{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0426262":{"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":"2023-07-16","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1952-08-21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426262\/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":" *-\u25a0:. \u25a0\u25a0'Z-   \u25a0' - -\nNo Recount for Coast\nMcGeer\nNegligence in Sealing, Packaging\nBallots Make Recount Impossible\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP)-County Court Judge J.\nA. McGeer today ruled against a recount of ballots cast in\nVancouver-Burrard riding in the June 12 British Columbia\ngeneral.election.,\ni._^A$-v\u00abP- ^ke<- for a recount after Social Credit\ncandidate^BerlL Price edged out the C.C.F. candidate Grant\nMacNell by 246 votes.\n\u2022_ \u00ab.^,Vdgi-r J^TcGeer In dismissing the recount application\nsaid: The difficulty here is the impossibility of conducting a\nrecount when there has not been a compliance with the Elections Act-in sealing, packaging and endorsing the ballots ...\nllliiliiliilMlliiiiillillliiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii you cannot get the ballots\nback Where 'they belong.\"\n**$**\n* 'n fity Ygars of Service to the Kootenay-Boundary   -    1952\nHe Got the Bird,\nAll Four of Them\nPEITOCTON, B.C., Aug. 20\n(CP) \u2014 Grease waa shot into\nevery   conceivable    corner of\n- Jim Lowndes' pick-up truck,\nbut a mysterious squeak remained. .      '   \u2022\u25a0\nPuzzled .mechanics lowered\nthe truck from the grease boist\nand continued the search.\nThe chirp, chirp continued.\nThen the mystery was solved.\nA .bird's nest was found under\nthe back of the cab.\nFour baby birds were found\nIn the nest, chirping merrily\nand apparently annoyed by the\nsearchers' intrusion.\niiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiimiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii)\nC.P.A. Plans fo\n*\nExtend Service\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP) -\nCanadan Pacific Airlines will extend\nIts Tokyo-Vancouver service to Eio\nDe Janeiro early next year, it was\n\u2022announced here today.\nC.P-A. President Grant McCona-\nchie said that the new service will\nmake Vancouver \"a terrific airbase.\"\nThs airline will use four-engine\nDC 6's, Mr. McConachie said, which\nwill put Rio within 27 hours flying\ntime and Lima, Peru, within 18\nhours of Vancouver.\nC.P.A. will be the first airline to\nestablish a direct connection between Asia and South America.\n\u25a0The-proposed roiite will be non-\natop'ffbp.; Tokyo to Vancover, nonstop from Vancouver to Mexico City,\nnpn*_top from Mexico City to Lima\n.   and non-Stop from Lima to Rio.\n- Mr. McConachie said that in addition to Japanese in South America,\nthere, are \u25a0'.'big Chinese settlements\nIn Lima and Cuba Which we propose\n\"ft link''with H6ls_f Kong''*\nPIPELINE WORK\nTO BE RESUMED\nVs^NCOtTVER, Aug. 20 (CP) -\nWork ph the lower mainland end of\nthe Trans. Mountain Oil Pipeline\nwill stirt near Sumas, B.C., Sept. 1\nafter a two-month-delay caused by\nthe U.S. steel strike, Canadian Bech-\ntel Ltd., agents fpr the pipeline company, announced today.\nThe announcement said engineers\nwill move into the Sumas River\nsection Sep.. 1 and work eastward\ntoward Hope.\nMachinery Is already being moved\nto the site and plans call for laying\nof 40 miles of pipe before Winter\ncloses the operation.\nIf the C.C>. had won on a recount in Vancouver-Burrard they\nwould have held 19 seats in the\nLegislature to Social Credit's 18.\nThe present Elections Aet re-\nquired   that counted   ballots  be\nreturned to the same  envelope\nfrem which they were taken. Under the alternative  voting  ays-\ntern with Its distribution of ballots this was found impossible.\nJudge McGeer based his ruling\non a judgment In the Vancouver-\nPolnt.Grey riding. The B.C. Appeal\nCourt found ballots could not be\nreturned to their proper envelopes\nand Progressive Conservative A. R.\nMacDougall was, declared elected.\nThe CCF. however, plans further action to obtain a recount in\nVancouver-Burrard,\nCC.F. leader Harold Winch said\nthe Social Credit government has\nbeen asked to take Cabinet action\nunder Section 148 of the Election\nAct. This section permits the lieutenant-governor to remove contradictions and impediments in the\nAct.\n\"This is the only step left for us\nnow,\" said Mr. Winch. \"And thia\nshows again the rotten draftsmanship In the Act\"\nANOTHER ELECTION?\nThere was speculation today that\nPremier W. A. C. Bennett might\ncall another election in Burrard to\nsettle the controversy.\nThe Burrard seat has been hanging fire for six weeks. Recount demanded by the C.C.F. was first rejected by Judge McGeer on a\ntechnicality when th* C.C.F. application referred to the seat as\n\"Burrard\" instead of \"Vancouver-\nBurrard.\" .\nSupreme Court of B.C. reversed\nthe county court decision and ordered the recount to be held.\nMr. Winch said his party had\napplied to the provincial secretary\nthis morning for action by the\nCabinet to remove \"technical impediments\" to the recount.\nNELSON, BsC.. CANADA-THtmSDAY MORNING) AUGUST 21, 1952\nWtATHER FORECAST.'.\u00ab..,\u25a0'\nKootenay: Sunny today but with\noccasional cloudy periods and scattered showers along the mountains\nduring afternoon. Little change to\ntemperature. Wind* light Lo\u00a3*nd,\nhigh at Cranbrook, Creacent Valley\nond Revels toko 40 and 80.\nBIRTHDAY >Xt.TY..\n203rd birthday ps\ndisplay of fireworks,\nss  \u00bb-- Yea.;-;     \u25a0 \u25a0 Ha,|fax climaxed\nIts 203rd birthday party with a gala Venetian night\ni, *ky rockets, flares and search*\nI0!_!!.l.i,ghtln\u00ab\" the pleasure boats sailing In the\n_-\u00b01h X\/.al Arm' Some 60'0o\u00b0 Hallgonlana watched\nthe brilliant display.\u2014(CP' Photo.)\nQirl Quintuplets Born in Brazil\nMan Burned by-\nHigh Tension Wire\n; TOFINC. B.C. Aug. 20 (CP) -\nA logging company superintendent\nwas seriously injured today ln an\naccident which caused a temporary\npower failure- at this West Coast\nVancouver Island village.\nKen Baird, 43, superintendent of\nthe Kennedy Lake Logging Company, was helping to move a house\nwhen it became \"tangled\" with a\nhigh tension wire.' \u25a0\nBaird received serious burns about\nthe head.\nA Queen Charlotte Airlines seaplane piloted by Capt. Gordon Laing\nWas due. to arrive at Tofino at 6:15\np.m. PDT to pick up Baird and take\nhim to hospital at Vancouver. The\nplane, which took off from Comox,\nwas due in Vancouver at 7:30 p.m.\nR.C.A.F. Finds\nMissing Plane;\n(Occupants Okay\nWnraiPEG, Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014 A\nSaskatchewan Government Airways\nplane, missing, two daya In Ndrth-\nern Saskatchewan, was located late\ntoday and all six occupants were\nreported unharmed.\nThe R.CA.F. here reported that\nthe plane had been located qn Wol-\nIaston. Lake, 75 miles South'eaat of\nita take-off point at Black Lake.\nThere was no immediate explanation for the plane's position \u2014\u25a0 it\nwas bound for Pascol Lake, 80\nmiles.North when it took off late\nMonday.\nIt was piloted by John Stewart jpf\nPrince .Albert, SasK, and five American sportsmen.oh a fishing trip.\nThey are: Dr;\"t'BrOlivef of Grace-\nville, Minn., Robert Oliver, B. J.\nLafave, James Lafave and Bruce\nRawson.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nPrincess Margaret Is 22 Today\nBY MURIEL NARRAWAY castle walls  when her father\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014A\ntouch of sadness' will almost\ncertainly shadow the-thoughts\nof Princess Margaret when she\ncelebrates her \"22hd birthday\ntomorrow within the granite\nwalls of Balmoral Castle.\nPresents and ,. peeting. will\nbe brought to the Princess in\nher suite. But the occasion will\nbe different from the happy\ntimes   spent   within the same\ncastle walls\nwas alive.\nOn other birthdays, Margaret\nwent eagerly to the breakfast\ntable in search of a familiar\ncard. It contained mysterious\ninstructions that would lead\nher to a present \u2014 if she could\nfigure out the message.\nThere will be no official\nbirthday party tomorrow. The\nroyal family and guests staying\nat Balmoral will toast Margaret's health and happiness at a\nspecial dinner, followed by an\nevening of dancing.\nI1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIII\nOTHER REFORM INSTITUTIONS HAVE RIOTS and Inmates\ntcheme to get out to freedom, but the Ontario reformatory at Guelph\nhas no bars to itop the Inmates from escaping and has no riots and\nno prison breaks. The activities keep the Inmates busy and\ntrain them for earning a living when they emerge Into society again.\nHere J. C. Pretzel of the reformatory staff Inspects a machine shop\nclass. The Institution boasts 81 per cent \"rehabilitation\" of Its\n\"graduatei,\"\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nLiberals lo Call\nB. (. Convention\nVICTORIA, Aug. 20 (CP) - A\nBritish Columbia Liberal party\nconvention is expected to be called soon after the party's advisory\ncouncil meets in Vancouver during\nthe second week in September.\nIt was learned today that top\nLiberal strategists are anxious to\ngather and plot the party's future\ncourse of action.\nAnnouncement of a convention\ndate could come from the advisory\ncouncil meeting.\nHigh Liberal sources say a convention would be called Immediately if there were some good candidates for leadership.\nMentioned prominently as possible leaders have been Chief Justice Gordori McG. Sloan, University of B.C. president Norman Mackenzie, James Sinclair, M.P., and\nArthur Laing, M.P. but none has\nsignified willingness to seek the\nleadership.\nGravel Truck\nKills Cyclisf\nCOMOX, B.C., Aug. 20 (CP) -\nA gravel truck swerving to avoid\nan oncoming car plowed into two\nmembers of a party of cyclists near\nhere yesterday. One was killed and\nthe other injured.\nDead Is \"Levett Taylor, 40, a\nyouth club leader from Vancouver\nwho was guiding the party. James\nF. Porter, 15, also of Vancouver,\nreceived a fractured leg.\n,_*_*w?_.P\u00a3i?^l.Br\"a- AJ* 21' (AP)-GW quintuplets,\nweighuigless than three pounds each at birth in a poor Negro\n\u25a0workman s home last night, appeared to be thriving today in\nan incubator in Sao Paulo's modern maternity hospital\n..v-oiw6 *\"\u25a0&?\u2022 M_s\u00a3* \"J?1**1 Albano' 38> wa* reported in\nexcellent condition. She lived with her husband; Jose a\naborer, in a ham occupied by four other families in the 'interior town of Sao Carlos.    \t\nHospital authorities said the parents are so poor the five babies arrived at the hospijal wrapped ln\nold clothes.\nMrs. Albano was first attended\nby a midwife, who quickly summoned a doctor when she realized\nmore than one baby was coming.\nAfter the deliveries, the mother and\nquints were brought to hospital,\nwhere the girls wer*. placed in an\nincubator.\nThe Meridional Newa Agency\nsaid it had learned that the babies\nhad been named according to the\nsequence of their birth: Maria Pri-\nmejra,-fii-t)i Marls^ Segunda' (second), Marii Tereelra (third), MaMa\nQuarto ..(fourth), .ind_Jfa\u00aba Quint*\nHe Albinos war* .married 10\nyeara agd. i Four girls arid three\nboys Were born to them previously but five of these children died.\nTwo other sets of quintuplets \u2014\nthe Dionnes and the Diiigentis \u2014\nare doing well.\nThe five Dionne girls became Ju\nnior high school graduates last May\n28 as they celebrated-their 18th\nbirthdayat Corbeil, Ont\n. In Buenos Aires, the Diligent!\nquintuplets \u2014 three boys and two\ntwo girls \u2014 were nine years. old\nlast July 15.\nFATHER CHARGED\nWITH SLAYING\nKAMLOOPS, B.C., Aug. 20 (CP)\n\u2014 Kosaburo Masuda, 58-year-old\nJapanese handyman, charged with\nthe shotgun slaying of his 17-year-\nold daughter, Mrs. John Bing, today\nwas committed for trial in higher\ncourt.\nMrs. B|ng, wife of a Chinese taxi\ndriver and the mother of a three-\nweek-old son, died in hospital here\nAug. 7 half an hour after a shotgun\nhad been fired through h r bedroom\nwindow.\nA statement read by police at the\ntwo-day preliminary hearing.before\nMagistrate Arthur Rankin indicated\nthat Masuda hated his son-in-law.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR DOWN\nNEW YORK. Au_.'2Q (CP) -The\nCanadian dollar was down 1\/16 at\npremium-of 4 1\/19 per cent in\nterms of United States funds In\nclosing foreign exchange dealings\ntoday. The pound sterling was\ndown Sri of a cent at $2.7S>_.\nU.N. Planes Strike\nSupply Centre\nSEOUL, Aug. 21 (Thureday) (AP)\n\u2014United Nations planes smashed a\nhuge Communist troop and supply\ncentre on the Northwestern Korean\ncoast Wednesday in a renewal of\nassaults on prime targets.\nMore than 200 aorties\u2014Individual\nmissions \u2014 were thrown at the\ncentre, near' Namyang about - 25\nmiles Northwest of Pyongyang, the\nKorean Communist capital. Fires\nraged in Namyang.\nReturning pilots reported at least\n58 buildings and several ammuni;\ntion dumps destroyed. Australian\nand United States Navy fighter-\nbombers took part\nU.S. Marine Corsairs and Panther\njets hit another supply centre\nfarther down the West coast, near\nHaeju. The U.S. FJfth Air Force reported it demolished 15 buildings.\nWednesday's <air blowa appeared\nto be part of a new policy of waiting until the Reds build up supplies near the front and then wiping them out.\n\u25a0iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiAiiiiiiiiiiiiiiTiiiiiiiiiiiii\nRoller Skating\nRooster Soon\nReady for Debut\nLOS ANGELES, Aug. 20 (AP)\n\u2014 If you're strolling ..long the\nsidewalk and a big red rooster\nwhizzes past on roller skates,\ndon't rush to the nearest eye\ndoctor.\nIt's only Buster, out for his\ndaily spin.\nA ,lively pptful of Rhode\nIsland Red, Buster is one of $ev-\neraJ\/chickens;owned.by William\n.Lehr, ^ttpedi^B^-clrmm. :\n- sjttster -use sa'five*_nch-foi_g\nbaby states, made of aluminum\naAa taped to his big feet.\nLehr usually gives Buster a\npush.to get him started. Once\nunderway the bird makes out\nall right.    '\nHe uses his wings to push\nhimself forward and to keep his\nbalance.\nBuster, who is three years old.\nhas been skating for six months.\n: Lehr-is grooming him for a\nstage debut. The ex-clown\nfigures his pet has a great\ntheatrical career ahead of'him.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\n9 OF TO ESCAPE\nINJURY IN CRASH\nSAULT STE. MARIE, Ont, Aug.\n20 (CP) \u2014' A Norsetnan aircraft,\nskimming over trees and hydro\npoles, crashed today some 14 miles\nEast of here with 10 persons aboard.\nOnly Injury \u2014 a broken ankle \u2014\nwas.suffered by pilot Keith Messenger, 32, of Sault Ste. Marie. The\nplane owned bySault Airways was.\non a scheduled flight from'Wawa,\nan iron ore mining town, 130 miles\nNorth of here, when it strayed off\ncourse and crashed.\nPolio at Kimberley\nEpidemic Hits Adults;\nSchools May Be Closed\nTruman Gov'l\noad to Tyranny\nSays Eisenhower\nBOISE, .Idaho, Aug. 20 (AP) \u2014\nGen. Dwight D. Eisenhower today\naccused the Truman administration\nof travelling \"the clear road to the\nleft\" in Labor-management relations, medical care and farm pol-\nHe called it the road to tyran-\nThe Republican presidential nominee said the administration is one\nwhich \"with new names and faces\nseeks to perpetuate itself\" through\nelection of the Democratic candidate for the White House, governor\nAdlai Stevenson of Illinois.\nIn effect, the General ln the\nspeech, called by his aides the first\n\"frankly political\" one since his nomination, sounded anew a now familiar Republican campaign theme\u2014\nthat Stevenson as President would\nbe captive of the Truman people.\nThe Democrats, Eisenhower contended, are seeking to nationalize\nmedicine, to \"regiment our farmers\" and without authority, to seize\nproperty and force our- working-\nmen to work for the government\"\nThe latter remark was an obvious\nreference to President Truman's recent seizure of the steel mills, an\naction the supreme court ruled unconstitutional.\nBandits Rob\nBank,of $3000\nMONTREAL, Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014\nThree rnen, two of them armed\nwith revolvers, held up the assistant manager and a bookkeeper of a\nbranch of the National Canadian\nBank today ahd escaped with about\n$3000.\nThere were no customers In the\nbank at the time and two other\nemployees were out to lunch. The\nbranch fs at Belanger and Bordeaux\nStreets in Northeastern Montreal.\nU. S. Ship Sinks After\nCollision With Tanker\nree\nKills Beafon Nan\nBEATON, B. C, Aug:-20 (CP)\nA tree, felled by .flames today\nstruck ahd killed legging operator\nJohn Rlbalkln of Beaten as he\nfouflht'si'lOO-acl-e forest fire In\nSoutheastern British Columbia,\nRlbalkln 49-year-old father ef\ntwo children, was one of 90 men\nbattling a fire In the Incomap-\npleux River district, 23 mile*\nNortheast, of this lakeshore community.\nHe Is believed to be the third\nperson to meet death In B. C. this\nyear whjle fighting forest fires.\nOne man died In the 60,000-acre\n. Burns Lake blaze In North-Central B. C\u201e and another firefighter\nIs presumed to have lost his life\nIn the same outbreak.\n\"There was no nolle as the flaming tree fell,\" said R.C.M.P. Constable Jim King of the Revelstoke\ndetachment. \"Several others Jumped aside, yelling as they did, but\nIt struck Rlbalkln on fhe head,\nkilling him Instantly.\"\nThe fire It believed to have\nstarted from a lightning strike.\nRlbalkln had been flreflghtlng for\nfive daya. He was a member of the\nRlbalkln logging operators firm at\nBeaton. '\nConstable King, describing hia\nInvestigation of the death, laid:\n. .-\"We took.a plane from Revel*\nstake and landed at Beaton shortly after noon. \"Then we were car?\nrled 10 miles Into the area by\ntruck, and then bad to walk another 13 miles through a roughly\nhewn path to get to the scene.\n\"It took 16 men, working In re-\n. lays, to carry the body out\"\nAn inquest will be held Monday\ninto Ribalkin's death. He is survived by hia widow and a son and\ndaughter.   .\n. The communis.' of Beaton ls on\nthe Northern tip of Upper Arrow\nLake in Heavily wooded country. It\nis about 100 miles from the City of\nNelson..\nKIMBERLEY _ Kimberley's polio epidemic took a\nquick upward surge Wednesday with two more deaths and\nlive new cases.\nDavid Honeyman, Sii-year-old\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Honey-\nman of Chapman Camp, and John\nBullis, 6-.-year-old son of Mr. and\nMra. Gaylord Bullia of Lower\nBlarchmont, died Wednesday to\nbring the total of deaths to \u2022ever-\nall of them children.\nOf the five new cases, three' tr*\nadults. One la a Marysville woman\nand the others are a man and a\nwoman from Chapman Camp.'\nB, w_J!. K_-\",ten\u00ab-' health head,\nDr. Watts, hai announced that\n\u2022choola will not open until the\nepldemlo abates. :\nThe Kimberley Amateur Athletic\nAssociation and the Rod and Gun\nClub  have  voluntarily  postponed \u2022\ntheir games scl.edu_.ed for the week-\nend.\nParents are keeping their ehU-\ndrm off the streets and In their\n--^iiom5*,'_\"s.th*- eP'-*\u00aba-<- abowi\nno sign of abating.       .\nThere have been 12 cases, with\nsix deaths and five patients discharged.\nIRON LUNO ARRIVES\nAn Iron lung has been brought lo\nfrom Cranbrook ln case it la needed.\nbut aa yet none of-the cases la of a\ntypo that would benefit from iti\nDEAL, England, Aug. 20 (AP)\u2014\nThe American wartime liberty ship\nWestern Parmer broke ln halves\nand sank in the storm-lashed English Channel tonight three hours after colliding with a Norwegian tanker.\nTbe collision tore a gaping hole\nIn tbe aide of the American ship\nand ripped her bridge away.\nLifeboats from Dover and Rams-\ngate circled the doomed vessel and,\nrepprts here said, picked up the\ncrew of 37 headed by Captain,Gun-\nSer Utvik, 52, an American of Scan-\nInavian origin.\nURGENT CALLS\nptie \"Farther\" seat' out urgent\ncalls for medical help after the\ncrash, indicating Some of the crew\nmight be in bad shape.. The signals\nhad to be sent by blinker becanuse\ntbe radio was wrecked.\nThe 11,732-ton tanker Bjorgholm,\nW\nbuilt last year, was not seriously\ndamaged.\nWhile attention focused here,\na small British trawler, tha 260-ton\nMagnolia, sank ln just seven seconds off Eastern England. Reports\nsaid three of her crew died lp an\nexplosion that blew up the trawler;\neight were rescued.\nSearchlights .from rescue craft\npicked out th^ 7239-ton Parmer wallowing helplessly In deep swells\nwith her bridge gone and the-crew\nhuddled on an open deck.\n8PLIT IN TWO\nIt was not clear whether the crew-\ngot away just before or whether\nthey Jumped Into (he stormy channel after the breakup. The lifeboats\npicked- struggling crew members\nout of the water and headed for\nDover where they are expected\nearly Thursday.\nThe forward half of-the single-\nstacker sank,,immediately and the.\nstern drifted away; settling slowly\nInto tbe sea.\nTwo Men Burned to\nDeath <in Explosion\nQUEBEC, Aug. 20 (CP) - Two\nmen were burned to death today\nwhen an acetylene torch touched\noff a gas explosion and fire inside\na 21,000-barrel gasoline tank being\ndismantled..   \" .\nKUled'.'W-re Ronald Sudds, 28, of\nKing-ton; Ont, and William Rue-\nther, 24, of Peace River. Alta.\nTwo. others. Roger Kennedy of\nKingston and Pierre Bedard. 42, of\nQuebec, were in the tank when the\nmishap occurred but escaped\nthrough an opening at the bottom\nof the tank.\nThe steel tank, owned by McColl-\nFrontenac Oil Company, Ltd., was\nbeing dismantled by a crew working for Spalding and Davis Company, Kingston contractors.\nBedard said the four men were\nbuilding an iron, scaffold inside the\ntank when the fire was started by a\ntorch held by Sudds.\nHe said Sudds and Ruether were\ncut off by the fire, while he and\nKennedy were hear the opening,\nlarge, enough for one man'to pass\nthrough.\nPriest (barged\nWilli fnffmidafing\nJehovah Witness\nVAL D'OR, Que., Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014\nRev. Georges Beland, Roman Catholic priest from the tiny lumbering\ncommunity of Val Senneville, appeared today before Magistrate\nFelix Allard on a charge of intimi-'\ndating a preacher of the Jehovah's\nWitness sect.\nMax Danleyko, 23, Val d'Or, laid\nhe had been going from house to\nhouse in the settlement when he wis\naccosted by Father Beland, who, he\nsaid,' ordered him away, took him\nby the shoulder and threatened that\nif he did not leave 'T will have you\nkilled by the mob.\",\nDanleyko described the mob as a\ngroup of people who had just come\nout of the Roman Catholic Church\nand were standing nearby. \u25a0.\nThe preacher said he had been\nforced to accompany Father Beland\nto the, presbytery where \"I asked\nhim for the credentials which gave\nhim the authority to act ln this way.\n\"He then pulled out a pair of\nhandcuffs, field them up to me and\nsaid: T am the police here. Thla ls\nmy authority.'\"\nThe case is continuing.\nVICTORIA, Au# 20 (CP) \u2014\nLand and Forests -Minister-R. E.\nSommers today announced the\ngovernment ls going to launch a\nthorough study to find out if B.C.'s\nexisting steel manufacturing capacity can be enlarged to Include the\nsmelting of domestic ores.\nThe minister said the government\nalso la going to look, into the matter of iron ore export, and the reserve placed on ores of iron and\nmanganese by the previous government.\n\"The government will publish its-\nfindings, whatever they may be,\nand if there is anything practical\nit can do to encourage the smelting\nof iron ores in the province a policy will be announced,\" said Mr.\nSommers.\nAn Integrated Iron and steel industry, even a small one, is a costly undertaking. To make it t success there must be sufficient supplies of raw materia! to guarantee\na long life, and there must be markets which the products of the Industry can be sold on a competitive basis,\" Mr. Sommers said.\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (Reuters) \u2022-\nSoviet scientists have developed\nmore than 20 new varieties of frost\nresisting tomatoes, cucumbers and\ncabbages for cultivation in Northern\nRussia a Moscow radio broadcast\nsaid today.\nPOOLS REOPENED\nINVERMERE \u2014 Swima-tog noola\nat Radium Hot Springe :\u00bb-td KS-\nmont Hot Springs have been rt.\nopened, as no more cases of polio,\nmyelitis have been reported lo th*\ndistrict. -\nThe.pool* were.closed reveral\nday* ago to -l-Ud-ra iw-l*. the ago\nof -IB when toe East Kc^-jr-Ddto\ne^wjr thre-tenea \u2022tS^^^'S\nthe area. ..a . \u25a0 --j,.-\u00ab\nme\nOTTAWA, Aug..\u00bb (CP)-P6Uet\nand civic officials today linked the\nnear-death by hanging of' a 10.\nyear-old boy with a movie, attended\nby at least.one of:the, playmate!\nwho strung him up to a pole.\nGarnet Kiel-ens was hanged with\na six-foot-long piece of silk during\na game. When his face turned blue,\nhis playmates cut him down.' Quick\ntreatment with oxygen by a fire-\nman saved his life.\nPaul Sullivan, 13, one of Garnert\nplaymatea, said the game \u2014 in\nwhich a five-year-old - also wae\nhanged but escaped injury \u2014 started after he saw the movie Golden\nHorde. The picture is a Hollywood\nversion of the invasion of Europe\nby the Mongol emperor.\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (AP) -\nMarine Major William Earl Barber, 32, of San Diego, Calit, was\nawarded the Congressional Medal\nof Honor today for heroism in the\nbitter maripe battle of Northeast\nKorea ln late 1950. Barber, who received the medal from President\nTruman, was in a band of stubborn\nmarines who held off over 1000 encircling Chinese In the icy mountains of Korea.\nU)akJL aCtwsh.\nAnd in This Corner...\nNEWPORT, Wales, Aug. 20 (AP)\u2014The park gardener's 18-year-old\nassistant couldn't stand flower pots. Day after day he had to wash\nhundreds of them.\nThe final straw came when people began calling him \"pot washer\"\nwhen he was out with his girl.\nSo he raged through the potting shed and broke the sterna of 328\nprize chrysanthemums valued at \u00a31-5.\n\"He must have gone beraerk,\" pleaded his counsel, when a juvenile\ncourt fined the pot-hater \u00a35.\nPROVIDENCE. R.I., Aug. 20 (AP)\u2014Mrs. Joe Farmer's living room\nhad a*jungle motif she didn't plan on when she returned home yesterday from a month on Cape Cod.\nThe huge Kudzu vine which almost covers her home.found its way\nthrough a slit near a window and grew into toe living room.\nShe found long tentacles entwining picture frames and furniture.\nWITH THE U.S. 2STH DIVISION, Korea, Aug. 20 (AP)\u2014Cpl. Ray\nBohn of St Louis Is due to be rotated In September, but he wonders If\nhe will get home by Christmas.\nThe reason: Back In June he wrote a dozen newspapers asking for\nmall. He was deluged with about 100 lettera a day and from them he\nhat found 2 girl frlenda who want him to visit them on hli way home.\nBohn Is studying maps and plana to visit all of them except t girl\nIn Omaha, which he oayo la too far off his route. But he It not euro he\nwill reach St Louis before Christmas, because 23 glrla take up \u25a0 lot\nof a man's time.\nSECAUCUS, N.J., Aug. 20 (AP)\u2014Secaucus pigs may not be social\noutcasts after today.\n.,, A New York firm is spraying a deodorant on the hog habitants of\nCharles Schoch's farm as an experiment. If the scents wafted'over hia\nwallows stifle, odors, says Schoch, all of the township's 53,000 hogs\nprobably wil] get the perfume treatment. . , \u25a0\nSchoch, president of the Stock Farmers' Association of- Secaucus,\nis confident of success. \"After today we will have pigs that smell\u2014like\nwisteria,\" he said.\nAugust 20 \t\n1952\n7.60\n1951   1948\n6.9S   4.04 I\nNORFOLK, Va\u201e Aug.,20 (AP)-Rev. R. I. Wllllami telephoned hli\n\u2022ermoo topic to the Norfolk Ledger-Dispatch. .\n\"The Lord la My Shepherd,\" he said. ' ,\"i'.   \\\n\"la that all?\" he was asked. <S-\nHe replied: \"That'i enough.\"\nAnd the.ehurc- page carried Mr. Wllllami lermon.tople ai \"the\nLord Is My Shepherd\u2014That'i Enough.\" - \u25a0\nThe mlnl-tor rather liked the Idea. He used the expanded verilon\nIt hit sermon title Sunday at Falrmount Park Methodist Chuijeh.\n;:*,;\n.--.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0': \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0''..-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0>\" .-\u25a0\u25a0-\n \u25a0Mitr NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG. 21, 1952\nIThe Mightiest\nOF THEM ALL!\nf DONT MISS HUMPHREY BOQART'S ACADEMY AWARD\nt WINNING PERFORMANCE\n*0*ttOHMCTVaj,\nHUMPHREY\nmem mm.Mz\\i\n^ -s^uittt-B.'\u00bb,wffii\u00ab-m\nro\u00bbwcow\u00bb3S\nExtra \u2014 Latest World New* \u2014 \"DOG TAX DODGERS\"\nTonight   '     XWZJF'I TTffit -1 Complete\nThru \u00a5 0TJ 'Yl0m\\ Shows\nSot. mstm^LMJLstmm       7.00-9.00\nPOLIO PREVALENT\nIN N.W. EUROPE\na GENEVA, Aug. 20 (AP) - A\nrthtrp Increase, ln poliomyelitis ln\nNorthwest Europe and the United\n.States was reported today by the\nainlted Nations World Health Organization. The weekly W. H. O.\npsealtb bulletin reported a \"definite recrudoecepce\" ot the disease,\n(\u25a0particularly- In Northern Germany\nSnd the Low Countries.\n^   ,        *\u00bb*..-'\u25a0.   ...I, \t\nWar Criminals To Be\nSent to Japan\nMELBOURNE, Aug. 20 (Reuters)\n\u2014Japanese war criminals on Manus\nIsland, North of New Guinea, will\nsoon be sent home, the Melbourne\nArgus reported yesterday. The Japanese were convicted of crimes\nagainst Australian servicemen, and\nare serving sentences of from five\nyears to life imprisonment\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nThursday - Friday \u2014 Aug. 21 - 22\nkm\nRANDOLPH SCOTT In\nColt .45\n(TECHNICOLOR)\nwith Ruth Roman, Zacltary Scott\nALSO\n11\nJUNQLE TERROR\nTechnicolor\nCartoon\nBIG HOUSE BUNNY\nLITTLE ARCHER\nBox Office 7:00 p.m. \u2014 First Show 8:15 p.m.\nCUSTOM COLORS\n\u2022 THE MOST COMPLETE ... .\n\u2022 THE MOST PRACTICAL. . .\nDECORATIVE   COLOR   SYSTEM\nIN WESTERN CANADA\n132\nSeparate Distinctive Colors\nfor use with Mohamel High Gloss, Satin, Velvet\nand Monaseal one-coat Flat finish\n51 deep tones and 81 pastel colors, with four different\nfinishes.\nNow, at. lost, we can offer precise colors to match any\ntype of furnishings for the most discriminating home\nowner of decorator \u2014 in the most mcd.rn finishes \u2014\nMonamel and Monaseal....     ' * * * \u2022\nBURNS\nLumber Company\n\"Everything lot Ihe Builder\"\n602 Baker St.    Kelson, B. C.\nPHONE\n1180\nPHONE\n1181\nCc^idsqry Insurance Favored,\nBut Board Hits Accounts Handling\nForest Service\nBuilding Ready\nIn September\nNew B.C. Forest Service building\nis expected to be ready tor occupancy at the end of September.\nThe exterior of the 93 by 82 foot\ntwo-storey building is almost completed except for three coats of\npaint and a hole in the roof which\nresulted from a fire Tuesday. Finishing work is now going on In the\ninterior. '\nForestry equipment such as the\nfire fighting gear, has been moved\ninto the basement of the building.\nThe entire basement and half of the\nground floor will provide warehouse facilities. All the offices except the Ranger's office will be\nsituated on the second floor. The\nLand's Inspector will also have an\noffice in the same building, *\nSome 23 offices will be housed.\nNelson Nan Hurl\nIn Road Blading\nAlbert (Bert) Doerksen, employee\nof Storms Contracting (Pacific)\nLtd,, ls ln Kootenay Lake General\nHospital with shoulder and arm Injuries received when in a blasting\naccident on Nelson-Nelway road\nconstruction work near the Euphrates Mine area.\nMr. Doerksen was hit by a flying\nrock Just before the day's work was\nto close.\nHe lives at 518 Latimer Street with\nhis wife and young son. They have\nbeen ln Nelson for *. year.\nOuldoor Theatre\nTraffic \"Orderly\"\nR.C.M.P. said Wednesday that\ntraffic on the North Shore \"was\nmuch better than we expected on\nthe opening night of the outdoor\ntheatre.\" Nearly 500 carloads attended the two opening performances at the new Starlight\nTraffic was \"very orderly\" and\nonly a few motoriata failed to comply with speed restrictions, a patrol\nconstable said. Police will continue\nto patrol the North Shore highway\nwhile the theatre Is in' operation.\nFerry traffic at Nelson was well\nregulated and few waited longer\nthan two trips. Ferry operators reported transporting seven full loads\nof cars across the Arm after the\nfirst performance,\nDRINK-DRIVING\nBRINGS $100 FINE\nFor driving while his ability was\nimpaired by the use of alcohol, a\nNelson taxi driver was fined $100\nin City Court Wednesday. R. J.\nBrindie pleaded guilty to- the\ncharge before Magistrate William\nBrown.\nThe charge arose as the result of\na minor accident on Silica Street\nwhen the cab hit a retaining wall,\nsmashing the front end of the car.\nThe Weather\nWith afternoon temperatures\nslightly above the 80 degree level\nvalleys of the Southern Interior en-\nJoyed another fine day Wedensday\nand should fare well again today.\nHowever, the prolonged and unchanging pattern of the weather\nshows signs of being interrupted.\nPersisting cloudiness has spread\nover the Northern Interior accompanied by occasional showers. Colder air from the North gathering in\nne Gulf of Alaska Is prompting the\nievelopment of a more significant\nweather system which is gradually\nHearing the coast.\nThe first effects over the Southern\nCoast should be demonstrated by increasing cloud *oday. Showery\n\u25a0veather following some distance behind will reach the Queen Charlotte\nTslands overnig' t and at'vance to\nNorthern Vancouver Island.\nNelson  .-.    57   SB    \u2014\nSt. Johns _ _   55  85   \u2014\nHalifax      58   75    \u2014\nMontreal    60   79   \u2014\n*)'tawa     56   80   \u2014\nforonto      54   79   \u2014\nrorth Bay      56  75   \u2014\n'ort Arthur     55   80   \u2014\n'enora    57   72   .06\n.Vinnipeg      54   75   \u2014\nBrandon       55   74    \u2014\nThe Pas     51   62   \u2014\nSaskatoon        40  75   \u25a0*\nPrince Albert    42\" 71' \u2014\nMorth Battleford     41   73   \u2014\nSwift Current     45   73   \u2014\nMedicine Hat     54   80   \u2014\nLethbridge     47   78   \u2014\nCalgary   <^x 48  70   .02\nEdmonton     45   74   \u2014\nkamloops     47  86   \u2014\nVancouver      50  71   \u2014\nVictoria        50  67   \u2014\n-imberley   86   81   \u2014\nCrescent Valley \u201e .39 -84   \u2014\n'Casio       47 - 77 . \u2014\n\"Vince Rupert    53   60   .14\n\"Vince George  .._.   42   70   \u2014\n\",rand Forks  ,   41   84   \u2014\n'-attle     47  78   \u2014\nPortland  '.    49   78    \u2014\nspokane        48   80   \u2014\nChicago      68   78   .29\n, San Francisco    _    48   68   \u2014\n'.os Angeles      \u2014    64   75    \u2014\n\"\u25a0lew York     68   79    \u2014\nWhlt-horse        46   56    \u2014\nThs Peter Redpath Museum of\nNatural History was built at McGIII\nUniversity in 1882.\nThe board of dlreotora of Koo-\nteriay Lake General Hospital li in\nfavor of compulsory hospital Insurance, but doesn't exactly like\nthe way the B.C. scheme is being\nadministered.\nIn one of the most lively discuss-\nIons it has held In recent months\nthe board Tuesday night ran the\ngamut ot points ln the hospital In.\nsurance situation.\nA resolution passed In June by\nthe B.C. Hospitals' Association\nstarted the talk off. It affirmed\nsupport of compulsory hospital in*\nsurance, and with a new govern*\nment elected since then, was being\ncirculated among member hospitals for a second time.\nA few of the hospital board\nmembers felt endorsation, which\nwas finally agreed upon, would Indicate tbe board was approving\nof the present handling of compulsory Insurance, not the principle.\nREJECTIONS\nA. K. McAdam, newest addition to the board, charged the\nB.C.H.I.S. with mismanagement. He\nbrought out the fact that Kootenay Lake General Hospital had oh\nits books between $48,000 and\n$50,000 In uncollectable accounts\nowing to rejection of bills by the\nB.C.H.I.S. j\nIn many cases patients had believed they were covered. But\nwhen numbers of their hospital insurance papers had 'been submitted, rejection slips had come back,\noften after the patient had left\nhospital.\n\"The B.C.H.I.S. has no compunction In criticizing our budget each\nyear, yet leaves us holding the bag\nin these cases,\" he said. \"The bill\nmay be as much as $1000.\nCollections costs also are borne\nby the hospital.\nIf every person were covered by\nhospital Insurance, the hospitals\nwould not be saddled with the\ndebts, jnembers pointed, out,\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nreceives about $80,000 a month\nfrom the B.C.H.I.S., amounting to\nmore than $1,000,000 since the\nscheme went into, effect in 1840.\nMembers agreed that the\nB.C.H.I.S. has done wonders ln\nkeeping hospital doors ,open, recalling the days of sweepstakes and\nlater ,the deep water the hospital\nwas getting Into wth private companies, '\nCHEAP INSURANCE\nGeorge Turner, chairman, said\nthat with costs today, he doubted\nlt many could pay hospital bills\nunless they were covered.\n\"It's cheap insurance, If everyone will get ln on It\"\nWhen \u25a0 hospital can show the\nB.C.H.I.S. it can't collect on the\ndebts, the B.C.H.I.S. may make a\nsettlement; although there Is no\nguarantee tt will.\nMembers such as R. D. Bames,\nhowever, .reminded the board that\nln the event the Indebtedness Is\nmet by the B.C.H.I.S., not Only for\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nbut also for other hospitals In\nB.C., the cost la reflected in Insurance rates.'\n\"Those who belong to the plan\nare bing discriminated against, ln\nthat delinquents raise tha cost\"\nHe felt 'that the compulsory\nangle should be enforced, and ln\nthis view was supported by other\nmembers.\nThe chairman recommended that\nbefore the board takes any further action, it should acquaint itself with recommendations of the\nB.C.H.I.S.'inquiry board, many of\nwhich he said were \"fine\"\nrecommendations.   -\nHospilal (lamps\nDown on Debtors\nThe board of directors of Kootenay Lake General Hospital has\nserved notice to its debtors that\nunless bills are paid, it will take\nthe cases to collection agencies.\nThe hospital has between $25,000\nand $30,000 in unpaid bills on its\nbooks, and the board at ita Tuesday\nnight meeting, after reviewing the\nsituation, Instructed the management to clamp down.\nThe management Wednesday stated that it expects to have the debts\ncleaned up ln two or three months.\n(asllegarPark\nSite Unavailable\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Pass Creek property, which the Village of Castlegar is endeavoring to obtain for a\npark site has been frozen by the\ngovernment for the time being.\nThis information was received by\nthe Village Commission at its\nmeeting this week.\nIn its fight for policing of the\nvillage, the Commission decided to\nwrite to authorities in Nelson for\nInformation. Fire Chief R. A. D.\nWest asked if there was anything\nin the bylaw to stop cars from running over fire hoses. If not he recommended a clause be added.\nPermission was granted A. Ere-\nmenko and Company to use two\nparking spaces as a loading zone\nduring atore liours only.\nThe problem of accommodation\nfor the old fire truck ls becoming\nacute, with the Winter montha fast\napproaching. This has been put ln\nthe hands of Commissioner H. Summers.\nBuilding permits were granted\namounting to $23,500 and accounts\namounting to $1518 were ordered\npaid.\nBike Catches Fire\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Prompt action on\nthe part of the Fruitvale volunteer\nfire brigade prevented a fire here\nfrom spreading. \u2022\nA motor bike belonging to Ray\nBorland caught fire at the home of\nhis parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Borland,\nand was destroyed. As the flames\nwere confined, damage to the shed\nwhich housed it was negligible.\nFailure To Remove\nBuilding Brings Fine\nKIMBERLEY, \u2014 James Kerrigan\nof Cranbrook, owner of a garage of\nWalllnger'Avenue here, has been\nfined $50 and $5.50 costs for failur.\nto remove a fire hazard.\nIn mid-April, Mr. Kerrigan was\nnotified by the Fire Marshal that the\nbuilding would have to be removed.\nAn appeal for delay until June 15\nwas granted, but no action was\ntaken. The building now has been\ndismantled.\nThe case was-heard by Magistrate\nV. M. Bourne.\nSix in Race for\nFair Queen Crown\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 The Castlegar\nFall Fair Committee has announced\nthat six students from the Stanley\nHumphries High School would be\nin the running for Harvest Queen\nof the Fair.\nThe six girls participating are Gall\nSeaton, Jerry Anne Wanless, Sheryl\nMartel, Rosemare Soberlak, Sheryl\nRiely and Betty Jean Lainpard.\nThe winner will be declared by\nthe number of ticket! sold, each\nticket representing so many points.\nThere will be a contest In conjunction with the crowning of the queen\non September 6. The fair will be\nheld September 5 and 6.\nBee Contributes\nTo Man's Death\nNORTH VERNON, Ind., Aug. 20\n(AP)\u2014A doctor said yesterday that\na bee sting on a finger contributed\nto the death of Owen Bonesteel, 34.\nThe doctor said a heart ailment\nwas the direct cause of Bonesteel'a\ndeath, a half-hour after tha bee\nstung him yesterday.\nHow\"SMnnf Girls\nGet Lovely Curves\nGain 5 to 10 lbs. New Pep\npw rtn up. loaTKr\nnod nourlaaeayou bat I\nCLASSIFIED ADS QET RESULTS\nNOTICE\nAINSWORTH HOT SPRINGS\nSWIMMING POOL HAS RE-OPENED\nOpen Weekdays 1 p.m. to 10 p.m.\u2014Saturday and Sunday, t a.m.\nto to p.m, excepting Mondays when Pool will be closed all day.\nTrail Youth Wins\n$250 Scholarship\nTRAIL, B.OC. \u2014 Edwin Menkes,\n18, has been awarded a $250 scholarship by the University of British\nColumbia Alumni Association.\nHe graduated this Spring from\nGrade XII, and will start studies at\nU.B.C. this Fall. Son of Mr. and\nMrs. Max Menkes, he had a high\nscholastic standing throughout his\nschool years here. Winning a social\nstudies award from the I.O.D.E. at\ngraduation this Spring. He ls well-\nknown for his musical prowess, having taken honors ln pianoforte\nclasses at Kootenay Musical Festivals.\nC.F.U.W. lo Posl\nNew Fellowship\nOTTAWA, Aug. SO <CP) - The\nCanadian Federation ot University\nWomen today voted to set up a new\n$1200 fellowship In.memory of the\nlate Dr. Margaret MacWllllams of\nWinnipeg,\nThe triennial convention of the\nC.F.U.W. approved the proposal\nsuggested by \u25a0 standing committee\non scholarships. Tne fellowship\nhonors Dr. MacWllllams, first president of the Federation, who died\nseveral months ago.\nThe fellowship ls open to a woman\ngraduate of a Canadian University\nwho wishes to do further academic\nwork. The recipient will be selected\nfor the 1953 from applications during the balance of 1983.\nThe Convention also voted $2000\nadditional financial aid to holders of\nFederation scholarships to complete\nwork already started. Present scholarship holders may obtain a maximum of $500.each.\nThe North Central Saskatchewan\nRegional Library at Prince Albert\nwill receive another $850 grant for\n1953. The Library was the first regional children's library set up on\nthe Prairies and received a similar\ngrant last year for 1952 operations.\nBOY OF 9 WINS\nBAKING CONTEST\nOTTAWA, Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014 Some\nkids have It, some kids don't. But\nwhen it comes to baking nine-year\nold Ross Dickson of the Ottawa suburb of City View can top them all\n\u2014including the housewives.\nRoss, who delivers papers when\nnot in school\u2014or baking\u2014 opened a\nlot of eyes at the home-cooking\ncompetition at the Central Canada\nExhibition, But he didn't seem surprised when the judges decided his\nfruit and brown breads rated tops\namong all the entries.\nHe also copped third place In\nthe white loaf division ln open class\ncompetition,\n\u25a0Tha oulinary art Menu to hold\nno puzzles for the carrler.bpy-tum-\ned-baker. For the last three months\nhe's been baking the family bread\nat home.\nNote to the ladles: Ross plans to\ngo Into the biscuit and cake competition at next year's' Fair.\nCanadian farmers collected $12,-\n175,000 from the sale of maple syrup\nand sugar ln 1952 or 42 per cent\nmore than last year.\nSoviet Congress\nSet for October\nBy THOMAS P, WHITNEY\nM08COW, Aug, 20 (AP)-The\nfirst nationai congress ot Russia's\nruling Communist party since the\neve of the Second World War was'\ncalled today for Oct. 6, A new\nproduction \u2022 boosting, five \u2022 year\nplan and revamping ef the party\norganization wera the big Items\non Its program.\nIt will be the most Important\ngathering in Russia in years. The\nlast such Congress, the party's 18th,\nwas held in March, 1939.\nPremier Stalin's Politburo, a central committee agency to which\nworld Communism long has looked\nfor guidance, ls to be abolished in\none phase of the party organization. Replacing It perhaps with\nabout the same personnel, will be a\npraesidlum to guide '\"the work of\nthe central committee between\nsessions.\" Stalin himself may speak.\nAnother Job for the delegates ls\nissuance of directives for a fifth\nfive-year plan aimed to Increase\nSoviet industrial production by the\nend of 1955 by 70 per cent over\n1950's output. The' call Is out for\nmore iron, steel, coal and oil, more\nelectricity, shipping, chemicals, tlm\nber.\nThe decree summoning the congress was Issued by the central\ncommittee over the signature of\nStalin In his capacity as general\nsecretary. It was published by all\nMoscow newspapers and broadcast\nby the Moscow radio.\nNakusp Boat Skipper\nHas Narrow Escape\nNAKUSP - Byron F. Crowell,\ncaptain of the Big Bend tugboat Klto\nescaped serious injury here when In\nlowering the apron of the barge, the\ncapstan bar on the winch slipped\nand struck him on the forehead.\nHe managed to reach the beach\nwhere- help was enlisted ln getting\nhim to the Arrow Lakes hospital.\nHe was treated by Dr. T. B. Max-\nfield.\nMRS. J. BLIGHT\nWINS WHIST PRIZE\nFirst prize in tbe Ladies Auxiliary\nto Fraternal Order of Eagles whist\ndrive Wednesday night was won by\nMrs. J. Blight. Second prize went to\nT. DeFerro while Mrs. P. Kuntz\ncarried off the door prize.\nRefreshment committee comprised\nMrs. T. Llssato, Mrs. M. Peloso and\nMrs. W. Kalynluk.\nThere are at least 750,000 known\nkinds of Insects In the world.\n* INDUSTRIAL\ntt COMMERCIAL\nie RESIDENTIAL   WIRING\n-   --\u00ab and;\nCOMMERCIAL\nREFRIGERATION\nFREE ESTIMATES\nTED HILL ELECTRICAL\nCONSTRUCTION LTD.\n\u25a0Castlegar, B.C.\nPhone 494? P.O. Box IS.\nAlaskaSafe\nFrom Raid\nANCHORAGE, Alaska, Aug. 20\n(AP)-Alaska ls safe from enemy\nattack as^ result of perfection of\nthe \"heartland concept\" ln the last\ntwo years, the acting chief of the\nUnited States Air Font told the\nChamber of Commerce here. '..\nGen. Nathan Twining said Alaska ls too big to plan defencea tor\nevery mile of the vast interior and\nextensive shorelines.. The heartland\nconcept was adopted to give th*\nmilitary a strong core near Anchor*\nage and Fairbanks from which operations could be extended quickly\nto the far corners of the territory.\n\"You can relax now for th* first\ntime because you ar* safe,\" he said.\n\"Nobody Is going to bother the\nplace.\"\nStatistics show that children ire\nmore apt to get Into trouble with\nthe law in Spring and Autumn, than\nin other seasons.\nHair Restored\nPermanently\nScientific herbal formula THlO\nguarantees results for ill types of\nbaldness and hair problem). Quickly\npromotes new hair growth regardless ot age or condition. Sold on a\nfull money back guarantee. Start\nyour treatments it home now. For\ncomplete Information writ* today\nto Thalia Herbal Products Limited,\nDopt 417, 8378 Klngswiy. South\nBurnaby. B.C.\nBring ihe\nChildren \u2022 \u2022.\nOn your visits to\nSpokano, stop at the\nFriendly Hotol Spokano,\nTo< better servo our\nguests, children under 14\nstay free with their\nparents.\nBring the children to\nsee ths heort of\nthe Inland Empire . . .\nthey're welcome, tool\n\u2022 Air Conditioned \u2022\nSilver Orill\n\u2022 Parking at our Front\nDoor\/\nREAD  THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nDR. BERT WHITFORD   OR.   R. A   ORAY    DR. D. C. MURPHY\nManager ownor\nHOUBS: 8:30 AM. TO 8:30 Ml\ns.\nDr. D. C. MURPHY\nand ASSOCIATES\nOptometrists\nPHONE MAIN 3537\nLICENSED  BY\nSTATE EXAMINATION      CornM 8*'r\u00bb\u00abu\u00bb \u25a0\u00bb<- Will\n36 Years In Spokane\nSPOKANE 8, WASH.\n^ Boiling Fowl u, _\n^Frying Chicken ._,\n7-T Lean Hamburger\nif Pork Tenderloin\ni( Ontario Cheese *\nLb.\n45*\n59*\n55*\n95*\n55*\nic Pickling Onions\nic Bananas\nUs.\nic O.K. Tomatoes\n12 oz. can\nic Swift's Prem\nic Purex Tissue -\nic Javex Bleach \u00bb \u00ab mi. -\nicDelta Long Rice 2\u00ab,.....\n\u2022 Kerr Mason Lids    ^\u201e 27'\n 25*\n2_. 45'\n2lt-28*\n2*, 69*\n2 -,27*\n\u2014 23*\n_39*\nPrices Effective\nAugust\n2.-22-23\n \u00ab^]|Cate Minister Promises\ne and Highway\nSUMMER\nSANDALS\nYour. Choice\n$2.95\n$3.95    $4.95\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n633 Baker St.\nPhone 895\nConvent's Superior\nGoes to Halifax Post\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Sister Anna Madeleine of the Order of the Sisters\nof Charity of Halifax, who has been\nsuperior of the Sacred Heart convent here for the last six years, has\nbeen transferred to St. Mary's convent ln Halifax where she will be\nin charge of the music department\nShe will be replaced as superior\nby. Sister Mary Margaret, who has\nbeen a member of the convent staff\nfor the last, three years.\nCASTLEGAR, \u2014 Engineers will\nbe put on the Job to find a feasible\nsite for a bridge over the Columbia River at Castlegar, and to ascertain the cost   ,\nThis statement was made Wednesday by Rev. the Non. P. A.\nGallardl, minister of public works,\non his arrival here by ear from\nCranbrook   at   8   p.m.   He   said  \u2014-.-_>\u2022\u25a0\u2014\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb I\nCastlegar would get a bridge to            _.  ._.'_ * I\nreplace Its overtaxed ferry when            KIMBERLEY \u2014 Construction of a modern hospital to\nthe money was available.          replace the present two-storey frame McDougall Hospital is\n.^JS^-SS- ~\u2014'\"   Eeui{_ glven MtM c\u00b0n\u00abderation by Kimbirley Hospital\nBoard, according to chairman i \u201e..,\t\nHospital Construction\nPlanned at Kimberley\nKIMBERT.i-V _  *-\u2014_-    \u25a0\u2022\nEBERLE*\n\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.' >*^'.pW-W.\n;\u25a0-\"\u25a0 Z '.ZZ(Z':\"'\"lZ -'\u25a0' '...'\u25a0*'\u2022\u25a0 -r <:\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0 -   . \u25a0.      \u25a0\u2022_\u2022' *\u25a0\nJ-^OND-A-g^ AUG. 21, .1^^\n.    .... ...miai.-i nom -lanuoops said\nhe would not promise anything he\nfelt his government could not fulfill\nat the present time.\nI CUT-OFF SURVEY\nIn reply to a query about the possibility   of  a  highway  link  from\n'Blueberry Creek past Sheep Lake\nto Paulson to tie up with the Christina Lake to Paulson highway, Mr.\nGagllardi said that as soon as engineers are available, he would have\nthem conduct a survey of the route.\n,   Mr.  Gagllardi  was accompanied\non his trip Into Castlegar by T. McCallum, chief engineer for' the public works  department, and H.  T.\nI Miard of Nelson, divisional engineer.\nHe was met by the Rossland-Trail\nSocial Credit group who had requested he visit the riding, Members\nof the Castlegar Chamber of Commerce   and  the  Nelson  Chamber,\nMcDougall Hospital on McDou-\ngll townsite was originally a Consolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany project constructed in\nKimberley's early days when its\npopulation was only a fraction Of its\npresent total.\nSince then facilities have been expanded to the full extent its site\nwill allow, and the building was\npresented two years ago by Comin-1\nco tq the community to operate under the Kimberley Hospital Board.\n' One-third of the still unestlmated\ncost of the new project would be\nlocal responsibility, with provincial\nand dominion governments covering the other two-thirds.\nWith a solvent and efficiently operating   Kimberley   Medical   and\n...-s-_ sum me nelson Chamber, .-,\u00ab\"_ \"\u00bb\"'*'\u00ab*\u25a0\u2022 ana efficiently od\nalong with Joseph Kary, Mayor of \u00a7*\u00a3\u00a3, Kimberley Medical an,\n'Nelson, were on hand to greet Him. ?\u00b0r?P}% fS\u00abvices Society on a pay-\n, A short discussion took place in 1\u00b0jLftd\"c\"\u00b0.n \"^.the board plans\nthe dining room of the Castlegar ^iD to*E*ng wlth \u00ab\u2022<* member-\nHotel, and major problems Were _\u00a3\u00a3i5__ \"\"JS \"Wand means of\npresented by Ross MacDermid of Si SL. *s?int apPeaI \u00ab\u00b0\nKinnaird, chairman of the Castlegar cWaSnnort r*JanizaUon\u00bb 'or finan\nRr\\r.Oa   -\"Vim*\u00ab.*____   ~J   *u-   \u00ab___._ \"*  wppon.\nDUSTLESS\nBROOM\nAutomatically ff\npicks up dust as -*-\nsweeps.\nJVCEEPS 3 limes bette\nSWEEPS 3 times'easier\nSWEEPS 3 times'quicker\nWEARS 3 times longer\n_\u00bb*_-ssss.u, -ssusrsnun oi me castlegar\nBridge Commltee of the Castlegar\nChamber ang by other officials.\nH. D. Harrison, president of the\nNelson Chamber, spoke briefly, and\n'said his group was behind the\nthe Castlegar Chamber in ita drive\nfor a bridge.      ,\nHe also asked for an -u\nthe Kootenay Lake ferry\nKaslo Bank Office\nTo Be Moved Shortly\nKASLO \u2014 The Bank of Montreal\nhas announced that its Kaslo office,\nafter operating for 10 years as a\nSUb-HC-nsSV    SS.     fss\u00bb    TsT-S\u2014     s .\n. _.     ..zioijilil.\niiiiliiiiiiUliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiH\nKIMBERLEY GIRL\nTOPS IN VIOLIN\nKIMBERLEY - Sheilah Jean\nHerron, 10-year-old daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. E. A, Herron of-\nI-imberley, has received 'word\nthat she has been awarded the\nToronto Conservatory of Music's\nsilver medal for obtaining the\nhighest mark in the province for\nGrade II violin examinations.\nShe is a pupil of Finn Deagle.\nIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIli\nArtgelo Bortolussi\nRites Held at Natal\nNATAL\u2014The funeral of Angelo\nBortolussi, anoldtimer in the Natal-\nMichel district, was held here, services being conducted . at . St.\nMichael's Church.\nHe was 72 years of age, born In\nthe town of San Vito, Tagliamento,\nin the province of Udlne in Italy.\nSurviving is a daughter living in\n \u201e.,. ___w Medical and Dental the old country. He was well known,\nClinic -building On Howard Street having lived nearly 45 years in the\nwhich is on a self-liquidating basis, vicinity of the Crow's Nest Pass.\n^sss Invermere Carries Off\nFfi\"   Honors at Flower Show\nTrsJ's711\"D--'nra*\" \u2014\nBOY'S AND YOUTH S\nrm\n M-_._J-St.\nMedical and Hospital Services Society last year constructed and financed the new Medical and Dental\nClinic iiilM'*\"* <\u25a0- \"---    *  -\nT\"   UNION MADE\nMEN'S\nOVERALL\nPANTS\nCommunity Centre hci SX^^.\u2122 Memorial\n8 and 9-ox. Denims\n$3.95\n'O-o*. Denims\n$4.50\nafter operating for 10 yeara a. a 'ncx rl\u2122er Show held in the fnC^ri mnde\u2122ere Dis- I _-. ___   _\nsub-agency of the Nelson branch, Community Centre here attract  Wlndei\u2122ere Memorial I   .        -6_f%#U__F0\n^7fiS?wa - w^*.^^ SOCKS\nA for\nN   GIRLS' and BOYS'\nOin\nBlue Denim and\np Assorted Plaids\nI All Size*\nI   $3.40 to\nD     $3.95\nLADIES'\nCARIBOU\nJEANS\nSIZES UP TO 20\n..*'*   ati*t   MP    LADIES'.si. GUILS' JEANS\n\u2022A\n- \u2014   ****   \".ssss\nas a full-time branch.\n(   The new office, at present under\nconstruction, is designed to meet the\ngrowing banking needs of the com\nmunity.\nNelson\nHardware\n440 Bake* St.   ~\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"YOUR FOR-BESS OF\nHEALTH\"\n\u2022 PRESCRIPTIONS\n\u2022 DRUG PATENTS\nSUNDRIES\nIPolio Warnings\nPosfed in Natal\nOwing to the serious polio situation, in areas close to Natal-Michel\nand Sparwood, a notice was posted\nfor the benefit of the people by\nDr. Glasgow and Amundson.\nAdvice of the doctors was for the\nparents to keep their children in\nthis arssss   s-*mu\u2014   \u2022     -\nPHONE\n1203\nRES.\n894-L\ns?\/.\n) Pink Salmon\n\u00bb Nabob Tea S\nSweet Mixed\nTomato\nPine Tree.\nVa. Tin\n>eS 28\nNabob\n\u00bbBeef Steak &\nGiant Duz Pkg\nPickling Spice i\nWhite Vineg\nPuffed Wheat\nNabob.\noi.\nSun Rype\nI a is     \"\"\niar Goi,.\nQuaker.\n8 qt. pkg.\n24'\n99'\nfl.M\n31*\n42'\n73*\n2 _, 37*\n98*\n27*\neen Label.\nPfrlrloe\n48\nricKies\noz.\n, fancy.,\ntin   ..\n15\nvianey\noz.\nThe many lovely flowers and\nflower arrangements on display\ndrew favorable comment from the\njudge and from many valley visitors,\nand the photographic and art display\nwhich was a new feature this year,\nwas highly commended also by\njudges and visitors. It is likely, too,\nthat many local residents were unaware of the wealth of artistic\ntalent available in the valley.\nEntries in the flower section were\n!two lower than last year. The dis- parenta I    _._-_, ._,.,, .niiaren in\ntrict display waB won by Invermere this area. Children should not be\nand the silver rose bowl Which is in allowed  to visit any other areas\n|anmial   competition   for   the   best where oolin --\u25a0, \u2022*\u00bb  .  - -\u25a0\nflower display from a district point\nwas presented to Harry Bartle, who\nwas instrumental In organizing the\nInvermere exhibit.\nWilmer had a display of some very\nfine flowers which were excellent in\nquality but the exhibit was small.\nExhibits from Edgewater and Windermere were missed this year, \/\nL.AUD8 EFFORT\nJudge of the art and photographic\nexhibit was Murray MacDonald,\nchairman of the painting division of\nthe Banff school of Fine Arts and\nsuperviso- of art for the Edmonton\nschool system. He was assisted by\nP. H. Henson of the Edmonton\n'Museum of Art.\nMr. MacDonald said the district\n[was to be highly congratulated on\nthis initial attempt to foster local\n'art He thought the color photos.a\nphy was exceptionally good especially as to subject matter and com-\nI position. He considered the close-up\nsubjects handled better than the\npanoramic views.\nPrize for tho most points won\n\u2014 .* vs-si any other areas\nwhere polio has been reported. This\nreferred particularly to Kimberley.\nand any portion of Alberta. It was\nalso pointed out that this disease,\nwhile more prevalent among children, does also affect adults. The\nonly method of treatment at the\npresent time is prevention.\nThis advice by the Michel doctors\nhas been posted throughout'the two\ntowns as a warning, especially to\nmany families intending to still go\non their Summer vacation.\nAs yet, no cases of the disease had\nbeen made known in the area.\nCranbrook School\nGels New Glass\nCRANBROOK, \u2014 Replacement of |\nwindow glass on South side classrooms of both floors of the new I\nMount Baker  Junior-Senior High |\nschool with a glare-seducing glass\n[at a cost of about $1600 will be un-\ndertasrssss   I****---ss. *  *\nFor Back to School...\nGood variety colon in Rayon on Cotton\nor Pure Nylon\nLADIES' NYLON   HOSE\n 89*\nLISLE or SILK HOSE\n^TZ. : ... 69*and $1.39\nOXFORDS\nMisses' Loafer Type...\nAll sizes.\nPair \t\nLow heels, \"Duralite\" sole.\nfor longer wear.\nSizes 5 - VA\nSENSIBLE LOW PRICE\n$4.95\nT-SHIRTS I BOYS' SHIRTS\nWide Variety        I   -       -\nWide Variety\nInter-Loek Knit\nor\nMarshmallows\n\u25a0 _. .\nJust Arrived \u2014 I\n\u25a0lb. cello bag\nSpecial -39clb.\nCauliflower \\t''l!^ ]&\nRed Peppi\n.  .\u201e.  \u00abn- most points won at a cost of about $1 \t\nIn the flower s.ow was awarded dertaken immediate1-   as the final\nto  Mrs,  E. J. Zlnkan of Rocky step in building preparation for the\nMountain Lodge. Mrs. L. 8. Oulton term opening,\nwas awarded th. prize for the best    At  Central   School  central  hall\nflower arrangement- floors   have   been   repaired   and\nMedals   for   the   best   gladiolus linoleum tile will be put down at a\nwere won by Harry Bartie and for cost of about $1500 before opening.\nthe best dahlias, by William Weir.     Two final appointments have been\nBEST WORK8 made to Mount Baker staff. Succeed\nIn the photography section the ing Miss .Beverley Madden, girls\nmedal for the best photograph in physical education instructor who\nthe show went* to Jack Cummings resigned at the end of July, will be\nfor his black and white composition Mrs. Gordon Malcolm of Cranbrook,\nof reeds ln the snow. the former Frances Boyes of Nelson,\nIn the art section Beverley Harris while Mrs. Bert Millner of Cran-\nwas awarded a medal for the best brook, former school secretary, will\npainting which was a mountain serve as commercial subjects in\n| scene done in watercolors. structor.\nA rosette was awarded Mr. Harris \t\n'for the same painting in the water |_|_-_;i,_| |\\___,\u201e n\u00ab_s.s.\ncolor section and Mr. Cummings nOSpirOI UOyS VOWI.\nreceived   a   rosette   for   the   same     INVERMERE \u2014 Hospital days at\nie Ladv EH--S-.SS. r..\nChildren's\nRaincoats\nScore style plastics. Red or yellow.\nAttached hood and belt.\nJ1.69\nPlain Jersey Knit\nfor Girls and Boys\nFor Ages up to 16.. \u2022\nGood quality, sanforized, Western pattern.\nLong sleeves. A very good buy at\n$1.95\nA Good Assortment of\nSweaters-Pullovers and Cardigans\nFOR GIRLS AND BOYS in pure wool or nylon. Wide variety of eolow\nincluding white, mauve, scarlet, etc. Several patterns to choose from.\nAll Sizes\niers\nFresh Sweet, Okana\ngon. Lb,\n ._**   -   rosette   for   the   same\nphotograph in the black and white\nphotography section.\nC. I- Svendson received a rosette\nfor his black and .white drawing of\nCooper's Pass in the drawing section, and Dr. K. J. Williams won the.\nrosette for his transparency of a\n\u201e..._, v- -...tic numDer of babies\n ._ s-s   ssss transparency of a born  since  March   I.  Nine minor\ngoose in'the, colbr photography, sec- operations and one major were per-\ntlon. formed during   uly.\n.. ._..._, \u2014 jnospital days at\nthe Lady Elizabeth Bruce Memorial\nHospital here for July numbered\n1342. In June there were 371.\nBight babies, three boys and five\ngirls were born during the month\nbringing to 2-the number of babies\nborn  since March   I.  Nine minor\nBat wing Style Jackets\nin corduroy for high sehool girls,\n-^-length Sleeves. SPECIAL AT\nBoys' Sheffield Steel POCKETKNIVES.\n2 Blades and Corkscrew   490\nCAMPING KNIVES\nGadgets include: punch, can opener,\nscrew   driver,   etc.   Complete   with  t*JAtjt\npocket chains  ... '. ...   * *^\nmii sues\nfrom $1.95 to fivoy\nShoes**-Boots,\nStrap Slippers\u2014Oxfords\nfor girls and boys. Wide range of styles.\nAll sizes at Lowest Prices\nPYJAMA\nFLANNELETTE\nWalton Quality, assorted stripes. 36\" wide. S3<t yd.\nWoollette, 36\" wide ..._  59* yd.\nWhite Saxony Flannelette, 27\" wide .. .44* yd.\nYou Are Cordially Invited to Come In and See Our Good Selection of Unadvertised\nBACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS\nWcWing Onions ssE.r2,b, 45\nOranges \u00a3!&_ 2*. 6T\nPeach Plums ^np._ 3 ,bs 25*\nj^ I Easf Kootenay Nfmrods Cleaning Guns\n*****       I    NATAL \u2014 With the onssni-.- ***-\u2022-     -   \u25a0   \"\nABU-TO-TAKE-IT\nithe  East Kootenay\nare as follows:\nOpen seasons;!\n-\u2014\u2014 -\u00bbMsm\nPhone 193\nNATAL \u2014 With the opening of\nthe 1952-53 hunting season less than\ntwo weeks away, many of the Natal-\nMichel and district big game hunters are making preparations to visit\ntheir favorite hunting grounds just\nas soon as the different game comes\ninto season.\nBag limits in tbe East Kootenay\nDistrict are the same as last year.\nI The Natal-Michel hunters, operating\nin the Fernie district of the East\nKootenay   game   district   will   see\nmountain goat and grizzly bear come  _.\u201e ,.\ninto season Sept, 1. hunters will ti\nThe following game regulations hunting season\nwere recently released by the Brl-  '\u25a0\t\ntlsh   Columbia   Game   Department     Salt in the water causes the foam\npertaining to the Fernie District in on waves.\nGrizzly bear, September 1 to June\n1.0, 1953. Black and Brown bear, no\nclosed season and open throughout\n'the year. Mountain goat, Septembei\n1 to November 30; Bull moose, October 1  to October 31; Mountain\nsheep (rams only), September 15 to\nOctober 15; Elk (bull), September\n115 to November 30;  Deer,  (bucks\nonly) September 15 to November 30.\nWith the Michel mines ^taggering\nJthe holidays this year, many of the\nhunters will take them during the\nhuntint7 ss*ss*jnn\nAll Your Back-to-\nSchool Needs for\nGirls and Boys\nIIS !_-. \"^\nThe Children^ Shoi\n         *>\n.\u00ab\u25a0-::    ..v.T\n\" .\\  \u25a0\u25a0\nv   \u25a0     ,   \u25a0   1\n'\u25a0*i\ny.\n\u25a0\u25a0       *** \u25a0!-&..\n \u25a0'\u2022'\"''\n\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0,'\u25a0 ' '\n-\u2022'\"'fi.'.\nE-tHbllslied April 23. 1003\nBrltlah Columbia's\nMott Intorestim Newspaper\nPublished overy morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED,\n20(1 Baker Street, Nolson. British Columbia.\nAuthorized is Sooond Class Mall.\nPost Office Department Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nIta. a iron bureau or' circulations.\nThursday, Aug. 21, 19S2\nt       \"   \u25a0 '   \u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0    '\u25a0    : \u2014~\nOttawa Should\nAcknowledge\nI     Municipalities' Need\nThe financial need of the municipalities, which have to depend almost\nEntirely on the property tax for their\ngeneral and school revenues, continues\ntebe disregarded by the Dominion\nGovernment. At the recent annual\nmeeting of the Canadian Federation of\npayors arid Municipalities, a spokesman for that Government reiterated\nits policy of not making grants to aid\nmunicipalities, except on the basis of a\nVery restricted formula based on the\namount of Government-owned property, which in practice eliminates all\nbut a handful of cities. But despite this\nunrealistic* and somewhat selfish policy, it is essential that the issue be met.\nEven if it were the case that \"there\nwere no financial difficulties between\nProvinces and Dominion, it would still\nbe necessary to discuss a reallocation\nof responsibilities and of sources of\nrevenue for the benefit of the municipalities.\nSo long aa the current growth of\nurban and suburban areas continues,\nthere will be financial difficulties. The\ncoat of new schools, of water supply\nand stowage disposal, of new streets\nand other expanded services, in themselves constitute a crippling burden.\n%   With Parliament just having risen,\nthere is, of course, no chance of a\nchange of Beart or policy in the near\nfuture. The Toronto Globe and Mail\n\u2022advocates  that,  in  preparation  for\n.the Dominion-Provincial Conference,\nSwhieh mus. inevitably be held, the\nJEconomic Committee, a fArt-finding\nWd research  body aet up  by the\n^Dominion - Provincial   Conference . of\n1945. be reactivated. Ai, it waa origin-\nfally conceived, it was to be a permanent body, maintaining a detailed and\n\u2022ko-ordinated body of financial and\nother information which would jhow\nfthe state of publie fin-tnoa ihroughout\nCanada, at all its levels. It should not\nhave been allowed to lapse.\nis    With such a body at work, declare*\nthe Toronto paper, within six months\njit could be possible to call together\nagain the ^minion-Provincial Con-\n'ference on Finance, which has remained adjourned since 1946. The constitu-\n\"tional problema related to this import-\n\u00abant topic ought to be ironed out as\n.soon as possible. They have been realized and discussed at great length for\n!' many years. If it had not been for the\npersonal pique of certain leaders six\n_ years ago, it would not have been suspended. All of the pbstacles which\n\u00bbostensibly caused the suspension have\ndisappeared, but the central problems\nremain. Each year they get worse.\nYour Friend\nDon't look down when a good friend smiles,\n.Don't turn away from his outstretched hand\u2014\nLet him walk by your side, it will shorten the\nmiles;\nLet him in on your troubles\u2014he'll understand!\nWhat do you suppose will satisfy the soul\nexcept to walk free and own no superior?\n\u2014Walt Whitman.\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR.\nLetters may be published ever a nom\nde plume, but the aqtual signature ef the\nwriter must be given to the Editor aa\navldenee of good faith, Anonymous letters\ngo In the waits paper basket\nWould Stop \"Rehearsal\"\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Re Vr, Griffiths' letter of almost a\nweek ago. Will ha ask authority for the statement that to date the only khown way to\navoid growing old Is to die first? I have, perhaps regrettably, so tar not done that. Could\nbe, Mr. Griffiths himself may yet commit the\nsame offence. But when he classes me with\nCanon Silverwood and the Dean of Canterbury\nI assure him he compliments me \u25a0 far more\nthan I deserve. Had he used nicer language\nI would have thanked him for the compliment,\nbut the language he used was, well\u2014'nasty.'\nThe figure of five million Koreans killed\nwas given in a U.N. report. It said the dead\nware \"largely civilians, some two million of\nthem children.\" Adding a further horror, lt\nwent on to say that there were so many maimed Koreans the U.N. had given top priority in\nKorea to a factory for making artificial limbs.\nDoubting Mr. Griffiths questions even the\nU.S. Air Force's own figures of th* time taken\nto burn up Korean cities with' napalm. The\ncities he saw burning were, one supposes, in\nEurope. But was napalm used there? I have\nseen many Asian.cities and towns from Japan\ndown to Singapore, and if Korean buildings\nwere as flimsily built and of similar inflammable materials, I have no doubt cities the\nsize of Slnuijl could burn up completely ln 20\nminutes If napalm bombs were scattered\nthrough them.\nMr. Griffiths, who requires authority for\nmy statements, gave none for his own quite\nremarkable one that Korean people were\nwarned of coming air raids. That would be\nnice to believe, but the evidence seems against\nit, The raid on Sinuiji was made at night; it\nis doubtful the people were warned.\nLet me introduce two more \"old men\" to\nMr. Griffiths. Recently there appeared in the\nLondon Times a letter protesting the use of\nnapalm. It was signed by a number of prominent Britons, among them Lord John Boyd\nOrr and Bertrand Russell. I quote very briefly\n\"... the abundant evidence from non-Communist sources that it (napalm) has been, and\nis being, indiscriminately used against inhabited places, with appalling,results.\" No aug-\ngestlon, there, of warning. I quote also from\nReginald Thompson's ^Cty Korea\": Every village and township in the path of war Was\nblotted out. Civilians died In the ashes and\nrubble of their homes. Soldiers usually escaped.\" What sign of warning there? It looka\nmuch more like another \"Operation Killer.\"\nThe extent, the utter ruthlessness and\ndeadlines^ of this destruction has been noted\nin Europe. Witness the remark made by the\nFrenchman to an American newsman: \"France\nmight aurvlve a Russian occupation, he said.\nFranca could never survive an American liberation.\" The OiC. of the U.S. bomber squadron\nin Korea testified at the Ma-Arthur enquiry\nthat before the Chinese entered the war, his\nplanea were grounded. -Tie reason? In )iis\nwords: \"There were no more targets left in\nKorea.\" A British observer', speaking of South\nKorea, declared, \"It has ceased to exist as a\ncountry.\"\nMr. Griffiths can find those two statements\nat much greater length ta the revealing pages\nof the book Canon Silverwood mentions, \"The\nHidden History of the Korean War.\" Here's\nhoping he and many of your readers, Mr.\nEditor, will study that book. I feel sure it will\nconvince even a doubting Griffiths. I urge\nMr. Griffiths to also read Thompson's \"Cry\nKorea.\" The latter ls a cry of anguished protest\nagainst \"the monstrous lunacy of modern war.\"\nOf it one commentator wrote: \"No sane\nparent who read it would ever allow a son\nto join the orgy of Indiscriminate destruction\nand pointless murder if there were any possible, or Impossible, way to prevent it.\" Both\nthese books may be had from the Peoples\nCooperative Book Store, 337 W. Pender Street,\nVancouver.\nThe Archbishop of York recently condemned the use of nuclear energy, obliteration\nbombing, napalm bombs, and germ war, describing them all as \"methods of war so monstrously inhuman they would brand with infamy the cause In which they were used.\nVictory won by their means would be the\ntriumph of barbarism,\" he said. The atom\nbomb has already been used; napalm has been\nused; obliteration bombing has been used; we,\nthe Christian and civilized West, have used\nall three. And consider the words of that\nWestern expert who said germ war would be\nthe most satisfactory of them all; it was cheapest, and besides it would kill off the people\nwhile leaving buildings, railroads, etc., undamaged; all that would be needed would\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names ot persons\nasking quoifloni will not be published.\nThere Is na charge for thla service.\nQuestions WILL NOT B( ANSWERED\nBV MAIL except where there Is obvious\nnecessity tor privacy.\nMrs. M. J., Wynndel\u2014On what charge, .and by\nwhom, wot Dr. Gordon Seagrave, the\nBurma surgeon, imprisoned? Who was Dr.\nSaleye? There have been several magazine\narticles on him.\nSeagrave was convicted In Burma of\ntreason and a special Burmese court acquitted\nhim later, setting aside the earlier copviction.\nHe was charged with aiding a rebal leader.\nAn earlier appeal court had already freed him,\ncommuting his sentence to the seven monthi\nh- h<d spent ln jail awaiting trial. We can\nfind no information on Dr. Seleye. We advise\nyou to write to the magazine in which you\nsaw the articles.\n\u25a0Reader, Kimberley\u2014What ls a simple method\nof curing coyote skins?\nSalt, one pound; alum, half-pound; saltpetre, two tablespoons. Spread hide out\nsmoothly as aeon as taken from coyote, rub\nmixture well ln on flesh side, leaving fur\naide out, roll closely, tie with string, let remain five days. Spread and tack, fur: side in,\nagainst wall. Scrape off all flesh and grease\nthoroughly with dull knife, wash with soap\nand warm water, using as much suds as needed\nto remove all oily matter. While drying, rub\nhard to keep soft. The above method has been\nuied often to make rugs of sheepskin and has\nalso worked effectively on coyote pelfs.\nSubscriber,- Cranbrook \u2014 Where tan I buy\nstamps for my collection?\nWrite G, Hagen, 111 Kootenay Avenue,\nTadanac, B.C.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Nelson Dally Newi, August 21, 1942\nEntries for the Nelson Garden Club noncompetitive flower exhibition Saturday were\nstill coming in Thursday night. George Brown\nof the Garden Club said the number of inquiries and comments on the show indicated a\nvery good showing of flowers from the city\nand district.\n26 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom Tha Nelson Dally Newi; August 21, 1927\nNelson sehlor soccerites are to warm up\nfor two West Kootenay league entanglements\nwith Trail, the first of which wil] take place\nSept. 6 at Trail. Nelson has won both games\nplayed so far In this season's series. If it can\nbeat Trail once more or even the score, It\nwill have cinched the league, and seniors will\nthen play off the Kootenay championship with\na Kimberley team, champions of East Kootenay.\nSO YEARS AGO\nFrom The Nelion Dally Newi, Auguit 21, 1902\nDavid Booth turned the tables on J. Fred\nHume yesterday, defeating his rink 10-7. The\ngame attracted a considerable number of\nspectators.\nM. S. Davys has started to work In a small\nway under the lease which he has secured\non the Silver King group of mines. William\nTurner, who for several yeari was foreman\nat the Silver King, and who later filled a\nsimilar position at the Ymir mine, will have\ncharge of the work.\nYour Horoscope\nIf you must criticize a friend or relative,\ndo it in the most kindly and helpful manner,\nFinancial benefits are apt to come your way,\nand you should reap the reward of past endeavors. An energetic, enthusiastic and persevering nature is probable for today's child.\nbo to clean up the dead and take over the\ncountry.\n< This is what our own militarists see coming for us. This ls therefore what Lord Alexander had In mind when he said the Korean\nwar is a \"rehearsal for world war three.\" Our\npoliticians lay they are out for peace. But\nwas Lord Alexander making peace-talk? What\nsane and decent person would want the kind\nof war Britain's war minister talks about?\nWhat Christian and civilized Canadian could\nstand for it? Who but a savage could take\npart in it? It would make savages of the\nnatlops who practiced it.\nIf we don't want that kind of war, the\ntime to say so is now, and the first step in\nsaying so ls to demand the end of war in\nKorea. By stopping, the \"rehearsal\" we help\nstop what lt is a rehearsal for.\nA. R. MUNDAY.\nTheyll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hado   Today's Bible Thought\nJrnjs took* 25 worth OF CHANCES\nOX THE TV S-FTsATTHE B4TAAR* ME\nREAliy COULD USE IT, WITH E1-3HT\nKIDS\/WO\/UX-*-\nNot all lands have snow and ice,\nbut two distinct seasons are essential to our happiness and well-being. Nature demands it, too.\nThou hait made summer and\nWinter.\u201474:'17.\nCbwL dial\nI reckon germs didn't bother\nfolks in the old days. Every cook\npulled a straw out o' the broom to\ntest her cake.\nLoonft whose itrange cries are\nfamiliar oh most Canadian lakes,\nare expert swimmers and divers but\nclumsy on land.-\n\"I Sayjussia Discovered America -\"\n*^-*m*m\nBy Robert W. Chambers in the Halifax Chronlcle-Herald.\n .  \u2014(CP Photo,)\nFrom an\nOldtimer's\nNotebook\n\" by R.G. JOY *\"\"\nHistorian Nelson District Oidtlmeri\nAneolatlon\nMy column ln reference to the\nStuckey family, pioneer! of Pincher\nCreek, Alta., and the development\nof gas wells in that district, was a\nsequel to a previous story.\nNorthwest Natural Gas Company\nis an American corporation headed\nby Mr. Dixon. This company applied\nfor a permit to transmit gas from\nihe Pincner Crek area of Alberta\nSouth across the International boundary at Kingsgate. The community\nof Pincher Creek is about 32 miles\nNorth of the International Boundary, and due North of Glacier National Park, from Kingsgate the\nroute proposed is South through\nSandpoint and Newport to Spokane\nand West to Seattle, then North to\nVancouver and South to Portland.\nThis company's plans call for 271\nmiles of gathering system. The mileage of the main transmission lines,\nprincipally 18 lo 24 inches, is shown\nto be about as follows:\nPincher Creek' to Kingsgate, via\nCrow's Nest, 150 miles.\nKingsgate to Spokane 140 miles.\nSpokane to Munroe 2S3 miles.\nMunroe to Seattle 19 miles.\nMunroe to Vancouver 114 miles.\nSeattle to Portland, 17J miles.\nTotal-849 miles.\nThe mileage table lists 447 miles\nof branched lines, which would include branches to Hanford, Trail\nand Kimberley, B. C. These aggregate only about 200 miles, hence this\ncompany must contemplate\nbranches to Walla Walla, Yakima,\nWenatchee and other points. There\nis no Information obtainable naming the various proposed branches.\nThis company has a contract with\nGulf Oil Company which took the\nlead ln bringing, in the Pincher\nCreek field. The Pincher Creek\nwells are deep, and Gulf Oil Company spent a large sum of money\nin anticipation of exporting gas to\nthe United States. ,\nThe Petroleum and Natural Gas\nConservation Board recently denied\nthis Company the right to export,\nbut gave it the right to renew its\napplication in April, 1953. Following\nthe rejection pf its application to export from the Pincher Creek area,\nthis Company applied for the right\nto export from the Peace River area\nand this application is pending.\nThe estimated cost of all the lines\ncontemplated by this company for\nbringing Pincher Creek gas to the\nPacific Northwest is about $90 million.\nFuture Bright for\nCancer Sufferers\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 20 (CP)-The\nfuture la bright for the eventual\nprevention of cancer, Dr. Stuart\nF. Harkness of Still College of\nOsteopathy and Surgery, Des\nMoines, la., said today.\nUnfortunately, advances today In\ncancer treatment are ahead of diagnostic ability, he told delegates to\nthe annual convention of the Canadian Osteopathic Association.\n- \"There is only one hope for cancer\ncontrol\u2014early diagnosis.\"\nDr. Hafkneei said many doctors,\nfor 'example,' don't undress their\npatients enough during examination.\n'There ll no excuie for skin cancer going unrecognized, but in many\ncases cancer signs on the surface\ngo undetected until damage is irreparable.\"\nMany patients who have cancels,\nsymptoms never see a doctor until\nit's too late, he laid. But often, the\ndoctor who does see the patient in\ntime misses the symptoms.\nThere are only two known treatments\u2014surgery and ridlatlon\u2014and\nthere ls no laboratory test adequate\nfor diagnosis, he said.\n\"But, cancer can be diagnosed,\ntreated and cured.''\nGlacier Outdraws\nOther Parks\nWEST GLACIER, Mont.\u2014Favored\nby Ideal vacationing weather, the\nFlathead ls in the midst of the best\ntravel summer in its history.\nAt Glacier national Park this\nweekend travel for the season will\ntop the 400,000 mark, and Glacier\nis leading America's national parks\nfor percentage of increase in visitors. The alpine vacationing area\nwith Its snow-topped mountains and\ncool lakes has seen 27 per cent more\nvisitors this year than'last when the\nseason ended with a record 500,125\nvisitors.\nIncome factor of the 1952 travel\nseason to Glacier is viewed as bringing \u266615,000,000 into Montana.\nLast Summer Glacier National\nPark visitors ippnt an estimated\n$12,287,773 in the state including $4,-\n030,077 in the park. These figures result from an extensive study by the\nMontana state highway cbmmissipn\nplanning survey In cooperation with\nthe United States Bureau of Public\nRoads and National Park Service.'\nThe- survey shows that park motor vilitors stayed an average of 4.8\ndays ln Montana and 1.8 days ln\nthe park. Average expenditures by\nthe car traveler ln the park was\n$4.12 per day per person and $5.52\nin the state.\nThe record 1952 vacationing season in Seeing mote extensive use\nOf camp grounds, cabin camps and\nhotels. With Logan Pass.contihental\ndivide crossing for Sun Highway\nopened Memorial Day, the. season\nhas been longer. .\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 20 (CP) - The\nBoard of Governors of *.' e Winnipeg\nGrain Exchange today decided to\nextend trading hours 30 minutes\neach day, Monday through Friday..\nN. Zealand Tries\nTo Harness\nVolcanic Power\nWELL.N_.T<-N, New 2ealand,\nAug. 20 (AP)-New Zealand scientists are working on a scheme to\nharness steam from underground\nvolcanoes to generate electric power to operate a huge pulp,paper\nplant planned by the government.\nIf the scheme ls successful New\nZealand expects to export newsprint to Australia and other countries.\nScientist, today began sinking\ndeep holes at Whakatane ln Auckland province.\nIt would be the first time that\ngeo-thermal steam has been used\nindustrially\n\" \u25a0 S\"   \u25a0! i II       I\nJapan Orders Planes\nFrom British Company\nLONDON, Aug, 20 (API-Britain's DeHaviland Aircraft Company\nannounced today lt had received an\norder from Japan Air Lines for two\nComet jet airliner! and seven other\ntransport pianos.\nColor Psychology\nMay Win Ball Game\n' ALBUQUERQUE, April 20 (AF)\n\u2014New Mexico University will try\na little wall-paint psychology to\nsee If It helpi win home football\n.game.thla Fall. The Loboi won\nfour and lost 7 last season.\nWhen the grid dressing rooms\nwere overhauled recently, a\nmember of the buildings and\ngrounds' department recalled a\nstudy of psychological reactions\nof humans to colon.\nThis year, the Lobmos dress ln a\nroom trimmed in bright red.\nThat'i supposed to be an exciting\ncolor.\nTheir opponents will dress in t\nroom decorated in quiet pastels,\naimed to dampen their spirits.\n50 Countries Attend\nPax Romano Congress\nMONTREAL, Aug. ?0 (CP)\u2014More\nthan 800 university students and\ngraduates will gather In Montreal\nnext w\u00abelt fer the 22nd World Congress ot Pax Romana,\nA world organization whole Members inelude Roman Catholic intellectual and cultural leaders, Pax\nRomana Is t federation of 82 student! and 40 gradaute associations.\nDelegates from 50 countries will attend.\nPacific Quake\nRecorded af (oasl\nVICTORIA, Aug. 20 (CP) - A\nstrong earthquake\/centred approximately 400 miles West of Victoria\non the floor of the Pacific Ocean,\nwas recorded by the Dominion as-\ntrophysical observatory here today.\nObservatory officials said the\nquake probably waa located either\noff the Queen Charlotte Islands or\nthe Oregon coast.\nInitial shock wave was timed at\n8:28 a.m. (PDT) on the local observatory's seismograph, and the disturbance continued to record for\nan hour and one-half afterwards.\nThe Louisbourg fort built by the\nFrench on Cape Breton Island once\nwas_ the strongest fortress ln North\nAmerica.\nINSIST ON ,\n'WHITE HORSE I\ni Smootn\nScotch\nDon*t Just Say\n'SCOTCH-\nAsk For...\nContonts 26n otjncos\n.\"his odvertisemerit it not published or dlsploy.d by th. Liquor\nControl Board'or by th. Government of British Columbia.\nDUPOBTANT NOTICE\nto all B.C, Citizens\nPREMIUM REDUCTION! Effective July 1, 1952, all\npremiums were reduced by $3,00. a year. New ratea are as follows I\nSingle person   ....   $27.00 per year\nTwo or snore persons     -   $39.00 per year\nThose who have paid their premiums for this period at the old\nrate will have a credit applied to their next premium billing.\nPayroll deduction adjustments will be made in September.\n\"DOLLAR-A-DAY\" PLAN: Effective August 9, 1952,\nco-insurance was abolished and a new \"dollar-a-day\" plan was\nput into effect for those who go to hospital. Under this new plan,\na person will just pay one dollar for each day he is In hospital.\nIt is expected that more than 97% of thdflc going to hospital will\nactually pay less under this new plan. *\nThese changes will benefit the people of B.C.\nby $2,000',000 yearly.\nTHE B.C. HOSPITAL INSURANCE SERVICE\n'Tour protection against high hospital bills\"\nHon. Erlo Martin, Minister\nL. F. Detwiller, Commissioner\n^^\t\n 'It Pays To Buy Quality\"\n20%\nDISCOUNT\non oil\nChildren's and Women's\nSUMMER\nSANDALS\nand on all\nSUMMER HANDBAGS\nR. ANDREW\n& CO,\n'z^z^WOMEN (Nelson Social\nutAX)BRIIs m FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nFHOM COAST . . . Miss Maud\nDolphin is here .from Vancouver\nvisiting her family.\nNelson Girl Becomes\nBride of Ladner Man\nCongratulatory telegrams from the groom's relatives\nin England and messages from B.C. points were read at a\n[reception which followed the marriage in St. Paul's United\nChurch of Grace Mary Stainton and Donald X Hayward of\nLadner. I       \"~   \u2014\u2014\u2014 -\nPHONB 144\nof honor, and Miss Cherry Saarlsto\nof Vancouver and Miss Elaine Maynard of Prince Rupert, both teachers. Mr. Donald H. Stainton of\nSalmo was beat Man, and tbe guests\nwere ushered by Mr. Harold H.\nStainton of Kamloops and Mr. T.\nW. Halsey. The ring bearer wa_\nJimmy Stainton of Kamloops, five-\nyear-old nephew of the bride.\nThe bridesmaids and matron of\nhonor wore net ballerina dresses\nover taffeta underskirts. Mrs. Stainton wore mauve, Miss Saarlsto,\napple green ,ond Miss Maynard,\n[yellow. All wore open crown picture hats and linen colored shoes\nto match, and carried baskets of\nroses, Oflrnnri-*,- \u00ab--s  -*'\n ,  |    The bride wa,s attended by Mrs.\nCLASSJFIED AD8 GET RESULTS IH. Stainton of Kamloops as matron\nBRADLEY\nMEAT   MARKET\nWEEKEND SPECIALS\nCHOICE FOWL\ntt A It   sv \u25a0\n* .PORK JOWLS\nSmoked.\nLb.\nThe bride is the daughter of Mrs.\nM. E. Stainton, and tbe groom,, who\nis with the armed forces at Ladner,\nis the son of Capt. R, H. P. Hayward\nof Prince George.\nThe ceremony was performed In\nthe soft glow of candlelight by\nRev. Gerald W. Payne, and the\nbride was given in marriage by Mr.\nF. N. Emmott.\nPRETTY GOWN\nThe bridal gown was of white\nChantilly lace and net over satin\nin ballerina-length, and featured a\ncrinoline underskirt. A waist-\nlength illusion veil was attached to\nher pill box style headdress orna- , .-- --- \"\"**\" \"J\"\"\"? _noe!\nmented with pearls and silver to match' \u2022}.nd carried baskets of\nsequins, and her bouquet consisted \u2122ses' carnations and other assorted\nof shock pink rosebuds. , Mowers.\nThe bride was attended by Mrs. KILTED\n\u2022 Stainton n. K*=\"*' \u2014' rj-.. yomg ring beaa wore thg|\nkilt, and bore the wedding ring on\na small white satin cushion.\nAt the reception at the bride's\nhome, the bride presented her\nbouquet to her mother, whose\nmarriage to Mr. Emmott will take\nplace later this month.\nMrs. Stainton wore a pink taffeta\ngown with) a pink flowered hat, her\nensemble \u25a0 being accented by a\ncorsage of mauve carnations.\nI Before leaving for a honeymoon\nat Kootenay Lake points, the bride\nchanged to a smokey blue suit with\nnavy and white accessories, and a\ncorsage of shock pink rosebuds.\nMr. and Mrs. -fayward will move\ninto their home at Ladner.\nThe groom's \u2022 father came from\nPrince George for the wedding, and\nother out-of-town guests were Mr.\nand Mrs. Ivor Hayward and\ndaughter from Vernon, Mrs. A. P.\nMills and children from Vancouver,\nMrs. Grace Babki and children\nfrom Lethbridge, Mr, and Mrs.\nHarry Williams of Trail, Miss\nElaine Maynard, Miss Saarlsto, Mr.\nand Mrs. Harold Stainton and\nfamily and Mr. Donald Stainton.\n[way homeward,     omumeT months here at,e wendingjheir ^aughter-in.\nEDMONTON,... Mrs. J. | MM Mr.and Mrs. H. _,. \u00bb-_*-.      ' ^^\nTO EDMONTON,...Mrs. J. C,\nCarpenter and son Jack left by\ntrain Wednesday for Edmonton,*\nwhere they will rejoin Dr. Carpenter, who Is Interning at Royal\nAlexandra Hospital. They have\nbeen spending, the Summer with\nMrs. Carpenter'\" sss.-**.-- \u25a0-- \u25a0\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Horton,\n523 Cottonwood Street\n\u2022    #    ss\nVACATIONING ... Dr. Harold\nH. Smythe has left for a 10-day\nvacation at Vancouver.\n.lira. 0. Truscott, visiting Ainsworth\nuntil the end of August She went\nWest from her home in Saskatchewan at the beginning of ^July,\nspending a month at Claresholm\nwith a brother-in-law and sister\nand at Cranbrook with her son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. L.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. Harry MacLean announces the engagement of their\nelder daughter, Katharine Mary to\n[Leonard Brown, eldest son of Mr.\nand Mrs.  w_\u00ab~.   **--\nMr.- and Mrs. E. L. Smith wish to\nannounce the engagement of their\n'youngest daughter, Claudia, to Mr.\nWm. George Apostolluk, son qf Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Apostolluk of Nelson,\nB.C.- The' wedding to take place\nSept. 27th 1952.\nBUY\nON OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115 - NELSON\nThe House of Furniture Values'\nigiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiimiimiii\"\"\nRoasts. Boneless\nsupplies\nmmat SAFEWAY\nsitting its peak now with the PlJCeS   EffeCtl'VC\n\/\/\n \u25a0 __r\n^ Veal Roasts - Steak\nIhoulder. \/?\u00ab>*\n* BREAST VEAL-\n*Veal\nSI: *    s\nNames Bestowed on\nKimberley Child\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 In a christening\nservice performed at All Saints\nAnglican Church, the three-year-\nold daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl\nChambers received the names Jo-\nAnn Lynne.\nRev. Eric Bibby officiated, and\ngodparents of the girl are Mr. and\nMrs. George Smith and Miss Agnes\nChristensen.\nWIENER ROA8T HELD\nNAKUSP \u2014 United Church and\nAnglican Church young people attended a party at Donnelly's beach,\nwith swimming, games, a wiener\nroast and sing-song on the program,\nTerrie Uyeda handled arrange,\nments.\nP^BB      Fresh Lettuce\nThe fresh fruit season is hitting its peak now with the\norchards' finest arriving daily at Safeway. You'll know \u00ab \u2022 \u00ab%\u00bb\u00ab.\u00bb   s_.l-Cll.V6\nsummer has really hit its stride when you see fruits like L\\ I i ^* I i (\"T **i'l   t       **\\ **\\\nthese. Refreshing and healthful-a gay surprise for any A|||-|||\\|\/l  T A   \/ S\nmeal. You'll find them priced for ton vol... -*\u25a0 <->-**- HUVIUJI   Mm I   IV Mm*J\nField Tomatoes \u00a3\u00a3**\u25a0-- \u00ab m+\nFresh LeM.. crisn'.-'..;.'_\"__:*_**;        '\u2022*\u25a0*      Sunkist Oranaec <-_     <\u25a0\u00bb-_:\nIA*- r. '      8H    Valendas.     2lbs2?0\n\u2022 4*      Bananas \u00a3b\u00b0Iden *\u00ab f tZ\nCe.ntr.l~. Goosi ss\/iss, liiii'--'\"'''  \u2022*\u00bb*\nCrisp, round heads.\"\nLocal. Lb.\nRochester. Ideal for\ncanning. 17-lb. crate\n(fade. JhMSL fosAijdcu}. Ualuu.\nEdward's Coffee g&\u00b05\u00a3& 99* Marmalade\nMargarine Good Luck 3 for $ ] .00\nBlended Peas *\u00ab\u00a3. can.... 21*\nSwift's Lard llbpH 2 for 23*\nGrapefruit Juice ^tT'... 13*\nChristie's Ritz8-zpkg 2 for 39*\nPeanut Butter \"?r\u00a5F\n-. 02. jar\nCloverleaf small,\n* oz. cah \t\nCooling\nat the morning dew\nAnd very inexpensive too!\nSimply make tea double strength and\nwhile still hot pour into glasses\nfilled with cracked Ice. Add sugar and\nlemon to taste and you have a drink\nto quench the tallest thirst I\nWet Shrimps\n_, r     a oz. can\nRice Krispies \u00a3?Uogg'B\nr \"'   Shi oz. pkg.\nCatSUP   \u00a3aste Ter\n*\"*r- 13 oz. boi\nMarshmallows\nTomato Juice\nPork & Beans ._ _ .\nSockeye Salmon .7c^oncaFnCy\n12 oz. can    Jm .\nMiracle Whip,\n32 oz. jar  ;.\nAylmer.\n-   84 oz. Jar .,\t\nPerfex Bleach\n42*\n _.\u201e\u00bb.   2 for\nTaste Tells. \u2022>\/___*.\n13 oz. bottle   Z-TT\"\n. Angelus.\n1 Ib. cello\nFancy. '      \u2022>\u00bb\n--   20 05. can __,\nSelect Biscuits fig\nSwift's frem 1;\nSalad Dressing\nDill Pickles\n54* \t\n47*    Jelly Powders\n35*    Packaged Rice De\u00bb->--Long      ...\n\u00ab%._-_       rt.        \u00abr*>***. 16 oz. ok*. 22*\nOrange. Empress.\n2- oz. tin\n-0..^ 2 for 23*\n42*\nfor 63*\n82*\n39*\n32 oz. bottle   33^\nEmpress.      a-* _ _ -,\nm oz.   3 for 270\nAIRWAY\nCOFFEE\nThe world's most pop.\nular coffee flavour . . ,\nroaster fresh. Ground to\norder when you buy.\n-     grain. 16 oz. pkg. __._(\u2022 w\nGiant Rinso PU 730\n^ r     Golden Syrup *\u00b0g%ZZZZ 29*\nfor 35*    Spredeasy Cheese fT&_,$.l.05\n. 350    Vinegar f^bouie 20*\n2 for 39*    Mazola Oil _ Jb.\u201e' 430\n'SAIADA'\n\u25a0:Z   '.'..   Z ily   '  \u25a0':-'\n 6 - NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG. 21. 1952\n\u2122Wm\n\u2022:;\u25a0       '\u25a0 !\nPlane (rashes\nKill II In 2 Days\nLondon, Aug. 20 cap) \u2014Four\nE. A. F. men died in two Jet crashes today, bringing the toll to six\ncrashes and 11 deaths in two days.\nA twin-let Canberra bomber, one\nof Britain's newest and fastest, had\nplunged into a field near Royston,\n\u2022 Hertfordshire,    killing   all    three\naboard, .\nA twin-Jet Meteor fighter plummeted near Stockton-o n-Te e s,\nYorkshire, killing the pilot\nFrequent jet crashes\u2014approaching 50 this year\u2014have brought anxious comments from 'coroners and\nnewspapers. But the air _ministry\n.contends jet flying is safer than\never. They say the number of Jets\nIn the air have doubled since last\nyear, while crashes have increased\nonly 15 per cent.\nThe Mattawa Hlver, widest and\ndeepest of the Western tributaries\nof. the Ottawa River, is 200 feet\ndeep in parts.\nMrs. Dennis O'Keefe\nPuts on Blue Bonnet\n\u2014 Claims It Best!\nMagna (aria Sold\nTo Australia\nWELLS, England, Aug. 20 (Reuters)\u2014An ancient English boys'\nSchool disclosed today it has sold\nan authenticated copy of the Magna\n| Carta to the Australian Government\nfor \u00a312,500.\nHeadmaster G. S. Sale said the\ndocument was found among the\nKing's School archives 16 years ago\n\u2014\u25a0presumably the property of some\nearlier headmaster. He said the\n402-year-old school would use the\nfunds for new buildings.\nThe unblemished parchment copy,\ndated 1297, is a confirmation by\nKing Edward I of the charier sealed by King John at Runnymede ln\n1215. The charter broke the autocratic powers of English sovereigns\nand formed a legal basis for democratic government.\nANTS KILL BABY\nNEW ALBANY, Miss., Aug. 20.\n(API-Little Linda Hill la dead,\nthe victim of .a .warm of angry\nants. The ants attacked Monday\nnight when the parents decided\nto sleep on the lawn. Mrs. Floy\nHill awoke to find the baby black\nwith ants.' Linda died early yesterday.\n. .   . .\t\n ...-*.-.-__   i.mo,%...zz\nTake a tip from Mrs. Dennis O'Keefe,\npopular screen star's wife \u2014 put on\nDf, LUXE Blot Boottct Margarine I\nYou'll love the extra convenience of\nIndividually-wrapped   golden-yellow j\nquarters. No scooping, no slicing, Just J\nunwrap what you need  and serve!\nQuarters not used tight away stay\nfactory-wrapped,   keep   far   fresher.\nYou'll enjoy the exclusive DE LUXE\nquality, too. Delicate sunny-sweet fla-\nvorlSplendid nutritional qualities 1 And\nyou'll welcome the real economy of this\nDE LUXE margarine. Look for the\n.DE LUXE yellow package with \"Blue\nBonnet Sue\" on the .front. \u25a0*._.\nForecasts Labor\nBeating on\nArmament Question\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014 Extreme left-winger. In the British\nLabor Party will be whipped on the\narmament issue, the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada was told\ntoday by Frederick S. Kelland of\nLondon, British Trades Union Congress fraternal delegate.\n\"Despite the machinations of the\nextreme left-wing movement,\" he\nsaid, \"I believe that the need for\nfull re-armament will be accepted\nby the majority of organized workers.\" .\nMr. Kelland, President of the Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen, said the Leftist supporters of Aneurin Bevan \u2014\nwho hold Britain is putting too\nmuch into armaments \u2014 will be\nbeaten at the T.U.C.'s convention\nin September.\nWynndel Notes\nWYNNDEL\u2014Miss Marion Vogan.\nbride-elect, was the inspiration for\na miscellaneous shower held lh the\nhall. Court .whist was played, with\nwinners being Mrs. R. Url and J. J.\nFirth, ahd consolation winners, Mrs.\nM. Hag-n and A. Andestad. Mrs. E.\nHess presented the gifts to the bride\nelect\nMr. and Mrs. Jorgenson and family of Lethbridge are visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Glazier.\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Johnson and\nfamily visited Calgary.\nD. Popowich and H. Underbill of\nCalgary .were guests of Mr. and\nMrs.tG. Lowery.\nMrs. Gleeson of Vancouver ls visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. CO.\nOgilvie.\n. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson are guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Hackett en\nroute from Ontario to their home at\nVancouver.\nNew Denver\nIndia Urged fo Stop\nBritish Recruiting\nMADRAS, India, Aug. 20 (Reuters)\u2014The Communist party yesterday urged the government to stop\n\"all facilities\" to Britain for recruiting Gurkha soldiers on Indian soul.\nPrime Minister Nehru told Parliament recently that facilities to the\nBritish army to use. Indian army depots near the Nepalese border to recruit Gurkha tribesmen were \"a\npurely temporary measure.\"\nValuable deposits of tin and lead\nhave long been mined dn Nigeria\nin British West Africa.\nR UTCHERTERIA\nNEW DENVER\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nCrawford and son who were guests\nof the former's parents, Mr, and\nMrs. T. W. Clarke for six weeks,\nreturned to their home at Nanaimo.\nMr. and Mrs. T. W. Clarke and\nson Dennis have' left on a holiday\ntrip to Vancouver to visit relatives\nand friends there and at Nanaimo\nthey will visit their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Crawford\nClarke.\nErnest peRosa of New Denver\nand Jack Harding of Silverton have\nreturned from Kearney, Ont., where\nthey attended the funeral of their\nsister-in-law, Mrs. Larry Dwyer.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Coulsey and\nson who were the guests ol Mrs,\nCoulsey'.-.brother-in-law and sister\nMr. and Mrs. Harry L. Taylor and\ntwo daughters and who also visited\nher brother and their families, Mr.\nand Mrs. Andy Ander.on.and two\ndaughters and Mr. and Mrs. A. H.\nAnderson and two children, and\nbrother Olaf K. Anderson, have left\nby car for their home in Hed Willow, Alta., where Mr. Coulsey is\nprincipal of'the school there.\nRain Relieves\nFire Sifuaf ion\nVICTORIA, Aug. JO (CP) - The\nB.C, Forest Service hopes to co'ritrol\nthe devastating (10,000-acre Burns\nLake fire in the Cariboo region some\ntime tomorrow.\n\"If weather conditions do not\nchange, and our Juck hold: out, we\nmay be able to bring lt under control tomorrow,' an official said today.\nRain fel lon the fire area for 20\nminutes Tuesday, helping firefighters ccrfsiderably.\nThe fire hasn't ye' been completely trailed, but firefighters now arej\nable to work close to tbe blaze,\n\"which is a good sign,\" Forest Service reported.\nThe 900-acre Great Central Lake\nfire 1* being controlled. Th. Vernon'\nLake blaze in the Nimpltish district\nof Vancouver Island now ls quiet,\nthe Forest Service said. It blackened 3800 acres before being controlled.        \u00ab\nThere are 135 fires in the province,\nand 1236 men fighting them.\n.vtfl\nNakusp Notes\nPICNIC SHOULDERS AQ*\nBoneless, tenderized. Per lb     '\"\nOven Veal Roasts Cft*\nLean _ ______     JJf\nBreast of Veal\nper Ib\t\nAlberto Turkeys, 12 to 14\n'os. each. i>\/\\ri\nperlb     59\n38'\nLean  Oven  Pork  Roasts\n\u00a3!'___ 50'\nFowl, Grade A.\nper Ib ..,\nChicken,  Grade A   6 Ib\noverage. C*t\\t.\nIb  59*.\n49'\nCOTTAGE ROLLS     \"~~~       tCC*\nTenderized   Perlb.    We\/\nNAKUSP, B. C\u2014Mrs. Harvard\nHilte and daugnter of Kamloops are\nguests of Mrs. Hiltz' mother, Mrs.\nJ. Parent\nMrs.  A. E, Fowler has left for\ntwo weeks holiday to be spent with\n,, her brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nj and Mrs. George Martin ol Hope\n'' and her sister, Mrs. A. Leslie  of\nVancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Doyle and\nfamily returned from a holiday, at\n,, Cherryville, Armstrong,  and  Pen-\nI ticton. At Cherryville a family re-\n' union was held o( Mrs, Doyle's family, a family of six brothers' and\ntwo sisters, with their mother, sMrs\nS. Kohlman. Forty-two of the relatives were present. They met at the\nhome of their brother and sister-\nj\/i-law, Mr. and Mrs. John Kohl-\nj dian.\nI Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gardner and\ntwo children of Vancouver are the\nguests of Mr, Gardner's parents.\nMr. and Mrs. George H. Gardner\nof Glenbank.\nElmer. Vest, up of Victoria, a na-1\nlive son of Nakusp, was renew,n_\nacquaintances in town. |\n' Mrs. Len Embree of New West-1\nminster is the guest'of her mother. I\nMrs. G. Hood.\n^P\u00bb\u00bb\u00abP\"i\u00bb*_-\u00ab-l\nfVepare\ntor the\nPjcklinq\nseason\nnowj\nlB*.!<V\u00b0f\n*iv\nIt's the Bay for Sehool Togs\nGirls9 Cotton Blouses Girls9 Blue Jeans\nSchool-stvled in rH-n ss.M*-. -~\u00ab \"\nSchool-styled in crisp white cotton with\nPeter Pan collars, short sleeves, and\ndainty lace trimming. Sizes 8 to 14. \t\nPinwale Corduroy Skirts\nThe \"Perkie\" skirt you've heard about. Blues, reds\ngreens, greys\u2014fine-tucked at the waist- gam\nband\u2014adjustable tie on the sides\u2014taped ^L  Qfi\nhem. Sizes 7, 8 and 10 J\u00bb**\u00ab\u00bb \/\nGirls' T-Shirts\nWith that \"Caribou\" label\u2014so rugged yet so good-\nlooking,   and   100%   guaranteed   san-\nforized\u2014a big \"must\" for the days to     *w   Af\ncome. Sizes 8 to 12       \u25a0^>':>\nGirls' Imported Sweaters\n&Z* With long sleeves,' all botany wool, in wide\npastel stripes and fancy yoke ^ tkgt\npatterns, gridiron classics from     ___-fl**79\nIn the popular sleeveless style, heavy cotton in small\ngay  check  pattern  or  wide  colorful\nstripes. For the 8 to 14 crowd. Sizes     *M    f A\nrsss.sjmis, gridiron classics from\nexclusive \"Bairnswear.\" 8 to 14.\nsmall, medium and large.\nSho\u00ab-t-Sleeve Pullover\n2\u00ab\nAll wool crew neck, in colors which\nwill brighten any classroom. Sizes i\nto 14\t\nCARDIGANS, to complete the picture .\n2.98\nOutfit Your Boys for Sehool\nBoys' Corduroy Slacks       Boys' Pullover Sweaters\nFor boys 8 to 18 years, ideal for all around ram,..        GuarnnfPPH inner, -n \t\nWilli H. J. Holm\nCompany of\nCanada Ltd.,\nD.pt. S.P., 420\nDupont St.,\nToronto 4,\nOntario, for\npickling roctpa\n-C-klot.\nBaby Beef Liver\nper lb..\t\n89\n<*   I Rolled Veal\nSirdar Notes\nKoiiedVeal QC\u00ab*\nRoasts, perlb        Oj\n\u00a3.95\nFor boys 6 to 18 years, ideal for all around rough,\nrugged school wear. Tailored from American Hoch-\nmeyer  cord  with   belt loops,  pleats,\nzippers and regular pockets. Colors of\nwine, green, royal, brown\t\nBoys' Tweed Slacks\nVery popular with the younger crowd, styled just\nlike dad's with dressy pleated front, belt loop's, zippers\nand regular pockets. Large variety of\nweaves   and   colors   to   choose   from.\nSizes 6 tb 18 years. ...\n4*\nGuaranteed 100% all wool pullover sweaters, style\nwith V-neck and long sleeves. Knitted from soft\nbotany yarns, moth-proof treated and\ncomes in plain and two-tone shades of    f%   AQ\nwine, grey, blue, tan. Sizes 6 to 18      _^fc\nBoys' Happyfoot Socks\nflh For your boy's foot comfort choose McGregor\nHappyfoot. Knitted with a wool interlined\nsole and reinforced at the heel\nand toe with nylon. Full elastic\n'cuffs. Assorted plain colors in\nsizes 8 to 10. Pair-\n<\/\\i\/ sizes a to 10. Pair-     \u2022\"\nBoys' Sport Shirts Youth's Semi-Drapes\nTailored to look very dressy with breast pockets and        Tailm-oW **-\"\u2014 -\u25a0-l- '--' '\ntVJI.  sss-s* \u2014ii\u2014-   s-s-  \u25a0 \u25a0\n.89\nTailored to look very dressy with breast pockets and\ntwo way collars. Guaranteed washable, plain shade\nfabrics with full button front. Colors of\nwine,  sand,   blue,  grey,  brown.  Sizes     **^k   QO\nsmall, medium and large.*. i       Ml.*****\n -\u2014_r\nTailored from rich-looking celanese gabardine. High styled with lap seams,\ndouble pleats, zippers. Good selection of\nnew Fall shades. Waist sizes 26 to 34.\nPair \t\n7-'s\nThe Best in Footwear for School\nO   CHICKEN FRIED RICE\n\u2022   SWEET AND SOUR\n24 Pieces\nLibbey Sofedge\nCRYSTAL\nGLASSWARE\nRetail Volue $14.85\nFRIED NOODLES\nCHICKEN  CHOW\nMEIN\nFor a Quick Oriental Meal\nPhones 527-528\nFree Delivery\nSIRDAR-Mr. and Mrs. W. E.\nFr*_ser and Mr. and Mrs. M. Roberts\nol Vancouver were guests of Mr\nind Mrs. Is. V. Rehmann for a few\n'__\u2022\u00ab and hava left to visit other\njoints in B, C.\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Mulllns of Ed-\nI'.onton ere visiting the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Kiernan.\nMr. and Mrs. Purcell of Chicago\nne visiting the former's father, J.\nJurcell.\nMr. and Mrs. Olaf Bjorge .of Edmonton were guests of Mrs. Horn-\nseth.\nGerry Wright has left for Van-,\ncouver where he will be the guest I I t\\t\\lr   Urhflt   UAH   HO.\nj of his brother-in-law and sister, Mr I \u00bb\u2022\u00bb\u00ab   Willi I   Jf\u00bbU   gJSl\nI and Mrs. C. Murnane.\nft sslArCHIO s.l \u2014 p_.uti.ui -no utetssj.\n- isstr.lv- glasses with o new cxdusiv,\nI \/05_-rn 4-s'\u00abr- She* cannot Dl purchase\ni-ysrti.rt ss camples* matched let fn *\n,1-0* et t glosses each. cREi *- 'with\nth.   jurchoss   ot   a\nCoteman\nOIL HEATER\nChilds' and Misses'\nSchool Oxf orts\nWe now have a complete range of \"Red Schoolhouse\"\noxfords and boots. Fine quality elk uppers with neo-\nlite soles and rubber heels. Brown only.\nSizes 5 to 8. m   *%\u00a3\u25a0\"\nPair  3mW*9\nSs8^012: 5.00\nSizes X2V. to 3. '***   f|f|\nBACK - TO - SCHOOL SPECIAL?\nYES! THE \"BAY\" DOES IT AGAIN\nWITH THESE EXTRA LOW PRICES.\nBallerinas\nMEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S\nDress Oxfords\nFeatured in this group of \"back to school\nfootwear\" are four of the season's leading\nstyles. Pebble grain brogues, moccasin vamps,\nplain blucher and plain balmorals. We now\n, have a good stock of these in a good sturdy\ncalf upper with neolite soles\nand rubber heels. Sizes 6 to 11.*   ___%   AB\nPair      &\nMEN'S AND YOUTHS'\nRubber -Sole Scampers\nHere's just the shoe to start them back to school, in\na full grain leather upper with a full \"Panco\" sole\nand heel. Brown only in full and half sizes. \u2014 _ ^\nMen's, sizes 6 to 11. S*95\nPair\nYouths\nPair ...\nsizes 11 to 13.\nA sl.rtlne ill,,, ._,,,\u201e pof .\ninomoi AJo-ro, fnglond, 1757\n*  valued -pi,,,, \u201e8W \/n lh>\nO. t. Alien to'\/tcHon, Vjncouv...\nLONDON DRY GIN\nA distinguished product of\nTHE BRITISH COLUMBIA DISTILLERY CO. LTD.\nNew Westminster. B.C\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by tho Gover;\nwith a\nCoteroao\nOIL HEATER!\nEASY\nTERMS\nSmall ln size\n\u2014 small ln\nprice \u2014 giant\nin performance! Produces 32,000 BTUs of heat pel\nhour. A really fine room heate:\n\u2014a dandy auxiliary heaterl See\nthis shadowed mahogany beauty\nfor yourself. You'll be amazed\nst Its law_pi.ee\u2014Its high power I\nCom* In ond .ntpac. tht, neater   \u25a0\nComfort eesH eo\nV     llHloY\/ltho\nMade of soft suedine with composition soles, slight\nwedge   heels.   Colors   of  black  only.    ^_\nSizes 4 to 81\/. including the half size.     ^O   ^Q\nSpecial School Opening price, pair      ___&*\nTeeners Strap Loafers\nUppers are of pliable leather in a rich brown shade.\nMoccasin vamp style with adjustable\nstraps. Sewn-composition soles and heels     00 Af\n.in medium widths only. Sizes 4 to 81\/..     ^fc*\n4.45\nBoys' \"Heavy Duty\"\nSchool Boots\nRugged, well-built school boots that will really stand\nup to hard wear. Heavy leather uppers with neolite\nsoles and rubber heels; hard toe-caps.\nBoys', sizes 1 to 5V_.\nPair \t\nYouths', sizes 11 to 13\nPair \t\nNylon Hose\nColeman\nNAKUSP\nHARDWARE\nNakusp, B. C.\nFully  fashioned  51   gauge,  15  denier\nnylon firsts.' Hard-wearing for school at    m mt,\ndays and sheer enough for evening wear. ) I \u2022 19\nPair :  M\nThree-quarter Hose\nMade from long-wearing all spun staple\nnylon. Guaranteed mothproof and shrink *M   *\\tt\nresistant. Sizes 8 to 9%. Pair  JH \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u00bb-->,\n5.50\nMEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S\nBlack Canvas Runners\nHeavy duty black canvas duck with heavy white\nrubber soles, trim and ankle patch.\nSizes'6 to 11     4*45\nBoys' sizes 1 to 5     3\u00bb95\nKiddies' Anklets\nHard-wearing,   long-lasting   all   nylon\nanklets. A wide 'assortment of colors in\n, sizes 6 to 8. Pair\t\nINCORPORATET   ??_\u2022 MAY IQ7Q.\n(iWfBng\n *>:\n14fh POLIO DEATH IN SASKATCHEWAN\nREGINyV, Aug. 20 (CP)-Saskatchewan's Uth poliomyelitis death\nwas reported here today by Dr.\nli. E. Baird, superintendent of the\nRegina General Hospital.\nThe latest victim is a 14-year-old\nfrom Neldpath, Sask.\nNo new polio cases have been\nreported in the Regina area in the\nlast 24 hours.\nOf Canada'; total butput by clothing Industries in 195D, Quebec accounted-for 56 per cent.\nMONTREAL, August 21st\u2014Ever long for real,\ncreamy cre-m-of-tomato soup? I know I do. Ana\nI know I can have it when I want it\u2014at very little\ncost. I just open a tin of HEINZ CREAM OF\nTOMATO SOUP\u2014add only water\u2014and get cream-\nof-tomato with the creamy tasta I love. You Bee,\nsYewis* puts in the cream\u2014you add only water (save\ny, pint of milk I), and the result is\u2014-d-mmml . . .\n, .____ delioioust When you've tasted the wonderful difference between straight tomato soup with milk added \u2014 and Heins\nCream <rf Tomato (made irith thick country cream) with only water\nadded\u2014-you'll want to stock up with Heins. (A particularly good idea\nfor your summer cottage where fresh milk is not always available.)\nGetting The Youngsters ready for school!1 When you're making or\nremodelling th*-\" -ohool-clo_bes, use LIGHTNING\nSLIDE FASTENERS for convenience and safety.\nClothes finished with Lightning Slide Fasteners are\nso easy for youngsters to get in and out of. You\nsee, Lightning is the ripper* with the famous automatic lode. When they're \"sipped up\", Lightning\nsippera stay put\u2014yet they're wink-quick to __-_ip\nwhen you want to. And just think \u2014 no more\nbothersome buttons to replace. To help you new\nthose back-to-eohool clothes, here's a GIFT FOR YOU. A wonderfully\nhelpful set. of leaflets\u2014\"Whas so Knoie About Slide FaeSeners\"\u2014with\nnew and easy-to-follow sewing instructions. Simply write to m*\u00bb\u2014Barbara Brent, 1411 Crescent St- Montreal, P.Q.\u2014\/or your free set.\nTha Best Of Travellers have\n....    their \"off days\".\nWell, here's my\nremedy for that\nsluggish, headachy feeling\n\u2014 a   sparkling,\nplea-ant-tasting\nglass of 6AL\n_-_-PAT_<-\u00bb_. in\nthe mottling be-\nfore breakfast. And if hubby or\n\u2022on are feeling low, suggest they\ntry Sal Hepatica, too. It's been a\nfaithful family laxative for over\n00 years. Another beauty about\nSal Hepatica is that you can use\nit safely merely as a refresher\nin the morning\u2014or at night when\nyour system feels the need of a\ngood cleansing. Sal Hepatica effervescent salts are pleasant to take\n\u2014\u2022mild and gentle\u2014yet wonderfully effective. So when you're\npacking for your vacation trip-\nplan to pack up your troubles with\na jar of Sal Hepatica effervescent\nsalts!\nWojojul fjoMifL\nJoel McCreo's 17-Year-Qld Son Will\nAppear in Film 'Lone Hand' With Father\n\u25a0Ho Wonder they call it the .\"one-\nminute\" make-im. One minute\nwith wonderful WOODBURY\nDREAM .STUFF does a complete\nmake-up Job and you look \"moro-\ning-fresh all day long. You see,\nWoodbury Dream Stuff is founda-\ntion-tint-and-powder in one dainty\ncompact. Just amoo-oth it on with\na glide of the puff. It's light and\nvelvety \u2014never cakes \u2014is never\ndrying nor greasy on your skin...\nand never, never spills. Woodbury\nDream Stuff comes complete with\npuff in a pretty, pimfe-ei-e packet\n... ask for your choice of s}T0\ndreamy shades\u2014just 7_o\u2014or in the\nnew luxury plastic compact\u2014$1.00.\nNo Fuss \u2014 No Bother At AU . . . BLUE BONNET DE LUXE\nMARGARINE is eo handy to use I Yes, now you\ncan buy Blue Bonnet De Luxe Margarine, pre-cut\nm individually wrapped, golden-yellow quarter\npounds. SO convenient I Blue Bonnet De Luxe quarters go ri^ht on the dish\u2014look right at the table.\nAnd there s real flavour protection \u2014 each quarter\nseparately wrapped to seal in the country-fresh Blue\nBonnet flavour. Another thing you'll tike about De\nLuxe Blue Bonnet\u2014you can forget your measuring\nTOP when ywi cook with it The handy chart on\n*e package shows exactly where to cut. Ask foi*Blue Bonnet De Luxe\n^DeSu-a^-^if6 tool LVf*\" lld''ant'*e*-*and BIv\"* -*\u00bb\"*\u00ab'\nWhet It Men Dellahsful than that precious time skimmed from a\n  sunny summw day\u2014when you sit and enjoy a cool.\nrelaxing glass%f iced tea. And my, how a generous\ntoon wedge bnngs out the tangy, refreshing flavourl\nWhether your refreshment is iced tea or lemonade\nrJMOMsLST t0_.US6\u201e-?N?i?T CALIFORNIA\nLEMONS-they make all the difference-they'ra the\nfinest, juiciest grown. That's why it's suoh a good\nidea to keep a supply of 8unkist lemons on hand\n__!fV?,vJ-a,**_ tten' *tea -\"\"\"'n** feeling tired\n\u25a0__, _-_*_,       \"g hot-jost make yourself a glass of iced tea with\n*Zi^T^r^T^'^ <*\u00ab <\u25a0** *\u25a0*<> *c. BinilTlZoldT.\nBy BOB THOMA8\nHOLBYWOOD, Aug. 21 (API-\nSome joker recently tacked on Jota\nMcCrea's dressing room a sign reading \"millionaire's row.\" .McCrea\nJoined in the laugh.\nIt's possible that he ls a millionaire, .ince he has ben making good\nmoney for 20 years. But one thing ls\ncertain: he doesn't act like a millionaire. Nor has he brought up his\ntwo boys to act like a rich man's\nsons.\nThey have been so shielded from\nthe limelight that only this week\ndid McCrea allow the first picture\nof one of them to be published. The\nreason for the photograph was that\nthe oldest boy, Jody, 17, is appearing\nwith his pop in \"Lone Hand.\"\nFIR8T MOVIE\n\"That's true,\" Joel cenfirrned,\nthere haven't been any pictures of\ntbe boys published since they were\nbabies. The only photos we have\ntaken of them were for the family\nalbum. My wife (Actress Frances\nDee) had a theory about that.\n\"She objected to children being\ntoed in publicity at an age when\nthey were not able to make their\nown decisions about it\n\"And she was absolutely right I\nhave seen it happen to too many\nkids of famous people. They wind\nup with a complex about being second best and make messes of their\nlives.\"\nThe McCreas seem to have done\na good job along those lines on Jody\nand David, 16. They purposely kept\nthe boys out of the social whirl,\nwhere they would be competing\nwith other film children. The McCrea sons have spent most of their\nlives on the ranch learning the\ncattle business.\nACTING BUG\nAfter years of Indifference about\nhis father's profession, Jody sud\ndenly has expressed -\"desire to get\ninto it Joel gave him a chance to\nbreak   Into   the  game   on   \"Lqne\nHand.\" v\n\"1 gave the kid a part and let\nhim double'in some riding scenes,\"\nremarked Director George Sherman. \"He's plenty good.\"\nThe proud father agrees. \"He's all\nexcited about It,\" said Joel. \"Now\nhe plans to enroll at Pomona College and take, the same drama\ncourse that Robert Taylor and I\ntook there.   \u2022\nJoel admitted that neither son Is\na great fan of his.\n\"They like me better than Ran*\ndolph Scott but not as well as Gary\nCooper,\" he shrugged.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG. 21,19W\nEdmonton Reports 2nd Polio Death\nExplorers Trapped\nIn Flooded Cave\nMUOTATHAL, Switzerland, Aug.\n20 (Reuters)\u2014Four cave explorers\nwere trapped far underground ln\nthe caverans of Hoel-Lock today by\na flood in the cave's underground\nriver.\nThe cave mouth, where the four\nwent down live days ago, today was\nturned into a lake by heavy rains\nover the weekend.\nThe caverns \u2014 one chamber is\nlike an underground cathedral 800\nfeet long and 200 feet wide\u2014twist\nand turn In a labyrinth of passageways and caves under Muotatbal\nmountain in the Alps.\nThe four explorers have been imprisoned in the cave since last Friday.\nMore emergency pumps were\nrushed to the cave entrance today\nin an effort to lower the water level\nsufficiently to let divers enter. Rescue workers with rubber rafts stood\nby.\nThe four trapped men are thought\nto be perched somewhere hear the\nroof of a caveran. They had some\nfood with them but it is not* certain\nhow much. \u2022\nCleaned free on\nrequest. Lb.\t\n* SPRING FRYERS\n* SMOKED PICNICS\n* FRESH GROUND BEEF Si __50'\nGainer's.\nTenderized. Lb.\n58*\n49*\nTender.\nLb.\n\u2022 BREAKFAST SAUSAGE\n\u2022 VEAL RIB STEW\n\u2022 ROUND STEAK\n\u2022 BLADE POT ROAST\n\u2022 EASTERN KIPPERS\n\u2022 SMOKED FILLETS\n\u2022 SLICED LING COD\nEDMONTON, Aug. ?0 (CP) \u2014\nDelayed, report of Edmonton's\nsecond polio death was made today\nby city health officials. It raised the\nAlberta toll so far this year to 17,\nhighest of the four Western Provinces.\nThe Edmonton death, isiat of a\nseven-year-old boy, occurred about\na week ago but was not leported Immediately tu the city health department i\nSeven, new cases of polio \u2014 four\nin Lethbridge and district, two in\nEdmonton and one In the northeastern town of Bonnyvllle \u2014 today\nraised Alberta's 1852 case total to\n228, second only to Saskatcnewan's\n263.\nCalgary and district with 113\ncases and eight deaths, continues as\nthe hardest-hit area In the West.\nLethbridge and district and Edmonton each have had 22 cases and\ntwo deaths and Medicine Hat live\ncases, Four other Alberta piilio\ndeatlis occurred at Vermilion East\nof Edmonton and one at Lacombe\n75 miles South.\nTO-CYO. Aug. 20 (AP)-Japanese\nseamen and shipowners agreed today to a retirement plan, ending a\nseries of nation-wide strikes that\nbegan two weeks ago.\nL_\u00a3^ Weekend Specials\nRefrigerators\nPHILCO F-915 9 Cu. Ft.\n$369.50\nHOTPOINT DELUXE\n9.6 Cu. Ft\n$459.00\nROY DE LUXE TO Cu. Ft.\n$349.50\nQUIC FREEZE 6 Cu.Fh\n$269.50\n1 Only\nDEEP FREEZE\n6 Cu. Ft.\n$229.50\n1 ONLY\nINTERNATIONAL HARVESTER\nDEEPFREEZER\n16 Cu. Ft (550 lbs.)\n$642.75\nSimpson's 5 Year Guarantee-or Money Refunded\nREMEMBER:\nDURING AUGUST SALE\nONLY 10% DOWN\nWill Place in Tour Home\nBEDROOM SUITES .\nCHESTERFIELDS . . . RADIOS\n\"     '     2-PIECE DAVENPORTS\nWASHING MACHINES\n  STOVES, ETC.\nESTABLISHED BUDGETS REQUIRE NO DOWN PAYMENT\nIt's Smart to Buy Fall Furnishings in August .\nIf It's For the Home-It's At\nAnnouncing\nFirst Showing of\nSave on Fall's First Fashions\nMeet the winners In Fall fashions\u2014 Meet the' prices\nthat help you win the battle of the budget. You'll find\nall the news in fashion at newsworthy prices \u2014 If\nyou're headed back to qollege, make your first stop our\nfashion floor today.\nThere's a festive.glow\nin the fabrics of these\ndresses. \u2014 There's dancing\nrhythm in the whirl of\nthe skirts. The kind\nof dresses that see a\ngirl through .emc.t.rs\nof good times on\nweekend dates.\nSmart Texture\nCOATS...\nTexture \u2014 Texture and\nmore Texture \u2014\nEvery smart woolen It\nwonderful to feel this Fall\n. . . Our Textured Coats take to\nnew lines just beautifully \u2014\nFlared lines keep their crisp flares.\nFitted lines fit like a dream.      \u2022\nGet your Winter Coat now .\nand be ahead in money and style.\n. \" Vl.\nNew Fall Suit\nTextures That\nTailor Like a\nDream . . .\nOur new Fall Suits are made\nof the textured woolens that\nare a tailor's joy \u2014 They\nhold their fine lines \u2014 Wear\nbeautifully \u2014 and are so\nsmart to look at.\n\u25a0  __ \u2022\u25a0   '. \u25a0\n Z\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG. 21,1952\nDefence Program Not Immune\nTo Strike Weapon Say Unions\nr' Bv jnsSM   I cbi a.\u25a0** -   -\nBy JOHN LEBLANC\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG. Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014 A\nFederal Government suggestion that\nLabor soften the use of Its strike\nweapon during the defence produc\ntlon race was rebuffed today  by\nunion chiefs at the Trades and Labor\nCongress of Canada Convention.\nThe cautiously-worded appeal for\nLabor-management harmony from\nTop Communist Shot After Three Years ita\nFl.hU\nTooth D\u00ab_'\nPromote* grow-.\norhealthy o-nrHI__uo\n45--75c\n[presenting ....\nFALL'S NEWEST\nFASHIONS\nCOATS\nin\nMohair \u2014 Poodle Cloth\n\"\u2022   and All Wool.\nVery moderately priced.\nm\nA CHOICE SELECTION\nHATS\nin\nVelvet - Velour\nor Fur Felt\nSEE OUR WINDOW\nDISPLAY\nIRENE'S\nMILLINERY  AND\nDRESS SHOP\nLabor Minister Gregg was answered\nI by President Percy Bengough of\nthe 502,000-member T.L.C. and Bus-\nsell Jj-arvey of Tofonto, one of the\nAmerican Federation of Labor's top\n'men In Canada. i\nBoth said labor will continue to\n[exercise its legal right to walk otit,|\ndespite a statement from the minister yesterday that Canadian production now should not be .\"interrupted,\nImpeded or interfered with for even\na short time.\".\nThe convention as a whole made\nno declaration on the issue, just\nhearing the two officials who spoke\non a point of \"privilege\" on Mr.\nGregg's address. President Ben-\ngough's statement, however, could\nbe taken as the official T.L.C! stand\n[in the absence of opposition from\nthe 500-odd delegates.\nHis comment and that of Harvey\nI\u2014-Canadian director of organization\nI for the A.F.L. \u2014 w;s aimed chiefly\nat i section of Mr. Gregg's convention speech in part:\n\"In these critical times, when the\nfree nations of the world are striving to hold their lead in the production race over those who would destroy all freedoms, our production\nshould not be interrupted, impeded\nor interfered with for even a short\ntime.\" \u00ab.\nThe minister added \"harmony\"\ncould prevent \"many potentially-\ndangerous delays ih production.\"\nMr. Gregg, in office two years,\nmade what was generally Interpreted by newspaper men as a \"go,\nslow\" appeal on the strike question.\nHowever, President Bengough and\nHarvey today professed to consider\nhe was misinterpreted.\nThe President, saying he did not\nthink Mr. Gregg intended to say\nwhat he had been construed as saying, added:\n\"Labor has certain rights and has\nexercised them and will continue to\ndo so.\"\nApart from the strike question,\nthe Congress session today \u2014 its\nthird day \u2014 devoted most of the\ntime to a long and involved wrangle\nover whether certain, employers\nshould be \"blacklisted.\" by the T.L.C.\nor its central provincial bodies.\nThe issue was still under discussion when the convention rose for\nthe day, and it was expected to\ncome up again tomorrow morning\nBefore the' delegates was a recommendation from the executive to\nthrow out a resolution that would\nmake it easier for unions to black;\nlist firms.\nAt present, T.L.C. organizations\nare not allowed to put an employer\nof labor on the \"unfair list\" if he\nhas a contract with a T.L.C. body\nunless that body okays the move\nThe resolution from the Prince Rupert, B.C., Trades and Labor Council would wipe out that restriction\nMan Jumps From\n13th Floor Window\nMIAMI, Fla., Aug. 20 (AP) \u2014 A\nman who plunged from the 13th\nfloor of an office building and crashed through the roof of an adjoining\ntwo-storey structure died today.\nCharles Svoboda, 41, former employee in the Pacific building from\nwhich he leaped, jumped from a\nwindow in a men's washroom, police\nsaid.\nSvoboda apparently hit the roof\nhead first. Af hole about two feet\nsquare was found in the roof..\nHe suffered cuts to the head, broken arms, a broken right leg, and\ninternal and brain injuries.\nPolice said lt was suicide.\nAnglo-Iranian, Shell\nOil Study; Alberta Fields\nEDMONTON, Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014 A fabulous oil sands, reputed to be\nteam of experts from the Anglo- the world's largest known reserve of\nIranian (jil Co. arrived in Edmonton qll. The 'oil sands, still untapped\ntoday on a fssi*-.fin*tt\u00bb.*. ^,..,\t\n_      . -_   ...  A.SSSSS.SSSUS1\ntoday on \"a fact-finding mission preparatory to the company, entering\nthe'crude'oil production picture in\n[Alberta.\nThe group, headed' by Peter Cox\n[of London, export manager for\nAnglo-Iranian's subsidiary D'Arcy\nExploration Co., called on Mines\nMinister N. E. Tanner. The company already has- announced plans\nto open a \"small office\" in Calgary\nMr. Cox.said that the company's\n[present plans do not Involve development of northeastern Alberta.\nA MANHUNT in the jungles of Malaya came to a sudden end alter three years when Second Lieutenant Raymond\nHands led a party of Tommies into the lair of Liew Kon Kim, notorious Communist terrorist, and shot him and\none of his chief lieutenants as they tried to escape. Pictured are some of the Tommies and. the 'shot Communist's flag.\nHolding it at right is Hands, who became a national hero in Malava w\u201e*.ss!s (,_*.--*..i\u2014- --\u25a0 ' \u2022\n.nA.il   si.-   s\u2014.\u2014;..'- *-\"\n _    ..._>\u00bb.. ss-sssssbs. \u00a3\n -... ....... sscssscssssssss as mey tried to escape. Pictured are some of the Tommies and. the shot\nHolding it at right is Hands, who became a national hero in Malaya when it became known that his\nended the terrorist's career. The British anti-Communist war in Malaya's jungles is now enter!\nWwUecAagt\nfly. sXcuvul Utfaurf&A.\n was the gun that\nentering its fifth year.\nFIRE DESTROYS\nNEW HOME\nLOMITA, Calif., Aug. 20 (Ap)\u2014\n\u25a0Fireman Alfred Trefethern.and his\nwife, Joan, spent 18 months and\n$6000 building their own home. A\n\u2022few days ago they moved in. Yesterday while Trefethern was on\nduty an alarm came in from his\n['neighborhood. He saw his own i\nhouse burn to the ground.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAmerican Y K\n. Barymin   .\n|Bevcourt\nBldgood Kirk ... ZZ\nBobjo \u25a0        ....\nBoymar Gold\nBrewis RL . ..\" \"\nBroulan  \t\nBuffadison\nBuffalo Ank\nBuff Can     ...ZZZZ\nCalliman      ... ZZ\nCampbell R i.\t\nCentral Pore     '.\"\"\"\nChimp G   _.__\nCochenour \t\nCons M & s ZZ\nConwest\nDetta R L .'..ZZZZZZZZ\nDonalda  _..__\"\nDuvay\nSIMPLE EMBROIDERY\nLUCKY TfOU, Jr. Miss! You can\nmake this new dr_ss so easily! That\nlovely design is simple to embroider\neither by hand or by machine. And\nfor fashion \u2014 the Empire-style\nwaistline, the beautiful pjeated\nskirt! Pattern 679: Misses sizes 11,\n13, 15, 17. Size 13 takes 4% yards\n35-inch. State size.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins, (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor  this  pattern   to  Nelson   News\nNeedlecraft   Dept.,   Baker\nNelson.   Print   plainly\nGovernor General\nWill Tout Canada\n\u2022a\nOTTAWA, Aug. .'J (CP) \u2014 Governor-General Vincent Massey will\ntour Canada from coast to coast before Christmas, his first extended\ntrip Sipce he i>ecame the Queen's\n'representative last February,\nGovernment House disclosed today that he leaves Saturday on a\ntrip to the Maritimes pnd Newfoundland. Then, after spending a month\nat the citadel at Quebec, he will\ntake off on a five-week trip that\nwill take him to the West Coast.\nThe R.C.A.F. and the Navy will\nprovide transportation.\nThe Governor-General will fly\nfrom St. John's to Quebec Aug. 31\nj and take up temporary residence at\n1 the citadel. After that he will leave\non the Western- jaunt, returning\n\u25a0.arly in November.\nU. S. Fascinates\nLondon Busmen\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (AP) \u2014 Nine\nCockney busmen came home today from a 12,000-mlle-tour of\nCanada and the United States and\ntold .of tt continent crowded with\nmountains of food,, well-dressed\nwomen and looney blokes who\ndrink their tea with ice In It\nThe drivers took their double-\ndeokers abroad five months ago aa\nan official \"Come-tq* Britain\" stunt\nto attract tourists.\n. Albert Dennia, 34, startled Britons at a receptloi for the busmen\nby declaring that \"temperature,\nJust temperature, la what makes\nAmerican women, especially those\nIn California, more attractive than\nthose over here.\"\nDennia hastily explained that\nwhat he meant was that the muds'' weather in the United States\nallows American women to wear\nlightweight and, therefore, more\nattractive clothes:\nThe drivers are going back to\ntheir old Jobs wheeling the big\ndouble-deckers through London.\nEast Amphi ....\nEast Malartic\nEldona\t\nFalconbridge\nFrobisher \t\nGoldcrest\nGold Arrow ^\u201e\u201e\nHalcrow .\nHardrock ... _\"\nHeath \t\nHolUnger\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULT8\nIncluding all its rivers, the republic of Brazil possesses 27,318\nmiles of navigable waterways.\nyour   NAME   and   AD\nNUMBER\nDRESS.\nSuch a colorful roundup of handiwork ideas! Send twenty-five cents\nnow for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalog, Choose your patterns\nfrom our gaily illustrated toys, dolls,\nhousehold and persona] accessories.\nStreet. A pattern for a handbag is printed\nPATTERN'right in the book\nTEAR'GAS USED\nIN STRIKE TUSSLE\nTUNIS,. Tunisia, Aug. 20 (AP) \u2014\nPolice used tear gas today in a\nfight with striking longshoremen on\nthe docks of this port city. Sixty\ndockers were reported injured, six\nseriously.\nSome ,1600 dockers struck yesterday in protest at the hiring of 60\nnew workers without agreement\nfrom the Dockers' Hiring Hall Committee.\n(Djism. lAp. With,\nVYlrtdxm. Wxvdtin,\nHomer Y K ,\nHudson Bay\nInt Nickel .\nJoliet Que .\nKelore   \t\nKerr Addison \t\nKirk-Hudson Bay\nLabrador\nLake Dufault ...\nLittle Long Lac .\nMacDonald\nMacLeod Cock .\nMadsen R L\nMalartic G F .\nMarcus G\nNegus   \t\nNew Alger ...\nNew Calumet\nNew Lund ...\nNorth Can\nOslsko \t\nPamour ....\nPaymaster \t\nPlacer Devel\t\nPreston E D ......\nQuebec Lab\nSan Antonio\nSen Houyn ..\nSilvermiller\nSilanco\nSiscoe\nSteep Hock\nSylvanite \t\nTombijl      ...\nUnited Keno\nUpper Canada\nOILS\nlAnglo Can\t\nB A Oil  \t\nCal & Ed    \t\nCentral Leduc\nDel Rio\t\nEastcrest\n.50\n\u2022 1.12\n.    1.45\n\u2022 .13%\n.25\n\u25a0       .16V.\n\u2022 .17'\/.\n2.72\n\u25a014H\n1.04\n22\n.23\n11.25\n.23\n.25-\n1.73\n36.00\n4.00\n\u25a031 \\\n.54'\n.75\n.18\n3.60\n-12\n18.00\n7.70\n.15*4\n.\"OH\n.11*54\n.12-i\n.29 Vi\n15.35\n\u2022lOVj\n61.25\n44.50\n.42%\n.14\n19.35\n1\n10.75\n1.20\n.70\n1.01\n3.20\n1.90\n2.21\nm\n.85\n.18\n1.75\nl.i\n.93\n.90\n1.10\n.66\n48.00\n1.50\n.28\n.45\n.16\n2.17\n.41\n.64\n7.00\n1.45\n.35\n13.15\n1.78\n ,      ..zzz      USSSSSSSSS.l-\ncommercially but undergoing tests\nnow by other firms, would be ''Incidental\" if brought into Anglo-Iranian's current plans:\nMr. Cox said tbe fact-finding mission would take months to complete.\nI The official, former general manager\nIof Anglo-Iranian's oil fields in Iran,\nsaid he regards the Alberta oil out-\nllook as \"good.\"\nMeanwhile, Lt.-Gen. H. Doolittle\nof Second World War fame and now\nla vice-president and a 'director bf\n[Shell Oil Co., made a flying trip today to the oil sands region to investigate their potentialities for his\n[company. He arrived in Calgary last\nnight with\/other shell officials in a\ncompany plane.\nDeer Pai*fc Nptes\nDEER PARK, B:*C,\u2014Mr, ahd'Mri.\nRupbrt Jamieson, who spent a few\ndays with Mr. Jamleson's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. D. p. Jamieson, returned to their home |n Oregon.   .\nDr. A. Schwartzenhauer and Mrs.\nSchwartzenhauer, who were spending a holiday at the home of the\nformer's parents, returned to their\n| home in Portland.\nMr. and Mrs. Bill Barnes and\ntheir children, who were guests of\nMr. and Mrs. R. Webster, returned\nto their home at Glacier, B.C.\nHow To Hold\nFALSE TEETH\nMora Firmly in Place\nDo your false teeth annoy and embarrass\n- -\u2022\"--'       * or wobl\"\n*-\" \/\u25a0-\u25a0\" .\u00ab\u00abc iee\nby slipping, droppmi\neat,   laugh   or  talk\nv ...jblliip when you\nJust   oprinfcle  a   little\neat, laugh or talk? Just sprinkle a little\nFASTEETH on your plates. This \u2022.kaHiw\n(non-acid) powder holds false teeth more\nfirmly and more comfortably. No gummy;\ngooey, pasty taste or feeling.' Does not tour.\n\u201e\u2014,, v\u2014.. _,. -\u00ab.kiii. uoea not tour.\nChecks \"plate odor\"  (denture breath). Get\n.TEETH today at any drug storu\nFAST\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILV\nZ0\nWhat mates the difference f\nOna chooso can look just about like another... but the\nflavor. makes a world of difference! The secret of\nChateau's taste-tempting mellowness is a master\nblending of fine Canadian Cheddar with thick, fresh\ncream. Try Chateau today for more flavorful cheese\ndishes, sandwiches, salads, snacks.\nGeh@natidii...\nirscmMm\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line. 40c line black face type; larger type rates en\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\n\"Hotpoint\"   garbage ' burner\nquick sale. Phone 1479.\nfor\nCarnation Milk is always full\nbodied and creamy colored. That's\n\"your assurance of complete satisfaction when you use it in coffee or\non cereals and fruits. You'll never\nfind watery consistency or thin\ncolor in Carnation. We buy top\nquality milk and process it with\nthe greatest of care (52 years' experience at it too) in order to give\nyou rich, creamy, heavy Carnation\nMilk. Get Carnation \u2014\nIT'S CREAMIER.\n*MAKE THIS\n7 DAY TEST\n\u2014 for just one week\nme Carnation Milk\nin place of your present\nbrand. Once you have\n. used Carnation,*\\tie\nare sure that no other\nbrand will satisfy you.\nMAC'S COFFEE AND  MILK  BAR\nQUALITY   ALL  THE  WAY\nDon't wait until after the fire,\nINSURE NOW. Blackwood Agency.\nWe now have Fall Hats on display.\n1       ADRIAN  MILLINERY.\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix lt.\nthrow it away. Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices.\nFor sale \u2014 1950 Custom  4-Door\n,    \u201e     ,  ~ ' p. '\"5*\"e- 1950 Custom  4-Door\nLe Pages cold water paste powder! Ford s<*dan- 26.\u00b0\u00b00 miles, radio seat\nor paper hanging. I ravers, A-l condition.   $1850 'mS\nI for paper hanging.\n1 BURNS LUMBER CO.\nHUNTING AND FISHING\n\u2022      LICENCES\nJACK BOYCE MEN'S SHOP\nSpecial \u2014 All  Bridal  Veils  reduced in price.\nADRIAN  MILLINERY\n1 only Corner China Cabinet in\nwalnut. Keg. $114.50, Now $89.50.\nMc & Mc (NELSON) LTD.\nBe choosy\u2014Get finer flowers from\nVALENTINE'S. We are alert and\nequipped to fill your order to PERFECTION.\ncovers, A-l condition.\nPhone 1136-R.\nHere's  a  real  bargain  \u2014  Ever-\nBrite Electric Kettle made by General Electric. Special price $11.95.\nHIPPERSON'S\nFor Sale: Astral refrigerator in\nexcellent condition. $95. Jeffrey\nRadio and Appliances, Ail, Ward\nStreet. Phone 1302.\nChurch of The Redeemer\nSunday Next:\nResume Evening Services\nPreacher: The Dean of Athabasca\nRev. E. Thain\nMORE PEOPLE IN CANADA\nUSE CARNATION\nTHAN AU OTHER BRANDS COMBIN\n.vapobaie;\nID.H-vMOOt*!*\nWATCH REPAIRS\nFor reliable repairs at moderate\nprices try COLLINSON'S JEWELLERY STORE. 561 Baker Street\nDust mops, floor mops, brooms\nand brushes, weighted floor polishers, scrub brushes, sponges and\nj chamois, etc. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nThe graceful way to say a bread-\nand-lnttter \"thank You\" is to send\nFlowers from COVENTRYS'.\nPhone 962.\nArmstrong's Imitation wall tiling\n54\" wide, beautiful colors to choose\n(rom. 89c lineal foot at\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nEND OF SEASON CLEARANCE\nClearing   of   lawn   furniture   to\nmake room for new stock. Only a\nfew pieces left. Reduced prices.\nFETTERLEY WOOD PRODUCTS\n1007 Cottonwood St.       Phone 1598\nSpecial \u2014 Used piano ln excellent\ncondition.\n\"Quik   Frez\"  Refrigerators   from\n$249 5 year guarantee.\nWe buy and sell new and  used\nfurniture.\nSpecial price quotations given on\nall mining, logging and construction\n'camp bedding requirements.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST.' PHONE 1660\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe ^re  deeply  grateful   to  our\n  relatives, neighbors and friends for\nT. H. WATERS A CO: LTD.       theii- kindness and sympathy shown\nHousehold, store and office fix-  during our recent bereavement and\ntures.  We build all  types to suit also for the. beautiful floral offer-\nyour individual requirements. ings.\n101 *taU St.      . \u2122\u2014 \u25a0\"\nFOR  HALF-8IZER8\nHere are the slim, trim lines that\nflatter you most\u2014and this pattern\nis perfectly  proportioned  for the\nshorter-waisted, fuller figures \u2014no\nalteration worries! It's the perfect\n\"gad-about\"   casual   to   take   you\nright through Fall\u2014and It's 1-2-3-\nsewing, so make it now! \/  , --\nPattern  H9087:  Half  sizes   1414, Simpsons pfd  -...\n16*., 18V., 20   , 22   , 24     Size Wit Steel of Can\ntakes 3% yards 39-inch. Standard Paving\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives per- tjnited Steel\nfeet fit. Complete, illustrated Sew\nChart shows you every step.\nS\u00bbnd fHIRTY-FIVE CENT8 <a|c)\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly SIZE\nNAME, ADDRESS, 8TYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson News, Pat\ntern Dept., Baker Str-.t, Nelson.\nFederated Pete\n[Home    \u2014 \u00bb\u2022\nImperial Oil    34.\nInter Pete \t\nKroy \t\nMacDougal Segur\nMid Cont-\nNew Pacalta\nOkalta   .\nPac Pete.\n| Royalite\nRoxana \t\nTower Pete\nUnited Oils\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\t\nAlgoma Steel\n| Aluminum ....r\nAtlas St \t\nBeattie Bros  ...\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian\nB C Packers B     \t\nBuilding Products ...._\n[Burl Steel \t\nBurrard A  \t\nCan Cement .\nCan Packers A\nCan Packers B\nCan Breweries\n| Can Canners\nCan Car & Fdy\nCan Car & Fdy A    ,i\nCan Pac Rly    34\nCockshutt           171.\nCons M & S\nDist Seagram     241.\nDom Bridge      84\nDom Foundries   \u2014   23\nDom Magnesium\nDom Steel Is Coal B\nDom Stores\nDom Textiles  .\nEddy Paper\nFamous Players\nGreat Lakes \t\nImperial Oil \t\n| Int Nickel\nInt Pete\nLaura Secord ..._      13H\n[Loblaw A\nMassey Harris\t\nM & O Paper\nMont Loco\nMoore Corp\nNat Steel Car\nPowell   River\n[Simpsons A\nH Walker    ZZZZZZZ.   471j\nCHICAGO, Aug. 20 ,(CP)-Alex\nReveille came to the United States\n'frbm Russia 35 years ago and often\ntold friends of the \"debt (he) owed\nthis country \" He died last Friday,\naged about 74 His will disclosed\nyesterday that he left $6500 to the |\nI U.S. Treasury.\n        in   hi      !\"\u25a0-\u2014-\u25a0 >\u25a0\u2022-\u25a0:\u25a0:-:\u25a0::\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0::\u25a0:    *^tPMRMHMHHMMHRE^i|IH*^\u00ab<lEHHH-i\nSILVERWARE BAROAINI 3 fine teaspoons, with your Awn initial,\n' only 7St and I box tap from Kellogg's Corn Flakes. See package.\n .\u25a0\"\u25a0\/:\n\u25a0 Z      : ' ''   \u25a0\"'*   \u25a0     '        '\nSunday Big Day\nActs Lend\nVariety to Water Show\nSix power boat racing event! ind\nfive big novelty apt)'wil provide\nNelson Water ShOM patrons with\ntour hours of spectacular entertainment at Lakeside Park Sunday afternoon.\n. Int.rip.rnd with the raoln. are\n\u25a0kllna and Jumping displays, '\ndiving exhibition and canoe tipping and |og rolling contests guaranteed to keep things lively for\ntha entl ,e afternoon.'\nA grovp of Trail divers under the\nguidance of athletic director Dmitri\nGoloubef will be featured in the\nspringboard display. Performers include Tom McVie and Joan Farmalo,\nwho won the junior championships\nat the recent Kelowna Regatta, Reg\nMitchell and Nick Catalano.\nNelson's Betty Foss, champion at\nthe Kelowna event two years ago,\nwill also appear ln the exhibition.\nThe skiing and barrel jumping\nPre-Water Show\nGRAND\nDANCE\nSATURDAY\nAUG. 23, 1952\nat\n9:00 p.m.\nCIVIC\nCENTRE\nMusic by\nKAMPUS\nKINGS\nAdmission 7S\u00a3\nEVERYBODY WELCOME\ndisplay will be handled by fo. and\nMrs. Danny 4c\u00abay, Dr. Bill Murphy, Clare Blakeman, Bob Wassick,\nEdna Steed and Batty Foss of Nelson and Aft Anderson of Castlegar.\nfour or five pairs ara Expected\nto contest tha eanps-tlpplng event.\nInoludlno Bud Cooper and Ivan\nLau.hton, Jack Morlrs and Doug\nMorris, Clare Blakeman and Dr,\nMurphy and others to bo announced.\nContestants for tha log-rolling and\ngreasy pole walking competitions\nara still on the secret list but the\nskill required is likely to draw only\n\"professionals.\"\nDmitri Goloubef, together with\nChuck McKenzie and Larry Ford,\nwill add to the diversity with water\nclowning routines.\nKais Trounce\nWeil Trail Squad\nCASTLEGAR, - The CastleSar\nKats went one game up Tuesday in\nthen district league series with the\nWest Trail Girls as they pounded\nAnne Mattari for 17 hits to register\na 16-1 victory.\nThe best Trail could do was to\nget four hits off Anne Kastrukoff\nwho struck out eight and walked\ntwo. \/ '\nL. Serard was the* big gun for\nTrail getting three singles. Mary\nRandall led the Kats with four hits\nin five trips.- Anne Kastrukoff aided\nther own cause with two softies ln\nthree tries.\nHELP IN STRETCH\nMOtyre\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'6fiZ;'i\nMB\ns\n*   By Alan Mover\n0JT WW A fiMKCA,\n'MMzf- SAVCB\n*wmm mopes\nroBkuBitt to\ntew MORE\ntWAA'MORAL ;\u25a0'\nSUPPORT\nFOR THB\nNelson\nWater Show\nSUNDAY AUG. 24th\nLAKESIDE PARK\n1:00 p.m.\n\u2022 SPEEDBOAT RACING      \u2022 CANOE TIPPING\n\u2022 LOG ROLLING      \u2022 EXHIBITION DIVING\n\u2022 WATER SKIING      \u2022 SKI JUMPING   ,\nond other aquatic events\nSponsored by Nelson Power Boat Association\nBenefit of Local Canadian Arthritic Society\nwhs* rue\nB\/AA\/Tit erAprep\n79 cioee fW\nan BPoaHiy\/J\nfrom rm\n\/AlDPlg OF\n<\u25a0?\/\/, \/noire\nlArrep at a\nfAttppy.sgo\nce Mo PRovg\nM 38 fiC\/A\/B'\n\u25a0W **m*w -Wep^siil^ 0yHMM\"l\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUG* 21, 1952 \u2014\u00bb\nCanuck Golfers Keep Pace in OXOpeii\nAiling Mawhinney, Walt McElroy Score    i \u2014' -\u25a0 f-\nmm. fflfa ^ mM RouM \\Tgp Canadian Netsters\nFall to Foreign Stars -\nS_5ATTl,B, Aug. 20 (CP)****'], wo of Canada'a top golfers\nmade their way today into the fifth round of the U.S. amateur\ngolf championship a\u00bbd reached a point where each is a threat\ntocopthe tournament. .        .;.'._\u25a0 ...\nThe Vancouver men, Walt McElroy and Bill Mawhinney, played outstanding golf to gi^ by the fourth round which\nSaw several top American stars eMinated. McElroy holds\nthe Canadian amateur title \u2014*~\t\nthat belonged to Mawhinhey\nin 1950. j\nMcElroy conquered Dan Silvestri\nof San Francisco, i and 1, tills mor\nnlng and then nosed out Dale Mor.\n_y of Martinsville, Ind., two up, la\nUs second match of the day.\nMawhlnney defeated John W.\nWood of Seattle, \u00ab and 4. to take\nhis fourth round matoh. Earlier\nIn the day he downed Bruce MS'\nCormlck bf Hollywood, t and 2,\nThe strong showing by Mflwh|n\nney surprised those on tha sidelines as the Vancouver golfer\nwas forced out of the American\nCup play last week with a lame\nback. ';\u25a0,\u25a0';\nMcElroy had-his ups and downs\nagainst Morey. The American drove\nout of bounds and lost the first hole\nto McElroy but than played lt more\nsteadily so that at the halfway mark\nthe Canadian was only ona up.\nOn the second nine, McElroy\nthree-putted and lost the 10th to\nMorey's par four but he won the\nllth where Morey's iron landed beyond the 167-yard green and his recovery rolled off the othqr side.\nMorey wop the 12th and 13th as\nMcElroy ran into trouble getting off\nthe tees, putting Moray one up.\nDriver trouble forced Morey to con.\nJust Ono Game Back\nIndians Close In on Yanks\nQuick\nPRINTING\nService\nAlways\nOrder your\nLetterheads\nOffice Stationery\nEnvelopes\nAccount Forms\nin fact, any type of printing . . .\nYou cdn be assured of\nthe highest quality of work\nand good service.\nPHONE 144\nOur representative! will be pleased .-'di.cuss\nyour printing problems with you.\nNELSON\nDAILY\nNEWS\nBy The Associated Press\nCleveland Indians climbed to\nwithin one game of first place Wed\nnesday, walloping Boston Red Sox\n18-8 while Chicago White Sox were\nadministering a 12-3 drubbing to the\nAmerican League.. leading New\nYork Yankees.\nBrooklyn Dodgers Increased\ntheir Nationai League lead over\nthe Idle New York Giants. to\nseven full games with a 6*3 victory over Cincinnati Reds.\nIn   the   only   other,   daylight\naction,  Philadelphia.  Phlli made\nIt two straight over _ths> hapless\nPittsburgh    Pirates    as    pitcher\nRuss Meyer and second baseman\nConnie Ryan teamed up to pace\nthe Phils-to a 3*1 triumph.\nRain washed out the-game between   the   Giants   and   Cubs  In\nChicago and also a night'contest\nbetween   St.   Louis  Browns   and\nSenators in Washington.\nThe Indians erupted for a 10-run\nthird Inning to erase a 3-0 Boston\nlead and\" added four more In both\nthe- fifth and seventh .Innings as\nthey pounded five Red \"So*, hurlers\nfor 18 hits. '\nLuke Easter drove. In six runs\nfor the Tribe with.-a,.grand slam\nhomer and a single, Larry Doby\nand Ray Boone also homered -or\nthe winners.\nThe White Sox blasted five\nYankee hurlers for .14 hits and\nkayoed starter Johnny Sain with a\nsix-run Third inning. All Chicago's\nhits-were singles .except for Sam\nMele's 12th homer with a mate\naboard in the eighth.\nSaul Rogovln yielded Only live\nhits for his llth victory;\nThe Dodgers teed off on starter\nKen Raffensberger early and often,\ndriving the veteran lefthander to\nthe  showers ln  the  fourth  after\nthey had shelled him for 11 hits\nand all their runs.\n27TH FOR HODGE8\nRoy Campanella and Oil Hodges\nhomered for the Brooks. Hodges'\nhit, coming with two mates aboard,\nwas his 27th.\nRyan was the whole offensive\nshow for the Phils, He smashed his\n12th homer, walked three times,\nstole two bases and scored all three\nPhiladelphia runs off rookie Cal\nHogue of Pittsburgh.\nLefty Harvey Haddlx pitched a\nflvo-hltter In his major league\nd.but as the fast-travelling St.\nLouis Cardinals defeated Boston\nBraves 9-2 for their fifth straight\nNationai League victory. The\nga,mc, played under the lights,\n. was called because of rain after\n7!\/_ Innings,\nHaddlx, an 18-J pitcher with Columbus of the 'American Association\nbefore he went Into the army two\nyears ago, was backed with a 10-hlt\nattack. The wildness of Lew Burdette, Boston starter, enabled St.\nLouis to wrap up the game with\nsix runs in the second inning,\nRighthander Carl Schelb batted\nin two runs and scored another on\nFerris Fain'a fourth hit of the game\nas Philadelphia Athletics rallied for\nthree runs in the eighth inning to\nnose out Detroit Tigers 4-3 ln an\nAmerican League night game. Two\nof the Detroit tallies came in the\nsame inning on big Walt Dropo's\n20th homer of the season with one\nman on base.\nAmerican league\nCleveland     00(10) 040 400\u201418 18 4\nBoston   ...    210      040 001\u2014 8 16 0\nLemon   and Tipton; McDermott,\nJiaJwlZ}coul\nWe're just naturally prejudiced, of course, and any\ntime an angler from distant parts starts touting his own home\nwaters we always'have a Kootenay fishing spot to name\nwhich we assure him is so much better. But the best part of a\nweek spent at Beaver Like, has convinced us that the Okanagan has  something \u2022 special\nin the way of fishing haunts,\nSet like a 2-mile-long, 75-foot\ndeep saucer, In the mountain heights\n10 miles from the main Okanagan\nhighway, Beaver Lake yields noting but Rainbow trout \u2014 king of\nthem al| to our taste \u2014 to fly and\nlure. Like all mountain lakes it\noffers a test to the rod-wielder's\nskill. Sometimes it's a fly left resting on the water, another time it's\nan active retrieve after,a cast that\ngets the scrappy ones. Evening\nfishing seems best\/ and some catches came in last week far after dark\nto the persistant ones with the patience to fish up to 10 p.m., or thereabouts. However, trout answej_ed\nthe fly and spoon practically all\nthrough the day but, as we said,\nthe evening fishing was by far the\nbest. Black gnat, Grizzily Kiag\nand any flies showing green or\nheavy brown were taking fish last\nweek.\n20,000 CATCHES\nEACH SEASON\nBeaver Lake is so rich in food\nand so completely free of. coarse\nfish that annually it gives up between 20,000 and 30,000 Rainbow\nwithout the need.of planting a single fish. Moreover, so they tell us,\nseveral million eggs yearly are taken at the neat little hatchery, tended by Fisheries Officer Frank Lucas to be planted in other lakes of\nthe district, and even In the Kootenay. So rich is the witer in shrinVp,\nplant and animal life that, churned\nup by an outboard prop, it is practically iodine colored.\nGood-sized highway signs\u2014something we lack in the Kootenay \u2014\npoint the vvay to the Okanagan fishing spots. Other signs and banners,\nposted by Rod and Gun Clubs, ask\nmotorists to be careful in the blue\ngrouse and deer areas. The big Sign\npointing the way to BeSver\"Lake\nis   at   Winfield   between   Kelowna\nand Vernon on the main highway\nA good mountain road, but with a\nfair share of gear-grunting grades,\ntakes you straight up to the mountain tops to Beaver Lake where cabin keeper and resort man Bill\nThompson holds forth. In the same\nvicinity is the Dee Lake chain and\nOyama that has Rainbow up to six\npounds lurking in its waters.\nOkanagan conservationists are\nhoping to duplicate the suceess ef\nKootenay colleagues In having\ngang trolls banned In thalr district waters. They hava the same\nproblems that brought about the\nban here\u2014too many- fishermen\ntaking too many immature fish\nwith the giant flashers,\nAmong those fortunates who spent\nUib better Jiart of the Summer at\nBeaver Lake were Nelsonites Mr.\nand Mrs. Gordon Pickering, now\nreturned here. Gordon assisted at\nthe hatchery during the egg taking\noperations, but got in more than\nthe odd evening's fishing there and\non the Dee and Oyama Lakes, .\nIncidentally, former Nelsonlte Alan Frisby, who transferred from\nthe Nelson hatchery to the. Qkaha-\n$an ln 1951, has just now taken\nover game warden chores at Vernon after a year as fisheries officer at th\u00bb fine Summerland hatchery and Beaver Lake operations.\nThe appointment is a natural. The\nformer Netyonite, who casts the\nneatest fly of any man we've yet to\nsee and is a wing shot Of some accomplishment, ls an outdoorsman\nof the first order. Moreover, he's\na traveller unlikely to leave any\npart of his detachment unexplored\nfor long . . . Wife ' 'inona and\nchildren, who also spent the Summer at Beaver Lake, have now moved to Vernjjn in tjme for the opening of tha school term.\nScarborough (3), Nixon (3), Benton\n(5), Brodowskl (6) and White,\nNiarhos (7).\nChicago ....   108 201 020\u201412 14 0\nNew York  110 000 001\u2014 3   8 1\nRogovln and Lollar; Sain, Schaeffer (3), McDonald (3), Ostrowskl\n(4), Mll|er (9) and Berra, Houk (7)\nSt. Louis at Washington postponed, wet grounds.\nDetroit         001 000 020\u20143 10   1\nPhiladelphia     100 000 03x\u20144 15   .\nWight, Madison <_) and Ginsberg;\nSchelb, Hooper (9) and Astroth.\nMurray (9).\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn     012 300 000\u20140 15   0\nCincinnati    ...   101 Q00 001\u20143   8   1\nLoes and Campanella; Raffensberger, Podbielan (4), Smith (8)\nand Seminick.\nPhiladelphia . 100 000 011\u20143 8 2\nPittsburgh 000 000 100\u20141   9   1\nMeyer and Lopata; Hogue and\nGaraglola.\nNew York at Chicago postponed,\nrain.\nBoston  .101000 00\u20142   5   0\nSt. Louis ...'..  160 020 Ox\u20149 10   0\nBurdette, Jones (2), Johnson (5)\nand Burris; Haddlx and D. Rice.\nSmokie Ace After\nSpolWHh\nAmerican Clubs\nTRAIL, B.C. \u2014 Defence star of\nlast esason's B.C. champion Smoke\nEaters Dick Kotanen has been shopping around Washington centres\nseeking a new berth for the next\nhockey season. ,\nKotanen checked out of Trail two\nweeks back, and'sihee has had conversations with Manager Roy Mc\nBride of Spokane Flyers and with\nofficials of Frank DOtten's Seattle\nIronmen. He ls at present In Seattle.\nKamloops, 'twas rumored*, was\nalso interested in luring the rearguard husky to the Okanagan\nLeague. At one time it was said\nthey were even willln\" to offer\nplayers in trade for his services.\nLATREMOUILLE,\nSILVERWOOD WIN\nHORTON TROPHY\nBruce Latremouille and Al Silver-\nwood copped the Elmer Horton\ntrophy for the 1932 season ,at the\nNelson Golf Club Wednesday, down\ning Fred Thompson and JOhnny\nFargher two and one ln the 18*ole\nfinal.\nJohnny Leschuk teamed with\nVern Miller to win the consolation\nevent with a three and two victory\nover Lou Bradley and Herb Pea'-\ncock.\n,oadp the 14th and the match was\n\u25a0ven. ,.\"!-\"'.-'\u2022. , \u25a0\nTha American took the 15th with\na batter display of putting 'but Me*\nElroy.sqtiared lt on the 16th with a\none-bver-p-f five. Moray three-put*\nted to lose th0'47th and then lost\nthe 18th to give the match td McElroy, two up.\nFAVORITE? UPSET\nMetuwftlle a navy -seaman, a\noroener and a college boy knocked\nthree Of the biggest names in American golf out of the championship\nin the fourth round.\nGene Littler ef La Jollo, Calif.,\nwho Is about halfway through a\nfour\/year hitch In the navy, handed the British amateur champion\nHarvle Ward of Tarboro, N.C., a\n4 and 2 beating.\nDon  Cherry of Garden   City,\nN. Y\u201e a singer with a sultry voice\nand a red hot putter, whipped\nPrank  Stranahan, twice  British\nchampion 3 and 1.\nAnd Paul Johanson, who played\nfor the University of Washington\nthis  Spring,  eliminated  Ray Billows of poughkeepsie, W. Y\u201e three-\ntime runner-up for the Amateur\ntitle, 5 and 3. '\nThese three major upsets in the\nafternoon round today followed a\nmorning third round which say defeats of Johnny. Dawson, 1947 runner-up; Billy Joe Patton, the Carolines champion, Arnold Blum of\nMacon, Ga., and Frank Strafaei of\nGarden City, N. -Y.\n82 Yanks Enter\nCanuck Amateur\nFIRST win\nCHICAGO, Aug. 20 (AP) -\nLouis B. Mayer's Princess Lygla\ntoday won her first stake of the\nyear, galloping to a four-length\nvictory In the $22,200 Misty Isle\nStake for three-year old fillies at I day camp\" opened.\nWashington Park. , '    All 10 were found In good shape.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014\nFrank   Strartahan,   the   Toledo,\nOhio, strong boy, today cast his entry in the Canadian Amateur Golf,\ncham pionship,  opening  Monday\nday over the 8804-yard, par-72 Capilano Course in West Vancouver.\nOf    the    195 entries for tha\nweek-long   tournament,   82   are\nAmericans.    Besides   Stranahan,\nthey Include oroener Bing Crosby, ,8am ..Ursetta of RoOhester,\nN.Y.,   1950   U.S.  amateur  champion, and.Joe Gagllardi of Ma-\nmaroneck, N.Y,, last year's U.S.\nfinalist.\nMatch play for. the .amateur will\nstart at 7.30 a.m- Monday. There\nis no qualifying round. There will\nbe 88 matches the. first day, the\nfinal pair teeing off at 3.13 p.m.\nThe 18-hole second-round will\nbe played Tuesday, the third and\nfourth rounds Wednesday, the fifth\nand sixth rounds Thursday, The\n36-hole semi-final will be played\nFriday and the 36-hole final Saturday.\nThe Capilano course has been\ncarefully groomed and players pronounced greens and fairways in\n\"beautiful shape.\"\nCLEM CROWE FINDS\nCANADIAN GAME \u00bb\nMORE EXCITING\nBROCKVILLE, Ont, Aug. 19 (CP)\n\u2014Clem Crowe, coach ...of the 1951\nDominion champion Ottawa Hough\nRiders, told a service club luncheon\nhere today the Canadian game of\nfootball is more spectacular and\ninteresting from the spectators'\npoint of view, than its United States\ncounterpart\nHe said the lack of downfield\nblocking and three downs rule produces more kicking with the ball\nkept in motion much more than in\nthe American game.\nCrowe, a graduate of Notre Dame\nand One of the famous \"seven miles\"\nlinesmen under the late coach\nKnute Rockne, attributed his team\nrecent defeat at the hands of the\nWinnipeg Blue Bombers to conditioning. He said the Western club\nhad been practicing three weeks\nlonger than the pttawa team.\nAT LEAST 10\nHABS IN SHAPE\nMONTREAL, Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014\nEarliest pre-season official gathering of Montreal Canadiens' hockey players came about today\nwhen 10 showed up at the Forum\nfor medical examination,'\nThe 10 are regulars who live in\nMontreal. They were summoned\nearly so there will be a less strenuous job for the examiners when\nthe full squad, including tryout\nhopefuls, gathers for the training\nseason in mid-September. Heretofore everyone was examined on the\nTORONTO, Aug. 20 (CP) - Four\ntop-seeded Canadians were bounced\nout of play today at the Canadian\nlawn tennis championships.\nBrendan    M-eken,   29-year-old\nsix-year Davis Cupper from Montreal, wept down In the fourth\nround  before  Tony  Vincent  of\nMiami, Fla., and New York City,\n6*2, 6*3. Vincent Is defending Canadian open singles champion.\nLawrence, Barclay, 22, of Vancouver bowed tp Mexico's No. 1 player,\nGustavo Pajafox, 8-1, 7-1, in the\nsame round, while Lome Main of\nVancouver anil Montreal was stroked aside by Hal Burrows of Vlr.\nginia-town, Va., 6-4, 6-3.\n, One of Canada's last hopes, Henri\nRochon of Montreal was speedily\neliminated by Fellclssimo Ampon,\nPhilippine champion since 1939, 6-2,\n6-1. Most observers expected the\ntiny 98-pound Ampon, one of the\nworld's best clay court players to\ndispatch Rochon handily.\nAnn Freedhoff ot Toronto, ranked\nsixth ln Canada, was trounced 6-1,\n6-0, by Melita Ramirez of Mexico,\nseeded first In women's singles.\nBeau Summers 44-year-old Toronto veteran, carried first-seeded Art\nLarsen of San Leandro, Calif., to\nthree\" sets before going down 8-6,\n6-1, 6-4.\n18-MINUTI RALLY\nMacken said after his defeat \"ay\nVincent, \"I played him the only way\nI think he can be beat.\" He referred\nto Vlncent's*long and tiresome rallies. Tuesday the defending champion rallied 18-. minutes on one\npo'nt in his match with lanky Dick\nGaines of Edgartown, Mass. The\nball cleared the net 668 times .before\nthe point was decided. Macken was\nchopped down by the apparently\ntireless Vincent in the same manner.\nTop-seeded Diok Savitt of Orange,\nN.J., in today's fourth round was\npushed to three sets by Anselmo\nPuente of Mexico. He finally won\n8, 4-6, 6-0.\nIn the women's singles today, Patj\nMillion Dollar\nGate Forecast\nPHILADELPHIA, Aug. 20 (API-\nWorld heavyweight champion Jersey Joe Walcott and challenger\nRocky' Marciano formally signed\ncontracts today for their 15-r0und\ntitle bout at Municipal Stadium\nSept. 23.\nWalcott, who will be making his\nsecond defence of the title he won\nfrom Ezzard Charles in July, 1951,\nis guaranteed 40 per cent of the\ngate. Marciano will get 20 per\ncent\nPromoter Herman Taylor, who\nis staging the bout in collaboration\nwith the International Boxing Club\nof New York, said he expects a\nmillion-dollar gate Including television and other rights.\nThe agreement also calls for a\nreturn match within 90 days should\nthe undefeated Brockton, Mass.,\nbattler beat Walcott. Both fighters deposited $5000 cheques with\nthe Commission as guarantees for\ntheir appearance and performance.\nNational Junior\nNet Meet Hos\nForeign Flavor\nOTTAWA, Aug. 20 (CP) - Hi-\ndeau Lawn Tennis Club assumed\nan international air today as ras-\nquet swingers from the United\nStates; Trinidad, Cuba and Switzerland joined their Canadian\ncounterparts for the Canadian junior tennis championships.   .\nThe pick of the junior tennis\nworld \u2014 200 strong \u2014 will start\ntheir week-long tournament tomorrow on the courts of the club\nnestled on the shore of the Rideau River.\nMacken of Montreal eliminated last\nyear's Canadian singles champlbn,\nLU'cllle Davidson of Lees Summit\nMo., 6-2, 7-8. \u00ab\nMiss Macken ls expected to meet\nHenna Sladek, the former Czecho-\nslovakian champion in the semi-finals later this week. Hanna eliminated Doris Popple of Des Moines, la.,\nlate today 4-8, 6-1, 6-?, '  Sj\nNow Offer\n24HOUR\nSERVICE\nANY WHERI\nANY TIME\n(n 0\nComfortable\nRadio-Equipped Cab\n7 TAXI\n(BUS DEPOT)\nm=m\nWhen in Spokaqt.^\nMOTOROLA\nCar Radios\n$39.9*4 to $79.95\nWe pay HALC of tho Installation,\n\\ *' ', ;\nRecapping   i\n600 x .*\u2014$*30\nSeat Covers\nPlastic $19.95' I\nFibre    $11.95\nJOHNSON\nTIRE \u00bb^3iM>\u00bbANY\n716 W. 2nd\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nAll-Nelson Dislricf Playoff as Queens\nFrounce Kinnaird IH lo Reach Semis\nQueen's Hotel advanced into the\nNelson District Fastball Uajrue\nsemi-finals against Nelson Kings\nby walloping Kinnaird Firemen\n16-2 behind the two-hit pitching of\nKeith Loewen.\nThe w|n gave Queen's the best-\nof-three quarter-final series two\ngames to one and assured an all-\nNelson final for the championship.\nKings, who ousted South Slo-\noan Playmors In two straloht\ngames, ire host to Queen's In ths\nfirst gama of their best*of*three\neeml-finel    here   this   evening.\nWinner earns the right: to ploy\nNelson Transfer In the final.\nQuepn's were dOwta 1-0 until the\nfifth inning before exploding for\nseveral big frames against Kinnaird. Grand'Slam homers by Jimmy Ball and Norm Hyssop made lt\n0-1 by the seventh to allow Loewen to coast In for the win. Lee Hyssop added a third Nelson homer\nwith the sacks empty.\n. Loewen got fine fielding suppbrt\nfrom his mates ln addition tt, their\nheavy hitting.\nFOR THF WORLD'S EASIEST SHAVES\nUSE THE WORLD'S SHARPEST BLADES\n= Gillette\nBlue Blades\n. So Easy-Shaving That Tough\nBeard Is No Problem At All\n. \u2022 Year after year Gillette Blue\nBledes are first choice of shaving\nmen', everywhere. That's because\nno other kind Is at Sharp, as easy. .\nshaving, as long-lasting.\nFor eists-a convenience buy them\nIn* the Gillette dispenser that itpi'\n'em out unwrapped ready for use,\nand has a built-in'compartment\nfor safe disposal of used blades.  <\n20Mo.es$1.00 \u2022 10 blades 50c\nIN IMPROVED GIU.TTE DISPENSERS\nRegular package 5 blades Ut\nJooks\",,\"'feels),^'],o,|l\u00bb,\"\"useGil!et.eB!u.Biadc';\n\" with tht tHAfiPfsr edges e\u00abei honed-.\n,. VV__ ..      \u25a0     .\n '.TH'MDUHTieAtUST\nfiOPsflTDREM'T IVOULDflT cms MUE..\nCAREFUL THEREI,.. The Commons and Senate have separate\nstaffs, Including cleaners called ''whltewlngs,\" to do various jobs\naround the Parliament Buildings; The whltewlngs clean only their\nown section of the Buildings by agreement Mere Commons white-\nwing William Henbrey, left, warns Senate whltewlng Thomas Brule\nnot to flick Senate'ashes on the Commons side of the building.\u2014(CP\nPhoto). \u25a0\u25a0-.;      \u2022*    >   .\nHere Is a view of the Impressive scene In Buenos Aires as the\nbody of Eya Peron was drawn through the streets high atop a gun\ncarriage. The body was taken to the General Labor Confederation\nbuilding, where It will remain for a year. It will be permanently\npreserved and ultimately transferred to a monumental tomb in tho\nheart of the Argentine capitals\u2014Central Press Canadian. \u2022\u2022'\u2022'\u2022\u25a0'\n        r .-,-..-vW\".^.,.:S-^S^*F**r-as^S^-^^f\nHeat waves, droughts' rain or balmy breezes may be the lot of\nmost of the inhabitants'of North America, but'In Alaska soldiers in\ntraining are experiencing snow and cold.-At Fairbanks, U.S. soldiers,\nholding mock attack use regulation white camouflage coveralls as\nthey advance through the crisp, new snow,\u2014Central Press Canadian.\n'\u25a0. M'\nMr. Stevenson doesn't do things\nby halves \u2014 even when It comes\nto winking, Induced by the huge\nbutton placed on hia lapel. The\nDemocratic presidential candidate, at a disadvantage photogen-\nIcally with the colorful Elsenhower, may have practised thlt\nexpression before letting loose\nwith It for the benefit of cameramen.\u2014Central Press' Canadian.\nTHIS IS THE LATEST PHOTO\nof Marshal Josef Stalin; Premier\nof the Soviet Union. The photo*'\ngraph was made en May Day, .196%\nbut has been released only recently.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nJapan became a member of the. International Monetary Fund\nand the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development\nwhen the articles of agreement of these Institutions were signed in\nWashington. Signing on behalf of the Japanese government Is the\nJapanese ambassador to the United States, Elklohl Arakl, right.\nSeated at left and pointing to the document Is David K. Es Bruee, acting secretary of state.\u2014Central Press Canadian.        .   .        \u00ab,\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n-.Pillow\ncovers\n6. Pauses\nM-Uititot\nweight\n.stones*\n12. Oust\n13. Maxim\n14. Pillar of\nstone\n15. Pen point\n16. Sun god\nIS. A chest\nsound\n(med.)\n19. Basement\ntAmagpie\n-.Cubic\nmeter\n\u00ab. Property\nth.)\niDeBwer\ntsptoa\nforeign\n\"\"\"\"*. PeesoiT\u2014\u2014\npronoun\n?-.Sh_t_t_\naS-Coia\nfSwetfj\n\u2022WLBKsgh,\n_\u00absa_KyM_l\nSet 1st note\ngauiaa -j___3a_\n\u25a0asna ___-B.ir_\nagaai_i n__a_i_-\n_,    aaaaii\n'^IS-.ai,HBa_;\nHgna shhhe\ni-raaar-ffl [.i..._i=\naanaa\nhhish as am\nagHUB aamm\naaa**... ____ao__3\nFormer Husband\n' SEA-TLB,. Aug. JO (AP) - A\nVest Virginia divorcee was shot to\ndeath in a wild chase through a\nSeattle rooming nouse early today, I\nand police said her former husband |\nthen turned the pistol on himself.\nThe slain women was identified\nas Mrs. Olga Gravis, 26, who came\nfrom MoMechen, W. Va. Sam Gravis\n32, was in critical condition with a\nhead wound.\nj Police patrolman C. 0. Vinup said\nwitnesses told of Mrs. Gravis, already wounded, running through a\ncorridor pcreaming \"don't let him\nshoot me.\" '\nByron Lefler\nFound tn Book\nCOLOMBO, Ceylon, Aug. 20 (Bed.\nters)\u2014A well preserved latter ._$\u00bb\nparenHy written by Poet Lord Byron more than a century ago waa\nfound today ln a book of Byron's\nworks bought 28 years ago.    ,\nThe letter, dated April 27, .1811.\nprobably at Venice, objects to a\nFrench . publisher's attributing\" a\nbook named \"Vampire\" to the poet\n\"X the book is clever,\" it says,\n\"it. would be base to deprive ..the\nreal writer,'whoever he may be, Of\nhis honors. And if stupid, I desire\nthe responsibility of nobody's dullness bat my own.\"\nThe letter was found folded in\nHie back of a book of Byron's poems\npublished by Callignanl of Paris. It\nwas bought second-hand for about\n15 cents by Dr. G. Mahabodhi, Sinhalese lecturer on medicine at Ayurveda College.\nAn official of the British high\ncommission said the letter seemed\ngenuine. It will be sent to the British museum for examination.    ,\nPHONE   144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nBuy, Sell. Trade tha Classified'Waf\nI\n48. Employ _\u00bb__\u2022\nwages\ntt. European\nrtver       \u25a0\n44. Ever\n(poet.)\n46. Likely\n8- Missile 33. Spteot\nweapoo ggzlMot\n9. Narrate hntath\nM-Sry^SootJ \u00bb.\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3\u201e.\nS'Aw*_>- peafamK*\nM. An office \u00bb.Moc-B8i_*.\nseeker              _fkA*sh-_-_\n      20. Falsehood K ItZt*\nasa?- *-S^ !&\u2022\n29. Kind of \u25a0__\nduck F    W   P\nSI. At home\n32. Speck\n34. Large\nvolume\n35. Optical\nillusion\n3*7. Jumbled,\nas type\n39, Italian river\n40. Exclamation\n43. Pilasters\n45. Quick\n47. Island in\nthe Mediterranean\n48. Extra\n49. More painful\n60. An anesthetic\nDOWW\n1. Scrutinize\n2. Angle of a\nfault vein\nS. Native of\nArabia ___________________\n_. A\u00ab\u00bb?**-BAAX*\nft-.,....     __    '\"\u2022\"'\u25a0\u2022\"HOf\n'o^ltee^xTtgX* \"i**** A * \u2014\ntrophies, the lengufw. ta_5ta? or It Si_-.le Ietters' aP\u00b0<-\nEach day the cod. lettels a\u00ab\u2122w^f ** \u2022*yords \u00ab\u2022 <-\u00ab *\u00a3-*.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\n.\"\u2022\u2022*\u2022\u25a0**\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb   \"*   r,PRZTVJ   SLp-\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT\t\nTHURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 19M\n3:00\u2014Musical    11\n3:15\u2014Wait. Time\nM*0 OW _HC MM.\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Morning Bevue\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Morning Revue\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n8:55\u2014Consumer's Corner\n9.-00\u2014Western Tune Show\n9:30\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:45\u2014Musical Varieties\n10:00\u2014Riders of the Purple Sage\n10:15\u2014Picnic With Pat.\n10:45\u2014Guestin' With Kesten\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Music   ,\n11:15\u2014Money by the Minute\n11:20\u2014Date With D'Arcy\n12:00\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Behind the Vews\n1:00\u2014The Concert Hour\n2:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n2:45\u2014Women's Program\n_ :30\u2014Surprise Package\n3:45\u2014Novel Time\n4:00\u2014The Maxine Ware Mew\n4:30\u2014The Jack Stories\n4:45\u2014Pacific News\n4:55\u2014Report from Parliament -*\"\"\u25a0\n5:00\u2014Jean Cavell Calling\n5:15\u2014John Fisher\n5:20\u2014Int Commentary\n5:30---The Music Boss\n5:45^-Sports News\n8:00\u2014Hit Parade\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade et Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7'30-rEventlde\n8:00\u2014A Man and a Maid\n8:15\u2014Points of Vie*-\",\n8:30\u2014Family Theatre\n9:00\u2014Vancouver Concert OrohestM\n9:30\u2014The People Act\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Music Profiles\n110:30\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n11:00\u2014NEWS Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1952\n1:00\u2014News\n:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014BBC News\nftlS-TAunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Musical Varieties\n0:00\u2014Morning Vi-it\n0:15\u2014At Mome With the Lennicks\n0:45\u2014Invitation to the Waite\n1:00\u2014A Man and His Music\n2:15\u2014News\n-:25\u2014Showcase\n!:3fl\u2014Farm Broadcast\n!:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014AfternOon. Concert\n!:30\u2014Program Resume\n1:45\u2014Why Dcn't You?\n:56\u2014Women's News Commentary\n\u25a000\u2014Brave Voyage\n:15\u2014Waltz Time\n:30\u2014Today's Guest\n_:45\u2014Novel Time\n4-)0\u2014Summer Spotlight\n4:30\u2014Sleepytime Storyteller\n4:45\u2014Don Messer \u25a0 \u25a0\n5:00\u2014Music Wont Hurt. You \u2022\n5:20\u2014International Commentasf\n5:30\u2014Bill Good Sports \u25a0\n5:45\u2014News.- Weather   \u25a0 -.\n6:00\u2014Whispering Strings'\n6:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Haydn Symphonies\n8:00\u2014Music From Manitoba\ni 8:30\u2014Song Time\n! 9.00\u2014Piano Playhouse\n| 9:30\u2014J. B. PriesUey\n' 9:45\u2014Three Cities of Babylon\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Sea Lanes\nlr \u2022 ,'.\u25a0'-   Be Announce*\n11:00\u2014U.N. Today\n11:15\u2014Hot Air\nUaW-Newa\n PmoWQ-PfRSONMNrAD?-'\nFOR QMK MSMS\/   -\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\n'hone 144\nBIRTHS\nljj_\u00abTIN>i-to:Mlf. and Mrs. Don-\n\u2022_*.' JjirtlB ,'0. Kimberley at Ma-\nDougal) P*)l.pit''l. .Aug- Jo, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nEXPERIENplD INVESTIGATORS\nare urgently needed for government' Work. Previous police ex-\njierience Is .essential Applicants\nmtist not have attained their 47th\nblrthc|ay; Engulf* at the R.C.A.F,\nMobile Unit or write* Commanding Officer, R.C.A.F. Recruiting\nUnit, Lethbridge, Alberta for details, stating age and experience.\nWANTED-M.LLW_tlk._T, FULL.*\nexperienced,''able to hammer and\nlook after saws as well Top Wages.\nApply Halston Planing Mills Ltd.,\nKamloops, B.C.\ntyANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED BUS\nj driver. Holder of Class A license.\n- Furnish   references   to   Interior\nj Stages Ltd., Trail, B.C.\t\nI  STINOGRAPiffl-lS - 1   Wlfrf\nbookkeeping  experience.   Salary\ncommensurate with ability. Wood\nVallance Hardware Co. Ltd,\nWANTiV   -7 POST MAKERS.\nWrite\nNews.\nBox   4088   ty-lson   Daily\nWANTED - WAITRESS, ALSO\nyoung boy for* general work. Apply Bowladrpme.\nWAffflai-''waitresses  AN*\n' kitchen   help.   Apply   Armson's\nCafe.      \t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWILL CARE FOR CHILDREN BY\nhour or day in my home in Fair-\nview. Reasonable rate. Phone\n1645-R.\nmSXSOb bABV-sfTTElt AVAIi:\n _ ER ._.\nable- evenings,  exc, Thurs.\nSat, age 18. Phone 443-L.\nand\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nimmm pow, saw sceks\nwork cutting wood, etc. Box 2658.\nDaily News. Nelson.\nWANTED-HOUSEWORK BY THE\nhnur. Apply Box 4404, Dally News.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nP.O. BOX 388. NELSON, B.C.\nftAWLi-'a.. _-_-.6i-Us_.T_.:\n . .. -NICK N\nKa-akoff Gen'l Delivery. Nelson\nHor s-XPER-r i'kir.'tii.t. ANd\npaperhanging ph A Cook. 591-X\nwawaot-U'miwal hRE nr\nsurance Co., D L Kerr. Agent\nALkEk HOflSL, 6W6gl_,_; (..pK\nDepot, Clean.rooms and reasonable-rates  Vancouver. B.C.\nWOUlJb Cl.IFFOftJi'.v.ftfeWSt-N\nor. anyone knowing his where-\n, abouta, please contact Marj> at\n2631 Prince Albert St., Van. 10,\nB.C.; Re: unfinished affair in 1945.\nATtSNTlON SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mlmeo and bond\npaper end can fill any order 1m-\nmediately.  Daily  News  Printing\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nAUCTIONEER\n--- -     REEVE PAJs-SOil\nBox 497, Fernie Anywhere in B.C.\nASSAYERS  AND   IU.NE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nW   WtbDOWfiON  _. CO, AS-\nsayers 301 JoseDhine St., Nelson\n1-5\nH   S   ELMES,   ROSSLAND.\nAssayer  Chemist. Mine Rep\nAUTO WRECKER8\nI-AVIES TRANSFER Atto AUT(5\nWrecking   Phone Rossland. 171\nCARPENTER'S\nbOUG GALLAHER, G E t, E R A L\nCarpentry Phone 873-L evenings.\n^NQlN-ERS  AND'SURVEYORS\nSealed Tenders for the General\nContract, including all (fades, are\nhereby Invited for the erection and\ncompletion of one, class \u2022room\nschools at Ainsworth and Retallack,\nB.C., and of a two class-room extension to the school at Riondel,\nB.C. These tenders, endorsed. \"Tender for Ainsworth Elementary\nSchool,\" \"Tender for Retallack\nElernentary School\" or \"Tender for\nRiondel School Extension,'; es the\ncase may be ,will be received by\nthe Secretary-Treasurer, School District No. 6 (Kootenay Lake), on or\nbefore Saturday, August 30, 1952, at\n5:00 p.m, at his office in Kaslo,\nB.C.\nWorking drawings and specifications, for the erection of Ainsworth\nand Retallack Schools will be available at the office of the Secretary,\nKaslo. These are identical. Those\nfor the building of the Extension to\nRiondel Sehool will be available at\nthe office of Mrs. I. J. C. Williams,\nArchitect, 373 Baker Street, Nelson.\nA certified cheque for five per cent\n(5%) of the tender must accompany\neach and every tender and shall be\nforfeited If the party tendering de-\nclines to enter Into Contract when\ncalled upon to do so. On award and\nsigning of the Contract, the successful tenderer shall furnish to the\nBoard of School Trustees a surety\nbond equal to fifty per cent (50.%)\nof the.Contract price. On receipt of\nthis bond, the certified cheque submitted with the tender will be returned.\nThe Board of School Trustees and\nthe Department of Education reserve ithe right to reject any or all\ntenders without explanation. No\ntenders having qualifying clauses\nwill be considered. A deposit of ten\ndollars ($10.00) is required for each\nset of plans and specifications'and\nwill be returned upon receipt of\nsame in good condition.\nJ. J. CLARK,\nSec.-Treas,\nSchool District No. 6,\n(Kootenay Lake).\nDated at Kaslo, B.C.\nthis sixteenth day\nof_ August, 1952.\n\" LAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 161)\nMACHINERY\nNATIONALLY KNOWN\nNATIONALLY USED\nPIPE \"AND FITTINOS, V UP;\nS.S. pulleys, belting, small electric\nmotor's and gas engines; 5-ton B.B.\nwinch, used sinks and'wash basins,\n78 mill chain. COLUMBIA TRAD.\nING CO. 902 Fr6nt Street.\n. 3 in\nIN THE MATTER OF Lot . ,\u201e\nBlock 25 of Lot 1242. Kootenay District, Plan 640.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 27357-1 to the above\nmentioned lands ln the name of\nMargaret Peters and bearing date\nthe 17th January, 1929; I HEREBY\nGIVE NOTICE of my Intention at\nthe-*xpi\u00abUon- of-ono calendar\nmonth from the first publication\nhereof to issue Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu of such lost\nCertificate. Any person having any\ninformation with reference to such\nlost Certificate of Title is requested\nto communicate with the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C., this\n22nd day of July, 1952.\nL. A. McPHAlL,\nDeputy Registrar.\nDate of first publication July 24\n1952, .\nTractors, PoWer Units,\nElectric Sets, Graders,\nDozers, Loaders.\nJOHNDEERE\nQuality farm equipment.\nSee the Model MC Crawler'\nTractor with angle dozer,\nwinch, plow, disc, loader,\nall  hydrqullcally operated.-\nSKAGIT\nOne, two, . or three drum\nhoists, for the logger, miner,\ncontractor.\nJOY\nCompressors, Crolg rock bits\nand 4ri\\\\ steel, Tungsten\ncarbide bits.- blocks.'\nHOLCOMB\nMine Scrapers The oldest\nscraper manufactured in\nAmerica\nPIONEER\nCrushers, rock feeders, conveyors\nKOHLER\nLight plants of every\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n.    v   (Ootitinuetll\nFOR SALE -TREE RIPENED\npeaches ready Sept, 1 to 21st.\nPickling cukes ready now, 100 a\nlb, Apply W. H. Balnbridge, R.R.\nNo. 1, Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 A MASON AND\nRisch piano. Reasonable. Phone\nor call at Playmor, South Slocan,\nB.C.\nsize.\nYOUNG\nQuality logging equipment.\n& Equipment Co., Ltd\nPhone 930      P.O. Box 119\nNelson, B.C.\n8 PIECE'DINING ROOM SUITE,\nlarge Coleman oil heater, nearly\nnew, 3 burner Coleman stove. V.\nCraig, Port Crawford, B.C.\nFOR SALE - MOFFATT SUPER\nDeluxe\" propane gas range. Fully\nautomatic. Like new, T. Holmes,\nRiondel. B.C. \t\nCK-ISS WART RMdVER -\nLeaves no scars. Your Druggist\nsells CRESS\t\nFOR SALE - SUNSHINE BABY\nhuggy, $10. Apply Mr. Bill Wood,\nUnited Trucking. ,\n-W'SA-i - iSTtfl-K. (.OUCH,\nbaby stroller, playpen.and bas-\nslnett. Phone 1325-X.\nV6r !sa_-_ - larGh! 6r_b Wi *..\nspring   filled   mattress,\ncondition. Phone 426-Y.\nPerfect\nFQR SALE - 5-YD. DUMP BOX\nwith heavy duty hoist Box 15,\nSalmo, B.C. \u25a0\nFOR Sale-heUsttzj-An KSM\nPhone\" 515-X' or call at 607 Car-\nbonate St.\t\nfor SAt_!-'fcAV_;k6 ANtt\nmatching chair. Must sill; leaving\ntown. Phone 564-Y after 12 noon.\nFC.R SALE - RE(-6Wbl_.61>J__l!)\nBendlx washer. K. Munro, Ymlr,\nB.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nDROP IN AND HAVE'A\n.   LOOK AROUND!\nExceptional\n\u2022NeW add Used\n'CARS\nNew 1952 Austin\n, Somerset*\nSeal Grey\u2014$1895\n1952'Austin Devon\nSeal Grey\u2014$1550\n(Low mileage)\n1951 'Austin Devon\n1950 Austin Devon\n1949 Austin Devon\n1952 Hillman Minx\n1951 Hillman Minx\n1949 Prefect Sedan\n195 h Chevrolet Sedan\n1?47 Dodge Sedan\n1940 Plymouth Sedan\n1939 Ford Coupe\n1937 Ford Coach\n1951 Austin Countryman\n1950 Austin Light Delivery\n1950 Mortis Pabel\n1948 Dodge 3,4-Ton Van\n1947 Willys Station Wagon\n1937 Chevrolet Sedan\n.     Delivery\nSPOT CASH FOR LATE MODEL\nCARS IN GOOD CONDITION\nTERMS and TRADES\nEMPIRE\npipe - fittings - i-u-ste,; SP_.:\ncial low  prices   Active Trading\nCo 935 E Cordova St.. Vancouver\nLADIES' SKATES, _._\u00b1Bi 7, tfiffi\nnew. Phone 1043-Y.\nGOOD COOK SIOVE FOR SALE,\n$25. Phone 464-R-3.\t\nFOR SALE - W. AND C. STOVE,\nwater jacket. 705- Stanley.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nE   W   HAGGEN,  Land, Surveyor.\nMining and Civil Engineer.\nGrand Forks and Rossland\nBbyb C AtTLECK, 218 GORE ST..\nNelson. B.C  Surveyor. Engineer\niri.8UI.ANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nMs.HA.sDY  AC-ENflttS  Cf5    IN*\nsurance. Real Estate.-Phone I35\nLIVESTOCK   OEAL6R8\nWit _tl)Y OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nContact H   Harrop: Phone Il7\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding Phone 533 324 Vernon Street\nTIMBER CRUI8ING. ETC\n1.M-)--*. CRUISING  ANYWHERE\nIn B.C. E H Hird. Slocan City\n\u00a3fotent. Satlg Bfottu.\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15o per line first insertion and\n.... non-jMnsecutive Insertions\nHe Line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48- line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n81.58 line per month (26 consecutive Insertions)   Box numbers  lie extra.  Covers  any\nnumber, of .insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES.\nTENDERS; Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfltst'liiSssnlon; \"16c. per   Use\neach subsequent Insertion\nALL   ABOVE-  RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates;\n(Not More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance .30\nBy carrier, per year        $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month         -   $ 1.25\nThree months  ,       3.75\nSix months         7.50\nOne year             15.00\nMail In Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month     -       1.00\nThree months       2.75\nSix months    ;       6,50\nOne year             10.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove, rates  plus)  postage.\nTENDERS FOR INSTALLING\nWATER MAINS\nTenders will be accepted by the\nCorporation of the Village of Silverton, British Columbia, up to 12\np.m. M.S.T. 30th August, 1052. for\nthe installation of approximately\n4500 feet of Transit Pipe Water\nMains. .Minimum depth of trench,\nfour feet.\nLowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\n, Further particulars may be obtained from the Clerk. Corporation\nof the Village of Silverton. B.C\nRENTALS\n$10 REWARD OFFERED FOR IN-\nformation of desirable rental unfurnished home in nice district.\nCareful retired couple can assure\nbest of care. Dally News Box 4252.\nBUSINESS MM WAfl_.tl.IC,, tod\ndependents transferred to Nelson\n\u25a0 wishes to rent small house or\nsuite. Please phone Mr. Bryan at\n144 between 9 and 5.\nWANTEt) TO Rita - ttbtjl.1. 6$\ncottage in or near Nelson. Small\nfamily. Apply Box 4296 Nelson\nNews.\nSTORE SPACE FOR RENT AT 661\nBaker St. Suitable for store or\noffice. Apply 661 Baker St.. or\nphone Dr. Reibin. 320.\nWANTED - 2-BEDRObM rIOUSS!\nor apartment required by local\nbusiness mdn and family Box\n3586 Dally News or phone 973-L,\nWANTED T<- RENT - SI.. 6ft\nseven rm. house, close in. Phone\n1119-R evenings. \t\nREQUIRED BY GOVERNMENT\nemployee by Sept. 1. 2 bedroom\nhouse. Phone 634-X.\n3-RM OFFICE SPACE FbR R\"_Nf\nPhone\nin   TraU.   Best\" location.\nTrail 248 or Nelson 334-R.\nWANTED - - <_R 4 ttU. SUIT., BV\nSept. 15 for adults. Phone 1198-L.\nFOR RENT - _5MAtt d_T.(__.; $25\nper month. Phone 1451-L.\nWANTED TO RENT - HOUSE 6ft\nsuite before Oct. lst Phone 781-L.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nEARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE \u2014 2 JERSEY COWS,\n$150 ea., one registered. Both\nmilking. Apply A. E. Jones, Longbeach, RJFt. 1, Nelson.\nFOR SALE - SHETLAND PONV,\nwith complete outfit. Will trade\nfor cattle. Apply Daily News\nBox 3855.\nFOR . SALE - 16 MONTH OLD\nHolsteln bull. Apply W. Ribalkin.\nThrums, B.C.\nFOR   SALE - LAYING Tt*EW\nHampshire pullets. Phone 711-L-3.\nRamp Body and\n'     Fender Works\nDealers for\nKING\n.LOWBED TRAILERS UP TO 65\nTONS. DOLLIES, LOGGERS\nPOLE TRAILERS, LINE CONSTRUCTION BODIES, POLE\nDERRICKS, AERIAL LADDERS.\nREPAIR TOWERS\nPrices on Application.\nPHONE 19.1 - Nelson, B.C.\n556 JOSEPHINE ST. *\nFOR SALE - ONE NO. S-25-7\nsectional cast Iron steam or hot\nwater boiler 5 h.p. 1175 square\nfeet radiation capacity, good condition; Wire Iron Fireman Stoker\nto be sold as complete unit. Price\n$500. Salmo Hotel, Salmo, B.C.\n'Z'tiAitOHAh 'lAAChiWEltl Cb.~\nLIMITED\n'DISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPJstENT\nEnquiries Invited\nGranville Island. Vancouver 1. B.C\nTake the Landlord\nOff Your.PayrolJ.\nRare opportunity to buy beautiful four room bungalow 6tyle\ndwelling with spare bedroom\nupstairs. Fairview location, two\nlots. House ls Immaculate,\ngrounds are beautiful. Priced\nJor quick .JJ^QQ\n$4800 will handle.\nINSPECT THIS TODAY.\nT.\ng\nREAL ESTATE Ss INSURANCE\n\u25a0-68 Ward Street        Phone 717\nFOR SALE\nFor immediate Occupancy on\nCarbonate St. 4 BEDROOM, 8\nROOM HOUSE. Newly decorated. Modern kitchen, laundry\nroom on main floor, full basement and furnace, and other\nfeatures. Deep freeze, refrigerator, a range included.\nPRICE $7000 CASH\nPhone *P. Poulin, 70\nor write P. O. Box 130\n603 Baker St. Phone 1135\n_   Nelson, B.C.-\nSpecial...\nSpecial...\nTWO DAYS ONLY\n3 CARS...\nAll Sedans\nPrice Including 3% Tox\nAll Cars With Licence\n1\u20141929 ESSEX SEDAN\n1\u20141930 CHEVROLET\nSEDAN\n1\u20141939 CHEVROLET\nSEDAN '    '\n,      ALL FOR\n$475\nLIMITED'\n213BokerSt.    Phone 1234\nNELSON\nCATERPILLAR RD8 COMPLETE\nwith belt pulley drive, new\nengine, priced low. Bayes Equipment Co., Cranbrook, B.C\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies: new and used\nwire rope> pipe and fittings:\nchain, steel' plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron Ss Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C Phone\nPacific 6357\n' P'dr'CHESWlRWtets. SUltt.\nand chair, 9 pc. blonde maple\ndining room suite, studio couch,\nlarge G.E. washing machine, walnut vanity desk, collapsible baby\ncarriage with detachable runners.\nPhone 816-L-5.\t\nFOR SALE - TH_. F6l.LOWlI,Cf\narticles reasonably priced for\nquick sale, one used dinette, suite,\ngas range, two toilets and ona\nbathtub and sink. Also one single\nlaundry tub. Phone '596-X or ap-\nply 904 Silica St.\n-S66K bf Mbvtidbb% 50_!B_H_\nheater, dishes, electric Singer\nmachine, tin heaters, blacksmith\nblowei. gas lantern, stove pipes,\ntools, 1302 Crossley Ave. Phone\n1043-Y.\t\nMl. SALE - Wt WAHr-\nJacket Heater; one Monitor coal\nfurnace No. 48-X, ohe four burner Enterprise gas range, one rope,\nblock and tackle. Apply 620\nLatimer Street\nUiiHtii. M6USE TftAILEft FOR\nsale, new 8' by 16' all veneer,\nbrass screws   throughout. Wired\nfor electric, linoleum. Priced right\nfor sale. Apply 301H Baker St..\nRoom 7, evenings only.\nMtdR(.Wt'(. tmsm AlDS.-\nWrite P.O Box 39. Nelson. B.C.\n(Continued in next column)\nWANTED \u2014 FOR EARLY Possession, 3 bedroom modern house.\nPreferably in Fairview district.\n$12,000 to $14,000. Mostly cash.\nApply Box 4415 Daily News,\nWANTED-50-60 F06T _*UILl.I_*tG\n, lot in good location. Must be reasonably level and ,on city water\nand sewer lines. Phone Nelson\n1729 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.\nFOR l-ALE - 6N__ fiUILDIHTG\n14x10 ft. One. year old, $175.00. 6\"\nsiding. Can be seen at North\nShare, Motel.\nFOR SALE - SMALL HotlSE,' _N\nKinnaird, fully furnished, nice\nlot, 2 mlns. from school. Write\nBox 3981 Nelson News.\nFOR SALE \u2014 6 ROOM HbME.\n$7000 full price. $2750 cash to ac-\nceptable boyer. Phone 1412-R.\nWANTED TO BUV \u00ab-_'._R_-_*\nApply\nOR\nBox\n-._ TO _._\nfour roomed house.\n3653 Daily News.\nf6r' Sale-SMALL f0rWis-_.I1.\nhouse ln Fairview. Block from bus\nstop. Phone 1385-Y,\nWANTED-BUli-DIMi S.T-, tbl..\nauto court. Phone Nelson 1729.\noffice hours.\nfSiTsalb - i-AmviEW HfiijB.\nModem, 2 bedrooms, good location, Phone 276-Y.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE - SMALL GROCERY\nand confectionery store, A good\nbusiness opportunity in very good\ndistrict ln Trail. Can be operated\nby couple. Modern living quarters\nwith 3 bedrooms. $10,000 will\nhandle. Apply Box 3977 Nelson\nDally News.\nNOTICE- WhA* W__,l_ VdrtJ\ngive me, cash or trade, for Union\nJack mining cliim on Toad Mountain near Nelson, B.C.? Must sell\nbecause of 111 health. Write J. E.\nGump. P.O. Box 6727. Milwaukle.\nOregon, U.S.A.\nt-AvE $-000 CASH XVaTEX-ILE\nto buy business or partnership in\nbusiness. Box 4410 Daily News.\nHOLTS PISTON-SEAL-RESTORE\ncompression and engine power,\nreduce oil consumption and stop\npiston slap. Simply remove plugs\naiid squeeze Piston Seal into plugholes. For free details write Major Distributors, Room 627, Dept.\nS, 736 Granville St., Vancouver 2.\nysrs-Xg -,.M6 mttbi. ots.\ntorn Sedan. Air conditioner, radio,\nnew tires, clean -xcellent mechanical condition, one owner.\nPhone 816-L-5.\nF6R \"SAIe - \u00a5w<5 w-fl-iit\ntrailer, one ton steel box, heavy\nconstTuetlbi., '750-17 \"tires, also\ngood Ford four - speed trans-\nmission. Phone 1472-Yafter 5 p.m.\n-\"BE\"-I-.!-.-'.!. .H.1-0U b.Ut.\nlogging truck and 13-ton Hayes\ndual axle trailer; S-speed main,\n3-speed auxiliary; 1850. Phone\n709-L, 110 Silica Street,\nft-ft \"..Ail. -'M M6WsV\u00ab<.H\nClub Coupe. Radio, heater, defroster. Excellent condition.\nPhone 364-L-3 after 6,\nFOR SALE -\"HAR_,_rt.-fiAVlb.\nson 1942, size 48. $300 or best\noffer; In gooi running order. Ceil\nbe seen at North Shore MoteL\nf6r -.Ai__ -'\u2022ss tbtb MUffl,\ngood condition. What offers. Apply 1.04 Crossley Ave, or phone\n1043-Y\nfor _A_J_ - _ LABnig' if.\ncycles. 1 British 3-speed, 2 years\nold. Mrs. C. It Smith, e\/\u00bb Dr.\nCarney, North Shore.\nF6k SA--_*^Jfl3r_.dl6(S_.,S_-(5XR:\nGood clean ear. Can be financed.\nPhone 873-Y after S.  '\nf6ft BAH. ~ iM ftAM__V BAV-\nidson Twin 74, has buddy seat and\nsaddle b.gs, Shorty'a Repair Shop.\nFor BSP=W SEDArt. EBBE.\nlent condition. $175. Apply 1304,\nRobertson Avenue.\nm -..m. a p Awm\/A.*:\nply 617 Fifth 6t\nurn iptwm mi. t>tum\nSedan. A-l shape. Phone 16I-L2.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE - 1 ONLY ' 3 HP.\nsldhnson outboard motor, also 1\n6hly 7.5,,H.P. Evinrude outboard\nmot.r_f,Bbth as new. Phone 1285-R\nMETAL PRICES\nLead, NA.. 16,\nZinc, East St. Louis, .11\nTin, NY., 1.21 V,.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 201CP) - Win-\nntpeg grain cash prices:\n..Oats, No, 1 feec, .77>_.\nBarley, No; 1 feed, 1.24V..\nBUENOS AIRES, Argentina, Aug.\n30 (AP)\u2014President Juan D. Peron\nsaid yesterday he will lead the Per-\nonlsta Women's Party formerly\nheaded by his wife, Eva. A party\ndelegation called on him with a request to take over. .,\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP M.JTAL\nor Iron Any quantity Top price\npaid Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, BC\nROWBOAT WANTl-b\"^-\"'i6'Tr2'\naluminum, waterproof, veneer, or\nfibre. Must be reasonable-prise\nAlso small car rack. Ph, 893-L,\nCEDAR POLES - ALL CLASSES\nand lengths; Larch poles. Koote-\nnay Forest .Products Ltd\nAFPX. 1000 W W' 6ft -*.\" esse\npiping. Contact Geo: Sundeen,\nKinnaird, B.C.    '   .\nwTOEE - OSS-3 323 sl-OVi.\nIn good condition. Phone 681-R.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED URGENTLY - ROOM\nand board In private home for\nschool boy going to Grade 12. Will\ndo. odd jobs around house in exchange. Write Gene Kimoshlta, Slo-\ncan City, B.C.\nriLL \"CAh.. \/6_t trWd V6WJ6\nschool aged children in my home,\ngirls preferred, Phone 392-X.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nFOR SALE - BLACK POMERAN-\nlan, male, 3 months, also other\ndogs and puppies. The Blue J,\nNorth Shore, Phone 773-R-4.\n-V-ft SALE - _ WrtiTS ftAftBi-S;\nyoung females, 76o each. Phune\n1472-Y after 5 p.m.\t\n.LOST AND POUND\nLOST - BETWEEN MADELINE'S\nbook store and bus depot Green\nbillfold containing sum of money,'\nelso identification, Finder please\nmall to me or leave at Dally News\nNELSON DAILY NEWS; THURSDAY, AUG. 21,1952-11\nMarket Trends\nNEW\/YORK, A..g. 20 (APi -\nRailroads \u25a0 provided a \u2022 convenient\norutch for the stock market to limp\nahead.   \u25a0\nVolume was restricted to an estimated 'i_,000,0p0 \"shares.   \"\u25a0\nSteels \"and motors held to their\ngains, and the radid-televlsion \u2022 section displayed fairly good gains trom\ntime to time.\nHigher were New York Central,\nNorthern Pacific, Philip Morris, Du\nPont, American Smelting, Youngs-\ntown Sheet & Tube, General Motors,\nand Radio Corp.\nTORONTO, (CP) - Prices improved slightly' today in active trading toward the stock market's close.\nVolume totalled about 3,100,000\nshares.\nSenior golds were strengthened\nafter a week opening but' secondary\nIssues were mixed. Heath, a prospect traded more than 200,000 shares\nfor penny gains while Donalda, a\nprospect, and Halcrov, a holding\ncompany dipped -n a similar turnover.\nSteels and textiles led the industrial recovery as papers, foods and\nmiscellaneous Issues slipped, Utilities, banks, manufacturing and re-\ntall stores held f rm.       ,\nfbUtib: Btktk bod Wirti a\nPenticton tag No. 77. Ph. 366-R-2.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nIAGARA\nHN.'.Na COMPANY HP\n9 imoflftiJu. Acemwci\netUVCWTlM IT*.\nSUITE. I\nPhone 1095   560 Baker St.\n***<++m*i*mm*m+*.+**\u00bb*0*+*m+*m*aim*\nPIANO\nTUNING\nW; F. ADAMS and SON\nfrom Vancouver\nPhone Ben Sutherland 948-L\nor Fred Nudd 1418\nHelntzman Piano Inspector\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Aug. 20 (CP) - Trade\ncontinued not too brisk on the local\nlivestock market today and prices\nwere (1 or more lower ln some\nclasses. Offerings were 740 cattle\nand calves.\nGood to choice light butcher steers\nwere steady to weak, good heavy\nbutcher steers 50 cents to ?1 lower,\nand in-between winds $1 or more\nlower. Good butcher heifers were\nbarely steady. Cows were around 51\nlower, bulls about steady. Good light\nstocker and feeder steers were\nsteady. But plain -inds were dreggy.\nVeal calves were steady at the\nweek's decline.\nHogs gained 25 cents Tuesday,\nclosing at 125.25, while sows dropped\n50 cents at $14.50. Good lambs were\nsteady at $26.50 to $26.75.\nGood to near-choice light butcher\nsteers 23.00 to 24.50, common to\nmedium 16.00 to 22.00. Good to\nchoice butcher heifers 22.00 to 2100,\ncommon to medium 16.00 to 21.50,\nGood light cows 16.00 to 17.00, good\nheavy cows 12.00 to 14.00, oommon\nto medium 12.50 to 16.50, canners\nand cutters 8.00 to 12,00. Gbod bulls\n13.50 to 14.50, common to medium\n10.00 to 13.00, Good stocker and\nfeeder steers 21,50 to 23.50, common\nto medium' 17.00. to .21.00... Good to\nchoice veal calves 22.00 to 24.00,\ncommon to medium 18.00 to 21.50.\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nBralorne \t\nCariboo Gold \u2014\nEstella  _\nGolconda  _\nGiant Mascot _.\nHighland Bell _.\nPend Oreille\t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPrerhler Border .\nQuatslno\nReeves MacDonald .\nSheep Creek .\nSherrltt Gordon.\nSilver Ridge\nSilver Standard\t\nWestern Exploration .\nYale\t\nOIL8-\nAnaconda\nAnglo Canadian  \t\nA P Consolidated \t\nCalgary & Edmonton\t\nCalmont  \t\nMercury  \u2014____\nNational Pete\t\nOkalta Com  ______\nPacific Pete\t\nRoyalite   \t\nVaSalta  \t\nVulcan    ____-_,.\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates\t\n6.18\n1.31\n1.15\n.21\n.93\n.57\n8.45\n2.05\n.22..\n.67\n8.23\n1.40\n5.40\n.28\n1.90\n.68-\n.44\n.15\n8.00\n.45\n13.85\n1.55\n.22\n2.30\n3.96\n10.50\n16.75\n.43\n.66\n17.50\nThe Canadian moose ls strictly a\nforest enimal and gets much of its\nfood from lake and river plants.\nHoliday Haunts...\nCRANBROOK\nGATEWAY AUTO COURT\nCoffee Shop\u2014Groceries\u2014Gas\nJust outside East gate.\n\u25a0      MOUNT VIEW MOTEL\nFully modern.\u2014Automatic Heating.\nWest gate, entering Cranbrook.\nGREEN It WHltE AW6 tbVttf.\nModern - Gaa Stoves - Oil Heat\nLis and Lew - Phone 201.\nWEST KOOTENAY\nNELSON\nCRESCENT BEACH AUTO COURT\n16 Furnished Cabins\u2014Boats, Fishing\nOn highway 10 miles East of Nelson\nLake Ph. 471-Y-l for reservations.\nMOYIE  VALLEY\nSOCIETY GIRL CAM,\nEsso Products. Modem Cabins.\nMain highway entering Moyie, B.C.\nHIAWATHA MOTEL - MODERN\nGas and Oil - Coffee Shop\n8 miles East of Moyle, B.C.\nWE8T KOOTENAY\nLOWER ARROW LAKEI\nCASA t\/ISTA CABINS\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.\nVacation  or overnight\n\"They're Different.\"\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nIX.CUTOItS  AND  7HU8T.M  FOK OV6H  HAll*  A'CINTUIY\nvalue for your\nmoney-\nBequoalh te your heirs\nall tho benefit*\nthat coma from\nexperienced\nestate administration\nROYAL TRUST\nCOMPANY '\nI\nOw.fcw-rW \"Whot\nWe Con Do for you\"\nIt avaUablt M\nf\u00ab-JU\u00abl.s\n<S2d WIS! PENDER ST., VANCOUVER   .   AAA. 0411\n  GEORGE O. VAI-, MANAGER\nNelson\nMachinery\nColumn\ne o\nIT'S Nl-W -\nREVOLUTIONARY ...\nSee the\nLESSMAN\nH. F. 10\nPOWER\nSHOVEL\nTWO UNITS IN ONE\n\u2022 Powerful Tractor\n\u25a0   \u2022 Power Shovel\nTh* only loader with power-\noperated crov\/der-arm. \u25a0\u00bb\u2022*.\nA posiHvq digging tool.\n1. Digj without tractor\npower\u2014no rdmmlng.\n2. Unique crowd cylinder*\nprovide 42\" forward\npower sweep.\nS* Digs in 12' on leyel\nground,\n4. Digs at any height.\ni.. A full load every time Ifi\nhard digging. 60%\ngreater loading force.\nti. Use crowder arms for\nback filling at any\nheight from ground. A\nfull 15,000 pound push,\nTHESE LOADERS NOW\nON DISPUY\nAND AVAILABLE .KM\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY \u25a0\nAsk for\nDemonstration\n\u2022  \u2022\nSEETHE\nBANTAM 5 TON\nCRANE\nTho Machine with\na multitude\nof uses\nO Lowest posslWe.Toef per\nyard, per job, per yeor*\nO Shovel handles 80 yd*\nper hour.\n\u2022 Trench hoe, digs 100\nft. of 5-foot, ditch per\nhour.\n\u2022 Dragline handle* 70\nyds. p\u00abr hour..\n\u2022 Is precision built.\n\u2022 Quickly Interchangeable.\n. \u2022  Perfect for steel erection.\n\u2022 Pile driving.\nPHONE 18 OR CALL\nTOR FULL DETAILS\num^\nCuts Hauling Costs!\n,  and\nTakes You Through\nWhen Others Can't\n4-wheel drive\n118\" wheel bos*\nThrifty, Dependable\n\"Hurricane\" Engine\nCome In today and let us\ngive you a demonstration\nof this amazing truck.\nCALL.or PHONE\n18\nNelson\nMachinery\nCompany Ltd.\nIf It's Machinery you Nded.\nConsult Us\"   '\n214 Hall St     Nelson   B C.\n ^\u25a0-HI-LSOW DAILYNEVv^THUMbAiAUa, 2VWI    tfelWf |i|ffIfialA|>\nTo See General\nBabylonian warriors combed, their hair with aro-\ni-triatie olZlt before gding into bdhle\u2014ahd today the\n\u25a0 battle goes to the well-groomed man.......\nTo Insure Your Smart iAppeawnee, Us.\n-Slnqinpoo for. Normal: Hair..\nSjhampdb \u2022 for Oily HoiK\nSHampoo for Dry Hair\nWe per Bottle\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nCAIRO, Egypt, Aug. 20 (A?)-An\narmy: spokesman, -said- today * that\nMustafa Khamis, the young-worker\nunder death sentence for instigating'\na. recent' rioft, will 'be brought to\nCairo'to meet Gen.-Moha-_-ni,a NaT\nthe N spokesman.' said'* Khamis\nclaimed he had ah \"important, slate-\ntot-it\"|pjj \/make ?\u00bb\u00bb***&* B-3T>tla-r\nti^icbm&tniiiizh-chiet in V cori*\nnedttori *ith!tha.Violence.'at.KafrU\ntl Dawars, ah in'dustr-lal-centro.. 12.:|-|\nmiles South of Alexandria. \u2022 \u00ab''*'\"> . \u2022 ;\n. ;A : mlKt_Jry . o'oort'- -sentenced.!\nKhanKs to death on -conviction of.J\nf-mehtlng the riot, which cost-nine\nMeanwhile, the trial- of 29 others\naccused In the riot continued.\nInv.stigators announced \"important ., developments\": which they,\nclaimed would throw new light sn\nwhat they called a conspiracy, to\nstage disturbances.    ..   _ \u25a0\nAmong those detained for Investigation .waa Mohamed Hussein tl\nGammal, manager of the Misr plant\nat Kafr el Pawar\u2014the rioters' tar-'\n| get\u2014and Amin Hafez Afifi,'son of\nHafez Afifi, forme-liv chief of for\nmer King Farouk's: cabinet,\n.,._._....._....s_-l_g\u00abPV_ssSBi .\nBULtSEYE' BEAUTIES .' . ;'..*,...,.\ngot a monopoly on marksmanship. Hera\nof the many expert markswomer. taking\ntha Dominion of Canada Rifle Assodatl\n\u2022-\u2022\u2014.--..   mmv.ssss C\nHera are two\n-*T part; at.\nIon meat\nj A twice-daily phenomenon at\nMoncton, N.B., Is tha tide on the\nPetltcodiac. Hiver, of ten reaching a\nheight of five feet\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nMAKE YOUR CIOTHES LINE\nOUn 'UEI'HONE LINE\nIB.' MAKER it.   PHONE 1175\nProposal\n\u2122*#\u00a3&irer Released\n- ^T^.   . \u25a0-*\"--*\u25a0___--\u25a0..'*.\u25a0._\u25a0 ~      \u2022>\nit Coortsiught Ranges near Ottawa. Left Is Muriel\nBurr of Ottawa with Eileen Learoyd of Victoria.\n\u2014(CP photo.)\nJUURY'S   Phorr^y\nMft0A\u00bb\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescriptions\n|P\u2014\"-\"' <\"--- Phone !>-\u00bb\nRADIATORS\nI    CLEANED \u00bb REPAIRED\n\u00a7_       ;'   REOORINQ\n, MgiKton\nfMOTORS LTD.\n\"    PONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\n<?M,C TRUCKS\n_Mrtal and Paint Work Specialty\n     \"     '\u2022' \u2022 . .-\u2022\nJ. X C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP). -\nIA new proposal made by Labor Relations Board in an effort to end\n[the 68-day painters' strike is being\n| considered by contractors and painters today.\nThe proposal, made by board\nmember Fred Smelts at a meeting\nbetween contractors and officials ot\nlite A. T. Is. Painters Union, would\nI give the painters a 20-cent-an-hour\n'wage Increase. The strikers rejected\na 15-cent-an-hour two days ago.\nMeanwhile, carpenters Its Vancouver and New Westminster, on strike\nfor 71 days, may intensify their picket, action which has held all major\nconstruction in the area at a standstill. . \t\nThey rejected a 10-c.nt-an-hour\nIncrease offer on Monday, mainly\nbecause the contractors offered no\ncbh.ession. oh board and .room\neh-rge-T #offcers Oh out-of-town\n'jobs; \u25a0*.',. *\u25a0-\"\u25a0\nB.C Schools fo\nOpen on Time\nSAN FRANCISCO,* Aug.-20 (AP)\n,\u2014Lawrence Mario- Glannlnl,,. 58,\nyear-old President of the Bank, of\nAmerica\u2014the world's largest bank--*\ndied in his sleep last night ln hospital. ':....\nIn 193(1 Glannlnl became President\nof the Bank of America; founded by\nhis father, the late A. P. Giannini,\nin 1904.\nGlannlnl also served as a- director\not the Trans-America Corporation,\nwhich controlled the bank until\n19.7.\nBranches of the bank\u2014more than\n600\u2014cover Californiaand are also\nIn London, Manila, Tokyo, Yokohama, Kobe and Shanghai.\nGiannini, who started working for\nthe Institution as a clerk in 1918,\nsaw Its capital, assets rise to more\nthan $6,000,000,000 in 35 years.\nIn 1922 he became personnel director .and six years later was named vice-chairman of the board of directors.\nDEATHS\nBERLIN,- Aug.\nCftarles - Noble-, \u2022 6v,-ueraut manufacturer,- met his Wife here, today\nafter '.even'..*ve_ra: la Communist\nc-o'cehtration.pamps and prisons. In\nEast Germany oh. charges.ranging\nfrom spying, to Nazism.     ' ,\nHis wife has been waiting here\nfor him since 1946, a year after he\nwas. arrested by . the Russians' in\"\nDresden.\nGerman-born Noble, released yesterday, said he had not beeti tried\nuntil last month, when he was\nfound guilty of smuggling cameras\nand supporting the Nazis'' during\nthe.war..He was given' a'seven*\nI year sentence, counting' time serv-\nSON IN RU8&IA    .'* \"'\u2022\nNoble said he had not heard from\nhis. son, John, since' the MWo Were\narrested. He \" believed'\" John had\nbeen taken to Russia.\" Another son,\nGeorge, lives in Detroit   .\nNoble said the ComihUitlst Judge\ntold him. ,\"6, back and tell, your\nAmerican   bosses   we 'ire   strong\nssian\nWhile   he  was\n-20 .(Reutets)  \u2014 United States and Soviet authorities\nDetroit manu- argued aver his nationality,  The\n.,---\"* U. 8. claimed, he. was a naturalized\nAmerican citizen. The .Russian's said\nhe forfeited his U.S. citizenshipl\nwhen he returned to Germany inj\n1939 and stayed there during the\nwar. '\u2022\"\"...\nNoble said he emigrated to the'\nU..:\u00a3i. In 1920, returning with bis-'\nwife and sons for a \"health cure\"\n'in 1939.\nWhen war broke out, he said, he\ntried unsuccessfully to laave and\nthen went to Dresden, where be\nowned a camera factory.\nWhen Noble, wss arrested, bis\nwife and, son. were forbidden to\nleave the district but In 1940 were\nallowed to \u00a36 to West Berlin. Mrs.\n[Noble stayed there and George returned to Detroit . \u2022\nNoble said his Dresden factory\nnow is state-owned -and turning,\nout about 10,000 cameras a month,\nunder, his trade mark, many for export to the U. S.\nThe Couple hope to return to the\nBusiness Spotlight...\nITafl-Hariley law\nCalled Time Bomb\n- WINNIPEG, Aug. \u00bb (CP). \u2014 the\nTaft-Hartley Labor law of the U. S.\nwas called a \"legislative time.bomb\"\ntoday before the annual convention\nof .the'trades and Labor Congress\nof'Canada., .'\u25a0\nJohn d*. Hauck of Philadelphia,\nfraternal delegate from the American Federation'of Labor, said tHe\nU.-'S. ls,\"plagued with the Infamous\n'Taft-ftartley Act\"\" ,'.',.'_\nI. \"Aa'lpng as labor ls In demand,\"\n-he-said,;..'there la-little provocation\nfor management to use the harsh\n,ft\u00bbtsU*a.of;the act. '\u25a0\u25a0'\"'\n\u25a0 \"Should employment fall off and\nhard'times,come, we can.expect\nthis legislative time bomb to be detonated ' and the' presently-unfamiliar features of the law to be used\nwith all the viciousness that management can command.\"\n- Hauck said the act\u2014passed. In\n1947 and putting some curbs on.the\nprerogatives of unions\u2014ia a \"millstone around the neck ot organized\nlabor.\"\n\"We are hopeful,\" Hauck aald,\n\"that as a result of the national elections to be held this Fall, we shall\nbe able at least to have the law am\nended to the 'extent that the inequ\nlies will be removed, \" \u25a0      \u25a0\nHave you\nmissed this\nSuit\nBargain?\nSome Cloths left en\nIRISHMAN'S   -\n$125 SUITS \\'\nfer\u2014 ,\"\niY\n.00\n ,   _-*_a_   sve   are   I\nenough now. We fear nothing.\"'    i   ine couple hope to re\nnrs.ii-   s..  .\u2014    imprisoned  the'U. S. as soon as possible\n66.\ni . Your Grocer Has Our New\nVIJO PANCAKE AND\nWAFFLE MIX\n\u25a0 Phone 238, or Call at\nEllison Milling & Elevator\n'Com pony, \"Ltd.\n,513 Front Street\n'''\"i\";r ;**** **\"\u2022-*\"   \u25a0*-**-*\u25a0\nBISMA-REX\nAid* Stomach, Heartburn\nand Indigestion.\n: 90$ and $2.15 pkg. <\nOn Sale Only at\nYOUR, REXALL 8TOR8\nVICtORIA, Aug. 20 (CP) - British Columbia's schools will open\nSept 2, On schedule, unless the polio\nsituation in this province deteriorates to shy extent\nEducation Department and Health\nDepartment officials confirm that\n[no province-wide delay is necessary.\nHpwever, Dr. G. TV Amyot, Deputy\nMinister of Health, pointed out that\nBy The Canadian Press\nI . Boston\u2014Michael  E.  Lynch,\nI lioston Post make-up editor.\nCincinnati \u2014 William Carpenter,\n79, umpire-in-chief of the International League'from 1929 to 1944.\nMontreal\u2014Mrs. Louis J. Papin-\neau, 94, widow of the grandson of\nthe Hon. Louis Joseph Papirieau,\nl(S\u00abH\u00bbr  \/,.   \u00bb\u2022'  s-s..--\u2014  _-s\u2014.*\u2022\nGregg Appeals fo Labor fo Go Easy\nAccuse U. S. of\nDropping Insects\nMOSCOW,  Aug. 20  (AP)   - A\nmember of Communist Czechoslovakia's Politburo, writing ln the So-\n.... ._ . v's\"* Communist newspaper Pravda,\nisbe-poiMto toTssffi^ si^rss&'S.sxsi\n\u2022rB^,sve-.r.sa,i1e!s.ewhcre\u00abw^rdr^n\u00abosbtstn.m.'\nage-Czech rrssn.   *ns*-..s.   --\n,,... j-on. l.ouio Joseph FapIt.eau,|**PPeal 'roni \u25a0*-\u00bb Federal G'o'vern-\n'leader Of the Quebec rebellion of \">\u00ab'* to go easy on strikes that\n183*^ I could slow defpnrss fsswi..***,'**.*\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 20 (CP)\u2014Canadian labor today had before it an\nappeal from the Federal Gdvern-\n1 been seven\n_    \u201e._.-*   sssssi\n[ttie B.C. scene*. There\ndeaths there:\nIt Is possible Kimberley may take\naction at the local !evel. They may\n[seek postponement of school opening until the epidemic subsides.\n...   \u2014__._...._,  _s, __--  *_  ssasss-\nage - Czech crops. The charge was\nfirst made several years ago, when\nseveral European Communist countries claimed the U.S. Was flooding\nthem with Colorado beetles.to destroy crops,\n\u2022\u2022v.    \u00bb COMPANY\n\u2022Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\ndu__      ___\u25a0    H\"A 460\nPhone-M, Diy - 807-R Night\nIran Emergency 'A W\nWASHINGTON, Aug. .20 (AP)-\nThe United States, is reported to\nhave urged Britain to Join in an\nAnglo-American emergency aid\nprogram for Iran to' avert a possible communist coup.\nState Secretary Dean Acheson is\n .  --  _.**  cssaj.. un  sirii.es\ncould slow defence production.\nLabor Minister Gregg, In putting It up to the convention of the\nbig Trades and Labor Congress of\nCanada yesterday, urged \"mutual\nconcessions'! before labor and'\nmanagement tO' keep. Industrial\nharmony.\n\"In these critical times,,' 'he said,\n'when the free nations of the world\nare striving to hoi? their lead'in\nthe. production race, oyerthdw who\nwould destroy\" all. freedom']*, our\nproduction should hot be interrupt-\nI ed, impeded or' interfered With' for\neven a short time'.\". ' '\n,. Apart from an amicable session\nwith the Labor Minister-^who coti-\nI fessed'.,he \"thought his''\"honeyn.Ooi.\"\nwith labor \\yas .over \"after' t*o yevs\n[in office\u2014the convention got down\n; to-reiterating its demands for social\nland other\", advances'and occasion;\n-II,- K-I-S.--S-- ..-   '-.\nCITY of NELSON\nTENDERS WANTED\nThe City of Nelson <fs offering for Sole the building\nonly known as the \"Bathhouse\" situated in Lakeside\nPark ,Nelson, B.C. The building to be pulled down,\ngrounds cleared by December 1st, 1952 to the satisfaction of the Superintendent of Public Works, The\nPlumbing fittings and fixtures are not included Irf Sale.\nTenders piust be submitted by September 2, 1952. The\nhighest or any tender net necessarily accepted.\nC. W. R. HARPER\nCity Clerk\nDated Nelson, B.C.\nAugust* 20, 19SZ\nOut of Respect for\nthe Late\nGeorge Benwell, Sn\nThe KOOTENAY STATIONERS\nwill be CLOSED\nAUGUST 21, 1952\nV '\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0    ....**. from\n-,.     1 P.M.\".to 4 P.M.\nKOOTENAY STATIONERS\nwd SPORT~8HSPT\u2014\nreported'.to have made thls-plea In\na memorandum to For-.grr-Secretary Anthony Eden within the last\n10 days. Acheson is said to have\nstressed the need-for quick joint action' to keep Iran's; vast oil resources from falling into Russian hands.\nAmerican diplomats who disclosed this to a reporter today-indicated that British officials ire decidedly cool to Achesn's idea but apparently have not rejected it.\nAcheson told Eden, they said, that\nthe U. S. is prepared to give an Immediate \"token\" grant of $.,000,0001\nto $10,000,000 to Iran, if'Britain sim-1\nultaneously would:  '\n. 1.- Buy the 2,000,000 ioni of refined oil and oil products how stored\nin huge. tanks along- the \"Persian\nGulf. This would .sjrini.'.the' Ir'a'n-\niar. government about sWO.OOO'OOO. at\npresent world market prices\/.\n2. Declare Britain's, willingness, to\nabide by international arbitration of\nits long-standing dispute -with Iran\nover nationalization of the Anglo-\nIranian oil company.. ' ;,, I\nUnder pressure from Washington,]\nBritish and U. S. diplomats are urgently exploring possible, solutions\nto the British -Iranian-argument,\nThe oil dispute has blocked the-flow\nof petroleum to the ' West for M\n'months and has choked off the. Iri\nssrslssss   ***...-- \"\n-.._ u*\u201e-s _uv-n.es ana occasion- tsranin ,,-sii ii: V\nIt bore down hardest on national\nhealth insurance and better housing,\ncalling for Federal action on both,\nahd also soubht reimposition of\nprice controls, checks-on Immigration and other measures.\nLong an advocate of national\nhealth Insurance, the Congress Instructed   Its  executive  to   keep\npressing  for such a scheme*  It\ndemanded this on a contributory\nbasis, saying workers .are ready\nto pay their fair share of the cost\nOn housing, the Congress asked\nFederal aid in low-rental projects\nand;-slum clearance. It declared itself \"greatly disappointed\" by what\nthe-Federal government, has dohe\nIon these points, saying its \"open immigration policy\" has agsfavated\n| housing shortages.   ',','.:.:\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 Immigration   should   be   more\nI tightly : controlled,   the   Congress\nsaid. It also askeil that the Federal\nGovernment assunie the respon-lfcll-\nity for housing ihd f^ediijig Immi-\ngrants until they, can,' be Absorbed\nintp Canadian. Inrlss\u00ab(\u00bb\u00ab    \u25a0\nThrough Publicity\n'. .WTOBWS RHUErE   -\nCanatflah'. Press-\"Business. Editor ,\n. Canadians,\" pfferi. p.uzzlijd' becau'stf\nAmericans.'khliw'.'so' flttle\" about\n[them..nDW.siiddenly find themselves\nIth^.objectpf considerable attehtion.\nA jarge .number\"' of'* AMerican-\n.newspapers,-and magazines' have,\nwithin recent mbhth's, given Canada\nIthe lull treatment.   .'.\nDuring the yeara of our obscurity\nIn the American mind, it soine-\ntimes seemed extraordinary ;fhat-\nAmericans paid so little attention tp\nthings Canadian, when similar\nevents or personalities from almost\nany. other country,\" ho tnittter. how\nminor, would-be regarded.'\nCanadians; living, in the.\"United\n{States, sometimes said: '\" ' \"'\"\u25a0\n\u2022'They tak.e;-us fOr granted. We\ndon't have revolutions. We don't\nmake, trouble.\" ','. .'.\nMAKEWiOWNsMINDfl\nThis writer, in 1047, trying to assess the matter-after a couple oj\nyeits in the-United States, wrote:\n\"Perhaps Canadians  should \u25a0 not\nbe unduly concerned, for, balancing\" the lack of knowledge is an al-\n,*5itWjS-0lts\u00aboUs; goodwill towards\n'-Canal.'..,-v-\"-'..?-*.;.   \u2022\/:.-..,,<    .,-\nB'Was this writer's vlew,^om\nI what He could observe, that Americans would make up their own\nminds as to when wB were a \"story\"\n\u2014and thatuntil that day. came we\n.would remain, to them, a. land of\nI snow,' Mounted Police and multiple\nbirths.-  \u25a0 '\"\u25a0 \u2022    :   ' \u25a0   \t\nIt came almost as a surprise to\n.many, when our economic development-suddenly became ar'.tory'' to\nAmericans.: '*' *\n(-ySLICITY FAVORABLE ...\n. The'recent publicity for Canada\ntin .the\" United States has been, for\nthe most pi-rt...'favorable. ....!.,.,\nAt the' same time we can take it\nthat as we come under closer cx_iit-\n[ihatfeil,'' there; will' be times, when\n1*4\" hjay: receive mote' criticism.\n'. .Tlje'' receht - aKentioh given us\nwoljldseem to be a jnatter- for.mod-\nlerate\"pleasure rather than for any\nexaggerated elation. Particularly,\nthi|: writer., thinks,., we .shouldn't\nlget_'--tob A'Chesty\", jbblit Oiir -new.\nZBtAtiWtt tht-tw^art; an extra-\n, onJinaR. -country- 4n\"-th'it no other\n!l4,OOOjO(IO pgeJJe.Have'.ever .had so\nmuch .we.silt!s..-usider' ts-eii* \"Control\nWith  all --t\"-. inns*,*-***,**'*.--   ---'---\nWoodworkers Fined\nI_ADYSMITir,:B.'C.,'Aug.> (CP)\n\u2014Nineteen members, of the International Woodworkers of America\n(CIO-CCI,) were fined $23 and\ncosts yesterday on each of, two\ncharges heard in Ladysmith police\ncourt\n\u2022: ,I-tey were convicted by Stipendiary Magistrate. G. A. Tisdale of\nintimidation, and watching and\nabetting -while on picket duty at\n-.Ladysmith Harbor during the re-\n\u25a0 cent \u00ab-<-_y I.W-4. strike.\nMaximum penalty on the charges\nof occurrei-ees during the strike\n.when thi coglttl Towing Co., Ltd.,\ntug GleefiiJ wi)s prevented from\nmovjrtg a bt50io termed \"hot\" by the\nALSO\nStOCK SUITS\not\n$15 SAVING\nLIMITED\nThe Manfr Stor*\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive 'Funeral Servtea*\nAMBULANCE SERVICH :\nSIS Kootenay St       Phona Ul\n110TH BIRTHDAY   .\nM0\u00ab--V1LL-,, Aug. 20 (CP) -\nRobwt ueynolds celebrated his\nilOtli birthday today. Although In\nfailing health and in hospital for the\nlilst four months, he will have t\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\not tho   \"\u2022'-.\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 148\nCAMPBELL, SHANKUNO\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n87\u00ab Baker 8t (\u00bbh6ni ^j-\nfijtoduaL 0spwdmmL\nGOLDEN SWEET CORN\nDirk de Jong's, Doi. _    m\nNEW POTATOES\nLocal \u201eV.   '..:, .\nOITAWA, Aug.-.J0 <CP),\u2014 l\u00bbe\nArmy today issued the following\ncasualty, list:\nKILLED IN ACTION\nMercler, Joseph Armand,. Ptj,;.1st\nBattalion, Royal 22nd Regiment;\nCatineau Mills,'Que.; Mr. Eugene\nMercier (brother, Moose Creek, Ont.\nBurgess, Thomas, L\/Cpl,; 1st Battalion, Royal 22nd Regiment; Mrs.\nAmy Burgess (mother), S033 Jacques\niHertel, Montreal.\nDIED OF WOUNDS\nOuellette, Joseph Napoleon Nor-\n.mand, -L\/Cpl.; .1st Battalion, Royal\n22nd Regiment;' Edm ind Ouellette\n[(father, 2350 Jblisjtfe, Montreal.\nWOUNDED.JN ACTION\nO'Donnell, Reginald, .<; e c o h d\nwound) 2nd Lieut.; 1st Battalion,\nRbya. 22hd* Regiment; Wm-. O'Donnell-* (fa;'l!W),.;.)r,4,.\"Cre.m_-ie St.,\n'Quebec. '.-.:\u25a0\u25a0. i.\n\u2022 Bates, Joseph ,Norihan>-Is\/Cpl.Mst\nBattalion, Ro\u00a3al Canadian Regiment; Cornwall, Ont; Mrs. Alice\n[Mary'..Bates twifej,\/\"l' ypres'Rpaij,\n'petawaiva Camp, P^tawaWa,' Ont.\nFlynn, Donald-Frjn^s, -Pte.; 1st\nBattalions   Royal   Canadian   Regiment; Mrs. Madeleine Flynn (wife)\nHamilton, Ont    -.,\nRobertson, William,  te.; 1st Bat\nJapan Orders\nAircraft from U.K.\n1. LONDON;-Aug. 20 (AP)'- Brit-\nainV.di} 'HSyiIl-i.d'Aircr__t' tpm-\npany, announced'today it had received 'att order fr^m Japan Air\nLines for two Comet.;Jet':'airliners\nand; seven other transport... planes,\nThe flnrt. Mid Bi.e total cost -sol\"%-\\\nrdet would .be about -.1,500,000.\nk.*s-_    ss -f'!v- \u2022 - \u25a0   \"le'r control,\nf\u2122-?^\"^ \u2022 -PfP^mm and re-\nsponsibiHtles;- and-thatour statute\n\u2022P* potential .Influence\" in* the\n\u25a0world,, ve.ifar beyond the' \"bare'-'fig-\nWtW.-ot.our population'. ---.v-.-*'\n\u2022.iSMa....ye;-j^e operating to'~i!-big\nleague.f)!ft-.gross.natural product.\nof -nore.than J21,000,0OO,\"O0O- is-\"a-Ve-1\nsounding figure: But =.the\"kroSs ha-\ntional. produet;of. pur* big heighW'\nIs something. Uke \"|3?0,000,OQO,ooO;,\n,,\u00a3\u00b0\u2122?!Mf?Joi\u00b0a tWibalit, val-\n,ued at \u00ab10,237 were manafecti_red\nl lh Canada to 1050. ' *^^,\"^Ba\nVEGETABLE MARROW\nLoc-l. Lb! ': ..:..\u201e. \u201e :..:.\u201e,.:\nFREESTONE PEACHES\nOkanagan. Basket \u2014 ,. '.\t\nROCHESTER PEACHES\nOkanagan Freestone. Crate \u2014\t\nLOCAL PLUMS\nGood eating. ..:.\u2014, -._ -\t\nLOCAL CUCUMBERS\n65'\n10 ,..49*\nZZ w\n11, \u2022 bskt\nlbs.\nPolio Continues to\nEmet Toll in West\nEDMONTON, AU-\\ .20 (CP)-The one at Bon'nyyille. 170 miles Northwestern Canada poliomyelitis toil east, .also were reported today. Ed-\nclimbed, to' W deaths and 803 cases mbntoh and district now has report*)\n.odst'y.with.reports of on* death in <sri .*> \u00bb-.\u2014\n$a\\oxWuj~ OsjfuVibnsznL\nCOFFEE\nChase and Sanborn's. Lb:..-':.'  :\u2014\nTENDER^UAFTEA\nLb.   ...: ...\u2014-.\n$n.as\n35'\n __,_ ss_s cnoxed off the.Iri    Robertson, William,  te.; 1st Bat;\nanian government's main source of talion.  Royal  Canadian Regiment;'\nrevenue.   Loflg Island, N.Y, Mrs. sfean Koster\nBritain's coolness to the Ameri* (sister), CedarhurstrNiY;\"'*:\".;  . I\ncan Idea, officials said, \u2022 stems .from . \\ '\u2022    -feg tr. \u25a0'  --   ,\na belief that to buy any oil would -        ,,',\u2022\u25a0.      \u2022*'\u2022*\u2022. '\u25a0'\" '.  .'\nundercut Britain's legal argument Thousands See\nthat the ofl already belongs to \u00abri* I\",   \u25a0 ,\u00b0, \u00a3\"!? j\ntain. Colorful Parade\nThe British cabinet I*.scheduled vinwrrittvirn' i'ii_ir__t irvt _\nto meet in London today with Prime wi.'T\u00abT\u00bb^S tiS-nS' \u00bb,L7.\nMinister Churchill to consider a re* J*0\" ,.than   WMgm*. ^S\u00b0BS\nply to an Invitation from the Iran* lin^Vapcouverstreeta.to watclv a      .... \u201e p.\u2122 0\nFan prime minister, Mohammed l01*'**' ?\"*<**'\u25a0 \u00ab. mWtary units, Man_.obg ral,e(1 that provlnce'i\nMossadegh, to resume oU negoUa- bandsM? float\u00bb ,bd<1-' \u2122 \u2122!,rk.t.ne number of casesto 210. British Col-\nHonk opening of the annual Pacific Na,- umbia im,\ntional'Exhibition. \u2022     1   -.     '\nSidewalks were Jammed along the\nentire rbiite..with, hundreds of Office\n'workers hanging out windows,\nThe weatherman favored exhibition officials; providing cloudless\nskies for the., procession, one of - the\nllonaea.-\" unil   **\"*\u25a0\u2022 -*\u25a0'--'-*     -  \u25a0\u25a0\ntions.\nMost U. S.-Policy-makers now\nhave decided that Mossadegh's regime, nationalist aB it is, represents\nthe West's only hope* of averting\nchaos. Further, they believe an emergency aid program ls essential to\nstabilize conditions, pay civil serv-lskles'for thi....... ,-,., >-,.\nII ants and lessen the threat of a com- longest and  most colorful  of the\n|l munlst-led upheaval. |u.N.E. history.\n-.\u2014..--....s. ss_ ueains ana _U3 cases\n1-day,with .reports of one death in\n^each of Alberta and Saskatchewan\n|'and 12 hew .cases in Manitoba and\njn AJberta.in the last 24 hours.\n,A week,.qgo 035 cases and 38\ndeaths had been 'reported. *'\n: A delayedt^^loiisptl^dmon-\n. ton's second polio 'death\u2014that of a\nseveis-yea.r,-old. boy**-raised Alberta's toll to, 17, Highest of the tour\nWestern provinces. Regina reported\nthe death of. a 14-year-old boy;\nbringing to 14 the number who have\ndied from the disease in Saskatchewan. ' * '\u2022'\u25a0\u2022  - \u25a0: * ' --'\nEight Jtave died In British Col\nunibia and six in Manitoba.\nSaskatchewan reported no new\ncase? today but-Its total bf 2S3 was\nstill the hlghifst irtrthe West Alber*\nta, with four pew case's in the. Lethbridge district ari^' three- aroun^\nEdmopton, has a' total of - 220.  '*\nThree new cases ln the.Winnipeg\narea and nine from other parts of\nManitoba   raised   that   province's\ned 22 cases.\nWinnipeg now -has 31 cases and\nita suburbs 32. The Southern Manitoba epidemic area has reported 103.\nand other areas 44. -.\nA week ago there were 175 cases\nin Alberta, 210 in Saskatchewan, 197\nin Manitoba and 83 ln British Columbia.   '\u25a0\u25a0.   ,'-\u25a0\"   '\u25a0\n\u2022 Calgary and district remained the\nhardest hit region with eight deaths\nand 113 cases. At,Lethbridge, three\nof the new cases were from the city\nand one from nearby Coaldale, the\nfirst from that town.. Twenty-two\ncases have bean treportcd : there\nsince the outbreak. -'.\"-.\u2022:\"\nTwo new .cues .at Eteooton and\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nmJE^\/\nwatch repairs\n1 yfars experience\n3N, 11.C\nKLIK\n12 oz. tin  -\nTurkey and Chicken Spread J\nSunjmerside    ***\nCORNFLAKES    - ?\nIfellogg's.    \u2014-i   ***\nMARGARINE\nGood Isuck. Lb   _ _.:_:,\nMARMALADE\nMalkin'S Best. 24 oz. jar  \t\nRITZ BISCUITS\n-; Christie^. Pkt.::...\u2014. '; ,..\u201e.._ \t\nTfaoi 0spcudmsht\nFRICASEEFOWL\nCut up ready for the pan. Lb.  \t\nVEAL PATTIES\nTasty. LJi. .'. .\".   .\".\u201e.-'_..\t\nBABY BEEF LIVER\nLt*.  \u201e \u201e-;.:.....,..:  *_.\nBONELESS PbT ROASTS     ~\nRolled. Lb. .\n...-___.\ntins\npkts.\n99*\n33*\n33*\n33*\n39*\n19*\n39*\n59*\n59*\n49*\nGROCERY\nPHONES 10-11\nH. A.' D.  GREENWOOD\n488 BAKER ST.\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"}]}}