{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0426021":{"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":"2023-02-13","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1949-08-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426021\/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":" \"100,000 Homeless\nEcuador Asks Help\n'Quake Death Toll Estimqtes\ni     Vary Between 2000 and 9200\nBy:JORGE \"MANTILLA-\nQUITO, Ecuador, Aug, 8 (AP)\u2014A: hundred thousand\nEcuadorans toddy were officially, reported homeless as a\nresult of the earthquake that ripped 50 cities and villages\nlast'Friday. ' ...        '   \" '\nUnofficial estimates of the number kilted rose, as, high\nas 6000 but an.aide to President.Galo Plaza..Lasso said the\ndeath toll was more likely to be between 7000 and; 4000.\n,     The aide, Presidential Secretary Miguel a^lbornoz, said\nthe Government had hot been able to compile a death list.\n_*! <&\n<&$.\n(Reuters News Agency, in a dispatch from Guayaquil, listed the\ndeath toll at 9241;. The dispatch,\nquoting a Guayaquil - official, estimated 5000 were killed In Ambato,\n'8000 In Pelileo and 1000,in Patate.)\nThe President Sunday announced\nthat ln one town of 3500, identified\nas Pelileo, there were only 800 survivors,   \u25a0\nPresident Plaza pointed out that\n7! per cent of the homes still standing In hard-hit Ambato must be\ntorn down. <\nOUT8IDE AID .   '\nHe said the Government had asked the American republics to rush\ntents to the area ahd that the Unit\ned   States   already   was   sending\nemergency  .shipments   of   canned\ngoods, an indlspenslble item on relief. ...,.'\u25a0.    \u25a0' .. ,, f   \u25a0.\nThe President laid his estimate\nSunday   of, $20,000,000   property\ndamage Was \"very modest\" and\nI mldht go much higher. A definite\nfigure, awaits an engineers' survey.                   ' - ' .\nI Latest information available today in Quito was that no foreigners\nWere killedor Injured In the earth-'\nquake although one Briton was reported killed when a- plane, flying\nworkmen* to   Ambato- after   the\n'quake, crashed. \" ., .      , \u2022  S7'\nSAYS VICE SQUAD\nVIEWED\n'XIR\u00abJS\"fREE\nL.A. Madam Tells\nCourt of Paying $50\nWeekly Protection\nOFFICERS CHARGED\nLOS ANGELES,\/Aug. 8 (AP).-A\ndescription of a brothel \"circus\" by\na callhouse madam who said she\npaid police: protection at the rate of\n$5t a week for each girl, came to\nlight officially tc'.ay in hitherto\nsecret Grand Jury testimony.\nIt was the 2141-page transcript on\nwhich former \"Police Chief G. B.\nHorrall and four other police Officials recently were indicted. '. \u2022; ,\nShe said that \"I considered pay-\nments to police as a necessary business expense.\"\nHorrall and Assistant Chief Joseph-Reed, Personnel Capt Cecil\nWisdom* and Vice Squad officers\nv Lieut Rudy Wellpbtt and Sgt E. V.\"\nJackson -were all charged with perjury in\" the Indictments. Wellpott\nand Jackson were also charged with\nbribery..  \u00bb\u2022'\n- Miss Allen-described a \"party\" or\n.\"cirq^^at,.|ti4|J:;reques.t.-.ol;;a grind,\njuror; She said.there would be a\ngroup of girls and paying customers\nIn the living room of her establishment All would be in the nude.\nPolice officers, she said,; would\nwatch the show, without paying.\nMiss Allen, said she met Sgt Jackson In 1946. i,\nShe testified she began paying\nhim $50 a week on his assurance\nthat his Vice Squad Would hot arrest\nher and she Would be warned if any\nother police unit threatened to raid\nher place.   ;\nBID ft) BLOCK\nNATIONALIZATION\nTURNED DOWN\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 8 (AP) \u2014\nThe Senate tonight passed a huge,\n^$5,797,724,000 money bill to run the\n\"European Recovery Program and\n... piy United States occupation costs\n^ abroad during thb coming year: The\nH Vote was 83 to 7 on final passage.\nFinal action came after more\nthan two weeks ot wearying debate.\nThe bill now goes to a conference\nwith the House ot Representatives,\nWhich had voted about 10 per cent\nmore. Senate-House conferees are\nexpected to reach a quick compromise.\nFinal passage come shortly after-the Senate hod knocked down,\nby a vote of 50 to 21, an amendment designed to' withhold recovery funds from any country\nwhich In the future nationalizes\n. an. Industry, It was aimed at\nBritain.\nOTTAWA, Aug. 8 (CP),\u2014Spine:\ntime'this Fall,\u2014 probably: around\nOctober \u2014 some 750,000 Canadians\nWill start receiving refunds on\ntheir 1949 income tax.\n. They' are the pedple who paid\nIncome tax last year, but were\nknocked off. the' tax-rolls by the\nbudget that Parliament received\u2014\nbut never passed\u2014this Spring. They\nare entitled to a refund of the taxes\nthat, were deducted from their\nwages before the, budget was introduced to Parliament\nThey won't get the refunds; however, until the budget has been\nformally\"' approved. Parliament\nmeets Sept. 15 and.1 the budget Is\nexpected to be one of the early\nitems it will consider.''\nTax Refunds\nComing in Fall\nFoundation Laid for $100,000\nLegion Building lor Kimberley\nEUROPE COUNCIL\nOPENS DOOR TO\nTHREE OTHERS\nStrasbourg, Possible *\nCapital of Europe, ,\nWelcomes Ministers\nUNIONLAUNCHED\n'.< By FRANK O'BRIEN\nSTRASBOURG, France, A14g.il\n(AP). \u2014 The Council ot Europe's\nCommittee ot Ministers voted today\nto admit Turkey and Greece. Iceland also was invited to become the\n13th member of the Council, the Old\nWorld's most ambitious attempt to\njoin in a union br federation.\n' The Foreign .Ministers of the 10\ncharter members\u2014Britain,. France,\nItaly, The- Netherlands, Belgium,\nLuxembourg, Swede n, Norway,\nDenmark and the Republic bf Ireland\u2014launched the organization ito-\nday at the first session of the Committee of Ministers. The Committee\nis the Upper House of the Council,\nrThe Council's Lower House\u2014tho\nConsultative Assembly, made up of\n87, members of the Parliaments of\nthe 10 charter members, eight from\nTurkey and six from Greece\u2014will\nmeet Wednesday. ,\nTOMEET-AGAIN\nThe Ministers met in Strasbourg's\n16th century City Hall with French\nForeign Minister Robert Schuman,\na . vigorous backer of European\nunion, presiding at the opening. Belgium's Paul-Henri Spaak then took\nthe chair. They were In session approximately 3U hours. They will\nhold their second meeting tomorrow.   *\nStrasbourg, permanent scat of the\nCouncil and hence the potential\ncapital of Europe, was decked out\nin the national flags of all the members.\nB.(. Chess Ace Wins llr Loses One,\nDraws One Against 13 District Men\nA man who won the British Columbia chess championship .-and\n'.'surprised\" himself, last night in\nNelson showed an aggregation of\nthe Kootenay's foremost exponents\nof. the game just how it is done.\nTaking on 13 of the game's followers, who gathered from through*\nout th^ District Mlervaldis Yursevsky of'Vancouver won 11. P. Tjeb-\nbes of-Grand Forks, won his game\nagainst Mr, Yursevsky, who played\nthe entire 13 at 'one . sitting. K.\nFug! of Vancouver gained a draw\nThe* boards were played at the\nhome of B. B. Clark. They replaced\na scheduled showing by the Canadian champion, Abe \u2022 Yanofsky of\nWinnipeg, who earlier had cancelled his expected date with Kootenay artists,\nB.C. NEWCOMER\nYursevsky is top-rated in B.C.\nAnd he has gained that standing in\nonly two years ln the Province\nTwenty years a player In his native\nF,stonla. the title holder came, to\nVancouver only ln 1947\nAlthough the players who showed\nup were the pick of the Kootenays,\na good many could not Seem to get\nthe upper hand. Amond District\nplayers were T..C. Middleton, B. B.\nqark, C. Holland, T..H. Vander-\nvalk. G. Lensoe, R. B. Relffer, all\nof Nelson: .G.' W. Ssndborn, Trail;\nP. TJeddes of. Grand Forks, F. Hawkins, Bonnington: C. P. Perry, Salmo; J. ,D..Yeatman,-.South Slocan:\nK. Pugil Vancouver, and A. D.\nDouglas, Vancouver\nMr. Middleton, ardent chess player and holder of the Kootenay chess\nchampionship, was the Instigator bf\nthe visit to. Nelson bv Yursevsky.\nHe had planned to have the Canadian champion play in Nelson, but\nwhen this date was cancelled; Mr:\nMiddleton had -the B.C. Chess Federation send-the B.C. champion to\ntake his place.' '\"        - .\nMr. Yursevsky, who will be returning to the1'Coast' today, told\nMiddleton that When he entered the\nB.C. champlonshlns he had no idea\nwhere-he would place, , HIS. one\nthought- was. to see If he could Improve' his fund bf experience by\nclaying former chamoions. As It\nturned out they .may have learned\nsomething from him.     .\nM-*lk\n**#*,\nft CENTRA COPY NEL8QN, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANAQA-^-TUESPAY MORNING, AUGUST 9. 1949\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay\u2014Clear Tuesday. Little\nchange ln temperature. Wind Hdht.\nLow and high'at Cranbrook 90 and\n75, Crescent Valley 49 and 79,\nNUMBER 89\n^\\^V^\/iom\u00a3fw KitriherUyJtfgion Rising\nModernity .and   simplicity   of    Klmberley's      In this sketch. Its location la the corner of Spokane\nLegion Hall now being constructed aria apparent     Street and Klmberley Avenue.\nHail and Fire Bring\nFarms, Que. Village\nSays \"I Do\" Today\nLOS ANGELES, Aug.'\"8 (AP)'-\nHollywood's perennial- \"most eligible\" bachelor, James Maltland Stewart, Is going to be married tomorrow. .;\u25a0*\u25a0-;\nStewart 41, who once quipped he\n\"could never marry one girl and\nbe disloyal-to all the others,\" will\nmarry Mrs. Gloria Hatrlck McLean.\nShe Is 31, the mother of Ronald,\nfife, and Michael, three, by her first\nhusband, Edward B. McLean.\nThe couple will be wed at Brentwood, Presbyterian Church. - The\nceremony .will be. informal. Friday\nthe couple will embark on a 13,000-\nmile, aerial honeymoon, and it will\nbf months before Jimmy returns to\nthe cameras again.\nJimmy: and Gloria first met at\ndinner ln the Gary Cooper home,\nThe serious-minded Stewart, whose\nname has been linked romantically\nwith many Hollywood girls, was qt\nonce attracted to the \"tall, slim,\nblonde Gloria. They both like the\noutdoors and have fished and played golf and tennis together a .lot\nsince lost May.: 20. Th.it wis the\nnight that Jimmy, celebrating his\n41st birthday, shook off his shyness\nand asked Gloria to irmrry him.\nAll Hollywood is pleased with\nJimmy's choice of a wife. She, wears\nlittle .makeup,, her. clothing is of\nslrt-.ple design, and reflects her naturalness: ...,.\/.:'.;.'.., ,,':.',J   '\nAnd Jimmy, well,, there never'has\nbeen another one like Jimmy. Stewart in Hollywood. Some people.used\nto think Jimmy couldn't, act that\nhe merely played himself on the\nscreen. But he won an Academy\nAward to \"The. Philadelphia Story,\"\nand he's one of-ihe Industry's highest: paid perfbnners.    : \\\nHe was earning mora than $100,000\na year when he was cut to- $21 a\nmonth -M* a private ifl the'United\nStetes\".\"Aritty. \"Five ;year\u00bb later he\nwas discharged from the Air Force\nas a colohel.   -        \u25a0'\"-\u25a0\nWANTS TRUCK, SEIZED\nIN RAID, REfllRNEb\nVANCQUVW. Aug- .8. (CP)\u2014 A\nCloverdale,. B.C., woman is petitioning the Federal. Government for\nthe return: of a truck, seized in a\nR.C.M.P liquor raid] claiming'She\nIs, an Vipnocent-victim.\"'',.,    .\nMrs. Maria Kruzlck said she had\nno knowledge of the offence'.which\nbrought .per ,\u00abon, Anton; Kruzlck,\n$500 fine for unlawful, possession ot\nUqupr,\/,,,\/.,;; ;,\u201e..-.., ...'. ..\n-The trues wss seized July 18\nafter police found three .gallons of\nIllegal\u25a0 Uqu*.Jn.lt';.'Y;\n\/*\nWar Old-Fashioned in\nFive Years, Lie Hope\nKIMBERLEY,- B.C.,  Aug.  8.  - 4-    '.  ' '\"   '.\", \u25a0 \u25a0  \u25a0' \u2014\u25a0 -\nFoundation has beeri laid for Kim- j , k,    -,\u2022._-._--_.   \u25a0., <\nbefley's $100,000 Legion' Sail, and | U.N. oU,LChi)bto . . .\nmembers of Branch,67.are looking\nforward with keen Interest to its\ncompletion.   .    '7\nThe big, two-floor structure, will\noccupy, two city lots' ahd cover an\narea.'bf \"Its feet by 8? feet '\nTop floor will include an assembly >rbom* 48;feet by 94 feet,*which\nWill be entered through'a spacious\nfoyer. There will also be a kitchen,\nlounge room, ladies' cloak room,\nboard room and. office.\nThe; lower floor will comprise\nbars, billiard room, ping pong'and\ndart rooms, as well as storage space,\nThe assembly room, with \"a stage'\nat ohe end; will be rented for non-\nLegion functions, such as banquets,\nexhibits, carnivals ahd dances, The\nadjoining kitchen will contain tully\nmodern equipment and will be spa-\nclous enough to handle catering for\na:large;gathering,\"  l;   \"..,':.,\nA small triangular lot opposite\nthe\" hall will be used1 fpr parking\narid later1 will be. the;, site of the\ncenotaph. \u25a0' -  '-'.\nNOw occupying cramped quarters\nin ..an old. building an Deer Park\nAvenue, the Legion Is looking forward to aypeak seastrirof activity\nwhen! the new building Is finished.\nThe public, too, is anticipating opening of- the building with-a large\nauditorium at its disposal, only a\nblock frpm the centre of.the ctiy.\nLAKE SUCCESS, Aug; 8 (AP)-\nSecretary-General Trygve Lie of\nthe United Nations tonight hailed\nthe last 12 months: as a : \"year of\nprogress towards a more peaceful\nworld\/' '.'\u25a0\u25a0'\nIn his. fourth annual report, Lie\ntold the 89 member countries the\nfear of war has definitely decreased\ndespite: big power differences.\nThe 159-pnge report was the most\noptimistic yet issued by the Secretary-General.\nIn a speech delivered a few\nhours earlier at Bergen, Norway,\nthe Socretary-General expressed\nbonfldenqe that In five more\nyears war may become old-\nfashioned. \u25a0*',..\nHe  recalled that  Franklin  D.\nfive years to win the .war and\nafterwards ,10 years: to win the\npeace.'\nIri his. report Lie credited the\nending ot the Berlin blockade with\ndoing the. most to ease world tension, but added:-;;\n\"United Nations action ln other\nparts of the world has also contributed to, the progress mads towards a. more peaceful world by\neither preventing or ending wars\ninvolving 500,000^00 people.\"\nThiS was a reference to United\nNations mediation efforts in Palestine, Kashmir and Indonesia..\nPROBLEM REMAIN\n.Lie conceded the United Nations\nstill has not been able to resolve\nthe differences which have caused\nthe.cold war .between Russia and\nthe Western powers, He said, however, \"the conflict has been kept\nwithin peaceful, bounds and- the\nway prepared fpr further progress\ntowards a, settlement.\" - ,\u2022:\u25a0-. ,::, \u25a0\n\" ' The    Secretary \u2022 General1   ad\nvanced a six-point program which\ni he said could reduce the danger'\nPf war. and strengthen the United\nB$oii\u00abtolt-.aika.\u00abld.lt^\ntlnued, consultations 'among the\nbig powers on such probleiris as\nthe German, Austrian and Japanese peace treaties, atomio control and creation .of an International police force.\n\"It. Is essential,\" he said, \"for\nthe great powers to keep In con\ntact to talk things over,\" and\nseriously to negotiate with one\nanother,\nFind Ilderly Man,\nLost Since July 27\nZIQZAG, Ore., Aug. 8 (AP)\u2014An\nelderly man, -lost since July 27 in\nthe- wooded country near. Mount\nHood,- was found today-ralive, but\nin poor condition\u2014by two searchers.\nDistrict Forest' Ranger Jim Lang-\ndon: was notified that the two men\ncame upon John Harrison Tracy, 78,\nCRASH INTO STREET\n\/T^INS, Onfe, Aug.,8 (CP) \u2014 A\nflbatequlriped. plane crashed to-\nnight ln a residential street .In\nnearby South Porcupine but its\npilot': and three passengers, bushland guides, Walked away uninjured\ntr'qriy'the wreckage, The-plane ripped' down telephone and power\nlines as pilot John Ttoiriilns guided\nit- to a pancake landing. None of the\ntownspeople was injured.\nMinister Turns\nRed, Resigns\nLONDON, Aug. 8 (Reuters)\u2014Rev;\nWilliam F. Allen, Pastor of Dulwich\nGrove Congregational Church in\nSoutheast London, has resigned be-\nshortly   before   noon- in   a-teail ^use some church members:object\nshelter...\n\"Ray Godleskl, Sandy, and Ben\nFranklin, Estacada, found . Tracy\nJust a* few hours after his relatives\nincreased a reward for finding him\ntp\u00bbiooo.;\nTo Descend\nMile Into Ocean\nLOS ANGELES, Aug. 8 (AP) -\nA marine explorer, :next Saturday\nwill attempt tb descend more than\na mile into.the ocean\u2014twice as\ndeep as man has ever gone and\nsurvived;   - Y*\nOtis Barton, former associate of\nnaturalist William iBeebe, today announced final plans for submerging\nin his new behtoscope to depth of\n6000 feet .\n. The bentoscope is a hollow steel\nball about eight feet, in diameter.\nBarton will .observe marine life\nthrough thick glass windows as the\nsphere is lowered on the end of a\nsteel cable.        -\nBarton and Beebe set the current\nworld's record of 3028 feet in 1934\noff, Bermuda in : a bathysphere\nwhich Barton also designed. Saturr\nday's test sponsored by the Allan\nJlancock Foundation for Scientific\nResearch, will be made. off Santa\nCruz Island, near1 Santa .Barbara,\nCalif.'\u25a0' '\"\u25a0 ....Y':\nWSter pressure it 6000 feet will\nbe about 2000 pounds a square inch,\nor more than enough to squash'the\neitplorer If the 1%-inch steel shell\nof the sphere should collapse.\ntb his; membership of the Communist Party, it was- announced tonight.\nHe had been pastor of the church\nfor 12 years.\nIn announcing acceptance of Allen's resignation, church officers\nsaid \"the great majority ot members are deeply grieved at the\nthought-of losing so popular and\nconscientious a minister.\"\nTfie officers said that after \"many\nyears of intensive study,\" Allen had\nconcluded that \"the Ideals of\nChristian society, are realized in the\nscientific socialism of Marx and\nLenin,'\nMr. Allen said: \"I hope still to\nremain an ordained minister and\nthe London Congregational Union\nhave agreed to accept me as a freelance preacher,\" he added.\nBraden Broadcasts. *\nFrom Hospital\nLONDON, Aug, 8 (CP)\u2014Bernard\nBraden. Vancouver broadcaiter, has\nproved thst When, he. can't go tb\nthe BBC, the BBC comes to him.\nThough in hospital recovering\nfrom a knee operation, Braden was\nstill able to make his Weekly contribution to the BBC program \"Starlight. Hour.\"\nAlong came a BBC recording van.\nEngineers ran cables and microphones to his sick room. With his\nactress wife; Barbara Kelly, beside\nhim, Bernard recorded a comedy\nsketch fpr the program. .,-\nMiss Kelly, also from Vancouver,\nIs appearing -with five other Canadians in the- West End jperformancs\nof Janjes Thurber's' \"The. Male Animal.\" Braden ihjured his knee, by\ntripping;over the'cOihpahyls niascat\n\u2014a catnamed \"Thurber.\"\nDIES AT 105    .\nFAIRMONT, Minn., Aug. 8 (AP)\n\u2014Mrs. Henrietta Mathwig, 105. died\nSunday jri her sleep, The centenarian, had\/been quite active until 10\ndays ago when she began to fall.\nComplete With\nWardrobe\nHOLLYWOOD, Cailf, Aug. 8\n(AP)\u2014Ann^otfe; 20, Union City,\nN.J., today is one of the United\nStates' 'most eligible bachelor-\ngirls. She won $31,000 to cash, arid\nprizes yesterday on a radio \"program.\nBut although she is single\u2014not\neven enga^edvthB: prize list Includes an all-expense tour of\n' Paris for herself snd any man she\nchooses to accompany her, plus\n$2000 worth of men's clothing.\nHer address is 2008 Kerrigan\nAve., UriiOn City. Phone Union\n' 86882, fellows.\nTIES BLASTED\nNEAR 6. FORKS,\nUTILE DAMAGE\n\"Another Sneak\nRaid\" Says\nPolice Official\nRAILS UNHARMED\nGRAND FORKS', B.C., Aug.'.*\n(CP)\u2014Twin explosions blasted ties\no(i the Canadian Pacific^ Railway,\nline near this Interior border centre\nlate\/Saturday bight \u25a0-:    -\nProvincial Police,\" reported Monday that little \"damage was. done.\nA number of ties were dislodged\nand splintered but rails were-tmi\nharmeB'and trains allowed to resume schedules after a' thorough\nsafety, 'check, ;       '.'\u25a0;     Y\nThe blasts took place between 400\nand S00 yards, East, of Jjhk Grand\n\u2022ForSS\"'BS^\u25a0al;'\u25a0-ne4r'\u2022*tH*a->ftllWi.y,\"\nbridge which spans the* KetBb\nRiver! T^ie charges, police said,\nwere placed about 12 feet apart but\nWere described aS,relatively small\nIn, strength.Y     ,,  ,   .,      ,   .' '.\nThe' exploldons ,'follpwed by ' a\nweek-celebrations In this district\nby orthodox Doukhobors from all\nover th'e continent marking the\n50th; anniversary olMhelr arrival'to\nCanada. At 'that time police reinforcements were alerted, to'guard\nagainst possible outbreaks from the\nranks of the rebel and radical Sons\nof Freedom, uninvited to the. feasting- ahd\u00bb pageantry. 7\nNo arrests have been made yet as\nthe Investigation continues by- R.C.\nM.P. and B.C. Police officers. A\nhigh police official described the\nincident as \"another sneak raid.\"\nFIRE* NOT INCENDIARY\nMeanwhile at Brilliant, 20 miles\nNorth of Trail, and the centre of\n.the Kobtenay V^Uey Doukhobor\nsettlements, another, squad of Provincial Police, investigating an outbreak of flames which consumed a\npile* of ties adjacent tb the C.P.R\nKettle Valley line, came to the\nconclusion this morning that the\nfire was not of Incendiary origin,\nThe flames were discovered on\nthe right of way at\" 11:05 p.m. last\nnight and a railway spokesman described the damage as' '\/very minor.\nSub-Station Fire\nStops Traffic,\nElevators, Machine's\nVANCOUVER, Aug fi (CP). - An\nexplosion and fire in the British Columbia Electric Railway Company's\nHome Payne sub-station \u25a0 left Vancouver and most of the LbWer\nMainland area without'.electric\npower for nearly an hour today.\nThe failure occurred at 1:50 p.m.\nStreet cars, trolley buses and in-\nterrurban trains in the affected area\nwere brought to a stardstill,, as\nwas all 'electrically-powered industrial machinery. Y\nStores, factories arid homes were\nleft without lights, and at least one\ndowntown Vancouver department\nstore dosed its doors until power\n.was restored.\" YL\nThe failure of elevators. In large\nbuildings forced many persons .to\nwalk up or down many flights of\nstepB.:; .'., :-\"' '.'.'\u25a0,*,\nSTRUCK BY INTERRURBAN,\nDIES IN HOSPITAL\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 8 (CP) 7-\nKfty-year-bldv Thomas , Parish,\nstruck by an interrurban train to\nVancouver today, died to General\nHospital about three hours after\nthe'accident\n..Parish is 'Said te have run-in\nfront of the\/British Columbia Electric Railway . Company's Central\nPark train at Lake View station.\nEyewitnesses said he apparently\nattempting te reach the right side\nof the train to board it.\nHis death brings to 24 the number of traffic fatalities in Vancouver this year.\nRAIN NAY SAVE\nMINING CENTRE,\nWonnen and Children\nF|ee Fire Zone;\nWater Supply Short\nNEIGHBORS AID\nVAL SENNGVILLE, Que:,\nAug. 8 (CP)\u2014A forest fire\nswept Info this Northwestern\nQuebec, village late today,\ndestroyed 14 of the 30 homes\nand some small business establishments and threatened\nto wipe out the community.'\nThe- village, lacking firefighting\nequipment of Its own. sent out pleas\nfor, help to Val 4'0r, 15. iniles West\nof here, and other: neighboring\ntowns in this gold-mining district\nEquipinent was brought from Val\nd'Or and fire rangers Joined to the\nfight but lack of water hampered\nefforts to check the blaze. -.\nRain, which strted before; midnight seemed the villages only hope\nof escaping destruction.\nOH-,* DOWN\n\u25a0 As' .flames spread through Val\nSenneville, communications with\nother sections of Quebec and with\nOntario points Were cut oft One report, to .Montreal 'was that a storm\nhad disrupted fie service, Lateto-\nnight, telephone company officials\nreported that all Wides leading into\nVal- Senneville and. many of those\nto Val d'Or were out of prder.\nWomen, .children and -household\npossessions -were moved .out of the\nfire \u2022asne-asthe fiaiiaS teed closer.\nFirefighters were vprepared to send\nout another call for trucks to case\nit became necessary to evacuate the\nrest .of Val SenneViUe's' population\nof 1800.\nCify Gels $99.50\nOn Power Bonds\nBid of McMahqn and Burns of\nVahcouver and the Bank of Montreal for $130,000' worth of 10-year\n3 per cent serial'bonds issued under Bylaw 1126 for power plant extension work -Was accepted Monday\nnight by City Council.  ,\nThe firm's offer, of $89,511 per $100\nwa-, accepted over a $98 bid of Nesbitt Thomson and Company, Ltd.,\nof Calgary.\nMOTHER SAVES FAMILY\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Aug.\n8 (CP>\u2014Two childreii were rescued\nfrom a fire which swept the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. Oswald L. Davies\nhere today. .  '   .\nFighting her way through smoke-\nfilled rooms; Mrs.. Davies awakened\nher husband and four-year-old son,\nGordbn, and then carried her\nyounger son, three-year-old Dennis,\nto safety. '\nBUMPER CROP\nFLATTENED BY\nGIANT STONES\nOn Eve bf Harvest;\nCyclonic V\/ind\nSnaps\".$-Inch Trees\nBARNS WRECKED\nYORKTON, Sask., Aug. 8.\n(CP)\u2014-Hail, with some stohGi\nreported latger than tennis,\nballs,'accompanied by wind\nof cyclonic proportions wiped\ni out bumper crops South ahd..\nWest of here today. \u25a0\nThere Were reports of cdn-\n; siderable*. property loss. An-\nelevator  annex  at  Tonkiri>\nSask.,   Was   demolished,   at\n,. least ,20 barns and machina\nsheids in the Rokeby district\nwere ripped apart.\nFarmer Tom   liiglis  said\n600 bushels of oats had been,\nsucked out of a bin lnh.it:\nbafn and-60 \"tons of coiled\nhay had disappeared. He said\nnot an ounce of-rain accompanied the nail.  ' , \u25a0'} \u25a0\n: Late tonight total damage and\nextent of the storm had not been\nestimated.  A  three-mile  strip  of\ngood crops in the Barvas District\nwere expected to be half destroyed,-\nother districts reported hall damage\nof from 25 to 100 per cent.  :\nFred Oxenbury of Rokeby estim-\nated his loss of a barn, machine\nshed .and Implements at $4000. In\niadditiori'he:lo8t.50.\":per7Cent* of his\"\ncrop.\nThe high winds Mew part of a\ntrailer throhgh the side of the home\nof Fred' Harris, four miles South of-\nhere, snapped trees eight indies\nthick, uprooted others and disrupted telephone communication.\nFarmers In the district affected\n. said they had expected to begin\n\u2022-harvesting crops this week which\nwould have yielded 45 bushels of\nwheat to the acre and well over\n60 bushels'for oata.   \u25a0\nThe storm reduced visibility tat\narm length but the peak disturbance lasted less than 10 minutes,  i\n.YORKTON, Aug. 8 (CP)-Herman\nClaughtbn, Rokeby, Sask.,' district'.\nfarmer, said the wind and hail storm'\nwhich hit a Wide area South and\nEast of here today was the worst\nhe had seen in 45 years of farming.\nDuring the storm he tried to prop'\nan old door against the hail-brokeri\nkitchen window panes.\n\"When the twister' struck I'was\nso excited 1 hung on to the blamed\ndoor and it carried me clear over\nthe wife's chicken, fence.\" The\ncyclone also blew down his barn\nand machine shed.   -\nROME; Aug. 8 (AP)\u2014Fourteen\nYugoslav childrent headed for a\nSummer camp, were killed EWday\nby derailment of a Ljubljana-Pola\ntrain, the Italian. Agency*Astra re-\npOrteiijioday.' Another 60 children\nwere iBjured.' .\"\u25a0'\u2022'.\nAnd in This Corner\nAVON, Conn., Aug. 8 (AP) \u2014 John S. Eddy was being more\nprophetic than he realized, back in 1940 when he converted his large\nhome into a* three-family residence and christened it \"Twin Acres.\"\nThe following year, Mrs. LeRoy Noble, a tenant, became,the\nmother of twins.    ' \u2022   ,'. \u25a0\u2022 _, \u2022\nThe Nobles subrlet their apartment to the William.E.Diefender-\nfers. Two years later Mrs, Diefenderfer. became the mother pf twins.\nThree' years aio the Diefenderfers moved out and the Daniel A.\nBensohs moved in, arid shortly thereafter Mrs. \"Benson went to the\nhospital and returned with one child ,',.; .-.>\u2022\n\u25a0'\"   Avon began to wonder if the \"spell\" had been broken, until late\nlast week Mrs. Benson went to the hospital again and became the '\nmother of twins. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\n\u25a0 8EATTLEi Aug. 8 (AP)\u2014Every year'on his birthday Dr. R. 8.\nReed challenges all other members of the Rainier Rolf Club to play\nhim for five benta a hole.\nToday he was 61, and 75 dlvot-dlggert took him up on the bet\nAll 76 got \"took.\"\nReed.'wlth a 21-stroke handicap, shot an 83 for a net 62. That waa\ngood though to give him hia first clean.sweep on hla birthday play.\nNEW PORT BEACH, Calif., Aug. 8 (AP)\u2014Waitress Lorraine Head\ntoday la the favorite waitress of the biggest tipper In town\u2014because she\nwas- honest.\n. A week, ago, a male patron ordered two drinks. He gavo-her a\nfive and a one-dollar bill In payment That she told him, waa way too\nmuch money and returned the surplus.\n. Saturday night, he came In again, sought her table and .ordered\nanother drink. He tipped her $50. , '\nThen he Ordered another drink. Another $50 tip. .-\u2022.'\u25a0\ni   Then dinner. The\" tip was $100. '\nShe doesn't know hla name.       '\nATLANTJA, Aug. 8 (AP)\u2014For most of her 54 years Mrs. Clarence\nWallace had-wanted to swim.   \"\n- But somehow Bhe hadn't found time even when her Six children\nwere learning. \u2022\n,    Now she is taking .her first Jessons to a city swimming pool\u2014along\nwith her seven grand children.\nIt hasn't, been hard she says, explaining: \u25a0   . \u25a0*:..- \" \u25a0\n\"You See, I had to start swimming before I kriew how.'I dropped\nmy teeth to the pool; I'd just paid $60 for those teeth Snd I wasn't\ngoing to let them get away. So I Jumped to after them and came.up\nkicking. I was swimming before I- knew it.\" '\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, M)G. 9,1949\n' LAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Shows at 7:00-9.02\nIntroducing\nLOIS BUTLER\n\u25a0>UMtoew.iiw\u00ab|SC.\nTo Buy $2056\nIteJham\nFor Civic Centre\nWednesday Only\u2014\"THE SET UP\" \u2014 \"INDIAN AGENT\"\nLife Saving Equipment Presented\nBy Lions Club in City Hall Ceremony\n. Presentation of modern life saving equipment costing $300 by Nelson Lions Club to Nelson Fire Department was.mado at City Council\nMonday night. -,-'\"\nMayor T. H. Waters said he was\n' sure he was voicing the appreciation\nof all the citizens of Nelson in\nthanking the Lions Club 'for their\nefforts in securing the much-needed\n..equipment.\n.'\u25a0\u25a0 The-apparatus, consisting, of a\nresuscitator, inhalator and aspirator,\n! -woUld be of great value to the Fire\nDepartment in replacing its 14-year-\nold, less-adequate equipment, as\nwell as to Nelson doctors, he said,\n- The donation was an example of\n-what could be accomplished by a\n.service club. Besides its usefulness,\nthe. gift showed appreciation of the\nwork of the Fire Department, His\nWorship added.\nTO ATTACK PLAGUE\nLions President G. S. Cooper, who\nattended with several other Club\nmembers, said It was Ills organization's wish that the equipment bo\nused wherever and whenever necessary, a\nIntention was to attach a Plaque\nto the case containing the apparatus\nsignifying that it was, a donation\nfrom the Nelson Lions Club.'\nFire Chief G. A. McDonald, he\nsaid, had spoken to : the Club on\nvarious phases of the Department's\nwork and when the equipment was\ndemonstrated ih the district and its\nadvantages over tho old inhalation\nmachine shown, its purchase was\ndecided upon.. > Y.Y \"\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0'\nR. H. Bush, Assistant Chief, acting for the Fire Chief who has been\ncalled to- the Coast owing to illness\nof his mother, demonstrated use of\nthe equipment '      ,*\u25a0    '\",'      '\nAid. Tt S. Shorthouse moved a\nvote of thanks to the Club for ;lts\n\"fine gesture,\" and Aid. N. C. Stibbs\nstated that Nelson would look ;with\ngratitude to the Lions when the\nequipment was brought into potion.\nPurchase of an Ice shaver coating\n$2050 for the Civic Centre was approved Monday, night by City\nCouncil. Delivery will be made in\nNovember.\"\nCivic Centre Commission asked\napproval ot the , purchase- from\nrevenue funds, Stating i that the\nequipment would solve ice maintenance problems in the arena:\nUse | of \" an Ice shiver from\nMedicine Hat Is now being demonstrated at the rink, ahd has already\nproduced better ice for Mary Hose\nThacker'S Slimmer Figure Skating\nSchool being conducted there.'\nThick ice conditions which an ice\nshaver eliminates caused unfavorable, comments after the Reglna-\nTrail Allan Cup hockey, playoff\ngames' at the rink ln the Spring, it\nwas pointed out, .\nBy cutting off excess Ice, the\nMachine reduces refrigeration costs\nconsiderably and improves quality\nof the ice surface. The type of\nequipment is standard in other\nrinks In Canada arid the United\nStates, '.-     v 7\nAssurance has been given that it\ncan be used effectively in the\ncurling rink.\nREPAIR BROKEN\n'TRAIL MAIN\nl   TftAIla,   B.C.,   Aug.   S\u2014Repairs\n\u25a0yjera made here by Public Works\nDepartment workmen after one of\nUne couplings on a water main on\n. the Columbia River' bridge burst\n.Sunday night, spraying a curatln of\nXwater In air directions.. City repair\nbrews had the trouble corrected early Monday morning.\n,. \u25a0 A police patrol directed, traffic\n.at the East Trail end during, the\n.trouble period.\nPOWER PLANT\nOUTPUT GAINS\nProduction of Nelson Hydro-Electric Plant-Increased 3.3 per cent last\n'month over the output in July, 1948.\nTotal   kilowatt  hours  generated\nwere 1,559,290 compared with 1,509,-\n.'180 in the same month last year.\nAverage load was 2095 kilowatts\nagainst 2028, or an increase of 3.3\nper cent\nThe peak load was 3500 kilowatts,\nsame as the peak load in July last\n.'year, . \u25a0     Y\nFind $15 for\nDangerous Driving\n| paving in a dangerous-manner\nresulted in an accident on Granite\nYRoad July 28, when a car driven by\nFrank T. Spring, Rossland, left, the\ntoad on a curve half a mile West of\n,-Nelson;  .-.-.-. ,\u2022\u25a0\n!..; Mr. Spring pleaded riot guilty .to\n\u25a0 the charge brpught before Stipend-\nj iary Magistrate William Irvine Monday, and in his defence stated that\n|:'a car.parked on the travelled por-\nli Mop- of the road in-the middle of\n.the curve,  caused him to swing\nWide and lose control of the car.\nj; ' He was found guilty, paid a fine\n..of tit and costs, and was; given a\nblue driver's licence., ;'.\u25a0'\nFIND FINGERPRINTS\n. VANCOUVER, Aug, 8 (CP) \u2014\n' Fingerprints found on an aban\ndened car may provide a clue to\nthe Identity of the two masked,\narmed bandits who escaped with\n$8100 from the Bank of Nova\nScotia here Saturday.\nIf BACKACHE is\nHolding You Back\nIt's Dodd't You May Need!\nWhen your kidneys set up snd btclicht\nfollows\u2014got ind use Dodo's Kidney Pills,\nIhe 50-ycsr-old Canadian remedy. Dodd's\nKidney Pills quickly and safely help restore\nyour kidneys to normal action\u2014help relieve\nbackache and that \"lircd-all-lhc-timo\"\nfeeling by treating the kidneys. Ask any\ndruggist for Dodd'a Kidney Pills, look for\nIhe blue box with U\u00bb red band.      . U4\nDodds KidneyPiJIs\nPOUR CONFIRMED\nAT KASLO SUNDAY\nIJASL6, B.C.i'Aug, 8\u2014A Bpeclal\nconfirmation service was held In\nSt; Lawrence Anglican Church here\nSunday morning when F, P. Clark,\nM.A., D.D., Anglican Bishop pf the\nKootenay, assisted by Rev. M. C. T,\nPercivall, confirmed Miss Lucy\nPitcher, Miss Carol Pitcher, James\nGarrett Snd George Robinson: Miss\nB. Giegerlch presided at the organ.\n: The, church was beautifully decorated with cut and potted plants\nfpr the occasion, and a large congregation attended.\nAIR COMMODORE\nRETIRING.\nOTTAWA, Aug, 8 \\'CP).\u2014Popular Air Commodore Dave MacKen\nof Ottawa, a sports enthusiast who\njoined the R.C.A.F. when It was\njust a baby outfit, is retiring after\ni years' service.\nAt 51, he is relinquishing his post\nof Deputy Air Member ior Personnel at Air Force Headc-inrters.\n. Air Commodore t. G. Walt, 46, of\nOttawa, Commander of the R.C.A.F\nGroup at Halifax, will succeed him\nin one of four senior officer transfers; announced by the R.C.A.P. tonight     ... Y     ;\nC.P.R. Dividend Not\nFrom Rail Income\nMONTREAL, Aug. 8 (CP).-\nDirectors of Canadian Pacific Railway Company declared a two-percent interim dividend today and\nsaid in a statement that it is being\npaid out of other than railway income.\nThe 50-cent dividend on ordinary\ncapital stock is payable Oct. 1 to\nshareholders\" of record Aug. 22.'\nDirectors called' attention of\nshareholders, \"to the fact .that the\nheavy disproportion between rail\nway expenses and revenues still\ncontinues and that no relief has yet\nbeen given in respect of the application for an increase In freight rates.\nThis interim dividend is paid\nwholly out of other income bf the\ncompany.\"\nTo Attend\nU.B.C.M. Meeting\nAttending the Union ot British\nColumbia Municipalities meeting in\nVictoria Sept. 7, 8 and 9 from -Nelson will be. Mayor T. H. Waters,\nCity , Clerk W. A. Gordon, and\nAldermen .Alex Sutherland arid A.\nG, Ritchie.    . '\u25a0'.;\u25a0 Y -,\nHELPER IN KINS TUT'S\nTOMB DISCOVERY DIES\n. GODALMIttG, Surrey, Jjrigland,\nAug. 8 (Reuters) \u2014Professor Perc;\nEdward Newberry, 80, leading British Egyptologist, and .one of the\nhelpers of Howard\", Carter, discoverer of Tutankhamen's tomb, died\nst his home near here Sunday.\nMOVING\nWITH CARE\nEVERYWHERE\nH_R*--i^^'Sv'Y;Y;''7^i7^;^\nFrequent service.in every direction, Specialized household\ngoods moving by von, house to house or to storage where\nbest suited to shipper. Your complete information, phone\n1106. :\nNow serving all United States as agents for\nUnited Van Lines, Inc.\nvm.mmmmmm.mm*\nWilliams Van Line Ltd.\n613 Ward St. Phone 1106\nNELSON, B.C.\nA. S. Horswill\nCastlegar\nAirfield Promoter\nNelson supporters ot the Castlegar\nairfield Monday paid tribute to the\n|\u00abfforts:.6f\"A'.\u25a0\u25a0\".\"&\u25a0 Horswill of Castlegar Vis one ot tbe original promoters\nof the field, which is bringing thousands of dollars in business to the\nKootenays annually,-.      '.\"',\nMr. Horswill, along with Ralph\nWest, John Waldie and other Castlegar residents, worked hard for the\npromotion of the field.\nMarket Trends\nTORONTO (CP)-^Industrlals and\nbase metals highlighted a brisk session. Industrial issues . climbed to\nthe highest level since February on\ngains ranging, from fractions to\nmore than a point, Base metals were\nin their seventh successive session\nof advancing prices and Western\noils also tagged onto the upward\ntrend. Golds bucked profit-taking.\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Accompanied\nby. the heaviest trading in more\n-than four months, the stock market\nadvanced by tractions to around\ntwo.points.   '   \u2022\" Y\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Demand for\na nUmber of metal and paper issues\nsparked trading. Gains ranged from\na shade to more than a point in\nspots ln a generally improved market. Mines were strong.\nVANCOUVER (CP)- Advance of\nlead prices in New York to 15*14\ncents a pound.wss reflected with\nan increase in prices of, base metal\nmine stocks. Y.\n\u2022Oils were fairly active. Industrials and unlisted mines were inactive. : , .-'.\u25a0\u25a0 '\n' LONDON (Reuters)\u2014Prices ot\nBritish Government stocks tumbled.'Renewed heavy selling caused\na sharp break and wide declines\nwere shown.                    \u2022-\nFirG Fighters     p**- flinty**\nRace Wind\nKoolaree Echoes ,\nNew Group of\nJO at (amp\nPEST PROBLEM\nGROWING\n\u2022 VICTORIA, Aug. 8 (CP) - Canada's insect problem now Is more\nacute than at any time in the past,\nW. A. Ross of the Federal Department of Agriculture said here today, '\nIn Victoria to \\ discuss an insect\nthreat to Vancouver Island's bulb\nindustry, Mr. Ross blamed new\npests and increasing irisect.resistance to poison sprays for the situation. .       <    .       ' \u25a0,\nThe official, chief of fruit Insects\ninvestigation in the Entomology\nDivision of the Federal Department\nof Agriculture, said this' problem\nconfronted Scientists.  , -   ,\nA Way must be found to reconcile\nchemical control to the greatest\npossible extent with the biological\nbalance of nature. rrs\nHe said tor instance that the\nintroduction of D.D.T. poison has\ncreated a serious mite situation in\nCanadian orchards. The poison is\ndestroying the natural enemies of\nthe, pests'.\n\"Our aim is to work in cooperation with nature instead of working\nat cross-purposes as we have been\ndoing in the past due to lack of\nknowledge,\" he said.\n\"With this object ln mind,\" he\nadded, \"the Department of Agriculture is conducting long-term\nstudies .on what effect spray treatments have on pests in the whole\norchard fauna.''\nCAMP KOOLAREE, B.C., Aug. 0\n\u2014By the second day, camp activities\nfor\"The new group of 70 campers,\nwere well under way. All girls were\nenjoying \u25a0 their outdoor life Immensely. -\nCabin 1, the BeeDee' Sea Galls\nincludes Barbara DeLong (BeeDee)\nCaptain; Lois Bridges, First Mate;\nVelma Hogarth, Purser; Barbara\nBrown, Boatswain; Donna Reynolds,\nGwyneth Davies, Frances Mag-\nWood, Mary-Ann Swanson, Connie\nRollag, Frances Boudler, and Barbara Turner, Sailors.\nCabin 2, SInbada \u2014 Helen Catley,\nCaptain; Doreen Graves, First Mate;\nBeverley Lipse'tt, Purser; Janet\nMacDonald, Boatswain; Audrey Allan, Johan Mawer, Thelma Bartlett,\nfath Towgood, Irene Martin and\nJanet Thompson,\nCabin 3,\\ Water Babes \u2014 Muriel\nStuart and Phyllis Cooper, Captains; Peggy Pollick, First Mate;\nBernice Pollock, Purser; Hazel\nYoung, Boatswain; Dora Payne,\nShirley.; Oxenham, Cecile Wolfe,\nJune Gardener, Phyllis Reid, Gret-\nchen LUndstrom and'Carol Coventry. '.'\". \u2022 '.''.''\nCabin 4, Gib's Gals \u2014 Gael Gibson, Captain; Joan Kirby, First\nMate; Eleanor ,Svarlch, Purser; Pat\nMorrison, Boatswain; Anne Hargrave, Mary Snowball, Myro Mc-\nGillvery, Verna Murphy, -Anne\nGordon, Paddy Angus and Carol\nTlckner, sailors.\nCabin 5, Koolaree Krusers \u2014\nDorothy Smith, Captain; Shirley\nLewis, First Mate; Charlene Miller,\nPurser; Shirley Mae Smith, Boatswain; Florence Comeau, Joyce\nStuart, Shirley Berry, Diane Cooper,\nElaine Robertson; Jean Attaway\nand Helen- Skinner, sailors:\nCabin 8, Luxury Liner \u2014 Joyce\nCoventry, Captain; Jane Millican,\nFirst Mate; Hillary Lee, Purser;\nJane Bennett, Elaine Bell, Jean\nWaldie, Beverly. MacLeod, Merylln\nSaulter, Rita Tye, Dorothy Foster,\nand Pat Olmstead. :\nCabin 7, Tuboat. Ten \u2014 Irene\nCarter, Captain; Margaret Daly,\nFirst Mate; Marilyn Avery, Purser;\nBarbara Humphries\/ Boatswain;\nShirley Bullock, Connie Cummins,\nEmily Hurry, Olga Henriksen,\nMargaret McLean, Doreen Rowe\nand Margaret Mae Banks, sailors, J\nVisitors day saw people here\nfrom various B.C. centres. Visitors\nsigning the register were Gordon\nWatts and Nancy Millar from Vancouver; Anthea Foster, Mrs. F. H.\nSmith, H. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nCummins, F. S, Willis, Mrs, G.\nKerby, Lorna Kerby and William\nHamilton of Nelson; Mrs. B. Gibson\nof Rossland; Mr. and Mrs. B.\nMahoney and. David of Kinnaird;\nBetty Sanderson, Tom Lok, Bruce\nBaker, Betty Cumming, Monica\nBrown, Jackie Thompson, Mr. and\nMrs. G.. Calls, Mr. and Mrs'. E,\nSmith, Mr. and Mrs. Coodok and\nTerry, and Mr, and Mrs, E. R.\nHumphries. :. -\u2022     . .'\nA highlight was singing by Donald Brown of v Nelson in the chapel.\nHELENA, Mont., Aug. 8 (AP>-\nWeary, grimy men, fo ced to fight\nnature: on her own terms, today\nworked doggedly to halt the spreading menace ot forest\" fires throughout the Northwestern United States.\n, Many blazes in the Under-dry\nwilderness, baked by another day\nof blazing sun, were contained\nquickly by rangers, smoke-jumpers\nand volunteers.' '.\nBut two of the worst burned on,\nVolunteer National Guardsmen\nwere among the more; than 400 men\nmoving in on the flanks of one fire,\nwhich has claimed 13 lives and mote\nthan'8000 acres of wopdland ln the\ngates of the mountains, area North\nof Helena, '   .\nThey fated a gradually rising\nwind which threatened to blow the\nfire off Willow. Peak, near, the Missouri River; and into dense, isolated\ntimber to the East, Forest Service\nofficials, confident they were winning the battle, pulled 100 other\ntire fighters back tb rest at mid-\ndsy. Y   \u25a0.\n:\u25a0 Planes' shuttled men and materials Into a second giant blaze, along\nthe Salmon River, 110 miles North\not Boise, Idaho. Spreading rapidly,\nit had covered SOW acres.\nNelson - Cranbrook \u2014, Generally\ngood. A few' rough sections. Construction M18-20 East of Creston.\nNeUon-KaslPT-Talt...-'..\nNelsoii-Mbtiashee-^Falr to good.\nNelson-tJelway\u2014Fair to goon,\nNelson --Trail1 r Patterson \u2014' Construction, Nelson to M20 Speed\nlimit 30 m.p.h. Speed limit on new\nprimer, 10 m.p.h.       - ;\nRossland-Cascade\u2014Fair.     -\nHamilton Squares\nSoccer Tussle\nCALGARY, Aug. 8 (CP).-Hamil-\nton's fast, aggressive eleven ran\nNorth-Vancouver's vaunted North\nShore Club into, the ground tonight\nto take \"a 2-1 victory and tie the\nDominion.: Association football\nchampionship at one game.each.\nThird and deciding game of the\nthree-game series Will: be played\nhere Wednesday night.\nOnly the spectacular play of\nGoalie Frank Ashdown held Ham'\nilton from running up a lopsided\nscore. Time and again he dovo to\nthe ground, or leaped high in the\nair, to keep.his goal-clear, He was\ngiven no chance to save on either\nof'the two shots that evaded him.\nThe Weather\nSynopsis: Although the weather\nhas Improved considerably at many\npoints.in B.C.-there was every indication \"Monday evening that the unsettled weather ot. the past three\ndays was not yet over. The storm\nin the.Gulf of Alaska Was expected\nto move Into the vicinity of tho\nQueen Charlotte Islands by Tuesday\nevening and by Wednesday it was\nexpected that most of the Province\nwill be under its influence.\nMln.   Max.   Pre.\nMay Connect Atlin s\nWith Defence* System\nOTTAWA, AUg; 8 (CP)-The Defence Department today announced\nconstruction will start soon on\n88-mile addition to the Northwest\nsystem to connect the isolated settlement ot Atlin, B.C., to the Alaska\nHighway.\nThe settlement, deep in Northern\nBritish Columbia, will connect with\nthe highway at Mile 885.8,'in the\nYukon, a ' point known as Jake's\nCorner, \u25a0'-.-'    ' * .\nThe project will be undertaken\nby the Canadian Army at the. joint\nrequest of the province of British\nColumbia and the Federal Department ot Mines and Resources, and\nthe!construction will be carried out\nby - Royal Canadian Engineers of\nthe Northwest highway system unr\nder the supervision of Brig. A, B.\nConnelly,, Commander and Chief\nEngineer of the system.\nAt present the little community\nof Atlin Is accessible only: by air\nor by tractor train In Winter. The\nroad will add greatly to the mineral ahd forestry, development of\nthe area.\nTRAIL RESIDENT\nCHANGES NAME\nWilliam Bentley Townsend,. 83\nRossland Avenue, Trail, B.C., under\nthe provisions' of the Change of\nName Act, Has changed his name to\nWilliam Bentley Bailey.\"\nNbtioe of the change.ot name appears in the current issue Of the\nB.C. Gasette.\nNearly 12,000,000 cubic feet of\nwater drop over Niagara's brink\nevery minute. i.\nBoundary Electrical\nFirm Incorporated\nBoundary Eleotric, Ltd., which\nhas its registered office in Grand\nFbrks, has been Incorporated under\nthe Companies Act, the current issue of the B.C. Gazette states.\nAuthorized capital is $10,000, divided into 10,000 shares of $1 each.\nCASH FOR ARMS UNDER\nSUBSTITUTE BILL\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 8 (CP). -\nCanada would have to pay cash, for\nUnited States arms under, the sub;\nstitute military-aid bill the Government has submitted to Congress,\nA State Department official said\ntonight the substitute knocks out a\n\"reimbursable aid\" section included\nin the original legislation,\n.. This section would have made a\nmaximum \u2022 of $100,000,600- available\nto,finance arms orders from Canada and the, Latin-American republics.\nNELSON  \t\n46\n73\n\u2014\n71\n.12\nHalifax \t\n79\n\u2014\nMontreal  \t\n...   70\n75\n\u2014\n...   86\n98\n\u2014-\n...   68\n88\n\u00bb\u00bb\nPort Arthur\t\n1   62\n96\n\u2014\n..:   71\n9J\n' \u2014\n103\n\u2014\n...   81\n81\n\u2014\n...   61\n79\n.02\nSaskatoon  \t\na...- 87\n78\n1.15\nPrince Albert\t\n...   87\n77\n\u2014\nNorth Battleford\n...   66\n75\n\u2014\nSwift Current ...\n...   58\n79\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u2014?\nMedicine Hat \t\n....   58\n79\n\u2014\nMedicine Hat ...\n.\u201e   52\n81\n.05\nLethbridge \t\n.\u201e   48\n75\n73\n....   50.\n78\n4.50\n...   55\n75\n\u2014\n...   53\n75\n\u25a0 \u2014\nVancouver \t\n...   55\n68\n.03\nVictoria   ...\n....   82\n70\n.15\nKimberley \t\n~   47\n74\n\u2014\nCrescent Valley .\n...   40\n69\n.03\nKaslo  ....\n....   45\n69\n.02\nPrince Rupert ...\n....   51\n59\n\u2014\nPrince  George .\n...   50\n62\n.48\n....   54\n74\n\u2014\nSeattle\t\n....   55\n73'\n\u2014\n....   51\n75\n\u2014\n....   45\n78\n\u2014\n.... -74\n95\n,\u2014\nSari Francisco ...\n....   51\n74\n\u2014\nLos  Angeles   \t\n....   62\n79\n\u2014\n....   75\n94\n\u2014\nWhitehorse \t\n....   45\n66\n\u2014\nNo Withdrawal In\nMonty's Europe\nDefense Planning\nBy DON GILBERT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\n\"LONDONi Aug. 8 (CP).-Gen.\nJean do Lattre de Tassigny', Commander-in-Chief of Land Forces ot\nthe Western Union group of countries, tonight denied reports 'that\nField , Marshal Viscount Montgomery, his chief; is 'considering a defence plan of withdrawal from the\ncontinent..'\"\nThe French general In a formal\nstatement took public notice of\nwidespread, reports, ol differences\nbetween him and Viscount Montgomery. The reports have, said, the\ntwo leaders of the Western Union\nmilitary alliance among Britain,\nFrance, Ihe Netherlands,. Belgium\nand.Luxembourg, don't see eye to\neye on how best to defend Western\nEurope. lit the event of war. In the\nstatement, De Lattre de Tassigny\nsaid,It isn't so.   \u25a0\nPress dispatches displayed prominently during the'last week have\ncredited Viscount Montgomery with\n\"Dunkerque complex,\" They\nclaimed that in the French view he\nthinks In terms of a.possible withdrawal to Britain as in 1940 and opposes- committing Britain to sending\na large army across the. English\nChannel; ..'..'\nThe French look on such ideas\nwith horror. They want any future\nWar fought as far East as possible\nand their country saved from military occupation.\nfirst basilica\nin Western Canada\nST. BONIFACE, Man., Aug.\n(CP)\u2014St Boniface Cathedral has\nbeen elevated to the- rank of Basilica, Most Rev. G. Cabana, coadjutor\narchibishop, announced today.\n\u25a0 \"This is the first such honor to\nbe paid to a Roman Catholic church\nin the Canadian West,\" a church\nofficial said, \"It is recognition of\nthe high esteem in Which the\ncathedral is regarded.\"        *\nLatest Idea\nFor Memorial\nPlacing of a bronze plaque on\nthe Nelson cenotaph bearing the\nnames of Nelson servicemen who\ngave their lives in both world wars\nis the latest suggestion for\nmemorial to the district's dead of\nthe Second World War.  \"',,.:.\nExecutive Committee of Nelson\nbranch of the Canadian Legion\nmade the recommendation to City\nCouncil Monday night as a way of\neliminating the necessity of building a new cenotaph.\nAs a result, Council delegated\nAid, A. G. Ritchie to determine the\nfeasibility qf installing such\nplaque or inscribing the names in\nthe stone, and to estimate the cost\nof resetting the. memorial,\nThe recommendation is the latest\nof a number of-ideas for honoring\nNelson district men who tell in the\nSeoond World \"War. :-.-\u2022\nSome time ago a Committee was\nformed under the chairmanship ot\nB, C. Affleck, then Alderman, and\nits last endeavor was the drawing\nup of plans for another cenotaph on\nVernon Street.. \u2022.'.'\u25a0\u25a0   ,'\nThe Legion Executive recommendation will come before the\nbranch's next general meeting the\nfirst week In September.\nOpen Stock\nChina Ware\nMany Beautiful Patterns\nFINK'S\nPRINT SHOP\nASK NEW CENTRE\nFOR CANADA\nWAR EXHIBITS\nOTTAWA, Aug. 9 (CP) \u2014 The\nCanadian War Museum, a little\none-storey stucco building tucked\naway in a corner of Ottawa, today\nwent on the warpath for a new\nwar-exhibits centre at least three\ntimes as big os the one it has.\nOfficials of the Museum, in a\nbrief prepared for presentation to\nthe.five-member Royal Commission\non Art and Science Development\nasked . tor erection of such a\nStructure to \"provide an adequate\nrecord of Canada's tremendous\neffort ln two world wars.\"\nClaims Subversives.\nOn U.N. Staff\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 8 (AP) -\nSenator Pat McCarran (Dem. Nev;)\nasserted today that persons in. authority on the United Nations staff\nhave gone there \"directly from\nfields of subversive activity\" iri the'\nUnited States.-He cited what he\ncalled two typical examples.\nThe U.N. immediately retorted\nthat 'pne of them, a Polish national,\nholds an elected position arid is not\nresponsible to the international\nagency in any way.. '\"\u2022';\u25a0:.\nThe other, radio writer Norman\nCorwln, replied In New York that\n\"I believe' I am a vastly better\npatriot'' than McCarran;\nTo Improve\nStreets, Walks\nImprovements to Nelson streets\nand sidewalks Will be made through\napproval. Monday night by City\nCouncil: of a number of Public\nWorks Committee recommendations.\nThey included:\nGrading of High Street,\nWork on an: approach to Union\nStreet through the City Tourist\nPark-\nConstruction of one block of concrete sidewalk on the West side ot\nJosephine Street between Hoover\nand Observatory Streets.\nInstallation, of. plank cribbing on\nHall Street near 624 MIR Street\nPurchase of one tank car of\nasphalt for repairing lateral streets\nabutting new pavement\nGordon Road widening, at the\nEast end of Nelson Avenue. -\u2022\u2022\nConstruction of concrete walks\nalong Fifth Street and other streets\nto be'designated later.\nRepair of the' lane between- the\nJunior High School ahd Hoover\nStreet by dumping of several loads\nof crushed rock.\nAssessment Hearing \u25a0\nIn Trail Today\nTBKV, B.C., Aug.\" 8.\u2014Consideration of the City of Trail's application for equalization of the basis\nfor assessment in School District 11\nwill be given at a public meeting in\nthe City Council Chambers here\ntuesday afternoon by the B.C. Assessment Equalization Board.   .\nBriefs are expected tp be submitted by the three municipalities,\n\"frail, Tadanac and Rossland, and\nrural area of the district\nD. K. Kenned), R. R. F. Sewell\na:.d W. I, Turnbull, three Board\nmembers, were scheduled to arrive\nhere by plane- Monday.. W. S. Tanner, assessment, expert of Vancou\nver, hired as consultant by Trail\nCity Council, arrived here last week.\nLusty Oldiimer of '94\nRescued From Scrap Heap\nSWAMPER WATCHES THIEF\nDRIVE OFF WITH LOOT\n. VANCOUVER, Aug. 8 (CP)r-A\nbold thief drove off with a $2000\nload of furriltute from the rear of\na Vancouver: department store early\ntoday while the truck swamper\nstood 20 feet away.\n\"I thought he was the.driver,\"\nsaid Ed Nault: \"I wondered where\nhe was going,\"\nBy R. Q. JOY\nNelson District Oldtlmers\n.Association Historian.\nRecently I recelyed a letter from\na Mr. Colman who is a dealer in\niron scrap. His warehouse is Southeast ot the old Nelson Iron Works,\nin fact at one tlma it was once the\noffice where several, old timers sat\nand planned many, an Iron project\nfor the early day mining fraternity.\nMr. Colman in his letter, Informed me that he had. ound amongst\nhis scrap Iron a bell that Was cracked and on lt in block letters was\nthe following inscription: \"Presented the firemen by the ladles of Nelson, 1894.\"    '< *,.\nMr. Colman said that he would\ndeliver the bell to any place 1 wished. \"Please bring it to my residence,\n904 Josephine Street,\" I replied. He\nwas prompt to delivering the cracked bell that called so many to the\nfires that threatened Nelson's wooden buildings in the .90S, It had a\nSonorous sound that would urge\nevery able-bodied- citizen to turn\nfrom his business or his pleasures.\nI remember seeing, many a good\nsuit of clothes ruined and its weartr\nwould sometimes look as; it it were\nhis home that was burning.. It would\nb< hard to identify him.\nWhat am I going to do with it?\nGive it a place of honor; perhaps\nat the Lakeside Park?\nCRACKED TWO BELLS\nNelson oldtlmers will shortly deliberate on the matter at some fu>\nture*date.\nI wss present at a dinner in 1893\norganized by those same ladies of\nNelson.' In fact, I made potato salad\nas my. offering. The late EC. Travcs\ncarved the meat Perhaps there are\nothers living in Nelson who were\nthere, If so kindly let us have the\nnames of the ladles present at that\nhistorical occasion.  .. %-'.'\u25a0\nIf I rememberrlghtly, .the lusty\nringers cracked two bells, then Jar\nccb Dover, the local jeweller, came\nto the rescue arid sent for the pres-\nen. gong.which Is used at the fire\nhall on ward Street,\nACHESON REJECTS\nSTOPGAP ARMS AID\nWASHIUGTON, Aug. 8 (AP). -r-\nState Secretary Dean Acheson refused point-blank today to go along\nwith the stop-gap arm* aid idea of\nSenator Arthur Vandenberg. (Rep,\nMich.). He stuck firmly by the full'\n$1,450,000,000 the Truman administration has asked to strengthen foreign -countries against Russia.\n12 Cars Craled Cherries Shipped;\nMarket Good lor Processed Product\nOLDEST BISHOP PASSES\n.LONDON, \"Aug. 8 (AP)' \u2014 Dr.\nJames Theodore Insklp, 81, who had\nbeen 'the oldest Bishop ih the\nChurch of England at his retire- tricts from splitting and also creat-\nConditlons under which cherry\ncrops ware harvested this year were\na great deal better than in 1948\nwhen.weather conditions were such\nthat almost continuous riin ruined\nqualities, Robert Foxall; Manager\not Nelson sub-central of the Associated Growers of B.C., reported\nMonday,\n\u25a0 Dryer, .brighter weather this year\ngave much Improved quality up till\nabout July 29; The rainy spell\nWhich occurred from July 22 to 36\ncaused considerable loss in late dis-\nment last September, died Thursday, it was announced Saturday,\nFor 29 years he was Suffragan\nBishop of Barking, in the dock area\nEast of London. -\ned conditions which led to development of cherry rot.\nTwelve carloads of crated cherries\nwere Shipped this season compared\nwith'only five last year.\nGreater quantities' of cherries\nwere processed at Harrop. this season than Jast year, Market for this\nproduct took a much firmer tone.\nStrawberries did not provide i\ngreat crop as- last year,. but the\nmarket ruled strong throughout the\nseason for good quality fruit Rasp-,\nberries were plentiful with a fairly\nstrong market until ihe July rains\ncaused a deterioration of quality,\nwhich coupled with the'Mjuantity\nthat had been placed\" on the market\nfrom, many points1 lii B.C., led to\nsevere softening of the price structure. .'\u25a0: ', ;\u25a0 .-.-\n' At the present time! local peach\nplums, apricots, early \\ apples' and\nearly peaches are being packed and\nshipped*.' \"   , '\nSELL THE CLASSIFIED WAY\nBLACKHEADS\nso quickly by ji elmplo method thnt dlf-\n\u25a0olres thorn. Got two ouncco of peroxfai\npowder from your dniRglBt, apply with a\nhot, wet cloth gontly over tho blncklioads\u2014\n\u00bbnd you wljl wonder irhero they havo con*.\nRegular As Day\u2014\nWithout Laxatives\n\"Constipation waa\nmy   bogey   for\n?eara and harsh laxa-\nivos made things\nworse. Since eating\nKELLOGG'S ALL-\nBRAN, I am regular\naa day, more alert in .\nmy work. Publish this letter, it\nmay help 'others.\" voluntarily writes\ndraughtsman A. Mc. C. Little,\n114 Sixth St., Midland,'Ont.\nAre you irregular due to lack of\nbulk in the diet? ALL-BRAN may\ncorrect your trouble. Eat an ounce\nof crisp, flavourful ALL-BRAN\ndaily, drink plenty of water. If not\nantisfied, send. empty carton ta\nKellogg's, London, Ont. Get double\nvour money backl\n'39 FORD COUPE 1.JJII0\n'30 CHEVROLET SEDAN....... $150\n'10 MON FORD.................. $000\nTWO-TONE SEDAN\nBRITISH GAR SALES\n& SERVICE\n513 VERNON STREET\nNELSON, B.C.\nCALL for TENDERS\nClearing Flooded Areas,\n\"Whatshan Lqka 7\nBritish Columbia Power Commission\n1. Sealed Tenders will be \"received until 12 o'clock noon,\nPacific Daylight Time, 26th August, 1648, by British Columbia\nPower Commission for the clearing of part or all of the area\nto be flooded on Whatshan Lake.\n2. Tenders shall be enclosed in a sealed envelope marked\u2014\n\"Tender for Clearing Whatshan Lake\" and addressed to: -\nS. B.Marshall,Esq,    '\u2022\"'   ,\nSecretary, \u2022     '\nBritish Columbia Power Commission,\nP.O. Box 550;      \u2022 .\nVictoria, B.C.\n3. Copies of Specifications may be obtained from the Com-\n. missions' offices at Victoria, pr from its Regional Office at\nVernon, or frorn Mr. G. P. Moe, Resident Engineer at Needles\nby depositing $15,00, which will be refunded upon return of\nthe Specifications..Copies may also be seen at the office of\nthe Secretary of Building and Construction Industries Exchange, 342 West Pender Street, Vancouver, B.C.\n4. Tenders will be opened in public at the Commission's Office\n\u25a0 In Victoria, at, 2:00 p.m. Pacifio Daylight Time, \u2022 26th August,\n'     1949,': , \u2022  '\n5. The Commission reserves the right,to reject any or all\ntenders and the lowest will not necessarily be accepted.\n Men's Buckle\nOXFORDS\nWine or Brown .\n: $9.50 to $1Z95\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nBreakfasted\nOver Bomb\nNo Plans To Take\nQuints To Lourdes\nSays Mrs. Dlonne   -\nCALLANDER; Ont, Aug, 8 (CP)\n\u2014Mrs. Ollva Dlonne said today she\nhas no plans to take the Quintuplets\nto Lourdes, France, site of the famous shrine, in 1950.\nReturning home after a month's\nvisit to Europe, she termed inaccurate an overseas dispatch jyhich said\nshe had promised to return to\nLourdes with the Quints next year.\nShe said she merely had told reporters at Lourdes that the future\nplans of the 15-year-old girls were\n'  Indefinite.      ' '\nMrs. Dlonne flew back from over-\nSeas during the weekend to attend\ntoday's funeral services for her\nfather, 76-year-old Molse Legroe,\nwho patrolled the. farm home of the\nDionnes with a shotgun at the time\nof the birth of the Quints to ward\noff the curious.\nThe Quints themselves, dressed\nalike ln black, attended the service\nln Sacred Heart Church at nearby\n. Corbel! along with other members\nof the family.   -\nAustralian Coal\nMiners\nReturn To Work\nSYDNEY, Australia, Aug. 8 (CP)\n'\u2022\u2014More than 70,000 workers made\nIdle for the last six weeks by a\ncountry-wide coal , strike, 'today\nwent back to work. \u25a0'.\nThe return to jobs was the first\nbig result of \"the army's working\nof open-cut coal mines in New\n' South Wales as a counter to the\nstrike of Australia's 24,000 miners\nfpr a wage, increase and reduction\nih the work week.\nPosse Seeks Man\nIn Crazed Shooting\nPEACE RIVER, Alta., Aug. 8\n(CP)\u2014One man is dead and another\nis being sought by an R.C.M.P.\nposse following a crazed shooting at\nLake Winagami early yesterday.\n' Dead Is George Ward, about 35,\nof Kathleen, 40 miles Southeast of\nPeace River. The area Is 250 miles\nNorthwest of Edmonton. '\nObject of the R.C.M.P. bloodhound search is Ward's friend, Louis Nadeau, a Treaty Indian, also\nof Kathleen.\nWitnesses told police the shooting\nOccurred  following a party in  a\n.shack on the shore of Lake Wina-\n-iathii-two-'teaes frorn Kathleen.--;\nNadeau is said to have taken up a\nrifle and walked out of the cabin.\nHe first took a shot at a group of\nchildren playing nearby and missed.\nHe is then alleged tp have said:\n\"I'm going to shoot the next man\nWho comes out of the shack.\"\nSeconds later, Ward stepped out\nthe door and was killed instantly\nwhen a bullet crashed through his\nthest\nDr. H.- W. Fish, District Coroner\nstated there was no indication that\nthere had been any drinking in the\ncabin. \u25a0\nWe Speciqlize in\nWedding Bouquets\nand *\nArrangements\n<S.     mmt\nBy ARTHUR W. WHITE\nT.ONDONi. Aug. 8. (AP)'\u2014..For'\neight.years Mrs. Hannah Hall 'and\nfamily of Stepney ate breakfast\nsitting over a 2000-pound un-\nexploded \"bomb. \u25a0\n- They never suspected it, until one\nexciting day when the back yard\nstarted to sink. An, army bomb\nsquad was called. Thirty feet down\nthey found one of Hitler's \"sleepers.\" It had been there since 1941.'\nBritain still has hundreds more\nlike 'it. They are scattered all pver\nthe country. New ones are reported\nevery day. Y    ,\nTwelve^hundred men r% German\nformer prisbners-pf-war and British soldiers Pf. the ttoyal Engineers\n^-are. digging them- - up. Seven\nBritish-laid anti-invasion coastal\nminefields still have to be cleared,\ntorf \":'\".      \u2022'.      ;\nSome of the 'sleepers\" are Impact\nbombs- which for ! some reason,\ndidn't explode when they hit; Others\nare deadly time bombs gone-haywire. It doesn!t take much to start\n'them ticking, again.\nA little water seeping Into a\ndeteriorating fuse; a bus rumbling\nalong a nearby street could mean\nsudden death to-scores.:\nBomb-disposal chiefs dislike dis-'\ncussing the possibility of such a\ntragedy, but they say it., could\nhappen: A \"sleeper' dropped iri 1940\ncould a'wake with a roar in 1950 mr\neven years afterward. ',\nDEPENDS ON LUCK\nWhether such a disaster occurs,\nthey say, depends largely on luck.\nSo far.the luck of British civilians\nhas been miraculous.   .\u2022'\u25a0..\nSince 1945 countless mines and\nunexploded bombs have been un-.\nearthed. Iri that period they, killed\nonly: three: civilians but 30 Royal\nEngineers and. three Germans died.\nGov't Order  '\nUnheeded in\nHawaiian Strike\nHONOLULU, Aug. 8 (AP) \u2014 An\nimminent .threat of Government\ndook seizure brought no sign of\n.earlry peace today in Hawaii's 100-\nday waterfront strike.\nBacked by a new territorial law\nto put the Government in the stevedoring business, Gov, Ingram M.\nStalnback ordered the Island's 2000\nstriking CIO. longshoremen and\nseven struck firms to resume work\nimmediately.\nThere was no Indication either\nside would obey the older to keep\nthe Territory from taking over and\noperating the struck firms.\nKlansmon Jailed in\n100 m.p.h. Race\nIRON CITY, Ga., Aug. 8 (AP) \u2014\nOne-armed Mayor C. L. Drake and\nsome of his friends yesterday renewed a shooting war against\nrobed, night-riding Ku Klux Klans-\nmen. \u25a0',-\nTo to git off, the Mayor chased a\n'Kiari'iSitlciajl'ntg Aiabaina at a 100-\nmile-an-hour pace and had- him\njailed.\nThe. shooting spree started when\n12 or 15 carloads of robed. Klans-\nmen rolled into this little South-\nWest Georgia hamlet in the dark,\nearly Sunday morning hours, Mayor\nDrake said! One unidentified Klans-\nman received a flesh wound.\nKing's Nephew\nTo Wed Sept. 29\nLONDON, Aug. 8 (AP) \u2014 The\nEarl of Harewood, nephew,-of the\nKing, arid his Austrian-born commoner, sweetheart will be married\nSept. 29 ln Chapel Royal of historic\nSt. James Palace, it was reported\ntoday.\nThe Press Association said It had\nlearned that the wedding of the\nEarl, 11th in line of, succession to\nthe throne, and Miss Marlon Stein,\nwould be held in the small chapel\nbuilt for Henry VIH\nThe King and Queen are expected\nto attend the ceremony, London.'s\nmost fashionable wedding since the\nmarriage of Princess Elizabeth and\nthe Duke of Edinburgh ln Westminster Abbey in! 1947,\nMilitary Commanders Complete Survey\nme good-riatured whisky\nSeagram's\nate\nCANADIAN  WHISKY\nThe price is *(foo(\/-\/lfatutvd' tool\nTMCadvertlMiMnt h nol publlihtd or dliployed by Hi? liquor Control Boord or by Iho\nGovernment of British Columbia.\nTop British and United States: military commanders are shown at Northholt Airport, London.\nThe Americans, on a110-day tour of Europe for\ntalks with leaders of the Atlantic Pact nations,\ncompleted their survey Sunday. (L to R) Marshal\nof the R.A.F. Lord Tedder; Chief of the Imperial\nGeneral Staff Field Marshall Sir William Slim:\nAmerican Minister Julius C. Holmes; General\nHoyt Vandenberg, U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff\nand General Omar Bradley, U.S. Army Chief of\nstaff.    \u25a0\u25a0*;'\nUnderground Water\nBrings Desert to Life\nBy HAROLD F. OSBORNE\nRUPERT, Idaho, Aug. 8 (AP) \u2014\nApparently, inexhaustible Supplies\nof underground water are reclaiming vast new areas of Idaho desert\nland. , \u25a0   ..\nSouthern Idaho's green farms\nhave long been showpieces of tradl--\ntional irrigation- methods. Waters\nof the mighty Snake River and its\ntributaries were among the first tp\nbe dsmmed and diverted into canals when Western reclamation began nearly 59 years ago.\nNow dry-lai.d farmers, far from\nstreams of any .kind, see promise\nof prosperity through use of deep\nwells.\nThirty years ago attempts to\nraise dry-land crops on the desert\nnear here failed for lack of water.\nAt least 9000 acres now are producing wheat and other crops in\nabundance.\nAn example Is the experience of\nJulion Claws.on, former Salt Lake\nCity newspaper man who iuw }s a\npioneer in deep-well, irrigation.\nClawaon came to Rupert three years\nago and purchased 20,000 acres of\nland on the Great Snake River-lava\nplain that covers 12,100 square miles\nof Southern Idaho.\nClawson had intended to try dry\nfarming on a large scale. But his\nsearch for the right location got him\ninterested in.the possibilities of Us-'\ning underground water for Irrigation.      ..\/\u2022\u2022\u25a0 '\nHe found nine Wells- of ordinary\ndepth .used by previous owners of\nhis land. These had provided only\nlimited supplies of water for drinking, washing and cooking.\nHe drilled five of them to a\ndepth of about 600 feet\n\"Folks thought I was after oil.\nwhen I brought drilling equipment ln from Oklahoma,\" Claw-\nson says, \"and they thought I was\ncrazy. They still thought so when\nthey learned It was water I\nwanted.\"\nNow he has 20,000 gallons of\nwater a minute flowing all during\nthe  Irrigation season.     After 70\ndays of constant flow, his water\ntable has njt dropped.\nThe United States Bureau bt Reclamation now is getting interested\nin the underground water supplies.\nThe Jgency has \u2022 drilled - three test\nwells to a depth of 306*<feet;*aiear\nhere. If the tests work out, Bureau\nengineers: say other wells may be\nsung to irrigate 63,500 acres ori the\nMinidoka reclamation project North\nside extension.\nFerry Laid Up\nWith Flash Fire\nSAINT JOHN, N.B., Aug. 8 (CP)\n-The. Princess Helene, 4055-ton\npassenger-cargo ferry which is a\nvital link in the Canadian Pacific\nRailway's service between New\nBrunswick and'Nova Scotia, will be\nlaid up about a week as a result of\nar. early-morning flash fire today in\nher hold, .-...'\nCanadian Pacific Steamship officials said. the. vessel would go into\ndrydock here. No estimate of damage was immediately available.\nDamage . was mostly smoke and\nwater,- confined fo Ufa hold, vj\nTo Fine Injured\nJay-Walkers v\nVANWUVE?, B. !C\u201e Aug. 8 (CP)\n\u2022*fty-walWhg doesn't pay here any\niriore; twpijay-walkers were injured\nin weekend' accidents, and had to\nhave.hospital'areatment. Police also\nhave decided to summons both of\nthem for improper actions.\n(slew Religion\nBased on Laughing\nMAEBASHI, Japan, Aug. 8 (AP)\u2014\nA new sect known as the Laughing\nReligion has been founded here.\nIts founder is Mein Zuiko, whose\nname means \"beautiful clouds and\nsacred sunbeam.\",\nZuiko said the main tenet of the\nsect is laughter on the theory one\ncan laugh if he lives right\nVANCOUVER MAN FOUND\nDEAD ABOARD BOAT\nVICTORIA, B. C, Aug. 8 (CP) \u2014\nThomas Georgeson, of 648 East 22nd\nAvenue, Vancouver, > was found\ndead from asphyxiation aboard his\nhalibut boat Arabella here early\ntoday. His craft was moored at the\nJ. H. ToddA Sons Ltd, wharf in the\ninner harbor.   Y\nSTUDENT PILOT KILLED\nKELOWNA, B. C\u201e Aug; 8 (CP)-\nThe 19-year-old student pilot of a\nCessna monoplane was killed yesterday when his engine apparently\nstalled as he took off from the\nnewly-opened Kelowna airport.\n; The; victim was Roy Barle'e of\nnearby Okanagan Mission.\nMASTER DIES ON SHIP\nNEW .WESTMINSTER,'B.C., Aug.\n8 (CPj-Capt. James Waddell, 47,\nmaster of.the Donaldson Line's SS.\nLakonia, died here yesterday of a\nheart attack on board his ship. Capt.\nWaddell's home is in Glasgow,\nScotland.\n11 Lives Lost   . '\nPORTLAND,. Aug. 8 (AP) \u2014 The\nworst, highway week-end in Oregon\nsince December, 19.46, took eleven\nlives Saturday and Sunday.\nA car plunged off the South San-\ntiam Highway east of 'Lebanon into\na 350-foot ravine Sunday, killing\nMr. and Mrs. Ivan G. Marsh and\nMrs. Bernard A. -Blind, all of Bend,\nOre.. \u2022'. 7*,' ''\u25a0.'\nAnother similar accident also\nclaimed three lives. Vernon Spink;\n45, Pheonlx, Ariz., his son, Louis, 28,\nMaster of the Elmira, Ore., Grange,\nand Owen P. Hedges, 37, ,Elmira,\ndied Saturday night' when their\ntruck -plunged off, a road near.\nSwisshome.\nFour-Carried To'\nDeath in Columbia\nSEATTLE. Aug. 8'(AP)\u2014An au'\ntomobile coasted the length - of a\ncross-river ferry at Entiat, snapped\na guard chain, teetered momentarily and then plunged into th,e swift\nColumbia River yesterday, carrying'\nfour persons to their deaths. .. ,\nIt' was the iriajor tragedy ot a\nweekend that saw at least 12 persons die violent and accidental\ndeaths In Washington State. Seven\nof the victims perished in traffic\nmishaps.\nFarmers In Eastern, Canada use\n150 per cent more nitrogen fertilizers than they did before the war.\nSay Magnificent\n\"Adequate\" for\nNorth Atlantic Role\nOTTAWA, Aug. 8 iCP)-A Naval\nheadquarters spokesman said today\nthat. Canada's aircraft carrier The\nMagnificent Is \"adequate\" for use\nin an anti-submarine role on the\nNorth Atlantic\nHe was commenting on a dispatch\nfront Sydney. Australia, in which\nthe Sydney Sunday Herald questioned the operational value bf,Australia's, hew aircraft carrier Sydney,\na sistershlp of The Magnificent.\nThe Herald said the Sydney bad\nto abandon air exercises because\nthe carrier could not produce\nenough air speed to launch planes.\nNo similar trouble in launching\nthe Navy's Fireflies from the decks\nof the Magnificent has been experienced, the Naval spokesman said.\nExpect Business\nTo Hold Own\nNEW YORK, Aug, 8 (CP) r-Talk\nof a bad recession in the United\nStates has died down among Washington and New. York business analysts, but there isn't much wildly\noptimistic talk, either. .\nSome prominent Washington experts express' belief the economy\nhas become steadier sine falling\naway from last fall's boom level,\nbut they say .it. hasn't settled on\nfirm ground yet,  '\nThings will stay about as.they are\nor Improve a little through September, they predict, then slide off for\nperhaps nine months t-1 moving toward, solid ground so gradually and\npiecemeal that the direction of\nmovement may at times be hard to\ntell.\nOn the other hand, ifs hard to\nfind a ihan in New York who thinks\nthe country is in for more than a\nmoderate arid short-lived readjustment before' business in general\nsteps ahead again.\nOne Washington economist says\nsilly to describe present conditions\nin the United States as a recession\nwhen they represent \"just what we\nwere hoping and praying for \u25a0', so\nlong\u2014an end to or correction of the\ninflation,\" He and other Washing\ntonians say the distortions of inflation,haven't been wiped out yet and\nthat further dips in employment,\nproduction, incomes and prices are\nprobable, \u25a0'...'\nENCOURAGING SIGNS\nHowever, these encouraging tendencies have been spqtted ln Washington:\nEasy credit and low interest rates;\nnp panic among consumers, business men, banks or government.officials; industries apparently going\nthrough with plans for new. plants\nand equipment;\nConsumers keeping up purchases\ndespite slight decline in incomes;\nari encouraging spurt in home construction and buying; a levelling-\noff of the decline in personal income (down only two per cent from\nlast year's peak);\nAn increase in scheduled steel\nproduction late In July, for the first\ntime in several months; auto production keeping at record rate;\n\"some recovery\" recently in textile\nmarkets, .\nBathing Slumps\nAt Coney Island\nNEW YORK, Aug. 8 (AP) - Attendance at Coney Island Beach\nslumped mors .than 50 per cent yes-\nterd'ay-rdespite 90-degree-plus temperatures. '\nThe reason apparently waB an outbreak of- Polio, which health authorities have described 'as. a mild\nepidemic of serious \"but not alarming proportions.   \u25a0\nA spokesman for the Coney Island\nChamber of. Commerce said \"bathing was not up to par.\" Par for a\nhot Summer Sunday there is about\n6QO.00O bathers..-'..-.\nChange Command\nAt Royal Roads\nOTTAWA, Aug. 8 (CP)-Defence\nheadquarters today announced a\nchange.in command at the Canadian\nService's College at Royal Roads,\nB.C. with Group Capt. H. S. Rayner;\n38, R. C. N., of St. Catharines, Aug.\n15.     -    - ,     .  -\nCommand of the tri-servlce college is on a rotation basis, with each\nservice in turn providing the commandant Officers of all three services act, as military Instructors' at\nthe school.     *\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 9, 1949 \u2014 3\nShift oi Chinese Power lo Red\nSide Upsets Balance of World\nBy JAMES D. WHITE\nAssociated Press'News'Analyst\n(For Dewltt Mackenzie)\nThe rising of the Red Star over\nChina Inevitably upsets the balance of power In a divided world.\nThe weight-of .476,000,000 people\n\u2014a  fifth   of   humanity\u2014shifting\nfrom one side of the world-wide\nschism to the other Is one reason\nfor the White  Paper  on  China\npublished last week by the United\nStates State Department   '\nOne of the most important things\nthis White Paper did,was to admit\nthe futility of trying further to pre-\nvent the shift with the method used\nlh the past   ,-:     _ \u25a0 \"-\u25a0* ;\nThat method was to support the\nlegal Government of China, as personified by Generalissimo- Chiang\nKai-shek. It didn't work. \u25a0\nIf any new method Is to work, lt\nwill have to answer many grave\nquestions growing out pt the great\nshift in world power that Red China\nmeans.\nThree of these questions have\nbeen raised by J. D. Ferguson, editor of the Milwaukee Journal, He\nasks what the Impact of Red China\nas shown by the White Paper, will\nbe on:\n1. China's use of the veto ln the\nSecurity Council of the United Nations.\n2. China's loss of Influence among\nWestern powers.\n3. China's commercial treaties,\nwith Western powers. \u25a0\u201e\u25a0\nIh Red hands, the Chinese' veto\npresumably would be used in Russia's favor but Russia doesn't need\nthis because her own veto is as absolute as anyone else's,\nFrom the standpoint of the United -Nations Itself, the danger lies -\nin the possible appearance of two -\nsets Df Chinese delegates at Lake\nSuccess.    Y\nIt could split or wreck the ll N a\nIf the United States and Russia,'n\nsist upon supporting rival Ctr>lr\ndelegations and drag their resprri V\nive allies along with them .:'.;\u2022     t\n. The answer to Ferguson's se\nond question\u2014what about China t\nloss of Influence among Western\npowers?\u2014lies In the future course'\nof power politics. But, It's prob\nably already safe to say that Red I\nsuccess   In   China   means   mors\nWestern influence lost there than\nChina will lose In the West.\nThe firmer coritrol the Reds gain.*;\nover China, the greater their bar-.'-\ngaining i power will be with both\nRussia and the West\nAs to China's trade treaties (Ferguson's third question), all have\nbeen condemned by implication by\nthe Chinese Reds as \"Imperialistic\"\nsince they are associated with the\nold Government Specifically; they\ndenounce the Sino-American Trade\nTreaty of 1948.\nChange Plans for Replacement\nOf Married Women in Civil Service\nVICTORIA, B.C., Aug. 8 (CP)-\nReplacement of married women ln\nthe employ of the Provincial Government is the plan of the Civil\nService Commission.\nA top-ranking official of the Commission said today:\n\"We don't want them (married\nwomen who are civil servarits) to\nget the idea that they arp lirriily Im-\nPOLIO SPREADS\nIN U.S.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 8 (CP)-In-\nfantlle paralysis mounted sharply\nin the United States last week but\nthere are signs the peak has been\npassed in some of the harder-hit\nareas.\n. A state-by-state survey by The\nAssociated Press showed some 1400\nnew cases. This boosted the 1849\ntotal to approximately 940(K-more'\nthan 50 per cent higher than the\ncomparable period in 1948, second-\nworst polio year on record.\nIn Ottawa, officials of the Health\nand Welfare Department said the\npolio situation in Canada to date\nis not alarming \"although it will\nbear watching in view of the increased, incidence this year in the\nUnited States.\"\n, The total number\" of cases in\nCanada was .not available but the\nDepartment said they exceeded\nthose of this time last year by a\nlittle more than 100.\nREMANDED ON\nMURDER CHARGE\nHAMILTON, Aug. 8 (C P) -\nEdward (Dempsey) Richards appeared in court today and was remanded for a wcek'on a charge of\nmurder in the rifle-slaying early\nSaturday of Richard Sllfka, 23, in\na,drinking brawL, .'\nThe 35-year-old bartender and\nfight timer was iri the courtroom\nonly for a couple of minutes. One of\nhis eyes was puffed'up.   '..'.'\u25a0..\nMeanwhile bail of $10,000 was renewed for Irish Davey Ambersley,\na, material witness, who owns the\nnearby Salttleet Township House\nwhere the brawl took place.\nThe free-for-all,,touched off by a\nperson a witness described as \"a\ngray-haired'man with a blackjack;\"\nwas climaxed by a fusillade of rifleshots which killed Sllfka, a steel-\nworker and Navy veteran who formerly lived in Vancouver and\nBrandon, Man., and wounded two\nother men. J\/\nBAY RUM BINGE\nOKAY IN GEORGIA\nRAVANNAH. Ga.. Aug. 8 (AP)-\nYou may get drunk as a coot on\nbay rum but it's strictly legal in\nJudge B. B. Heery's city court.\nThey were about to send a 71-\nyear-old, defendant tb the cooler\nyesterday for drunkenness. Then\nthe police happened to say they\nsmelled bay rum on him.\nThat did it.\nJudge Heery told the Jury to\nacquit the man at once.\nBay rum, he explained, Is not an\nintoxicating liquor ln the Georgia\nlaw. Therefore, he said, it is not pos-\nsibe to get legally drunk bn it.\nBay rum generally is used as a\nman's toilet preparation.      :\nPHPNE 144 tor CLASSIFIED ADS\nNesting Birds Stage Air Raids'\n: \u2014Central PresS Canadian\nFortunately for Los Angeles ladles, the nest building season for\ncertain feathery friends will soon be over. It seems they like human\nhair for their nests and have beep borrowing curls from the heads of\nunsuspecting housewives as they hang out the weekly wash. The\nCity Humane Department has quieted the feminine population by\ntelling them It will be over soon. Mrs. Estella Walker (left) and Mrs.\nAudrea Hunt had a bad time from the birds. The camera caught\none (arrow) In the act as It swooped down on Mrs. Walker. Mrs.\nHunt has a broom ready to swing at the raider, who was much too\nfast for either of them.\nEstevan Prepares\nFor Harvest\nESTEVAN, Sask., Aug. 8 (CP)\u2014\nFarm combines rumbled down\ndusty country roads in the Southeast corner of Saskatchewan today\nto golden wheat fields soon to be\nstripped.  -\nThe weekend's Intensive heat\u2014\nthe mercury was over the 100-de-\ngree mark both Saturday and Sunday\u2014has speeded ripening.\nHarvesting should be in full\nswing in the area late this week.\nAt last the perpetual fear of .drought\nhas been replaced by farmers confidence of a good crop. And in this\ndistrict'rioted chiefly as a coal-producing area, good crops have not\nbeen frequent\nGREYHOUND WORKERS\nTO VOTE ON OFFER\nSEATTLE, Aug. 8 (AP)-A still-\nsecret offer by the strike-crippled\nNorth-coast Greyhound line is going to be put up to its employees.\nIdle for 52 days *by tie-, strike,\nworkers voted \"overwhelmingly\"\nin weekend, balloting to consider the\ncompany's latest offer.\n' Whether the action will bring an\nearly end to the strike appeared\ndoubtful ,.\u25a0'.\u25a0:\u25a0 i\nplanted in their Jobs,\"\nHe confirmed reports that all\nmarried   women   civil   servants.\nsave been asked to submit to the\nCommission an open resignation\nto be kept on file until the tln\\o\ncomes when they can be replaced\nor their positions done away with. [\nBut this was not a change in policy of the Commission.' It merely\nwas a change in the method of administration to  comply wife'\u25a0\u25a0 the*'\nlaw.  \u2022 i\nUp until now married women em- '\nployees have been kept on the tern-':\nporary job  list Being  temporary\nemployees they.knew they might be\nlet out of work at any time.\nThe law states temporary employees must not be kept as Such\nfor over a year.      ,   lY ;\nSo under the hew arrangement,\nmarried women are made permanent employees but they still can\nbe \"given the gate\" with little fuss\nif their resignations are on file.\nSome employees are questioning,\ntlie Commission's plans to remove\nmarried'women* who are not bread- j\nwinners! from the ranks ot Provincial Civil Servants.\nThey are pointing tp an act passed\nby the Legislature iri 1931 which\nstates, In-effect, that marriage or\nsex does not disqualify a person\nfrom holding public positions.\nTo Show Prized\nPets at P. N. E.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Aug. 8 (CP)\n\u2014The Pacific National Exhibition\nhere, from Aug. 29 to Sept 5, will\nshow premier members of the cat\nand dog families which officials say\nare.flnest of the four-legged pets in\nthe Pacifio Northwast\nMinus $97\nVANCQUVER, B. C, Aug. 8 (CP)\n\u2014A rooming-house landlord, G. E.\nDell, is minus $97 todayi An unknown thelf broke Into his Vancouver home early today, and took the\nmoney from his room.\nRefused Reprieve -\nLONDON, Aug. 8 (Reuters) \u2014\nHome Secretary James Chuter Ede\ntoday refused to grant a reprieve to\nJohn George Halgh, self-confessed\nmurderer of nine acid-bath victims,\nHaigh, 40, is scheduled to be\nhanged Wednesday-morning.\nCLUE TO IDENTITY\nOF BANDITS FOLLOWED\nVancouver, Aug. step) -a\nclue to the Identity of the two bandits who robbed a Bank of,Nova\nScotia Branch here Saturday, escaping with $6100, Is being followed\nup today by police.\nThey did not elaborate on the nature of the clue.\nFour bank employees'have picked\nout pictures of three men with police records. The employees said\nthey were similar to the duo involved In the hold-up.\nSell by Classified\u2014Be Satisfied   ,\nPHILIP MORRIS\n.    yO'VlRGINJA   FINE'CUT\nA#*^.T0BACC0\nIN PACKAGES \u2022 POUCHES\nAND Va IB. TINS\n\u2014^_\n \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS\/TUESDAY, AUG. 9, 1949\nHints\n' By IDA JEAN KJtiN\nHere's Another Menu for the Girl\nWho Is Enjoying Summer Reducing\nIQHTH DAY\nCalories\n\"Breakfast:\nrange juice, sliced orange br\n'grapefruit   .: .-     75\noached egg on thin slice of .\n, toast    160\nloffee,  clear -     0\n\u2014III-    ' *a25\nLunchi\n'una fish salad     185\nTuna (oil washed off), Vt cup\nChopped celery and cucumber\nBoiled dressing, 1 dessert\n.:,'spoon .\n\"read, 1 slice ..........     75\nlutter, V, pat ,     25\nHot teo, 1 lump sugar  26\nCantaloupe  80\n\u25a0 360\nDlnnpn\nLamb or veal chop, grilled .... 160\nBaked potato  100\nButter, ft pat  : 1  25\nBroiled tomato (2 halves) with\nwith cheese bits .: ~ 75\nHead lettuce with 1 tbsp.\ndressing (special)  '.  35\nButtermilk or skim milk,   .\n1 glass   .'. ...._. : 80\nTotal calories for dar\n465\n. 1050\nARIS, U. S. BATTLE FOR FASHION\nTITLE WITH TWO DIFFERENT \"LOOKS'\nBy ED CREAQH     i\n;*NEW YORK, Aug. 8 (AP)\u2014Park\nyour coats on that hitching post,\n;ents, and let's amble down Fifth\nAvenue while the women folks'are\nfinishing their morshmallow sun-\nfees.\n' Jfh* big stores with the chroml-\num-plated floorwalkers broke out a\nfew million dollars' worth of female\nfall finery over the weekend, and\njrou might as well see what you're\ngoing tb get nicked tor.\nThe Frencji new new look is battling it out for the notional fashion\ntitle:with the American back-to-\nthe-1820's look.\n'^fb'u should worry which one\nwins. Either way, it's going to cost\n|TOU.','   *''\u25a0 '    '.\niBow does the new new look differ\nfrom the old new look?\n' .Well,' the hem hangs higher. Thir-\nteen-an-a-half inches front the floor.\nRemember that! You might . be'\nasked about it on a giveaway program. ..\nAlso, the new look has something\ncalled a floating panel, not to be\nconfused with floating power. The\nfloating panel is a kind of misplaced\nbib. It hangs down from the waist,\napron-wise.\nNow then, ln the next block, the\nnew old look.\nGad, what memories it brings\nback \u2014 the Charleston, Clara Bow,\nprohibition.\n, The tight, or hobble, skirt Is back,\nshort, too\u2014'way up what we used\nto call the limb. And get that waistline, half-way down the hip.        \u25a0\nLet's face it, men\u2014the oatmeal\nbox figure may be on Its way back.\nColls On Artisans\nTo Help St. Paul's\n^ONDON (Reuters)\u2014An appeal\nto: artists, musicians, scholars and\narchitects to help enrich .Saint\nPaul's Cathedral was made in a sermon by Canon L. J. Collins, preaching in tho Cathedral.\nTho Canon described the Cathc-\nIral as being \"like a piece of Victor-\ntan furniture\" and declared that it\nlias ceased.to share in the life of the\npeople.\nf:'-'Why Is the Cathedral no longer\na dynamic inspiration as it was in\nWartime?\" demanded Canon Collins.\n[Saint Paul's like the rest of the\nchurch, it it is to live today, must\nShare ir. the peacetime life of the\n\u25a0people.\"   [.\nv. The best way life could be given\nto the Cathedral wss tor artists and\nartificers of all kinds to offer their\nbest to enrich and beautify it, said\npahon' Collins.\n'Let them vie with each other to\nWife of Sumner\nWelles Dies\nLAUSANNE, Switzerland, Aug. 8\n(AP)\u2014Mrs. Sumner Welles, wife of\nthe former United States Undersecretary of State) died in her hotel\nhere last night, hotel officials disclosed today.\nCUIM FRANCO\nVACATIONING, UNHURT\nSAN SEBASTIAN,' Spain, Aug. 8\n(AP).\u2014Personal aides of Generalissimo Francisco Franco Saturday denied all reports that the Spanish\nleader had met with some sort of an\naccident. They said he is In fine\nshape and has gone fishing ever\/\nday since he began his vacation\nhere July 29.\noffer their gifts and so enable the\nbest of modern art and modern\ncraftsmanship to -. find expression\nto the glory of God.\"\nATTENTION\nEVERYONE INTERESTED\nin our\nPicture Contest\n\u2022 HERE ARE SOME IMPORTANT     .\nTIPS TO, HELP YOU WIN\n1. Be sure to send\nNAMES \u2022\nand particulars of the people in the\npictures\n\u00bb .\u25a0* \u00bb\n2. Please do not send negatives\n3. Tiny or blurred pictures have  no\nchance of winning a prize.\nAnyone May\nEnter\n. except members of the Dolly Newt Staff\nAny Picture\nIs Eligible\nSend pictures to Photo Editor\nTOMORROW'S DINNER\nJellied Tomato Bouillon\nCracker Canapes\nOVen-Pried Fish Fillets of the\n..'... Locality\nKetchup\nParslled Creamed Potatoes ....\nVegetable Salad Bowl\nGingerbread Squares ,\nIce Cream Topping\nHot or Iced Coffee or Tea\n.    \u2022'   \u25a0 Milk (Children)\nJELLIED TOMATO BOUILLON\nMeasure 1% envelopes unflavored\ngelatin into*y\u00ab cup chicken broth or\ncold -(rater, and let stand 5 minutes.\nThen add 2 cups tomato Juice combined with 1%* cup's water and ,4\nchicken bouillon cubes. Stir until\ndissolved, Season to taste with salt\nand white pepper. Cool; then place\nln the refrigerator to chill until\nbeginning to thicken, about 30 minutes. Stir ln 1 minced, seeded and\ncored sweet green pepper, 4 tablespoons minced celery or firm portion of cucumber, and % a large\nfresh tomato skinned and diced.\nChill about 3 hours, or until firm.\nServe in bouillon cups with or without a dusting of minced parsley.\nPass cracker canapes,\nOVEN-FRIED FI8H FILLETS\nThis method of cookery is suited\nto all kinds of fish fillets and may\nbe substituted for sauteelng .or\ndeep-fat frying. Cut the fish fillets\nBy IDA SAILSY ALLEN\ninto four portions to the pound,\nDip in a slightly beaten egg mixed\nwith 1 cup milk,,.% teaspoon salt\nand % teaspoon pepper; then in fine\ndry bread crumbs, Place in a well\noiled pan. Pour over 1 tablespoon\nmelted fat or vegetable oil for each\nportion of fish'. Place in-a very hot\noven, at least 500 P., and bake 10 to\n15 minutes, when the fish should be\ngolden brown, Do not add water, as\nthis causes the fish to steam and\nallows the Juices to escape. Serve\nplain or with a chopped-egg cream\nsauce, tomato sauce, ketchup or\nhorse-radish, or sauce tortare.\nVEGETABLE SALAD BOWL\n*- This may be made from a combination of cooked vegetables combined with crisp vegetables,- such as\n1 cup cooked- or canned green peas,\n% cup thin-sliced cooked. carrots\nand tt cup diced cucumber or celery. Blend with mayonnaise or\nsoured bream dressing seasoned\nwith chopped chives, and serve In\na bowl lined with crisp lettuce\nleaves.'   .        \"\u25a0 \u2022*\" .* \u25a0\nSPECIALTY OF THE CHEF '\nShell 2 pounds peas just, before\ncooking, Drop into a sauce pan containing about 1 inch of boiling salted water. Add 4 fresh mint leaves.\nCover- and cook quickly until barely tender, from 8 to 12 . minutes.\nSeason with pepper, butter or margarine. ,\nFor Parents\nBy GARRY CLEVELAND MYERS. Ph.D.\nDemonstrative Mother Often Cause\nOf Son's Seeming Heartlessness\nAS a rule, parents who are happy\nand successful at guiding their child\nin his earlier years also are'happy\nand successful in relation to this\nchild during his adolescence. Yet a.\nfew parents who.are sure they were\neminently successful in bringing up\ntheir child before he reached the\nteens grow very much discouraged\nwith him tor some years thereafter.\nThere may be many reasons. Perhaps the biggest ope is that these\nparents have failed tp keep growing\nwith the child but tend to treat him\nat fifteen or sixteen as they did\nwhen he was eight or ten, though\nUu6 older child is a very different\nperson. From British Columbia,\nCanada, a mother writes: ,\nDISCOURAGED MOTHER\n\"Dear Dr. Myers: As-1 am so disappointed in the attitude of my boy,\nsixteen, toward-me, I thought I\nwould like some advice. During his\nchildhood up to 12 or 13 he was a\ncheerful good-natured child, always\nwanting to please me, and he was\n'treated very kindly and had the best\nwe could afford. He has never been\nwhipped as there was no need for it\nand I don't believe in it myself. I\ntreated him the way I wanted to be\ntreated when I was a child. My\nchildhood was not pleasant He is\nstill treated the best I know how:\nI got a shock when I gave him a kiss\nand he looked at me so disgusted.\nAt times I think he hates me. He is\ncranky, fussy about his food, eats\nlittle tor a growing boy, is pale and\nunderweight. The doctor' says there\nIs nothing wrong. I can't believe\nthis. Is lt just his age*; Please advise,\"\nAbout as follows I answered this\nmother. It is highly probable that\nyou feel ahd act toward this young\nman as If he were only nine or ten,\neven four or five. A wise mother\nhardly would kiss her son at any\nage unless she felt sure he would\nwelcome such caressing. Perhaps\nyou have embarrassed him at times\nby kissing him or by other show, ot\naffection when other persons, espe\ncially his pals, were around. On the\nother han.d any youth inclines' to\nwelcome such symbols of affection\nln privacy. Then he may suppose\nthat jour symbols of endearment\nare merely mechanical and that you\ndon't really share a deep sense of\nsympathy with him.\nNEEDS TO BE APPRECIATED\nYour expressed concern oved his\npallor and poor appetite suggests\nthat you often talk anxiously and\nfretfully about these matters, suggesting to him your excessive\nmanagement of him, excessive bossing, Your anxious demeanor and\nvoice Could' be the biggest wall between him and you.,What he needs\nis a mother to inspire him with\nhopefulness and self-regard and\nenthusiasm over interests outside\nhimself which he can share freely\nwith other boys and girls ot his age.\nI am sure -he doesn't feel he is understood and appreciated as the person he is or would like to be.\nTry to have faith in his normal\ndevelopment and let him alone.\nFind some ways in your church,\nclub or wider community to lose\nyourseuf in being of real service.\nFind more ways of good social re-\ncretlon, you ahd Dad. The happier\nyou can be in your community the\nmore delightful should become your\nson's attitude toward you. Very best\nwishes to you and him.\nYou made no reference to the\nfather. If there is a father in the\nfamily he might do most to help\nmake this sop feel more worthy as\na person and member of the family\nand you to win better relations with\nthis son. ,(My bulletin,,, \"Fathers\nAre Parents, Too,\" may be had in\na stamped envelope sent me in care\nof this paper.) -'<*-.\nWUL\ntttWfafe\nART EVERYONE LOVES\nHave you tried this new hobby?\nNeedle-painting is such fun^espe-\nclally with a glorious transfer such\nas this to begin onl\nColor and art at a popular prlcel\nFrame br line Pattern 638. Transfer\not picture 15x10% inches.\nLaura Wheeler's improved pattern makes needlewor\". so simple\nwith its charts, photos and concise\ndirections. \u25a0 '\nSen* TWENTY-FIVE CENTS ln\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\ntor this pattern to Nelson Dally\nNews, Needlecraft Dept., 266 Baker\nSt, Nelson, B.C. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\nVillage Students\nLearn New Skills\nFor Broader Life\nBy WILLIAM BOSS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCARRINGTON, Lincolnshire\nEngland (CP)\u2014Parents of the children who attend headmaster. John\nKnock's school feel they've missed\nsomething. '\n' The building's the same, and so\nare the benches, as in the old days\u2014\n20 and 25 years ago\u2014but the learning dispensed in the grey-tiled\nstructure's walls has a new point.\nMost of the 72 pupils come from\nfarm homes and headmaster Knock\nhas revised the curriculum.\n\"I don't want to entice them off\nthe land,\" he says, \"But I do want\nto give them a wider interest, than\njust digging potatoes.\"\nAnd so in Cai-rington Village\nSchpol the 31-year-old principal\nwears the sports jacket his pupils\nmade for him. They wove the tweed\nmaterial, dyed it grey, cut'it and\nsewed it, The cost was worked out\nin an arithmetic lesson at 16s 6d.\n($3.30) a yard for the 3'A yards of\nmaterial required.\nThe school made the looms on\nwhich it \"(and-,so far, tartans for six\nskirts) was woven. In a craft class\nthe children learned how to weave\nand in a chemistry class discovered'\nby. trial and error the vegetables\nbest .used for dyeing.\" They found\nthat young gorse shoots tint yarn\nyellow, birch bark brown, meadowsweet roots black and dandelion\nflowers red.\nTALK IN CLASS   \/\nBoys and girls work together arid\nare allowed to talk ln class, comparing ideas and progress in their\nproblems. .    i\n\"They've got to live together\nwhen they leave school,\" says\nKnock, \"Why shouldn't .they live\ntogether here? If you- interest a\nchild In one lesson his interest will\noverflow into all the\" others.\"\nThe school has Its own fruit and\nvegetable gardens, fish inhabit\npond built by tlie boys and 300\nchickens now, occupy the poultry\nrun\u2014hatched from \u25a0 a, schoplrbullt\nincubator, Ihe latest project.\nBesides imparting the three Bs,\nDRESS MA K ER OH A*D A RE-Mnrray A.Howard,\nof Portland, Me:, who took up -dressmaking when challenged by\nhis wife, measures her for a new dress. HC doesn't use any pattern.\nTheBoctor\niLove Problems '.\u25a0\nBy JANE ATKINSON\nNorrpw-Minded Mother Will Driye\nDaughter To Make Hasty Marriage\nDear Miss Atkinson:\nI am a young man of 21-arid engaged to marry a girl who wlll.soon\nbe 18,    '-\u2022\" \u25a0': \u25a0';\u25a0\n\u25a0 I just had an argument with her\nmother about her coming with me\nto spend an evening With my fathr\ner. My mother is dead and my father and I live alone. My girl's mother\nabsolutely will not permit her to\ncome out with me because there is\nno woman in the house, She says it\ndoesn't look right, and that it isn't\ndecent. I cah't understand it to save\nme. I never thought I would .live\nto see the day that people thought\nlike that\nThen, too, I was talking about\nbuying a car, so my fiancee\" ahd I\ncould go fishing Sunday afternoons.\nKnow what I heard? No, sir! Can't\ndo thatl It couldn't be thought of for\njust the two of us to go out fishing\nalone. We went to a concert one\nnight and there was-a squawk'raised because there is a bar in.the\nbuilding where the concert was. My\nfiancee doesn't drink and I very seldom touch the .stuff and her mother\nknows that. But lt was just the Idea\nbf a bar being in the building.\nWhy should my girl's mother be\nlike this, and what would you, do\nabout it?\u2014A. >\nDear A'\u25a0'.\"'.    '\u25a0 '-'.':\nI cant possibly imagine why this\ngirl's mother should be like that\nexcept that there are people so\nnarrow-minded arid so unable to\ntrust others that they are always\nsuspicious that something wrong is\ngoing on.'\nI hate to say it, but I don't think\nthere is a thing-in the world you\nBy HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D.\nExact Cause of Acne Not Known But *\nUnfair To Blame Youth for Condition\ncan do about the situation except\ntry to endure it with as much patience as you can, until you are\nready to marry the girl: When she '\nis 10, she can marry you Whether\nher mother likes it or not and it\nsounds \"to me as though the sooner\nshe did so, the better it would be.\nDear Miss Atkinson:\nI am 20, nnd have been married\nnot quite six months, I had my husband's baby before we were married. It has died since, and I am\nhaving another in December.\nMy, husband never comes home\nuntil early In'the morning, and lt\nI ask him Why, he says he was out\nwith a bunch of fellows. But I don't\nbeljeve him, as he has told me so\nmany lies and besides, I have* found\nlipstick on his shirts. He drinks\nquite a bit, too,'and never saves\nany money at all. He hardly ever,\ntakes me anywhere any- more.\n' If I left him, I wouldn't get any\n.support, for myself or the baby, arid\nI can't go home to my people as I\nhave a stepfather, so it seems Ilk*\nI have no place-to go. But I can't\ntake any more.\u2014Mrs. M. D.\nDear Mrs. M. D,! '*..\nnearest welfare organization, and\nWhat you should do is to go to tha\ntell them all'about your situation.\nThey will talk the whole thing over\nwith you; Snd will, I am sure, help\nyou decide what is best to do.\nIf you do not know the name of\nany such organization, write me\nagain, giving mo your name and address so that I can write you a personal letter, ond I will try to tell\nyou where to apply.\nI wish every mother could realise\nthat young people with acne are in\nno way to blame for their bad complexions, I know because I have'had\nthis problem with most of my six\nyoungsters.       , . \u25a0\nAcne is a disease ot the skin\nwhich frequently accompanies the\nprocess of growing up. It is not due\nto neglect of cleanliness and there\nis nothing shameful about it' If\nmothers only understood this, many\na-.youngster would escape Ihe unjust censure which is so often ad-\ndept to his other troubles. These,\nalone, are hard enough to put up\nwith, including as they do blackheads, oily skin, enlarged pores and\npimples. Many teen-agers with this\ncondition are further annoyed by\noily, stringy hair, and excessive\nquantities of dandruff.\nNUMBER OF FACTORS\nUnfortunately; we do not know\nthe exact cause of acne, but it seems\nthat a large number of factors may\nbe involved.\nFor example, there may be some\nglandular disturbance, particularly\nin those internal secretions which\naffect the skin, Diet, injuries to.the\n.skin, and the wrong type of c&smet-\nies may also contribute to the development of acne.\nAccording to Dr. Lester Hollander, the treatment.for ache should\ninclude surgery, X-ray, proper\n\u2022cleansing,' and the application of\nsulfur to the skin.   . .\nIn carrying out the surgery, the\npatient lies down and his face is\ncarefully washed with a liquid\ncream, which is wiped off thoroughly. Then, the face is Washed again,\nthis time with liquid soap. Next the\nphysician' removes- all the blackheads which are visible, using a\nspecial instrument called a blackhead extractor. It is important that\nall of the blackheads be expressed\nsince, if.any of the material is left\nbehind, a pimple will form.\nIt pus has formed in the pimples,\nthese are cut open with a knife and\nthe material contained within Is\ngently expressed. Following the\ntreatment, the face is again washed\nwith liquid soap and water and a\nsulfur-containing cream ' Is patted\non.   - \/       \u25a0 ..   '\",.'\n: The foregoing procedure is carried out Once a week: for 'r\u00b0m three\nto four: weeks,; and thereafter once\nevery two weeks or.once a month\nas th need arises. ; \u25a0\nX-RAY.TREATMENT\nTo decrease the 'activities of the\nfat glands, X-ray treatments'- are\nhelpful. Of course, these must be\ncarefully carried out\" by an; expert\nThe patient is instructed to\ncleanse his face thoroughly on arising, on returning from school, and\nbn retiring. This consists of \"applying a soft skin oil or cream, thorough drying and wiping, washing in\nsoap and water, and drying. Before\nretiring, a lotion containing sulfur\nis used, : ', \u25a0\u25a0  .\"\nIt is important that acne be treated by a physician and' that the\ntreatment be thoroughly carried\nout\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nJ. R.: I have had tonsillitis for\ntwo months. What would you advise?        '    \u25a0 ,   '..\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nAnswer: Continued infection in\nthe tonsils may: make it necessary\nto have them removed. However,\ntreatment with drugs, such as the\nsulfonamides or penicillin,' might\nclear up the- \"Infection.\nIt would be well to consult your\ndoctor about this matter.\nMayfair Experts\nDispute Hairdos\nBy MURIEL NARRAWAY\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer i\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Two of May-\nfair's fanciest* hairdressers are at\nodds over whether milady's hair\nshall be worn long or short\n\"Short,\" says Raymond emphatically,\n\"Long,\" is Stelner's edict. \"At\nleast two inches longer by the end\nof Summer,\"   .      '\nThe battle is on. But women will\ndecide the victor. s\nFor the short of it, Raymond prescribes: \"No curls, no waves, no\nfluffiness, sleek forward movement,\nshorn necks,\" .\nHis Summer special is Ihe old\nshingle with a difference:, a monk's\ncowl brushed up frpm a circular\ncrown at the back, Wellington burns\non the cheeks.\nFEMININE ANGLE     \u25a0\nTo this Steiner retorts: \"The ton-\nsorial art is in the waving and curling, not the cutting. Short hair is\nnot feminine.\"\nSteiner uses soft casual curls, upswept sides, asymmetrical styles,\ncurls fluffed up on one side or\nmarching boldly down the back,\ncurls in a bang, curls on either side\nof a V parting\u2014all showing early\nVictorian influence. -\u2022-.\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022\nA teen-age style by Steiner gives a\nshort appearance without actually\ncutting the hair very short The.side\nhair is set into loose.'.curls which\ncover most of the ears, the back is\nsmooth from the crown with soft\ncurls at the bottom.\n\"The hairline is beautiful,\" says\nSteiner. \"Why hide it with fringes\nand'forward movements? Sweep the\nhair back, clear the brow.\"\nsays Knock; himself father of three\nchildren, \"we want to broaden the\nChildren's minds, encourage.crafts-'\nmanship and foster a sen^e of responsibility and pride of achievement. We want to give the children\na chance to shine at something and\nif possible to. assist them for future work.\"\nRead the Classified\u2014It Payi\nFrenchmen Rule Out\nPatterned Material\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Fwichnien\nmay be volatile in politics but in\ndress they're conservative.\nPaul Roederer, Paris textile\nwholesaler here on a\" visit, says you\ncan't catch a. Frenchman in a flowered swim suit.   '\u25a0'..'\n\"American men may fall for that\nsort of thing, but y\/e don't,\" Mr.\nRoederer said.\nParis business.men stick to plain,\nworsted. with- no design in. their\nsuiting, he added. \"This is probably\na passing fancy, but we're certainly\nriot using stripes or any .pattern.\"\n;\u25a0\u2022'- Hard tweeds that last.fdrever are\nout. Those used sparingly for sports\nmust be soft as silk. '\nBut Frenchmen at resorts branch\nout into light pastels, said Mr, Roederer. They bounce .right back into\nconservative blues arid greys when\nthey return to Paris.\nSEEK BRIGHTER MEN\nLONDON (CP)-The British Color Council hopes to brighten men's\nclothes. Suits, shirts, hats;-ties will\nhave color names;such as Atlantic\nBlue, Kiltie Green, Sky Mist, Vacation Pink, Jungle Wine and Jasmine. -\u2022\u25a0 Y '\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0'\nSKITTLING ADULT8\nSCATTERED .\nSARRB,- Kent, England (CP) -\nAnne Of fen, 10, defeated 27 grownups ih-a skittles contest here, Her\nprize: a laying hen.   ,. \u2022 .-\nMTTCRN-9WrQ:\nIT'S ADELIGtfTI\nThe only upkeep is'soap, and\nwater! This gay housefrock ruffles\nall its smart, style-details \u2014 the\ncurved .sleeves,, pockets,, smart: new\nneckline. And it's slimm|ngl\nPattern 9140 comes in sizes 34,\n38, 40, 42, 44, 4b\", 40, 60. Size 36 takes\n5Vs -yards '35-lrich, '\nThis' easy^o-use'. pattern give's\nperfect .fit. Complete,\" illustrated\nSew- dhart shows you every .step..\nSend, TWENTY-FIVE .CENTS\n(2Bcj .in>coiris-(stamps, cannot be.\naccepted)-.for: this pattern\" Print\nplainly 8IZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE DUMBER.   '.\u25a0<\u2022\nSend -your order- to MARIAN\nMARTIN, - care- -4t- Nelson, pally\nNews, Pattern Dept, 266 Baker St.;\nNelson, B:&- : -\u2022\u25a0-.\u25a0\nPHONE 144 for CLASSIFIED ADS\nTIGHT PENCIL\nSKIRTS FEATURE\nFASHION SHOW\nBy  FLORENCE  MILL8 ,\"      '\nPARIS, Aug. 8 (AP) \u2014 .Mincing\nsteps were in vogue -when Jacques\nFath last night gave a, three-hour\nFall fashion show. ' -\n\u2022 The sheath skirts he showed for\nevening wear were so tight tho :\nmannequins looked its though they\nwere being wheeled along,, instead\nof walking, ,'     '     '\u25a0.'.'.   '\",'\nFath features the sheath skirt,\nthroughout .his Collection but those\nhe showed, for day wear, made\nwalking more feasible,    -     \u25a0\nHe varies it by buttoning either\na full-cut goder or pleated panel\nonto the' baok or front. This treat- ,\nment makes, it look half pencil-\nstraight half fisted. He Slits up one\nside ot a black moire cocktail dress\nand buttons in a bodet or tulle.\nFath shows no tailor-mades but\nprefers thigh-length loose jackets\nbelted slightly into, the waist, giving a blouse effect to the back. All\nare teamed with tight pencil skirts.\nFath shows a lot of flying panels\nthat grow down tiom Moused back\nbodices and overskirts that are short\nin front- long at the back and-set\nover sheath skirts.\nHb introduces demure choir-boy.\ncollars which he .sets on plain navy\ndresses with huge pocket flaps set\nbeneath the bust     -\nOf the 3000 Islets which make up\nthe Bahamas group, only about 20\nare inhabited:\nFOR My KINO\nOf 9M '\nNABISCO\nSHREW WHEAT\n.(fatpjjiiAilMtMll.\nMy youngsters expect teacher to have lots of energy)\nSo I eat crisp, nourishing NABISCO Shredded Wheat\nfor breakfast This delicious, golden cereal is made\nfrom pure 100^ whole wheat And we need whole\nwheat in our diet every day. Why don't you join the\ncrowd of husky NABISCO Shredded Wheat eaters-\nenjoy this grand energy-cereal\ntomorrow I\n%\n^Si.     fatevtff\nJust add salt te ,1 cup bolUntj water, *\n. coarsely crumble In 2 NABISCO Shred-\n- dtd WhMt btituttt. Cook 1 mtrttri* \u2014\ntntn >ervo tasty porrldgtl .\n^^\/^A^^^emf\/ai^^\/\n <=^5;\nBIGGER!\nBETTER!\nVALUES\nJ>r>\nSale Shoes;\n. '--. .For\"\nt MEN\n,\u2022 WOMEN    7\n\u2022 CHILDREN\nRe ANDREW\n# CO.\nEstablished 1904\nLeaders- in Footfashion\nNEW MATRON\nARRIVES FOR\nKASLO HOSPITAL\nKASLO, P. C., Aug. 8 -Miss M-\nOringer, R.N., of Seaforth, Ont., arrived on Thursday and has taken\nover the duties of Matron in the\nKaslo Victorian Hospital :        :-*;:\nMiss Gringer is a graduate of the\nToronto General Hospital and has\ntaken post graduate courses in both\nEngland arid France, :  '\"\nto Make Home\nIn Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C.. Aug. 8.-In a\npretty afternoon ceremony at Christ\nChurch, Alma Laughlfn,' daughter\nof the late Mr, and Mrs. J. S..Laugh-\nto, became the wife of Edward Bailey-, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Bailey,\n(11. of Cranbrook.\nThe bride, wearing^ navy blue\nkuit with pink .accessories, was attended by her sister, Miss Marie\nfcaughlln,. wearing a Wine suit with\n[grey accessories. Ralph Bailey was\nSis brother's groomsman. Rev. Allan Gardner performed the ceremony. A reception' at tho: home ot\nMr. ahd Mrs. Floyd Laughlin followed.\n'.They will make their home, on\njGarden Avenue. ' The bride came\nhere from Saskatoon and has been\nWith the staff at Colene's store, and\nthe groom operates a truck in logging work.     \u2022 '.- '.',-.\nOn Coast' Honeymoon\n'-CRANBROOK, B.C., .Aug. 8 \u2014\nMary YSckovitch, R.N., daughter of\nMrs. YackOvich and the late K.\nYackovich, became the wife of William Waltham Huxtable, twin son\nof Mr. and Mrs: H..J. Huxtable in\nthe presence of friends at the' United Church, Rev. W. H. McDannold\nofficiating. .\"      i ,\u25a0';\u25a0\"'.\n\u25a0 Stfe'WdriiT white velva ray,Satin,\nwith full length .veil, and Was attended by Miss- Dorothy Campbell\nss bridesmaid in blue velva ray organdie with white picture hat, and\nJanet Littlejohn in yellow organdie as flower girl. Jack Huxtable\nwas ..groomsman, and Edward and1\nGeorge jGummer ushers,\n:A reception at the home of Mr.\nind Mrs. Samuel Littlejohn on Van\nHome Street followed, and the couple left for the Coast on their wed-:\nding trip. They will make their\nborne in Cranbrook. Both are. well\nknown here. The groom is with the\nrailway service \u25a0here, and the brid^\ngraduated from St Eugene.Hospital- \u25a0 :'.' X \u25a0\nYORK MINSTER WALLS\nSAPPED BY NEGLECT;.,\nI *YORK, England (CP)\u2014An additional \u00a33000 ($12,000) a year will\nhave to be spent if the stonework\nof ancient York Minster is to be\nkept in repair.\n'\u25a0Very Rev. E. Milner-White, Dean\nof York, said in a report that only\ntwo stone-masons were available to\nlook after current repairs, although\narchitects said a staff of 10 should\nbe constantly employed.'\nCurrent funds did not permit\nmore.,workers. Jesse Green, clerk\nof works, said ,the Minster's fabric\n\"is slowly ' deteriorating through\nlack of skilled' craftsmen and\n(Unds.\"\n\u2022I'-a\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40o line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nVALENTINE'S WILL BE CLOSED    Dropih for, a delicious Milk Shake\n'  ALL DAY TODAY.    ;\u2022\u25a0,,.'     at MAC'8, COFFEE BARi\nAirfoam Mattress for real comfort at\nSTERLING HOME \"FURNISHERS\nDouble tut tumblers, 5-, 8-, 9-, 12-\noz: sizes.'' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0',   ,'..\nMC A MC (NEL80N) LIMITED\nConvert unused articles to ready\ncash. Call the NELSON EXCHANGE, 520 Vernon St Ph. 391.\nBring that valuable timepelpo lo\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices; \"\\ \u25a0! 'Y'-jY\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs.your\nwatch it is on time all the tlnte.\n491 Baker Street Nelson, B.C\nImported  English -Melton  Cloth\nBlazers, 2 to 16. Priced from $4.76.\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP ,\",   r\nOUR PHONE NUMBERS ARE 1177\nAND    1178.   FAIRWAY    MEAT\n\u2022     MARKET\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix it\nthrow it away: Prompt service on\nwatch work; fully guaranteed.\nGirls' two-piece. Jersey-Knit Suits\nfor ages 2, 3 and 4. Special $1.49.\nTHE CHILDREN'8 SHOP\nATTENTION\nChild Health .Centre and Pr*\nSchool Immunization Clinic, Memorial HaU, today, -2 to 4 p,m. .?,\nThose Improvements to.- your\nproperty\u2014are they, covered by insurance? If not see BLACKWOOD\nAGENCY today.\nHave you a prize list for the, Fali\nFair? Shop early for supplies for\nyour handicraft-entry at   '; ' ,\nTHE CR^Ft CENTRE\nHOME PLAN- BOOKS-T6 help\nyou plan your New Home\u201450c to\n$L00. BURNS LUMBER & COAL\nCO.   - .\nDONT FORGET\nREGATTA DANCE\nCIVIC CENTRE \u2014 AUG. 13th\nFor ybur camping or fishing' trip\n\u2014Li Lo air mattresses. Made Jp England\u2014finest quality, light Weight\n$16.50 each.- HIPPERSON'S. ; -\u25a0'..\nWhy not list your house with C,\nW; Appleyard'today.'We can often\narrange a cash deal through our\nmortgage facilities.\nOpen \/Stock China ware \u2014 three\nlovely , patterns, to choose.-, from\u2014\nnow.on display,at. ,\u25a0-.' ,-'.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nbse Vlgorb, the complete plant\nfood, on your flower and\/ vegetable\ngarden. It. works, wonders: Nelson\nFarmers' Supply.Ltd., 524 Railway\nStreet Phone 174.    .\nUNITED. GUILDS OF BALFOUR\n-      AND QUEEN'S BAY : ''\nGARDEN BARTY AND SALE\nAT BALFOUR BEACH INN\nWEDNESDAY,'AUG.'-lpTH* AT 2:30\nClean -your rugs- the, right way\nwith a Blssell Carpet, Sweeper, Efficient, fast, (Convenient., cleaning.\nTwo popular .models.'\nHIPPERSON'S\nAdding machines tor Immediate\ndelivery. Sold either for cash or on\neasy monthly payments, Strictly\nguaranteed: and serviced by us. D.\nW. McDerby, \"The Typewriter and\nAdding Machine Man\", 554 Stanley\nStreet Nelson, B.C.   ..-,-.\nFARMERS-RANCHERS - WHEN\nYOU ARE IN TOWN TODAY,\nVISIT OUR PLANT AND LET U8\nSHOW YOU HOW YOU CAN\n8AVE, AND SAVE PLENTY, BY\nRENTING LOCKER SPACE. \u2014\nPHONE 1218- FARMERS' QUICK\nFREEZE MARKET.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral services for the late Vit-^ia!\ntorio Bolettl will be he^lfrom the\nThompson Funeral Home Wednesday, August 10, at 10 a.m. Interment\nwill be in Nelson Memorial Park.\nArrangements are in charge of the\nThompson Funeral Home.    \"',\nCASUAL ENGLISH TWEED SUITS, COATS\nSCORE HIT WITH VISITING BUYERS\nPARIS, Aug, 8 (AP) \u2014 Foreign\nbuyers today warmly praised \"fiiig-\nllsh tweed suits and coats presented, by designer Dlgby Morton In\na fashion show here.   ...\nIn direct contrast to the Fall\nfashions, now being shown by\nFrench   designers,   all   Morton's\nJOGS of all sizes and breeds go tot\n\u2022 this \"smackin' good\" food. Fed\n>y kennel owners for sleek coats,\nitrong muscles, sound bones and\nBeth! (Thrifty, too! Not 70%\nvater like most canned dog foods;)\nIro-Pup comes in cubes and meal-\nrout grocer\ntea both!\nirs .\n\u2022SMACKIN' ,\nGOOD\n...irs.\nfatfe by KalloBtf'i.\ni London, Ontario\nSlocafi City *..\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C.-N; Twee-\ndie, who .has been relieving H. Butler of New Denver on the SS. Rosebery while on vacation, has returned'\nto Vancouver.\nMiss Rosemary Russell of Vernon\nis a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Stan Hes-\n\u25a0lip.       - \u25a0\nMrs. R. W. Gardiner and family\nare in Nelson, visiting Mr. Gardiner,\nwho Is a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital. ,\nMiss Helen Bailey, Anglican\nChurch Worker, who has been visiting her sister inJWassachusetts, and\nfriends in Toronto, has returned\nhome. .\nMiss Joyce Hopkins of Victoria is\na\" guest of ,Mr. and Mrs. W. Elder\nand Mr. and Mrs. Paul Barber.\nE. Aihoshl of Revelstoke is a guest\nof Mr. and Mrs, T. Samejima.\nDes Hood visited his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. T. Hood, in Trail, arid also\nattended the golf tournament\nToniio HayashidaOf Kimberley is\nvisiting' his family.\nMiss\" Jurie Graffl, who has been\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. Marchl,\nhas returned to Nelson. She was accompanied by Miss Marlene March!,\nwho will be guest of.Mr.' and Mrs.\nA. Graffi. .     '  .\nPercy Greenwood of Nelson yisr\nfled his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nBolsvert\n. \"Mr. and Mrs. J. Garret of Vancouver are guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nF. Storgard and family.\nMental Telepathy\nTested Over BBC\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nSydney Piddington, - a youpg Australian couple, recently broadcast a\ntrickproof demonstration Of mental\ntelepathy from a BBC studio.\nMrs. Piddington,'26, was able tp\n\"receive\" two selected colors \"ttans-\nmitted'1 by her husband; drew on a\nblackboard a complicated design of\na triangle enclosing a swastika, and,\nfinally translated from a,\"thought\nmessage\" the meaning (but not the\nexact words) of a line seleoted at\nrandom, from a book:\n, There appeared to be tfo possibility \"whatever o('collusion he-\ntween the pair, and any \"cheating\"\nduring the broadcast would -have\nrequired the cooperation of a panel\nof six judges.\nMrs. Piddington sounded tense\nand nervous as slowly, \".word-by\nword, she worked out the meaning\nof a Sentence -^transmitted\" to her\nfrom another studio:\nSyd ftddington, 31,' first began\nexperimenting with telepathy While\na prisoner of war in a Japanese\nprison, camp. After the war he\nmarried Lesley Pope and the two\nof them began experiments leading\nup to the BBC demonstration\n\u25a0 Now the Plddingtoni*'are booked\nfor a series, of eight Weekly broadcasts Resigned to test thought trans-,\nference under scientific conditions.\nmodels are casual and easy to wear-\nOne American buyer said: \"Those\nSuits and coats are the sort of\nclothes any American woman would\nlove to wear.\" .*\u25a0;:\u25a0'\nA'popular model is a pepper-and-\nsalt, soft Scottish Wrap-around topcoat with a double- fringed shaWl\ncollar.\nCapes were featured, in another\npresentation to Fall fashions by\nJacques Helm.    ,.-.\nHe shows them. hem-length in\ncurly black carpet wool and lined\nwith plaid. He sets them flared and\nshort on top of both loose and fitted\njackets and topcoats. Sometimes he\nmakes box coats develop into capes\nat the back only,   '\nHem has fitted redlngotes of plain\nwool, rich red duyetyn, a soft fabric\nwith velvety nap, and velvet often\nlavishly trimmed in fur. Plaids\noften are combined with solid\ncolors and linings frequently tie up\nwith dresses. \u25a0-.,\u25a0'.' ,.-.\nJackets are either,. Housed 'and\nbelted, or have molded waistcoat\nfronts, often in plain or embroidered\nsuede.\nHis evening wear comes both full\nand slinky, and he uses a lot of fur\ntrimming.. A full-length cape \u25a0 ih\nalmond green and black broadcloth\naccompanied a dress of .black broadcloth with a leopardskin strapless\nbodice.\nKimonoStyle Coat\nBowler flat, 1950 Type\nBy PRUNELLA-WOOD\nThis Is Mr. John's latest bowler hat, a success from the first\nmodel shown, and as good an example as any we could choose to\nshow-from his new and.exciting collection.\nMade here, from beaver felt, In what the designer terms a tired\nold pink, the hat has a rolled brim, a cloche crown which Is soft and\nshapely, a veil attached to ribbon and which Is easily put over the\nhat each time'of donning, due to Its sewed construction, called a\nhammock. This Is the Jazz bowler, .as like many another designer,\nMr. Jphn Is reviving.the Jazz era.'\nSocial\n\u2022   In compliment to Miss Pearl\nIckey,. whose marriage will be taking place shortly, Mrs. H. E. Stevenson Jr., and her-sister, Miss. Myra\nNelson, ;were co-hostesses at an enjoyable miscellaneous shower at the\nhome'ot the former on Third Street\nFriday, evening. The. many, lovely\ngifts were presented, to the -bride-\nelect In a gaily decorated basket\ndone\" in' pale, pink and blue crepe\npaper. A. bride's book was made up\nand contests. were enjoyed.. Carnations .arid roses were .the main flowers used throughout tor decorations.\n#' Peter Gelle.of Vancouver, formerly ot the teaching staff of the\nCentral School, accompanied by his\n10-year-old son Donald, visited Nelson* yesterday en. route home from\nthe Crow-District\n#\/.- Miss Shirley Robinson, Public\nHealth \u25a0 Nurse of Abbotsford,, is\nspending her vacation at the honie\nof her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. C.\nRobinson, 607 Second Street. ,\nBy MRS. M. I. VIGNEUX\n,';#\u25a0': Commander\u25a0 R.\u25a0 T. Deane. has\nleftfor Vancouver to receive medical treatment at Shaughnessy military hospital. ,7\n, \u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Roberts\nof-.,Vancouver-are vistiors en rotite\nhome-from Calgary and Blalrmdre.\nMr. Roberts will be remembered as\nPrincipal of Central School some\ny-ars ago.\no Miss Mary Muraro of Vancouver, who Is making the trip by\nplane, is expected home today to\nvisit he-.- mother, Mr-. M. Muraro,\nGranite Road.:'      .\"\u25a0.'\u2022\"\n\u2022 Mrs. M, D. Chadwick of Van\ncpdver is in the city, to attend the\nwedding ,of- her grandson, Roger\nHesse, to Miss Pearl Hickey,\"'\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Lude Palm and.\ndaughter. Glennys of Vancouver\nvisited Mrs. Palm's sister and\nibrother.-in-lawi Mr..and Mrs;,A. J.\nHesse, on returning from. Chicago\nand points in Southern Saskatche-\nHOLD LAST RITES\nFOR FERNIE MAN,\nHA. WHITE\nCRANBROOK,' B.C., Aug. 8 '\u2014.\nStricken suddenly with a heart seizure at his.Fernie home, Harold Anderson White, mine, surveyor, died.\nHe'was born at Cochrane, Alta., 60\nyears ago and continued West to\nFernie Ih' 1000 with his parents. He\ngrew up there and following schooling at^Calgary and Victoria, joined\nthe Crow's Nest Pass Coal Company\nstaff at Pernio about 1005. Except\ntor,-' the' years of the First World\nWar when he served overseas, he\nremained with tha Coal Company\nuntil, his. death.   .\nHe. was an alderman prior to administration of Fernie by a Commission during the depression, and\nwas.reelected alderman when City\nGovernment, resumed a few years\nago.'servingconsistently since then.-\nHe was'a. member' of Christ' Church\nand Rector's Warden on the vestry;\nactive in Legion affairs, and a member, of the Hospital itioard. '.     .   \u2022\nFuneral services were from Christ\nChurch with Rev. O: W. Blackaller\nofficiating, and burial in St Margaret's  Cemetery.,\nBalfour..\nBALFOUR, B. C. \u2014 The Ladies'\nGuild held a meeting at the home\nof Mrs, H. Hudson to make final\narrangements for the tea and bake\nsale to be held at Balfour Beaoh\nInn. \u2022 .Y\nJ. A. Wellwood of Vancouver was\nguest of his son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. M. W; Wellwood.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Hallett of Vancouver are guests ot Mr. and Mrs.\nM. W. Wellwood. ' -\nMr. and Mrs, - Dawson Callbeck\nand family, who spent the holiday\nhere, guests of Mr. and Mrs.- J. M.\nPollock, left \u00a3or their home in Calgary. . \u25a0 -\nH. P. Mann pf Calgary left after\nspending1, several, weeks hero at his\nSummer home.\nJack Abbott .of Nelson is spending\nthe holiday here, guest of Mr. and\nMrs. C-Noakes. \u25a0'.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:,\nMr. and Mrs. Ted Hinchcliff and\nsons of .Trail are the guests of Capt.\nand Mrs. D. B. MacPherson<\nMrs.. R. Ramsay of Nelson was a\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. H. Hudson.\nDr. M. Robinson of Macleod, Alta.\narrived here oh 'the '\u25a0 weekend -to\nspend a few weeks with his family.\nMr. and Mrs.. R, Hied and 'family\nhave left for their home in Calgary.\nCANBERRA (CP) ^\u2022'-Australians\n.may soon be using oil manufactured\nfrom large brown-coal-deposits in\ntlie -State of Victoria as a. result of\nrecent research. Following technical\ndevelopments, production cost is'\nhow approaching that from natural\npetroleum,     \u2022     \u2022   , \u2022 .\nBy PRUNELLA WOOD    .\nTina- Lesen'a current collection\nIs excitingly compounded from\nher air trip around the World\nwhich filled all 'last Winter for\nher. The lacquer red fleece eiati\nabove, |s obviously a Japanese\nmemory, suggested by the outer\nkimono of that country and well\nadapted to our uses In this guise\nover here. Wonderful over all\nkinds of tailoring or dressmaking,'\nbecomingly'cut and luxurious In\neffect. ,-..   \u25a0 \u25a0 y    ...\"\nLoser's Hindu tunics and slacks,\nher sari evening frocks, her more\nformal kimonos, qro a tonlo tour\nfor us stay-at-homes, colorful and\n\u2022urnrlklha eeodles to wear.\nASK NEGRO VOICE\nIN COLOR PROBLEM\nOF SOUTH AFRICA\nCAPETOWN (CP). \u2014' Europeans\nln South Africa will have to call on\nthe colored, races in that country\nfor their cooperation and opinions\nit the question of color relations in\nSouth Africa is to be solved, thinks\nDrl, A. B. Xuma, President of the\nAfrican National Congress.\nDr. Xuma told the Institute of\nCitizenship here: \"No party government no Union, parliament representing a white electorate oniy\n: ,' is capable of settling the\nquestion for South Africa as a\nwhole, and the' 'whole' includes\nthe 10,000,000 non-Europeans.\n'Short of, a-national convention in\nwhich non-Europeans participate as\ncitizens, there can be no solution, no:\nsettlement\" \u25a0 ,\n. Dr.' Xunia said South Africa\nshould begin to work for a policy of\nintegration before the policy of\ncolor- disintegrated and' destroyed\nthe \u25a0 nation. . This' did not. suggest\ninter-racial marriage, but meant\npublic equality, equality of opportunity for all, and the cooperation\nof all groups and colors for the progress,'and advancement of South\nAfrica as a whole. r\n. He said that adequate, land and\nfree,access to.;*;he UBe.of all its resources' Was; essential to the pros-\nperity, happiness and progress of\nany people, irrespective of race or\ncolor,. !,\u25a0' \u2022\nUnder, the present circumstances\nthe-African was in effect a landless,\nhqmele'ss,' poverty-Stricken. government\" tenant,- \"whoSe occupation of\nany.area.rnay be affected.adversely\nor otherwise at the pleasure of the\nBobby-Soxers\nTagged \"Rats\"\nBy JACQUES ARMAND-PREVOST\nPARIS, July (AP) i-.French\nbobby-soxers are called \"existional-\nists\" not because they* follow Jean\n-Paul Sartre's philosophical doctrine, but because they first met in\nthe Saint-Germain-des-Pfea district where Sartre* has his headquarters:  \u25a0- .',.,'\nIn this old-fashioned part of Paris\nyou can.see young boys and girls\ndressed in corduroy jackets. They,\nwear long hair arid >!a|d skirts, She\ngirls have little makeup and wear\ntheir hair-either in pigtails or long\nand straight .\nIt is mostly at night that you meet\nthem becaues most of them work in\ndaytime, They are'students, artlBts\nand some girls are mannequins., But\nall of therii have a joint and distinctive feature, their love for the jitterbug arid the be-bop. They meet at\nnight in cellars. These stuffy and.\nsmoke-filled hide-outs have been\nturned into clubs. The main clubs\nare the \"Club \u2022 de Saiht-Germaln-\ndes-Pres,\" and the \"Club'du Vieux-\nColombier\" and the \"Rose Rouge\"\n(therednose).'\t\n' In the first one, Boris Vian is operating. Vian. plays a jazz trumpet\nand also is a writer. ,\u2022 \u25a0 \u2022 -.' \u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0 ;\n\"PETIT8 RAT8\"\nHis dancers, all of them amateurs,\nare,so good, that they have, .been\nasked'to give exhibitions at charity\naffairs. They call -themselves' the\n\"petits .rats of Salrit-Germain-des-\nPres.\" In French a-\"petit rat\", (a\nsmall rat) has nothing to do with\nthis animal, it is only the nickname\nof the young ballerinas in the beginning ckss of the opera ballet. ' \u25a0 '\nTourists pack the clubs to see\nthem dance, arid it is a Sight . The\ndancers,are young:and they swing\ntheir girls over their heads while\nthe band plays the.latest be-bop..\nAt the Vieux-Colombier, Claude\nLiiter plays first trumpet and rivals'\nVian. The employees and.members\nof these two spots each insist theirs\nis the best Sometimes members belong to both just to make a comparlJi\n\"sou. >'.\".'-.\nTheir main purpose.of course, is\nhaving fun. As they say in French\nthey are \"Mordus\" (bitten) by tho\njazz music'\nThe clubs are not so wild as some\npeople think they are. They cloBe\nat 2 a.m.   '      ...\nSouth Slocan.\u2666.\nSOUTH SLOCAN, ,B. C.-Mr. and\nMrs. R. Young had as guests their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. G.; Weir of Vancouver. Mrs.\nWeir has returned, whjle Mr. Weir\nJs staying over for - a longer visit\n\" Mrs, M, Downie has returned from\na visit to Windsor, Onf., where she\nwas called on. the .illness 'of. her\nbrother, Mr. Robson, who passed\nsway, during her visit .\nMr..and Mrs. W. A..McCabe and\nson Bruce are .Spending a vacation\non a motoring trip to \"points.in the\nOkanagan.\nMiss Kay and Master.George Mul-\nloy are spending the holidays at\nSanca-with their aunt, Mrs. West\nMiss Joan Mulloy,' who has been\ncamping at Koolaree, has joined\nthe mat Sanca.\nMiss Sheiela Wadeson is spending\nthe holidays- with her maternal\ngrandmother at Lake Chelan, Wash.\n.Miss Marjory Young has returned\nto Vancouver,, where she is in training in the New Westminster Hospital after spending a holiday with\nher parents, Mr,, and Mrs. Ross\nYoung..   \u25a0 \u2022 . \u2022    ,       -\nThomaB Roberts is spending a vacation in Vancouver..\ngovernment\"\nIf racial separation came the Africans would have no alternative,\nbuf to accept it for.the sake of\npeace. But it would have t be equitable.'\n\"The division of the country and\nits assets must be proportionate to\nthe ratio of races,\" said Dr. Xuma.\nWynndel. * *s\nWYNNDEL, B. O\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nBiJOwn have-returned to their home\nin Lethbridge after visiting Mr. and\nMrs. Standize, * -\n-,-Mr. and Mrs.-A. Schade have left\ntor ;a holiday at Vernon. :>\nMrs, *Hackett .is, visiting relatives\nat Medicine Hat and Calgary.    . ,.\nMiss . Virginia' Payne returned\nffom Camp Koolaree. \u25a0  \u2022 \u25a0 ,\nMr., and Mrs. Dunbar and son\nBobby and Miss Ward .of Edmonton\nare visiting here; guests of Mr.,-^nd\nMrs. G. A. Ward.:  '.,\nMr. and Mrs. K. Wright and Ruby\nNorthy returned .to Edmonton arid\nRed Deer after visiting Mr\/and Mrs.\nW. Northy,' ' Y \u25a0-\nMrs. G. Zeznik and family-of Nelson were visiting Mr. and Mrs. B.\nPopovich ancj Mr. and Mrs. P. Popovich.\nJimmy and Tony Mannarlno, of\nCranbrook are visiting Mrs. V.\nMannarino.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 9, 1949 \u2014 3..\nNew Denver\n\u25a0     \u25a0\/ - \u25a0',\" -     .;,',;\nNEW DENVER, B.c!-Mrs. I. J.\nKlein and three children of Nelson\nare guests of the 'former's sister,\nMiss Dora M. Clever..'\u2022-,\nThomas Steenhoff\" motored \u25a0 to\nKlmberley., He was accompanied\nback by daughter, Beverly, who-visited with friend;. Miss Joan Kennett and Miss Carol Dixon also accompanied them from ^Kimberley\nand will be their guests for the\nHolidays.. .\n. Miss Norah Woods,'. P.H.N., is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nWoods,at Naramata, B.C.\nDave Powell of Vancouver, who\nwas visiting Tom Pearson,, is visiting Mr,' and Mrs, N, C. Tattrle, and\ntwo sons, Stephen and'Allan.\nMr. and Mrs. Bert Lamb of Roblson, B.C., were guests of Mr. -and\nMrs. Walter G: Thrlng. '.\nColin J, Campbell, who was a\nguest of his parents arid brother,\nMr. and Mrs. LSslie R. Campbell\nand Donald, also his brother-in-law\nand sister,' Mr, and Mrs, Walter G.\nThrlng, has returned to Port\nArthur. Y \u25a0:\u25a0 *\u25a0  ;.       \u25a0. '7j:\n;. Mr. and Mrs. James Passmore.and\nfamily of Kamloops visited his nephew,' Mr., and Mrs.. Walter ,G.\nThring. . , \u25a0 - ' -\n, Mr. and Mrs. V. D. Craig, who\nwere recently married,at Needles,\nB.C., have taken up residence in the\nDu'Mont Cottage,\n.'Arnold W. Nesmith,-who was visiting his brother-in-law and sister,\nMr, and Mrs, L. R. Campbell and\nson Donald, returned to Trail.\nONLY CANADIAN TO\nCAMPING CONFERENCE\nNEW, YORK, Aug. 8 (CP) \u2014\nMuriel Davies, Girl Guide Provincial Camp Advisor In Quebec, will\nbe the only Canadian attending the\nInternational Camping\", Conference,\nAug. 10-15 near Pleasantville, N.Y.\n-\u25a0 Miss Davies, a Montreal school\nteacher, will speak on tGirl Guide\nmethods of camping in Canada.\nKaslo* **\nKASLO, B. C-Miss Charmaine\nGruchy of Vancouver, Is spending a\nholiday with her friend, Miss Dorothy Powell.\nMrs. T7 Jones; of Trail is visiting\nher brother, Cameron Clarke.\nBilly Tlnkess has as guest his\nfriend Garry Gilker. of Trail.\nMrs. J. J. Strachan, accompanied\nby her son James, visited her son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs,\nD.ouglas Strachan in Trail, i \u25a0    \u25a0\nMisS Agnes Meers, who has been\na patient in the Victorian Hospital,\nreturned to her home at Shutty\nBench on Friday.\nMiss Mae Meers returned to' her\nhome at Shutty Bench from an absence of five weeks spent at Silver-\nton. ,    '\nMiss Patricia Abey returned on\nSaturday from Calgary where she\nhas .been a student in Garbutt\nCollege.\nSays Modern Belief\nIs in \"False God\"\n. CARDIFF,. Wales (CP) - The\nmodern philosophy of life \"rejects\nriiercy'and pity and creates a-new\nfalse god of the state,\" Bishop W,\nT. Havardiof St..Asaph, Flintshire,\ntold the Order of St John of\nJerusalem.-,   ,\n\"When a man parts company\nwith true religion he invariably and\npromptly creates for himself a false\ngod in whom he finds his worship\nand allegiance.\n\u25a0 \"That* false gqd is the absolute\nstate.\".'.-        .-,;..*\nThe bishop urged young, people\nto offer their services to the St.\nJohn Ambulance.- Brigade' \"on be*\nhalf of .the injured, siok and needy.\"\nFreeman Furniture C07\nPHONE TIB - NEL80N, B.C.   \"\nThe House of Furinture Values\nBUY\nON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\n10 MONTHS TO PAY\nVour t S $ Buy Mora at Freeman's\nWOMEN'S CHURCH\nLEAGUE HAVE TEA\nON KASLO LAWN\nKASLO,   B.C,   Aug. ,B \u2014The\nWomen's   League   of  the   Sacred\nHeart Church held a successful tea     .\nand bake sale on'the church lawn\non Saturday afternoon,\nThe bake table held a choice selection ot home  cooking also  tho\nvegetable With a large Variety .of:\nfresh vegetables and \"were well patronized.', !. \u25a0 ,,'7\n'Under the supervision of the.\nPresident, Mrs. Bendis,'were Mrs.'\nW. McDonald, Mrs,\" W. White,-Mrs.\nC. McDonald and Miss M. McDon-\naid serving at the bakl table, vegetable table and also selling useful-\narticles in sewing- ,\nMrs. Brochier.i Mrs. Furiak,' Mr\u00bb7\nC. J. White, Mrs. Surina, Mrs. Ba-\nsista and the Misses Anna Surina, .\nMary Furiak, and Hele Surina took;\ncare of the rush at the tea tables.; -;*;\nSays Old Folk '\nOften Lonesome\nCHICAGO, Aug, 8 (AP) \u2014 Thei\nfashion in grandmothers has chang-     ,\ned radically, a University of Chicago\nsociologist says, arid he thinks It's\"\nfor the best. Y\nProfessor Ernest W. Burgess told .\nthe University's first Institute on\nProblems of Old Age today \"the    .\nday Vhen grandmothers accepted .a\nstatus as old and went,to church' .\nori Sundays in black dresses and\nblack silk bonnets, is gone forever;\n\"But older people are frustrated  \u2022\nto a.greater extent than people in\nother ages . ..\"\nBurgess said'the basic yearnings\nof aged persons are much the same '\nas those of their juniors\u2014primarily--\nfor economic, emotional and spirit*\nual security. -\nBut, \"as a person becomes older\nhe loses by* death' his spouse and\nhis friends. Many older persons,-*''\nfeel pushed aside. Lonesoriieness is\nprevalent among older persons. He\nsaid activities are necessary to\"\ncompensate, for loneliness\/'\nSell by Classified\u2014Be SatlsHed\nSUN DRESSES\n\u2022 1\n1     Sizes 12 to 20\n$11.95\nFashion First Ltd.\n, New Shipment of\nCotton Dresses\nAll sizes\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE ..\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\n|\\ooTENAY Valley I\/aikyi\n,  *.   7 t\nICEUTEA\nMake tea double strength and\nwhile still hot pour Into glasses\nfilled with cracked ice . . .\nAdd sugar and lemon to taste.\nn\nSALADA\ngotta keep feeling RIGHT...\nliving gets no cheaper!\n\"Can't afford to slow up with tlie kids... Jane... today's prices\ngotta keep throwin' that punch ., .that means \u2014 keep fit.\"\nYou have to feel right and work right to be in the money. YOU\nCANT if you're troubled hy irregularity due to lack of bulk foods\nin what you cat. ' .'\u25a0.'\"\nPost's Bran Flakes help provide gentle, natural laxative action.\nHelp make food wastes move promptly\u2014keep you feeling fit and\non your toes.  ;*';\nEnjoy wholesome wheat nourishment too \u2014Post's Bran Flakes\nare made with other parts of wheat. :     :     .\n. , \u25a0\u25a0    ;   \u25a0 A Product of\nAnid flavorful Post's Bran Flakes make good eating      o.n\u00aboi Fpodi\netiery morning. Large or regular pack-\n._\u2022      age. Insist on POST'S BHAN.\nt\nIMit'lll) llallaUM   * J\nSure-'fie needs\nBRAN FLAKES-\/ikes em fooT\nWITH  OTHER  PARTS  OF WHIAT\n I       \u25a0\u25a0'.-,   Established April 22, 1902.\nBritish ColuniJMaV\nMoil Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY.' LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street Nelson.  British Columbia,\nAuthOtiied as Second Class Mali,   .\nj Post Office Department Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN P&B8S AND\nTHE AUDIT titJMiAU OF CIRCULATIONS, a\n'  TUESDAY,: AUGUST 9,; 194?\n?Questiotts?\n. \"Converts\" To Communism\n-, V(henr*^ter months of,protest over\nfailure to repatriate Japanese prisoners of war, the Russians sent back a\nbatch of converts to Commuhism\/theire\nWas more than a little suspicion that\nconversion was the price ol; thei ticket\nhome. The manner in which the repatriates united in. singing \"The, liitertia-\ntiotiale\" as their ship pulled Jniro Mal-\ni wiri and the enthusiasm with-which\nthey talked of Marx and'Lenln and of\nlife under'Stalin gave the impression\nof caref uWstaging.. So, stod, did their insistence that conversion was their own\n-idea,, that their'orie object now was to.\nenlighten their countrymen.lt all was\ntoo closely a duplication of the repatrU\nation of prisoners of war .to \u2022 Germany\nand to other European countries which\nnow are Soviet satellites. . y\nIt is not surprising, therefore, .to\nhear the story which Shi'geru. iMizu-\nhara, a former Japanese baseball'star,\ntells of his experience. He says that\nprisoners who refused to become Communists Avere ,either shipped into the\ninterior of Siberia or subjected to harsh\ntreatment as,\"war criminals or holders;\nof mistaken ideologies,\" the term employed to explain why some prisoners;\nwere not being sent home. Those who\nbecame Communists had a chance to\nwrite a letter of thanks to Stalin for\nthe treatment they, had received at\nRussian hands. Only when, this li id\nbeen done were they eligible for repatriation. This causes Mizuhara to observe: \"Only a few-of the repatriates\nare real Communists, I think.\" Sending;\nback'shipments of avowed Communists;\nmay have been the Russian idea of a\ngood joke on General MacArthur, who\nhas been having troubles enough with*\nthe Reds already in Japan, but if. the\nrepatriates turn out to' be .ho better\nconverts than Mizuhara the last laugh\nmay not be in the Kremlin.\n' Open'to any reader. Names of persons\nasking queiilona will not h\u00bb published.\nthere la (lo charge for this service. Quel-'\ntions Will not b^ answered by\nMAIL except where there Is obvious necessity for(prlvaoy.  ,.\nScotty, Nelson\u2014When was Harry Lauder born?\n'\u25a0' 187J0.     *   \\..- '\nT. H, SalmO-i-What'ls ttieant by the Devil's\nBooks?\nFlaying cards, probably because of their\nassociation with gambling and fortune-telling.\n.totalled $11,960,000,000 as compared\nwith $10,390,000,000 which they made\n* in 19*7. Incidentally; this Has little' to\ndo With -the comparison in.: questiot),\n' but in 1939 Canadians only earned $4,-\n291,000,00b,    7\n'     In 1948, the people Of 'this country'\nspetit $10,o6o,000,000t or 83.6% of their\nincomes,' On goods and services. They\n'\u25a0 saVed $I,146,o06,O06\u00bb or ?'.8& of thejir\nincomes. In 1947, by comparison, they\nspetit $8,949,000,000,-of 8B.i% Of their\n'incomes, and mailaged tb 'save-$890,-\n000,000, or 6'.*2fool what they took in.\nThS fact la-that,, in 1048* although\nCanadians spetit more on good? and\nservices than they did in 1947, th,e proportion of their spending to their total' , Mrs. H\u201e Nelsott-Miy grandmother, wheh'I was\nvincomes w*as less.than it was the year\nbefore.   And, furthermore, not only\nwere they able to, save more in 1948\nthan they did in 1947, but the proportion of savings to total earnings was\ngreater in 1648. :'\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0. .'7'v \u2022\u25a0\n\u25a0 In taxes, the citizens of this cbuntry '\nalso had a break in 1948. In 1947,- 7.7%\nof :their 'total personal income went to\n- the Government in the form of direct\ntaxes, last year,, this figure dropped to\n'6.8%.* '  -.    '    '       X,      \u25a0\nAll of which is pretty-dull reading\nand.not calculated to add to otir literary status, but powerful pro'of that\nWe were, as a nation, pretty \"well\nfixed\" last year. . '-,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.*\"\nSizzlitig Giti^tt St^mhi^ei\nDry But Illuminating\nThis may sound strange in view of\nthe never-ending \"beef\" of peoplethat\n( they're' having a barrel of trouble keeping their heads above Water in this day\nand age of high living, costs, but last\nyear the average'. Canadian earned\nmore money, spent more money, and\nwound up by saving* more money than\nhe did,the year before.\nThis may not \"have applied to you\nas an individual, but it stands true for\nmost, Canadians?, and the source of our\nI information is the authentic and reliable Dominion Bureau, of Statistics. If\nyou didn't fall.in the category; of those,\nwho were better off in all pecuniary\nways in 1948 than in 1947, the following\ndry-as-dust butv nonetheless illuminating paragraphs may not cheer you but\n; they should certainly prove that Canadians were mighty well off in. a world\ngenerally beleaguered by financial\nworries. ,\nIn 1948, Canadians' personal incomes\nPalmy Days ,A.re Oyer\n- Well, there's One'{fan which is not going\nto take any business recession lying down. It\nknows that the sellers' market is bverV It recr\nognizes that the. type of salesmanship that permits a customer to buy* it he is polite enough\nnot to question the price, [reasonable enough\nnot to inquire about a guarantee, and fair\nenough not to ask for delivery exlcept at,the\nseller's .convenience,, Is not likely 'to produce\n; a spectacular sales record in this more \"difficult'' period. ' .\nSo the firm advertises for a salesman, ac-:\n: cording to a United Press dispatch, as follows:'\nMust be a salesman, expert driver, 7\n..  .talker,   liar,   hunter,, fisherman,   dancer;-   -\nfi aveler, bridge player, poker player, golf\nplayer, diplomat, financier, capitalist, phll-.'.'\u2022\u25a0\nanthroplst authority on palmistry, chem-  *\n:\u25a0:\u25a0   istry,   physiology,   dogs,   cats,   horses,.,\nblondes, brunette's,..and\"redheads; A man\n' of vision and ambition; after-dmner speak-   '\ner, night owl\u2014work all day, stay Up all .\nnight, and appear fresh the next clay. :\"'\u25a0\n.  Must be a man's man, a ladies' man: a\u25a0;.'_[:\nDemocrat, Republican, New Dealer, Old\nDealer, techhiclahj politician,, mathemati-\n\".'   cian, and niechariic to represent established \u25a0\n:;\" chemical manufacturer.      7 'vY\nTo the salesman trained in the post-war\nboom the demands.may seem unreasonable.\nButto any old hand at.the game this advertisement says only that the \"good.old days\" are.\ncoming back\u2014days when a man had' to earn'\nhis salary, and sometimes even had-to hustle'\na bit.r-Chrlstian Science Monitor.\na child in Yorkshire, used to sing a little\nrhyme about the good and bad days tor\nwashing clothes. It began, \"If you wash\noh Monday, YpU've ail 'the- week .to dry,\"\nbut I cannot remiihber the rest\nPerhaps this is it: :''.'\"\n\u2022\"If-you WSjh on Moftday,    -\n.   You've allithe week to drjrj   .    ...\nIt you wash on-Tuesday, 7\nYou've let a day go by;       ,}Y\nIfyou wash pn Wednesday; . (\nThere's: halt-the Week awayi*  .   v\nIf-you wash on Thursday,\nYou choose an awkward dayj'. \u25a0\u2022\u2022',, Y\n, ,   H you wash on Saturday,    .   '.:\"->*. i .,\"\nYou're very siow Indeed.\"     ;,..-.;\u2022\u25a0,\nP. H., Nelson--,Where can * obtain p'ls'ns from\nwhich to build a model of.the old \"Beaver\"-\nwhich used to be ori the Pacific? .\n. Write to the Editor of The Beaver Magazine, c\/o Hudson's Bay Company, Wlhnipeg,\n:Man.        ,{- \u2022\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0    ,.-.'\u25a0*     '    7Y '   \u25a0\"\u25a0\nK. 0\u201e Kootenay Bay\u2014How can I remove tea\nand coffee stains from linen tablemats?\nSoak overnight in. clear, cold water, then\nrinse ln a mild solution ot sodium hypochlorite.\nP. D., Nelson\u2014How is propane gas made?\nPropane gas is 'a byproduct of natural gas.\nTraveller,- Nelson\u2014What Is the elevation of\nCalgary?      \u2022'\n,    3436 feet \u25a0 .\nDeaths\nBy the 6W4dl4n Press Y\nNEW' WESTMINSTER, .B. C. \u2014\nCapt JameS Waddell, 47, Master of\nthe Donaldson Line's SS Lakonia.\n; OKA, .(Sue.\u2014Mrs. WorWick Fielding chipman, 51, wife bt' Canada's\nHigh Commissioner to India,\n-CLEVEliAfJto - George M.- Stein-'\nbrerlWer, Ug, President of thi KinS-*\nman Stolnsit Company.\nGODALMING, Surrey, Eng.-;\nProf. PelrcyV BdivSrd Newb&rry, 80;\nleading British Egyptologist . .\" ;\n. BOURNEMOUTH, E'riJ. t-.Slr\nRowland Hirst. Barren, 91, former\nMember of Parliament-    '...,'\u25a0   '\u2022\nLONDON r-fir,, jameS Theodore\nInskljl, 81,' oldest Bishop - of the\nChurch of England at his retirement last.Sept\nGUELPH, Orit, \u2014 Dr. H8irvey\n.dlare, - 77,,.. wmely-kriown psychiatrist.- :\"'\" -..*:':\u25a0\nNEW Y(?RK\u2014William Trotter, 78,\nfotinerVice.-PJesldeht of the International Typographical Union\n(A,Fla.)V \"':-'\"'\nLONDON\u2014Sydney W.-PaBcall, 72,\nIbririer. President Of fcotsfy Ihter-\nHas Narrow Escape\nWhen Struck By\nBus Trolley Pole\n-VANdotiVtft; i; c\u201e Aug. ixepy.\n\u2014Barry Brown, ,18, had a narrow <\nescape from death early today, when'*\na bus trolley pole pierced the windscreen of: his car. Brown suffered\nhead injuries. The pole Whipped between the spokes of the car's steer-''\nIng wheel,' struck Brown fn the,\nstomach, ripped his-shlrt, and swung\nback but through the windshield,\nFoils Holdup Attempt\nVANCiJUVER, B; C; Aug. 8 (CP)\n\u2014An attempted gas station holdup\nearly today was apparently {oiled\nby the.level-heafledneBS ot,tHe sta*\ntion attendant.\nWhen told, by the WOUldbe robber, \u2022\n\"Don't move tor.'10 ljiinutes,\" at-\",\ntendarit Robert Kean struck him and\nejected hint from the office. Tha\nmtui is tjelng soUghiy by polite,\n\u2014Ciehtral Sres's Canadian\n. Joan Lulzor, 20-month-old staling Citizen of sizzling New York,\nknows lust how. It feels on so-called \"dogs days.\" She was finding\nsomo relief. In an Ice cream treat wheli she happened upon a panting\npup Who Was looking for a breeze\u2014even a warm breeze In front of a\npet shop, Joan, graciously shared her treat and the pup didn't Walt\n\u25a0 to bo coaxed.   \u25a0'.'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022<    .\n_J\u2014-. ,\u2014.\u2014. 1\u2014ta. V .\".-   ..'. rrr^- :\u2014t '\u2014^~ 1\u2014;\u2014.\u2014:\t\nModern Public Enemies 'Small Hull\/\nOvershadowed by Spies, Traitors\nBlueberries That Is\n\u25a0 The proof of a pudding\u2014blueberry, pr any\nother kind\u2014is'in the eating. But tne proof of\nthe blueberry \"comes before that Folk gather\nblueberries,:we are convinced, not simply because they are edible, but because\u2014their being\nedible providing the excuse\u2014it is Just plain'\nfun to pick tt\/cm.\nBlueberry pickers discuss their favorite\nterrain as golfers compare famous courses, and\na pint in so many\u2014or, rather, in so few\u2014minutes is equaf Jo a hole in one. '\nPicking blueberries for sport Is like cutting wood for use, Of the latter occupation it is\nsaid that wood-that ;a man cuts far himself\nwarms him twice. Of blueberries it may be\nsaid that berries picked for the delight of the\npicking provide yet another delight, along*\nabout 6 or B:80 at a farnihouse or Summer-\ncamp table. ,  .-\nWe could go on, but that wojild only postpone the important part of our message. Which\nis that a crop-reporting service has just noted\nindications for a very good crop this year-\nblueberries, that is.\u2014Christian Science Monl-,\ntor. ,'\"\u25a0.' . \u25a0, \u25a0     \u25a0  Y\nLooking .Backwards,\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom the Dally News of Aug. 9, 1939\n, -IMtLon''. newest power boat to siieed\nthrough the Kootenay Lake waters on a trial\nrun is Dr. Ray Shaw's \"Mi* Nelson\". The boat\nwas designed and built in Nelson by Robert\nClerihew. Miss Nelson will challenge Lou Gilbert's iamed Ladybird as champ of Kootenay\nLske wlftn they meet In the Kinsmen Regatta\nAug. 23.\nA 6000-gallon wooden storage tank for as-\n. phalt is under construction at the Department\n, of Public Works workshop on Front, Street,\nThe tank measures 11% feet in diameter and\nabout l^feet high..\n,   .    '\u2022\u25a0\u25a0      '\u25a0\u25a0 V *-.\u2014,--i  :.. k\n-J'.i    \u25a0' &YEARS AG6      \u25a0\u25a0>       t\nFrom the Dally News Of Aug, 9, 1924\n' Five young ladies, graduates ot the Kootenay Lake General Hospital training school,\nlast night went through their graduating exercises at St Saviour's Memorial Hall. Graduates were \"Uiss Rose Watts, Miss. Kathleen\nMulr, Miss Vera Doig, Miss Edna Doig and\nMiss Amy Helme. William -Irvine presented\nthe diplomas:\n,.L. F. Gilbert, owner of the Ladybird, Nelson's speedboat, and holder of the Kootenay\nLaunch Club Shield, yesterday.wired a chair\nlenge'to T. V, Wilson of Ka'slo for a,20-mile\nlaunch race to be staged Wednesday afternoon. ,        \u2022'.\u201e\u25a0:\nWYEAR8AGO\nFrom The Dally Neyit of Aug. 9J 1949\nAt the meeting of the City Council last\nright a resolution addressed to the Board of\nTrade was, unanimously passed, pointing out\nthat it was of the utmost Importance,, to the\nCity of Nelson that the proposed C.P.R. tourist hotel should,be located either within tho\nCity limits or* adjacent to the CJty'.-, \u25a0\nWillfem' Percy Thompson of* Nelson has\nbeen appointed a notary public for the Province of British Columbia.\nby ALEXANDER R. GEORGE\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 8 (AP) \u2014\nThere isfl't a single big-name gangster on the Federal Bureau of Investigation's list of the 12 jnost-'\nwanted criminals in the United\nStates.' ';\u25a0\u25a0    '\u25a0\nEight are described by F.B.L officials as dangerous with gun-, or.\nknife. But compared with-John Dillinger, \"Baby Face'' \u25a0 Nelson 'and W\ndozen other trigger mett of the '30s\nthe 1049 model public enemies are\nurikriown to the general public.,',\nWhy the compar'ative.obscurity bl'\nthe eight \"dangerous\" men and four\nsmart swindlers on the current list\nof top criminals?\n. 1. Their operations have not been\nso big'' or sensationally reckless as\nthose of the bank-robbing' dnd^kid-\nnapping gangs of the;'30s.' \u2022\n\\2. F:B.I. actiylty in spy -and-.trea-.\nsoh cases, combined with international tensions ln the atomic age,\nhas overshadowed investigation of\nthe so-called .orthodox types , of\ncrime. Crooks who might otherwise\nwin- headlines look like small stuff,\nBetween 1929 and 1935 there Were\nmore than 3000 bank robberies in\nthe United States. In 1932 alone\ntheVe Tifere 606 bank robberies by\narmed 'gaiigsters.' They frequently\nkilled police officers and others\nWho 'got in their way.\ntn, 1934 three F.B.I, agents- met\ndeath In;''gun* battles with these\ngangsters. The name of bank rob\"\nber Dillinger was more familiar, to\nAmericans that year than that of\nAdolf HltlOr, already the . blood-\npouring master of Germany... .\nOnly, two of the, dangerous men\non the 1049 most-wanted list tire\ncharged with murder. A ^Wrd is a\nconvicted \"murderer. The first two\nare wanted for, knife killings, and\nthe.other is a gunman,       ,    -i\nIsham Danube Hobbs Jr.- is alleged to have entered the home ot\nMrs, Louis Fleming,: near HUnts-\nviil'e, Ala., killed Jier with a knife\nand. injured: two' Other persons,.The\nF.B.\"I. says that Hobbs, \"extremely\ndangerous\" with knife orgun; has\nbeen a fugitive since the slaying\nMay 5,-1944.      ' ,    \u25a0\n\"MAROON\" EYE8\n'  A'44-year-old (Negro) man with\nmaroon\" eyes and a medium-copper complexion, reported to carry\na long knife, is wanted for the murder of a man in a fight in Washington, six years ago. The alleged slayer is William Henry Evans, of medium build nd with a scar below\nhis left eyebrow.  . \u2022-\"   \u25a0';.\"\nLeft-handed. William R. Nesbit\nescaped in September 1946 from the\nSouth Dakota State Pehtitehtlary\nat Sioux Falls. He was serving, a\nWm for murder.-' Nesbit and two\naccomplices shot .and killed a man\nand severely wounded.a Woman to\npre*ent their implicating-; them In\na $37,000 jewel^ robbery at Sioux\nFalls, ;iowa.   \u2022'..-   V\nThe four confidence men on the\nmost-wanted list are rated by the\nF.B.I. as Smooth\" operators, they are\nCharles Jean Dorssner, Frederick\nE. Peters, Nenry Holmes and Dus-\ntean A. Young.\nHarry Holmes, 54, and; London\nborn, has posed as a British brigadier and ' Industrialist to obtain\nmoney 'under false pretenses. ..\n\u2022   Your Horoscope     .\nLove, family and\/or social activities seem\nmost prominent in the vibrations for your next\nyear. Happiness and success should be the lot\nof the child-born today. '-,'.\nThey'll Dp It Every Time\nBy Jimmy ifatlo\nOwiLXsl\nA&SIE.THE gAB1\/ SlTTlER\/llPTOED\nIN EVERy TEN MWU4TeS TO SEE\nIF LITTLE E66HEAD WAS O.K.\n#UT-J(JST AS THE PAREMT5 <5ET\nHOME, Ll'L E<S6HEAD PRESENTS\n.THIS (3RUESOME SCEKlE-     '    X\nI feel sorry for chronic invalids\nlike Ann. WhSh the family-gets\nUsed tb. their condition, they, can't\nget any sympathy except by gettin'\nworse,      .\nTWO MORE POLIO\nCASES AT COAST\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Aug. 8 (CP)\n\u2014:PoliiJ Incidence continues'' to .rise\nhere, with another 'two cases re\nported in the city today. ,'\n. Since Jan. 1,- a total of 74 victims\nhas been treated at, -the General\nHospital\u2014a .figui'e'far ahead of the\n1948 peak.\n:' Medical official's have indicated\n'August may be.the peak month of\nthe dread disease.   '\nnationals-\u25a0_   \"i   ,\u25a0'\u25a0' ,.',-,,\u00bb,,_\nSYDNEY-WlUlani George Ma-l\ngrath, 93, reputedly oha  of Aus-f..\ntralia's riChSSt mSn. \u2022. \u25a0''.\n'\u25a0 Fathers and iRelr sons like Old Chum\nbecause It fits Into a man's smoking\npattern. It's |ust riflht for day-in-day-\nout smoking. Enjoy Old Chum's slow-\nburning qualities and fresh, cool, rich\nflavour. Ask your tobacconist for a\npackage or half-pound tin.\nBta who llln * tobatto thai', ahnys good\nWOOED fmST-KATS SINCC 'I\nOLD CHUM\nCUl   FINE   FOR   ROILING   YOUR   OWN\nGet 70 Years\nIn Love\nTriangle Slaying\n- GBDAR HAPIDS, Is.,\"Aug. 8 (API\n\u2014Dr. Robert' .0. Hutledge, Jr., :.of\nSt Louis^today -was sentenced -to 70\nyearjin prison, for the love triangle\nslaying* of 28ryeSr-old Byron C.\nHattman. ,\nDIstriot Judge' J. E. Heiserman\ntold, the young pediatrician that he\nhad committed a serious and vicious\noffence. \u25a0\u25a0\u2022 \"  ,\n' \"The sentence,\" he said; \"must be\nsevere\u2014for'a'long time\"\nThe,-judge stipulated that the sentence be served \"at hard labor.\" i\n. ThS-.Court.said that because.of the\nstatutes and honor' time for good\nbehavior Rutledge's period of Imprisonment would be approximately 30 years \"at worst\"      \"i   -v\nDuring the trial of Dr..RutleiJge,\nthe defence contended that. .Hattman met death in a fight Dec. 14\nin, a Ceder. Rapids- hotel room. The\nfight, the defence said, followed tfie\ndoctor's attempts to persuade-Hattman to cease his attentions to, Mrs,\nRUtledge, -\nThe- defence claimed Hattman\n\"seduced and debauched\" Mrs. Rutledge following, a sailboating -and\ndrinking party last summer.\nThe State contended that Dr. Rutledge lay in wait for Hattman in the\naircraft engineer's hotel room,' and\nkilled him through motives of \"jealousy, extortion and murder.\" ;\nTeachers Start 7\nFive-Day Convention\nOTTAWA, Aug, 8-(CP).\u2014;.While'\nCanadian youngsters,are lapping up\nthe:few,remaining-weeks of Sum-'\nmer holidays, tHbir, teachers,have\nsettled \"4owh to: a ^flverday grind\nof, convention meetings,  , . 77:\n-The 28th annual conference of the\nCanadian Teachers Federation,\nin the.Dominlon, opened today with\nwhich speaks for close to 80,000 public' separate and, secondary-teachers\na series of closed executive kni 'directors meetings.      .-' .    ','\nPHONE- 144   FOR' CLASSIFIED\nEvery day\nsatisfied -customers\ntell us...\n\" Amazing results witK my\nDaily News Classified Ad\"\nAfter housecleoning sell \"white ,\ny   elephants\"  through  FQR SALE.\nMISCELLANEOUS Columns^-\n.ii\n3\u00ab\"\"\n\t\n Qflit\nWoodcock Retirement Won't Solve\nWorld Heavyweight Title Tangle\nBy FRED KERNER\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nNEW YORK, Aug. B (pP)-Hopes\nthat Bruce Woodcock's decision to\nquit the ring might bring New York\nState recognition to the Ezzord\nCharles-Gus Lesnevich fight as a\nworld heavyweight title go, were\ncrushed tonight by Eddie Esgan,\nEagan, State Athletic Commission\nChairman, made it quite clear that\n:ven lt Woodcock doesn't fight Lee\nlavold ln September for the Brlt-\nsh version of the heavy crown,\nWednesday night's fight here will\nust bo an elimination' in their\nlooks. The Commission WIU want\nhe winner to meet Savold or some\nther ranking contender before\nlew York State will recognize a\nferld heavyweight titllst to suc-\need the retired champion, Joe\nbuis.   '\u2022.\"\u25a0,:\nSo the Yankee Stadium, battle\nrill still be billed for the National\noxlng Association title, which\nlharles picked up. in Chicago. 1%\nlonths ago. That means recogni-\non everywhere but in this state\nand In Britain, And what the British Boxing Board of Control Intends\nto do it lt gets no fight nobody can\nsay Just yet\nGOOD FOR BUSINESS\nIn any case, the ' International\nBoxing Club is ready to match the\nwinner of the Charles-Lesnevich\nfight: against. Savold\u2014as soon as\npossible. That would give Vie recently-formed I.B.C. tWo \"title\"\nbouts in a short time, something\nthat would make anybody's cash\n'register play a merry tune. :\nIn the midst ot the title speculation, Charles came out with a stunning pre-battle statement, Said the\nlithe Negro boxer who is laying\nclaim to the heavyweight title after\nyears ot fighting as a light-heavy:\n\"I am confident that I will defeat\nGus Lesnevich in the ring . .\nrealize that Gus Is a hard hitter and\nthat I will have to be on my toes\nall the way.\n\"But that's what I Intend to be.\nI plan to outbox Lesnevich, wear\nhim down and stop him in 10 rounds\nor shorter.\"\nSfwhL $nap^^\nBy REUBEN CIPIN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nHALIFAX, Aug. 8 (CP)-Ia It\namlna and youth or skill and ex-\njrlence that pay off in three-of-\nve set matches in championship\niiinis?\nRecalling Jack Kramer's defeat\n! the veteran Bobby Riggs during\nleir pro tour, some United States\njthorltles claim two-of-three set\nlatches produce taster and better\n:nnis ahd that the longer matches\n[ice too much emphasis ot stam-\nla.\nAlex (Halifax Chronicle-Herald)\nlickerson raised the question last\n\/eel? when Lome Main ot Vancouver, Canada's sixth ranking player,\nItaved oft elimination in the Cana-\nllan Lawn Tennis Championships\nlere by winning, the last three sets.\nThe 19-yeaf-bld ambidextrous\n)avls Cupper dropped the first two\neta of his singles match to 35-year-\nild Don Bauld of Halifax 4-6, 1-6\naid Won the next three 6-2, 6-3,;61.\nfick charged the defeat fo Bauld's\nging legs.\n.EOS COUNT\nHe observed that midway through\nho third set \"youth snd superior\nondjtion began to tell. Bauld's legs\nrere giving out. Shots that he had\nretrieved with deceptive ease ln the\nfirst two sets kept whistling past\nhim Into the Corners. It was the\nold story: In championship tennis,\nif the players are closeiy matched,\nthe winner. IS generally the man\nwith the better'legs.\"\nGRECO MOST\nUNPREDICTABLE\nNick also took time out to note\nthat Montreal's Johnny Grecq is the\n\"most unpredictable fighter In the\nranks of the world's top professionals.\"   ' Y-   '   .'\nHe put it this way: \"Time after\ntime tho clever Greco has disappointed the loyal Montrealers who\nhave wagered hundreds, on him.\nTwo years ago he was the betting\nfavorite against Beau Jack In Montreal. Beau Jack won.\"\n,- Laurent Dauthuille's < fifth-round\nknockout of the Canadian welterweight champion last week followed the \"greatest buildup ever \"given\na fight ln Montreal, A lot of money\nwent down with Greco for once\nagain Montreal had: made him; the\nfavorite.\"\nNick wonders why Dauthullle,\n\"who only last Spring outpointed\nJake Lamotta, should be the underdog in a match against a chronic\nln-and-outer like Grgcb.\"\nConclude Lawn\ntennis Indoors\nVICTORIA, B. C, Aug. 8 ((#)-\n'or the first time in the history of\nhe event several champions were\nrowned on wood Sunday as the\ni. C. Lawn Tennis Championships\nbncluded with play in the. new\nadminton building of the Victoria\n.awn Tennis and Badminton Club.\nOn Saturday the men's singles\nhampionshlp went to. Jim Kroesen\nf San Francisco with a four\" set\n\u25a0i, 11-13, 7-5, 6-4.victory over Jack\nhoemaker of Los Angeles and the\n\/omen's title to Marjorie McCord,\nAo defeated Carol Deim of Santa\nlonica in three sets, 6-4, 7:0, 6-3.\n'Miss Deim and Jean Doyle of San\nliego captured the women's dou-\nles! '   >\u25a0\n'Best match,indoors was undoubt-\ndly the men's doubles final which\n'regressed to five sets of often bril-\nant tennis and was eventually won\ny Kroesen and Jim Livingstone,\nr8, 12-10, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4.\nTeamed with 15-year-old Julie\nampson, Shoemaker went down to\n3-8, 6-1, 6-3 defeat to Miss Doyle\nnd Livingstone in the mixed\noubles.\nBetter Golf\nBy SAM SNEAD\nBy 8AM SNEAD\nWatch'out for jerklness in your\nring. I have seen some mightily\nvful swings that got pretty fair\nSuits because these swings were\nnooth, even though not in the\nght groove. But I have yet to see\nfellow or girl hit a good ball with\njefky swing. The chances are that\nyour backswing is smooth you\n111 swing smoothly down into the\nill. Trying to think of some spec\nI point accounts for as much jerky\nringing as anything else I know,\nben you are swinging at a leaf or\ncigarette butt you are not think-\nof anything so you have your\nring working smoothly as muscles\ne accustomed to work unless they\ne interfered with by some strong\neclal intention. Maybe you will\nve a tough time trying to get\nihe of the things I'm telling you\nthese lessons to, work, Keep prac-\nlng on them until they become a\nbit; one little thing at a time,\nen you'll slide into a smooth\ning.\nWATER SPORTS\nEVENT PLANNED\nAT KASLO\nKASLO, B. C, Aug, 8\u2014The Kaslo\nRecreation .Association plan to hold\ntheir annual water sports event on\nThursday, Aug, 11 under Miss Dorothy Powell, Swimming Instructor\nand Lite Guard at the swlmmlhg\nbeach.     \"\nIn the past five years the KA.K.\nln cooperation with the City, has\nprovided a 'qualified swimming Instructor and {Ufa guard at the swim-.\nming beach ahd the annual water\nsports event will give the public\nan opportunity to witness What has\nbeen accomplished in the training\nof their youngsters. V-\nSnead Falters,\nMangrum in Lead\nCHICAGO, Aug. 8 (AP)-Slamr\nmin' Sammy Snead collapsed for a\ntwb-over-par 74 as pace-setter Lloyd\nMangrum plodded along with.a\nsecond straight 70 to take a four-\nstroke lead today in the $20,000 ail-\nAmerican Professional Golf Tournament.\nMangrum's 64-to-70 gave him a\n54-hole total of 204, 12 under psr.\nSnead, who started the third 18\nhole round only one strike behind\nMangrum, 134 to 135, putted miserably and generally was in hot water\nas he carded his poorest round for\na 54-hole aggregate of 208.\nThat left leading money winner\nSnead deadlocked with two other\nplayers in fifth spot behind a\ntriumvirate knotted at -208, Including: Clayton Haefner, Bill Nary and\nFred Haas, Jr.\nThe day's proceedings left it up\nto defending champion Mangrum to\ncake-walk Into the $3333 first prize,\nunless one of the Haetoer-Nary-\nHaas trio can uncork a sizzling\nround in tomorrow's final 18-hole\nchase.\nDurable Mike Breaks thei Record\n\" Luke Appling of the Chicago White Sox bats\nIn the first Inning against Washington (Aug. 6)\non the latter's home grounds, participating In his\n2154th game at shortstop to break.the 2163 major\nleague record of Rabbit Maranville. Catching for\nWashington. Is Al Evans and umpire Is Cal Hubbard. Appling filed cut te Clyde Vollmer, Washington centerflelder.\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\nAMERICAN HIGH\nTESTS FOR\nSKATERS TOPAY\nAmerican high tests will be conducted at Mary Rose Thacker's\nSummer Figure Skating School in'\n.Nelson today. The high tests rank\nnext to the gold medal tests.\niThree male examiners from California and Seattle will judge the\ncandidates.\n\u2022Of Interest to the public will be\nthe\" free style skating and dance\nsession after 8 p.m;       ,'\u25a0''\u25a0\u2022'\nWilliams Even\nWith Dillinger\nCHICAGO, Aug, 8 (APr \u2014 Ted\nWilliams of Boston and Bob Dillinger of St, Louis are tied for the\nAmerican League batting lead with\naverages of .345 each.\nWilliams moved up four points\nduring the last week to go into a\ntie with Dillinger, who dropped one\npoint   ,-\nDom DiMaggio of Boston- held\nthird place-with .343, an average of\na point from a week ago, when he\nwas in second place,\nVerne Stephens, Boston shortstop,\nled in runs batted in with 112, and\nwas tied with teammdte Williams\nfor. thq lead; in homers, with 27\neach. \u2022 \u25a0\u2022-        '..'': -.'\u25a0'.\nAllie Reynolds of New: York led\nthe pitchers with an average of '.846\ntor 11 victories and 2 defeats.. ;i\nWalks, Error\nTurn Ball Game\nCRANBROOK,; B.C., -Aug. 8.\u2014\nTrailing to the lower, final 2-4,\nMitchells cashed in on two walks\nand an error, for three runs to beat\nZenkeys 5-4 ln the opener of the\nbest-of-five semi-final softball\nseries,tonight.\nHits were even at six each and\nso: wcre errors at two each. -. \u2022\nTeams meet again Thursday while\nByng and Bombers start their best-\nof-five series- Tuesday, night *\nBatteries\u2014Bill Atkinson and Roger Saverie, Red Stevely and Allio\nHugheST\nUmpire\u2014Fred Brown,\nBELIEVES CITY KIDS\nBETTER BALL PLAYERS\nTHAN COUNTRY COUSINS\nTORONTO, Aug. 8 (CP!)-Cy\nMorgan, farm-club director ot Philadelphia Phils ot the National\nLeague, believes city kids are better ball players than their country\ncousins. ., ftj\n\"The elty boys have added opportunity of watching and learning the\ngame from players in organized\nleagues, and there's, the' edge,\" he\nsays.'        ':.  ' ..\u2022\u25a0    . ,<     ':\u25a0'.,':.:\n-And Cy, whose business is to keep\nthe Phils and their 14-club farm\nsystem stocked with players, should\nknow.' He has just completed a\nlightning two-week' tour, of six Ontario  towns: and   cities   teaching\nNELSON TENNIS\nENTHUSIASTS\nl>LAY TRAILITES\nOver a dozen Nelson tennis enthusiasts travelled to Trail Sunday\nto participate in a few friendly\ngames. Those who went from Nel-\nSon were R. Cornwall, M. Major, D.\nBaker! G. Gelinas, M. Malahoff, R.\nStewart, H. Coates and A. McAdam.\nThe ladles who went Were Mrs. R,\nCornwall, Mrs, M. Major, Mrs. W.\nRamsay and Mrs. E. Marsden.\nGeorge Gelinas reported the Trail\ncourts the best courts he had ever\nplayed on. They were surfaced entirely with black top, and very\nsmooth. The lawns and flower beds,\nhe Said, were so well kept that\nthere d|d not seem ta be a single\nplant out of place.     '\nRefreshments-were served to the\ncompetitors,     Y\nMonarchs Take\nSecond of Semis\nWith 7-1 Win\nWith a big,four run burst in the\nfirst;, Inning, Sam Brown's Monarchs coasted to a 7.-1 triumph over\nErnie Colman's Kings at the Civic\nBall Grounds Monday night.\nThis gives the Monarchs a win\napd a tie in the best-of-three series\nand they now need' only a- tie in\nthe next .game to win the right to\nmeet the Pucksters in the finals.,\nKeith Loewen, .pitching for the\nMonarchs, shutout the Kings until\nthe top half of the seventh Inning,\nwhen he walked Merv McMullln\nand wild-pitched him home.   Y,\nAfter a shaky start in the first\ninning, Dennis Colman, pitching for\nthe Kings, settled down and' matched Loewen pitch for pitch. *?;.\n. Loewen ajlowed seven hits, five\nstrikeouts and three walks, while\nColman allowed six hits, two strikeouts and tour walks.\nBob Waller was heavy hitter for\nthe Monarchs with two, hits, While\nTed Swales climaxed their first inning uprising with a homer. Jim\nBall collected three hits for the\nKings.\nBox. score follows:\nKings  * ;.. 000 000 Ml   7   3\nMonarchs,\". 402 100 x\u20147   6   1\nBatteries Were shared by D. Colman and Ball for the Kings, and\nLoewen and' Clinton' for the Monarchs. Umpires were Walter Tozer\nand Jim Valentine.\nThird encounter ih the series will\nbe staged Thursday night\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 9, 1949 \u2014 7\nMusial Moves Up\nIn Batting Race\nNEW YORK, Aug, 8 YAP)-Stan\nMusial .of St. Louis, making a belated rush to the defence of his\nNational League batting crown-, finally has moved among the top 10\nhitters but Brooklyn's Jackie Robinson still Is making a runaway of\nit with a .382 average.\nMuslal's heavy bombing during\nthe last week when He collected 13\nfilts in 27 at bats for a ,481 pace\nsent his average up to ,813. That\ngives. him seventh place. Musial\ntook over the lead ln one department with 27 doubles,\nRobinson, however, completely\ndominates the figures which Include\nSunday's games, Batting .382, Jackie\nenjoys a 33-polnt lead over runner-\nup Enos Slaughter of st Louis at\nyoungsters the fundamentals of the\ngame.  \u2022 ... \u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\n\"Champ\" (loses\nTraining af 180\nPOMPTON LAKES, N.J., Aug. 8\n(AP) \u2014 Ezzard \u2022 Charles finished\nheavy work for his Yankee Stadium\nfight with Gus Lesnevich Wednesday night by sparring four rounds\ntoday with Floyd Gibson, Gene\nJones, Herble Hood and AI Smith.'\nHe weighed 180 at the finish.\nThe Cincinnati Negro, recognized\nin 47 ot 48 states as heavyweight\nchampion, will remain at his training camp until Wednesday morning, driving in for the noon weigh-\nin at Madison Square Garden.\nNelson \u2022Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ.CMUIR\nPhones:   Nelson 77; .Rutland 171; Troll 1001\n. Connections for:\nSALMO \u2014  KASLO \u2014 CRESTON - NAKUSP\nThe Brooklyn second baseman\nalso shows the way in three othci\ndepartments with 80 runs batted in,\n147 hits, ahd 26 stolen bases. He if\ntied wtih Del Ennls of the Phillle:\nand Roy Smalley of Chicago foi\nmost triples, eight.\nRalph Kiner of Pittsburgh smash\ned two homers during the week to\nmake it 28 for the year, tops lh\nboth leagues. Pee Wee Reese oi\nBrooklyn has scored the most runs\n80- ..'.'.\n'Rip Sewell. of Pittsburgh, Inactivi\nduring the week, remains tho top\npitcher In percentages with a 5-1\nrecord but Brooklyn's Don Newcombe with a 10-3 mark is the second man.     \u25a0    '\nCADDY DIES AFTER\nSTRUCK BY GOLF BALL\n' LAKE CHARLES, La., Aug. 8\n(AP)\u2014Struck on the head by.a golf\nball, Beauford McGee, 10ryear-old\ncaddy, died 20 minutes after admission to a hospital here.\nShield your car from wear nnd tear!\nGot fresh, compounded RPM Motor\nOU from any Chevron Gas Station.\n'   For eitra  engine  protection!  it's\nUNSURPASSED\nSell by Classified\u2014Be Satisfied\nPerfect Score\nIn Tyro Match\nCONNAUGHT RIFLE RANGES,\n.South March, Ont, Aug.-8 (CP) \u2014\nA. T. Sharp of Edmonton today\nposted a possible 50 to win the\nTyro match, first event of the 81st\nannual Dominion of Canada Rifle\nAssociation shoot ,        '.;*.' y \u25a0\"-'\u25a0,|\nKeen shooting marked the opening day of the week-long shoot as\neight others posted 46's IA a tricky\nwind. Twenty-five posted 48's and\nthere were 55\" scores of 47 in the\n137 entries shooting at 200 yards,.\nPosting 49's ln the. Tyro match\nwere: L. Salter, Winnipeg; T. B.\nTymchuck, Vegreville, Alta., M. W.\nMorman and P. Lunn, Calgary, M.\n*T. Davies, Winnipeg.\nSell  the Sure Way\u2014CLASSIFIED\n u\n1\n1\nA\nB\nN\nB\nR\nH\nt\n\u25a0it\nIs\nY\nK\nI\nN\nG\nG\nF\nR.\nc.\nH\nP.\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\n6\nS\nE\nC\nK\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nX\n9\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nc\nK\nb\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\n-\u2022\n-\n5\n(W. IW*K1*|\nMras tp*\u00ab l\u00abr. 1t*M <V* MOt_\nCaoi\u2014 0\nanderson \u2014\n\u25a0\n\u2022T*\\ \u25a0 W\ni\":\n^Jj^i\ni\nTHATMOUNTIE PRETEtlDEO TO\nRIDE AWAY, BUT HE'S 60HNA.\nSh)EAtf BACK ANb CATCH THI\/\nFOX THIEF TONIGHT,'}\nOn the Air\nTUESDAY, AUGUST ?, 1949\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL    :    '\n7:00-Slgh'On     ' \\\n7:05\u2014Top of the, Morning\n8:00^-OB.C. News'    '\n6:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For You, Madame\n9:0O--BBC News\nOUS-1 Western Tuner,.\n9;45-\u00ab-Cbffee Time Y'\n10:fS0\u2014Mowing Visit    ,\nlliOO^-Strlke Up the \"Band\n11:1*5-Waltz Invitation\n11:30\u2014Melodia\n12:00\u2014The Notice Board\n12:15-43tirling-NewS :.-.\u25a0'. \u25a0; ''\n12:30\u2014Farm broadcast \u25a0\nIsOtf\u2014Summer Symphony      \u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0,\u2022\n1:30\u2014Afternoon Concert  \u25a0 \u25a0\u2022':\n2:00\u2014In a Lighter Mood\n2:15\u2014The Little Show\n2:45\u2014Commentary .   '\n3:00\u2014Odds and Ends\n3:15\u2014Serenade\n3:30\u2014Divertimento\n4:00\u2014Bernie Braden     .\n4:15\u2014Meet Gizelle . .\n4:80r-The \u2022Marsons \u2022'.\n14:45-*-Patsy and Patches\n5;00\u2014Songs' From The Shows\n5:30\u2014Peerless News .;- |\n5:46\u2014Sacred Heart\n6:00\u2014FishingiForecaBt   \u2022\n6:02\u2014'Teenage Requests\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00-CBC:News '\u25a0\u25a0',-\n7:15\u2014Science Reporter\n7:30\u2014Leicester Sq, to Broadway\n8:00\u2014Alberta Ranch House\n.8:30\u2014Iaocal Talent\n8:00\u2014Eric Wilde-.\n9:30\u2014Conductor's Choice\n10:00\u2014Peebles News '**\n10:15\u2014Points of View\n10:30\u2014DAma\nll:001-Sign Off\n\u25a0\"\u25a0- J-   ' '--.CJAT'''\n810 ON THE DIAL\n6:30\u2014News . '{\u25a0\n6:35\u2014Tom's Ipn\n7:00\u2014News .        ''     .\n7:05\u2014Tom's Inn\n7:30\u2014News      ,,\n7:55\u2014Tom's Inn\n\u20228:00-CBC News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Music Workshop\n9:15\u2014Lucy Linton\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited!\n9:45\u2014Morning Meditations\n10:00\u2014Homemaker's Club\n10:15\u2014Musically Yours\n10:45\u2014Songs by StU Davis\n11:00\u2014Strike up the Band\nll:15-rMid-Mornlng Melodies\n11:45\u2014Wakely Trio \u2022\n12:00r-Luncheon Concert  :.-\n12:30\u2014News\n12:45\u2014Afternoon Recess\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Recess\n\" l:307-Afternoon Recess\n2:00\u2014In a Lighter Mood\n.2:30\u2014Waltz Time\n2:45\u2014Comm: A, Grant\n3:00\u2014Brave .Voyage\n: 3:15r-CJAt Goes Calling\n4:00^-Bernle Braden\n4:15\u2014Club Calerfdar\n4:30-rPlatter Parly\n5:00\u2014NeWs\n5:05\u2014Supper Serenade\n6:30\u2014The King's. Men\n. 7:00\u2014CBC News\n7.15'-'-Science Reporter\/       ' '-\u25a0\u25a0\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square' to Broad-\n.,',. -way.\n8:00\u2014Alberta Ranch House\n8:30\u2014Mystery Theatre.\n9:00\u2014Music by Eric Wijd\n9:30\u2014Henry Brant Conducts\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Sports Cavalcade '\n10:25\u2014Memorable^Moment\n10:30\u2014Drama\n11:00\u2014Dance Date\n11:30\u2014Dance, Orchestra\n11:55\u2014CBC News\nWEDNESDAY, AUG. 10,1949\n>  CKLN\n1240 ON THE. DIAL      .\n7:00\u2014Sign On ,'\u25a0\u25a0'\"'\u2022'-\u25a0'.>\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00- \u25a0'3BC. News -     .\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club \u2022;\n8:45\u2014For You Madame ,\n8:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Westerd Tuhes ,>':\n9:45\u2014Coffee Time\n10:00'\u2014Morning Visit .\n10:15\u2014Old Favourites ,\n11:00\u2014Strike Up The Band\n11:15\u2014Waitz Invitation\n11:30\u2014Famous Voices\n12:00\u2014The Notice Board\n^li'h-Stirllng News ;-'\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n1:00\u2014Summer Symphony\n2:00\u2014In a Lighter Mood\n2:30\u2014The Little Show\n2:45r-Commentary\n3:00\u2014Gdds and Ends\n3:lS\u2014What's New?\n. 3:30-r-Divertimento\n4:00-rBernle Braden\n4:15-SpotlIght,\n4:30\u2014Ed   Hockridge\n4:45\u2014Sleepy Hollow Farm\n5:00\u2014Pops on Parade\n5:30H?eerless News\n5:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n6:00\u2014Fishing forecast\n6:01\u2014Fire Fighters\n6:16\u2014Musical Program\n. 6:30\u2014Cavalcade ot Melody\n7:00\u2014CBC News.\n7:15\u2014Footloose in Europe\n7:30^CBC   Wednesday   Presents-\nh    : tions\n8:00\u2014Tales People Tell\nI0:00r-Peebles News ,\n10:15-r-Book Shelf\n10:30\u2014London Studio Concert\n11:00\u2014Sign Off .\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nMurder Victims\n:\u25a0\";:-\u25a0\u25a0:.:\"\u25a0\u25a0;:\u25a0    \u25a0>\u25a0:\u25a0\n\u25a0 \u2014Central Press Canadian\nThe body of Robert 8mlth McKay, 25, Toronto, Ont., was found\nlast Tuesday In a North York\n\"lover's lane\". Hla body waa riddled \"with, .38 calibre revolver bullets. On Wednesday, the body of\nhla wife, also shot by .38 calibre\nslugs, was found in a parking lot\nstuffed Into the'back seat of their\ncar. >...*..\nMrs. Gloria McKay, Toronto police believe, was shot some distance away from where her body\nwaa found. Hen murderer Is believed to have pushed her body\nIn the back seat of the car ao thai\nIt could be driven through Toronto atreets Unnoticed.\nSudbury Beauty\nFind Cooperation\nOn Cosmic Rays\nStudy at Churchill\nWASHINGTON, Aug, 8 (CP) \u2014\nThe National Geographic Society\nsaid today an expedition studying\ncosmi crays at Churchill, Man., is\nreceiving \"superb\" cooperation from\nCafladian authorities.      ,        ,-\u25a0\nThe Society said in a statement\nthat Dr. Martin A. Pomerantz of\nPhiladelphia, leader of the scientific\ngroup, made this observation In a\nreport shortly after arriving at\nChurchill during the weekend,'\nDr. Pomerantz added that first\nresults of the Study were \"extremely successful.\"\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nAspirant for the Mlaa Canada\ncrown la Plerette Scanlon, 19, a\ntheatre usherette, who haa Just\nbeen awarded the 'Mlaa Sudbury\ntitle In a contest there. _-.\nLead Price Boosted\nNEW YORK; Aug. 8 (AP)-The\nprice of lead was advanced by a\nleading custom smelter today . to\n15% cents' a pound, New York basis. ThiS was a boost of % of a cent\nand placed the metal at. its highest\nlevel.;since-last. April 6..   -\nThe advance was a continuation of\nthe -strengthening of lead prices\nwhich has been under way since\neirly* July when the climb frorn \"le\nyear's low of 12 Cents a pound began.  Y\nToronto Killer Sought\nCentral Press Canadian\nToronto police are engaged, In one of the greatest manhunta In\nhistory searching for a gunman answering to this description. Dozens of witnesses saw him hold up a Toronto grocery store, shoot and\nkill Alfred Layng In hla getaway. The policeman, ahown here, Is\nwearing clothes discarded by the murderer, and a mask drawn\nfrom descriptions of the dozens who asw him face to face.\nTitle Changes Hands\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto\nMary Collins (left), who won the \"Mlaa New York City\" contest July 20, givea the contest trophy to runner-up Lot-ecu Osgood\n(right), of Port Huron, Mich., after being disqualified for competition In the Atlantic-City beauty pageant because she Is under contract aa a model. Grace Downs (centre), head of the model agency\nwftlch sponsored the local contest, explained that Marys agent has'\nrefused to tear up her contract aa haa been ouatomary when'a girl\nunder contract won the New York City contest, and that the title\nautomatically goea to the runner-up.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n\u2022.Asterisk\n8. Talk,\n(s|ang)\n9. Fashion.\n10. Having bars\n12. Light\n(     helmet\n13. City I Neb.)\n14. Apple seed\n5.Stall\n6. Cripple    .\n7. Constellation\n8. Cuts off\nthe head\n9. Weakens\n11. Italian poet\n(poss.)\n15. Employ\n15. Shoshonean 18. Baseball\nIndian\n16. Half an em\n17. Of Spain\n20. Gun\n(slang)\n21. River\n\\ (Afr.)\n22. Signal   '\nsystem\n23. Reflect\n25. Transparent\n,   substance\n26. Lift\n27. Outer\ngarment\n28. Emmet\n29. Room\n32. At home\n33. Hawaiian\nfood\n34. Water:\nFrenqh \u25a0\n85. Hebrew\nmonth\n87. Plague\n39. Large net\n40. Blu.tdered\n41. Hastened\n42: Fathers\nfiOWN\n1. Narrow piece\n2. Drummer\n8. Malt\nbeverage\n4. Soak flax\nteam\n19. Every.\n(Scot.)\n20k Joseph's-\nflower.\n(hyphen.)\n22.Edible ' ....\nmollusk\n23. Coupled\nrailroad\ncars\n24. Hybrid\nanimals\n25. Gazelle\n(Tibet)\n27. Greek\n' letter\n39. Shaped like\na cone\n30. Relieves\n31. Regretted\n33. Window\nsection\nbhqg nann\n\u25a0araaian narci.iM\naanata gibes-h'-,\nnam nLjuinnnu\naananQa aa\nr aaua aaaa\ntiumaig Hrauui-i\nnana aaaa\naa _aaa_GH3\ntaaauac] laciin\naaaata aaHaci\nntnuBa Haaan\nUQHU   HUHtl\n. Yrstrrdny'B Anowef \u25a0\n16. Slight taste\n37. Spread grass\nto dry\n38. Epoch\n19\nmm\n'&\nI\ns\n1\n%\n&\nn\n6\u00b1\n77\/\nDAILY CRYPTOQCOTE\u2014Here's how to work tt:\nAXYDLBAAXR\n,'   '. Is   I. ON'OTEL LOW\nOne letter simply stands for another In this example A Is used\nfor the three L's. X for the two Os. etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\n\u2022Each day the code letters are different.\n\u25a0 A Cryptogram quotation\nK L     I G!     KL     10!     N L U C     K A A T.K B fe\nL K C    E B U V G M     L 0.1 \u2014 A' T K B N B C.\nYesterday's Cr.vptoquotel THESE PROPHECIES THE EVEN]\nVERIFIED\u2014CICEKO. i\n H^n\nCLASSIFIED\npublic Notices\nPHONE 144\nHELP WANTED\n\u2022 wanted;\nEXPERIENCED\nMI N ERS '\nApply to\nEMERALD MINE\n..SALMO, B.CV\nWAiVTED IMMEDIATELY^-TYP-\n1st with, small switchboard experience preferrable. Steady %'etti-\n'ployment if suitable. Apply Sec-\nManager, K. L. Gen. Hospital,\n:Nelson: B.C.: \u25a0 \"\"'     .\n|BOY WANTED\u2014APPLY COMPOS-\nlng  Room,: Nelson  Dally  News\n_ after-5 p.m.   '\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0       ,.\u25a0...   \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0\nIeXPERIENCED WAITRESSES\nWanted. Apply Standard Cafe.\nI^ANTED-EXPERIENCED WAIT-\nresses, New Star Cafe\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESAMUTUAL\" FIRE IN-\nsurance, Co  D L. Kerr, Agent.\nWISH TO ADOPT BABY GIRL, UP\n-. to: two years. Good honie and\n. honest  people.  Box   127,  Grand\nForks, B.C \u25a0 .   ,.   '    -.\nALM*kR HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R,\nDepot Clean rooms and modern\nrates, $1,50 to $2.00 single. $2.50 to\n$3.00 doubles   Vancouver,  B.C.\nFOR PERSONAL .RECORDINGS,\nWeddings, Speeches. Write Box\n105 ' for appointments. Enclose\nPhone number,  '\n10 CBNTSI BIRTH CONTROL IN\nformation and catalogue of hygienic supplies Write Western\nDistributors, 61-L Roy Building.\nVancouver.   \".'   '\u25a0','<\u25a0\nSITUATIONS WANTED\npLDERLY ACTIVE MAN DESIRES\nwork around auto camp, farm,\ncountry hotel. Expert horseman,\nfeeding, fitting pr decorating.'Can\nmilk one or two cows If necessary. Any light I Job similar to\nabove. J. W. Wilkinson, 705 Victoria St. .\nPOOK, AND WIFE AS HELPER\nor waitress, 'desires position in\ncamp or small hotel. Box 1323,\nDaily News.\nfc)DD JOB MAN. PH 256-R Carpen-\nter, pipe fitting, kalsomlning.\n|FROPERTY, HOUSES\/FARMS\nBNAP FOR SALErSTUCCO BUN-\ngalow, insulated. Has 2 bedrooms,\nglassed-in porch, Uvlngroom-din-\ningroom, furnace and: fireplace.\n4% blocks from Baker St., close\nto all schools. Located ;on bus\nroute, Price $5500. Terms. Apply\nMrs.' D. E. Bennett, c\/o C. D.\nBlackwood, 536 Ward St. City,\nfaiRM FOR SALE - 47 ACRES.\nFour-year-old, four-<room bouse.\nBarn for eight heads,.hay shed,\nchicken shed, pig pen, wood shed.\nj With stock: 3 cows, 1 horse, 5\ncalves\u2014or without. Also all farm\nmachinery. Box 1033, Daily News.\nIMMEDIATE POSSESSION Oil\n.North Shore, 6 mi. from ferry. One\nacre, new house. Good water supply. Electricity available. Some\nmaterial to finish house and some\nfurniture included in full price\u2014\n$2200. Apply 704 Baker St, Nelson.\nfOK QUICK SALE^-192 ACRES\nof land, 18 acres under cultivation\n! with Buildings and irrigation; remainder under timber, Must SeU;\nI Cash or Terms. Apply L. Katelni-\nk#f, Blewett B.C.\n(\u2022OR SALE-FOUR-ROOM FULLY\n| modern house on two lots, Just\n1 two blocks from highway on Ma-\n- ple.St For particulars apply. Box\n1\",\" CasfeaA B.C.\"\nHYGIENIC PRODUCTS (RUBBER\nGoods), Best Service, High Quality, Low Prices. Send for our tree\ndata 1 ogu'e. 1.X.L, Specialties,\nG.P.O. Box 57, Toronto, Ont\nMEN'S   PERSONAL   DRUG   SUN-\n- dries,  19  Deluxe assorted $1.00,\nmoiled in plain sealed wrapper.\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed.\nBargain catalogue free, Western\nDistributors. Box 24RN, Regina\nFully Insured and Guaranteed\nHYGIENIC   SUPPLIES   (RUBBER\ngoods)   twelve samples for 60c,\npostpaid in plain sealed wrapper.\n\u25a0 Catalogue included listing books\nbn marriage and modern methods\nof feminine hygiene, General Novelty Co* Dept *N*. 71 Major St,\nToronto, Qnt\nOifie Trip\nAUTO LOANS\nWhen you phone first a single\ntrip will put the cssh In your\nhands. Niagara Finance accent\nspeed and friendliness In all\ndealings. An Auto Loan IS the\nfastest of Niagara's 4 kinds of\nloans. On owner's signature you\ncan get from $50 to $1000.\nNIAGARA\nFinance Company  Limited  '\n. Esfd.-1030. ,\nSuite 1   560 Baker St   Nelson\nPHONE 1095\nfOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nATTENTION RADIO ENTHUSI-\nastsl We have packed and ready\nfor shipment 1\u2014BC\u2014348 6-band\nCommunications Receiver, at $80,\nvlith Dynamotor and Filter. First\ncheck, or money order takes lt.\nKaslo,Radio Shop, Kaslo, B.C.\nARGUS 35- MM. 3 FILTERS, SUN\nshade, f4.5 lens, good condition,\n$30.00. Also1 man's bicycle $25.00,\nand lacrosse stick. Phone day 1023,\nnight 98>B.\nm\nMEDIATE POSSESSION \u2014\n'bur room bungalow with bathroom,   two   bedrooms.   Cash   or\nj terms. Apply 210 Park St (near\nV. hospital) \t\nrOR SALE\u2014LOT AND BUILDING\nat 1387 Bay Ave., Trail, B.C., oc\ncupled by Elite Cafe. Apply W. A\n; POrteous, Trail, B.C,\ntOR SALE - SMALL, MODERN\nhouse, newly decorated, on two\n-developed lots in Falrview at bus\n\u25a0stop. Apply owner. Phone 1044-Y.\n1EACH PROPERTY FOR SALE\u2014\n\u25a0 3-room cabin. Near Balfour ferry\nlanding, Box 1441 Daily News.\n\"OKSALE\u20148 ROOM HOUSE ON 4\nlots dote to school. Oil furnace.\n.Part cash and terms. Phone 423-R.\n1W&LL RANCH FOR SALE WITH\njitock and hay, also garden. Box\nW, Dally News. -       y\nIOUSE  FOR  SALE\u2014125  SILICA\n.(Streqt '\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0 '.-'.'\nVANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nIBS' US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C\nrANTED - CEDAR AND LARCH\npoles, fence posts, piling and R.R.\nties. P. J. Hlookoff, 542 Baker St\nHIP YOUR HIDES TO J. P.* MOR-\n.'gan. Nelson, B. C\nrANTED, ONE ELECTRIC RANG-\nette. Phone 1046-Y.\nBUSINESS AND\nROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nCHIROPRACTORS\n, COLIN McLAREN, D.C, CHIRO-\npractic X-Ray, Spinography,\nStrand theatre Bldg. Trail, PhJHI.\nA8SAYER8 AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n.'\u2022 W.  WIDDOWSON & CO. AS-\nsayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\n,..S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, B. C\nAssayer. Chemist Mine Represnt\nFOR SALE - MODERN COAL\nrangej_Er\u00a3\u00a3Usally new. Also, coal\ncirculating heater. Call at 247\nBaker or Ph. 987-L.\nFOR SALE\u2014RAYMOND SEWING\nmachine, good condition, for $45.\nPhone 588-L.\nFOR* SALE-r-KITCHEN SET, $25;\nStove $15, Bedstead $12. Apply\n1004, Third St.\nRECONDITIONED WEST ING-\nhouse Electric Range, $35. Phone\n1229-X-l.*\nCANADA\nDEPARTMENT of AGRICULTURE\nPrairie Farm Rehabilitation Act\n\u25a0'..'\u25a0..TENDERS    :,7'-.- ,'7\n. Sealed tenders will be received\ni by the undersigned until 2.00 o'clock\n[p.m. Regina Time, Monday, August\n29, 1040, tor the construction of\npipelines and other works on tbe\nWestbank Irrigation Project The\nwork is located In lots 503, 506, 506,\n807, 1119, 2189, Hie,: 2687,. 2689, 3461.\n3496, 1934, 2688, PR5641 and unsur-\nveyed Und west of L4090, ln the\nOsoyoos Land District ot Brltlsn\nColumbia and about 4 miles south\nand west of Kelowna. \u25a0   \u2022\nTenders must be submitted on the\nforms attached to the specifications\nln the envelope provided.\"\n,. The following are the main items\nof work and tho approximate quantities of each:\n1 Welded Steel; Pips,' 20-Inch to\n.22 inch X. ....;.....; 15,700 lin, ft\n2. Welded Steel, Pipe, ,10 Inch to\n18 inch .. .,....:  9,005 Un; it\n3. Welded Steel Pipe,,-! inch to 8\nInch :...:........  81,180 lin. ft.\n4. Steel Pipe Bends, various\nangles-..........:...:...;.. .',,:. 54 bh)y\n6. 4\"   Lot: Outlets,  consisting   of\nValve,: box, key, elbow and\nriser  ... ..    ...... ,...: 125 only\n6 Gate Valves, 6. Inch to 20 inch,\n....';..'.,:....;..:.......;.........  14 only\n7. Gate Valves, 4,Inch ...... 148 only\n8. Miscellaneous Fittings, Tees,\nCrosses, etc   Ill pieces\nft.Galvanized Iron Culvert,\n12 gauge, 36 Inch .-.'.:' 80 lin. tt.\n10. Galvanized Iron Culvert,,'\n14 gauge, 30 inch  120 iln. ft\n11. Galvanized Iron Culvert\n16 gauge, 12 Inch  80 lin..ft\n12. Blow off and Air Release\nValve Units ..:..... : ..6 only\n13. Timber, supplied and placed\n ;......::  3 MFBM\n14. Talus Bench Excvation\n .\u25a0. ,.  800 cu, yd\n15. Hauled Backfill 5,000 cu. yd.\n16. Extra Work  15,000 dollars\nPlans, specifications and form of\ncontract are on view at the following P.F.R.A. Offices:\n418 Public Building,\nCalgary, Alberta.\nP.F.r.A.\nThe Airport   \u25a0\nLethbridge, Alberta.\n010 McCallum Hill Bldg.,\nRegina, Saskatchewan.\nV.L.A. Building,\nVictoria Avenue,\nKamloops,' B..C.\nPlants, specifications and tender\nforms for bidding may be obtained\nI from the undersigned at his office\nIn Regina; Saska hewn, add from\n1 the P.F.R.A.' Office in Kamloops,\nB.C., upon the deposit of Ten Dollars ($10.00) cash of a certified\ncheque for the amount payable lo\nI the Receiver\/ General of Canada,\nwhich deposit- will be redeemable\nupon the, return of the plans and\nspecifications in good order within\none month after -tenders have\nclosed. '}\u25a0\u25a0 '\nAny tenders which are not pre-\npared strictly in accordance with\nthe \"Instructions to Bidders\" may\nI be rejected,\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nBy Order,\nL. B. THOMSON,\nDirector of Rehabilitation,\n910 McCallum Hill Building,\nRegina, Saskatchewan.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nNEW AUSTIN:\nDEVON SEDAN y\nImmediate Delivery\nN\u00abw A40 Auitiri Pickup\nNew A4.0\"Austln panel .''\u2022,-*\u25a0\nUSPD   ,\n1948 Dodge Sedan\n1946 Chevrolet Sec(an\n1942 Ford'Sedan\u25a0'.-'.\n1940 Plymouth Sedan\n1937 Chevrolet Coach\n1937 Olds'Convertible\n1934 Plymouth Sedan\n1930 Nash Sedan'\n1941 Pontiac Sedan   -\nFOR SALE\u2014STROMBERG CARL-\nson mantel radio, 5-tube. 3-burner\noil stove. Phone 525-L-2.\nJACK BOYCE GUN EXCHANGE\nGuns for sale and exchange and\nexpert gun i repairing.\nPIPE-FITTINGS-TUBES, SPE-\ncial. low prices. Active Trading\nCo. 816 Powell St., Vancouver.\nDRY, 12-INCH WOOD FOR SALE.\n$15 a cord, delivered. Ph. 401-Y-3.\nLOST AND, FOUND\nLOST-BABY BROWNIE SPECIAL\ncamera at Castlegar Park Sunday, August 7.-Return to D. Storen,\nSuite 26, c\/o \".23 Vernon Street\nNelson. Reward.\nFOUND-LAST FRIDAY, SMALL\nbrown puppy, believed to be Collie, female, vicinity of Hospital.\nOwner may have same by paying\nfor this ad.\nLOST-TONE-RAY SUNGLASSES\nbetween Baker St and C. P. R.\nFlats last week.' Reward. Finder\nplease phone 129.\nLOST\u2014ONE WHEEL WITH 828x20\nGoodyear tire \u25a0 between Nakusp\nand Nelson: $10 reward. Nakusp\nCartage,'Nakusp, B.C.\ni FOUND \u2014 BLACK PUP, LABRA-\ndor, female, now in care of Geo.\nClerihew, phone. 1305-ti,    .   '\u25a0'.\nDIAMOND  DRILLERS\nATIONAL DIAMOND DRILLING\nCo., Ltd., Drilling and Bit Ser-\nvice Box 508, Rossland. Ph. 420. ,\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\n\u00bbGGEN AND CURRIE, B. C.\nLand Surveyors, Mining anl Civil\nEngineers, Rossland, V e I 0 w n a,\n\u25a1rand Forks. Ph. Rossland 348.\nOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST,\nNelson, B. C, Surveyor, Engineer\nISURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\npHARDY AGENCIES LTD IN\nsurance. Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nMACHINISTS\n'.       BENNETTS LJMITED\nMachine  Shop,  acetylene  and\nIctrlc welding, motor rewinding.\"\n[one 593 324 Vernon St\n|EVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP-\nSpecialists in mine and mill work\ntoo Vernon St., Nelsoa Phone 98\nMachine work, light and heavy.\nSALES AGENTS\nIer Brush Sales \u2014 J. C. McKim\nWrite Box 123 - ?hone.789-R\nClassified Advertising Rates:   -\n15c per Une first Insertion and\nnon-cOnseCutlve insertions,\nlie line per'consecutive Insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive Insertions.\n$1.56 line per ,month  (26 consecutive insertions). Box num-'\nbers  lie  extra.  Covers any\nnumber ot insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst  insertion,   16c  per  fine '\u2022\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription: Rates:\nSingle Copy .*..$  :05\nBy'Carrier, per week,\nin advance  ;      .25\nBy Carrier, per year' -13.00\nMall in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne -month    1.00\nThree -months _;_..,    2.50\nSix months  _    4.50\nOne yea? :    8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month  k. ;    1.00\nThree months .    3.00\nSix months -....,    6.00\nOne  year  12.00\nWhere extra postage Is required:\nAbove,rates plus- postage.\nSLOCAN SCHOOL DISTRICT No. 8\nJANITORS\nAPPLICATIONS wiU be received\n[by the undersigned to 16th August,\n1949, for Janitor positions in schools\nof the District Schedules of wages\nand duties-available on request\nSECRETARY-TREASURER,\nSLOGAN SCHOOL\nDISTRICT No. 8,\n812 Ward St, Nelson, B.C.\n1947, Dodge 3-ton\n1941  International KB5\n1939 Ford lit. Delivery .\n.1.948'.'Jeep Lt; Delivery\n1947 Chevrolet Pickup\n1941 Ford Vi ton\n' Terms and Trades\nEmpire Motor's\nPhone 1135       803 Baker St.\nNelson   ;-7\nFOR SALE -r 1929 .CHRYSLER\nRoyaL, Mechanically in A-l condition. 4 new tires, new battery,\nlicenced. Snap for $165. See Sam\nBrown. ...\"\nMACHINERY,\n(Continued)\nlira\n.*, We hav the experienced Staff,\nequipment'and parts to do a\n\u2022 reliable repair job on your\npower chain saw. Bring your,\nmachine to us and save valuable\noperating time, -\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n214 HaU St\nPhone 18\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nBlack and Galvanized.\nVarious Sizes in Stock.\nMining,   Milling  and   Sawmill\nMachinery, Building- and\nContractors' Supplies   .\nYTf it's machinery you'want,\nconsult us.\"\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE-'49 MERCURY 3-TON\ndump truck. Condition as, new.\n6000 miles. Attractive, deal. .Can\nbs financed. Apply E. Wolfe, 448\n-\"\u25a0'-\"  \u25a0 Ave,, Trail, B.C;\n1942 HARLEY DAVIDSON Motorcycle tor sale. In good condition. D. B. Wallace; Box 102, Castlegar.\nFOR SALE-i-1946TRIUMPH TWIN\n\"Tiger 100\" motorcycle. Good condition.: Write: A. Nixon, BOX 1127,\nCastlegar, B.C.\nMUST SELL 1947 HARLEY DA-\nvidsdn 74-O.H.V... u\"der 10,000\nmiles. G. Fleming, 224 Behnsen\nSt Phohe 130, evenings.\nTRAILER FOR SALE -> GOOD\ncondition.' Apply. North Shore\nMotel.\n1939 'D.S. \u00ab5 INTERNATIONAL\nchassis, also 1250 gal. gas tank.\nPhone 927, or 709-Y.\nFOR SALE\u2014BOY'S BICYCLE: Apply M.-s. H. Anderson, K70 Cedar\nStreet Phone 389-L after 5 p.m.\n19   PLYMOUTH   LIGHT   DELIV-\nery for sale. V-8 Power Unit\nCITY AUTO WRECKERS\nFOR SALE-BOY'S C.C.M. BIKE.\nSterling Hotel.\nLADIES'   C.C.M.   BICYCLE   FOR\nSale, New cond. $35.'Ph. 1129\n1947 V4-TON CHEV . TRUCK. DE-\nluxe cab, Phbne 484-K3. \"Y\nMACHINERY\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nTHIS FALL AND WINTER PROr\n. duce your own eggs. We offer\nraised New Hampshire, Leghorn-\nHampshire Cross or Leghorn pullets. All stock over two months\nold and older. All pullets raised\nfrom our finest R. O. P. sired\nchicks. All birds are running out\non .our free, range. Apply our\nSgent Nelson Farmer's Supply\n'Ltd., Nelson, or write direct to\nNew Siberia Farms, N. Balakshln,\nBYR. 2, Chilliwack, B.C.\nFOR SALE-WORK HORSE, 1500\n' lbs.,. 12 yrs. Good for farm or\nlight logging. Also set farm harness. Price $125. Box 1482, Daily\nNews..\nFOR SALE\u201430 NEW HAMPSHIRE\nRoosters,- 4 - .nonths old. Apply\nMrs. D. Bolton, Creek St.,Yor\nPhone 464-L-3,    ' \u25a0-      _    \u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nATTENTION DAIRYYMENI FOR\nSale: 4-yr.-old Ayrshire coA, due\nto freshen' Aug. 11, lind calf. Ap-\npiy to W. H, Slatfer, fl-R. 1, NelSon.\nLOVELY STANDARD BRED SAD-\ndie mare for sale, with drwlth-\nout saddle and bridle, Dick Kleef,\nR. R. 1, NelSon.\nBLAck AND WHITE BANTAMS\nfor sale. May hatch, 50c. each. 1807\nStanley St Phpne.767rR.      '..' '\nboats and Engines\nSNAPPY NEW OUTBOARD RUN-\nabout 1TA ft, by 8 ft Low price\nfor quick sale. Apply 1011 Front\nor-phone 926rR.\nFuk   BAtaB\u201412-FT.   KOWBOATS,\ngood   condition, : Kootenay L Cot-\n' tages,' Gray Creek, B.C.\n18 FT. MOTOR LAUNCH WITH\ncabin, and 5 H.P. \"marine engine\nfor sale. C. L. Race, Balfour, B.C,\nFOR SALE-16rFT, MOTORBOAT.\nGood condition. Appl> 804 Stanley St or Phone 876-R.\nFOR. SALE   -   18-FOOT   CABIN\nlaunch. Cheap. Ph. 436-X-4.\nROOM AND BOARD\nRELIABLE. WORKING' GIRL\nwants room and,board at reduced\nprice in return for help with children and house work. Phone\n794-L-l,\nUsed\nCAT-\niains-\n1\u2014New Model D7 Caterpillar\nTractor\nHydraulic Angle Dozer and\nHyster, Towing Winch, Operator's Guard and Winter Tracks.\n1\u2014RD6 Caterpillar Tractor'\nWith straight cable dozer and\nlogging donkey. Just, overhauled.     \u2022\nl-VModel 30 gas Caterpillar\n1\u2014Model 20 gas Caterpillar\nSee the latest-\nSKAGIT Model Bul5 two-drum\nWer carry a complete line of\nlogging  hooks,   tongs,   blocks,\nwedges etc.\n? Fjmiing\n\u25a0;7'.;; Tractor.'\n&Jquipment Co. Ltd.\nFORSALE, '-\nCombination-chicken and dairy\nfarm, on. ten acres'of land in\n.Fruitvale, Vt of a-mile from\ntown, Modern seven room'house,\nbath'.and pantry, fireplace, hot\nair furnace and full cement\nbasement Large .barn, chicken\nhouses, milk ho-ise, double gar-\n. age, 800 laying hens, 400 pullets,\n12 milk cows, 4 young heifers.\nAll buildings .lew and in A-l\ncondition, equipped with electric egg grader, milking machine, etc. Young frui, bees and\nlarge garden, good .supply of\nwater.  Steady* market  for  all\n> milk and eggs. Reasonably\npriced. Terms. .\nAPPLY C. J. GALLAGHER\nFruitvale. \u25a0     \u25a0\n_NEliOH_DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, AUG. 9] 1949\nCards, Dodgers^ Hold\nNeck-and-Neqk Pace\nBy STEVE ROBERTSON\n* Canadian Press Staff Writer\n\u2022 St. Louis. Cardinals and Brooklyn\nDodgers both- won Monday .night\nand still'are tied In first place in\nif the National League.\n\u25a0In the1 only two -major: league\nbaseball 'games, scheduled, the\nDodgers edged out New York Giants\n2-1 and St Louis outscored Cincinnati jReds 9-3. ,\nBig Don-Newcombe, Brooklyn's\nNegro rookie, registered hla 11th\ntriumph. The giant righthander\nhas been beaten only three times\nthis season. -\nDave Koslo of the Giants walked  In the winning  run in the\neighth after Jackie Robinson had\nhomered In the second Inning..\nA crowd, of .33,826 a't Brooklyn\nsaw Newcombe pitch shutout ball\nuntil the ninth when Whltey Lock-\nman clouted his eighth homer of\nthe campaign..\nKoslo also pitched a fine game\nbut was Unfortunate in serving a\nhome-run pitch to Robinson in the\nsecond: It was Robinson's 13th ,6f\nthe \"season.. -\"'\nThe Dodgers got what proved to\nbe the'winning run: In the eighth.\nWith: two out, Furlllo singled and\nmoved to second on another single\nby Robinson, W H e n Lockman\nfumbled tha hit: the runners' advanced. This set the .stage for an\nIntentional pass to Gi! Hodges to\nload the.\/ bases. Bruce Edwards\nbatted, for, the lofthanded hitting\nDuke Snider and drew another\nwalk.to force-in FUrillo.\n15th  VICTORY-\nAt St.'.' Louis Enos. Slaugliter\nwalloped two home runs and drove\nln six runs as the Cards beat the\nReds.:'.Howard Pollet. of St., Louis\ncoasted' to his.15th, victory.\nA crowd of 13,000, One of the\nsmallest St. - Louis night turnouts\nOf.the season, saw the Cards.take\nfull advantage of the - Wlldness of\nCincinnati pitchers, Kent Peterson\nand Ken Burkhart The Reds out-\nhit the Cards,* 12 to .5, \u25a0, -\nSlaughter's first homer came in\nthe third inning and scored Nippy\nJdne#. In the next frame four\nstraight walks forced one run\nacross' and left the bases loaded.\nEnos promptly unloaded them with\nhis second four-master and his. 10th\nof the season..   - ... \u25a0 .'\nWalker Cooper, Red catcher and\nformer- battery, mate of Pollet's,\ndrove in all three Cincinnati runs'\nwith a double and single.\nGOOD OPPORTUNITY FOR MAR-\nried couple in small hotel, cafe\nand ice-cream bar. Will sell modern-equipment reasonably. Low\noverhead. Write or phone Wlnd-\nsor Hotel, Silverton, \"'.-:'- ..\nFOR SALE-TAXI BUSINESS. 1\n' car ln good, condition. Ph. 1225-L.\nRENTALS\nBALFOUR BEACH\u2014; BEDROOM\nfurnished modern cottage, near\nferry, for rent From Sept 1 to\nJune 30. Mrs. C M. Robinson,\nBalfour, B.C. Y. ,\nWANTED TO RENT\u20142, 3 OR 4-\n. room \"house or apartment. Rell-\n. able tenants. Box 1040. Daily News.\nVERY, ATTRACTIVE SUITE, FIVE\nlarge modern rooms. Also smaller\nsuite. Phone 489-R Tuesday only.\nWANTED\u2014ELDERLY LADY \"(PEN\",\nsioner) to share private home.\nApply -320 Chatham Street\nBEDROOM FOR RENT TaOSE IN.\nPhone lOllrY.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT. PHONE\n493-R.      \u25a0'...'        - .'\u25a0\u25a0   ,;.\nBEDROOM SUITABLE FOR TWO\ngirls. Phone 1069-Y.\nJTMUNT ROOM FOR RENT,;CLOSE\nin. Phone 653-R.\nFARM\/GARDEN & NURSERY\nNELSON'\nCRANBROOK\ncontractors - sawmill -\nlogging & mining*\n,     \u25a0   '-equipment\n\u2022 send your enquires to-\n\u25a0-.'   national*Machinery.-.\nCO. LTD. -     .\nGranville island MA 1251\n. Vancouver, BO,\nCUSTOM MACHINE. WORK AND\nwelding. Portable welding equipment for Held'work. Stevenson'*!\nMachine Shop, 708. Vornon St,\nNelson, B. C.\u201e:;.:.\n1 D7 CATERPILLAR; 1 D8 CATER-\npillar; 1-D4 Caterpillar, all In top\nshape. .Equipped for ybur job.'\nBayes Equipment Co., Cranbrook.\nP4 CAT. FOR KENT OR, CQN-\ntract Equipped.' for excavating,\nroad building, land clearing, etc.\nC Ross, Phone 688-R, Nelson,\n. (Continued Ip Next Column\"\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrial's\u2014180.54 up 1.47.\n20 ralls-47.M up 1.14.\n15 utUitlesT-64.44 up ,70.\n\" FARMERS\nWe Can Now Supply\nInternational Diesel\n.-- Crawler tractors\nfbr FARM USE\nAlso\u2014Rubber-tired farm\ntractors- In all sizes, gasoline or diesei powered.\n$ee Us for Information .\nand .Prices,\nCentral Truck\n& Equipme'ni\n,    Co.' ^[\n702F*rontSt:    NelsoniB.C.\nBallPlayers'\nPensions Safe\nCINCINNATI, Aug. 8 (AP)'\u2014The\nmajor-league player pension and\ninsurance plan is not-in. jeopardy,\nWalter : Mulbry, its Secretary -\nTreasurer, said today. '\u25a0'.\nHowever, a proposal to make tbe\nage\" minimum 55. years instead of\n50. before the annuities begin, is\nunder consideration, he added.\nThat matter will be discussed at\na' meeting ot the Baseball Executive\nCouhcil, in Chicago next Thursday,\nMulbry. said,   - \u2022:\u2022 \u25a0 \".-\nMulbry, also secretary.\" of base\nball, told a reporter today that reports-of the fund; being on the\nverge of .collapse are without\nfoundation.     -    \u25a0\u25a0 ;\nthere are only three or four riien\neligible at this time to collect from\nthe fund, Mulbry said. The others,\nhe-added, will not begin tapping\nthe till untU>1952.\nBy that.tinie, players and clubs\nwill have paid more than-$2,750,000\ninto the found, according to the\nSecretary-Treasurer,\nBaseball Scores\nNATIONAL LEAGUE   .\nNew York -.. OOO'OOO 001\u20141   4^.2\nBrooklyn  ....... 010 000 Olx\u20142   7  0\nKoslo and R.- Mueller, Westrum\n(8); Newcombe and Campanella.-\nCincinnati ;...-\u201e. 000 120 000-3 12   1\nSt. Louis ,.. 112 500 OOX-0' 5   1\nPeterson, Burkhart (4) Fanovich\n(6) Fox (8) and Cooper, Prariiesa\n(7); Pollet and D. Rice..\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nMinneapolis 2, Indianapolis 5.\nMilwaukee 0, Columbus 1.\nKansas City1, Louisville 8\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE     *\nRochester -7, Syracuse 2\nNewark 6, If Montreal 7,13\nJersey City 2, Toronto 3\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES. ETC\nMORRHILL KENNELS REG'D.\nBox 618, Gr^snwood, B.C. American Cocker' Spaniels, Scotch, terriers Dogs boarded,       :'    '\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nNELSON BUSINESS COLLEGE -\n.Day classes commence September\n1st Night classes commehce Oc-\n'   tober 3rd   107 Baker Street.\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, Aug. 8 .(CP)- Livestock market opened fairly active\nunder fully steady prices at Calgary\ntoday. About 600 cattle were on- offer.       ;\u25a0\u25a0\";;'      .';-\u25a0\u25a0'\nA slightly stronger trend for\nbutcher steers.and heifers was evident. The cow market was steady,\nStockers and feeders, were scarce\nfnd steady. Offerings were generally good to plainer kinds, few choice\nanimals, being , available in any\nclass.: '. \u2022 '\"-\u2022 '   \u25a0'\u25a0\nEarly receipts today: cattle-120,\nsheep 50- Receipts yesterday: cattle\n311, calves 68, hogs 16.\nHog's closed last week at $34.85\nfor A's at yards and plants; sows\nbrought 18;25, ljve weight. *\nGood butcher Steers 20.00-21.00;\ncommon, to medium 16.00-l0.50,\nGood ..butcher heifers. 18.00-10.00;\ncommon to medium 15,00-17.50.\nGood iiows 12.75-13.00; common to\nmedium 11.50-12.50; canners and\ncuttets8.00-ll.0b.;  i'!    \u25a0 \"      '\nGood bulls 10.00-16.25; com'mon to\nmedium 14:00-15.50; Good to choice\nveil calyes 17.50-10.00; common to\nmedium 14.00-17.00. .Good stocker\n\"and feeder steers' 10.00-17.00.\nCanadian Bonds\nDomlnidh of Canada: '\u2022\n\u25a0ml ' \u25a0'\":\u2022'\". ' -Bid     Ask\nVLB :.....-8   1059    101%    102%\nVL Ji.    3   1063    100%    101%\nProvincial:\nB.C. ;..... , :   3      1960    99\nB.C. .:....;...:....,.:.......:....   3%   1958   103\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 8 (CP)'- Winnipeg grain, cash prices: \u2022\nOats-No. 1 Feed 73%.\nBarley^No. 1 Feed 1.24%.\nEnglish Cricket\n., LONDON, Aug. 8 (Reuters) \u2014A\nfighting inning by Denis- Compton\nsaved Middlesex from being routed\nby Surrey in today's English Cricket. But in spite of Compton's fine\neffort the county \"championship\nleaders finished the day in a difficult position. '\nReplying to Surrey's 444, Middlesex lost three-wickets, for 17 runs.\nComptbn capie to. the rescue With\nnot but ln thr.ee hours, 10 minutes\nand with him Sims added 33 for the\neighth three-hours,' following with\na ninth-wicket qtand of 64 with\nJack, Young. W. Surridge, Surrey's\nfast medium, bowler, claimed six\nwickets for 49 runs and Eric Bedser\ntook two for; two.\nTonight's, score-card:!\nAt Nottingham \u2014 Nottinghamshire 323 for four declared; New\nZealand 329 for four.\nAt Hastings \u2014Kent 482 for five\ndeclared;' S.ussex 236 and 42 for\nnone. \u25a0 . .,  u ..-\nAt Cheltenham \u2014 Gloucestershire\n349 and 240 for eight; Essex 148.\nAt Manchester \u2014 Derbyshire '421\nfor seven declared; Lancashire\nfor seven. \u2022  :\nAt The OvaWSurrBy \u25a0 444 and 207\nfor seven,; Middlesex 175.\nAt Portsmouth\u2014Hampshire 305\nfor three; Worcestershire 286.\nAt Leicester \u2014 Leicestershire 334\nand 32 for none; Warwickshire 346\nfon five'declared.;4\nAt Wellingborough \u2014 Northamptonshire 354; Yorkshire 301 for\nseven.    '.\nAt Weston. Super Mare \u2014 Somerset refeated Glamorgan by 10 wickets: Somerset 325 and\/ 34 for none;\nGlamorgan 132 and 225,\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES. \u2022\u25a0.     ;;: Y\nAmal Larder ....j....,';............ .18\nAnglo-Huronian  ,  ,8.55\nArrdistice    ! ;..:.......:,.. \u2022 .11  \u25a0\nAumaque  .16M\nAunor   ......-...'.-...\u25a0.'. +..... 3.00 '.\nBase Metals Mining ,\u201e \u201e. , . .37\nBevcourt. ..:........'. \u201e....  .30   .\nBralofne ,.: ;., 10.25\nBroulaii-     ...'..     :. 36\nBuffalo 'Ankerite \u201e.,,.. 2.24\nBufadison   '..,    i '. \" .2H|.\nCastle-Trethewey  1.52\nCentral ^Patricia\nChesterville Mines* ...\nCochenour.\nConiaurnm Mines   ...\nConsolidated M & S :\nConwest\t\nCroinor ....\u201e,\nDelnite \t\nDiscovery\t\n.86\n.    2.45\n,    2.18\n4.08\n100.00\n1.16\n.56'\n1.68-\n.32\nDome Mines ;...: ......_..\u201e   10.65\nDonalda'\nDuquesne\nEast Malartlc .\nEast Sullivan .\nElder \t\nEldona.\t\n.59\n.60.\n2,55\n2.45\n\u25a0 .4iy\u00ab:\nFalconbridge Nickel  3.70\n\u25a0Froblsher    .  2.36   ,\nGiant Yellowknife ......._..,.... 7,05\nGod's Lake Gold .... .  *   .48 \u2022\nGolden Manitou .;\u201e... .19 V,\nHard Rock Gold i  .23\nHollinger* .... ..... : IOjIS . \u2022\nHudson Bay M & S ......_. 47.60 -..\nInternational Nickel 34\nInt Uranium  .34\nJack Waite  .'.   .IStt\nJbllet Quebec  ...... .53\nKerr-Addison :  17.75 '-\nKirkland.Lake .......;,...\u201e... 1.47\nLabrador  4.15\nLake Shore Mines ................ 13.00\nLamaque Gold .: , 6.75\nLingman Lake .:.,;   .'48\nLittle Long Lac   .85\nLouyicourt   .13\nMacassa    2.42\nMacDonald  ' .41\nMacLeod Cockshutt ........... 1,10\nMadsen Red Lake    8.10\nMalartic GOld F _. 2.75\nMclntyre-Porcuplne\nMcKenzie Red Lake .\nMcMarmac ....;;..\nNegus ....,;.... _.,\nNicholson  \u201e...\u201e..\u201e...\u201e\u201e.\nNoranda \u201e.....;\u201e\u201e\u201e..\nNornietal ,\t\nPaymaster\nPerron Gold \u201e,\nPickle Crow Gold ....\nPowell Rouyn Gold\nReeves MacDonald ..\nPreston East Dome .\nQuemont ........;.......;':*;\nSan Antonio Gold X.\nSen' Rouyn\nSherrltt. Gordon \u201e...\u201e...\u201e.\u201e\nSladen Malartlc ~.a\nStadacona  , ..........\u201e._\nSteep Rock.  ,..~-\nT C, Resources  '.\t\niTaku River Gold Mines ...     \t\n1 Teck-Hughes Gold     3.55\nToburn- Gold Mines        .65\nUpper Canada .........: -    1.50\nVentures     5.\n63.25\n.53\n.13\n2.46\n.64\n88.50\n2.45\n.38\n.70\n3.26\n.80\n2.35\n1.70\n.1814\n4.50:\n.42\n2.55\n.54\n.47\n1.71 s\n.65\n24%\nCLANCY TO COACH\nNEW SQUAD\nCINCINNATI, Aug1.-8 (AP)'-\nFrank (King) Clancy, one-time\ndefence-man for Toronto Maple\nLeafs, today was signed to a\" two-\nyear contract tp coach Cincinnati's\nnew team in the American Hockey\nLeague.\nAfter 17 years of active hockey\ncompetition, Clancy served for\nbrief period as coach of Montreal\nMaroons and then became a referee\nln the National Hockey League. He\nresigned the latter job to take the\ncoaching job here.\nThe Cincinnati team will make its\ndebut In A.H.L. action in the 1940-\n50 season. It will be affiliated with\nMontreal ot the N;H:LY.\nI   Ancient Persia had a pony-express\nsystem for mail delivery.       '\nj&wer Caves In, Four Die\nWaite Amulet-,\nWright Hargreaves ...\nOILS\nBritish American \t\nBritish Dom\t\nImperial  :...-....-,\t\nInter Petroleum \t\nRoyalite  ...\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltibl Power  _\u201e..\nArgus Corp _,.\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian Traction\t\nBrewers & Distillers .\nB.C. Power \"A\"\t\nB.C. Potoer \"B\" ..:\nB,C. Pulp'\nBuilding Products\"*,.........\u2122.\nBurns & Co. Class A .\u201e\u201e'....\nBurns & Co. Class B\t\nCan. BreW  ..;....... ..,\u201e;,\nCanadian Canners\t\nCanadian Celanese\t\nCanadian Car & Foundry .\nCan Cement ...:       35^4\n9.40\n: .2.55'\n-24.00\n,   .19%\n18.50\n8.25\n6.58\n12%\n6%\n42%\n18%\n18%\n26%\n3\n.   80\n81\n25\n14%\n*   21\n17%\n31%\n11%\n\u2014Central Pr,'?:. Canadian\nRescuers, perched on the scoop of a power shovel, are shown\nrecovering the body of one of the four workmen who died In a sewer\nexcavation In Philadelphia. Another victim may be seen In the muddy\nwater In background. Two firemen of-th'e rescue squad had a narrow\nescape from a similar fate when.they were overcome by the deadly,\nfumes that apparently caused the death,of the.four.\nCan Ind Alcohol\nCan Malting\t\nCan Packers \"A\"'..\nCan Pacific Rly ....\nCoaBf Copper\t\nCockshutt Plow ....\nCons Paper\t\nDistillers Seagrams\nDominion Bridge ...\nDominion Stores ...\nDom Textile ....:\t\nFord of Canada \"A'\nGatlneau ;\t\nGen Steelwarej ......\nGoodyear Tire .\t\nGypsum Lime w..\u00bb\u201e\nHiram -Walker .-.\t\nImperial Oil\t\nImperial Tobacco ...\nInter Nickel \t\nLoblaw A\t\nMassey Harris\t\n.McColl Frtmt :\t\nMin & Ont Paper ...\nMoore Corp ....:>.......\n\u25a0New Jason\t\nPage Hershey.\t\nPowell River \t\nPower 'Corp\n[Vancouver stocks\nMINES.'-\nBralorne -. .\u201e ; \u201e\nCariboo Gold .\u201e _.\u201e.,.\u201e..\nGrahdview   !; \u201e\u201e\u201e.\nHedley Mascot  \u2122..........'.\nHighland Bell  .,._\n\u2022Int'CA C  :, \u201e.\u201e.....;;;_\n'Kootenay Belle   \t\nPend .Oreille :. .: ,.,. .\nPioneer Gold  ...,..,.\u201e*\u201e..\nReeves .MacDonald\t\nSheep Creek :..\/. \t\nSilver Ridge : \t\nOILS\nAnaconda ,'. \u201e..,.\u201e...\u201e\nAnglo Canadian  ...\u201e.._\nA P. Consolidated .\u201e..\nCalgary & Edmonton \u201e\nCalmont ..;.... ........;...'.......;..\u201e__\nCommonwealth ..,..._., ^..\nDalhousle \t\nFpothills ....!, ;\u201e__\nGlobe    ;  ...,_\nHome ....: : \u201e..\u201e\nOkalta Com\t\nPacific Pete\t\nRoyalite  .......; \t\nVanalta ; .\t\nWest Leduc  y\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nI CoaSt Breweries .....'.:.\nNeon Products  ...t\t\nUNLISTED MINES\nCuyunl'       ..:....\nSpud* Valley \u25a0:\t\nAtyianda' :\t\n9%\n44\n32%\n15%\n1.05\n12%\n15%\n18%\n36%\n37%\n.11%\n23%\n,11%\n14%\n89\n16\n29%\n18%\n14\n34\n28\n17%\n12\n14\n72\n58    .\n44%.\n39\n14%\n10.15\n1.18\n.14 <\n.24\n.54\n.25\n.18%\n4.90\n3.50\n2.35\n1.20\nJI   \"\n.10\n8.30\n.16:  .\n4.80\n.31-\n.66\n.37\n2.35\n.47\n9.85\n1.45\n2.40\n6.50\n.''.19'.\n.62\n3.25\n13.10\n'.40\n.70\nfx.\n\u25a0\n TO \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS\/ TUESDAY, AUG. ?, 1)\u00bb49\nWbat's Cookin1!\nHot weather1\nand laziness\n\u2022 \u25a0 >.\nExcessive heat\nand -sleeplessness\n= Eno's Fruit Salt\n= Wa'mpole'i Phospho Lecithin\nThe sun's rays '\u25a0'\nand   burned   shoulders\nExposure\nto aun arid nausea\n=' Front's, Tongel 7\n= Nyol Antacid Powder\nGardening and blisters   = Bandaids and Iodine\nBE PREPARED TO COMBAT SUMMER AILMENTS\n\"Flowing Qold\" Strike in Alaska\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\n.The first fish Hooks used by cave\nmen of prehistoric times were pieces,\nef flint, called \"gorges\"..\nMann's Repair'Shop\nRebores \u2014 Valves ground\nGuaranteed  Satisfactory\nJobs  Reasonably  Priced\nPh. 392-L      2021 Stanley St.\nFor Dependable\nPAINTING and\nPAPERHAN6ING\n\"' See '\u25a0\u25a0.-'\nMurphy Brothers\nPhone 655 745 Baker St.\nBRAND NEW TOGS\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:.   For Boys and Girls\nTo Go Back to School\nY. At\nThe Children's Shop\nMAKE VOUR CLOTHES LlNE\n-  OUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1178\u2014182 BAKER ST.\nYES \u2014 Your New Wave\nIs bound te be MORE STVLI8H,\nLAST  LONGER and\nLOOK  LOVELIER\nat the\nHAIGH TRU-ART\nJ.A.C. LAUGHTON\nOptometrist  *\nMEDICAL   ARTS   BUILDING  '\nSuite 808\nsiiiimitiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!\nCleaned and Recored\nRADIATOR REPAIRS\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\nJOlWintSt:';- Phone 83\naiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiii\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC\u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and paint work specialty\nMaxwell\nWASHING\nMACHINES\nELECTRIC\n$13975    .\nGASOLINE\n$199.50\nSmith\nElectric\n645 BAKER ST.\nPhone 258\nJoyce Goodwin\nWins Title of\n\"Miss Nelson\"\nMiss .Joyce Goodwin, attractive\nyoung'Nelson girl,.Has won a trip\nto ..Vancouver, as this city's represr\nentatiye at the Pacific Rational\nExhibition queen contest late this\nmonth.1\n. As \"Miss Nelson\" .she -will compete against other winners trom all\nparts ot the Province lor a1 $1006\nscholarship and a trjlp to Hollywood.\nLast: year's,- ''Miss .Nelson\"'\u25a0.was\nMiss Lorraine Jarrett'r\nJ. Englehardt,\nCranbrook, Dies\nCAMS CA\u00bbll6W\nNORTON SOUND\n, \u2014Central Press Canadian\nRevealing one of the greatest prospector's atrlkea In Alaskan\nhistory, the U.S. Navy has announced that natural gas haa been discovered In Alaska. Thla map shows the.Navy's 37,000-acre petroleum\n.reserve No. 4 (ahaded area). Six miles South of Point Barrow natural\ngas waa found for the flrat time In the American Arctic In commercial\nquantities. The Navy announced the find after It had been kept secret\nfor several months. .:-\u2022'.\u25a0' *>\u25a0\u25a0:\nProduction\nResumed at\nSpider Mine\nMeet Mfcs Toronto, 1949\nRaise Tablet Over Grave of\nFormer Cranbrook Mayor Roberts\nCRANBROOK,,B.C., Aug. 8 \u2014 A\ngroup oi friends' of Thomas Mason\nRoberts, long-time resident who\ndied here ih 1041, recently erected\na suitable bronze tablet at his grave\nin Westlawn 'Cemetery as a permanent memorial. A Raworth made\nIbe arrangements bn their behalf.\nThe tablet. \u25a0 commemorates Mr.\nRoberts' 15 years as mayor, from\n1925 to 1040. Prior to that he served\nas city-clerk and Was one.of the.\nprovince's authorities dn municipal\nmatters,''particularly dealing with\nfinance. CranbrooH's enviable post-\ndepression financial standing was\nattributed largely to his efforts, in\naddition to the start' of the city's\nparks: .system and the. Municipal'\nTourist Camp..  .\nWestlawn. a perpetual care cemetery, was \"also a city project of his\nregime, when its beautiful looping\nstone fente was built as a relief\nproject during the hard times bt\n'the 1930's,\n'Production at the Spider Mine ih\nthe Lardeau, long a'favorite mine\nof Its former operator, the late Duke\n. Harris, has been resumed under the\nmanagement of Walter J. Scorgle.\nThe property la being operated by\nSunshine Lardeau Mines, Ltd.\nMr. Scorgle has reported that the\nhigh grade ore blocked out by the\nUlnnels on the No. 1 vein consistently gives, assays, Im channel samples\nbut across the high grade portions\nof the vein from widths of from two\nto three feet, of about $100 gross per\nton. .., -   .;\u25a0';\n: The best values are in silver and\nlead, with zinc, gold and. cadmium\nfollowing in that order. Shipments\nare expected to average about $100\ngross per ton at present prices. The\nMine, has been equipped tor breaking high grade ore and shipping' it\nto the Trail smelter.' '\u2022\u25a0.;\u25a0-. .,\nShipments are now being mode to\nArrowhead, where the ore cars \"will\nbe spotted for'hauling to.the smelter. The C.P.R. has-advised that the\nfreight rate, will be the same, as that\nwhich' applies by barge over the\nArrow Lakes. This freight rate is on\nthe escalator basis, tinder which the\nrate, is scaled upwards from a low\nrate on low grade pre so aS to give\nan economic rate over all shipments.\nPlans are proceeding .to establish\na mill for concentrating lower grade\nores from the Spider.1 Mr. Scorgie\nstates that there is ample ore in\nsight to maintain continuously the\noperation, ot a 50,-ton mill.\n'. He hopes to have the mill fully\nequipped before completion of the\npresent operation of. shipping. the\nhigh grade ore presently, blocked\nput Negotiations are proceeding to\nmerge; the Winslow and use the\nmilling machinery from that mine.\nJuly Runoffs\nBelowNormal\nCRAtJBHOOK, B. C, Aug. S^The\ndeath occurred at the hospital here\nFriday of John Engelhardt; 80-year-\nold watchmaker, who has made his\nhome hear Cranbrook on the Lum-\nBerton road since 1923,\nHe settled here After a long flight\nfrom Russian. Communism which\novertook th,e family, in Russia in\n1921. Born in Ekertshaussen, Germany, he moved to the Caucasion\nDistrict in the' Southwest- corner ot\nRussia as a child and learned his\ntrade of watchmaking and jewelry\nthete. He married a Netherlander\nand they brought their family of\nsmall children to the United'States\nin the 1890's. In 1905 they returned\nto the same district in Russia. The\nSpread of the. revolution to the 5000 Sec,-ft;\nfringes of Russia by 1921 led to persecution and on the basis of the\nAmerican citizenship their departure, for America was authorized.\nWith his.wife and four children\nhe began the journey in boxcars\nto Novgorod on the Black Sea and\nmany months later by- way; of Trieste, they somehow reached Munich.\nTheir overseas passage was arranged there through the Red Cross and\nthey arrived in Canada ;in 1922 and\nspent, a. year in Saskatchewan at\nRostern and Walker Lake before\ncontinuing. to Cranbrook where\nthey settled and. he resumed his\nbusinesSy-He retired in 1*941. One\ndaughter, JHulda, was left.in Russia and two years ago they had indirect word of her.\n', i. Mrs. .Engelhardt died here six\nyears ago. Surviving are three sons,\nPaul.at Invermere, John and Carl\nin. Cranbrook, two daughters, Hulda in Russia arid Mrs. Henry Schel-\nlenberg in Cranbrook, Seven \"granddaughters and one great-grandson\nih Cranbrook:\nRunoffs of the Columbia and\nKootenay- Rivers were considerably\nbelow normal during July.\nMean monthly discharge, at the\nColumbia River gauging, station at\nBirchbank'near Trail' was 96,000\nsecond-feet, compared with the\nlong term figure taken over 35\nyears of 108,000 sec;-ft,%r. 57 per\ncent.      \u25a0*\u25a0 s. .,   - \u25a0 .\nMaximum daily dlsdharge. was\n110,000 sec.-ft, and the minimum,\n(87,000- sec-ft All-time high was in\n1916 when 3d4,D()0 sec.-ft were\nrecorded, and the minimum, 78,200\nsec-ft of 1944.   '*\nAt the Kootenay River typical\nstation at Wardner, iiiian-monthly\nrunoff was 7490 sec-ft, against the\nlong-term mean monthly discharge\nover 35 years of 14,100 sec.-ft, or\n53 per cent 7   \u2022'\nMaximum dally discharge was\n8600 sec-ft, against the record high\nof 44,100 sec-ft of 1920, and the\nminimum daily discharge, 6290 sec-\nft compared with the 1941 low of\nCastlegar Forms\nProjects Society\nNotice was given in the last Issue\nof the B.C. Gazette that the Castlegar DisVlct Projects Society- was\nincorporated*under   the (Societies\nAct.   .',       \u25a0    ....,*       '\";     7\"  '   ,*'.\" ':'\u25a0\u25a0\n:The purpose pf the Societiy will,\nbe to promote cultural projects of\nevery -kliid. .\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0..   - ...   ,-:   :\nSentenced to Three\nMonths for    7\nDangerous Driving\n; Fred Babakaltf ,-of. Thrums Is\nserving three months Jn Nelson jail\nafter he pleaded guilty to a charge\nof dangerous driving. Police testified in Provincial Cpiirt* here Monday that he was -travelling over: 80\nmiles per hour at Crescent Valley\nSaturday, ;'\nMr. Babakaiff had a choice of\npaying a $50 fine or serving three\nmonths imprisonment\nHe was ', also prohibited from\ndriying a motor vehicle anywhere.\nin Canada for six months. \u25a0 \u25a0\nWilliam Irvine, Stipendiary Magistrate, gave the sentence.\nS.S. CORPSMEN TO DIE\nM LILLE,.France; Aug.-'a -ftVP) \u2014\nEight, members of Hitler's S.S.\n(Elite Corps) Saturday w?re sen-\ntenced to death for the massacre of\n77 French civilians In the village of,\nAscq April 1, 1944. A ninth was sentenced to'15 yeara in prison.\nREQUIEM MASS\nSUNG FOR ,\nMRS. DeBLASIO\nRequiem   mass   for   Mrs.\nDeBlaslo, 75, who died in Vancouver General Hospital last Wednesday,   was   sung   at   Cathedral   of\nMary Immaculate Monday morning.\nRev. Father W. J.'Harrison conducted the service, and interment\nyas in Nelson Memorial Park.    '\n* Rosary was recited in the Thompson .Funeral Home Sunday night\nFriends who acted as pallbearers\nwere A? S  Horswill, Frank Ozey,\nT. Prime and M. Maglio.\n.   Mrs. DeBlaslo made her home\" at\n923 Observatory Street *\nDuring the Middle Ages playing\n\u2022cards possessed names like \"the\ntwo pf cups'' the \"king of Basfos\"\nthe \"cavallq ot coins\" and the\n\"hanging man.\" Y     :    \u25a0\nOUR STORE WILL B|\nTuesdoy, August 9th\n,   Out of Respect\n7 For the Late *\n'Mr. J, A. Valentine\nVALENTINE'S LTD.\nOPTION TAKEN ON\nWOODBURY\nCREEk PROPERTY\nprivateer Mine, Ltd,, has acquired\nan option to purchase a promising\nsllver-lead-zinc property. op Woodbury Creek near Alnsworth,\nIndications showed a fair grade of\nore in seven different deposits; D.\nS.. Tait, President, has. stated. .He-\npredicted the .' property., could'. be\nbrought into. profitable production\nat one-tenth the cost of any comparable prospect  \u25a0   '\".'\u25a0       :'\u25a0\"\nGAS BOTTLING\nPLANT TO OPEN\nIN CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B.C.,:Aug. 8\u2014 A\nbottling-plapt for propane, gas is\nbeing constructed -here In. the area\njust North of city limits which\nhouses, the various bulk storage\nplants tor. oil companies. The building, to,be in operation by October,\nIs of; cement blocks and .concrete\nand\" will have a 20,000 gallon storage\nplant tor the liquid gas. It will be\n90 by 32 feet\nThe site .adjoins the* railway\ntrack, arid the liquid gas will be\nfreighted here' in tank cars from\nthe manufacturing point at Turner\nValley, and will be bottled here in\nmetal . containers' for .distribution\nthrough the Southern Interior. 'j\nr Propane Gas-Services Ltd. began\nits business here .in the Spring\nintroducing, gas fuelled'ranges. Its\nefforts have been successful enough\nto warrant this major addition to\nthe city's industries. H. E. Wheeier,\noperator of. Wheeler: Motors, and\nTexaco distributor In this district,\nis. President of 'Propane Gas\nServices Ltd.   '\nNelson Man Fined,\nFails To Obey\nCar Checkup Slip\nJohn S. McLellan, Nelson, charged\nwith operating a motor vehicle on\nthe Granite Road July 18 without a\nwindshield wiper, pleaded guilty\nwhen he appeared before William\nIrvine, Stipendiary Magistrate- In\nPrbvinclal Police Court. hSre Monday.   '      !...*.\"'.     .-.'-, -.7 ': \"\u25a0\nMr. McLellan was Issued a checkup slip during July-for defective\nheadlights, tail lights, rear vision\nmirror and windshield-..' wiper and\nwas instructed to have them repaired by July 23.. He failed to\nCarry out the instructions and did\nnot report as requested, the Court\nwas told.\nThis resulted In a $15 fine and\ncosts.\nWORLD BODY TO\nTACKLE\nYOUTH PROBLEMS\nBRUSSELS, Aug. 8 (Reuters) \u2014\nYoung people from, five: continents\ntoday ended an eight-day. meeting\nhere in which-they set up a new\ninternational body to study and try\nto Solve many common problems\nfacing the youth of the world.\n(The delegates\u2014150 of them from\n39 countries\u2014have been attending\nthe first meeting of the Permanent\nCouncil of the World Assembly of\nYouth,-  .\nThe Idea was conceived by the\nNational Youth Councils of the\nUnited States, Britain, France, Denmark and Oie Netherlands. They\ninvited delegates to a conference in\nLondon, a year ago and W.A.Y.\nwas born.\nyouiLdta&L\ntfhanai\nFASHION-GRAFT\nMADE-TO-MEASURE\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nTrio of beauties,are the winners In Miss-Toronto contest. Irene\nMclnnes, centre, .22, wearing her erOwn and robe, waa named Miss\nToronto. At left Is Thelma Brewts, 17, who came second, and at right,\nBette-Jane Pike, third In judging. Irene will compete In the Miss\nCanada contest In Hamilton, Ont.\n20^ Off\n\u2022\";-\u25a0'' \u25a0    1\nThis week Is your last\nchance to save $18 toi\n$S?0 on a Fashion-Craft\nMade-to-Measure Suit.\nEmory's Ltd\nTHE MAN'S STORE    j\nIn ancient Egypt, Babylonia and\nAssyria, water was supplied by open\ncanals with large storage basins:\nFall Fair Plans\nPlans 'jtor-.:the West Kootenay\nAgricultural and Industrial Exhibition, one. of Nelson's old time\nprides that will be revived this\nFall, were outlined to '. Nelson\nRotary Club at its Monday luncheon\nmeeting in the Hume- by Joseph\nKary, President of the Association.\n. Purpose will be tp advertise Nelson and district industries ih combination with a fair and midway.\nExhibition dates are Sept. 15, IS\nSnd 17. ,\n, President L.'-. A:. McPhail anr\nnounced that an invitation had been\nextended toe.Coeur d'Alene, Idaho,\nRotary Club to attend, a luncheon\nat Nelson as soon as possible.''\n. Seven guests were J.' L. Davidson\nand Ralph Tennant, Lethbridge; E.\nJ. Chambers, Calgary; Harold Timmins, William Batchelor, Ontario,\nCalif.; H. A. Doak, former President\nOf Nelson Rotary Club now in Vari-\ncouver, and J. S. Livingstone,\nNelson.' \u25a0 ,,.'- ,\"\u25a0'\nBIRTHS IN NELSON\nMAINTAIN\nHIGH JUNE LEVEL\nBirths in Nelson during the month\nof July maintained' the-high level\nwhich they attained in June, the\nVital Statistics -.Office in Nelson\nreported. There' were 34- as compared to'36 in June; \\yhile there\nwas an increase of four over' July\nMary W8. Tljere' \"were 10 deaths during\n I last month, an increase; over the\nseven lh June; but a decrease from\nthe;'. 14 deaths in July '48. There\nwere 10 marriages in.^fuly, 1949, 14\nin July 1948 and 13 in June 1949.\nIn.-the, district- there, was   one\ndeath, no marriages and no births.\nFirst Frost-Froe 7\nMonth or Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C., A\"* 8 -f\nJuly, with ;a subnormal mean\ntemperature of 82.8 degrees, was\nthis district's 'first frost-free .month\nslnce'l'ast August Frost ,was quite-\nclose in the month's minimum pf\n36.6 degrees, \u25a0 while* the'. month's\nmaximum of 92:6 . degrees was\nhighest ln the past several years.:\nPrecipitation on'the ,10 days it\nwas recorded totalled .98, ihch, and\nwas largely due .to the series of\nthunderstorms, with heavy but brief\nrain.   '.      ':\u25a0*',\u25a0        \u25a0\u25a0       '   r'-'f\nStreaks of snow on the Western\nface of the Rockies flanking the\nvalley failed to disappear during\nJuly.\u25a0 Statistics were 'compiled by\nthe Dominion. Meteorology Service\nat the Kimberley, airport range\nstation.\nCREWCHECKS\nFOREST BLAZE\nIN SLOCAN\n; SLOCAN CITY, B.C., August 8-:\nA forest fire started alongside the\nold highway on the.West side:of the\nplain -highway located nea^- the\nLemon: Creek Bridge.' Assistant\nForest Ranger Fred Christie with\nthe assistance of three men held the\nfire, under'check-until an additional\ncrew of 16 men arrived from Slocan\nCity, and a; portable water, pump\ninstalled on' the banks of Lemon\nCreek brough V into-use.-The fire\nburned Over an area of approximately,.ope and half acres was\nbrought under control by Saturday\nmorning. ...\n$25 Fine for  y\nSpeeding\nA fine of $25 was paid by Peter\nNahornoff, of'\u25a0 Castlegar Monday,\nwhen he' pleaded guilty before Stipendiary Magistrate William. Irvine\nin Provincial Police Court Mr. Nahornoff appeared bn a charge of exceeding the speed limit tn the 30-\nmile zone bn Granite - Road early\nSunday morning.\nHe was issued a ' blue driver's\nlicence. \u2022 '\nThe chief exporting countries of\ncod-liver oil are Norway and Newfoundland.      ,\niitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniitiiiiiimiiiiniiiiiiiii\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\ni.    .at' the,' :\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\n; 413 Hall 8t Phone 140\nI n n l n i 1111 n 1111111111111111111111 a 11:\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\n-   Accurately .\nMed   Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nFined $25 for\nSpeeding \u25a0 \"r  \\\nLarry Herismaki, Vancouver,\nB.C.-,- who appeared.betore' William\nIrvine, Stipendiary Magistrate,: hi\nProvincial; Police . Court,-iJelson,\nMonday paid a $25 fine on a charge\nbt exceeding the so-mile per' hour\nspeed,limit on Taghuni Hill'Saturday, night \u2022\nMr. Herlsmakl pleaded guilty and,\nwas issued a yellow driver's licence\nin 'substitution tor bis blue, licence.\nBell  the  8ure  Way\u2014CLASSIFIED\nFirst Shipment\nNew Fall\nHATS and PRESSES\nIn Distinctive Styles\n... See Our.\n,Bargain Table\n:   Articles Less Than\n-.\",.' Half-Price\nKootenay Florence\nOutput High\nAinsmore Consolidated \u25a0 Mines,\nLtd., production from the Kootenay\nFlorence Mine North of Ainsworth\nwas high during 1948.  \u25a0\nFrom 13,861'tons of ore mllled'ln\nthe year,,there were 18,432 ounces\nof silver, 627,882 pounds Of lead,\n408, 347\"\u25a0 pounds of. Stab, and 2201\npounds, of cadmium. ..;\nS1000 IN PRIZES\n: For farm, garden and field products,\nflowers, cooking, canning,, sewing,\nhandicrafts, poultry\/ pets, etc.\n7 <it thai'\nWEST KOOTENAY EXHIBITION\nNELSON, B.C. \u2014 SEPT715-'T6- 17\n'\"->'\"'\u25a0  ^NTBlE8 CLOSElS-EPf; 10th '\nPrlM.tlit and Entry for-ms: From:\nExhibition Secretary\u2014302 Baker St., Nelson B.C.\nAs early as 1780, Nova Scotia had\n30 sawmills in operation.\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL-HOME\nTHstlnctlve Punerai Servto*\"'\nAMBULANCE SERVICB\n815 Kootenay St -Phone 361\nELLISON'S Rb>AL PATENT\nPASTRY FLOUR\nBE8T FOR CAkE8>ND\n'-',-.        PA8TRY\nGUARANTEED TO SATISFY\nYour Grocer Has It\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditor*\n680 Baker St Phono 231\nLet George Do It\nELECTRICAL WIRING\nAND REPAIRS\nGEO. G. BOYES\nPhono  768-R\u2014420  Houston  8t\nGeneral\nElectric\nWASHERS\nComplete With Pump\n$149 *>\nNelson Electric Co.\nAuthorized GE Dealer\nPhone 280 '   674 Baker 8t\nMcCLARY RANGES\nCOAL AND WOOD\nESCORT \u2014 W oven \u25a0:\u25a0    \"\u25a0        .'.\n18\" oven ________\nCHARM ' ',\"-'     ' ' ; '\nELECTRIC\n. Rangette   _._\nCottage Range\nConsole Range..\n$184.80\n$164.50\n$19000\n$ 63.80\n$218.00\n$269.00\nCOAL AND GAS COMBINATION\nPropane Gas Automatic Oven \u2014 4 surface, burners\u2014\nFull-sized coal firebox. \u2014A Set this smart, modern\naddition to BETTER,LIVING. '\nsnr\nELECTRICAL APPLIANCES\nPHONE 544\nRely on us\nand you can\nrely on your\ncar. .T\n\\\nList above\nthe things\nyou need\ndone\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\n35-PHONE-35\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. 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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"}]}}