nMENI PERSONAL DRUG SUN-\ndries: 25 deluxe samples, $1.00.\nMailed in plain, sealed wrapper.\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed.\nBargain Catalog free. Western\nDistiibutors, Box 1Q23N, Vancouver. B. C.\nLADIES I DUPREE, PILLS. IM-\nproved Formula Dupree Pills to\nalleviate pain, nervousness, and\ndistress associated with monthly\nperiods. $3.00 per box. Also Cotes\nTriple-Strength Pills. $5.00 per\nbox. Western Distributors, Box\n1023 AN. Vancouver. B C\nHoiiinger .........!......! n'.m\nHUdson Bay     55.50\nInspiration       .86\nInt. Nickel ,.\\  36:35\nJacknlfe\nKayrand\n914\n14\nKerr Addison  \u201e.. 17.25\nLabrador   7.20\nLake Dufault ,  .70\nLakeshore  -  9.00\nLake Wasa   ,31\nLamaque  5,25\nH. Walker\n50'4\nWestern Grocers       44%\nWestern Grocers A        35\nWinnipeg Electric com ....\nWinnipeg Electric pfd .:..\nMarket Trends\nderground program at the Altoona,\n2014; Monitor and Whitewater mines in\n33   jthe Slocari. These are three of the\n3114;seven properties, all within a radius\nof 12 miles of the mill, which Kootenay Belle has acquired to further\nits objective of a long range permanent silver-lead-zinc operation. Ore\ntonnage possibilities of the Ruth\nHope,   Richmond-Eureka,   Elkhorn\nand Payne groups of claims are under investigation at the same time.\nSECOND MILL\nBack from a visit to the. properties, J. L. Trumbull, President, and\nseveral other directors report good\n\u00a7g,, | progress is being made in the underground programs, and that the\ncompany's second sink-float plant\non the Richmond-Eureka properly\nnear Sandon will be In operation\nearly in July. Similar to the slnkr\nfloat unit which has been in successful operation ot Retallack, the\none at Sandon will have a capacity\nof 600 to 800 tons dally. These two\nplants make it profitable to treat\nore dumps on the properties which\nhave been acquired. The sink-float\nprocess concentrates this feed in a\nLapa Cadillac\nLeitch\t\nLexindin \t\nLynx\t\nMacDonald \t\nMacassa\nMacLeod Cock\nMadsen R. L..-.\nTri\n1.10\n1014\n.13\n8614\n1.80\n2.50\n2.05\nMagnet  , 18\nMalartic G. F.      1.91\nMining Corp \u201e    16.00\nMoneta  , 31\nNegus  73\nNew Calumet     2.80\nNew Jasoh  \u201e       .11\nnd   ...\nir. Ho\nNew Mar. Rouyn .\nNew Thurbois\n814\nRENTALS\nCHEF WANTED IMMEDIATELY\u2014\nApply Golden Gate Cafe.       \u2022\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nJAPANESE FIRST COOK WANTS\ncountry hotel or camp cooking\nJob. Wife experienced waitress.\nBox 1567; Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED BABY -SITTER\nprefers job ln Fairview. Apply\n30-Y.\nAGENTS WANTED\nIWANTED \u2014 RELIABLE MAN AS\nRawleigh Dealer. Experience not\nnecessary. A fine opportunity to\nstep into profitable business\nwhere Rawleigh Products have\nbeen sold for years. Write Raw-\nleigh's, Dept. WG-G-154-103, Winnipeg, Man.\nFOR SALE \u2014 NATIONAL ELEC-\ntrie Itemizing cash register, self-\nservice type, practically new, costs\nover $1100 new; will sell for $775\ncash. Phone 139-R or write Box\n808, Grand Forks, B.C.\nWALK-IN COOLER, IDEAL FOR\nmilk, fruit and vegetables; approximately 5' x 6'. Guaranteed.\nReply P.O. Box 460, New Westminster, B.C.\nHOME DEEP FREEZE, 7 TO 21\ncu. ft., $298.00 and up. 5-year guarantee. Reply P.O. Box 400, New\nWestminster, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1938 FORD PANEL\n4 new tires, $250 cash. Box 37,\nSlocan City.\nFOR   SALE \u2014 MODEL   A   FORD\ncoach. Phone 984.\n'40 CHEV. BUS. COUPE. \u2014 GOOD\ncondition, good tires. Ph. 169-R2.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nMETAL BABY CRIB, $15. ELEC-\ntrolux, complete, $20. Apply Box\n970. Daily News.\nPIPE - -FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co.\n935 E. Cordova St.. Vancouver.\nFOR SALE\u2014SERVEL RBFRIGER-\nator, coal-oil run, and sanding\nmachine.  Phone 907-L-4.\nBUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES\n|FOR SALE - (SNAP) $7000. MiLK\nand snack bar (44 seats) next to\nthe only theatre in town. All\n'modern ice cream, and cooking\nequipment, living quarters in\nrear of building, rental of building reasonable. For information\nwrite the Dart-Del Snack Bar,\nFernie, B.C. or call 149.\t\n(Wholesale agency for ma-\njor oil company available for Nelson and surrounding area. Excellent opportunity for good aggressive businessman. Some capital\nrequired. Reply in strict confi-\ndence  to Box 1518. Daily News.\nFOR\nSALE-G.E. ELEC. STOVE,\nboy's bicycle, and miscellaneous\nitems. Phone 394-L.\nHOUSE FOR SALE \u2014 FURNISH-\ned 9 roomed \"house, centrally\nlocated on two lots, in downtown Kaslo. Three rooms, large\nhall, bath and storage upstairs.\nFive large rooms and pantry\ndownstairs. Two suites to rent\npossible. Furnishings for same.\nCan be financed locally, if desired. Apply: Gordon Bowker,\nKaslo, B.C.\nURGENTLY REQUIRED' IMMED-\nlately\u2014Three or four room unfurnished house, or suite for young\ncouple with 8-year-old daughter.-\nPhone 129. Ask for Jack Willie.\nWANTED TO RENT OR BUY, BY\nreliable couple, no children; small\ncottage on North Shore, Box 1532,\nDaily News,\nFOR RENT - 1 ACRE STRAW-\nberries and 1 acre raspberries.\nApply'Mike Androshak, Canyon,\n\u25a0  B. C.\n2 ROOM UNFURNISHED SUITE\nfor rent. Phone 464-L2.\t\nBEDROOM FOR1 RENT \u2014 CALL\n923^ Vernon Street.\nNoranda  _    71.25\nNormetals  \u201e     4.75\nNorzone         1114\nOrlac  \u201e .'._ \u00ab        414\nOsisko       .76\nPaymaster  54\nPickle Crow\nPioneer  \t\nPore Reef ...\nQuebec Lab\nQuebec Man\nQueenston ...\nQuemont \t\nRegcourt \t\nRoche L. L,\nNEW YORK, July 3 (AP) \u2014 In\nits second straight -recovery, the\nstock market today curved qtiletiy\nhigher. Many leaders gained more\nthan $1 a share at the best. Losses\nwere held down firmly.\nVolume  simmered  down  to  an,    ,,     ,, \u201e     , -- ;\u2022\u2022,\"\nestimated  1,300,000 shares for the-^-^IS jK\n&\u00ab(-..-.% viwirt i,L\u00bbL *,\u00ab*>* i\u00abU the Whitewater mill. By the time\nLeaders today were steels and uti\u201etnw, \u201e\u201e\u201ej\u2022<\u25a0,\u2022\u201e\u201e\u201e *.nM\u201eLn \u00ab..,.\u00ab\u00ab,,\ni ui.  ii      - -t     j - -Winter conditions require suspen\nmotors with the railroads coming |   \" p\nin with support later in the session.\nMONTREAL. (CP) - Securltiesj\ncontinued to firm towards the close\ntoday in a follow-through of early\nday trends. Trading was moderate.\nPapers and senior metals were leadr\ners in the shift to higher ground\nand industrials, senior oils and carriers participated in the climb. Utilities were narrowly mixed, banks'\nremained steady and beverages\neased a trifle. \u25a0\nto sustain full time rnirfing through\nthe Winter on ore from mine stopes.\nAt Altoona one. of the replacement zones under development is\nproviding 00 tons per vertical fool of\nore, averaging .$23 net smelter value\nper ton, and diamond drilling has\nindicated important ore extensions\nof good milling grade.\nThe stepped-up ore development\nIs under direction of A. J. Tbdiss.\nNorthwest field engineer, for Ans-\nconda Copper, who recently joined\nKootenay Belle directorate in bis\npersonal capacity. Associated with\nMr. Theiss in geological studies of\nthe company's properties this Summer is Dr. U. Sahenin of the Montana School of Mines.\nroad Benefits\nAt Whitewater mill, additional ore\nbunkers and a new warehouse and\noffice have been built, and more\nbunkhouse accommodation provided\nfor increased staff.\nProceeds of recent financing assure Kootenay Belle of adequate\nfunds for the present program. Officials say that substantialroad expenditures by the company, combined with improvements by the\nDepartment of Mines and the Department of Public Works, will benefit mining operators throughout the\nSlocan this season,\nBusiness Spotlight. ...\nConstruction Soars Past 10-Figure\nMark in Record-Making Year\nBy  FORBES  RHUDE llarge  part  to  hydro-electric  pro-\nCanadian Press Business Editor   Meets at Niagara Falls, Ont. Indus-\nWhen Canadian construction con- trial  contracts  totalled  $66,713,100,\n  .  I tracts first passed $1,000,000,000 in a | up $52,016,100, with the West supply-\nTORONTO   (CP)   \u2014   The   stock single year, 1049, it was considered--   -\"--   '-'\t\nmarket moved higher under highly; an extraordinary event in Canadian\nselective buying today. A few lead- building.\ning issues climbed briskly while I There was some speculation as to\nthe rest of the market stayed in a!when there would be another such\nmixed narrow price path. j year.\nStrength in carrier issues followed an advance in New York yesterday   while (Canadian'  markets\nThe answer came quickly. For,\nwhereas it took 11 months in 1940\nto edge past the 10-figure mark, it\n1.60\n1.93\ns33\n.20\n2.95\n.45\n21..00\n3',4\n5%\n2.50\n514\nHOUSE AT KINNAIRD FOR SALE\n\u2014On 1 acre level land. Kitchen\nwith sink and cupboards. Wired\nfor electric range. Front room, 2\nbedrooms, small bathroom and\nporch. Some finishing needed. 5-\nminute walk from highway and\nbus stop; 2-mlnute walk from\nschool. Price $3000. Write' Box\n1739, Dally News.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nJARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR 'SALE\u2014BED-CHESTERFIELD\nand chair in good condition. Phone\n1582-L.\nFOR SALE\u2014SERVEL REFRIGER-\nator, coal-oil run, and Quebec\nheater. Phone 967-L4.\nFOR SALE\u2014MINK CAGES. WRITE\nJ. W. MacNicol, Johnson's Ldg.\nMICRONIC HEARING AIDS.-\nWrlte P.O. Box 39. Nelson. B.C.\nCANOE AND PORTABLE TYPE-\nw't'r. Mrs. Dunnett, 310 Med. Arts.\nFOR SALE-5 ROOM HOUSE ON\napproximately 1% acres land at\nedge of city limits. Furnace, modern plumbing, garden, fruit trees,\nchicken house. Brooder house\nwith electric brooder; also 350 2-\nmonth-old chicks, optional. Phone\n584-X2.\nWANTfcu - HIGHEST PRICES\npaid for cattle of any kind or age\nby Dick Kleef. Phone, wire or\nwrite to Dick Kleef, R.R. 1, Nel\nson. Phono 401-L-4.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1 5-YR. OLD BAY\nmare, partly broken. Price $75.00.\nApply D. W. Sutherland. .Vallican\nFOR SALE - TWENTY-MON'TH\nold Jersey bull.' Fred. Fillipo'f,\nWjnlaw.\nWANTED \u2014 3 COWS, FRESH OR\ndue to freshen. Holstein preferred.\nBox 1537, Dail;- News.\nFOR SALE\u2014125 l-YR.-OLD HENS,\n$2 each. Phone 584-X2.\nFOR SALE-2 MILK GOATS AND\n2 kids. Phone 241-R3.\nLOST AND FOUND\nSan Antonio,...'.\t\nSannorm\t\nShawkey       .17\nSherritt Gordon  :     2.68\nSigma       6.45\nSilvermiller     1.38\nSilanco  _     '.26\nSiscoe 76\nStarratt Olsen .-.  66\nSteep Rock  \u201e...'.     6.25\nSylvanite   .........     1.21\nTeck Hughes      2.06\nToburn ;...      .27\nTorbrit       1.80\nUnited Keno  ,    10.65\nUpper Canada _ _'.......\u201e    1.50\nVentures      10.00\nViolamac  _. 80\nWaite Amulet    10.35\nOILS\nAnglo Can     5.70\nAtlantic Oil  _..    2.80\nB.A. Oil      36.00\nCalgary and Edmonton    14.25\nCalmont  '    .05\nCommonwealth Pete     2,30\nDalhousie 38\nDecalta  : - 24\nDel Rio      1.00\nEastcrest  _  '   .12\nFederated Pete      8.15\nHome     -    15;25\nImperial Oil     34.75\nInter Pete    18.12\nwere celebrating the Dominion Day] took  only  nine' months  in   1950;\nweek-end. Trading was dull. Volume, and has taken only six months to\nwas about 950,000 shares.\n1951.\nMacLean Building Reports Ltd.,\nstates that contracts let this year\nCalgary Livestock       ,t0 the end of June toWWdWo.\nCALGARY, July 3 (CP) \u2014 Trade 305,800 more than double those in\nwas moderately active on -the Cal-;;he 5ame period last year; and, these\ngary livestock market this morn- six-montli figures compare with\ning. Receipts were moderate, 450 $i;i4O,llB.O00 for the full-year 1949,\ncattle and calves. !onti with'$1,525,764,700 for the full-\nMedium to good butcher steers jyear 1950,,\nwere .easier to 50 cents lower in|   june\nspots, butcher heifers about steady,' $382,300,800, compared with the pre\"\nCows were steady to. strong, one ceding June's $164,651,100.\nload of choice ranch cows selllnsri   June engineering contracts were\n$214,146,800, up $175,709,400, due in\nF?LS.rL\" A\u2122ES' Mn\u00b0STL4Y|FINDER   OF   BROWN \"\"WALLET\ncontaining valuable papers, lost\nat Empire Motors, please return\nto W, Unhlll. 414 Silica St. Reward.\ntimber; house and barn. Close to\nhighway, Patterson, B.C. Very\ncheap for cash. Enquiries at\nThrums Post Office or -at Patterson.\nWANTED,   MISCELLANEOUS\n\u2022Nplfiuu iatlij drills\nClassified  Advertising  Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive inser-\n\u2022   tion afler first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n$1.56 line per month (26 consecutive  insertions).   Box   numbers   l!c  extra.   Covers   any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.-20c per line.'\nfirst  insertion.   16c   per   line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle copy  $   .05\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance  25\nOne year 8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne  month         1.00\nThree   months        3.00\nSix months       6.00\nOnei year   12.00\nSix months       4.50\nBy carrier, per year   13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month  ..    1.00\nThree months 2,50\nWoer\" extra postage Is required,\nshove rates plus postage.       'Phone 593\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St.. Vancouver. B C.\nCEDAR\" POLES. ALL CLASSES\nand lengths Larch poles. Glacier\nLumber Co., Box 450, Nelson, B.C,\nSHIP   YOUR    HIDES   TO\nMorcnn. Nelson. B   C\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nACREAGE WITH NEW 4-ROOM\nmodern house; basement, garage,\nlarge garden, hen-house; adjoining city limits. $5000; half cash.\nBox 1447. Daily News.\nFOR SALE\u20142-BEDROOM HOUSE\non highway at Kinnaird. Very\ngood improvements. Lot about l*\/fc\nacres. Good price for quick sale,\nAlex Maitland. Kinnaird, B.C.\nLOST - 650 x 16 TIRE AND PET-\nmouth wheel, 2 miles West of\nBalfour Sat. afternoon. Reward.\nCall collect Balfour 2X. H. Fish\nLOST \u2014 SMALL, BLACK, SHORT-\nhaired dog. answers to \"Max.*\nMcFadden, Corra Lynn. Reward.\nLOST \u2014 BROWN AND WHITE\nSpringer puppy; uphill district.\nPhone 1586.\nFOR SALE\u20143-ROOM HOUSE ON\n2\/3 acre. One mile from Baker St.\non Ymir Road. $600. Apply F. N.\nDavidoff, Crescent Valley, B.C.\n64 ACRE FARM ON LAKE NEAR\nRiondel. Must sell. $1650. Polzin,\n118 Wellington St., Trail.\n;.  W   W1DDOWSON  &  CO.  AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nH.   S.   ELMES.   ROSSLAND,   B.C.;\nAssayer. Chemist, Mine Rep.\nAUTO WRECKERS\nDAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTO\nWrecking  Phone Rossland, 171.\nENGINEER8  AND  SURVEYORS\nBOYD C AFFLECK. 218 GORE ST..\nNelson. B.C.. Surveyor. Engineer\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nMcHARDY  AGENCIES  LTD.,  IN-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nLIVESTOCK   DEALERS\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nContact H   Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\nFOR SALE-NEW 5-RM. HOUSE\nwith nook, on 36 lots in Salmo.\nM. Papau.\nFARKTFOR SALE. \u2014 APPLY TO\nSouth Slocan Garage, South Slocan, B.C.\nFOR SALE - BEACH PROPERTY\non Kootenay Lake. Box 1917 Daily\nNews.\nWILL BUY OR RENT, SMALL\nhouse in Fairview; 2 or 3 rooms.\nF. A. Baker, phone 1050-L or 46.\nLOST\u2014TAN   COLORED   KITTEN;\n\u25a0 child's pet. Please phone 564-X.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nClean up\nbills with a\n4 LOAN PLANS\nMid Cont.\nUat.  Pete\t\nOkalta   :\t\nPacific Pete \t\nRoyalite \t\nRoxana\t\nTower Pete \t\nUnited Oils \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\t\nArgus\t\nAtlas St\t\nBeattie Bros.\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian _. ,\nB.C. Packers A \t\nB.C. Packers B ... .....\nB.C. Power A .\u201e..\u201e\u201e..\nB.C. Power B \u201e\t\nBrown Co \t\nBruck Silk A \t\nBruck Silk B  \u201e\nBuilding Products        31%\n,15\n1.95\n2.35\n8.45\n14.85\n.16\n.29\n.71\n19%\n12V4\n16%\n10Vi\n39y4\n23%\n16\n15\n28\n5\n12 ft\n21%\n11\n   \u20141   june    contracts,   alone   totalled\nspots, butcher heifers about steady,: $382,300,800, compared\nCows wero \u00ab(=ady to. strong, one ceding June's $164,661,100.\n  ranch cows selling'    -\nfor $2.10. Bulls were about steady.\nGood,  light  stockers  and  feeders\nwere in fair demand at steady prices.\nVeal calves were scarce and steady.\nSales last Week .were 3653 cattle,\n174 calves, 1209 hogs and 72 sheep.\nA year ago, sales were 2785 cattle,\n210 calves, 1357 hogs and 238 sheep.\nHogs closed steady last week at\n$39.50, sows at $24.75.\nGood    to    near-choice    butcht.\nsteers   32.50   to  34.00,   common   to\nmedium 27.00 to 32.00.. Good to\nchoice butcher heifers 31.00 to 33.00,\ncommon to medium 25.00 to 30.00.\nGood cows 26.50 to 27.50; common to\nmedium 23.00 to 26.00, canners and\ncutters 19.00 to 22.50. Good bulls.\n29.50 to 30,75. common to medium\n27.00 to 29.00. '.Good stocker and\nfeeder steers 31.00 to 33.00, common\nto medium 27.00 to 30.50. Good to\nchoice veal calves 85.00 to 39.00.\ncommon to medium 28.00 to 34.00.\niln  gthe  biggest gains.\nCommercial construction, although bolstered by defence* orders\nas well as by schools and hospitals,\ngained only $3,368,600 to $51,180,500.\nResidential contracts, at $50,260,900,\nwere down by $13,444,400, with the\ndrop   spread   across   Canada.\n\"A construction project worth $1,-\n000,000 used to be considered a\n'big job'-in Canada. That was trua\nperhaps until the post-war years.\nNow, ln June 1951, there are 23\njobs valued at more than $1,000,000\ngetting under way, with some worth\nmany times that amount.\n\"A $40,000,00 chemical plant, for\nSJaffipIe, is getting started near Edmonton. A further power development in the Lake St. John area of\nQuebec, this time by a paper firm,\nis estimated to cost $10,000,000. A\nhospital at St. Boniface, Man., will\ncost an estimated $5,000,000. Major\ndirect defence contracts to June\ntotalled over $12,000,000.\"\nFOR SALE\u201445-FT   VIEW LOT IN\nFairview  Phone 1361,\nROOM AND BOARD\n1 DOUBLE, 1 SINGLE ROOM\nwith board available. Mrs.\nPeachey, 812 Carbonate St. Phone\n620- Y,\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop,   acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\n\"\u2022--      \u2014 324 Vernon SL\nBOATS ond ENGINES\nFOR   SALE - 16-FT.   ROWBOAT,\nsuitable for outboard. Ph. 957-L4.\nI tIFE IMSURED AT NO EXTRA C081\nIAGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY- LTD.\nIUB3IUMT Of INDUSTRIAL JCCOTUca\nMWOUIIM LUl,\nSUITE 1\nPhone 109S 560 Baker St.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials 245.92 up 1.94.\n20 rails 7} 92 up .76.\n15 utilities 42.50 up .16.\n65 stocks 88.25 up .69-.\nBurl. Steel .\nBurns A  ;.\t\nBurns B  \t\nBurrard A \u201e...\nCan. Malting ;\u201e\nCan. Packers A\t\nCan. Packers B \t\nCan Breweries\t\nCan Canners        \t\nCan Car & Fdy A\nCockshutt \t\nC M & S  _..\u201e\"\nCons. Paper  \t\nDist. Seagram _.\nDom.   Bridge  ....\t\nDom Stores \t\nDom. Tar & Chemical\t\nDom. Textiles .1 _._\nEddy Paper \t\nFamous Players  \t\nFanny Farmer  ,. \t\nFleet Air      1.85\n20%\n55\n38\n8y4\n5oy4\n39\n33\n20%\n30%\n16%\n27%\n140%\n36\n27\n59%\n12%\n37\n14\n23\n16%\n30\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\n(Closing Prioes)-\nBralorne _., \t\nCariboo Gold   _\u201e._.\u00bb.._\nGolconda  \u201e. ...............\t\nGrandview    \u201e \u201e\nHedley Mascot \u201e s,      .ui\nHighland Bell 90\nInt. C & C ..:..,\nKootenay Belle\nPend Oreille ...\nPioneer Gold ....\nQuatsino .. .\nSheep Creek\n6.50\n1.20\n.25\n.40\n54\n,32\n7.50\n2.00\nSilver Standard .\nUtica  \t\nVanada\n1.55\n2.40\n\u202214%\n.14%\n.70\n1.00\n12\nWestern Exploration .\nWestern Uranium \t\nOILS\nAnaconda - *\u00ab\nCalgary & Edmonton    14.50\nCalmont\t\nDalho us el dG  S.\nDalhousie   \t\nHome\t\nNational Pete\nOkalta Com ...\nPacific Petet .\nRoyalite\nINDUSTRIAL**,\nCoast Breweries\nCapital Estates ....\nInter Brew \t\n15.25\n1.95\n2,35\n8.45\n14.83\n4.15\n19.00\n4.10\nFord A\nGypsum Lime\nImperial Oil ....\nInt. Nickel .'\t\nInt. Pete   \t\nKelvinator  _\n49\n23\n34%\n36%\n18%\n16%J\nNew Company to\nDevelop 15 Claims\nFifteen mineral claims on the Upr\nper Arrow Lake will be developed\nwhen the Samson Mining Company,\nLtd., ls incorporated.\nThe company is ta the process of\nincorporation as a private company,\nand plans to acquire and develop\nthe claims, reported to possess a\nstrong, wide vein, outcropping on\nthe lake shore and extending for a\ntraced distance of 1500 feet up a\nmountain.\nPrincipal among those organizing\nthe new company is Albert E. fe-!\nterson of Revelstoke. Herbert Stewart of Calgary is President anij R. H.\nMcKenzie of Revelstoke, Secretary-\nTreasurer.'\nDiamond Drilling\nRecommended\nFor Ymir Claims\nDiamond drilling, to test for parallel orebodies, ls recommended for\nthe six-claim Stewart Creek property near Ymir, operated by the\nArrow Tungsten Mines Limited.\nIt has also been recommended,\nstates the Northern Miner, that the\nmine be developed by an adit at\nthe end of No. 4 open cut and drift\non the ore zone with 500 feet of\nraising, to develop backs of 350 feet.\nIn previous operations three main\noreshoots, computed to contain a\nprobable 331 tons per vertical foot\ngrading 0.50 per cent tungsten tri-\noxide, were exposed. A fourth shoot\nwas opened in three trenches for a\nlength of 100 feet and an average\nwidth of 4.25 feet, grading 1.19 per\ncent tungsten trioxide.\nTO ENLARGE CREW\nThe small craw Working at the\nBosun mine just North of i-iilverton\nis to be enlarged this week.\nNew Santiago, which operates, the\nbase metals property, made the announcement when it advised thot\n100,000 shares at 20 cents per share\nhave b'een underwritten-by Seattle\nand Victoria interests, known as\nNatural Resources Underwriters, a\nfirst commitment of $2500 having\nbeen paid.\nPayment of $7500 Is to follow\nwithin 30 daysl of the underwriting\nagreement,  and  $10,000  within  60\nBase Metals Lead\nCanadian Industry\nThe base metal industry continues\n(o occupy by a long lead its premier\nposition among industries to Canada on the score of net income. Gold\nmining, which before the war occupied second place, is down to 14th\namong the 29 industrial classifications, says The Northern Miner.\nThe figures appear ln the Bank\nof Canada's latest Statistical Summary. They show base metals' net at\n$129.2 million ln 1950, as against\n$111.5 million in 1049, and the record of $137.6 million In 1948. In 1939\nthis industry netted 68.5 million.\nThe figures cover the 16 leading\ncompanies, or all the earners.\nGold mining, with 27 mine earners quoted, had a net of $11.2 million\nIn 1950, as against $11.5 million in\n1949, and $7.7 million in 1948. These\nfigures, it csyi be said, include\nE.M.G.A. Ba^ t\u00bb<,1939 the same 27\nmines enja\u00bb*d t profit of $34.3\nmillion, a level not approached\nsince. While the 27 mines do not\ncover the entire industry, the record\nshows that with cost-aid the industry, as a whole, would be In the red.\nLast year the pulp and paper industry, with 20 units, had a record\nof $80.2 million of net income, comparing with $3.4 million in 1939.\ndays. Options have been given on\nan additional 700,000 shares In\nblocks of 100,000 each, at prices from\n25 cents to 55 cents per share. Period\nof the option Is 12 months.\ncycy\u00a3\/#0F\u00a3&\nWe can brighten\nup the future\nof your car\nby giving\nit the\nservice and care\nit needs.\nCome in\nand see \u2014\nyou'll agree.\nJuem\nLTD.\nPHONE 43   NEISON.B.C.\nFORD TRACTORS  DEARBORN IMPLEMENTS\n 12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1951\nONLY TONI\nGuarantees a Wave\nThat FEELS -\nLOOKS ond ACTS\nLike Naturally\nI        \/ Curly Hair\ngS^s? That's why Cahadlan Women\nprefer Toni two-to-one\nover all other brands combined.\nTONI REFILL   $1.50\nONiy\n;\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb.-' Tonl Kit with 8pln Curlers $3.00\nMANN'S\nDBVC STORE\nNews of\nlllth Battery\nGolden Eagle\nVisits Calgary\nCALGARY, July 3 (CP) - A big\ngolden eagle made its annual visit\nto Calgary Sunday . right on\nschedule.\nThe bird has flown over the city\neach July 1 for the last seven years.\nSunday it remained abojt a \"minute,\nthen headed North.\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIG GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nPhilco Radio\nSales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\n-Phono 1302\n446 Ward St.\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n876 Baker St.\nPhone 327\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's  Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St.  ' Phone 63\n\u25a0   MAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST  KOOTENAY\nSTEAM  LAUNDRY.\nPHONE 1175 \u2014 182 BAKER ST.\nCUTLERS'S\nJEWELLERY\nWATCH REPAIRS\n20 Years' Experience\nPROMPT SERVICE\n\"Miss Clahol\"\nA quick, youthful\ncolor both for\nhair.\n\u2014SIMPLE APPLICATION    .\n-LIGHTENS AS IT COLOURS\n\u2014NO STREAKING\nOnly $1.50\"\nCity Drug Co.\nREXALL STORE\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nKremlin Must\nSee Korea Error\nSays Harriman\nWASHINGTON, July 3 (AP) \u2014\nPresidential adviser W. Averill Harriman said today he believes the\nKremlin must recognize the Com\nmunist assault in Korea as a \"major\nblunder.\"\nThe aggression not only failed, he\nsaid, but spurred the non-Communist world to a great rearmament\ndrive.\nIf the United States and Its Allies\ncontinue their efforts, he added, the\nturning point In the world struggle\nwith Communism may soon be\nreached.\nHarriman sketched this outlook\nbefore the House of Representatives\nForeign Affairs Committee as Congress members discussed aspects of\nthe impending cease-fire talks ln\nKorea.\nHarriman, former United Stales\nambassador to Moscow, said the\nSoviets expected an easy victory in\nKorea that would demoralize the\nU.N. and discredit American leadership. \u25a0\nInstead, he said, the war triggered\na vast speedup in rearmament both\nin the U.S. and among U.S. Allies.\nBut Harriman warned that any\nslowdown ln the. U.S. defence program\u2014as a result of moves for a\nKorean truce \u2014 \"can only lead to\ndisaster.\"\n\"The Kremlin would like nothing\nbetter than to have us'think that we\ncan safely relax, while the Soviets\ncontinue to build their military\nstrength.\"\nHarriman appeared before the\ncommittee to urge congressional approval of President Truman's request for a new $8,500,000,000 foreign aid program for 1952.\nMurder Charge Laid\nIn Fruit\nGrower's Death\nWEST SUMMERLAND, B.C.\nJuly 3 (CP)\u2014George Clark, 25, today, was charged with the murder\nof Harold O. Tavender, fruit grower of .this district 150 miles East of\nVancouver, who died .Saturday\nnight after being found at the foot\nof a 300-foot cliff near his home.\nThe charge was laid by Royal\nCanadian Northwest Police. Clark,\na former baseball and basketball\nstar, will appear later in police\ncourt for formal committal for trial.\nTavender died in hospital late.\nSaturday, apparently from head Injuries suffered in what police described as a \"brawl that apparently\nfollbwed an argument.\"\nPolice said a gun was involved,\nbut.did not give details of the fight.\n'Clark was arrested at the-foot oi\nth'e cliff near where Tayender was\ndiscovered. He was suffering from\najlbadly cut arm and was treated\nbefore being placed in,jail.\nTavender, 43, was the son of Mr.\nand Mrs. E. F. L. Tavender of Calgary.\nTralnlnsi\nWeekly training parade will be\nheld In the Nelson Armories Wednesday at 1930 hours.        ' \"\nDress for this parade will be battle\ndress, anklets web and boots ankle,\nbelts WE Pattern 37.\nDuties:\nOrderly Officer. Wednesday, July\n4, 1951\u2014Capt. R. G. Simms.\nOrderly Sergeant, Wednesday \u2014\nA.-Sgt. K. A. Anderson.\nDuty Driver. Wednesday \u2014 Bdr.\nJ. W. K. Loewen.\nIns and Outs:\nRecent enlistment ln the Battery\nwas that of Trevor White.\nGunner J. S. Horswill and Gunner\nT. L. White leave Friday for a two\nmonths Army course at Currle Barracks at Calgary.\nB.Q.M.S. F. Drew returned to his\nduties over the weeRend after a\nfine holiday.\nLieut. H. E. Dahlquist has been\ngranted a leave of absence for one\nyear. Mr. Dahlquist will be leaving\nthe city In the near future.\nS-Sgt. D. A. Iceton, A & T Staff\nof the 24 H.A.A. Regt, will be conducting NCO for the troops leaving\nTrail and Nelson for the two months\ncourse that will be conducted at\nCalgary.\nB.S.M. Les Chown left over the\nweekend for the R.C.S.A. (C.S.T.\nand A.A.) school at Victoria. Sergeant Major Chown is employed as\nA & T warrant officer ot Cranbrook.\nAt Trail a complete-demonstration of anti-aircraft equipment will\nbe.on display Thursday afternoon\nand evening, and will be manned\nwith active force troops from the\n119 H.A.A. Battery,' R.C.A., from\nVictoria.\nCENTRE OF ATTENTION at graduation exercises of Nakusp\nand Arrow Park High School were these eight graduating students.\n-A banquet and party at the Nakusp school auditorium was sponsored\nby the Nakusp Parent-Teacher Association,\nThe graduates,  left to  right, are:\nFront row\u2014Joy  Oxenham,  Beatrice  Brotherton  and   Loralne\n. Henke,\nBack\u2014Clifford Green, Bernard Oxenham, Alan Stanley, Kenneth\nDrummond, and Melvin LaRue.\nHoliday Toll\nBlackest Since\nEnd of War\nBy The Canadian  Press\nCanada today recorded a violent\ndeath toll of 84 as an aftermath of\nthe Dominion Day weekend.\nIn the 72-hour period from mid-,\nnight Friday to midnight Monday,\n36 persorls were drowned, 28 died\nin traffic accidents and 20 from\nolher causes. The report was the\nblackest since the end of the war,\nj Ontario led Ihe list with- 42 violent deaths, 23 by drowning, nine\n\u2014a comparatively light toll\u2014In\ntraffic accidents and 10 from other\ncauses.\nOnly New Brunswick, Newfoundland and,Prince Edward Island reported no accidental deaths during\nthe celebrations' of Canada's 84th\nbirthday.\nIn 1950, a total of 51 persons died\nin a two-day weekend holiday and\nin 1948, when the holiday covered\na five-day period from July 1 to\nJuly 4, the toll was JO.\nThe 1051 figures in order of\ndeaths by drowning, traffic, other\nand total:\nOntario\u201423, 9, 10, 42.\nQuebec\u20146, 7, 1, 14.\nManitoba\u20143. 3, 2, 8.\nAlberta-2. 7. 3, 12.\nBritish Columbia\u20142. 1, 3, 8\u201e\nSaskatchewan\u2014, \u2014, 1, 1.\nNova Scotia\u2014, \u2014, I. 1,\nTotals\u201436, 28, 19, 84.\nUnemployment\nContinues Decline\nOTTAWA, July 3 (CP)-Unemployment in Canada is continuing\nto decline, the Labor Department\nannounced today.\nAt May 31, there were 151,100\npersons registered for employment\nat National Employment offices.\nThe figure represented a decline oC\n24,100 from the total for May 17. At\nMay 31, 1950, the number of unemployed totalled 254,400.\nThe Department, reporting that\nan increasing number of employers\nare regarding immigration as the\nsolution to their pressing needs,\nsaid:\n\"The three main Labor market\ndevelopments in the latter part of\nMay were, the continued expansion\nof seasonal activities, the beginning\nof the usual increase in the labor\nforce as students and women accepted jobs for the Summer\nmonths, and the appearance of employment dislocations in some lines\nof manufacturing as consumer\nbuying slackened.\"\nThe seeding of field crops, the\nopening of ihe Gaspe and Pacific\nFisheries, lhe extension of ocean\nnavigation to the St. Lawrence and\nthe further expansion of construe\ntion and mining activity have all\ncontributed to the creation of more\nthan 300,000 jobs during the last\nthree months.\nThe number of registered unem\nployed by regions at May 31, with\nthe figures for May 17 in brackets;\nNewfoundland 7500 (8900); Maritime region, 18,700 (22.600); Quebec region. 47.200 (57,000); Ontario\nregion, 36.200 (38,000); Prairie region, 20.900 (25,900); Pacific region,\n20,600 (22,800).\nNOTICE\nNELSON FARMERS\nSUPPLY LTD.\nwill be\nClosed Wednesday\nJULY4TH\n,..   FOR STOCK TAKING\nNELSON FARMERS\nSUPPLY LIMITED\n524 Railway Sfr.\nNelson, B. C.\n\"Zero One\" Answer\nTo All Problems\nBERLIN, July .3 (AP) - Murder\nor bugs, just dial \"zero one\" in\nWest Berlin and the trouble will be\nlooked after.\nAt least that is what some West\nBerliners seem to think, to the despair ol* police officials.\nIt was for murder, kitinapping,\narmed robbery, riots and other such\nemergencies that West Berlin police\nheadquarters set aside the short,\neasy-to-remember telephone number \"zero 'one.\" It rings more than\n200 times daily.\nAn elderly woman dialed it in\nthe middle of the night. A radio car\nraced to her flat where the excited\nwoman presented the officers with\ntwo bugs carefully wrapped in\npaper.\n\"For months,\" she esaid, \"I've\ntold the landlord to do something\nabout, the bugs in this house, but\nhe never believed there were any.\nNow I've caught the proof and you\nare my witnesses.\"\n\"ARE YOU THERE?\"\nFearful spinsters are frequent cus-,\ntomers of \"zero one.\" Sometimes,\nthere is something tangible for!\npolice to work on\u2014like the old lady!\nwho reported burglars in her house.\nThe \"burgler\" turned out to be an I\ninebriated neighbor trying to fit\nhis key in the wrong door.\nOne unusually-cautious young\nlady called \"zero one\" just to be\nsure somebody was there in case\nsomething should happen. \"I expect\na young man visitor, you see,\" she\nexplained to the flabbergasted\npoliceman, \"and you never\nknow ...\" .;\nWeary police officials have noted\nthat the number of emergency calls\nrises sharply on pay days. Usually\non those days police aid is sought\nto stop a beer-hall fight.\nMissing Reds\nNEW YORK, July 3 CAP)\u2014Judge\nSylvester J. Ryan today forfeited\nthe bonds of the 11 convicted Com;\nmunist leaders \\vhen they failed to\nsurrender in'court,    .,,\nThe motion to fqrfeit.-the bonds,\ntotalling $80,000, was made at the\nrequest of the Government when\nthe names of the missing Reds were\ncalled and there was no response..\nSeven other leaders, also members of the Party's American Politburo, began serving their prison\nterms yesterday. The four missing\nleaders were to have appeared in\ncourt at the same time.\nThe four, object of a country-wide\nsearch, are Henry Winston, the Party's national organisation secretary:\nNew York State Chairman Robert\nThomnson, Illinois Chairman Gilbert Green, nnd Party national secretary Gus Hall.\nThe II leaders were convicted\nnearly three years ago of plotting to\nnreach ihe forcible overthrow of the\nUnited Slates Government. Their\nprison sentences ranged from three\nto five years. v\nNEW DAUGHTER FOR\nTHE LANCASTERS\nSANTA MONICA, Calif., July 3\n(AP)\u2014An eight-pound baby girl is\nthe newest member in the family\nof Aclor Burt Lancaster. The child,\nnamed Joanne Mari, was born to\nMrs. Norma Lancaster yesterday.\nThe couple has three other children.\nLancaster wasn't here to hand out\ncigars. He's in Italy to start a new\npicture.\nNo Helicooter for\nFlag-Pole \"Queen\"\nMEDICINE- HAT. Alia., July 3\n(CP) \u2014 The Medicine Hat Stampede's flagpole sitter will be removed from her perch Friday by\nflreladders instead of by helicopter.\nR.C.A.F. officers inspected . the\nQagnnle yesterday, and decided it\nwould be danrrcrous to attempt 'tp\nremove the flagpole sitter, Mrs.\nVera AIIph of Ottawa, by helicopter.\nMrs. Allen, former London Music\nHall girl, will end hor two-week\nstay atop the flagpole Friday to become oueen of the Medicine Hat\nStampede. Yesterday she was interviewed by \"transatlantic telephone\nfor a second time by the London\nweekly newspaper, News of the\nWorld.\nShe also participated by radio\nhook-up In the annual Dominion\nDay pow-wnw at Dryden, Ont.\nBalloting Complete\nIn Finland\nHELSINKI, July 3 (AP) \u2014 Finland today winds up its two-day\nballoting to elect 203 parliamentary\ndeputies. Moderate parties comprising the present coalition regime\npredicted victory with little trouble\nfrom the Communists. Balloting has\nbeen quiet.\nPROMOTED\nTOPEKA, Kas., July 3 (AP) \u2014\nDr. Franklin D. Murphy, 35-year-\nold Dean of the University of\nKansas' Medical Centre, yesterday\nwas elevated to Chancellor of the\nuniversity. He succeeds Dean W.\nMalott who resigned earlier this\nyear to become President of Cornell' University, Ithaca, N.Y.\nHEAVIER FRUIT\nCROPS EXPECTED\nOTTAWA, July 3 (CP)\u2014Heavier\nyields for all Ontario fruit crops\nexcept grapes were forecast today\nby the Bureau of Statistics in its\nfirst estimate of 1951 production.\nThe grape crop, while heavy, will\nlikely be down- from 1950.\nFor British Columbia, the Bureau\nsaid apple, cherry, strawberry and\nloganberry crops will be lighter\nthan last year while substantial increases are in prospect for pears,\npeaches and apricots. Moderate improvement over 1950 was expected\nin plums, prunes, raspberries and\ngrapes.\nThe Bureau said lt still ls too\nearly for estimates of production\nin Nova Scotia. New Brunswick\nand Quebec, though general indications are for good crops of apples\nand strawberries. Apple scab was\nreported in all three provinces.\nStrawberry output has been heavy\nin the Montreal area.\nFor British Columbia, June estimates are: apples, 6,774,000 bushels\n(8,782,000): pears, 567,000 (359,000);\nplums and prunes, 306,000 (268,000);\ncherries, 76,000 (91,000); peaches,\n492,000 (81,000); apricots, 62,000\n(21,000); strawberries, 9,191,000\nquarts (11.208,000); raspberries, 7,-\n503,000 (7.356.000) quarts); loganberries, 829.000 pounds (953,000);\ngrapes, 1,570,000  (1.539,000).\nFarm Youths Tangle\nWith Zoot-Suiters\nEDMONTON, July 3 (CP)\u2014Zoot-\nsuiter violence spread during the\nholiday weekend io the Seba Beach\nlake resort 50 miles West of Edmonton. Police said district farm\nboys chased a group of drape-trousered Edmonton youths from the\nvillage and cornered some others in\na car. They were about to overturn\nlhe vehicle when police stepped in.\nThe trouble started Saturday\nwhen a farm youth was beaten by\nseveral Edmonton teen-agers.\nPolice said that shortly after midnight about 70 farm youths drove up\nto a dance hall in trucks. They were\narmed with stones and clubs.\nMost of the Edmonton 'Juveniles\nhad already left by that time, police\nsaid, and no one was injured in a\nscrap with those who vremained.\nWitnesses said several windows in\nthe dance hall were smashed. .\u201e\nMeanwhile in Edmonton groups\nof soldiers stripped several juveniles\nof their draped trousers and in one\ncase attempted to set fire to their\nclothing, police said. Two soldiers\nwere arrested.\nOne of the disrobed juveniles told\npolice he had just arrived in Edmonton from New Westminster,\nB. C, and that $45 was missing from\nhis drape trousers when they were\nreturned to him in tatters.\nThe pantless juveniles were escorted home in police cruiser cars.\nTo Hold Inquest\nInto Child's Death\nNANAIMO, B.C., Jly 3 (CP) \u2014\nAn inquest will be held Wednesdav\ninto the death of 18-months-old\nSusan Rochford, killed when struck\nby a run-away car.\nThe baby was struck by the car\nSaturday when it ran over the embankment onto Departure Bay\nbeach, where William and Barbara\nRochford were playing with their\nchild.\nThe mother suffered fractured\nribs,  bruises and head  injuries,\nThe father, a former London\nnewspaper advertising man, and his\nfamily have lived here only three\nmonths.\nThe car was reported to have been\nparked on beach boulevard.\nIt is believed it either slipped Its\nbrakes or was bumped forward by\nanother  car. '\nUniform Plan for ill Needy\nCanadians Urged by Health Minister\nOTTAWA, July S (CP) \u2014 Health\nMinister Martin said tonight the\nFederal Government hopes all provinces will adopt, a uniform plan for\nthe payment of pensions to needy\nCanadians between 65 and 69.\nFiring the opening gun in a campaign to acquaint Canadians with\nchanges in the old-age security program, Mr. Martin said no matter\nwhat the provinces do the Federal\nGovernment plans to go ahead Jan.\n1 with the payment of *i40-a-month\npensions to all 70 and over regardless of means.\nHis statements were contained ln\na speech over a national network\nin the CBC's series \"The Nation's\nBusiness.\"\nThe Federal\/Government has\noffered to share on a 60-60 basis\nwith tho provinces the cost of\n$40-a-'month pensions to the needy\nbetween 66 and 69. It has offered\nto Increase the amount of allowable Income, Including pension, to\n$720 from $600 for single pensioners and to $1200 from $1080 for\nmarried pensioners. The Federal\nGovernment It ready to Inaugurate the new program next Jan. 1.\n\"While some provinces have indicated \"that these income ceilings\nmight be too high, others may have\nsome doubts as to the advisability\nof commencing payment at an age\nas early as 65,\" said Mr. Martin\n\"Still others may wish to set additional conditions of eligibility,\n\"The Federal Government, of\ncourse, hopes that all provinces will\nultimately adopt a uniform pattern\nin order to take fullest advantage\nof the scope of this Federal legislation. At the same time, it is not the\nintention of the government to impose this new program on all provinces on a 'take it or leave It' basis.\n\"If any province comes to the\nconclusion that it cannot, for reasons of its own, implement this part\nof the program in its jurisdiction\nat the present time, or that it can\nonly do so on a limited and partial\nbasis, this will not affect the Federal Government's offer as it applies to the other provinces. Nor\nwill it in any way affect the implementation of the universal pensions program.\"\nMr. Martin said that since the\npensions for those between 65 and\n69 will be administered by the\nprovinces, those who wish to apply\nmust wait for directions from their\nprovincial government.\nThe Federal Government will\nissue instructions within the next\nfew weeks to those 70 and over who\nwill qualify for the Federal universal pension regardless of means.\nThe famous Scottish botanist Johl\nHutton Balfour was also Dean o\nMedicine at Edinburgh Universltj\nfor 30 years.\nPredicts Alloy\nSteels Nol\nAvailable in '52\nNEW YORK, July 3 (AP)-Pf ace\nin Korea would have little effect\ntoward easing the supply of steel\nthis year, The Iron Age, national\nmetalworking weekly, says today.\n\"Manufacturers who now face\nlimitations on their supplies of metals cannot expect any improvement\nin their picture for the balance of\nthe year,\" says the trade publication. \"In fact, indications that most\nmetals will be generally hard to get\neven In the first quarter of 1952 still\nstand.\"\nThe weekly \u00abay\u00bb most of the\nalloy steels now used In automobiles will become unobtainable\nbefore 1951 Is over, and makers of\ncars, trucks, farm Implements and\neven some military materials will\nhave to use substitutes.\nThe Iron Age calls the alloy\nshortage the most critical that the\nUnited States has ever faced, and\n\u2022ays manufacturers of automotive\nand farm equipment Items will\nhave to move fast on substitutes\nIf they expect to keep their plants\nrunning.\nFortunately the substitutes, new\nboron steels, now are available as a\nresult of high-speed research by automotive engineers in cooperation\nwith steel producers and defence officials, says the publication.\nFIND TROUSERS\nBUT $800 MISSING.\nBRANDON, Man., July 3 (CP) \u2014\nThe police have the trousers, but\n$800 in cash and savings certificates\nare missing. A bold snatch thief\nlifted two pairs of trousers, owned\nby James Moehler and his son, A.\nD. Moehler, both of Camrose, Alta.,\nfrom a trailer parked at the Exhibition Grounds last night. The trousers were recovered in nearby fields.\nSoldier to Be Buried\nWith Full\nMilitary Honors\nWOODSTOCK, N.B:, July 3 (CP)\n\u2014Pte. H. B. McEachron, \"20, shot at\nWainwright Saturday, will be.\nburied here Friday with full military honors.\nThe Carleton and York Regiment\nband, a guard of honor and a firing\nparty will be in attendance at the\nUnited Church service.\nPte. McEachron was a son of\nHarry McEachron, Truro, N.S., and\nMrs. Thelma McEachron, Woodstock, f\nHome on embarkation leave two\nweeks ago, he had been awaiting\ndraft for Korea. A wrist injury prevented him from joining an earlier\ndraft\nWAINWRIGHT, Alta., July 3\n(CP) \u2014 Pte. Frederick J. Sabattis of\nKingsclear, N.B., today was charged\nwith murder and remanded until\nJuly 10 for preliminary hearing in\nthe death of another soldier here\nSaturday night.\nSabattis is alleged to have shot\nand killed Pte. H. B. McEachran\nwith a .303. service rifle. An inquest\nSunday revealed McEachran was\nstruck in the chest with a single\nslug. He died shortly after in hospital.\n\u2014\u00bb\t\nYacht Sinks\nSIDNEY,' B.C, July 3 (CP) \u2014\nThe Seattle yacht Pababab sank\nyesterday in Irving Strait and her\nfour passengers were rescued by\nAlex Fowler of Coal Island. Irving\nStrait is about 17 miles Northeast\nof Victoria. B.C.\nCause 'Of the sinking was not\ngiven in reports received by Royal\nCanadian Air Force officials here.\nThey said the yacht's owner, Mr.\nSchwarz, his wife and two children\nwho were aboard, continued to their\ndestination, Genoa Bay, in another\nboat of the cruise party.\nThe sunken, yacht has been refloated and is beiny repaired.\nSALE\nFASHION CRAFT\nMADE-TO-MEASURE\nSuits\n20% DISCOUNT\nNow is your chanca to\nsqve up to $30 on a\nmade-to-measure suit.\nNo extra charge for\nextra sizes. Fit and satisfaction guaranteed.\nEmory's\nLIMITED\nThe Man's Store\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty]\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n515 Koolenay St. Phone 381 \\\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 1401\nNELSON, B. C.\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy]\nPrescription!\n.   Accurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arts Bile, |\nPHONE 25\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON!\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 1411\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountant*\nAuditors\n576 Baker St. Phona 235 I\nLORD WOOLTON BIDS\nFOR DEPARTMENT STORE.\nLONDON, July 3 (Reuters)\u2014Lord\nWoolton, 67-year-old chairman of\nthe Conservative Party, has bid\n\u00a33,500,000 to buy a controlling interest in Selfridge's. London's largest department store.\nThe announcement was made last\nnight in a joint statement, which\nalso said the Treasury must approve\nthe proposed deal before final decision can be made.\nFounder of the store was Gordon\nSelfridge, a native of Ripon, Wis.,\nwho started work at the age of 10\nearning 84 cents a week in a dry\ngoods store. At 25 he earned $11,000\na year in a Chicago store.\nHe retired with a fortune of\nabout $560,000.\nAfter his retirement he came to\nLondon and in 1906 opened his\nstore.\nSelfridge stayed in Britain and\ndied a naturalized British subject in\n1947 at the age of 91. No member of\nhis family is connected with the\nfirm today.\n\u25a0, V '\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimul\nDONALD E. HUNTER!\nOPTOMETRIST\nGilker Block\n542 Baker St.       Ph. 1527,\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiili]\nTRAIL\n1901-51\nALL FOR YOU AT TRAIL'S\nQolden Anniversary\nTODAY and TOMORROW\nProgram for Today, Wednesday, July 4\n10:00 to 12:00 .Cominco Tour's .'\u25a0'-..\n10:00 a.m Softball at Butler Park (T.A.A.)\n10:30 a.m Old, Timers' Luncheon and Tour South Slocan\n1:00 p.m Midway. Kiddies' Rides at Old Rink Site '.\u25a0\u25a0'.\n2:00 to 4:00 Cominco Tours\n2:00 to 5:30 .....All Pet Show at Armories\n3:00, p.m. \u25a0 Caledonian Dancing at Butler Park\n\u2022-;  4:30 p.m Model Aircraft Show at Butler Park\n5:00 p.m Regatta Show ln Front of River Wall. Between Cominco Arena\nand Old Kink Site\n6:00 p.m Softball. Spokane vs Trail (T.A.A.)\n7:30 to 11:00 , All Pet Show at Armories\n8:00 p.m Final Showing of Pageant. Cominco Areha\n9:00 p.m Street Dancing in Front of Williams Clinic\nProgram for Tomorrow, Thurs., July 5\nCIVIC HOLIDAY\n10:00 to 12:00   Cominco Tours\n10:30 a.m ...Grand Parade, Judging of Floats. Starting From Far End of Aldridga\nAvenue to Butler Park\n1:00 p.m ...Midway. Kiddies' Rides at Old Rink Site\n1:00 p.m.  Army Display at Butler Park\n1:30 p.m. Tree Planting. Historical Site. Hospital Site.\n2:00 to 4:00    Cominco Tours\n2:30 p.m Fashion Show at Cominco Arena\n2:30 to 5:30 p.m Carnival at Curling Rink\n6:30 p.m Old Timers' Banquet at Legion Hall\n8:00 p.m Army Show. Butler Park\n8:00 p.m Carnival at Curling Rink\n9:00 p.m. Street Dancing in Front of Williams' Clinic\n8:05 p.m. (Costume 1900) Cabaret at Cominco Arena\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1951_07_04","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0425847","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}