{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0427477":{"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":"2023-03-02","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1954-07-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427477\/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":" juatemala Awaits\niommunist Purge\nHero's Welcome for Armas; 800 Reds\n-Arrested; Honduran Lawyer Executed\n,,        By PAUL SANCllE\n-GUATEMAIsA 'CI,J;X i (Reuters) t- Quatetoalans,; Who:\nKVe,.rebel Jeade^'CoL.Castillo Arnias a herb's1 welCQine\n^tl^rday i^pon hisysnijval here, tensely ..waited, today tot $'\u25a0\nbncentrated, drive to purge Comihunists in'this Central\nttferican;- republic.   ; '\nPROVINCIAL\nArmas arrived here aboard- a Uni-\nid. States plane from. neighboring\nan Salvador for the first time since\n{la rebellion brought ..about \u201ethe\niownfall of President Jacobo Aria, ''\u25a0'\"'\nAccompanying Armas \"was John\n'eurlfoy, U.S. ambassador to Guat-\n1 la, wh,o. acted, as mediator in\nla's'successful peace negotiations\ni-'SalvadoT \u25a0 With' Col. \u25a0'\u25a0 Elfego\n;on. Monzon, who setup a junta\nst week to' succeed Arbenz,- and\nher junta leaders also were\nioard the plane. A five-mail junta\nill rule the country under the arm-\nHe;..       ;.  '':     ?'?s\nMore than 800 Communist sup;\nijrters of Arbenz's government\niy\u00ab been arrested; by the new rente and a- more intens(ve ant!\nImmiinlst drive is expected to fol-\nW Armas' arrival.-\nJAWYER 8H0T\nThe junta disclosed Saturday that\n;firihg squad had executed Hon-\niran lawyer Romula Reyes Floras,\nho had been a judge in the Red-\nlppoi-ted Arbenz regime.\nSpokesmensfor the junta blamed\nByes Flores for the assassination\nist:'year of four opponents of the\nommunists. He was shot ln the\n\u2022ison yard here Friday.\nThe biggest crowd ever seen at\ne airport was on hand to greet\nrmas. City streets were lined with\nowds shouting \"Viva Castillo Ar-\nas\" as he drove to the national\n-ace.1 \u2022    . -    -   -\nSoldiers were unable to hold the\nowds back In many places. Some\nj the men who fought with'Armas\n. 0d along side the regular troops,\netching for trouble. Some known\nimmunists were reported to be\nabng the crowds.' \\\nArmas had to enter the palace by.\nback door to avoid being buffeted\nid delayed by the wildly cheering\nuatemalans. He delivered a short\neech from a palace balcony.\nipiCAl. 8UPPLIE8\nIn Washington, Harold E. Stassen,\nreign operations administrator,\ninounced Suodiiy'a $25,0OQ; ship -\nent of medical and pharmaceutical\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll|l!!lllllll!lllll\nMaladjusted? Good\n;   LONDON, (Reuters)-^A med.\n' ic?l''. official Friday criticised -\npsychiatrists for trying to make\npeqple normal..:\ny.'.t   Is   maladjustment   that\nmakes the world go round,\" he\n-.jaidif' \u25a0'\u25a0:','\n', 'l5r.. JohnD, Ke'rshavr, medi-.\n. cai Officer with the Essex county council, told a national -con-':\nfererice; for maternal and child-\nwelfare, here; that too much effort was .being irade to turn\npeople into sheep,\n, ,' \"It\/is the cranks, the people\nwho.-do not quite fit and the\n- people who are individuals who\nget things done and make for\nprogress, Moderate maladjustments with fear and caution is\na good thing,\" ho said,\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nsupplies la being flown from New\nYork'to Guatemala City for use if\nneeded \"to' alleviate 'sickness- and\ndistress\" among the Guatemalans.\nll|P\n-__\u25a0\n'^S*\nWEATHER FORECAST\n-    Kootenay:   Variable   cloudiness:\nwith isolated thunderahowers in the,\nafternoon. Continuing warm. Warm'\nnights. Low-high at Cranbrook and .\nCrescent Valley 45 and 85\nMELSON, fe. C\u201e CANADA-MONDAY MORNQia JULYS, 1954\nNo. 62\nSi^illed in French Rail Collisiort\nToll Up fo 54\nBy The Canadian Press\nAt least aS4 Canadians have been\nkilled in accidents since the Dominion Day holiday began. The toll\nincludes the; death of five persons\nin a two-car collision in Alberta.\nOntario leads the list with 20\nfatalities. Thirteen are dead in\nQuebec, six in British Columbia\nand six in Alberta, four in Manitoba, two in Nova Scotia and one\neach in Saskatchewan,' New Sruns-\nwick and Newfoundland, a Canadian Press compilation showed.\nNineteen persons have, died; in\nhighways accidents between 6 p.m.\nWednesday' and early Sunday\nnight, 16 have been drowned, five\nburned to death, three crushed jtd\ndeath, one man shot himself, one\ni\u00ab8f?*l\u00ab-tWciUlW^_nd< rrfne-'j__3\nfrom miscellaneous causes,\nSweeping Reforms\nAnnounced for Kenya\nNAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters) -\nenya's reconstituted government\nday announced a policy of sweep-\ng racial, economic, and adminis-\nitive reforms to rebuild the Bri-\ni- colony from, the disasters of\nau Mau terrorism.\nA policy statement from the\nwly-formed Council of Ministers\nId down the'multi-racial group's\nahs for creating a united nation\n4m the hodge-podge of 8,500,000\niicans, 90,000 Indians, 30,000\niropean whites and 24,000 Arabs\nio make up Kenya's population!\njhe council stressed that Kenya's\nxhausted financial reserves\"\nitlld not stand the strain of the\nm program without universal coloration, rapi-economic progress\nid outside financial aid, presum-\nily from Britain.\nTQday's statement was the first\ntailed policy declaration of 'the\nUncil, whose creation was pro-\nBed last March to meet the grow-\nstralns of Kenya's old-style co-\nnial administraiton.\nNow the chief governing body\nunder governor Sir Evelyn Baring,\nthe 16-man council includes two\nAsians and one African \u2014 the, first\nnon-European to hold ministerial\nposts in Kenya's government.\nEXPAND 8ELF RULE\nThe\" statemettt pledged the government to, appoint a committee,\nincluding Africans, as soon as possible ib study methods of choosing\nAfrican members for the colony's\nlegislative couhcil.\nIt also outlined educational campaigns to school Africans in self-\ngovernment; expand technical\ntraining programs; and win back\nand rehabilitate Mau Mau adherents! ,\nThe Kenya police force, accused\nof brutality and corruption by'a\nBritish parliamentary delegation\nlast February, is to be revamped\nThe council's statement came on\nthe,heels of new Mau Mau out;\nbreaks in Nairobi. Police reported\nthat Mau Mau gunmen killed two\npatrolling home guards and an\nAsian restaurant owner in two separate incidents Saturday.\nFour-year-old Naokl Spllman was a little shy when hla new\nlather greeted him at Seattle as he'arrived on a Navy ^transport'\nrom Japan. Naokl. own father was an American soldier who died\nn Korea. Sot John 8pllman, (left) now of.-Ft- KnoX, Ky., liter\ntiarried Naoltl's Japanese mother and adopted; Naokl, who soon lost\nlis shyness aa the two began-to get acquainted.\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\nfiVtDIElH\nHEAD-ON CRASH\nImmigrant Family y\n' Wiped 6$ ;\nExcept Fatlier\nEDMONTON (C-.^ye. persons\nlost their lives fa a\"head-on' 'collision between two cars Saturday,\nin broad daylight, on a clea\/\nstretch of road on the ^dnumton*\nCalgary highway Bear Nisku, 16\nmiles south of here.  ,\nDead are: Mrs. Jan Wilhelm\n(Mientje) Grijzen,' her six-year-old\nson . Hendrlk and three-year-old\ndaughter Matilda; Herman A. Wler-\ninga of Edmonton and Rasmus A.\nSorenson of Wetasklwln, Alta.\nJan Wilhelm Grijze-n suffered\nsevere hip Injuries and shock. His\ncondition in an Edmonton hospital\nwas described Sunday as \"good,\"\nindicating he is expected to recover.\nPolice said Wieringo was driving\nthe Grijzen family, newly-arrived\nimmigrants from Holland, to jobs\non a forpi at Wetasklwln, 40 miles\nsouth of Edmonton. Sorenson was\nthe sole occupant of the northbound other car.\nSorenson, Wlerlnga and Hendrik\nGrijzen were killed in the crash.\nMr;. Grijzen and Matilda died\nlater in on Edmonton hospital.\nAn inquest opened in Edmonton\nSaturday night but was'-adjourned\nIndefinitely until the injured man\nIs well enough* to give eviderfce.\nPolice said the cause has not\nbeen definitely established ahd it\nmay never be although charts and\nphotographs made by RCMP investigators might indicate something.   .\n:[~tyAN<zpyy^.(cpy\u2014 Twif\nwidely - separated searches Have\nended in British Columbia \u2014 one\nin tragedy\nThe body of four-yOar-old fiarry\nBeckers of Agassiz was found\nSaturday in a slough about 200\nyardS from his back, yard. He disappeared Friday night from the\nfarm home about 00 miles east.of\nhere.      '\u2022\u25a0'_\"\u25a0\nAt Kamloops, about 220 miles\nnortheast of Vancouver, the hunt,\nfor Kenneth F. Crosby, 18, ended\nwhen he was seen wanderihg two\nmiles north of Tranquille. He was\n.without - shoes arid suffering from\nexposure, bruised feet and sprained\nankle, - >  ,y    . .....\nRescuers had to build a bridge\nacross a creek to. get to him, then\nwinch him u pa steep bank. He\nwas later pronounced ln \"good\"\ncondition in hospital. _\nThe Crosby youth disappeared on\nDominion Day while returning\nfrom a fishlngHrlp.\nBarry Beckers, son of Mr. and\nMrs. M. Beckers, was first sought\nwhen his dog returned home alone.\nHis body .was located by. a- teen-\naged boy, one of 7& .searchers.\n14TH TRAFFIC DEATH   *\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Vancouver's 1954 traffic toll rose to. 14\nSunday with the death in hospital\nof Johann Ami HalldOrson. The\n24-year-old Vancouver man died\nabout 36 hours after his automobile\nrolled over following S. two-car\ncollision here early Saturday.' y\nA TRACTOR DRIVER and a clerk ohoek\nrecord of work done on the previous shift on a new\nstate farm' set up In the Chkalov region of Riltila, .\naccording to the caption supplied with this pi\nIssued by Sovfoto, a New York agency dlstrlk\n. plotui.\u00ab from Ruiila.\u2014(AP wlrephoto.)\nleture\nork agency distributing\nFrench Leave TW\nRed Delta iiiSHSifii^tt\nARMISTICE TALKS\n; :\u25a0   By,C0.RU?Y 8MttH\nTRUNC. GIA, Indo-Chfaa. (Reuters) \u2014 High-ranking French Union officers Sunday crossed Into\nVietminh rebel territory here to\nopen on-the-spot armistice talks\namid trophies of Communist victory. :\"'\nFive French and three .Viet {Namese1 officers met five Vietminh officers in a bamboo hut for the first\nround of tho Southeast Asian Pan-\nmunjom.\" ..-''*', < \u25a0 \u25a0:>\u25a0:)\u25a0\n.,':&\u2022 'series.bf Frepcji 'cwtoesslons\nmarked - tftb delayed -U\n.\u00ab_-' _._Y'___ _\u25a0_-_\u2014__-_'_\u25a0-_' \u2022____\u2014\n'At \"repr^&fatiyo\u00bb-;*om'; (P^y^RS-\nfag high- commands here. Most, im-\n\u25a0portent of these ;wasthe faotthat\nTrung Gia, though surrounded by'a\nneutralized zone, is two miles inside Vietminh lines Instead of in\nno-man's land as first reported.\nCourteous Vietminh .officers rub\nbed in the fact by lining up three\nAmerican-built jeeps and two American trucks outside the compound\nwhere. the talks' took place. Each\nvehicle bore the painted Inscription, \"captured at Dien Bien Phu.'\nBUDAPEST. (AP)-Running well\noff his usual form, Emil Zatopek,\nthe noted Czech distance runner,\nbarely managed to hold on for a\nvictory in a 5,000-metre run Sunday after suffering his first defeat\nof the season in a 10,000-metre run\nSaturday. :   <-\nThe Olympic champion . was\nclacked in 14 minutes, 18.2 seconds,\njust two-tenths of a second ahead\nof Hungary's Mlklos Szabo, fa a\ntwo-day,international athletic meet\nSaturday another Hungarian, Josef Kdvacs, outran Zatopek with-\n29;0B clocking In 10,000 metres\u2014\nalmost 15 seconds better than the\nCzech's best performance for the\ndistance, ; \u2022'\u25a0''';[.:\n_atopek, who on June Iran .10,-\n000 metres fa 28:54*.2 til better his\nown world record by 1,14 seconds,\nfinished to 28:09.8 Saturday.-,   .   -\nCalgary Bulging With\nStampede Visitors\nCAtGARY (CP) - Marching\nmusicians.0127 bands from:Canada\nand the United States wUl trumpet\na welcome today to. thousands of\ntourists from all over the globe here\nto see and celebrate western Canada's biggest,' wildest show\u2014 the\nCalgary Stampede, .'\u25a0\u25a0;,..,\nThis gaily-decorated city is bulging its boundaries with visitors.\nOfficials expect the Stampede attendance record ib be shattered\nagain as it Has been every year since\nthe event began- In 1912, apart frofii\na lean spell to the'\"hifagry.thlrties.\"\nLast year's attendance at the combined rodeo, Industrial and agricultural exhibitions was 451,837. In 1022\nwhen records were first officially\nkept, lt was 97,731. This year, it may\nbe as high as 475,000 and Calgarlans\nare looking to the day when a cool\nhalf-million persons will\nthrough- the turnstiles.\n: The-lve-dayi Stampede opens today with a para'de through the\nstreets qf downtown Calgary.\nA total, of 27 bands, spaced at 75-\nfoot- intervals, will .provide the\nrhythmic' beat tor the parading\nMounties, flag-bearers, members of\n\u25a0the services, cowboys and cowgirls,\nIndian braves, and thoir squaws,\nchuckwagons, community, sections,\nsocial and recreational exhibits.\nINDIAN QllRL; 18 QUEEN\n: Smiling down on. her \"subjects\"\nwill be a real-life princess who is\nqueen for a week. She is Evelyn\nEaglespeaker, or Princess Wapiti, of\nthe Blood tribe, the first Indian\ngirl' to be crowned Stampede queen.\nHer \"coronation\" will: take place\nTuesday,. ,'      ::'  . \";\u25a0,;\nPremier Manning of Alberto bf-\nfioially opened the show Sunday.\nnight at tho grandstand in the ex-\nclick jhlbltion grounds, scene during the\nweek of traditional rodeo events.\nBy  JOHN   RODERICK;\nSAIGON, Irido-Chiha '-'(AP. \u2014\nFrench Union, forces, under heivy\nattack' by... three Commimlst-led\nVietminh battalions, withdrew Saturday front the key communications\ncentre of: Phu Ly.      \u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0'-.'\\ y\n1_he action put the entire soiitheVn\nthird of the Red River delta\u20142000\nsquare miles of<rich rlceland,and\n2,500,000 Viet Namese, most of Jthem\nRoman, Catholics\u2014urider rebel control. '.' \u2022*\ni Three battalions of. Vietminh rebels swept down from adjacent\nlimestone hills Saturday in an attack .upon cojumns of-French Union trbbps' moving \"up the road to\nHanoi. The French Said they,Inflict-\nediheavylosses brith* rebeis-efbre\n\u25a0iBreaWftgioff.:tb$ \u2022-.*-. ounter,\n* -iaiYVle'tnll'i-li 'rebel' radto\nclaimed Sunday the entire province\nOf-Haifaim in theY southern delta\nhas been captured following a savage battle with withdrawing French\nUnlojij; forces- at Phu Ly* It said the\nretreating - French Union troops\nwere (i intercepted, and suffered\n\"heavy casualties.\"      ;\nA Reuters new;.agency report\nsaid French officers fa: Hanoi now\nfear Gen, Vo Nguyen Clap's Viet-\nmlnh.forces; will, hurl :a major^assault on Hanoi before the regrouped\nFrench forces\\ get set!-\nU.S. ADAMANT\n'By-JOrtN' M. HIGHTOWER\nWASHINGTON (A^J-PiJesldent\nEisenhower arid State'\u25a0\u25a0 Secretary\nDulles told British leaders'at their\nriieeting this week that the \"United\nStates will do everything within Its\npower to.block Red'China'sbld for\nmembership in the United Nations.\nPrime- Minister -ehuri&ill\" aid\nForeign Secretary Eden iridlcated\nBritain *ould do what it cati to avert a showdown onthe Red China\nproblem this year.'But they warned\nthere may be very strong'allied and\nhome front political pressures on\nthe goyernme-'t to support the Red\nhid .ft'ctiyety;,._ iJ ..y ...,. \"1,\u201e\n+Vft'-C-j'ft'i!!htt^^bUd^M\u00abiRjfe''-\nWilliam Knowland said last week'\nhe will resign his ' position arid\nfight for American withdrawal from\nthe UNflf RedvChfaa>;ie adrhltted.\nDemocratic leader Lyndon Johnpon\nin.' a follow:up speech generally\nsupported Knowland's opposition.\nKnowland said Saturday: he believes .Congress. ,is .ready .'to, wrlfjl\nleglsiaUon .providing ;that,'.ir', R^d\nChina gets a UN seat, the United\nStates shall automatically with:'\ndraw from the international organization, and cease tp help finance It.\nSailor Stabbed in\n^Mnl WoaA Cafe\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A - young\nUnited States sailor was stabbed in\na skidroad c\"afe brawl herb early\nSunday, '     '. V ' \u2022  \"-.\nPolice identified the Injured man\njis Richard' Leon Miller, stationed\nat Whidijy. island, Wash. He suffered stab wounds. In the back and;\nhead cuts. His asSattanf has no.t\nbeen captured,\nADMITS SLAYING CHILD\nSAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP. '-'A\n31-year-old airmail admitted Sunday the brutal rape-murder of pret-\nhy, blonde three-yearrOld Chere\nJoe Horton iri an old gravel pit;\nSaturday night ;,Y.:\" \u25a0' -\nThe tot hod been abducted from\nher parents' car parked to front of\na cafe near Lackland air force base.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n'Ritljnietic's Easier\n\u25a0 ' NEW. .YORKy(A1>)i.r- Arithmetic is much easier these\ndays \u2014 or so says R. L. Morton,\nprofessor dl education at Ohio\n.\"University.      ,-,..  .i,,,.\/'.:.Y.\nHere, for example^yhe told\nmathematics teachers attending\n'. the aithl. al convention, of the\nNational Education Association,\nis the theory on which pupils\n'., used to be taught to ISubtract\n' 28from:48:;        'y'%:' .'\u25a0'\u25a0 \u2022\n\"Subtract 8 from 18 |fter the\ni 3 has been increased to 13 by\n. aaaing io.\"..'.,     : 1 .\n: Trouble with this, said Mor-\n' ton, is that \"the source (if the 10\n' is not apparent, arid thb matter\nseems to be beyond the grasp ot\n. i eight and nine-yqor-olds. Not\nbeyond our grasp, though \u2014 eh,\n..dadf'-:''   . \u25a0.'\u25a0.\u2022;- y-'gyyy\n\"Forty-three may be thought\nof as three 10s ond thirteen )s\nas well as four 10s and three ia,:\nIhen the subtraction ' or removal of eight ii from thirteen\n: le and of, two 10s from tho\nremaining three 10s Is not diffl-\noult to understand\"     [\nlllllllllllllllimilUHIIIIIHIIIIIIIlillllllli\nMile-a-Minute Autorail y\nCrashes Into Freight\nCHATEAUBOURG, France (A__J) \u2022-.\u2014' A ftiur-car autoi'\nMil train travelling a.hiile-a-minute collided lieadon Saturi\n(Jay night:w_tb_ an oncoming#eig^t.at the outsldrte-of tfeil;\nyillagey in goiithern \u25a0 France. PoUce said an; i_experierice4;\niswitchmali -who threw the wrongVleVer caused the wttsclfc i\nwhich cl^irijfed. the liyes.of at lejst 35 men, wbmen i^iid diil*'\n^reh settin^fout for aJioliday.',\nVANCOUVKR (CP) - Defence\nMlnisteij Campney said fa an fater-\nview Saturday ihat Canada's vast\ndefence program will be reviewed\n\u25a0to seek ecbnofnles.'.''.'\n'\u25a0Every dollar is a dollar arid it is\nalso someone's' tax dollar,\" he said.\nMr. Campney, appointed to the\ndefence post Thursday, was interviewed by' Ross Munro, assistant\npublisher of th_ Varicouyer Province, who talked to'the minister via\nlong-distance telephone' to Ottawa.\nMr. Campney was .also quoted as\nsaying he intends to pursue.energet-\nically the re-'organization of the reserve army,' arid'plans to give careful consideration to all problems of\nwest coast - air defelice.\" \\ - ' - . ;\n\"The chief rieed now In' Our- defence program is to review .carefully all'our structure of defehcb,\nwhich has been built up in recent\nyears tinder' such great pressure,\"\nsaid Mr. Cafapney, \u25a0\u25a0'\/\u2022 ;-,   ' \"'\n\u2022\u25a0Willie; fae defence eim_rgehcy.-l_as\nnot ended land indeed will probably\nbe with us for a long time, we now\nare in a position fa a business-like\nmanner.*;' ,:'r\"!iv -.' '\u2022\u2022 ,'\"'\u25a0\". \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*:!'\u25a0\u25a0 '\nThe accident was one in a series,\nfor public transportation facilities\nin Europe hud .elsewhere during the\nweekend. At! Tetuan, capital of\nSpanlshTilOr^cco, a bus went-.ovef\na cliff uid up;ti) 30 Moslem passengers were killed. Six men were killed when a. bus overturned near\nValencia, Venezuela. At Plnerlo,\nItaly, a train collision injured-: 11\npersons. A similar mishap at Lei-\nboch near Graz,-Austria, Injured 17\n\u25a0passengers.' ..    ; ':.\nThe toll to the French wreck may\ngo higher. '    '~*S -7   T  ,   ,\nSome 400 rescue workers were\nstill picking bodied from the tangled\nwreckage 24.hours after the crash.\nTwenty-seven, persons were severely Injured and were being kept In\nnearby hospitals. \"\nPolice said the switchman had\nbeen on the job only two weeks and\ndidn't know, how to operate the\nswitches well enough; : >-:\u25a0.\nThe switchman, 29-year-old Andre\nMontelier.'has been arrested. Police\nSaid rib charge has yet been lodged\nagainst-him.   \" .\nThe four-oar autorail\u2014two mot;\norears and twotrailera\u2014was travelling from Lyon to' Nlmes when\nIt met the big freight locomotive.\nThe locomotive picked up.the mo\ntorcar and tossed It to the side of\nthe right-of-way.\n- The see,oM, ear skidded Up the'\nnosV of the locomotive. The third\n. ripped off part of the rear end\nof the second ear ind then shot\nright ever the top of It.\n. The fourth car was not damaged,\nand 28 youngsters in it, all bound\nfor^a ivaiktfoBj-'^awp ..'faysbu^ern\nFrandei- .soaped-severo-\u00bblr!JU--eer \"\nWe freight wai goiiig\/bnly 25\nmiles an hour at the time of the\ncollision, railroad officjttls said.\nMayor Courtis of (3iateaubourg\nsaid he-was working In his vineyard\nonly, BOO feet from, tho'Jail-Urie.\n. \\ \"Aj11 do every jnight, I watched\nthefSlutorail jass' by .my vineyard\nand then I heard a tremendous\n.crash.':.\".':-'\nHURLED INTO AIR\n't saw thecars hurled Into the\nair. jl fliilckly called the authorities.\nMy son arid a servant and I dragged\na-^ladder .to the'jplaberand we helped\nfree the suryiyorB from U_\u00a3,-first\ncar.'*....     -:' \u25a0-\";\nFrom miles aroutid, men and wo\nmen pitched Into fae rescue wprlt!.\nSoldiers, firefighters and policemen\nworked, side by, side with dobtarsi\nnurses, civilians and railroad' men.\nA big railroad crane i><as called\ndown from Lyon to lift the mass\nof Wreckage and aid rescue workers,\nCLAIM S-EING\nABOMINABLE SNOWMAN\nNEW-DELHI (AP) - Reports\nfroth Katmandu'said Sunday that a\nmember of the New Zealahd Himalayan, expedition eWimed- to have\nSighted the Abominable Snowman,\nthe elusive hairy giant that supposedly roams the upper reaches'pf\nthe Himalayas..:, y\nThe snowman story cariie out as\nfour members .of, the* New Zealand\nteam rejoined Sir Edmund Hillary\nat Katmandu, after a 20-day; trek\nfrom the Bai-uri valley.\n-The New Zealanders had no time\nto deviate, froth their schedule and\nchase the Snowman, the Katmandu\nreport'said,\nBill! He Doesn't\nWantqWife!.\".\",    y\n; CORiC, Ireland \u2022(Reuter\u00bb)->rbhn;\nhy Coiighlih, '33, 'doesn't want o\nwife, bue unless he gets one by Nov,\n,12 ^ell hi. out a farm and nearly\ni.?,000.\nHis undo, Thomas Coughlln, a\nchildless widower who died: last\nNov. 12. left, him the farm'and\nmoney on condition that he; find-\nhimself a wife within a year,\nOtherwise.the. money will go to\nbharlty. , '\u25a0-     <\nSince then, relatives ond friends,\neager to see that Johnny doesn't\nlose' his Inheritance, have rallied\nround. They have introduced him\nto almost every comely lass ln\nthe county of Cork. ,\nBut handsome, shy Johnny just\nsays, over and over again \"I don't\nwantawlfe.\"\nHOPES WANE FOR\nLintE DIANE    i;\nSearch for>L6st. v !;\nEdmohtOn Tot. \\ ^'\nto.B? Abahdoried \u25a0\nEDMONTON (CP), \u2014 Tho search.'\nfor 2%-year-old Diane Mason, missi-:\ning from her Edmonton home since\nWednesday, was scheduled to be\ncalled off officially early today unless some tangible trace of the little\nadopted girl. is found.'\"-..\nThe hunt went into its fifth night,\nSunday night with, little hope left:\nbf finding the blonde child olive.\nSince the search started Wed_eS.V\nday night, almost all the area of\ntHe,:..clty and.Its;:suburbs has-been\ncovered by ifoiunieers, at times\nnumbering 10,000. persons by helir\ncopters arid trained search dogs! -;\n' 9.n? of the last major, :operatloij|(.\nwas, a sweep -Sunday by privately^\nowned motor boats down the North\nSaskatchewan, river, from Edmdri?\nton's downtown area ,to -the.'.Fort\nSaskatchewan bridge, 15 miles\naway. \u25a0 \":\" .'-..,-...'.'.\". .':,f., ; .,*\nCops Richest Purse\n. DURBAN (Reuters)\u2014A ' 25-tq-t\noutsider, C'Est Si Bon, Sunday woo1\nthe \u00a311,800 Durban July^Handicap,,\nSouth Africa's richest race, over _\ndistance of .one1 mile 2 - furlongs,\ni^ie threo'y'W old colt finished\n'i:\u00bb^3ei^#4_i\u00abk^^^'^Tfe^gS\u00bbv\nRadhngtbh, ruhn&up for the, last\ntwo years, was third,,,      ,   \u25a0\nBURNS TO DEATH\nVANCOUVER [(\u00a3P)-rJohn Kadlri;\n61-year-old municipal; employee; iri''\nsuburban Burnaby,; was burnedi to'\ndeath ?arly-Sunday;when fire ;des-\ntToyed a home he: was visiting, t.\nROUGHY, A 8EAI_ fished out\nof Alaskan waters n month ago,\nIs fed by a long rubber tube while\nhis companions Toughy, looks,\nanxiously on, fearful there won't:\nbe any left'far him. The two peals.,\nare friendly, shy. Inmates bf the\nBronx,' N.Y., zoo now ahd the\nOnly trouble they give their keepers lo their reluctance to. take\nnourishment unless It Is given to\nthem by this method, -t Central \u2022\nPress Canadian.\nIii This Corner \u2666 v \u2666\nCOPENHAGEN :(CP)\u2014American automobile magnate Henry Fort\nII took ooelbok atiRusslah oarsbn display at a trade and industrial\nexhibition here arid.aald he was \"not Impreised.\" .\u201e,.   t\u201e.-\n. \"Those oars are like the ones,we built 10 or 12 years ago,\" he told\n\u00ab reporter. \"The Russians apparently can not build nwcars.\"        .\nFord conceded, however, that he couldnlt judge-'Juat \"from a short\nlook\" how the 8ovlet cars perform. \u25a0\u25a0-.\nApparently the Russians weren't much Impressed by Ford, either.\nWhen a reporter informed one of the Soviet technicians at the\n\u2022how that Henry Ford was present, the technician replied through ^>\n\" \"TO.'FordT VVl|o It thatf\", -. \\\nARRAS, Franco (AP) i\u2014' Andre Pollaerb a small town butcher, i\nFriday won the title of.\"Garg^ntau of, 1954.\" A 12-egg .omelet provided\nthe margin .of victory,      .- '\u25a0:,;.,y \"_t: __'\u201e_.   \u2122.\n:, _?ollaert:and\u00abGustave Porion, a cool miner, were the f_.allsts.The\ntwo sat down together and polished off soup, a dish of mixed hb^\n- d'ouevres, a flock of chicken pieB, a chicken with peas, a duck gal*\nnished with cauliflower, a,steak-with green beans, nam and salad,\ncheese, three kinds of tart and a consignment of petit-fours all washed\ndown by appropriate wines.: -       -   -        j    \u25a0     \u25a0\u2022.->\u25a0;.'\nWith honors even at-thiB point, they started over again on ttje\nsame menu. An hour later the second meal was over but the tie was\nunbroken. ;The 12-egg omelet was produced. Pollaert went at It man,-\nftilly. but Porion excused-himself.' . \\ 'i\nBERLIN (Reuters) \u2014 A hit-and-run baby carriage pushed by a\nwoman knocked down a middle-aged man, breaking his leg, and\nvanished at highspeed, police reported.\nfeRtST, France (AP) \u2014 The new 8000-tOn French anti-aircraft\ncruiser De Grasse began sinking 'last during her.first floatabillty test.\nti\u00bbe French navy.ministry said Tuesday. '   ,     ;;\nA quick look around showed someone had forgotten to close a\nseacock.     \u2022       '    \u25a0     . :i \";,\n ^m^f^^wmwf\nWmtW^W^W^W\u00ae\nrfio\nfr-NSLSQN fiXrttV NIWS, MONDAY, JUIYS; 1\u00ab|4\nTONIGHT THRU WEDNESDAY. Complete Shows 7i0p-9:OQ\nM ,:..:.;'.;V':- v\/;\u201e:' .        '\u25a0' ' :W?:\nSEN.\nKEFAUVER\n\u25a0 \u25a0han . fifi* rft*r_iD__i_i_ht\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0ilia a inn wiiejjswvwjd\nfeonestly *nd Kearate^ thoan\nfor the flnt tlna Ut REAL\ncause ef OROANIZED CRIHE.\n\u25a0tACKEIEEI-NO *a\u00ab _WGSTE\u00bb\n||U l_ ___\u25a0_. __.____. *if- * -\nCH tn Vm wrofcini wcomn\nsjPICniREIupWUDMP\n\"THE CAPTIVE CfTT#^nHNB)RSYraE\u00abj-gi-ura.---.--_.,.\u00bb\n*\u2022*\u00bb\u00bb ___.sM\u00bb\u00ablss>>S|ll;->\u00absss\u00absirW\u00ablllNll\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb-*sMllltra**\u00ab\u2122\na-atiapntlss^w \u25a0_\u00bb.\u00ab, _.._._ is mummmmm \u25a0 s.\n\u25a0 -?^ieiae^asie<ei)ia,i\u00abe(*teeiiehiB'ailipincB,|.i(sw(i\u00bbfcMisiB\n;\u00bb\u00absill<lito\u00ab\u00bbsi s I s,i      ii       i i.i   -\u2014\u2014_s\nIXTRASPHClAL ATTRACTION - \u25a0 '\n''The Marciano vs Charlos Fight Pictures\"\nSEE THIS AMAZING FIGHT\nSTARLIGHT Drive-ln\nTONIGHT and TUESDAY\nshows 9* anp m m.\n_.._!__: \u25a0   '\u25a0      \"   '\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\u2022\n.HELEN WESTCOTT- CRAIG STEVENS \u2022 REGINALD DENNY\"\n.    h_ilia^U_r-ta#(l|lE_3al-._W-r*ai|-\u00bbi-BKI\n10 MILES j_&JT OF NELSON V\nREX\nCRANBROOK\nMONDAV and TU-SDAY -\n'WVERlSTREET''   \u25a0\n> \u2022'.,-        (ADULT)    :       V;\nJohn Payne . Evelyn Keyee\n|-   Show Starts at Sundown '\nWAYNE\nKIMBERLEY\nMonday \u2022 Tuesday \u2014 July B.6\n\"WOMAN THEY ALMOST\n( \u201e;.fcYNCHED'< (AduM\nJ. Lund \u2022 Brian Donlevy\nShow Starts at Sundown\nm\netk.Shtve.,4*\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 <:   Wed\u2122    '..,'.\nTHE HEART OF CAST-EGAR\nI*- \u25a0 SHB \"\u25a0'   \u25a0-?-\u2022'\nj CIidSED\nj       Dua Te High Water\n\\ WATCH FOR\nI       RE-OPENING DATE\nIThe Weather\nNelson\n(Saturday.\n__en',lc!(in_..;;,\nVincou-. cr\n.S,\"ok\u00ab,e\n*\t\n45 89.5    -\n46 78      -\n48 70    _ -\n51 70    , \u2022-'\n5' 01   ' -\u25a0\nAUTO-VUE\n!    y    DRIVE-IN      :\\\n;'\u25a0['      TRAI_,,B.C.--    \u25a0\u25a0\n\"MISSISSIPPI GAMBLER\"\nTyrone Power \u2022 Ripen Laurie\n\"\u25a0\u2022 Julie Adam's\nShow Starta at 9;iS p.m.\nLoggers Given\nDamages lor\nBreach of Contract\nLogging contractors John J. Dou-\nblnln ind Peter Kanlgan won\ndamages lor breach of a logging\ncontract from a Trail Lumber Company, In Supreme Court here\nSaturday. Damages will ha ascertained by Court Registrar \\IV J\nSturgeon,\nMr. Justice J. V. Clyne ruled the\nplaintiff had sufficiently filled tl)*\nagreement by delivering 12 to; 18-\nfoot logs, and therefore ' the con-!\ntract wai wrongly repudiated August 15, 1058 by Laiareff and Company. Ho heard first evidence- on\nthe; proceedings at Ho.Bland two\nmonthi; ago and final evidence hero\nFriday and Saturday morning.\nPlaintiff was liking $1733.31\nspecial damages and genoral\ndamage*.\nPlaintiff, Doubinln and Kanlgan,\nheard' in RoBsland, said the contract itlpulated only merchantable\ntimber 12 to 18 foet was to be supplied and thoy had supplied It.\nThey aaid they hid not seen a letter\nwhich had been written the same\nday as an addition.to the contract\nstipulating IB and 90 foot logs were\nrequired.\nDefendant William William Lazareff said the letter had been\nwritten Just after the- contract.\nApril 8, 1993 and that, the plaintiff\nhad argued to supply the 18 and 20\nfoot timber.\nThe plaintiff, for four and-a-half\nmonths, had filled the contract wltb\ntimber from Nine Mile Creek near\nthe Pend d'Orellle.\nLumber company operator William William Luareft ol Trail told\nthe Court he had broken his contract with John. J. Doubinln and\nPeter Kanigan because they had\ntailed to supply 16 to 20-foot logs\nas stipulated fa an addition to their\ncontract.\nLazareff told the court the length\nof the logs actually had not been\nstipulated in th* contract April 8,\n1953 but had been added the same\nday ta a letter which Doubinln and\nKanlgan had agreed to follow.\nLazareff'i ion, John William Lazareff, laid the company waa well\nstocked with logi up to 14'feet and\nneeded 18 to 20 foot lengths.\nAnother witness for the defence,\nKick S. Zeytsoff said- that after\nreceiving a letter fa mid-June from\nWilliam Lazareff to get longer\nlogs, he had gone to Doubinln explaining \"these are the kind of\nlogs we want If you dont cut them\nyou will have to close down.\"\nOther witnesses heard for the\ndefence were Oeorge K. fofflnow,\nemployee of Lazareff, and Andrew\nKelson o. Fruitvale, manager and\npresident of Kelson Lumber Company Limited.\nNO ORDERS\nMichael M. Tom-fa sealer for\nDoubinln said Friday he had .received no order* to supply 18 to 20\nfoot lengths. Average length of the\nlogs Doubinln and Kanigan had\ngiven Lazareff Company were between 12 and 18 feet, he said. Other\nevidence for the plaintiff was heard\nin Rossland.\nRebuttal evidence, was called\nSaturday morning by plaintiff's defence D. Wetmore to prove the term\n\"merchantable timber\" as stipulated\nin the contract, did not necessarily\nmean 18 to 20-foot lengths but logs\nfrom 12 to 16 feet long with some\nlonger.\nWitnesses celled were Pete W,\nElasoff, retired lumberman John\nWaldie of Castlegar and plaintiff\nJohn J. Doubinln.\nD. Wetmor* and E. M. McOauley\nwere eolicltori for the plaintiff and\nParker Williams and J. B, Varco\nfor the defendant\nCOLUMBIA RISE\nAT CASTLEGAR\nCL0SIS pRIVE-JN\n'. CASTLEGAR\u2014Fast rising waters\nof ihe Columbia River are threatening low-lying areas around Castlegar. \"\u25a0- \u2022; y y --   '\nElk Drive-ln Theatre at Castlegar\nwas forced to close Saturday duo\nto the high water; which prevented\nentry to the grounds.   \u25a0\u25a0'.\nMotorists crossing the river on Ut*\nCastlegar-Robson ferry report the\nferry to be landing \"practically oh\ntht'highway'! on either bank. .\nLatest reports Sunday night\nshowed the water level still rising.\nCoast Juvenile\nEscapees Caught\nHere in Stolen Car\nTwo jpvenlles who hid escaped\nfrom Boys Industrial School at Vancouver' w*re arrested by RCMP\nwhile fa possession of a stolen car.\nSunday morning,, ''.,--\nRCMP patrol Intercepted the\nstolen ear at South Slocan. It had\nbeeh stolen from Port Coquitlam,\nahd the alert patrol spotted the licence number, as. one on which a\nroutine report had been received.\nIt js expected the juveniles Will appear ln-.'court' to\"_a_A\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\ni -'':   \" &.' \u25a0  '   .-        yy\nUNCLE OF TRAIL\nWOMAN PASSES\nFuneral services will be held\nMonday in Vancouver for George\nEmerson Copeland, upele of Mrs,\nE. McOauley, the former Evelyn\nMcGill, of Trail. Mr. Copeland died\nThursday in Vancouver fa his 78th\nyear.\nBesides his niece ln Trail, he is\nsurvived by two sisters, Mrs. Lydia\nPetty ot Roekwood, Ont,, Mrs. Minnie Mason of Ouelph, Ont., one niece\nMrs. J. A. C. Harkness, the former\nEsther McGill, of Ijorth Vancouver, and several other nieces and\nnephews.\nFATHER OF TRAILITE\nBURIED AT VANCOUVER\nFuneral Bervices. were held Saturday fa Vancouver for. Charles\nNathaniel Bendel, father, oi Mrs.F.\nMorram of Trail. Mr. Bendel died\nfa Vancouver Wednesday at. the\nage of 58.\nCharles Bendel; wis a member et\n.the Canadian'Legion >Ko. 185. H* li\nsurvived by hli wife, Ma^el; two\ndaughters, Mrs. F. Morram of Trail,\nWr\u00ab. &'Filling of Vancouver; six\ngrandchildren; three, brothers and\ntine slstejf' in Ontario; and two listen fa England. \\  ''.'\nBlgSciieen\nReady lor\nPark Program\nA summer program, sponsored by\nthe Kelson and District Film Council, \"Films Under tha Stars\" will\ncommence showings at Lakeside\nPark Wednesday with a big opening oelcbratloh planned,\n'. The outdoor screen, with a viewing area of saven feet by nine foot,\nhas been under construction for\nseveral weeks by volunteer labor.\nOil Miller, formerly with the film\ncentre fa Montreal, will act *\u2022 matter et. ceremonies for the grand\nopening and on succeeding nights,\nIt is planned to include local talent\nta the programs. Special films for\nBonspiel Week'and the Regatta\nhave been arranged for from the official Regatta Commission ln the\nEiit. ;.; y.; ;-'.,;',[:\\\nThe last Post\nSounded for\nDonald Miller\nLegion momberf attended in t\nbody arid formed ranks at Thorop-.\nson' Funeral Home as services wore\nheld tor Donald McDonald Miller,\n60. who died In Nelson Wednesday.\nRev. L. S, Van Mossel officiated.\n. Mr. Miller was a life member of\nthe \u25a0 Canadian Legion, put president of Cranbrook branch, Conn-\nI'dtan Legion, and a Nelson momber.j\nHe was also a. life' member of\nKirkwall, Scotland, Masonic Ladg*\nond a member of Lodgo No, 34, AF\nond AM at Cranbrook.\nHymns sung wcro \"Tho Day Thou-\nGaveat, Lord, Is Ended\" and Psalm\nXXIII, \"The LoTd Ii My Shepherd,\";\nPallbearers wore T, C. Jerome, H.\nJorgensen, J, H. McLean, L.-Mawor,\nK. M. Spence and H. S. Telford.   '\nInterment .wu. In the Soldiers'\nPlot, Nelson Memorial Park, where\nbugler -Marvin Smith sounded Hie\nLast tost and then Reveille,\nThe new Kootenay Lake ferry,\nMV Balfour, was still tied up at the\nCPR shipyards ln Kelson lata Sunday night, and word was that the\nwill not go into service until at least\nthis afternoon.\nWhen the new ferry does start\nrunning between Balfour and Kootenay Bay tt will likely bo a limited\nschedule for the first few trips. It\nwas originally, slated to commence\nservice July 1, but a tew final alterations prevented this,\n! \u25a0\nQueen's Bay Man\n'\"id at Rest\nFuneral services were held-at the\nChurch of tha- Redeemer - Saturday\nafternoon for Oskar Frldoll of Nelson, 54, who died at Queen's Bay\nlast Monday. Rev. Canon W. J. Silverwood officiated.\nHymns sung we're \"The King of\nLove My Shepherd Is\", and\"Rock\nof Ages\". Pallbearers were Olio Anderson, E. Sjorstrom, Gunnar Anderson, Pete Walgren, Donald Cameron and Basil Aylmer; Interment\nfollowed fa Kelson Memorial Park.\nDistrict Sawlog\nProduction\nOn Upward Trend\nNelson Forest District, sawlog\nproduction resurhed its record-\nbreaking ways in 'June, when the\nseal* was ^3,289,770 feet board moo-\nsure, nearly 3,000,000 fbmvaheed ot\nJune, 1053.\nGains were shown in fir, cedar,\nbalsam, yrilow pine and larch.\nTh* figures fa detail;\nSawlogi .-'. 1058\nFir \u201e\/.     7,152,077\nCedar       831,774\nSprue*     4,025,329\nLodgepole pine     358,831\nHemlock .......    1,225,882\n87_\u00ab7\n1,341,228\n1,118,885\n4,841,118\nBalsam \t\nWhltt pine\nYellow fine\nLarch\t\nBirch   .    ,.\nCottonwood\n57,041\n1954\n9,164,047\n1,585,153\n8,508,883\n188,280\n895,113\n123,885'|\n1,197,828\n1,744,205\n5,103,784\n13,998\n8,088\n20,818,330 23,289,770\nServices Hold for\nMrs. Van Der Reyden\nNAKUSP-^Furieral services'^for\nGrietje Van der Reyden who'died\nin Nelson Wednesday, were held at\nNakusp United Church Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Van der Reyden was\nborn fa Holland\nJames Fprguson officiated at the\nservice. Hymns sung were \"Unto\nThe Hills Around\" trad \"Rock ol\nAges.\"\nPallbearers were A. Steenhoff, A.\nWetterstromrR. Hopp, L. Miller, P.\nHenke and W. Mosley. Interment\nfollowed fa Nakusp cemetery.\nArticles Taken\nFrom Tourists' Cdr\ncity Police are Investigating disappearance from a tourist's, car\nSunday, a Wallet, vanity case and\na plastic purse., The ' wallet contained $12 and personal papers; The\ncar in which Mr. and, Mrs. D. Gray\nand children of Vancouver Island\nare1 travelling was parked in the\n200 block on Baker Street at the\ntime.\nTotal\nTotal to\nend of June 127,829,078   09,378,428\nMinor Products:\nPoles ond-Plles\n(lin. feet)\nMine Timbers\n(lin, feeti ....\nMine props\n(cordift\u2014........\nHewn ties\n(pieces) ! _.\nCordwood\n(cords)\t\nFence posts\n, (cords) ...........\n  318,815 241,182\n    22,236 - S^IS\n___\u2022    V-T '\"\n     2.458 1,708\n819\n..     1,071 1,301\nSwimming classes will get under\nway at Lakeside Park today when\nthe,tiny tots take.to the.water'at 2\np.m. Instructions will be provided\nalso for beginners, Improvers, advanced swimmers, beginning divers, advanced diving and adult\nswimming and diving.\nThe recreation classes will be under the supervision .of Pro - Reo\nLeaders \"Blondie\" Johnson, Bill\nPalesch, Joe Palesch and Denny\nKraft This week's schedule will\nhave a halt hour instruction each\nday. for all classes except the adults,\nwhose classes are 8:30 to 8 each\nnight\nProficiency Award\nWon by fat Clark\nA general proficiency award was\nwon by.NellOn boy Pat Clark on his\ngraduation from the Vernon Prep\nSchool recently. .'.<\u2022',\nPat has been attending the school\nfor the past three-years and next\nyear .plans to attend Nelson High\nSchool,\nHe Is th* son ot Rt. Rev. and Mrs.\nF.'Pl.Clark; 1J15 Ward Street, .\nTHE lnsURRnCE PROFESSOR\n\"The Mayor takes every pre-\ntlen when smoking. In bedl\"\nSmoking In bed Is dangerous\n\u2014also It Is dangerous not to\nhave enough FIRE INSURANCE to cover your property\nIt today's high prices. Be sure\n-call us.for a FRES Insur.\nmot study.\nIf YOU Wont To  Peel\n. '     Secure,\nThe Wlitttt Things liTe\nINSUR*.\nNO SAWDUSTf >.\u2022,':'\nADELAIDE. Australia (CP) -I\nfirm here is manufacturing o,new-|\ntype circular saw which lt claimed\nleaves no sawdust. Th* blade has\nonly eight tooth. -'prtjeeHnj'.-4*191. *\nof an inch above the non-cutting\nedge. \u00ab\u201e'\u25a0'\nROB\u20acRTSOfl. HILLIARD.\nCATT\u20acLL f.\u20acRLTY CO., LTD\nFJRE \u00bb   GENERAL   INSURANCE\nPH0HES  1112     IBI2\nl\u00abate\u00ab\nRomantic Comedy of All Time! 0RI VE*IN\n.*_ft-_5_,.*__4\u00ab\nllOflPfR WRIGHT'^\n(\".isunov.i\nyt 7i row nl ;\n*ami \u2022*\u25a0! \u00bb\u25a0\u2022# ttbw| H \u2022!\u00ab\u2022\u2022\u2666> W\u00abi \u2022 tnm . tifj %i %rf M \u2022*( \u25a0\n.wim;ViioAY.omi\"ioci_)ii^\"MwicY it*,*, \u2022\nA U-iyEBSAl-lsHTEIWATlOWAt PICTURE\n\u2122ljjfR7^NF0L0R   If\nDONALD GRAY    \u2014\u2014li\nEntertainment\nCalendar for July\n^JUtY STH-6TH\n\"Abbottand\n\u2022Coitello Maet\nDr. Jekvll and\nMr. Hyde\"\nAbbott and Costello and\n-   Boris Karloff\nPlui Cartoon ahd Shorti\nJULY 7TH-ITH\n\"Casanova Brown\";\nGary Cooper, Teresa Wright,\nFrank Morgan\nPlus Oortoon tnd Shorti\nJULY 9TH.1OTH\n\"MyPdlOui\"\nIn TMhnicbior;\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"> '\u2014m\nRichard Wldmark, Joann* Dru, -,\nAudrey Totter .,-iS\nPlui Cartoon and Shorti      '\nand Latest World Newa\nJULY  12TH-lJ-TH.14T\u00bbi^\n\"Yankee Pasha\" ]\nIn Technicolor a\nJeff Chandler, Rhonda Fleming,\nMamie van Ooren      . ,M.\nCartoon and 8horts I\nJULY   ISTH-16TH-f7tH;-\n\"Francis Covers\nBSflTown\"\nFrancis, the Talking Mule,   ...\nDonald O'Connor. Nancy Guild ,1\nLatest World News, \u2022\nCartoon and Shorta\nJULY 19TH-20TH\n\"Island of Desire\"\nfa Technicolor\nLinda Darnell, tab Huntei',\nDonald Gray\nCartoon Ind 8nortl \u25a0\nJULY J1ST.\u00bbND\n\"De\u00ab*:\"\u00ab*<o\" Gobi\"\nIn Technicolor\n5i       Richard Wldmark. Don Taylor\n\"* Cartoon and Shorts\nA UNIVERSAL-IHTERHATIONAL PICTURE\n|fi BE SURE TO VISIT\n* \"our snack bar\nFOR A\nTASTY TREAT\nA LAWLESS DRAMA OF WpLEHCE AND GREED!\nn\/m      wa^\nJULY 23RO-24TH    ^\n\"Bock to G\u00abd's k\nr\u00ab\u00ab'\u00abntn\u00bb\"\nIn Technicolor    j    '...'\nRock\u25a0\u2022Hiw,\u00abi\">. Steve Cochran,\nM. Hendersftn   \u2022     . :.>;\nNews, Cartoon and Short*    '\nJULY 26TH-27TH\n\"Sflhra Jflt\"\nIn Technicolor ,-\nRobert M\u00bbek. Cileen Gray,\nRloherd Arlon\nCartoon and Shorti\nJULY 28TH-29TH\n\"Doolinsof\nOklflhoma\"\nRandolph Scott,\nGeeree MnRiady,\nLouise Allbrltton\nClrtoon and Short* .\nJULY 30TH-31ST\n'*Wakeoftho\nMWiteh^\nJohn W*yn*, Gig Vouno,      I\nAdelo Man, Gel! Rus.elf\nNewt - si\n10 Miles Eait of Nebpn|\n -    \u25a0--'\u2022  '   ;        '.'\nFo Hdiior Oldtimers\njfERNIE \u2014 A civic banquet _nd entertainment for old-\nImers of-Fernie will be one of the features of the Labo. Day\nflebration events marking, the fiftieth anniversary-f the\niiiiorporatioh of the. City Of service unit, were established,\nWi\nerriie July, 29,, 1^04.\nCity. Council, at, its regular meet-\nig, decided lo sponsor the dinner\nid provide the evening fireworks\nIsplay. Council may also enter .a\nfltable float in the Labor Day par-.\nley'-, '. \u25a0'.\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\"\u25a0'\u2022':\nTwo suggestions as to who should\nI considered as pioneers were,\ntit, those residing in the district\n..the tfaie of fae, incorporation\nid, second, those living in the dls-\nlct Rrior to' the Periiie, itire of\nug. 1, 1908. No actual decision on\nlis has been made, but It was felt\nat very few could qualify; under\nI* \"it-t-Bt suggestion. .\nCity Cleric George Robertson re:\nirted jthat two - representatives\nom the office of assessment com-\nIssioner at Victoria had taken 32\nfaple property descriptions from\ne city assessment rolls. This was\nm'p under the provisions of the\n' ,C.; Assessment Equalization Act\nhich aims for equalization of prop-\nty assessment throughout the\novince. A government appraiser\nill assess the sample properties\nhich will then be used as a basis\nr reassessment of all properties\nthe city tax roll. ,\n- REDUCE BOULEVARDS\nAU residential boulevards in the\n;jy will be reduced to six feet in\ntot- Council gave approval to a\n.otion to this effect.- The standard-\natton of boulevard' width followed\nIscusslon at several, meetings of\nie'possibility of reducing width Of\nlulevards on two blocks ln the\nitidentlal area at the south end of\nletoria Avenue. Council felt that\niy ruling made should apply.to all\nsideptial areas. The boulevards in\ne business area on Victoria Aven\ni- between Thompson and McEvoy\nreets will be reduced to three\nM   .,,   '\nThe recommendation of the As\nciatibn of Kootenay Munlcipall-\nlii'that T..R. B. Ad-msT executive\nMotor of the Unit of B. C. Muni-\npalities be appointed to the De-\nirtment of Education's Provincial\nirriculum Advisory Board, was\nidorsed. .   .\nThe City Clerk read a comm\u00bbmica-\n>n itrom Eric'P. W.. Young of Ot-\nwa, regarding a possible lease at\n0 .city airport for the establish-\nent of an aeroplane maintenance\nA service unit City intentions\n_re not to put much, money into\ne airport. No work was planned\nher than the possible grading of\ne runway and placing of a wind\nck. Council instructed the city\nirk to get more information from\n(y Young and ascertain from the\nipartment of Transport what retirements would be expected from\ne city if such a maintenance and\nPHONE 999\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer\nfjlSRllH H move?  Oafl\nbat Our mod.ra\nturn, m\nmt Mi\n_s\nw agent, for North\n*\u25a0 Va\u00ab \"in, laiiitin.\nMdiDf Jong distance mMotg\nt*e___ia.\u201eon. R costs no mo_#\n* ee*>y ftto finer senfe*\nWest\nTransfer\n19 Baker St.  Ne\u00abt*\u00bb,I.C\nn\nCouncil was of the opinion' that\nthe reserved bus parking space on\nVictoria ;avenue should be abolished. Hie bus.cofapany Is being notified that the council wishes to discuss the matter, wltb an.official\nfrom the Calgary office rather than\nthe local representative.\nThe Post Otace is being notified\ntbat.cbuncll is not fa'favor of either\nof the two suggestions that street\nletter drop boxes be placed on the\nnewly erected light standards or on\nposts; set fa the sidewalks,; New io-\ncatlohs for,two boxes will be required when the telephone. poles\nare removed itrom the business section- of. Victoria AyWiue. Coyhc(l\nteU that the boxes could be placed\non builjjirig walls an& is requesting\nthe' postal authorities to-'find sufli\nlocations.\nInformation '.'-on.'' the; construction\nam?; type; of flooring .used ;in the\nCreston Arena has beep, received\nCouncil- authorized the arena committee to inquire into, the costs of\ninstallation of, a floor In the Fernie\narena... * . ,.    >\nThe RCMP headquarters at Victoria has granted council permission to restrict'traffic on all city\nstreets to 20 miles an hour..\nBanquet, Dance\nkATAL -' Michel-Natal High\nSchool graduates, numbering 15,\n\u2022jlosed out their school years at. the\nMichel-Natal School with a graduation banquet-and dance. At the\ngraduation banquet Delma Cividln,\nGrade XI, acted as chairman, Grace\nwas said by J, Glover of the teaching staff.- The toast to the Queen\nwas proposed by the. chairman,\nDelma Cividln while the toast to\nthe graduates-was proposed by Ar-\nlene Walker which was to turn\nreplied by graduate George. Sofko.\nA toast to the school board, was\nproposed by Delma Cividin with\nthe reply coming.from A. L. McPhee, chairman of School District\nNo, 1, Fernie.        '\"'        ,'\u25a0   '   \",\nAn address was given by guest\nspeaker, F. P. Levirs, Inspector of\nSchools, from Kimberley.\nDuring the program two duets\nwere given by Betty\" Weber on the\naccordion and Rosalie Billy on the\nviolin. All musical , selections\nthroughout .thy, p_?gi:^<!were;-'ic*\ncompanied : by J, Glover on- the\npiano\nThe presentation of Block Letter\nawards for Grade SJJP were made\nby M. DUncani f rtoclpal of Michel-\nNataJ School, They went to -Noreen\nCheston,. William Cbusens, Fred\nFacca, Jack Marsh, George Sofko,\nAlfred Ungaro and Dorene Karas,\nSpecial awards to Grade XI pupils\nwent to Pauline Androlick, Delma\nCividin, Robert Glasgow and Rodney Joyce. Special awards to Grade\nX pupils went to Sally Berdusco,\nRosalie Billy, Rend. Fabbro Ond\nPolly Facoa.\nThe graduation. dance was held\nfa the Union Hall at Natal.\nThe Michel-Natal Graduates of\n1953-54 are: Blanche Baher, Noreen\nCheston, William Cousens, Sheila\nDePaoli, Fred Facca, Joanne Halko,\nRaymond Hughes, Devina Kach-\nluba, Dorene Karas, Kenneth Linn,\nJack Marsh, George Sofko, Ruth\nTravis, Alfred tmgaro and Meivin\nGrocutt ,-\u2022''\nMeat Market\nChanges Hands\nINVERMERE \u2014; The Invermere\nMeat Market was sold to Alvln E.\n(Veno) Erickson, formerly of\nCranbrook. Owners and operators\nfor.the past 10 years were Mr.,and\nMrs. E. R. Merrilees, who purchase\ned the business in April 1944 from\nthe P. Burns vCo. Mr .-.Merrilees jhad\nmanaged t)ie business for Burns the!\nprevious fOur years, .   ~ ;\nMr. Erickson has beep employed\nby Walkley Meat Market at Cranbrook for the past year arid previous to that ihad been with the\nCranbrook Meat Market tor 22\nyears. He took over the business at\nInvermere June 19.        '!\u2022'\/,\nMr, Erickson has purchased a\nhome in Invermere and will bring\nhis wife and two children here\nshortly. Mr. Merrilees has been fa\nCalgary for the past several mOnths\nand will be joined there by his\nwife and daughters.\nHorticultural    \u2022\nSociety Formed\nNATAL \u2014 At a-well attended\nmeeting, a Natal and district horticultural association was formed.   .\nPresident, is John Thomson of\nMichel, secretary Len Little'of. Natal. Directors included Joe Larit,\nMario Berdusco, William Mihaly-\nnuk and Adolph Androlick, <\u2022':.\nThe first horticultural show and\ncarnival will be held August 7 and\n9. The proceeds from the show will\ngo towards the arena, fund. It was\npointed but that 20, years have\nelapsed since the last horticultural\nassociation was in operation here.\nThe new association was made\npossible through the untiring efforts\nof ten Little of Natal, who was an\nactive mefaber years'ago.\nNed Pland fleft) of the Kimberley Ambulance Societ\ninspect the. interior of, the new; ambulance, which tittfe Lions\nSociety.      .       .-  * . i-\ny, arid Bruno Binaldi\/ president of Kimberley Ision.. Club;\nClub recently presMited' to the Kimberley Ambulance\nEDUCATION OFFICIALS REVIEW\nSCHOOL BUILDING NEEDS\nINVERMERE \u2014 Two department\nof education Officials visitecl-No. 4\nWindermere School District on the\ninvitation of the Board of\u2022 School\nTrustees. Dr... Plenderleath, recently\nappointed cb-ordinator of department of education services for the\nprovince, ahd Mr';-Kennedy 61 the\nBuilding Department, visited the\ndistrict with Inspector I. C. Jeffery\nof Kimberley.  \\.    ';-..\nAt Canal Flat they reviewed the\nsituation there with School Board\nChairman Harry Erskine, discussing the proposed addition to the\nCanal Flat school'.\nThe four officials then proceeded\nto Invermere School: where they\nwere joined by school trustees -Mrs.\nIan Weir, A. 3. Laird, O. F. Yoiing\nand the secretary, treasurer H. R.\nWannop.  .\nEvery aspect .etjt Central Consolidated School fa Invermere was discussed with the principal Miss Alice\nCurtis.    ,\nThe -officials then motored, to\nEdgewater where they ptgte, joined\n\"by School board members?'Mrs. T.\nMoore and Joe Roesch, ahd the\nEdgewater' school was inspected.\nHere the officials fully. endorsed\nfae tentative plans of the school\nboard  regarding, the forthcoming\nbuilding program which is necessary for next year.        . \"\nGreatly increased school population in; the Windermere District\nmakes an additional number of\nclassrooms a necessity. Overcrowding at Windermere will necessitate\nthe use of the old Windermere\nschool as a classroom. At Invermere\nthe school basement will have to be\nused as a classroom. Pupils are, already, using the laboratory as a\nclassroom and. another room will be\nrequired by September, 1955.\nLeases on rented schoolrooms at\nCanal Flat and Edgewater will expire, ln June, 1955, though-they\ncould possibly be renewed but the\nrenting of classrooms is thought to\nbe inadvisable by the board as they\nare of a temporary nature and playground facilities are not available.\nThis September will see a district\nschool population of 600 with a likely 640 pupils In September 1955 and\ndepartment of educatipp officials\nwere agreed that a building program is essential. Much valuable\nadvice was given by the officials on\ndistrict problems and plans are now\nbeing formulated by the board for\npresentation of'a mooney by-law tor\nendorsement by the ratepayers.\nHEROIC RESCUE\nBRINGS AWARD\nGRAND FORKS-^-Mrs. William\nMcHugh of Rock Creek has been\nawarded a certificate for heroism\nfrom the Royal Canadian Humane\nSociety.'The award came followlng\nher courageous action, last July,\nwhen she plunged Into Rock Creak\nto save six-year-old Archie Mason\nfrom drowning,     y\nMrs. McHugh saved the Rock\nCreek boy from certain drowning\nas he was being swept down the\ncreekt She caught him a quarter of\na mile below where he bad fallen\nfa-'., -y .'.-'\"'.\n\"Mr. McHugh administered artificial respiration after Mrs. McHugh\nhad dragged the boy to shore.\n1000 Students\nGRAND FORKS- Close to 1000\nare expected tb enrol in Grand\nForks schools next fall, school authorities in the district estimate. The\npast school year saw about 875 students in the elementary and Junior\nsenior Wgli, school,\nAn additional 80. to ,90. are expected to enter Grade fin the Fall.\nTo adequately* handle students\nthree classes of Grades _ to TV and\nVll to IX will be, held>All other,\ngrades will have two classes, with\nthe exception of 12 and 13, which\nwill-have only qne. ',-\nIn 1945, there were 87 students fa\nGrades IX to XII, 'While ln 1934,\nonly nine years later, the total had\nrisen to 200. The increase in teachers in the school district was also\nconsiderable, jumping from 22 fa\n1948 to 34 during the past year.\nBoth total! will probably show\nan Increase next year, Vith approximately 80 going into the high school\nfrom elementary school, ahd only a\nthird of that number being graduated, this yea*,  ,       ..'';\u25a0-' '-   ;... .\nAlthough present space-will be\nable to handle, rapidly increasing\nenrollment for some time yet, the\nschools are gradually 'becoming\nover-crowded. \u25a0.*.    :\u25a0\u25a0'_\u25a0\n\"LONDON-:<CP) \u2014. Twelve men\nand women have formed their own\n\"midgets club\" here. None of the\nmembers is over four feet six inches in height ' .\"''  '\u25a0\nLiving Index Up\nDuring May\nOTTAWA. (CP) \u2014 Living, oosts\ngenerally declined earlier this year.\nBut' figures for May, to be released\nMonday, lokely will tell a different story.'\nIndications are the consumer\nprice index, yardstick for measuring living costs, may show one of\nthe biggest rises fa recent months.\nThe shelter column, which fa-,\ndudes rents and home-ownership,\n'costs, continued to shatter previous records,.climbing to a new high\nof 125.8, up a fifth of a point fa a\n12-month period it had climbed 2.2\npoints.\nArty Decoration\nFor Submarines\nPEARL HARBOR (AP)\u2014D. S.\nNavy submarines are going in\nthese days tor \"free expression.\"\nThe results fa the interior of the\nsubmersibles have been startling.\nMess compartments are decorated\nwith murals of glacial lakes and\ncooling snow scenes. Decks have\nsuch colors as red tile and walla\nare rilnlt   ' \u2022    \u2022\nThese are>\/persOnal ash 'trays and\nindividual bed lamps by each bunk,\ncurtains and upholstered chairs.\nIt started a year ago when Mrs.\nAlec Mickey Baird, a member of\nthe American Institute of Decorators, was asked by the crew of the\nSabalo to help spurce up the inter\nlor of the ship. Said Mrs. Baird:\n\"Before redecoration the.Sabalo's\nvisual impact was exactly zero.\"\nThe chief of naval Operations\ngave his blessing to the project. To\nday at least 18 subs have a new\n\"free expression\" look.\nBOOST FOR FIDO,\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Delegates at the\nWorld Congress of Animal Welfare\nSocieties here passed a resolution\ndeploring the tendency of public\nauthorities to exclude dogs from\ncity life. A delegate argued' a dog-\nless world would be safer \"for the\npetty bandit and the thug.1*''     '\nPlatinum Is valued tor industrial\nuses, as well as jewelry, because it'\nis much harder than silver and\ngold;\nGov! Action\nTo Aid Coal\nMiners Sought\nNATfL \u2014 At a-joint meeting\nheld to,the Union- Hall between\ndelegates from all the United Mine\nWorkers of America locals in the\nCrow's Nest Pass the question of\nsome immediate'actipn on a coal\npolicy to aid the coal miners of\nWestern Canada was discussed.'It\nwas the opinion of all present that\n\"in. spite of the many promises of\nboth t_e- Federal and Provincial\nGovernments -and others, nothing\nor very little has been done to make\njobs' and markets Which would aid\nthe coal miner.\" \u25a0\"'.\nIt wasfelt that the.situation was\ngetting worse, and there were no\nsigns that it was going to improve\nta the future unless some action\nwas taken by both 'government^.\nPoints under discussion' were a\nmarket tor Canadian, coal and the\ndevelopment ;of other; industries in\nWestern Canada which could meaii\njobs for not-only coal miners but\nmany others who are unemployed.\n\" The question of the District organization initiating ihe calling ot\na joint, conference in both B.C.- and\nAlberta of all Canadian Congress\nof Labor, American Federation- df\nLabor and all other unions was\ndiscussed...;\u2014\nIt Was. agreed that resolutions on\nthe problems would be sent to all\nU.M.WA, Lbcals in District 18,\ncalling^upon them tb.urge District\norganizations to see'that action on\nthese questions is taken immediately.\nSEGREGATE WORKERS\nJOHANNESBURG, South Africa\n(CP)\u2014Skilled and. semi-skilled native building-wbrkeis fa future will\nbe allowed to work only ;on native\nhousing schemes while white workers only are \"employed in European\nareas of South Africa. One builder\nexplained the system would eate-\nguard jobs for both classes.\nn_i.-ON>aj>y heWs^ Monday, jmiy \u00ab, 1934\u2014s\nCarpenter Union   '\nTo Aid in   V;\nMemorial Home'\nCRANBROOK \u2014 At its annual\nmeeting fa Cranbrook, Local 1719,\nUnited Brotherhood \"of Carpenters\nand Joiners which covers- C r a h -\nbrook-Kimberley district as official\nbargaining agent, the' large attendance re-elected President Mark\nMiller.\nOther, of fleers named were.Falm-\ner Void, vice-presldent,kJohn Fred-\nerlckson, recording secretary; Steve\nShymko, financial' secretary; Lars\nPaulson, treasurer. Chosen trustee\ntor three years was Dick Weighill,\ntor two years C. Smalllck.'and named warden was James Welberg.\nConductor is Frank-Morrow.\nThe meeting unanimously 'supported a motion that the local fully\nsupport the proposed \u2022 Dr. F. W.\nGreen Memorial; Home for Senior\nCitizens, and Will consider contributing free labor when a start on the\nbuilding is made, fa addition to considering -a financial contribution\nwhen a basic fund.for.tha project\nis established.    .'-\u2022-  .        '.    - -\nForest Service\nSuppression\nOperations Start\nCRAJSIBRDQK \u2014 B.C. Forest\nSanger, offices for Cranbrook Ranger Districts, East' and 'West, have\ncompleted their preparation for ihe\nseason ot increased fire hazard.\nThe B.C. Forest Service suppression camp starts .operations this\nweek. With A.. L. Cartier of Nelson\nfa charge of the crew of eight East\nKootenay boys who, will live all\nSummer in the' premanent camp\nquarters at the end of the prairie\nnorth of the city. This crew is maintained instantly available for service at spot fires fa the district\n\u25a0wherever tiey are reported. Crew\n\u2022lab engages in courses on forest\nconservation practices.\nShort-wave radio headquarters\nOre in operation in the new B.C.\nForest Service building at the Kimberley road junction' as part of the\nnetwork which covers the Kootenays for quick communication in1\nspotting!and fighting fires.    -\n(The leaded Pacific' Western Aii>\nlines aircraft is doing its regular\npatrols through the, southern interior tor fire spotting,\nLookout M.M-20 at Eager Is manned this year by William Carrie,\nand Jtoyie Mountain! lookout by\nB. A, Phillips, Joe Jiirak is patrol\ntor St. Mary's Lake district. Frank\nHill is ranger for Cranbrdbk West\nassisted by Peter Czar and Tom\nHamilton, and J. B, Glerl js ranger\nfor Cranbrook East assisted by Ken\nMoore and Glen Bertram. Clarke\nBlysak is dispatcher at radio head\nquarters in the office here tor both\nranger districts and this service is\nin constant communication with\nlookout stations and adjoining ranger stations, and with crews on\nfire duty who are equipped with\nportable radio transmitters' and receivers.' ,;'\n$300 Reported in\nCancer Campaign\nNATAL \u2014 The annual Conquer\nCaneer Campaign is being-sponsored throughout Natal-Michel and\ndistrict by .Michel Aerie 'No.; 1884,\nFraternal Order of Eagles, for the\nfifth -straight  year.       -,\nThe latent amount reported to\nhave been collected was well over\n$300, with the Michel local union\nheading the list of donations with\nti00. Joan K. Mitchell of Michel Is\nchairman while canvassers include\nMrs. Lorraine Fontana, .Mrs. Nell\nDoolan and Mrs. Jean Mitchell. F.\nMitchell is to canvass the school\nstaff, R. Cornish the sawmill and\nWilliam Chapman the coal company officials at Michel.\nWynndel Notes\nWYNNDEL - Miss Helen Tuff\nand Billy Joevanazzo of-Let-bridge\nvisited Mr. and Mrs.' J. J. Firth.\nMrs. Ward ot Nanaimo Is guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. S. Mosley and Mr.\nand, Mrs. H; Lynk. , y ..--\u2022.' :\u25a0 \u2022...'\nMrs. P. Payne, Miss phyllls Payne\nandjDlck Payne have left tor Van\ncouvervan'd Viotoria. y '~:-y -''\n' D. iFawcett left for-'Victoria to\nspend the holidays with his family.\nEd Redshaw accompanied him to\nVancouver where he will be employed; \u25a0 '...,.'    \u25a0   j\n' Paul Haines .of Vancouver is visiting his uncle and aunt, Mr. and\nMrsi-A.-W,.Burch,. . \u25a0\u25a0\u00bb;-\u00a3*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\nFARM TOUR\nPLANNED FOR\nFORKS FIELD DAY\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 Annual Sun-,\nshine Valley -Field Day will be held I\nJuly 28.\nA .tour will sijrt .at the Co-:\nOperative Growers' Exchange, and I\npersons going will; travel' fa One'\ngroup; stopping' at selected farms, \u25a0\ninspecting crops and.seeing machinery demonstrations,      ,\nLunch wUi be served at Firemen'! i.\nPark at 1 p.m., after which prizes'\ntor best farms, and Other competitions will be given out. Judges are]\nFraser Carmiohael, ,Cy Pennoyer;\nind Cliff Hamilton.\nDr. p, Ainsley, head of the Summerland experimental station, will*\nbe guest speaker^;'.. ...\nNovelty sports will also be held:\nat the park.\nA dance will be held ot Christina''\nLake.        .-' -   ;, '\nRay. Orser. is chairman of the\nField Day committee.\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RE8ULT8\nfor a\nRUBBER\nPAINT? I\n\u25a0: s' You Cam} \\\n.Have the\nBEST for !\nmm-\\\nNEW\ntOV.:\nPRICE\n\"i\nat mint It:\nNSi\u00abt<<!Si\nVamwver bland?\ngo BLACK BALL\nStrips Daily-^oneshoe Bey (WetlVmcooveti to Ntmaim.\nRETURN VIA THE SCENIC CIRCll\nTHROUGH THE OLYMPIC PENINSULA\n4 Tript Daily\u2014Victoria to Perl Angeles\nTOP8Y-TURVY\nWELLINGTON, N.Z. .(CP)r-Sihip's\nmasters and officers seeking higher\npay presented an inquiry board here\nwith a pay sheet showing the cook\non one vessel earned \u00a3111 a month,\nwhile, file master got \u00a3107. They\nsaid the first mate on one ship resigned to become an able seaman\nBuy. Sell. Trade the. Classified Way at higher pay. . Y\nRECREATION DIRECTOR AT CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Cranbrook City\nCouncil has endorsed a city parks\nbpard\/ recommendation of appointment of R..L. DeArmond'as recreation director tor Cranbrook under\nIhe' provincial Community feecea-\ntions Program branch of the Department of Education. Appointment means vtho city will- cover\nthWeifourtha of his salary to this\noffice; and':the provtaliial government one-fourth.\nThis is Crarjbrook's first inoye toward establishment of a branch of\nthis successor to Pro-Rec which\ncovers co-ordination ot sports, recreations such as folk dancing, hobbies and adult education in the community and is designed to make fullest use of facilities for these already in existence such as rinks,\nparks and group activities.\nDistrict supervisor for East Kootenay of the Community Program\nBranch is Sidney Hanson, who has\nhis central office fa Cranbrook. Theoretical organization is creation in\neach community of a recreation\ncommission ,oi representatives of\nsports groups, service clubs, school\nboard, city council; PTA and sufeb\ngroups as arts and drafts associations. The recreation director puts\nfato action the program drawn up\nby this commission.  -        N\nKimberley has availed itself of\nthis new service, and has as its recreation director William , Wilcox;\nPart of Its program last year wai\nthe highly successful and well-attended adult night school in various\nhandicrafts and academic subjects;\nCommission has not yet been established there, however.\nNucleus1 of community programs\nhave been established at Marysville\nwhere John Franz has been named,\ncommission chairman, - and at less\nadvanced stages of development are\nNatal, Golden and Fernie.       '\u25a0';,\nTHIS IS LIVING\n.\u25a0-''--.'..\u25a0    ,,--,   ' ,  -.-\u2022;.'\u25a0\u25a0 \"\u25a0.\nBetter plumbing and heating makes life more enjoyable. Attractive new fixtures do more than improve the\nappearance of on old-fashioned bathroom . . .their\nconvenience and charm adds prestige to the surroundings. We.carry a well-' selected stock of well .known\nbrqnds for your selection. '\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating Co. Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 666\nBURNETTS *>\"\" S\u00bbTIN GIN\nBURKETT. ___\u00a3_____I GIN\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by tho liquor\nControl Board or by tho Government of British Columbia.\n.\n .*fi\ni\n\u25a0-    Established April 23. 1903 ; ,\"\nBrltlih Colombia \u00bb,-'\u2022      '\u25a0:;'(\nMosf intorosfing Nowapaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the -\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY  LIMITED,\nUt Baker Street, Nelion  British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mill,    '\nPost Office Department, Ottowe.   '-,\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTUB AUDIT ByBtAU OF CffiCUUTtONB.\n._\"'\u2022     Moniay,JulyS,'ipsi,\nProgre&s Outlook\nA fairly .reliable barometer of the\neconomic health of the, nation is its\nplant for capital spending. By that\nbarometer Canada Is not taking much\nstock of all the blue ruin talk of a\nrecession thlt year. Here are the figures for planned capital spending in\nCanada this year at published by the\nBank of Montreal monthly letter:\n'..-.. ...v    Outlays  Plant ,\"\n(Millions of dollars)   in 1953; for 1854'\nPrimary taduttry .....;.... 91S       875\nManufacturing.........  9,40        835\n;UptlM 'v...----,-v: \"\"88       1239\nTrade, finance and\ntervicet         480        547.\nHousing ..;*. 1088       1182\nIntuitional  801 ,     409\nGovernmeitt     :,-.\ndepartoientt .'.;.; 71(9       811\nTotalt I.....-;.........: 8679       5838\nThe figurea indicate spending plant\nare for an increase of 2,8 per cent over\n1953 which was one of the best years\nin this,nation's history. Of the proposed spending, $3865 millions Will go\nfor new construction and $1973 millions fdr-new machinery and equipment.    .   '    V- -    '.(-'.'.  '\" -'\nWhqt Is Gamma Globulin\nCanadian parents should derive\ncomfort from the fact that an additional supply of gamma globulin for\nprotection against polio paralysis will\nbe available during the epidemic season this year.      .-   \\\npamma globulin may perhaps be\ndescribed as a grab-bag of immunity.\nIt It that part of human blood which\nprevents an individual's catching some\ninftjctiotis disease twice. It thus carries\nthe antibodies developed, to combat A\ndisease during illness. The gamma\nglobtilin. of a person who hat had\nirfeaales will contain measles anti-r\nbodies. Consequently, most Canadian\nadults have antibodies against polio in-\nthe gamma globulin of their blood became they have had one or more light\ncases of the disease without knowing it.\nv When t^e blood from a thousand or\nmore different individuals is pooled\ntogether, the pool is certain to contain\nantibodies against polio, measles, infectious .hepatitis, and probably some\nother diseasjst at well. ? .\u2022..-'\u25a0\nWhen,-;tl_\u00ab?gamma globulin is removed .front jhe pool, the protective\nantibodies it contains can be loaned to\nanother person who has not developed\nhis own antibodies. This is exactly\nwhat happens when a child receives\nan injection-of gamma globulin.\n\" Since borrowed antibodies pass\nrapidly out of the blood,- however,\ngamma globulin offers only temporary\nimmunity.'It. protects only for periods\nup to five weeks, hence it is chiefly\nuseful during periods of high incidence, when it either wards off the\ndisease or reduces .its severity.\nGamma globulin is by no means a\nnew diacoyery. tJsed for many years\nagainst measles, it became well known\nas a useful agent in polio cases at the\nGetting to Moon\nEasy for Rii&tensj\nThe Russian'scientist A. Obruchev li\ncertain not' to be the first man to get to the.\nmoon. Ho will be luqky if ho lives tht year\nout, In fact, because he mad* a capitalistic\n.'mistake. '  .\nObruchev wai performing on tht radio the\noihor day, giving * science toll: to Soviet\nyouths, dutifully exhorting them to resolve\nthat the first person to reach tho moon would\nbe a Russian. Worming to his subject, he\nslipped. \"Tin planetary system,\" ha orated,\n\"needs e new ColumbuB.\"\nObrucncv mutt have thought for a moment that be was a scientist, whoreai ht it\nonly a Communist sclontlst, Under Communism you do not deal In facts, but in what the\nparty hli decided a\u00ab a foct\u2014viz., black ii\nwhite,- war li peace, seizure li liberation, \u00abtc,'\netc. Obruchev should have known thit Colum-\nbut wai nobody, that Russians first discovered\nAmerica. He could have chocked upon that by\niio mora research than a phon* (invented by\na Russian) call to the Kremlin.\u2014Spokane\nSpokesman-Review.\nLabor Leaders View\n\u2022Walter P. Reuther, CIO labor chief, Hid\nsomething the'othor day with which a lot of\npeople, regardless of vocutlon, will'certainly'\nagrei. In rejecting a suggestloh for n 30-hour\nweek, Routhcr stated that a cut In tho basic\n44-hour week would simply mean, \"sharing\nthe scarcity\" when the crying ncod was tor\nmore purchasing power, rothor thon moro\nleisure.\n.On this continent, despite the great advance in technical efficiency, we limply could\nnot maintain essential production and\u00abervlces\non a 80-hour week. Goods would'become\n\u2022career and prices higher. A lot bf people\nwould starve..\nMen of wisdom have long been telling\nabout that basic factor in productivity and\nthe stondord ot living. Now thit men like\nReuther are saying it, there is some chance\nthe truth will link In where it will do good.\n\u2014Financial Port.\n' Looking Backward\n10 YEAR* AGO\nProm thi Nelson Dally News, July 6, IM4\nDorothy   Wallace,   Mrs.   Colman,   Don\nBrown and Rev. Father B. Doyle isored high\nin the KinSmeh Trjek and field events July I.\n2SY\u00abARIAOO\nFrom the Nelson Dally News, July B, 1929\nHon. J. Hinchllffe, provincial' mlniiter ef\neducation, said the department is establishing course*;of wwreepondence Instruction in\nhigh icbool subjects,  ,   . .-,\nSO YEARS AGO        Y\nFrom the Nelson Dally Nows, July S, 1904 ,\nA, C. O'Neill, the new Ymir postmister,\nis preparing hit place of business to receive\nthe post office, It will be situated next to the\ndrug itore..'   ' , _-. \u2022>,      ,'     ..-...-> \u00ab\nWhat's Behitid It n\n\"Whenever you see a complex piece of\n, equipment turning out neat, shining rowi ot\nitems, think of tho designers, the draftsmen,\nthe. engineers, the tool and die makers, .the\nstenographers, the salesmen, the miners who\nall contribute to the finished product in one\nway or another.\"\u2014Rhyi M. Sale, preiident\nFord Motor Company of Canada.\nltVJ3een Said\n. A man is never astonished or ashamed\nthat he doei not know what'another doei;\nbut he is surprised at the gross ignorance of\nthe other in not knowing what he knows.\n\u2014Thomas C. Hallburton.   -\nresult of trials conducted in the United\nStates in 1952- In that year it was discovered that among 27,000 children\nwho received gamma globulin-in epidemic areas in Texas and I6wa, the\nincidence bf paralysis was less than\n. half as great as among an-equal number of 'children who did not get the\ninjections, The attacks were, also\nshorter and less severe among the, children who received gamma globulin.\n. Gaihma globulin is not the final answer to polio by any means. The protection it offers is temporary and limited. But'until; a \"vaccine or spine other\nagent is proven effective, gamma glob-,\ntilin appears the best weapon now\nknown to medical science in the' continuing war agahjst polio..\n1 Questions?\nANSWERS\nDpon to any reader. Nimet o\u00bb porio.il\n- iiklno queitloni will not be published.\nTher* li no oharge for thlt lervlce,\nQUIItloni WILL NOT BE ANBWeREO\nBY MAIL exoopt whoro then It'obvious\nnoeenlty for prlvsey.\nReader, Arrow Lakes\u2014Whore 'can I sell an.\nOld copy of Swift's Gulliver's Travels?\n. Give full description of book, condition,'\nand complote copy of title-page, nomet of\nprinters and publishers. Send to _. A, Benny,\n4349 West Tenth, Vancouver; British Columbia Book Store, 1117 Wert Pender, Vancouver;\nHOW* Street Book Shop, 085' Howe Street,\nVancouver; Vancouver Book Centre, 803 Davie\n' Street; Vancouver.\" \u25a0 {   \u2022'...*'\nA. O., Trail\u2014I'hovis a little ooy of seven, and\n.would Ilk* him to take lessons ort the.\n\u00abcord(oit, Can ybu glv* me addross of 4\n'      Trill teicher\n'\u25a0',,  We havo been Informed that Instruction\nIs-given at tho Marepodi Accordion College,\n1434 Third, Trail, phone 2230.   . .'\u2022'\nSubscriber, Kimberley\u2014Could you  tell  me\n.. where a porson might be oblo to sell' a\n'colloctlon of book* which Includos popular md classical novels, history, blogra-\n.' phlei, ita   My reason for selling Is that\nwo are moving and find it a great expense\n\u2022'- to ship such * quantity of books.' There\nwould bo about 400 in oil, Y   '     -\nYou could writ* to, Oibomi, Eighth Avenue, Calgary, describing the books and their\ncondition, Alio tee answer to Reader, Arrow\ntakes, tor addresses of Vancouver booksellers\nand buyers.\nPuzzled, Castlegar\u2014Referring further to your\nquestion regarding whereabouts of Nigegr\nCreek, we haye received tlie following In-\n,     formation from a Cranbrook reader:\n\"Nigger Creek arises at the base ot Nigger\nMountain at about fifteen miles up Moyie\nRiver from Lumberton. The name erroneously\nappeared on the map as Negro Creek.\"\n-   French Mob   , \/\nIt may havo struck some people ss funny,\nthis business of a French mob kicking Premier'\nLaniel In the thins and slapping Defence minister Rene Pleven's face. To.us, however, the\nunfortunate Incident was a sad commentary\n' on the present, state of affairs in France, When\na premier and a member of his cabinet are\nheld in such little respect, the morale Of the\npeople muit be very low indeed. ,' ;\u00bb,\n'.'. France, of course, has been .having more\nthin bersbare of troubles ever sinoe the First\nWorld War practically joiined her, Her people\nare SO sick of war that they will do almost\nanything to keep from getting, into another\none,- This business of ratifying French partici-.\npatton in the European army, supported by\nPremier Laniel, haa split the country, in two,\nwith supporters of no-participation. doing the\nshin kicking ond face slopping.. \u2022\u25a0'\n11 'Violent outbursts ot such- a tiaturt'cannot\nbe allowed to go on, Not only do democratic\ninstitutions lose esteem in the face of such\n, iotlylty, but it encourages the mob to try more\ndaring ahd violent'action. WetruSt that in\n. the future the French police will see to; it,\nthat the premier and members of his cabinet\n-aren't again placed In such an embarrassing\nposition.\u2014Lethbridge HeVald. '.'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nExploitation of Labor\nExploitation now fortunately Ig recognized\nas both a social and economic evil. Federal\nand,provincial laws, plus the growth of unions, have a deterrent \"effect Exploitation. Is\nnot now the serious e*il It once was, but'it\nstill exists,'and sometimes In surprising places.\nv The theory that-powerful corporations are\nthe only exploiters always was erroneous. In\nthe past many of the worst exploiters were\nsmall-time operator's. Exploitation never has\nbeen peculiar to any.one.strata of employment, but has been common to all .\n\u25a0'. This is illustrated by news from Ottawa\nthat public works department charwomen\nhave beep subletting their work to substitutes, paying them less money and pocketing\nthe difference, Charwomen perform menial,\nthough decent, duties ond generally are paid\naccordingly- They, ars .close to.the.bottom of\nthe economic order. Yet even there exploitation creeps in unless care is taken to prevent\nit-Windsor Dafly Star.     \"    \"\u25a0-' -\nYour Horoscope ,\n^ An active', busy and successful year is\nIndicated for you. Forge ahead and take advantage of the favorable -omens. A businesslike, intellectual personality is likely for today's child, for whom a brilliant career is\nsuggested.\nI-jCTll Do It Every Time\n  ,\u201e>\u201e. \u25a0    i i\nTfe-WCK-FENCE\nBra&iOf'SftVORlTE\n. TOPIC W4S WHV\nEMMA OlVtiT LAUD\ngOMEAWUS-\n4N\/>HALB~\n\u2022>      By Jimmy Hal.0 I      Todoy't Bible Though*\n      ii i i\u2014\u00bb\u2014\u2014-r_______J There li a way that leemeth\nThere It a way that .teemeth\nright unto a'-man, but tha end\nthereof are tha wayt of death.\u2014\nProv. 14i1g.-\u25a0\nThe, proof of any philosophy or\nway of life Is the kind of life its\ndevotees live. Millions would gladly\nescape from atheistic lands end\nthousands risk their lives to attempted escape.    -\nCkutLdkL\nClara's trouble- is Just plain old\nJealousy. A wife can't stand It to\nnave any other woman bosslti' her\nman, even if it's hit own mother.\nWho W^n^tt\n(Copyright,  1034,, William 0.;.\nBogart, Illustrations copyright,\n19M, King' Features Syndicate, .-\nInc. Distributed by King Fea-\ntur.l Syndicate.)\nCHAPTER III CONTINUED\nThere was no answer. Everything\nwas q'ui\u00abt. '... ...-.'.\nI eouii still heir an occasional\nvole* from down\" by the lake. I was\nstanding y there \"-watching ' when\nlomeone moved behind mc. It wis\nthe amber-skinned maid. Her eyes\nlooked sleepy. \"Oh,\" ihe said. Her\nteeth ehono whltely In her untroubled face. \"Miss Louella his\nbeen looking for you.\"\nShe-motioned toward the water.\n\"They're out swimming. Did you\nhave a nice trip, up?\"'-;     '\"\u2022 i\u25a0'.-\n\"Loy\u00ably,viiild.        \"y ;;\u25a0).'.':\n\"Was. there somothlng -you'd like\nwhile you'wait for them Mr. Morgan?\" v -v  \u25a0\u25a0:'\u25a0<\u25a0'[\u2022\u25a0'\nI shook my head. \"I'll )ujt go\ndown thorc.\" Idropped my hat on\na goy-colorcd porch swing and\nstarted toward the Bhore.\nA path cut down the gentle slope.\nIt led to a longs narrow, wooden\nstringpiece-that ended in. a dock\nand diving platform. A man and\nwomen had.just hauled themselves\nout of the water. They watched a\nfigure swimming some distance\ntrjm the shore, fhe man turned as\nhe heard my footsteps clattering on\nthe wooden planking. Then he was\ngetting to his feet.\n\"Steve Morgan!\" ne said in surprise. He csme over' and shook\nhands heartily.,.\nHe was- a thin, long man- with\nskinny knotted legs and not much\nchest But hli neat black mustache\nwai to excellent condition. I remembered that hli name wis Sneldon\nPatterson and that he waa president\nof Patterson, Martin and Thomas,\none of the big Chicago ad agencies.\n\"Louella told us you'd phoned her\nyesterday In town. What are you\ndoing now?\" --,-'-,\n\"Same butlness.\"\nHe turned. The woman coining\ntoward US was his wife. He said\nbrightly,\"\" \"Elsie, 'you remember\nSteve Morgan?\" . '       -V\nThe woman nodded. \"Why, yes!\nHow areyou?\" She held out'a strong\nbony hand. She had good legs, But\nthat was^ all. You, see women'. Ilka\nthat, The rest of hec wastoo thin\nand too lean. She was brown as a\nout jmti-her dark, flashing eyts\nmatched. She made up tor her figure with something that was In her\nwatchful, questioning eyes: \u2014 she\nliked men. She was younger than\nher husbapd,'   '\u2022     .-   . '    .  .,\n'Louella told us .you might drop\nby,\" she said. \"Have Vou a place to\nstay? ^here's plenty bf room at our\nplace.\"      - '\u25a0'.,<\u2022 '''\n\"I'm at the hotel,\" I told her.\n''Oh,\".shesa|d,.'\nPatterson was staring toward the\nlake, \"Look at her, will you!\" he\nsaid, glancing at me, ^Can't she\nswim, though!\"\nI followed his eyes, There was a\nsleek, white-capped bead, some\ndistance out from shore, and flashing arms that moved steadily in a\nlazy crawl. The figure was approaching the edge of the dock.\nThen Louella raised her head, saw\nme, gave a shout Immediately She\nIncreased the pace of the crawl\nand moved through th* calm wajer\nwith powerful strokes. Soon she was\nclimbing up on the dock. She rushed\nover to clasp my hands.\n\"Steve!\", she cried. \"Let me look\nat you.\"\n\"We ought to have a party.\" said\nElsie Patterson.\n\"I get him firtt,\" exclaimed Lou-\n\"How about tonight?\" Elsie asked\nme. There] was some meaning in\nher eyes and I tried to figure out\nwhat Is was.\n\"Sure, old man,\" put in her husband. \"This calls for a celebration\nTonight it is.\"\nWe went back to Louella's house\nend the maid, Clarabelle, .served\ncocktails. Soon Patterson and his\nwife were leaving. \"We'll have to\nget things started,\" he explained.\nThe maid drifted off, leaving a\nsilver cocktail shaker almost full\non a coffee table. Louella still-wore\nthe white two-piece sw,im suit. She\nlooked up at me, her face serious\nnow. \"When did you get here?''\n\"I drove up last.night,\"\nShe nodded toward our empty\nglasses. \"You can pour me another\ncocktail. Did you find out anything?\"\n\"\"About Dave.1*   ,-\n\"Of course;\",\n\"'Not yet\",\nShe bit her Up. \"I wish there\nwai something I could toll you.'\nI asked,-\"Did Dave owe any\nmoney? Gambling debts, for Instance?\" '.-\n\"No, He had plenty of money.\nShe put down her glass and looked\nat me quickly. \"Oh, I tee. That man\nI described to you! The one who\ncame to see him hero that last Saturday. I told you they were arguing. But lt couldn't have been about\ndebts. Dave always paid -bis bills.'\n\"Ever hear of Tony Volenti?\"\nShe shook her hood.\nI finished the drink' and stood\nup. \"Well, maybe VA better nose\naround a bit.\" :        .y:\n\"Aren't you going to say for\nlunch, darling?\"    ' '   ,\n\"Aren't you going to stay for\nlunch, darling?\" >:\n\"I bettor not.\" I motioned toward\nthe rear of the bouse; \"It's too bad\nthat maid Is here.\" I let her take\nthat-for what It wil worth.\nLoucllo said quickly. \"Don't\nworry about Clarabelle She'i wiser\nthan you thtnk. Please, stay.\"\nHor gray eyes took on a lazy, holf-\nslcepy expression. She put, ber\ntawny bead-back against the divan\nand looked up at mi.\n..Look..baby,\" I tried to explain.\n\"Either .1 work or play. It cant\nbe both at'the some time. 1 think\nit's better he wirk.\"\n\u2022Hor face changed. Her eyes laid\n\u2022he wanted to make some acid comment, then sh,c doclded hot to. \"But\nyou'll go to the party tonight, won't\nyou? Elsie and Sheldon are such\nnice'people.\" \u25a0       ..'.',;,.\n\"I suppose we'll have to.\"\nShe followed mo out to the\nscreened porch. \"I think \u25a0 you've\nalready learned something about\nDove. I wish you'd tell me, Steve \"\n.' \"Maybe I'll have something tonight.\"     '\u2022 \u25a0['   .\"     y.\nI went around the bouse to the\nroadster. Backing out to the lake\nroad, I saw the kitchen curtain\nmove slightly. She should have left\nClorabello back in Chicago.\n(What happens when LOUELLA\nond STEVE get to the PATTERSON'S party- A tryst in a dark\ngarden, will thrill in tomorrow's\nthrobbing chapter of THE.HUS-\nBAND WHO WASN'T THERE, ex-\ndueively 'in The Nelson Dally\nNews. *\n\u2022 \u2022 i  \u25a0>\nGeography for\nVancouverites\nF 6. Pearce\n!f You're Going lo Vancouver, Look\nOut lor Spears or Dizzy Bicyclers\n,By BRUCE LIVCTT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Canada'!\nthird, largest city will be a hazardous spot for tb* next week.\nThe unwary stand a > chance of\nbeing splashed, speared with a Javelin or run down by a bicycle as a\ndizzy round of British Empire\nSames .trials opens. >',-'\n, Biggest tangle is set for July 8,\n6 and 7 when the cycling trials and\nthe Joint Canadian swim champion-\nships-gllmos trials' occur.\nJuly 0 and 10 will see the track\nand .field try-outs erupt In these\nthree categories alone there will be\napproximately 800 athletes -vying\ntor the fight to represent Canada at\nthe games here July 30 to Aug. T.\nMOSTLY SWIMMERS'\n. Swimming Is attracting the most\nathletes\u2014390 evenly divided between men and women,- Coach\nPercy Norman says British Columbia's entry will be the one to beat\nduring-the three-day gele at Em\nplre pool, University of BrMHh\nColumbia.\nAcross town, while this is going\noh, the cyclists will be pumping\nhard.' July J and a win see the MO\nn-ctre sprint, 1000-metre time trie\n4000-metre pursuit race and 10-ml\nrace. All this will occur on th* sp\ndally-built, $105,000 banked boa\ntrick, attracting about 25 cyclists.\nROAD RACE8\nAbout Si ridors will bo on hai\n11 the fashionable Point Oroy ir\nJuly t when the gruelling road r*\ntrials are hild. The cyclists will rli\na nine-lap course for a total of 1\nkilometres or approximately- 62\nmiles, '    . I\nThere will b* a one-day layo\nthen on July 0 about 130 assort!\ntrick arid field hopefuls will bit\na two-day grind. July D will see tl\nrunning of the 130-yard high bur\nles, 440 run, 100-yard dash, six-mi\nrun, one-mile run, 80-metro w\nmen's hurdles, running high Jum\nbroad Jump,'shot put and hamm\nthrow. \u25a0 1\nThe following day will be fe\ntursd by the 440 hurdles, 220 das\n880 run, three-mile run, 440 reli\none-mile relay, hop. stop ind Jum\ndiscus, pol* vault, javelin, womer\nhi.h Jump. (\nMew Food and Drugs Act Ups Fines\nFor Offence From $200 lo $10(0\nLake Shipping Drops\nCLEVELAND (AP)-Th* Grea\nLakes fleet hauled 10,608,268 ton! of\nIron ore last month, bringing ihe\nseason's movement to 22,064320\ntons, the Lake Superior Iron Or*\nAssociation reports. A year ago.\nthe movement wai 30,058,371 tons-\nThe lack of good' sound training\nIn geography ln our schools is limply scandalous. Here we have the\nHon. Minister of Education tud-\ndenly discovering the-beauties of\nthe Kootenays and being so enthused that he takes 232 color transparencies. He must have been badly instructed In his youth not to\nknow that Nelson, the Queen City,\nis the centre of an area .of incomparable sccpio splendor.    \u25a0'\nI hope bis pictures turn out well.\nI should like some of them to illustrate, my forthcoming book entitled, \"East of Anarchist Mountain, or Life ln the Wild West Kootenay.\" Among \"Other fasdhatlng\nsubjects;the book will, treat of the\ncurious race of. people known as\nSmoke Eaters, the Par* Nekid\nDoukhobor and that ultra-refined\nspecimen of the human race, the\nNubbly Nelsonian. There will also\nbe Intriguing little stories, such *s\nthe tale of the Phantom Bridge\nacross the West Arm and the toad\nthat christened Toad Mountain.\nTaken all in all this book should\nbe a great contribution to contemporary **phrenzaic literature.\nYou, my. learned- reader, will\ndoubtless wonder at the choice. of\ntitle, \"East of Anachlst Mountain.\"\nFor every magnus opuS of this\nnature there is a ralson. d'etre,\nwhich being \"simply translated\nmeans that there is a reason tor all\nthings, including this, In this case\nthe motivating motive-is the curious\nattitude of;the dwellers in Vancouver, v.. :.'.'\nVictoria, as you no doubt are\naware, is the last stop before Heaven, but Vancouver is the last place\non the mainland of Canada. It is\nhere that Canadians of all kinds\nreach the Pacific Ocean and say to\nthemselves, \"Thus far and no\nfarther\" for this it the place where\na baleful spell falls upon them end\nthey forget \"their own people and\ntheir father's bouse.\" Once under\nthis spell they no longer, remember\nthe pleasant street of Portulaca\nthey walked as children, or the\ntrails of Taghum, but only that\nthey are Vancouverites, a-race,\napart. \u2022 . '\u2022..\u25a0\u25a0\nFEAR. . - '.    -      '.'.,[\u25a0\nWith this .orgetiulnes comes a\nstrange tear of .{he, unknown- During the summer they conquer their\nfears sufficiently, to venture as far\nas the Okanagan in search of sunshine. Appalled by i the name Anarchist Mountain, beyond W\u00bb *hey\nwID not venture. To them thls;is\n\"the ultima' thule, the limit bf civilization. Beyond it they tncture\nrough and crooked trails with bandits lurking at every turn and an\ninhospitable land full bf bears end\nother wild animals. Of course they\nare wrong, but how, shall we convince them that once up the western 'lop* of the mountain they enter a pleasant park.ike country\nwhere the rdfcd runs smoothly, that\nas they descend, the smiling slopes\nand valleys lie before them, like\nTennyson's country in the Lady of\nSh|lo^t,-.where    ,,-'\u25a0.'\nOn either hand {he river He,\nLong fields of barley and. bf rye,\nWhich clothe the Vorld and reach\nthe, sky. \u2022    ' -       _    . \" .,-\nHow shall we tell them,'too, that\napart from one short seven miles\nof good, but unpaved road, the\nhighway is all that can be'deslred\nuntil lt reaches the Cascade, and\nthat there the hardy soul can take\nthe mile high'Santa Rosa summit\nln his stride and the less venture-\nsume' may cross our neighbor's\nlota and detour via Kettle Falls to\nRossland, where the whole of the\nMore Security\nPensions, B. C.\nVICTORIA (CP) ~ More old age\nsecurity pension cheque! were sent\nout to British Columbians during\nJune than ever before. *\nW. R. Bone, regional director of\nthe department, of national health\nand welfare, revealed Saturday that\n86,339 persons received pension\ncheques, amounting to $3,474,500.\nAn Increase was also recorded In\nfamily allowances with $2,243,345\ngoing to 371,807' children in 182,345\nfamilies,\n, During June, 486. families receiving faml}^ ettovv\u00a3ncesf_^ovedt Into\nBritish .Columbia from other provinces while 4i0 families moved but\nAt the same time, 188 pensioners\nmoved In while 185. left-   \"\nOTTAWA (CP); \u2014 The gover)\nment bos proclaimed the new Foe\nand Drug! Act passed by ParUi\nment In 1958.\nAn extra editidn of the Cana.\nGazette says the act wis proclaln\ned effective last Thursday. Its proi\nlamatlon wai doUyed .pending'\nrkvislen of the regulations (overt\nbig the act's, operation. \\ '\u25a0\nIh* new act substantially, ii\ncresses the maximum penalties f<\nbreiohci of the law or tho regub\ntlons. For first-offences the max:\nmum is increased .to $1000 fro\n$200.  ' '\nMAJOR CHANGES\nFood and drugs inspectors no\nwjll have the power io examlt\nrecords of companies ln the cour\nof investigations Into alleged irre\nularitles In order to trace 41\nwhereabouts of dangerous or alii\nterateo products. They also' mi\nrequire druggists to produce- pr.\nscrlptlohs records to trace illeg\nsales of drugs. '\nOfficials ot the\/health depar\nment say the sections concernii\nsanitation probably are, the trial\nchange in the act Under tile-19\nlaw, prbseeutioni epuld be, undi\ntaken c-ly,lf t-i-rowi-buli_iwsi\nthat \"flit, of dirties evident' ttl\nfood, drug or. cosmetic' The, ni\nlaw makes it an offence to mon\nfacture food, drugs or cosmetl\nunder unsanitary conditions.\nThe first steamship, on the coast\nof British Columbia was the Beaver, brought from England in 1912,\nKootenays Is open for their delight?   '\n\u2666\u2014Nubbly, \\ a combination , of\nnoble arid Jovejy, the best of both.\n\u2022\u2022\u2014Phr^nzaic, a ftew word I\nmode myself. It sounds good, but I\ndon't know what it -means.     .\nDEATHS\nBy Th* Canadian Prett\nRobertsonVlIle,  N.C.  -  F.-l\nBoone Sr., 61, .who made, the toba\nco auctioneer's chant famous.\nHalifax\u2014Lena Margaret Frasi\ntor more than 20 years port work\ntor the Presbyterian: Church.\nVancouver\u2014Sid Beech, 63, v<\nergn .sportsman and restauratei\nNew Business\nConnections.. \u2666\nLEAFLETS\nHANDBILLS\n*       CIRCULARS\n,. that appeal to your\nsteady a n d prospective\ncustomers.\nIf you are planning a\nSALES CAMPAIGN\n\u25a0for   .\nBARGAINS and SEASONAL GOODS\nplease,   consult   us.\nWe will be glad \"to give\nyou estimates on all your\n'    printing needs. :\nO PHONE 144\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT\nNelson Daily News\n-       NI_,SQN,BfC,\n ,(PIIPC'\n. \u2022\u25a0'  ,- ,'\n\u25a0\"\" .- ... '\u25a0\" \".\u2014\n-__-_-_-________-__\u25a0\nIt Pays to Buy Quality\n::-V^iiVv:;';;.',,;:\nMoccasin Vamp\nnch welt, foam rubber crepe\nbs, tor summer comfort,-day\niight. \u25a0\u25a0\nSizes 6 to 11   '\n\u25a0'.  '$6.^5v.\".;\n1 ANDREW\n& CO.\niADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstabllthtd 1902\nfelson Social\ntOM FORT MacLEOD ...'.Mr!\nMrs. J. H. Vandervalk, R. R. 1,\non, have as guests their Son and\n:hter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, B.\ndervalk, and family, of Fort\ntseod. .  '\n^VANCOUVER . . .'Mr. and\n\u25a0jSs H. Loucks have left'for Van-\n\u25a0er to spend their holidays with\nires.'      - -.-, .\n^gagements\nr; and Mrs.-tii_brd, Watts of\njary announce the engagement\nleir youngest daughters Eileen,\nt. John Dalgas, only son of Mrs.\nia Dalgas and the' late Major\n:as of Nelsbn. Tlie wedding.\nstake place;July 10, at .7:'<\u00bb.p.m.,\nit Paul's United Church, Nelson.\nTH IAN SISTERS'\nfKESALE\nUGE SUCCESS\"\nhuge success\" was the com-\nt of Mrs. J. Bereau, committee\niber tor the Pythian Sisters\n! sale Saturday morning in Mc\nW'\u25a0\u25a0    \"\u2022      '-.'.'   \u25a0' ';.'\nprofit of $25 was realized from\nsale, to go towards the Work of\ngythian Sisters Lodge,\nle.sale, which featured a wide\nrtment of baking, waa sold out\nre noon.\ncharge ot the sale were Mrs. J.\nlau, Mrs. B. Whitehead and Mrs.\nButcher. -. '\no FALSE TEETH\nRock, Slide or Slip?\nFASTEETH, an lmpr6vo_ powder ta\n- - rlnkled on upper 6r lower plates,\nfalse teeth more firmly In place.\n' aiwe, slip or roct No.gu'\u2014\n.n\u00bbstr       ' \"\t\n>-breath).\nlit'counter.\nBride Designs Oiyri QpyOn\nFor Kiniherley Wedding\nKIMBERLEY-At a nuptial mass'\nin the Sacred Heart Church in Kimberley, Esther Barbara Pearl Rollheiser, daughter of Mr., and Mrs.\nJ. J Rollheiser of Kimberley lie-\ncame the bride of Albert, Edward\nInman, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A.\nIpman of Fort William, Ontario.\nRev. Fathep Js J. Cheevers was eel'\nehrant,-.-\"   _ - *\nGiven in marriage by her; father,\nthe bride-chose a white nylon gown\nwith raised velvet; flowers over taffeta and- a scalloped neckline. A\nwide sash formed, a bustle at the\nback of the ballerina length gown.\nA flof-al headdress of roses and lily\nof the valley matched: her shower\nbouquet. The bride designed the\ntowns worn by herself and her'\nbridesmaid -. . \u25a0\"\nSister\";of the.bridei Miss. Jeanette\nRollheiser, as bridesmaid, was' dressed-in an identical gown inmauve,\nwith a, sash-forming two wide- panels in.the back. She carried a bouquet of .yellow carnations, lily of,\nthe'valley ind roses. \"\u25a0\u2022\nClarence-J. Rollheiser, bride's\nbrother, acted as best man and Don\nald Rollheiper, also a brother of the\nbride, was usher.   -.   -        :\u25a0'\u25a0\nA mauve linen dress embroidered\nin whit, was worn by;the bride's\nmother with a matching stole and\nwhite accessories, y\n.. The- New -Olsls; Hotel. was the\nplace of'the reception at which the\nthree-tier cake, flanked by gladioli\nembedded in pink tulle, was cut.\nPoUrers were Mrs. F.' Kocevor, Mrs.\nC. J. Rollheiser, Mrs. Eileen Brown\nand Mrs. A. J. Kennedy.\nThe toast to the bride, proposed\nby Rev. Father J. J. Cheevers, .wai\nresponded to by the groom:\nthe bride's travelling outfit for\nthe honeymoon to Niagara Falls\nconsisted of a pale blue boucle suit\nwith white accessories and .a rose\ncorsage. ;\";\u25a0' , ' ' '-y   .' -,-'        '-'.'\nMr. and Mrs, Inman will reside at\nFort Wil-aht. *y--\n' Out-of-town guests to the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. C. J.' Rollheiser and family,ot Tfail, Mr. Con\nRowley, Uncle of the bride;, of Vancouver,- Mri,- Eileen Brown of- Fernie, Mr. Al Manjak of Ocean Falls,\nand' Miss Jeanette; Rollheiser of\nVancouver.      -'  *       \u25a0      ':'\u25a0'\nKimberley Girl WfdsafHanaimo\n'\u25a0'. The -Nanaimo United Churdh\nmanse was theyjeene of the. recent\nwedding of a Kimberley girl, Edna\nMay Dolson, youngest daughter of\nMr. Harold Dolson and the late-Mrs.\nDolson of Kimberley and Richard\nKlostCof Vancouver. 'Rev. Mr. Nut-\ntal was the officiating clergyman.\nGiven in-marriage by her father,\nthe- bride chose a white nylon 'ballerina-length gown with a small\nwhitehat.ahd carried a bouquet-of\nsweetheart roses and Illy of the\nvalley.   .   -.\nBridesmaid, Miss Sheila Ellis of\nVancouver, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs:;T. A; Ellis of KimbeTley, wore,\na turquoise ballerina length nylon\ndress with white accessories and\ncarried a bouquet ot white carnations and blue batch.lor buttons, j\n.' Noreen Wheat, niece of the bride\nas flower girl,, wore a white taffeta\ndress and carried a Small bouquet of\nwhite carnations and blue batchelor\nbuttons,  . V\nBest man was Robert .Klose of\nBurnaby, cousin of the groom.\nThe reception was held at the\nborne- of the bride's ' sister. and\nbrother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. G. E.\nWheat  ''.'-.'\nTor the honeymoon to Vancouver\nthe bride chose a green taffeta dress\nwith yellojv top coat and white accessories and, a. white gardenia\n\u25a0 -Mr. and:Mrs. Klose will reside et\n2137 West. 1st Avenue, Vancouver.\n''Golden\nCorn...\nrich\ncream-style . 1\ncom so easy \u00ab;\nto serve.\nRftYALOlY\ncorn\nIpgifAtC-W\nCANNED    FOODS\nPHONE  288   fer  FREE   PICKUP  AND   DELIVERY\nor stop in at 288 BAKER STREET. .'\nEMPIIIE\nDRY CLEANERS\nHIGHEST QUALITY\u2014LOWEST PRICES\nPYTHIAN SISTERS\nCELEBRATE\n29th ANNIVERSARY\nKIMBERLEY .\u2014 ;\u25a0'Members;.'of\nKimberley Temple No. 2T;:Pythian\nSisters,; marked the ;,29th anniversary ot toe Lodge with a banquet\nattended by approximately 85\nKnights of Pythias,' their wives, Pythian Sisters and their husbands.\nThe date was also the 87th birthday\nof the Mother of the Temple, Mrs.\nSarah Leigbton. '\u25a0*        > .\nThe delicious turkey banquet was\npreparej; by .Mrs. JlbMnce-Cotth-,\norp and her committee and served\nby members of the Junior Forest\nGuards in their colorful uniforms,.\nFollowing opening remarks by the\nChief;'Mrs. Claude Simpson,;charter, members of the Temple spoke\nbriefly.\nPast Grand Chancellor. P. J. Mc-\nKim, told of the Temple as he knew\nit in days gone by,-'--\nA' gift was presented to Mrs.\nLelghton by Mrs. Simpson on behalf of those present. A gift was also\npresented to R. Bastedo, this being\nhis last meeting prior to'.his leaving\nfor Nelson.\nCommunity singing and party\ngames concluded a most enjoyable\nevening... \u25a0   '.':.\",. ,'., \"   ','\", \u25a0 -\"\"\nNOT TOO OLD.\nCALGARY (CP) - Idle men are\nunhappy men, says William Mercer, Vancouver insurance executive. In a speech here he said \"one\not the cruellest things employers\ncan do is to retire a man who, is\nkeen on his job, Just because he is\n65.\"    - \u25a0-\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RESULTS\nby. ctcuvuL Whsudsh.\nRecent -Nelson newlyw^fls, Mr. and Mrs. Peter\nFillipoff; above;. are ntjw liying' ih -Leanifiigton,; Ontario,\nwhere.the groom is empio^ed by fhe government. Bride\nis' the-former ElisabethIftargpret Spfohtfff; daughter of\nMrs.'-M. Sofbnoff, while :theg.66m' __ the.soii of ,Mr;and\nMrs-Fred J..Fillipoff, .<\nRecess iFor Summer..-..[\nVaried Legion LA Hears in Report\nPenficlonConvenlion Colorful,\nv y'-\\'----, \"\u25a0'.-'\u25a0;'    '   ,';\u25a0-.'\u25a0\"'.',-\u2022\nJteportS:.'of '-.zone . conference,, at.1\nNew Denver and of the big-annual\nconvention of the B. C. ahdNorth-\nwestern Command were heard 'at\nthe meet^hg ,,-f the Nelson Ladies\nAuxiliary: to,the Canadian legion.-\nMeetihg, fte: lafet to be-held be\"*\nfore summer recess, heard Mrs.\nFrank. Day outline the activities-of\nthe. .zone conference at Denver,\nwhere Randolph Harding, M.L.A.\nfor:v'Kaslo'-Slocan, spoke; on ''the\nDdi%'-Nation- Mrs. 0.- A. Allen'\nwas reelected zone president, Mrs.\nDay'.said.'-'.'   :. ;.-     '' .\/\u25a0   -_',\"\nEnthusiastic, over the'colorful\nP-htlcton convention attended by\n400iWomeh was Mrs. G. E. Thompson. Representatives converged on\nthe Okanagan centre frpm 200 auxiliaries \u25a0 .in '.British Columbia, and\nnorthwestern* United Stales' Command 'Ladies'' Auxiliaries.:.      ';;.\n\u25a0Enjoyable'.social' a'cjivitiea' were\nmingled with business meetings and\nparades, Mrs. Thompson said. A\nhighlight\" .was the wefcdtoing'ad-\ndr^ss:'of \"Mayor C. Oscarr Mattepnv\nwho expressed the hope-that the\nworld!, nations would riot agqjii. air\nlow a- war. His feelings! wewi - re-\npleated by.Donald McTaVish, immediate p'lst. provincial president, of\ntheY Canadian. Legion who Mrs.\nThompson quoted as sayirig \"we\nmust make our feelings felt toward\nthe callous indiftererice- to the\nplight-of'those who suffered, and\nof'their dependents.\"\nAddresses were given by the Dominion President, Dr. Lumsden,\nwho^said ?5 per cent of the dis-.\nabled Veterans on pensions live in\nB. C, and.by N. G, Kincaid, zonei\ncommander, G. W. Bolton; president\nof the Penticton; isegion Branch,\nand Mrs. -P. .F. Eraut, president of\nthe Penticton Women's Auxiliary,\nas-official hostess.\nAbrief outline'on.telegfams.'fent,\nincluding; 'one',\"to,Prime 'Minister\nLouis St. Laurent, committee reports and 36 resolutions embracing\nveteran problems from - medical\n\u25a0care', to .boinjes for pensions was\n'givOn,by.Mrs^Siompson.  -;',....\nExecutive meeting this year will\n_e!held'-in -iattte in November\/\nwith the-. B.; C. convention called,\nfor Prince George next year.\nl-j;Gfficers elected wire: y ..-\"\n[[T\/lrtU. 3. S. 'Black, Prb{ce Rupert,\npresident; Mrs, A. Macdonald, Victoria; MTs. F\/MlddletonrlrailliMrs,\nD. O'Neill, Seattle; .Mrs;-Dennison,\nLumby, fourth vice-president; Mrs:\nC. 'Bree'don, Vancouver. District\nCouncil, fifth \u2022vice-president;; Mrs.\nCatherine . Anderson,. Okanagan\n\u2022Council; Mrs, -W. (Hi'<}reeri,- ClOver-\n-dale, Mrs. E. Armijhaw, all.vlce-\npreSidentS: .'\u2022'.. ',.':.-.-\u25a0<'\nThe  parade -that, lailhdied^the\n-ith.annual convention was one of\nthe most colorful Mrs., Thompson\nhad ever seen. Sipping champagne\nfrom:toe Alhn'Gup, av\/^exto-HM;\nMajesty pledging continued support,'\nluncheons' and- dinners all were: a\npart of the' three-day event,     ' *\nApplication   f,o r . membership\nfrom Mrs, E. A, Muir-waB accepted by the 'meeting,: whloh also\n'.. heard, a report- on; the. gift box\nsent to veterans at;Hyoroft. Pur.\n> lng June auxiliary members made\n! 166 visits to the hospitals'; distributing 162 gifts. New drape* have\nbeen purchased for the soldiers\nward at Kootenay Lake General\ni   Hospital, and will be put up this\nweek. .\nAlthough there will -be no, July,\nor August meetings, the Auxiliary\nwill carry on its activities; afidiWill\nwork for a booth at the annual\nKootenay Exbibltion..;;.        \t\nCoast Home for\nCouple Married\nAl Grand Forks\nGRAND FORKS - Vancouver\nwilt be the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Papove, who -were married\nto,Gr\u00abnd Forks July 1,\n: -Th* bride, Mfldred'May Hawre-\nluk, is -the only daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs, Alex Hawreluk of Grand\nForks' and had lived here'for the\npast 13 years prior to going to Vancouver-last year to take a dress-de-\n:signing.course ;The groom, the eldest son of Mr, and Mrs. William N.\n\u25a0Papoveiot Gran^ -Forks, formerly\nof Salmo, is employed at a garage\nin Vancouver.   : ,.,        \\\nThejweddlng was held in Russian\nciistomvatsthe hotoeof &#. bride's\nparents In the' afternoon.*' Immediate relatives and close friends-witnessed the ceremony; at \"whjch: the\nbridal .eouple.vwas ;.glveh-:ttier bless-\nii^s jof ,'the families'linked :by^the\nmarriage. Bridefs ,sole;.attendant\nwas Miss Anne Potapoff as bridesmaid,'andiest man was Peter Pop-\noff of Gri(nd Forks.\" ' '\n- -Tho ijetite bride was to a robln'a\negg blue dress styled in -princess\nlines. Chalk-white accessories complemented her outfit. 'The. bridesmaid-was attired in a dress of deep\n\u25a0blue.-; \"y, \u25a0 \"' ;' \u25a0',': \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0    ;\/..;-\"',, <\u2022'.'\nA banquet featuring Russian delicacies was held after :the:cere,mony\nand congratulatory speeches and\nsongs .were rendered in. t^ei.hon-\n,qtf..'-At five,o'clock a;'small.party\nwas heldlor thenewlyJveds-atvthe\nhome; of the groom's parents, v..\nThei. Russian: ceremony was followed by a civil marriage solemnized at .toe Court-House in Grand\nFoirks,\n, Mr.and Mra.Papove left'Monday\nfor\" their home in Vancouver. For\ntravelling Mrs. Papbye-donned a\nbluV-tWeed suit and White'.accessories. '       .- .'i';.. -' - -\u2022, -,.; -\nWM\nNflrSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 5, 1954\u20145\n\u25a0i. =:'' \u25a0;\". easy to clean Venetian blinclQ '\u25a0 ry\n\u25a0;; \u00b0^- 'e^w^^:-;'.;! \/'y\nspring-tempered slats    ...>-Oy yyl\n'y \\I      \u2022\"\"'   * and vinyl plasticY tape\n.. ' \u2022 ;Ple_taiu_i vinyl plastic tape matches the beauty,^oleaii-\n-' liness, and endurance of the famous Flexalum spring-\ntempered slats. Check the important advantages thoy:.-.\n. .,\";'irSffer you in oustom-hiade Venetian blindi,  ' ?.;;\\''\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0\n\u25a0 Wlpn Clm - A damp\n.cloth whists away dirt,\ngrease, lam and spots\nfrom Flexalum taps. -\nJulllt \u2014 Even aun\nwon't fade or discolor\nflexalum plasllo tape\n... always loots new.\n\u25a0 Wn'lttiB-Rexaliini\nvinyl plasttetapewon't-\nshrlntortt-t-i. Moisture doesn't alla'ct'-If\nWlHoti6r\u00bb\nDeparting Member\n':W*mtm\u00a3'.. -At;-:a:- meeting . of\nWynndel .Women's \u2022 institute Mrs.\nM. \u2022 Wigtln, ;Mrs. J.MerWinan,' Mrs.\nT. MoUftttorit and\/Mrs.,a., Andestad Avfre elected on the ESJI Fair\ncommittee. .' \u25a0' .- V\n. Itesi^aUori-of. Mrs. P. Payne as\na. director and representative ' On\nwelfare board was accepted, as she\nisMvlng-'toedis^lCt. lifts. A. Hagen eleoted to fill both vacancies.\nThe sUto of $5 -was donated to\nSt John Ambulance'Fund. Knitted\nsqusies, wi_ be': made..for-iblank-\n,ets.-for. Gr^e,;it-,was-'de8d^.: Mrs.\nR.. Andestad, delegate to convention-at Vancouver, gave a-full report: . r. \":'' ,_j \u25a0,:'\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0 ']\u25a0\u25a0'::\n\u25a0r FoUOwing, the.;meetihg.'.a social\nwas held as a farewell to Mrs.\nPayna.-:Prizes; were Svon i.bif.iMrs.\nJ. Wigen, Mrs, M, J_ies,';iw;ft C.\nShaw.aftd ilfts^iS. I\u201e;Packman.\nMrs.. -(,- Fletcher presentediV Mrs.\nJPayiie with; a ^ft from the Institute ; and;.-,JKs M. ^ohes-on-behajf\nof the Credit Union gave her an\nemblem pin      \"\nMrs, M,: Foiall,'-rndther of Mrs.\nPSyiie who will be- leaving shortly\nwas also remembered. On Friday\neverting a number of friends gathered at.the home'of Mrs;.:P. Payne\nfor .\u25a0 a. farOwell party. A parting\ngift^of pin and ear'ring set was\npresented.   ,y     .;\u25a0''.\nPILE OF FARTHINGS '\n! '\u25a0 9XFpBD,-England <CP) - Whlt-;\nsuiitide holiday \"farthing\" gifts for\ncharity from 700 children in Oxford\nparishes; amounted _ to 2,000,000 of\nthe quarter penny coins, worth \u00a32>-\n083. ' . .' ['.'. \u25a0\"\"    ...\nSlitaSuplitk \u2014 Flexalum aluminum. atats\nare tpilnl-tempered\n' to keap their shape.\nWas'tClilpirCiict-Tho\nfinish won't chip,\ncrack, or peel. Flexing\nwon't harm It either.\nWarttmwrir-The .\nname'!Flexelum\"ls\nulslbly-lnvlslblySn-\ntravad on every aist.\n120; color combinations.     Free estimates.     Easy terms.,\nWedding Shower\nFor Teacher at\nSchool's End\nGSjS^fWOOD. \u2014 On the closing\nday .-of-school. Miss Martha Takemo-\nto was' honored by the staff of the\nGreenwood! Senior High-Elementary School,'-, the P.T.A. and the stu-\ndenfi '_6t Jher' class, with a presentation ^of gifts, Miss Takemoto was\nmarried^Itiiy 3,\nThe staff preSentated her with a\nsteam-iron,-the P.T.A. gave her an\nelectric clock and her students, of\nGrades IV- and V, gave her an el-\nec^lc-.iettle.  .'    .\nMiss, Takemoto- came to Greenwood, at the time of the evacuation,\nShe received her education at the\nGreenwood; School, and went to\nVictoria'Normal School. After graduation she was on the staff of the\nMidway school for two years and\nhas been a member of the staff at\nGreenwood tor the past year.\n809\n\u2022JAMA BAG I    !\nHe's a dolll He's a PAJAMA\nBAG! Slit in back for youi_ youngster to pop his pajamas in.- This\nhappy clown sits .On the bed; all\nday 'till slumber time comes,;.\nUse gay scraps to make this\nclown 'Jama Doll. Pattern 809 has\neasy-to-follow .directions. \u25a0 \u25a0 .*\u25a0    .'.\nSend TW_NT-iFIVB CENOS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this, pattern to ^Nelson Dally\nNews, -Needlecraft Dept; Nelson,'\nB. ,C. Print plainly-PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and' ADDRESS. \"'.'' y \u25a0',;_.-\nDon't miss our Laura Wheeler\n1954 Needlectaft Cataldg! 79. embroidery, crochet, color-transfer and\nembroidery patterns to send \/tor-\nplus 4 complete patterns printed in\nbook. Send 25 cents-tor your copy\ntodayl Ideas for gifts, bazaar sellers,\nfashions.\nSOUTH SLOCAN\nCOUPLE TO\nTOUR ISLES\nMr. and Mrs. C..F. Bland of South\nSlocan leave Thursday for Montreal where they will .stay before\nboarding the-\"Empress of Australia\" July 12 for a three-month visit\nto\" the British Isles. .,\n' .Mr. . Bland\/ . superintendent of\nplants tor'toe West: Kootenay iPdvier\nand Bight Company, 'is a native ot\nWales, ahd his, wife of. Scotlahd.-\nThey have riot returned to the .Aid\ncountry since their arrival in i Canada 31 years ago. \"y,\nDuring thetoholiday they plartto\nvisit 'relatives in England, Scotland,\nWales and Irelahd and ^_n,tendr .0\ntour the continent.\nStrawberry Tea\nPlanned for Manse\nRepair Expenses\nGREEijWQOD \u2014 Ladies' Aid of\nthe United Church held' tjieir. last\nmeeting- of toe season in,the.Kindergarten-room of the chin-ch when\nit was 'decided to hold a strawberry\ntea on the church lawn- JTijly 18,\nweather permitting, to raise funds\ntot carry on the. necessary repairs,\nat.tbe.manse.- It was aisodecldedto\nask: for permission to- operate the\ncanteen on .Labor Day\n.;; A vSrlety. pf pieces.-,ot; material\nwas given out to the members to be\nmade.up into,aprons, etc, tor the\nChristmas bazaar.     \u2022'   \". \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0' *.-,,   '\nRty.ERfeATUf^E'......-\u2022.;.,, vy:\u25a0;',\n: Thfe'tlSal bore of the Petiteodiac\nciyer; rushes.up.-;ti..ra. pest Morii^v\nton, with a height- of three ,-tb five\nfietv .   \"'\"..       ,\"..:',;.', \u25a0'\u25a0 '\u25a0'\u25a0!'\nNOXZEMA\nsaves tho night*\ni you sleep in cool comfort!\n\u2022 Get heavenly relief from hot sunburn-in\nas little as 3 seconds! Medicated Noxzema-\nBdothes,cools,helps heal even the most severe\nsunburn; cases - and Wa (reaseless, doesn't\nstain clothesl That's why over 25,000,000 sunburn sufferers.haye already used Noxzema!\nRemember-First Aid Hospitals at,-most\nfemous American beaches rely !dn NoxzOmO'\nfor sunburnl 26^, 65i, 8W, and $1.69. '\nAlso available In handy AS* tubes.\nFor savers sunburn\napply. Noxjema\nheavily! As spbn as\nNbxreroa disappears;\nreapply liberally for\nbest results. '\"\nWITHOUT   liURNING\nRICH\nHtALTHY\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nDeer Pai^Not08a.\nDEER PARK\u2014MT. and7 Mrs, A.\".\nRonmark and J. Neglesklof NelsOn\nwere visitors to B^YParlt >0hey\nWere acoompamei_-<Byi.P.yNagftW\nand nephew, Jim, of Bow Island,\nAlta., who are spending a. holiday ,-\nin Nelson.' '\"'.'        .;'\"'v:'- :\u201e\nMr.'and Mrs. P.;F.-,Gd\u00abi^\u00ab'iana\"\ntheir children retufnlng;^m;ifel-'\nson   were   accompanied   by   Miss\nSylvia Butling, who;wpi::q!iend,-as\nfew weeks with her cousin GOral-\ndine.        '\u25a0 . .  V';.-1 \u25a0',>'-.-'\nMr. and Mrs. A. -A. Ehdpl=Ad'\nfamily, who moved to Salmo two\nyears ago, have returned to, their'\nformer home ta Deer Park. \u25a0-'\/.?\u2022\nBackache\nlorttag help J\nB.GoHlngU_>:\nFoe, qnlflk comf(\nI-heumatio Pains. G ...\ncloudy urine, irrHatlng pasae^\n\u2022nd ion ol energy duetto\nBladder troubles, try.\ncomplete aatlaf action or\nauifer another da;    \"\"\ndrugg-ct tot\nRobin Hood Bike Contest Winner!\nHOctsr Stewart, 411 Latimer 8tr;eet, Is shown here with a leading\nEnglish 3-speed racer he won on the Robin Hood Bike Contest\n.-Iu-e3j9,,19B4. '.'\u2022\"\u2022\u25a0 !'\u2022'.. .'\"\u25a0     '\u25a0'   , f\u00ab3_-?l \/::.\nHbctor 8tewart answered the question asked on the. show correctly, and Included a box-top from a Robin Hood product with\nhis entry. \u25a0',        ,   y      '.'-'. y'y--'\u25a0';\"-.-\u25a0-\u2022.'\u25a0\nThe Robin Hood Contest Is easy to enter, and every boy and\ngirl haa a chance to- win. Every week, a simple question Is\nasked on the Robin .Hood Show.The question for next Saturday .\nla'What IS the highest mountlln In the world?\" Contestanta\n'are' asked to send In their answer, with their name and\naddress, along with a guarantee certificate or box-top from\nany Robin Hood product. Send entries to: The Robin Hood\nBicycle Contest, care of CKLN, Nelson. Every week, a shiny\nnew English bicycle will be given away to a lucky boy or\ngirl v_ith the correct amwer. . -,..;:\u00a3. \u25a0\nYou'll have no trouble getting guarantee certlflcatei and box-\ntop's to enter as often as you wish. That's because these duality\nproducts, Robin Hood Flour and RObin Hood Cake. Mixes,\nare Canada'! biggest selleri byfar. \"'\"'\u25a0 >''\nThe Robin Hood Show Is heard weekly on Saturday mornlhn\nat 9:4? over Station CKLN, Nelion.     .     , ..      '\n \u25a0_   ;.. \u25a0-, \u25a0\n m\n6\u2014NEL50N DAILY yE\\VS\/MONDAY, JULY S, 1954\nWONDER   BUILDING' \u2014 Galvanlied steel panels fastened with nuls and holts form\ntrusAless building of many uses Over lt Is test span to determine wind and snow loads.\nGUESS WH AT?-\nThls hairdo, called \"Sea Gulls'\nFlight,\" with a splder-IIke decoration, a creation of Corita and\nAlexandre, Is the latest thing\nabown In Paris,\nSUBMARINE  HUNTERS \u2014 Five American-built Sikorsky 8-55 helicopters of ihe British Navy's first anti-submarine\nsquadron &y to formation near Gosport, England,, Air Base after the unit wu placed in formal operation.\n\u25a0'\u00ab\u25a0\". I, uniu\u2122^\nD\n>; ^\nSW'iA'f 'LJVfcE'. A' F OX-ilttiity; a Mt fox captured by\nW, C. Rosebud, of Burbanlt, Cat., when the animal was three\nmonths old, 'performs, one ot o number of tricks It has learned.\nRESTORATION   PROJECT _. Architect Wernfcr March, left, and Protestant Bishop\nGerhard Jacob! view model of war-damaged Kaiser Wilhelm Church to be tcbullt In Berlin.\nCHIEF  CHAPLAIN\n\u2014 Maj. Gen. Patrick J. Ryan,\na Roman Catholic, has been\nnominated as Chief Chaplain of\nthe Army, succeeding Maj. Gen,\nIvan L. Bennett, a Baptist,\ny'-.-:.\nif:\n:-'-':YY----^^_^:;--^_Y<r-:VY^-\n\u25a0..N;>y::Y:v:-fi:::Y-Y'y'' \"'\n;:.;|^:ss\nm^0^yMy\n[isyyyyyyyyyy\nSPRING F E V E R \u2014 The Baron, a gorilla seven years old\nand growing In strength, raises voice in temporary cage while\nregular> one Is fitted with stronger bars at Columbus, 0\u201e Zoo.\nMAN IN THE KITCHEN _ BUI Chappell, only\nmale ln home economics course at University of Rhode Island,\ntastes canned pears with girl classmates ln test of preserves.\nHONOR WAR DEAD \u2014 Japanese cameramen covering U. S, Marine exercises on Iwo Jima offer prayers, flowers and\nwise at grave of Unknown Japanese Soldiers killed there in 1915.\nIN   THE   FAMILY \u2014 Judy Devlin, left, and her sister,\n, Sue, of Baltimore, Md., hold trophies after winning All-England\nbadminton doubles title ln London. Judy won women's singles.\nQUEEN   IN   HER  S E T T1 N G _ Nydla piero, IS.\nwaa selected by Puerto Rico's orchid growers as queen of their\nfourth annual orchid show ln San Juan, April 24-25, ..\nN I W_SC H 0 0 L  0 P E NED- Schoolgirls in national costumes meet officials al\nbauguratlon of new Allied Powers Headquarters school to St. Germatoo ett Laye. near Paris.\nFOR LOADING SPEED - PennsylvahWliallroadg\nGoodrich conveyor ia Philadelphia will carry 3,800 tons of Iron\nore an hour to freight ears from,ships . quarter-mlle away.\nNOVEL   FIRE   DRILL \u2014 Firemen In Verona, ktaly, put out mock blase at elty'i Coloi-\n(earn, a structure larger ia circumference than Coloweum In Borne and Just as ancient\n'._\u25a0   ,'.-'   -  Y- --\n;.y.y \u25a0:\n mm\nWK-\u2122 y^^mjm^!m;\no.i\nMusial Stars in\n-Star Poll\nCHICAGO (AP) - Stan.(The Man) Mdsial of St.'\ntpuis Cardinals emerged Sunday as the highest' individual'\nvote getter in the final tabulation of the all-star baseball poll.\n};&'.: Musial, six-time National League batting champion,\npolled 1,468,377 of fhe 4,272,470 yotescast by baseball fans\nthroughout t_ie world\nTrolling Musial as first choice\nwere Cleveland's Al Rosen, 1,452,-\n738, and New York Yankees'\ncatcher Yogi Berra, 1,440,380.\n.Three National Leaguers and\nfive American leaguers repeated\nfrom last year's vo'\u00b0 'or storting\nberthS In the 21st annual classic\nJuly 13 at Cleveland.\nIn the National League, Musial\nreceived the nod again tor right\nfield whlld Roy' Campanella of\nBrooklyn Dodgers repeated as\nCatcher with Ted Kluszewskl of\nCincinnati Redlegs the choice at\nfirst base;\n: In the American, Berra Joined\ntwo other members of the Yankees'\nWorld champion team as repeaters.\nMickey Mantle annexed the centre-\nfield position for a second year In\na row. Hank Bauer matched his\nYankee teemmate as starting right-\nfielder.\nSlick-fielding Chlco Csrrasquel\nof Chicago White Sox repeated as\nstarting shortstop. Rosen, a starter\nlast year at third base, moved to\nfirst base.\nMINOSO TOPS WILLIAMS\nMinnie Minoso,of tho Wtyta 8ox\ntook the left field starting berth\nwith a commanding 300,000-votc\nbulge over Ted Williams of Boston\nRed Sox, -a perennial selection.\nBobby Avila ot the league-leading\nIndians snd Ray Boone of Detroit\nround Out the starting circuit lineup-\nJoining Musial, Campanella and\nKluszewskl ss Notional League\nstarters are: Granny Hamner of\nPhiladelphia, second base; Ray Jablonski of St. Louis, third base;\nAlvln Dark of New York, shortstop; find Jackie Robinson and\nDuke Snider of Brooklyn as left\nand centre fielders.\nManager Casey Stengel ot the\nYankees and Walter Alston of the\nDodgers are expected to announce\ntheir selection of pitchers and reserve players today. The Nationals\nwon 8-1 last year at Cincinnati.\nRules of the voting poll require\nthat players named as starters be\npermitted to play the first three\nInnings before being replaced.\n*.\nmistraMans Dim U.S.\n'\u25a0'\", .       \u25a0 .-.-'    .,<\u2022 '< \u25a0 ,'y ',\"!*. \u25a0-\u25a0'-,.      ; -   -\nHopes for Davis Cup\nBy STIRLING. 8LAPPEY\nWIMBLEDON, -England (AP) -\nA pair of grim, unsmiling Australians made U. S. chances of winning\nback the Davis Cup look dim as\nthey won tha Wimbledon men's\ndoubles tennis title with supremo\nease Saturday.\nRex Hartwig and Mervyn Rose,\ntop-seeded In the doubles, scored\ne.t-i, 8-4, !-, 6-4 victory over Vic\nSeixas of Philadelphia and Tony\nTrabert ot Cincinnati, who were\nseeded second.\n'The rout was the final chapter in\nthe all but total collapse of U. S.\nmen'S tennis hopes at the 08th Wimbledon.\n'The American girls, however, distinguished themselves as usual\nMaureen Connolly of San Diego,\nCalif., won her third consecutive\nwomen's singles, defeating Louis\nBrough of Beverley Hills, Calif., 6-2,\nW-.\"\nMis? Brough later teamed with\nMrs. Margaret DupOnt of Wilmington, Del., to defeat Shirley Fry of\nAkron, Ohio, and Doris Hart of\nCoral Gables, Fla., 4-8, 9-7, 8-3 In\ntba women's doubles,\nSelxas and Doris Hart of Coral\nGabtos, Fla., defeated Ken Rosewall\nof Australia and Mrs.. Margaret Du-\nporit of Wilmington, Del., 5-7, 6-4,\n6-3 in the mixed doubles.\nDR08Y WINS    .....\u25a0 . \\\nThe setback by the Americans in\ntho men's doubles followed their\nelimination from.the singles which\n\u25a0was won -by Jaroslav Drobny, th e\nself-exiled Czech, over Australia .\nKen Rosewall.\n\" In the doubles, Trabert played\ncreditable tennis and in the last\ntwo sets was the best man on the\ncourt But Seixas had another bf\n.the bad days which have, plagued\nhim ever since he won the 1953\nWimbledon's singles.\nThg erratic Play of the Americans\nat Wimbledon gave little reason for\nbelief that they may win the Davis\nCup back from Australia wbicb\nhas both depth ahd class in such\nplayers - as Rosewall, Lew Hoad,\nRose and Hartwig, as well as some\npromising youngsters on the way\nup.\nThe Americans started by shoot-\ntag for\" Hartwig, usually the weaker\nof the -two'Aussies. But they bad\nplenty of troubles of their own and\nin a short time they were spending most of their time trying to\nkeep the ball ln play.\nSURPRISE C0LLAP8E\nSeixas and Trabert had beaten\nHartwig and Rose at the Q u e e n' t\nClub here two weeks ago and at\nthe French championships so their\nOur staff of expert mechanics are fully equipped to\nrepair anything, from minor\nfender creates to major over-\nhauls.\nService Ltd,\n213 Baker St       Nolson, B.C.\ncollapse Saturday was a surprise.\nThe Australians recognized that\ntha American team was weak In\ntba centre and lust inside the area\nSelxas wu covering. They pumped\neverything they could at Selxas who\nlost one vital service in the first\nset to account for the Aussie margin, dropped two Aore services In\nthe second set and lost one-service\nwhile Trabert dropped his only service in the deciding set\nAll-Star Date Set'\nDETROIT (AP) - The National\nHockey League's all-star game will\nbe played at Detroit'! Olympla Stadium Sunday, Oct 3.\nThe date was announced by Jack\nAdams, general manager of the Detroit Red Wings whose.Stanley Cup\nwinners Will Oppose the pick ot the\nleague's five other teams.\n.' Four members of the all-star\nteam, selected by hockey writers,\ntelecasters Snd broadcasters, will\nbe playing with Red Wings Instead\nof the all-stars.\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Cricket\nclose-of-play scores Saturday:\nPakistan 157 and 189 for six, England 558 for six declared (Second\ntest match),\nOxford University 401 for three\nvs. Cambridge University (varsity\nmatch).\nYorkshire 361 for five vs. Surrey.\nKent 278 for five vs. Essex.\nGlamorgan 232 for eight declared, Northamptonshire 10 for\ntwo.\nDerbyshire 213, Sussex 63 for\none.\nHampshire 239, Lancashire 25 for\nno wicket\nNottinghamshire 179, Leicestershire 108 tor three.\nWarwickshire 130, Gloucestershire 106 tor five.\nSomerset 360, Worcestershire 29\nfor no wicket.\nLeafs Win 3 Weekend Ball Games\nWith Steady Pitching and Hitting\nNelson Maple Leafs swept a\nthree-game weekend baseball series\nfrom the, HUlySttj' Merchants .of\nSpokane. \".-'\u25a0! ,.',;\nt Saturday night and Sunday afternoon It took ninth Inning rallies\nand steady pitching by Les Hufty\nond Al Dawson to defeat the Spokane club 3-2 and 5-4, Sunday night,\nthough, ihe Leij.s pounded out 16\nhits Including two home runs by\nBob McNabb to thump tho Hlllyord\nteam 18-3, '\"'   ,\nLes Hufty turned in the best Leaf\npitching performance yet this season Saturday when he tossed a\nthree-hitter st the Merchants. Their\ntwo. runs came in the first Inning\nop a home run by Harry Dunlcvy\nafter .Bob Keady was safe on- on\nerror.'.These two runs; stood tip\nuntil the Leafs came to bat in the\nninth.   .-\u25a0\nBob McNabb opened with a walk\nand after the next two batters were\nretired. Ken White and Marsh\nSeveryn waa safe; on an error. Al\nLarson then became the. hero of\nthe game when he hit a booming,\ndouble to send White and Severyn\nhome with the tying and -winning\nruns;-- '\u25a0\"\u25a0'.'.\nHufty started the first game Sunday too-and was touched tor Hhrte\nhits and three runs In the first\nfour Innings before giving way to\nDawson. Dawson, -pitching- sensation wllh the juntor Falrytew Athletics, allowed the Merchants only\ntwo hits aiid a single run in the\nrest of the way. .'\nMeanwhile the,Leafs collected\nnine bits off Hlllyard pitcher Dick\nMiller and scored two runs in each\nof toe third and seventh innings to\nmake the score 4-4 When they came\nto-bet in the ninth. Leafs sent only\ntwo men to the plate In getting the\nwinning marker, Frank Hufty\ndoubled, took 'third on: a passed\nball ana scored on a long single by\nKen White,\nIn the slugfest Sunday night the\nMerchants picked up a single run\nIn the top of the first but the Leafs\npushed across four ta their half of\nthe Initial Inning and Were never\nbeaded. McNabb in,addition to Ji's\ntwo homers, which Wer* both slam-\nmed with two mates on base, bit\ntwo doubles to bo top man at the\nplate. Let Hufty, playing first base,\ncollected two singles and a double\nond pitcher Marsh Sevoryn got a\ndouble and a singlei while limiting\nHlllyard to five safeties, Frank Hufty also got two hits as did Frank\nElsener, another junior recruit. He\nreplaced Dune Kennedy In the\nllith inning' ,   y\nIn the entire Series, Leaf pitching allowed the Merchants just 13\nhits. An interesting feature of Huf-\nty'B performance Saturday was. in\nthe fifth and ninth innings; In the\nfifth he' retired the side on jult\nfour pitches and in the ninth he\nthrew: Just six.\nj Series was umpired by Red Was-\nslck, Bob Wright and A. Scanlon\nSaturday, while Wassick and Scanlon took charge Sunday. ,\n(IL Golf (up\nEd McGregor turned ta the best\neffort among 31 golfers who competed for the CIL Cup ina tournament at- Nelson Golf and Country\nClub Sunday. McGregor won with\na net score of 80.       -, ' A\nCompetition was a toll handicap.\n27-hole ,\u00ab_cdal annual: event that\nwas originally scheduled for July 1\nhut was rallied out An exciting\nfinish saw five close contenders tor\nthe trophy, Only two strokes behind;\nMcGregor was Marsh Steadman\nwhile Bill Bishop ind Max Macleod,\nplayers ta tho same foursome, each\ncarded 98's. Larry Parlow finished\nstrong with a 36 final round for a\nnet of 94. Best round of the day was\nscored by Arnold Sherwood with\na 35. ' .\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.-\u2022'\nCAMPANELLA TO\nTOUR WITH,\nNEGRO ALL-STARS\nNEW YORK (AP) - Catcher El-\nston Howard of Toronto Maple\nLeafs and pitcher Joe Black of\nMontreal Royals will' be members\nof an all-star' Negro squad which\nBrooklyn'! Roy Campanella will\ntake on an international exhibition\ntour after tba current season.\nThe team will play 14 games in\nJapan, five in Colombia and a number in the West Indies\/Puerto Rico,\nPanama, Hawaii and Manila besides\nthe United States.\nCampanella. team consists of\nMonte Irvin, New York Giants, and\nTom Alston, Rochester Red Wings,\nfirst base; Junior Gilliam, Dodgers,\nsecond base; Hank Thompson,\nGiants, third base; Jim Pendleton,\nMilwaukee, shortstop; Larry Doby,\nCleveland; Minnie Minoso, Chicago\nWhite Sox; BUI Bruton,, Braves,\nand Willie Mays, Giants, outfield;\nHoward, Charlie While, Braves,\nand Campanella, catchers, and.Don\nNewcombe, Dodgers, Bob, Trice,\nPhiladelphia Athletics, BroOks Lawrence, St. Louis, Black and Dave\nHoskins. Indians, pitchers.\nDetermine Loses\nTo Fault Free\nINGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)-Ken-\ntucky Derby champion Determine,\na prohibitive l-to-9 favorite, suffered a blow to his prestige Saturday when an outsider, Fault Free,\nwon the $55,900 Westerner at Hollywood Park.\nJockey Ralph Neves brought\nFault Free In first ln a photo finish\nover Allied, the stablemate of Determine. Determine wqs third in the\niy_-mlle race.\nYANKS GET STUART\nNEW YORK (AP) - New York\nYankees Sunday purchased Marlln\nStuart, 35-year-old righthanded\nscrewball pitcher from Baltimore\nOrioles.\n- Stuart a grey-haired relief specialist, has won one and lost two\ngames this year, Last season he\nappeared ta 88 games tor St Louis\nind finished with an 8-2 record.\nThings Look Bad\nFor Pakistan\nNOTTINGHAM, Eng. (Reuters)-\nOnly the Intervention of bad weather or a miracle batting feat can\nsave Pakistan from defeat at the\nhands of England in their second\ncricket test match. '.-\nAlthough rain limited play Saturday to three hours, and five minutes,\nin that time Pakistan lost six second\nInnings wickets for 169 and will resume today requiring another 212\nto make England bat again..\nREPRESENT B.C. IN\nSOCCER PLAYOFFS\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C. (CP)\n\u2014North Shore United of the Pacific\nCoast Soccer League Saturday .won\nthe right to represent British Columbia in the Dominion playoffs by\noutlasting Vancouver'City 1-0 before 2,500 fans here. ;\n; Young Bud- Walton scored the\nimportant goal at 38 minutes Into\nthe second halt when he headed ln\nAb Travle* .well-placed corner kick.\nBuffs Blanked\n-aMBERLEY,,^-Kimberley Canadians had a 2-0'win over. Michel-\nNatal Buffaloes in their last\nscheduled home game of the Crows\nNest' Pass Football League Saturday and now stand at two wins'and\nthree losses, with road games\nagainst Fernie Rovers July 11, and\nagainst. Fernie United July 18.\nThe Opening goal was scored by\ncentre Harry Brown soon after play\nstarted and the final goal by inside\nright Matt Fagta- near the end ot\nthe first half. Dominion Day\nscheduled game at Kimberley\nagainst Fernie United Was rained\nout apd will be played at time not\nyet decided, with playoff set to begin the end of the month.\nFifteen-Year-Old\nBeats World Record\n8YDNEY, Australia (AP) \u2014\nFifteen-year-old Lorraine Crapp\nbettered two women's w o r 14\nswimming records and one women's Olympic mark at -Towns-\nville, North Queensland, Saturday night\n8he aWam 440 yards In five\nminutes, 11 seconds, beating the\nworld long course record of 6:14\nheld hy Val Gyenge, of Hungary.\nHer swim alio broke the world\nand Olympic 400-metre records,\nboth also held by Gyenge.\nBaseball Standings\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW.  L\nCleveland    52\nNew York !.. 49\nChicago  48\nDetroit   31\nWashington  30\nBaltimore  30\nPhiladelphia   ..... 29\nBoston     27\n8:30p.m.\n?\nMuiic by Ken Griffin ot the Hammond Organ\nMotorcyclist Killed\nFRANCORCHAMPS (Reuters) \u2014\nGordon Laing of Australia, riding\na British-made Norton, was killed\nSunday in the opening race of the\nGrand Prix de Belglque for.motor-\ncycles. '       . '\nLaing was ln third position on\nthe second lap when be lost control\nrounding a bend.; .?'.>  '..;\u25a0''\"\"\"\nRECORD VAULT  .' <\nATLANTIC CITY, NJ., (AP) -\"\nRev. Bob Richards won his second\nannual U. S. AAU decathlon championships Saturday;.losrtagYto a\nworld decathlon record Of 15 feet\nta the pole vault.\nThe 23-year-old Olympic and natatorial pole vaulting'king broke his:\nown decathlon vaiill record ot 14\nfeet 11% inches.\nFRESHWATER SALMON\nThe ouanahiche is a type of Atlantic salmon, which spends its\nwhole life in eastern freshwater\nlakes.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nNew York    50\nBrooklyn     46\nPhiladelphia   ....' 38\nMilwaukee      36\nCincinnati ..........   36\nSt. Louis     35'\nChicago   ,...'.   27\nPittsburgh        2\u00bb\nPet.\n.703\n.635\n.605\n.437\n.411\n.405\n.403\n.330\n.667\n.622\n.543\n.493\n.488\n.473\n.380\n1333\nGbl\niVt\n7\n19%\n21W\n22\n22\n23%'\nU.K. Teams Lose\nTo Russ Oarsmen\n: HENLEY-6N-THAMES, Englond\n(Reuters) \u2014 Russian oarsmen, rowing in Britain for the first time,\nSaturday won the blue riband of\ncrew rowing, the Grand Challenge\nPup, They whipped Britain's best\neight, the Leander crew.\nThe Russians also beat on RAF\nfour to take the Stewards Cup, another main prize In tba 115-year-\nbld, International Henley Royal\nRegatta,  ,\nFashionably-dressed crowds on\ntho lawns at the riverside and ta\nboats lining the narrow course saw\nthem held their lead throughout\nThe Russian Krylla Sovctov crew\noltled their red-tipped oars as they\naiid, forward between strokes. In\ncontrast, the Leander squad' used\nthe classical English style, and\nfeather their pink-bladed oars back\nalong the water's surface.\nWhen the Russian eight paddled,\nln after their win, the stroke,-Y,\nKrukov, presented a three-cornered\nflag decorated y\/|th ! too Soviet\nhammer and sickle to 0. A. ft Cadi\nbury,, the Leander stroke. Leander\nmen are all from. .Oxford or Cambridge. . \u25a0      \";*'\u25a0-. ,\nThe Thames Challenge Cup Was\nwon by the Massachusetts Institute\nof Technology oliht which' fib-.\nished 2% length! ahead of a floyal\nNavjr crew, completing the one-\nmile, 580-yard course in seven minutes,- 24 seconds, *;\u25a0;'\nDistance Records\nBy AL MARKLt\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Canadian\ncycle championships provided a\npreview of the British Empire\nGames here during the weekend\nwith two records broken In as many\ndays of racing.. \"-.'['   ;'.\u25a0\nPat Murphy of Delhi,' Ont, proved\nhis capabilities as a distance man\nby shattering both the 10- and 25-\nmile records at the city's new (103,-\n000 Games oval.\nThe 23-year-old rider capped .Friday's 10-mlle performance in semi-\ndarkness Saturday, besting the 25-\nmile competition record of 1:02.6 by\nWearly five minutes.\nThe 10-mile record of 23.12.4 fell\nFriday when Murphy completed tile\n82 circuits ln 21.57.2, again calling\non a hidden bank of strength ln the\nfinal, yards.\nJim Davies, 20, was the all-round\nwinner In the meet and will be\ncrowned Canadian champion as\nsoon as the 1000 metre, race Is over\nand his total points compiled.\nDavies, who marked the Canadian\nchampionships as his first, big-time\ncompetition, took first place In the\none-mile and half-mile, senior circuits, making four wins ta the two-\nda.- meet. Friday he led the field\nacross the finish line in both the\nquarter-mile and one-third-mile\nraces: \/\nBaseball Scores\nSUNDAY\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nDetroit   \u201e,. 000 000 010\u2014-1  0 0\nBaltimore' ...., 020 000 01x-3 \u2022 1\nGromek, Marlowe (8) and Bouse;,\nKretlow and Courtney. L\u2014Gromek.\nChicago   000 000 010-1  _ .1\nCleveland    000 101 C0x-2  6   I\nKeegan and Lollar,- Batts (0);\nGarcia,   Narlcskl   (2),   Wynn   (8)\nand Naragon. W'\u2014\u25a0 Narlcskl,\nPhiladelphia ,. 000 000 OOO-fl   8   1\nBoston :'.;.\u25a0! .'. 212 200 10x\u20148 18   1\nSima, Dixon (3), Raethet (7) and\nW, Shantz, Astroth (2); Klely ond\nWhite. L \u2014 Sima.\nWashington .... 000 000 000--0 5 0\nNew York ..... ,000 002 lOx\u20143 7 0\n' McDermott and Tipton; Grim\nond Berra.\nBrooklyn' .... 000 100 000 4\u2014S 10   0\nPhiladelphia 000 000 100 2-3 10   1\nErskine and Campanella; Roberts\nand Lopata.\n..firm.-.-.-.\nNew. York ..... 012 402 000-914 1\nPittsburgh  000 000 020-2 3  0\nLlddle, McCall (0) and Westrum;\nSurkont, Purkey (4), Pepper (6)\nand Shepherd. W \u2014 Llddle. L\u2014 Surkont   .<\n1 'Seoond: \u25a0\u2022\u25a0 '\nWew York 01O 011 300-8 12   I\nPittsburgh ...... 000 300 0_f-4 11 '.J\nJansen,'' Wilhelm (4), Grlssom (6)\nMcCall (8), qnd Katt; Lapalme,\nHetki (9) aiid Atwell. W-Lapalme.\nL \u2014 Grissom. -.\u25a0-..-'\nCincinnati .... 000 004 000-4 8 1\nMilwaukee .... 001 110 000\u20143 9 0\n- Judson, Smith (9) and Semlnick;\nButdotte, Nichols (6), Crone (6),\nJohnson, (8) and Crandall. W \u2014\nJudson; L \u2014 Burdette.\n.Writs,\nSt. Louis ........ 000 100 010-2  9. 0\nChicago .010 003 W*-i   8   2\nPreiko, Brazle. (7) ,and Sarni;\nMinner and Garagiola, Tappe (3).\nL \u2014 Presko, HRs: St Louis \u2014 Jab-\nlonskl. Chicago,'\u2014 Baker.\n\\8eqpndi':> - .. \u25a0 3 ;\nSt. Louis  011 050 000-7 13   0\nChicago 000 OOO'000-O .9'\"\u25a0!.\nLint and Yvars; Klippsteta, Bros-\nnan   (5),   Cole   (8)   and   Cooper.\nL \u2014 Klippitein,\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSan Diego Jl-4, Los Angeles 8-2\nSacramento 5-2, San. Francisco 7-9\nHollywood 7-1, Portland 3-0\nOakland 6-3, Seattle 8-8\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nSATURDAY   ;-,\nNational League }:\nSt Louis 1, Chicago 4.\nBrooklyn 4, Philadelphia 3.\n\u25a0mn York 4, Pittsburgh 6.\n' Cincinnati 3, Milwaukee 4.\nAmerican League\nPhiladelphia .7, Boston 3,\nDetroit 3; Baltimore 5. !\nWashington 2, New York 8.\nChicago 4, Cleveland 5.\nPacific Coast League\nSan Diego 1, Lps Angeles 0.\nSacramento 3, San Francisco 10.\nOakland 10,|ieattte'S, -.'\nHollywood 0, Portland 8.\nWE8TERN INTERNATIONAL\nWenatchee 8-2, Victoria 8-1\nYakipia 0-6, Vancouver 7-12\nLewiston 8, Salem 4\nHigh Gun Takes   .\n$57,400 Purse\nNEW YORK (Al) \u2014 High Gup\ndisplayed the class necessary for;,\nthree-year-old champion Saturday\nwhen he outbattled Palm; Tree\ndown the stretch to capture the\n$57,400 Dwyer Stakes at Aqueduct\nThe brown son of Heliopolla-\nRocket Gun, the l-to-2 favorite in\nthe small field of five three-year-\nolds in the 14-mlle race, won by a\nlength over ,Palm Tree, owned by\nthe Greentree Stable, which finished five lengths ahead of the th'ird\nhorse, Mrs. Ethel D. Jacobs' Paper\nTiger. Glangollen Farm's Porterhouse was fourth and Queen's Own,\nowned by E. P. Taylor of Toronto,\nlast\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nW\n....   55\n...   53\n...   50\n_   48\nHollywood   _\t\nSan Diego -\nOakland ,...^.\u201e\nSan Francisco \t\nSeattle   41\"\nSacramento .__, _..  41\nPortland;  t 88\nLos Angeles ...,\u201e\u201e <37\n3%\n9%\n13\n13\u00ab\n14-\n21.\n25\nGB\n.598\n.582\n.543\n.522\n.466\n.448,\n.427'\n\\\u00ab1\nSoccer Results\nZURICH, Switzerland (API-Austria defeated Uruguay 3-1 today\nto win third place In the world\nsoccer championship tournament.\nThe teams bad been tied 1-1 at\nhalf time.\nThe game brought together the\ntwo defeated . seml-flnalists.' Uruguay, the- defending champion, had\nbeen eliminated by Hungary while\nGermany defeated Austria.\nGermany will play Hungary In\nthe championship final tomorrow.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 5, 1954\u2014T\nGeirm^^ Captures\nWbrld Soccer Title\nlandy, Bannister\nRace on TV\nNEW YORK- (CP) - The National Broadcasting C 0 m p a n y announced today \u25a0',It will carry the\ntelevised account of the mile race\nat Vancouver Aug, 7 in which Roger\nBannister of England and John\nLandy of Australia- aro entered.\nThe (ace will be one of tHe competitions at the Empire Games.\nNBC announced that transmission was arranged In co-operation\nwith. the Canadian Broadcasting\nCorporation. The race Involves the\nonly two athletes ever, to run the\nmile in less than four minutes.\nBannister became the first: man\never to break the four-minute barrier at Oxford May 6 when he'ran\nthe distance in 3:59.4. On June 21,\nLandy shaved 1.4 seconds off Bannister's mark ta a race at Turku,\nFinland.\nBy WILL GRIM8LEY\nPEABODY, Mass. (AP) - The\never-astonishing   Babe   Zabarlas,\ntold 15 months ago she might never\nplay again, completed a stirring\ncomeback Saturday when she won\nher third women'iU. 8. open-golf\nchampionship by 12 strokes.\nFront running all the way but\ntiring at the end of the final day's\n36-hole grind, she finished -with\nrounds of 73 and 73 for a total score\nof 291. '\nNo one eke in the field came\ndose to cracking 300 for the three\ndays over the 6,393-yard Salem\nCountry Club course.\nIt was the Babe's tournament\nfrom' the moment she posted, an\neven par 72 on opening day until\nshe hacked out of the woods on\nthe flnalj hole, torew ber-hat high\nta tho air and exclaimed:\n\"Thank goodness, it's '- ovpr. I\ncouldn't have gone another bole.\nBut it's the answer to my prayers.\" {\nThe premier American woman i\nathlete, Olympic gold medalist- and!-.\na star ta many sports, underwent-;\na cancer operation ta the spring\nof 1953 and it was thought her\nbrilliant career might be at an\nend,\n\"I just told the Lord to let me;,\nplay again and I'd care of the win-;\nnlng,\" the Babe laid after her vie--j,-\ntory. \"Today we sealed the bar-'\ngain.\" -,\"\n\u2022\nBy COLIN  FROST       ' -:$&\nBERN (AP) \u2014 Darkhorse Ger-'|\nmany Sunday won the world soccer,;!.\nchampionship by upsetting supposedly unbeatable Hungary 3-2 on a\ngoal by outside right Helmuth Rhan\nwith only five minutes remaining ln!;|\nregulation i|iWt-'.TvX'. y'^M\n'B was a brilliant' victory for theil\nGermans, who came from behind to\ntie the score ot 2-2 at the half. In\nthe first round, of the Id-country,!\ncompetition,' Hungary\u2014unbeaten ln\nfour .years\u2014had swamped the Germans 0-3. It Is the first time they:\nhave won the title.\nBut at that time the Germans\nfielded seven reserves, choosing to\nhold their regulars tor vital playoffs. Sunday the Germans were at\nfull strength and combined a sparkling offence that overpowered Hungary's own magnificent style together with a iplendid defence. '.'\n. Much of the game was played, irt;\nrata'. . '\u25a0\"'\"   .'\u2022\u25a0\nRhan's winning goal sent the'\nthousands of Germans In the crowd\nof 55,000 rojring crazlly. He picked\ntip a pass ta the middle, dodged two\nHungarians and .sent the ball low\nand bard- just Inside the goal post\nALSO TIED SCORE\nIt.was Rbani. toot who tied the.\nscore at 2-2 shortly before the half\nended. Earlier, he helped set up\nGermany's first goat scored by Max\nMorlock, which cut -Hungary's lead\ntb_-L.,;'.'.'      .;y\nHungarian' star Ferenc Puskas,\nout with an Injury since the first-\nround match against Germany,'\nscored the game's first goal, Then\nZoltan V.ibor gave Hungary its. 2-0\nadvantage.\nIt was like the world'series, a\nheavyweight' championship fight\nand the Kentucky Derby rolled into\none.\nIn Berlin, fans from the Soviet\nsector drifted over to the western\nsector and .watched the game on\ntelevision sets ta Shop windows.' y'f4\nMany tav&ns ta Germany were\nfilled to overflowing and fans-\njumped on tables and chairs, knocking over beer glasses, to get a better\nlook at the TV sets. The streets were\nvirtually deserted during the game.\n|      .,-,1\n\u25a0'    '   -   -      ... :'\u25a0 y.|\nThe Pacific ocean, largest ta the .\nworld: covers an estimated 70,000,-:\n00 square miles.\nRained Our Ball\nGames Rescheduled\nThe first of seven games rained\nout <in the first-half schedule ot\nthe Nelsbn - and District Fastball\nLeague will bo played tonight when\nMaddens meet Transfers, and at\nSalmo, the Salmo nine will be hosts\nto South Slocan. '\nComplete schedule is as follows:\nJuly 5\u2014Madden ys\" Transfer at\nMadden; Salmo vs South Slocan at\nSalmo. ' ',\nJuly 8\u2014Salmo sWa Transfer at\nSataio.,\nJlily 1\u2014Passmore va\" Madden at\nSot^th Slocan.   :\nJuly 8\u2014Salmo vt Transfers at\nSalmo, Hrnne vs Madden at Hume,\nJuly 12\u2014Madden vs Salmo at\nMadden.    ' ' -. ,\nThe second half schedule will begin when these games have been\nplayed. \u2022\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nPC0UD OF ITS AGE\n\u2022I LUXE WHISKY\nIN SMART DECANTER\nTOitirminrnmIt oo< pabHihtd oT\ndlipUycd by lit liquor Control Board '\nor  by the Gor*r__wat of British\nColumbia. -'-   \u25a0\nH;\nNEAR CENTENARY\nTtaee of the Republic of India's\nUniversities, Calcutta, Madras and\nBombay, were all founded ln 1857.\nDUNLOP\nHAPPY HOLIDAY CONTEST\nWINNER RECEIVES $500 IN PRIZES\nDunlop Dealer: E. D. WAKEFIELD & COMPANY\nABBOTSFORD, B.C.\nDunlop'Canada congratulates the winner\nWinner: MR. HAROLD LOCKE,\ny > ABBOTSFORD, B.C.\nOn_i-__fofitod_aerBDU-__OPmshe-toth_i_.th9\nthousands of motorists who participated in this Happy\nHoliday Contest which commenced May 15th and\n\u2022ended June 15th, 1954. Yon are invited to join in the\nsecond Contest now being sponsored by DUNLOP\ndealers in your locality.\nGet YOUR entry form NOW!\nINFUSION WINS\nSPEARS HANDICAP\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Infusion,\nowned and trained by Mrs. Dan\nKennedy of Winnipef and ridden]\nby Willie Marsh Jr., captured the\n$5,000-added Spears Handicap for\nthree-year-olds and Up oyer a mile\nand 70 yards at Winnipeg's Polo\nPark Saturday.\nInfusion, who covered the distance, in 1:48 1-5 won by three\nquarters of a length over Lolly Dear\nof the Welcome Home Sarin of Calgary. Beau Oronge finished thuM-\nCANADIANS PEST SHOTS\nBISLEY, England (CP) -Canada's Blsley teem, led by Major\nTaylor Stittal of Victoria, Sunday\ndefeated a . North London , Rifle\nClub '848 to 934 in an unofficial\nmatch which traditionally precedes the Blsley tournament.\nIt 'was the eighth ^victory for\nCanada in 19 peacetime shoots.\nStrawberry kino-- \u25a0'<-\u25a0'\nmission city, b,c. ;(cp), \u2014 a\n\"strawberry king\" contest open to\nFraser valley fruit-growers will be\na feature of the strawberry festival and soap box derby celebra-\nNOTICE\nDUE TO THE LACK OF FINANCIAL SUPPORT\nTHE NELSON REGATTA\nHAS BEEN CANCELLED\nFor Those Who Have Supported Us -'\nMany Thanks...\nNELSON POWER, BOAT ASSOCIATION\n ,\"- , \u2022   ..-.-..   \u25a0\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 5, 1954\nTHE\n\"3)\nHE\u00ab '\u25a0\/'\nLoggers Await Sun;\nCrop Outlook Good\n. Strike at Bluebell Mine at Riondel has thrown some of the 270 miners -onto the labor market, but a\nstabilized base metals Industry IS\nnot providing opportunity tor much\nadditional employment \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0   >-\nWarmer weather could'put nearly 250 men to work in logging\ncamps at high levels.\nRetail trade was holding steady\nand merchants were expressing the\nopinion that business baa stabilized\nat present levels. Promotion and\nsales were Increased to stimulate\ntrade that is below past levels.\nAlthough improved from conditions in May, .the.employment situation was worse last month than\nlt was ln June, 1053. Crops, building\nprograms, mining and logging have\nall been held up by muggy weather,\na report from George Bevis, manager of the Nelson office, National\nEmployment Service, indicates.\nSome of the graduates from Nelson'High School were placed at\nwork in what could become permanent positions.\nThe report:\nAgricultural reports Indicated the\nwet .weather retarded crops but has\nnot damaged them to arly appred'\nable extent\nIt was previously anticipated the\nlogging industry would be in. full\nproduction, but the larger companies operated at the higher levels\nwere not able to put crews to work.\nWith the advent of warm dry\nweather, they expected\" to put an\nadditional 250 men to work. Demand for logs was heavy and sawmill operators reported a strong\nmarket for dry lumber of better\ngrade, from all points, though demand for lower grade lumber was\npoor. From present indication-- the\n1954 seasoh In logging and'lumbering should be better tban 1953,\nthough saw. log production was\nlower than at the same time last\nyear. .\nWAKE UP YOUR SMILE\nIt is unlikely, that, there will'be\nany change in the base metal industry. Operators of' thi larger\nproperties were of opinion that the\nprices had stabilized at the present level, and no expansion was\nexpected. ;\nThere has been considerable activity in staking of new claims,\nespecially ln the Lardeau district,\nand many small properties  were\ngetting their assessment and development work done.\nConstruction   work   was   mainly\nconfined to the City of Nelson\nwhere a crew of 20 men has been\nemployed en street Improvement.\nWork on one school  progressed\nsteadily, but work on the extension to the Junior High School\nwai  almost at a  standstill  for\ntwo weeks and work at the new\n\"High 8cheol  suspended  for the\nWhole  month.  No  definite  date\nwas  given  for     resumption   of\nwork but the contractor stated\nthat additional help,will be employ to make up for the lost time.\nSeveral projects were forecast\u2014a\nnew post office, a bridge oyer the\nWest Arm of Kootenay Lake, and\na highway bridge, but these projects will not be Undertaken for\nsome time, and it was .felt that employment opportunities in the construction field would be restricted\nduring the 1954-season.\nOne departmental' store reported\na distinct falling off in men's wear\nand in piece goods with other departments only slightly below last\nyear.\nBETTER  CROPS\nFarm work .progressed slowly\nowing to continued wet and cold\nweather.\nIt was  not thought that any\nharm had resulted to farm crops\nlocally and If the usual weather\nfor July prevails the berry and\ncherry   crops   may   be   slightly\n.larger than previously anticipated.\nIt was not expected that this will\nmaterially affect the labor market\nas most farmers harvest their crops\nwith the help of their families and\nneighbors. \u00bb\\\nA new dairy .entered the fresh\nmilk' supply trade for Nelson, employing one or two men, with possibilities of expansion. : \"'\nForest Service enlisted its full\nquota of suppression crews from\nhigh school students and re-engaged\nlookot)t men and dispatchers, employing approximately 60 persons.\nA labor dispute at the Bluebell\nMine, Riondel, resulted in the closing ot that mine. It affected, some\n270 workers, some ol whom were\nattempting  to   obtain  work  else-\n__5KN\"nH\u00bb'\u00bb\n\"'aWyhwporfttnt\ntt^^.glcyVSiwara.intGum.\nChewing (,elpa cleanse the teeth.\nHelpi keep them bright, attractive. Reftehfoj^ ^tf^\nEnj<W daily.-Millionsdo.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nMONDAY, JULY 5,1954.\n(Pacific\n1:00\u2014News\n1:05\u2014The'Early Bird\n1:30 -News\n?:30\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\nS:00- -News >\n1:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n1:45\u2014Serenade\n!;55\u2014Women's World\n.;00\u2014 Warren's Wigwam\n);00\u2014Western Tunes\n):15\u2014Elwood. Glover\n):45\u2014News\n):50\u2014Morning Music\n1:01)\u2014Shut-in Show\n1:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n1:45\u2014Consumers Corner -\n_:0O\u2014Kitchen Karnival\n!:15\u2014Sports News\n? 20\u2014News\n!:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n!:55\u2014Today In History\n1:00\u2014Tops and Pops\ni:15\u2014Hollywood. Calling\nliSO^-Specialty Shop\n1:45\u2014Musicale\n!:00\u2014Pacific News\n!:15\u2014Musical Matinee\n2:8l_\"Trans-CanaijB Matinee\n3:15\u2014Siesta Time\nDaylight Time)\n'3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:45\u2014News Bulletin\n3:48\u2014B. C. Roundup\n4:16\u2014Maxine Warf Sings\n4:30\u2014Black Bass Rock\n4:45\u2014The Voyager\n5:00\u2014Story Parade\n5:15\u2014Report From Pari. Hill\n5:20\u2014Lighter Side\n5:25r-Road and Weather Report\n5:30\u2014Supper Club    \u2022\n5:45\u2014Sports Newa    '\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Cavalcade of Melody   ,\n6:30\u2014Cavefcade of Melody\n7:0Or-News ' .\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30r-_ummer Fallow\n8:00\u2014Report from Pari. Hill\n8:15\u2014Win's Showplace\n8:30\u2014Don Grey Adventures.\n9:00\u2014Bob McMullin Show\n9:30\u2014Let's Square Dance\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:45-^Devotions\n11:00\u2014Arouna the Town'\n12:00\u2014NEWS Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nTUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954\n(Mountain Standard Time)\n7:00\u2014Marine Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n, 8:10\u2014Here's Bill CJobd\n8_H-Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes     >\n9:00\u2014BBC News      ,-.-,.\u00bb,....\n9-15\u2014Aunt Liicy\n9:30\u2014Laura Ltl.\n9:45\u2014Music Shop\n10 Ull-Mornino Visit\n10:15\u2014Elwood Glover\n1C:45\u2014Mart Kenney ,   \u2022\n11:00\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12.25\u2014Showcase\n12 3I>\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:15\u2014Today's Guest\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\nlSy-Siesta Time\n:3t>\u2014Program Resume      ,\n:45\u2014News Bulletin\n:48\u2014Yesterday's Favorites\n:15\u2014Barney Potts Show\n:30\u2014Music Picture Lady ,\n45\u2014Sleepytime Story Teller\nOO^-Howdy Doody\n15\u2014JAi Home With The Lennlcks\n40\u2014International Commentary\n:45--News and Weather\n55\u2014Have You Heard\n:00\u2014Fighting Words\n30\u2014This is Radio\n:00\u2014News\n.15\u2014News Roundup\n:30\u2014Leicester. Square\n:00\u2014So to Speak\n15\u2014Canadians\n:30^-We're -ravelin' Light\n00\u2014Let's Make Music\n30\u2014 Chilcotin Trails\n00\u2014 News\n:15\u2014People of the MacKenzie\n:30\u2014Ragtime Rhythm^\nwhere. Mining activity in the area\ncontinued to be very restricted owing to low lead and zinc prices.\nBOOST MILL CAPACITY\nMost of the activity j centred in\ndevelopment work on'smaller prop-,\n.ertles and a good deal of assessment\nwork on claims. This absorbed a-\nsmall number of experienced miners but there was still a considerable labor force seeking employment ..'\u2022\":\u25a0*\u2022\nOne mine,on the Upper Arrow\nLakes  resumed   drilling   operations and employed approximately  20  men,,'..while   one  of1 the\nlarge, producers   at   Ainsworth\nplanned to boost Its milling, capacity from 150 to 250 tone dally.\nProgryn     will , require    eight\nmonths to complete, Will cost approximately $14,000 and  employ\nan additional'eight men.\nWith   present   prices,  of  ,11%\ncents for zinc and  .14  cents tor\nlead, it was hot anticipated .that\nthere will, be any apreclable change\nln   the  mining' situation. Should\nzinc prices advance a further cent,\nseveral properties may be expected\nto resume operations.'.,.'\nORDERS EXPECTED\nDuring the . month the match\nblock faiitory had to lay. off its\ncrew of 10 women owing to lack of\norders. This firm will close for\nlts'anual .vacation of two weeks\nearly in July and expects that when\nthe vacation ends there will be\nsufficient orders to require full\nemployment    .'\u25a0',\nFor the month of May the saw\nlog output was ahead' of that for\nthe Same month last year but the\ntotal for the. year to date was\nlower. All sawmills are now In\nfull production and report e good\ndemand at firm price for the better grades of lumber. However,\nthe demand for the lower grades\nIs week.\nApproximately   600 - men   are\nnow engaged  by all  companies\nand lltle change Is anticipated.\nOne employer has found U necessary to lay off 16 men owing to\nflood threat to his lath mill area.\n\u2022The situation is improving and no\nfurther layoff is expected. '.   ~   '\nWork at the Junior High School\nwas at a standstill for the last two\nweeks' owing to a combination of\nviet weather, delay in shipment of\nwindows  and  waitnig for  school\nholidays to enable doorways and\nentries to be mfde to the existing\nstructure.\nWork resumed on the project and\n10 to 15 men were re-employed.\nAt the site of the Senior High\nSchool work ceased while engineers decide what should be done\nto cojtrol water from local springs.\nHume School extension was pro:\nceeding according tb schedule; 15\nmen were employed and work will\nbe finished in August. '\nWork on the extension of the\nTruck Terminus has employed-5\nor 6 tradesmen and; should be com;\npletedat the beginhiojg of August.\nProvincial government let a contract for a new bridge at Kokanee'\nCreek to a Penitcton contractor,\nWord h^s been received that the\ngovernment of B, C- authorized\nconstruction of a bridge across the\nWest Arm of Kootenay Lake to\nconnect Nelson with . the North\nShore. Engineers were considering\nposisble sites and types - of structure but it was riot considered any\nCascade Lode\nNines Plan\nOre Shipments\nBoard of Directors of Cascade\nLode Mines Ltd. (NPJ), was reelected at the annual meeting of\nthe company, which is developing\nits lead-silver-zinc claims, comprising 600 acres, near Christina Lake\nIn the Greenwood milling, division.\nNew officers are: president, C, J.'\nL. Lawrence,'. Powell River; vice-:\npresident L. C, Way, Vancouver^\nformerly of Trail; secretary^ ;F\u00ab-.|JH\nNorth,' Powell Rivet,' treasurer,,'\nJohri Harper, Westview; and directors, R.,__ MUir, Westview; L, IL|\nBet,tln, Vancouver, and HdgnJ\nScouse, Westview. .    , Eg\nThe shareholders endorsed- -the?\ndirectors' reports of exploration and\ndevelopment work during the past\nyear, Snd approved plans for shipment of sorted .ore to the TriSp\nsmelter during the summer months.\nBulldozing work on the road' iron)..\nthe portal to Coryell rail siding is\nnow being, completed preparatory to\nshipping production to the CM&S\nsnielter. Last year's diamond driM_\nling program which produced \"Ori*\ncouraging\" results will be expanded\nduring the Summer to: prove' up extension of Interesting ore bodies al*:\nready encountered.\nBIG EEL8 .\nWolfe  eels found   off Canada's]\nPacific   coast  sometimes reach  a -\nlength of eight feet.., \"   ''\"\u25a0\naction will; be . taken for somti';\nmonihs. This bridge will be ap-\npioxlmately one-half Ihlle iloflSB\nTenders have been called fpr coil-.:\nstrUctiori of a new Federal building at Nelson. It was not expected\nto affect local employment for;'\nsome months.   \u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 .\u25a0''\u25a0\"\u25a0- fj9\nHOUSING IN PR08PECT;\nConstruction of several dwellings was delayed'owing to uncer*\ntainty regarding requirements under the new CMH\"regulati0ns. As\nsoon as this is resolved, about 20\ntradesmen will be employed at this\nsub-division with a possibility of\nan increase to 80.\nThere was no change in the employment picture on the railway*\nNo extra gangs were engaged; this\nyear, j There were still some ,80.\nmaintenance of way employees and\nsix bridge'crew employees not'.calj\nled back to work. :\u25a0    .,'.. !\nLong distance trucking and local   freight  haul  showed   only, a-\nslight drop from previous year.-\n\u2022 Truck  lines notified  theofiice\nthey were fully staffed,\nRETAIL TRADE HOLDS ..',-''\nWholesale trade remained at a\nlower level than last -year andyne\nchange was .expecte.d..l_nl_\\ss..E.4ce|\nallow district mines to re-bperi,\"\nREAL ESTATE LOW\nCollections were reported to be\nslower on goods1 purchased through\nhire purchase system.; .   '\nHea'l estate activities were.'prae-;\ntic'ally at a standstill with a fair\nnumber of properties for sale or\nrent. There were no vacant, bust-:\nnes premises but some,office space\nwas available: : Yi \u2022 ,'   .\"_-.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Apportions\n6. Unaccented\nsyllables\n(Pros.)\n11. Senior\n12. Pua hemp\n13. British\ncolony\nIS. Pac).\n14. Complain\n(slang)\n15. Greek\nletter\n(19th)\n18. Intersected\n17 Salty\n19. Detestation\n21. Containers\nfor liquids\nS5. Apart\n26. Dark\nbrown\n27. Leading\nactor\n28. Settlement\n29. Slopes\n31. Spendthrifts\n34. Flap\n37. Chant\n38. Tibetan\npriest        \/\n39. Fillet for\nthe hair\n40. Companion\nof apostle\nPaul (Bib.)\n41. Tops\n42. German <\nriver  '\n(poss.)\nDOWN\n1. Dexterous\n2. Pen-name of\nCharles\nLamb \u25a0\n8. One who\n. settles a\nclaim   .\n4. Wreath\n-Pf \u25a0\nflowers\n(H.L)\n5. Senior\n(abbr.)-\n6. Protective\ngarment\nT. U. S.\nPresident\n8. Coins\n(Fr.)\n9. Relieve\n10. Lean-to\n14. Grating\n16. Music\ncharacter\n18. River\n(Me.)\n19. Exclamation\n20. Malt\nbev-\ner-\n. age\n22. One,,\nwho'\nforsakes\nhis, -\nchurch,\nparty\n23. Can\n24. Speak\n26. Male\nchildren\n25. Caution\n30. Furnishes\ntempo-.\nrarllji\n31. Handful\nof straw\n32. Girl's name\n>ow ;\nElttlAR-ffl\nm\nPgEf\n3 Jcl-lnvl-\npsBBi\n\u25a0_\u2022\ns|3l\nIm\ntit\nf nds\n0_EI\nspols 1\ns Ie 1\n\\m\nT\n*\u25a0\nSaturday'.  -inw\u00ab\n,33; PortiOp\n- tfcr.\nArch.)\n35. River\n(E.Asia)\n36. Fish     ?.-\u25a0-.\n38. Cover    ,\n.40. Toward\nr-\nX\nS\nar\nr\nI\n\u25a0<r\n7\n.-\n9  i\nw\n1\nii\n-\n1\nii\n13\n%\nii\n>-\u25a0'\n\u25a0 y\nIS\n%\n16\n-.;. i\n^\n^\n1.\"\nIS\nI\n1\n'\/\/\n19\nJO\n%\n21\n1TL\n\u25a0ii\n*>\n25\n26\n27\ni\n\"\n^\n%\n|\n29\n3\"\n1\n%\n31\n32\n-3\nI\n34-\n3S'\n3*\n-7\n\u25a0\u25a0\n^\n30\n39\nI\nJ4\n41\n1\n4_\n-7-5-\nDAILY CRYPTOQUQXE-Here's how to work ltl\n' A X YD LBA AXR\n', isyi,o.N 0 rtiiiow.; ',\/\u25a0\u25a0\nOne letter slmply.starids for another. In this example A.ls usel \u25a0\nfor the three L's. X for the two O's, etc.  Single letters, apo\u00bb'\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hint*\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation \u25a0 !'\nSOMDZF!    HPLZ    TPYOL!    P' W 0\nP    SRTUJO    OAF   'TE8\nTOYWELU    OWOYSD YO \u2014HOEUT.\nSaturday's   Cryptoquote:    A   GLORIOUS   LAZY   DRONE, j\nGROWN   PAT   WITH   FEEDING'   ON   OTHER'S   TOII_-\u00bb\nHASSINGER. . ';\nOEPY\nIsD    VADPVO;\n ..,'.. 'ipjymi.\n\u00bb^\u00bb^^M\nn*3.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, 1ULY5, 1954\u20149\nClean Mone^ From Y Want Acta\nHELP WANTED\nSCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 3\nSTENOGRAPHERS   WANTED\nApplications ore invited tor tho\nfollowing positions:\n\"-Stenographer for the Prince\nCharles High School, Creston,\nB C, dutlei to commence August Oth, 1954. Minimum starting\nsalary (15200 per month.\nStenographer for the Cres 10n\nElementary School, duties to commence August 31st, 1954. Minimum starting salary (152.00 per\nmonth.\n'Address all applications to R. D,\nGardner, Secretary-Treasurer,\nSchool District No. 5 (Creston),\n-Box 250, Creston, B, C\nHELP WANTED\nCITY OF NELSON\nApplications will be received by\n-Qie undersigned up to July 19th,\n1954, at 5 p.m. for the position of\nTIRE CHIEF. Personnel of Dept\nconsists of 8 paid firemen, 1 paid\nloci-Qtary and 25 volunteers.\nApply giving age, qualifications.\n\u2022alary expected, together with ref-\nC. W. R. HARPER,\nCity Clerk,\nNelion, B. C\nBXFffj-S FOR INTERIOR SAW-\nmlll cutting, 40,000 f.b.m. per shift.\nOne experienced setter. Mill Is\n| equipped with electric setworks.\nApply Box 4049, Nelson Dally\nI News,\n'mob SAWm JftBT Be SBCT\n' fto do own'mlllwrlghting. Portable\nniill capacity 20 M. per day.\n\"Wager \u00bb1.75'per M., year round\nwork, Appl - to D. W. Walker,\ne\/o M, Rodgers; 430 Seymour St,\nKamloops, B. C.\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nBENCH MACHINIST WISHES\nwork as motor mechanic helper\ni';or similar engineering Job. Good\n\u2022\\,references, own tools. Write A.\n\\sLenow, 140 Baker Street.\nhour. Brushes and equipment supplied. Box 4400. \t\nremodeling then phbne 434-X-2,\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n1 MAHOGANY DRESSER, PLATE\nglass mirror, (29-0. Walnut vanity and bench, (37.50. Porcelain\ntop kitchen table, (7.50. SUver\ngrey upholstered rocker, badly\nsoiled, (55. Studio lounge, (35.\nGuitar, (20. Trumpet and case,\n(30, Inglis electric washing machine, (75, Cutler's New and Used\nV. Furniture, Phone .47, .301 Baker\n\u25a0St,\nFOB-SALE: TIMBER LIMIT, 600,-\n000 ft logs, also poles, pilings,\n\u25a0 posts, cordwood, sawmill, planer\nand necessary tools, Lawrence\nJammer mounted on truck. IEL\npower saw. 1947 Ford, long-wheel\nbase truck with steel bunks. Situated 8-miles north ot Kaslo, B.C.,\non 'Lardeau road. Riley, Hoey &\nMcKinnon, Box 343, Kaslo, B.C.\njMsaUers IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings.\nchain, steel plate sod-shapes Atlas Iron & Metals L'd., 260 Prior\nSt, Vancouver, B.C Phone Pa\nctfic <.57\nTbtt sale: tiRV mIxed Woob,\nI (15 per cord, Fir and tainarac $17.\nImmediate delivery.. Phone 604-R\n| or write S. A. Myers, Box 367, Nel-\nson, B. C\nTOR SALE 9 CUBIC FOOT KERO-\nj   sene Servel Refrigerator. Excellent  condition.  Box 2, Needles\nB. C.\nTtUCA. VlC-OR ttAtttC- AND 1\n''\"'.' new 600x16 Goodyear tire   Both\ni  (35. Write Box 9020. Nelson Dally\n\u2022 News- . '\nCandid   ANb  sTtftiib-For-\ntraits.   Everything 'Photographic.\n\u25a0 Pe'ttit Photos, Castlegar, B.C.\n3555 SALE: MAN'S BALLOON\nbicycle with carrier and light.\nApply 310 Golf Links Road.\nPIPE - .ITI'INGS - TUBES -\nspecial low prices Active Trading\nCo 935 E Cordova St Vancouver\nlo   ACR-S    -HXED    STANDING\n' hay. Your offers.   Sam Zmaeff,\nAppledale, B. C,\nf6R-SALE: 'fi6_ft-6-I J-AJW-\nture and miscellaneous. Ph: 1152\nevenings\nGOOD TOP SOIL. NO ROCKS OR\nsods. Hand.oaded. Ph. 794-R-l.\nRlCBONIC H_AE-Jl<S. AIDS -\nWrite PO Box 89 Nelson BC\ny BUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nAB8AVER8 AND  MINE\n8- REPRESENTATIVE^\ne w wibbowsoiN & cb.; as\n'\u25a0: layers 301 Josephine St. Nelson\nB  .   ELMES   feSJOTTB   BT\nAssayer Chemist. Mine Bep\nENGINEERS  AND BUHV6YORS\nt-itaVb'c Mtue*. Mil i.e.1\nB.C Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St. Nelson   Phone 1238\ng tt K COATES \"\"\"\nSuite No 8, 378. Baker St., Nelson\nPhone  1118   B.C.  Land Surveyor\n'\u00ab-ir #_JX-V(_Wl.;p6   B(ix\"254.\nKimberley   Phone 54\nB,C \u2022 Land Surveyor. Engineer.\nORAVBL\ngmepgs swamp eft.sH-\n-ed Gravel. Wholesalo and dallv-\nI eted Phone 1497-L.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LlMlfEli \"\nMachine Shop .Acetylene and\nelectric welding motoi rewinding   Phone 693   324   Vernon St\n' PHONE 144 POR CLASSIFIED\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nIN THE MATTER OF\nTHE CHANGE OF NAME ACT,\nREVISED STATUTES OF\nONTARIO, 1950, CHAPTER 47\nTAKE NOTICE that the application of Anatoly Bojmuk residing at\nthe Village ol Enterprise, In the\nTownship of Camden, County of\nLennox arid Addington, In the\nProvince of Ontario, to change his\nname to Tolie Albert Boymer will\nbe heard by the presiding Judge ot\nthe County Court of the County of\nLennox and Addington. In hla chambers at tha Court House, Napanee,\nOntario, on Friday, the 23rd day st\nJuly, 1964, at the hour of olevon\no'clock ln the forenoon.\nDATED at Kingston, this 24th\nday ot June, A.D, 1951\nRANKIN AND WRIGHT,\n71 Clarence Strcot,\nKingston, Ontario.\nTENDERS  WILL .BE  RECEIVED\nat the Secretary-Treasurer's office up to 5 p.m., July 8th, 1964,\nfor the purchase and removal of\nthe building known ai the Hume\nSphool Annex. RuUding to be removed and site levelled by August 31st, 1954.\nForward tenders to\nSecretary-Treasurer,\nSchool District No. 7, (Nelson),\n554 Stanley Street\nNelson, B, C,   -\nRENTALS\nWANTED  TO  RfcNT   BY. Government employee, a 2-bedroom\nv house by Sept. 1, Phong 570-X.\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT\nUphill District. (40 per- month.\ngox 4358, Daily'News\/\nMIOOM romWK-HTXWR T \u25a0\n,nent (35 a month..718 Silica St.\nPhone 1342-L. . .\nOR RENT: CEMENT BLOCK\nbuilding on Front Street. Apply\nJim's Radiator Shop.\nHOUSEKEEPING    ROOM    FOR\nrent Pleasant, newly decorated\n- room. 706 Victoria.\nFOR. RENT: 8-ROOM APART-\nment unfurnished. Box 4807.\nDally News.\nALLEN HOTEL: HOUSEKEEP-\nlng or sleeping rooms. Day, week.\nor month. 171 Baker Street\n4-RbOM  CbttAl-E   -6R  REtft.\nWillow Point, Some furniture. T.\nG. Ludgate, 482-X-y, '\n2-R50M  UNFURNISHED  SUITE,\ndownstairs. Phone 1511 or 386-Y\n\u25a0HhusE____-HW- U5BH T?T8\nworking girl. 719 Stanley St.\nDUPLEX- ADULTS Or.LY. 409\nSilica Street\n3DniO!PO!-r33SBO.\nYniir,Road.      '    '        .\t\nBEDBOOM FOR RENT. 923 VER-\nnon St\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nLIVESTOCK AUCTION. THURS-\nday, June 24, at 1 p.m. .Regular\nsale held every other Thursday\nat Hunt's Spallumcheen Auction\nMart near Vernon. Gov't tested\nscales for fat stock. Always a\ngood assortment of livestock at\nall tales Livestock ot any kind\naccepted, up to start ot .sale.\nWrite P.O. Box 393, Vernon, B.C.\nPhone 3120, Stan Hunt\" Auctioneer. \"Sales Held Anywhere.\"\nWE HAVE A QUANTITY OF\npartly grown cockerels to be\nraised for meat. Heavy or light\nbreeds. Also pullets of all ages ln\nwhite rocks, white leghorns, new\nHampshires and crosses. The\nAppleby Poultry Breeding Farm\nMission City, B, C.\nFOR SALE: FIVE-MONTH\" OLD\nGurnsey bull, out of good found\nation stock. Nick Poohachoft,\nSlocan' Park.   - '     -\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES,     BICYCLES\n1 YOUNG COW FOR SALE, RE-\ncently freshened. Apply Nick\nVerigin. Ymir, B. C.\nMACHINERY\nFOR SALE: Vs YARD SHOVEL,\nsuitable for gravel pit also Diesel\npower units, cats, winches, etc.\nBayes Ltd., 1016 S.W Marine\nDrive, Vancouver, or Cranbrook.\nB, C.\nFOR SALE 1 1951 J6-tt.'bfc_-E\ncrawler tractor. A-1 shape. Hydraulic blade and winch. No reasonable offer refused. Box 4060,\nDaily News, for particulars,\n.'OH KENT 0-3 CAT AND FRONI\nend loader Basements and back\nfill   Write boa 7674. Daily Newt\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR (200 A 21-FT. CABIN CRUIS-\ner, boat .In A-1 shape. Built-in\nbunks. Remote control. New\npaint.. Pb, 1473-R.\nFOR SALE: 18,-FTs MAHOGANY\noak ribbed constructed boat.\n\"Jowly finished Inside and out.\nApply 723 tth Street, evenings.\nWANTED: 14 OR 16-FT. ROW-\nboat with or, without outboard\nApply Box 7892, Daily News.\nii-fbor LAUNCH \"tbtt _A__\nExcellent sea boat. E. C. Wragge,\nNelson. \u2022 . '->.',--\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nONLY (2000,D-WN. BUSY CAFE\nwltb rooms above all ranted\nSuite for owner. Lease and option. Home taken in trade. P.O.\nBox 109, Salmo, or, ph. 26, Salmo,\nFOR SALE\u2014LIGHT LUNCH AND\ncoffee counter; confectionery \u2014\nDowntown TraU, Box 4318, Daily\nNews,\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nWanted  matched  set  of\nlady's golf clubs with club bag.\nPhone 527 oi 703-R.\nVACATION TIME\nIS HERE AGAIN!\n; For That J4EW.br V.\nGood1 Used car\n\u2022 SEE \u25a0\u25a0\"'\u25a0\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\nMotors' Ltd,\n. FIRST!\n5 New-Austins Just\nArrived\n5 Mors on the Way\nFull Price $1895'\n1953 Austin Sedan    ..\nNew car condition\n1952 Austin Sedan\nCustom radio\n1952 Pontiac Sedan\nCustom radio\n1952 Meteor 5-Pasjenger\nCustom radio\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\n\\Q\"i\\ Austin Sed-in\n1950 ChevrolUt Sedan\nl?5(J\u00bbFord Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1948 Chevrolet Sedan\n1948 rw4n\u00ab 5-Passenger\nCoupe\n1946 Ford Coupe\n1946 Monarch Sedan\nCustom radio\n1941 Chevrolet Sedan\nCommercials\n1951 Studebaker Pickup\n1950 Dodge Pickup\n1950 Pontiac Sedan\nDelivery .\n1949 Austin Pickup\nSEIBERLING TIRES\nOur Tire Sale continues at\nWHOLESALE PRICES,\nExample:\n600x16 ....... $13.95\n670x15 ..14.95\n*.\nTrade in your old tires\nLifetime Guarantee against\nall Road Hazards\nCASH - TERMS - TRADES\nReuben Buerge\nMotors Ltd.\n803 Baker St. \u2014 Ph. 1135\n600 Block Vernon St.\nPhone 1661\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. POR SALE\n1\u20143 bedrooms, _.R., kitchen tnd\n.bathroom and living room with\nfireplaoe. Full basement and\nhot-air furnace. Immediate oc-\n\u00a3*&__ ,.i\".;..... $5,500\nSplendid Terms.\n1\u20143  bedrooms,  L.R. .with -fireplace, D.R, and kitchen; S-plece\nbathroom. Villi basement and\nthermostatic   icontrolled. furnace. Immediate      S_7 __M\noccupancy. .... ..;-,.. 919W\nSome Terms.\n3\u2014A lovely little house on Third\nStreet in Nelson. Close to park\nand bus. On* good-Sited bedroom,: L.R., bathroom and\nkitchen. Full basement and\nfurnocette, Located on one lot.\nHNfel ...*3900\nWe could help finance this one,\ni\u2014A food 2-B.R. house'In Fair-\nView wltb, an a   '\t\nroom upstairs, t\nview wltb an additional bedroom upstairs, L.R., good, large\nkitchen with breakfast nook.\nBasement and hot-air furnace.\nEarly occupancy. $5ftflO\nSplendid terms \u2022P*\u00abvU\n5-^-A wonderful\n.. -...,\u2122Jul buy in uphill district.   Not  quftt   completed.,\nmd.fireplace, good kltch-\nL.R. and.fireplace, gpo_ \u25a0-,-.-\nen, 3 Bit. and modern bathroom. For short time only and\ngicVT1,\".:.'. .18500\nHerb Peacock\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSURANCE  AGENCY\nPhone 63\n832 Ward St,\nm*J0+*tm**mmmmr+\n+xrtema*mtiB>t*,im!*tirm*\nNOW    .\nIS THE TIME TO BUY\n$10,000\nI-^mall 12' x 18' dwelling on two\no5yuphm'\"\u00b0'-   $2400\nJ\u2014Nearly new five-room bungalow in Fairview, excellent, lo-\n.   cation,\nat' '..:\u25a0 ....\n3\u2014Modern dwelling on West Arm,\nabout % acre between highway\nand lake with 100 foot frontage.  Land  in  lawns, garden\nKfc,*1\"'      $12,000\n4\u2014Financial Independence on a\n- S-aeie-.plol, near city limits.\nCultivated garden, fruit, flowers ; and' greenhouses. Modern\nhot water heated dwelling. \u2014\nSee this,     y;-Y^500\n8\u2014Also many  business\" opportunities.\nT. D. Roslijtig\nREAL .ESTATE and INSURANCE\n868 Ward St, Phone 717\nDividends of 1954 Bring Smiles\nOf Joy lo Canadian Investors\n\u25a0yQEORM LINTON\nCenedlen Press Staff Writer ,\nStock owners smile a lot these\nday*. They've made money four\ntimes Jn five on the 1884 markets.\n,Many who bought shares of long-\ncstabllshcd Industrial \"row with\nthe aim of accumulating dividends\nwere pleasantly surprised. Ton-dollar increases in stock prices were\ncommon and some Jumped as much\nas 20 per cent ot their valu*<\nAlthough investors looking back\nover the. first six months'of the\nyear probably agree industrials\nwere the best buy, there were few\nsections of the stock markets that\nfailed to make fair gains.\nSome Indicators of the trend:\nAt New York, Tht Associated\nPress average of 80 stocks shot up\n110.10 In il*. months to f 127-27. At\nMontreal papers rocketed. 180\npoints, utilities managed 18 ind\nother groups had smaller gains,\nAt Toronto, the Industrial Index\nsoared 31.12, (or... the' greatest .increase in any- Six-month period\nsince the first half of 105.1, The bass\nClassified- Advertising   Racial\n150 par line, (irst Iqiertipoyand\nnon-conaequUve .Insertions   '\nUS' line per consecutive tnser.\ntion  oftor  first  Insertion       -\n48c line tof 8 consecutive Insertions.\n8158 line for month (38 conse-.\ncutlve insertions'!   BOX (lumbers llo extra  Covers any\nnumber ol insertions.\nPUBLIC   ILEC.AL,   NOTICES.\nTENDERS etc - We per line'\nfirst insertion   16c per line\neach subsequent Insertion\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscriptions Rates:\n(Not- More Then Listed Here)\nBy carnei  per weex.\nui advance .30\nBy oarrlei 316.00\nUnited. Rules United Kingdom\nOno month        . ',125\nThree months    ,378\nSix months         7.50\nOne yeai .'-.: 1500\nMall in .lanada. outside Nelson\n-   One month t 1.0U -\nThree months' ...;.:.        2.75\nSix months   .V.      5.50\nOn* year lflJIO.\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates Dlus oostago.\nmetal, gold and western oil index\nmoved ahead smaller amounts.  \u2022 .\nBIO IN0J.BA8E8 APPEAR\n; Big Increases wart Mattered\nthrough til industrial groups. Gains\nof more than 820 went to Canadian\nCanners, Csnadlan Celaneao, Seagrams, Dominion Banks Ooodyear,\nlihd Ford A, Gains of between $10\nand $20 were chalked up by International Paper, Hlndo tnd Dauch,\nCanada Cement, Canadian Dredge,\nGeq'eral Motors tnd Aluminium,\nSenior boso metal increases, led\nby Noranda- 313.73 climb, were almost as outstanding as industrials,'\nTht prominent issues, Consolidated\nSmelters, Falconbridgo, Hudson Bay\ntnd International Nickel, were well\nahead.\nWestern Oils began the year with\na steady climb but got a sharp setback last month when the Federal\nPower Commission of tht United\nStates approved building a. natural\ngas pipelind'to the U,.S, Pacific\nnorthwest from New Mexico rather\nthan from Alberta- '\n$iis result ws ap Index drop (n\nwestern  oils of more than  five\npoints .In one' jesjlon, .the\/ greatest\nsj'ump sine* September, .-.V\nSHOW MIXEP REACTION\n;Pcace River Gas, on* of the companies that hoped to profit (rom\ntho .pipeline project, was dow'n($1.35 j\non ,the six-month period. Qthtr wes-'\ntorn oils Showed a mixed pattern. |\nCentral Explorers, Home Oil' and]\nInternational Petroleum were ahead |\nwhile Anglo-Canadian, Calvan and!\nHusky were lowSr.\nThe gold bpard also ended mixed, I\nwith Holllnger 'and Malartic ahead\nIn seniors, most Juniors down, and \u25a0\nholding companies showing no definite pattern,'  '        .-   *\nIndex changes: Industrials up 31.-\n12 to 343.48, golds up 6.76 to 67.39,\nbase metals up 10.03 to 140.52, and\nwestern oils up 1.00 to 87.13.        .  |\nThird Thr\u00abq.T6pi\nVladimir Petrov\nPERTH, Australit : (SjUUtsri):, '<-*\nA third-threat to kill Vladimir Petrov, former Soviet diplomat now\ngiving evidence to the royal commission on espionage in Melbourne\nwas received by * newspaper h'oro.\nThe man who made lt described\nhimself as a Canadian.  .'\nHe telephoned The Dally New.\nhere threatening to \"put a.couple\nof bullets into Petrov'' If he visited\nPerth. Two similar threats were received by Molbourno papws Friday.\nPravda Defends\nEinstein Policy\nMOSCOW .(APl-Pravdt-rtppid\nSovltt physicists Saturday tor not\npaying enough hetd to \"the work's\nof Albert Einstein because they dls.\napprove of hit \"dirk idealistic\nviewpoint*        . '\u25a0*. :\nThe Communist party paper de-\nclorcd that failure to pay attention\nto the fniitS of Elnsttln's. physletl\nresearch had caused Soviet delay\nIn the field ot supersonio spaed. \u25a0\nThq srtlclo by academician S. L.\nSobolev ssld somo faculty mem-\n\u00abrs at Moscow University \"missed\nthe practicality of tho nW Sclonco\nof physio's, not tven noticing it\"\n\"At the same time,'-' Sobortv ai\nsorted, \"were ignored such import-\ntilt spheres ss the physics of supersonic sounds coming close to the\nspaed of light, s'poeds wbosa theory\nwas given by Einstein, ,. .\" .-\nDALLAS (Af) -Maud Lynch,\nqueen of the Dallas underworld and\npickpocket deluxe in prohibition\ndayt, li dead)\nMaud died Friday night 15 minutes after tt'e reached a hospital\nafter she had been found ill and;\nhalf-paralyzed in a cheap- walk-up\nhotel, She was 88, broke and alone.\nDoctori said sht apparently had suj>:\nforcd a stroke.\nPolice say she never had nn enemy. She died Friday night Without\nl friends hundreds of arrests, th6u.-\nsandt of parties, and thousands, o-f\nvictims after- that first orrest In inw\n\u2014for ihopliftlng'so'mt.prttty llngf.\nerie,     .'\u25a0'.,\nI Germans Vole\nHeavily for EDC'%\nBERLIN (Reuters)-More than-'\na million East Germans defied their, .\nCommunist-led government at '\u00bb,\"\nplebiscite lost weekend by voting to\nfavor of the European Army project or handing In spoiled balldte}\nfinal official figures htvt disclosed.\nTh* official East German new.-\nagency' AON announced that 03rS\nper cent of all valid votes were\nagainst the European Defen'cV\nCommunity and (-4 per cent fi~\nEDC. Invalid votes number 328,4\nand the votes for EDC B3-.925, '\nPLAN BIQ REUNION\n:myERNiiss,-Ni.s,; (CP) - This\npredominantly Gaelic community\non Cape Breton island marks Its\n50th anniversary with a,week of\ncelebration July.. ?5-31. Thousands\nof former, residents are expected\nback,.for.a graridireu_lon,-.-._-   ..v.\nBuy Sell  Trado the Classified Way\nem. \\Jmim>     w9mnmmmfml\nFully Equipped\nSA IrrMILL\n|JMI^.IS SOUTH OF REVELSTOKE !\nTimber limit with two miles of completed ward ee'ntalnlno\n11-16 million feat of Pine, Fir, Hemleok and Spruce plus\n8000.12,000 Cedar. po|es. !..\u2022'\u2022\u2022'.\nMill Is within 200' of good oreek and has, Planer, Blower TD14\nCat, two logging trucks and 180 H.P. Diesel ready to operate\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 '\u25a0 *y for Inspection Applyy %.\u25a0\n',.'\"\u25a0 HUGH STORR, BOX 90, REVELSTOKE, BL.C.\nATTRACTiyE STUCCO HOMt\nat 807 Baker St Living room\nfireplace, dining room, kitchen. 2\nbedrooms and bathroom, down 2\nbedrooms up. Hot water, automatic oil heat, full basement drive-in\ngarage. Phone 487-R.\n3-BEDROOM HOME WHICH RE-\nqulres some finishing on 2.32\nacres with fruit trees and 263 ft\nlake frontage. Apply N. Pochay.\nnext- to Johnstone Holne, North\nShore, West of ferry.\nNEW 4-ROOM M-DERN\"STU(_CO\nhouse. Hardwood floors, electric\nhot water, wired for electric\nrange, full basement Apply Carl\nStensel, Frultvale. B. C, after\n8 o'clock.\nCAR CERTIFICATE FOR SALE.\nDealer will honor full;faco value\nof $500. Owner will sell same for\n$400. No trade-In will be considered and .sale must be on new car.\nBox 4399, Nelson News.\n1038-'30 FORD SEDAN. CHASSIS\n1038. In 1050 hew motor, new\nhydraulic brakes Installed, complete rewiring done. Price $265\nBox 4108, Dally News.   -\nFOR SALE OR TftADE'ON LTfTE\nmodel csr, Fargo Del., 8000 careful miles. A-1 condition. Ph. 27B-X\nor-call at 813 Observatory St.,\nafter 6 pm.\nFOR SALE 1 1051 FORD 3-TON\ntruck. Good motor. Very good\nUrea. Flat deck. $1400. Box 4061,\nDaily News.\nFOR SALE 1037 FORD TUDOR -E-\ndtn In excellent mechanical re-\n. pair Good buy Apply 214 Vernon\nStreet\nfbk -At* m 'l-ww '\u25a0mvk.i-.\nlet truck, Low mileage. Good\ncondition. Riverview Service, ph,\n.M.B-.1\ng ic_n mam isxam ws\nsale Price -1200 Apply L\u00ab-o Van\nin. Shoreacres\ntion. $800. or will accept older car\nand balance In cash. Phone 1323-L.\ntruck In A-1 shape. Full price\n$475. R, Dauphlnals, Salmo. .\nFOR SALEi H\u00bb lETEOH, 2-000*\nexcellent condition,  Ph.  1233-X\nGIRL'S CCM BIKE FOP SALE.\nExcellent condition, 207-R., ..\nFOR SALE: _-V_.R06m UN\",\nfurnished house, on upper bench.\nKinnaird, B. C. For full particulars write Box 12. Kinnaird. B. '\nor phone 8544.\t\ncheAp FOfc dmlCS: SAIA: ttOD-\nem 6-roomed house, 7 lots, close\nln. 210 Mill St., turn left .Carbonate and Kootenay.\nFOR salETpartly FURNISHED\nrooming house or will lease, attractive location, good terms. Ph. i\n329-L. ;\nS-L-LL' -\"A-t-t.Ittm SOX, AL'So\nsuitable for tourist cabins. Close\nto highway. Box No. 7358. Daily\nNews.\nPOR'SAysiAiftV-.w bmmr,\n2-bedroom home, basement new\nfurnace end unfinished upstairs.\nOn a 60x00 lot, Phone 072-X,\n$T8M FULL PRICE* 6-ROOM\nhouse. New roof. Five lots. Garden, fruit trees. Apply A. Jeffrey,\nKaslo.\nHOUSE   FOR   SALE - 120-FOOT\nbeach, on North Shore at 0-Mile.\nPhone 318-L-l,\t\n6-ROOM HOUSE ON 7 ACRES\"OT\nland, View Street, Fairview. Box\n206, Nelson.\nttbTSm 'rt'BM-. _TV_ fc-OI-S.\nF.A. Baker, phone 10 or 1044-L.\nPHONE,144 POR CLASSIFIED\nBoy, Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nPalace Guardsman\nBitten by Corgi\nFLEETWOOD, Ent- (Reuters)\u2014\nGuBrdsman Alfred,Edge, who was\nbitten by Queen Elizabeth's corgi\ndof outside Buckingham Palace\nlast week disclosed Saturday that\nan invitation to appear on the panel\ntelevision program \"geut My story\"\nhss (seen cancelled.\nHe has received a telegram from\ntha BBC saying the cancellation\n, Was \"due to pdlicy regarding tht\nRoyal Family,\" >\nI   The 23-year-old soldier was bit\nten by the dog tn the left enklr\nwhile lie Was bringing hln left foo'\nforward before sloping arms nesi .\na sentry box outside the palace.\nMAIL\nYour Classified Want Ad ph Jliis iHtedy\n\u2014__\u25a0______\u25a0-____-\u25a0< _________i___M^-__iv^\u2014 ill\u2014is \u25a0     en  ii nw\u00abMMm^___rT>  \u25a0avMHRMMBW*\n' I        - ' I I.\n',V     :   '. ::''    '   \u25a0\u25a0>\u25a0.    ' ' '..     \"\u00a3\u00b1\u2014 i\n_^ \u25a0\u2022  \u25a0\u2014! ____ \u2022\nFIRST UNI\nSECOND LINI\nTHIRD LINI.\n-FOURTH LINE\nFIFTH UNI '\u25a0%\nSIXTH LINI;;\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH UNI\n1\n\u2022 Puf on* word in each space\n(Each .group of numbers or letteii,count rilf?ope Word.) ....'\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words\n(Box.00 NelsonNewi.) \u2022\u2022'; ';!'\u25a0' :.',-,-\u2022 .   '\u2022.\"\u25a0:-.\u25a0 :,,',,;.;*\u25a0' .-v,;\"'\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\nLINES\n\u25a0\u25a0 i \u25a0:\u25a0'\n3. ::,\n5\n<\n7\nS\nYOUR NAME\n3 TIMES\n.74\n1.11\n1.4.\n\u00a3\u00bb.\n2.22\n2.B9\n2.96\n6 TIMES\nm\n2.40\n- a.88\n3.30\n3.84\n\u25a0\u25a0:<%%\n\u25a0 <:y,<.\n: :\u25a0\u25a0*$:\u25a0.:>:;\nADDRESS\n9 Minimum charge Is two lines\no Add lie for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% front above rates If i\n\u2022 enclosed : \"-' \"\u2022 \u2022J\" -\"      '   *\n9 Take advantago of the low the time rata\nNo. of Days Ad Ig To Run   -   '' ,.\n\".  .  Payment Enclosed :'-- >   '\u25a0\n: BIll.Mo      \"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0 \u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\"\n\u25a0VT\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT, NELSON, B. C.\n\u2022t^bJ.\n__________________\n___________\n - __-\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 5, 1954.\nGaseous Distention?\n\u2022Acid Indigestion? ,   . .'..->' '-\u2022'\n'.. Loss of Appetite?'     .-.\"\"  f! \u25a0\u2022'.'.[\nNervous or Sour Stomach?   '    .'-,\nTRqserireiamong the 'troublesome sytnptprhs\n; of hyperacidity ond the cause of much --V-\n^viV..'; common.stomach distress.   \u25a0 \" \u25a0\nThe newest answer to this discomfort ii\nRECLUt\n2 sizes _\u25a0>'.'.'\n$3.25 and $630\nlose Marathons\nWorry Runners\n,'tONDON (CP) - Britain's top\nmarathon runners, Jim Peters and\nStan Cox, expressed concern at the\nprospect of running two competitive\nmarathons in 18 days next month.\nBoth Peters and Cox plan to run\nat the British Empire\/ Games in\nVancouver. Originally they had fig\nur.d on participating also in the\nEuropean games at Bern. Switzerland, which, follow two weeks later.\nCpx however, has changed his mind.\n.Jit isnt fair to expect a man to\nj give his best if he is entered for\ntwo marathons In 18 days,\" said\n\u2022 Cpx. \"1 wont take part ln the European games even if I am selected.\"\n\" -Peters, a 35-year-old who usually\ntakes the toughest obstacles in\nstride, said he wants to test his re\nictioh to what he called-the \"mountain biuhb\" a. Vancouver before deciding what to do shout Bern..  *\n*T'v4.hear dthe Vancouver course\nwill be practically uphill for the\nfirst 18 miles'and that during a recent trial there, one of the runners\nhad to go to hospital because ot exhaustion. From what I have read\nthe course will be an extremely\ntough one 'and no one.can tell, at\nthe moment, what the physical\nshape of competitors will be to\ntackle another gruelling marathon\nOnly 18 days latere ''\"..\u25a0\u25a0   \u2022\nLethbridge Beats\nMichel >1\nMICHEt\u2014A gbal in each half by\nJulius Parascau enabled Lethbridge\nANAF to score a 2-1 decision over\nthe youthful ldichel iulfaloes In a\nwell-contested game ln a Crow's\nNest Pass Football League encounter, f\nMichel scored their only goal\nearly in the second half to tie the\nscore at 1-1, with Frankie Mitchell\nscoring oh a penalty shot. Holly\nDoe, in the Lethbridge goal, made\na great effort to hold the hard-\ndrive which ended up hiside the\nnets. Lethbridge scored their first\ngoal in less-than one minute after\nthe game started on a well executed\ndrive. ~  '    '..'\nThe winning goal was scored after\nthe Michel goalie went out of his\nnets too far for a stray ball which\nended up inside the goal before he\nhad time to return, to his position.\nJJtlphel, with one gime left to\nplay against Kimberley this weekend t<5 complete theli. piaylng aihe-\nduli, lost thoir third Striitht game\nafter being at one time tied VWth\nFernie United for 'first place, and\nare now entered In thlri place,\nahead of Kimberley and Fernie\nHovers. The win^ for Lethbridge\nconsolidated their position In second place.    \u25a0 >.'\u25a0'.'\u2022   '-  \" . \u25a0   .\"\nThe Anglican church of St. Paul's\nat. Port Royal, \"N.S., was built-ta\n:\u00ab3o.-'.y   \u2022',\u2022-\u25a0-.\nWashington Charges United Fruit\nto., With Unfair Banana Monopoly\ni#i;\n-WASHINGTON.- (AP)\u2014the' govi\nernment has taken legal action\nagainst the United Fruit Company's\nbanana empire in Central America.\nAttorney - G e n e r a 1 Herbert\nBi ownell announced that the', government had tiled an anti-trust\nsuit ln New Orleans federal court\nasking that United Fruit .be ordered to take steps to \"establish effective competition in the banana industry.\" '\u2022' \u2022',\nCHARGE8 SAID GROU.NDLE88\n' Sam Baggett, the company's vice-\npresident and> general counsel, issued a statement im New Vork in\nwhich he Said United Fruit is convinced the action \"is based upon\nincomplete or unreliable information and that the charges are\ngroundless.\" '...,.\nThe government -suit accuses\nUnited. Fruit of forcing out competition and ot gaining control of\nnearly -all -Central, American land\nused for growing, bananas. It also\ncontends United Fruit thus has\nmanaged to 'achieve dominance In\nthe production, transportation and\nimport_.tion.of bananas.\nThe Justice \u25a0 department moved\nagainst the big .fruit firm with a\nbackdrop of government upheaval\nin Guatemala;'where United fruit\nhas operated In a large' scale.\nLone Bull's Eye\nPufYoungTops\n- A unique sports program was\nconducted at Camp Koolaree in\nwhich each boy competed for tho\ntop place ta his cabin. The program\nincluded softball pitching; shot put.\nhop, step and jump; basketball\nthrow; ahd archery.\nPRINCESS, LOSES:\nSHOE At WEDDING'\nOXFORD. Eng. (API\u2014Princess\nMarie-G-brielle von Urach-Wurt-\ntember today wed,Desmond Walter Guinness while standing with\none shbe on. .-\u25a0\u2022\u25a0' I\nThe 21-year-old daughter of the i\nCount of Wiirttembefg, Prince Al-\nbrecht von Uroch,.lost the shoe as\nshe walked up the aisle at the cathedral of Christ Church College\nBlU Matthews was. the. top manpublin garbage collector, Patrick\nWEBBWOOD, Ont. (qp) \u2014 The\nPresbyterian Women's Leagtfe in\nthis Sudbury district town reported\na bank balance of $106, decided to\npurchase paint .or the church floor,\nand agreed to do the work themselves. '*'\u2022'' l\". \u25a0  .-,'\u25a0\nNews of the Day\nRATE8: SOojIoe, 40c line black face typo; larger tyne rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for-pwir.pt qaimeZ\ni    I  light  housekeeping  room  for\n- rent. Phone 1546 OC.\n; 'Rotary luncheon Monday, July 5,\n12:13 p.m., Hume Hotel.\n\u2022Fine supply of Mrs. Gray's and\n\u25a0 Moir's Chocolates at WAIT'S.\nFOR 8ALE \u2014B0ATH0U8E WITH\n22<FT.   FRONTAGE.' PHONE   902.\n-    Stovewood for sale. Price, 4 ft. 1.\n'311.00; 12\" for $15.00. Phone ,372-L.\nHot peanuts  and Hot  Buttered\nPopcorn anytime at WAIT'S.\n' Used coal and wood range, like new.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS.\n1 Free Estimates-.o'h\"Watch. Repairs.\n-CUtLERtt Jewellery, 611 Baker St\n|? 'JACK BOYCE\n[yi Fishing; licences\nEagles meet tonight at 8 p.m..\n,Prevent'moth damage with the\nnew Green Cross Moth Bomb. Effective for one year after treatment\nNon-staining, inexpensive.\nHIPPERSON'S\nWOOD . <\u2022'.\nDry,. 12-inch slabwood.\nQUEEN CITY FUEL CO. LTD\nPhone 1518\n\"a Fuller Brush .'Representative.\n. jDon E. vSergent - Phone 1333.\naBoI' EXPERT DUPLICATING\nig   Phone B. J, Kelly, 378-R-3  \/ \u25a0:\n^|PUR MIMEOGRAPH 8ERVi0g\nimprinted-cotton waffle ln small\npjiids. Very qew'i 36\" wide. Yd; $1.18\n\"\u25a0\u25a0*\u2022    TAYLOR'* DRY'GOODS\nig jjGeneral meeting of Local 1003,\nBfcjJjEW tonight, 7:30 p.m., .Hume\n;:.'-B_>tel. Executive meeting 7:00 p.m\nI :M      AIN8W9STH pool\nI H? Open daily accept Mondays, ..\nB v\".   from 3a.ms- until .0 p.m.    .-'-\nE.->-siiarg8 Bewh Tpwels in beautiful\nacquatic designs. Size 36\"x60\". Each\n. S$3i50. TAYLOR'8 DRY GOOD8.\nI i Closed Monday in respect to the\nUtfe Mrs. Elsie McCuaig. Shorty's\nRepair Shop, 714 Baker Street:\nj ''Boys'..Swim Trunks, all size's.\n''\u25a0''-\u25a0': .Priced from $1.69 to $2.05.\n\u201e   EBERLE'B JUNIOR SHOP\n.-,, 8LABWOOD POR SALE. LONG\n60RD8 ,OR CUT TO 8TOVE\nLENGTH. - PHONE 330-L.\n\"Chimneys cleaned and topped.\nfurnaces, stpves cleaned by vacuum\n\"\u2022'' Pounder's Chimney Service\ny.'r Phone 1541-L. -...\u25a0;\nMIRRORS    .\nWe   carry   a   fine \u2022election   of\nmirrors for any room in the house.\nLovely full lengths, and decorative\nwait mirrors. Call and see them at\nT. H. WATER8 & CO. LTD.,\nPhone 166 - 101 Hall.8t -Nelson\n..MEN: For a good,\" sturdy work\nboot, see our GORILLA line. $9.60\nahd $14.50.. 8\".ioos at.410:60..St.\nWADE'S SHOES AND LEATHER\n\u2022\u2022Y-j.':; G60D8\nin the sports events with. Allan\nYoung being the only archer to\nscore a bull's eye. Garry Burch topped the basketball throwers with\nhis 90 feet. .        ,'\nThe results of the events were:\nsoftball pitching: Cabin :2\u2014Robert\nMcLean, Cabin 3\u2014MlchaeV Bennett and Cyril*. Towson, Cabin *^-\nRobert Van ahd David Dickinson,\nCabin 5-_,loyd Atwell, Cabin. 6\u2014\nPi-ham Drew, Arthur More, Olaf\nShellard, Joe German,\nShot put:.Cabin 2-sBUl Matthews,\nCabin %3^Bob Gates, Cabin 4-^F.on\nHamson, Cabin 5\u2014Alex; McClelland, Cabin 6\u2014Art More. '\nHop, step and jump: Cabin 2\u2014\nPat Burroughs, Cabin .3\u2014Michael\nBennett. Cabin 4 \u2014 Ron Hamson,\nCabin 8\u2014Alex McClelland, Cabin 6\n\u25a0Denis Stanley.-', .\nBasketball throw: Cabin 2\u2014Bill\nMatthews, Cabin 3\u2014Cyril Towson,\nCabin 4-rLloyd Atwell, Cabin 5\u2014\nGarry Burch, Cabin oVDeriis Stanley.\nArchery: Cabin 2\u2014Bill Matthews.\nCabin 3\u2014Noel Cutler, Cabin 4\u2014Mel\nMiller, Cabin 5\u2014Grant John, Cabin\n(h-Alah Young. ,.'.-,.\nIn the cabin softball competition\nCabin five, behind the: superb\npitching of McClelland swamped\nthe Cabin six team by a 15-3 Score.\nIn the second game ot the day\nthe Ch'lnooks took a tumble before\nthe Okanagahs who won their first\ngame, by an 8-4 victory. The mighty\nbat of Bill Matthews: brought in\nthree runs and scored Derbyshire\ntwice. Hector Stewart drove a home\nrun and McLean' made two runs for\nthe victors.\nThe'-volley bell tomes went to\ncabins three and four. It was Cabin\nfour's-big'day as they won their\nfirst game, acquired-the shield for\nthe -best housekeeping and won\nthe totem for their table.\nCHORE TIME Y\nThe cabin ..roups are well organ\nized for the camp chores and, outstanding In thla field were the cab\nin three Chinoolts, under Allan\nLittle, who. hoisted 30 blocks of\nwood from the bush to the oamp\nfor the kitchen stove.\nIn the campfire program Jim\nSadler' entertained the campers\nwith the \"Chewing- Gum Song\".\nOther feature Hems included the\nsenior trio of Berger, Derek Fraser\nand McLachlan singing \"Three\nBlind Mice.\"\nding of- the year. More than 400\nguests saw her hesitate slightly, and\nthen walk on. The shoe was taken\nto her at the end of the service.\n. Guineas, 32,.is.the son of Lord\nMoyhe, ylce chairman-of-the Giiln-\ness brewery concern.' He has been\nstudying    modern\u00b0'languages-   at\nChrist  Church   College  for three        >By WALTER BREEDS, Jr,\nyears.'.      'J, .\"^        '   j' NEW YORK (AP) -r Big'steel\nAmong the guests was'a lone'hiked; wages .and prices In the\nlin garbage ^collector, -Patrick J United istateS this '.week with re-\nO'Reilly, 60, wko sent a letter of! verberatlims'that were felt in most\ncongratulations Jon reading,of the| segments of the country's-business.\nNELSON AIRMAN, Squadron Leader Norman\nW.rEltihjott Is-one of seven officers of British Co-\njmttblaywh.o graduated fronuRCAp staff college\nIn TOrOnto.Juno 25.,In.frortt,of.Air Marshal Curtis\nHall at the conclusion of their Intensive 10-month\nadvanced training, course, the B.C. officers -are,\nfrom left,,WC,T, J. MacKinnon..8L.J. A\/A'rn'ott\nboth Vancouver; WC G; Sutherland,-Port Moody,\n..Lt, Cmdr, G. R. Wood, Buccaneer Bay,' 8L R..R.\nLaronde, Ocean Pork, SL Emmott, Nelion,-and\n8L R, I. Moodle, Vancouver.\u2014RCAF photo.\nBig Steel Hike\nBrings Headache\nforthcoming marriage and received\nan invitation. He knew neither\nfamily.\nNO TRIMMINGS\nTIVIDALE, Eng. (CP) \u2014 When\nnew hymn books were Issued.at\nSt. Michael's church in this Staffordshire district Rev. .H.' C. Matthews asked \"would-be artists\" to\nstay their hands for a couple of\nyears. '\u25a0\u2022' \"\nDo your, canning the\" easy^ way\nwith.a Burpee can sealer.. Simple\nand fast to use, no failures; inex\n,pen,s.ye--the modern way.'to- can.\nv.Y--yy - -HIPPERSON'S < .:;\u2022\nB.C. GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES\nV ATTENTION '\ny Monthly meeting of the Nelson\n-ranch of the B. C. Government\nEmployees ^Association will be held\nin the Canadian Legion, Tuesday,\n.July 6 at 8 p.m. '\nATTENTION CANADIAN LEGION\nAND  LADIE8'  AUXILIARY\n\u00bbl        Members  .\nMembers are'requested to meet\nat the,Canadian Legion, Hall on\nSaturday, July 3. at 3:15 p.m., for\nthe purpose of attending the funeral\nof our late comraide, Donajd Miller.\n\"   IN   MEMORIAM '\n,  In loving memory of our little\nFranklin, who passed away July 5,\nDo not ask us if we miss hilp, \u2022    \u25a0\nFor there's such a vacant place,\nOft we think we hear his voice,\nOr we see his lovely face,\nFor\/ he left us broken-hearted,\nFriends may think the^wouhd Is\nhealed,\nBut ,they little know the sorrow,-\nThat-Is in odrhearts, concealed.\nEver remembered by his sorrowing-Mom, his sister, and brothers.\n;The Isle of Orleans Tn the St.\nLkwrence neat; Quebec was first\nsettled soon after 1651.,    - \u2022-    \u2022\u25a0\nH Girls First\nTo Camp Galilee\nThe first of four sessions at Camp\nGalilee, situated near New Denver\non Slocan Lake, begins Monday\nunder the auspices of ihe. Anglican\nChurch.    \u25a0'   '   .\nThe camp is commencing its third\nyear with the senior girls camp and\ncanjps for junior girls and senior\nand junior boys will,follow, The\ncamp is under the direction of\nDean T. L. Leadbeater. -.\nA capacity enrollment of '24 girls\nfrom throughout the West Kootehay district is expected.at the first\nsession which will-be-held from\nJuly 5 to July 15. y\nl A program bf swimming,' boating,\nhiking, religious instruction, handicrafts and athletics is planned. Sunday school van workers,. Miss V.\nMilne and Miss E. Jones art also\nassisting with the supervision of\nthe camp. ;  '\u2022\";\u2022'.'\nSays Mail Maus\nDelay Reforms\nMONTREAL (CP)' \u2014 Mau. M^u\nterrorism^is delyaing: needed social l00i ln ^ b        ( ,.\nreforms for the native population ,iP\u201e.,i'w _,..t. s .   .     w.~u\nbf Kenya,: says Rev.' _hem Irangi, I S'rUCtio,J was boomlng os never be\nAfrican-born convert to the Pente-\nTopLijueStlon concerned the probable impact on consumer goods\nmerchandising. Would manufacturers of; cars, refrigerators, farm ma-\nchlnery-apd kitchen.sinks\u2022'absorb\nthe added-steel cost? \u2022 '-'.',\nLOT8 dF KICK8\nA leading steel' industry publication said;steel users .would \"kick\nlike steers.\" But first Indications\nwere that most would swallow the\nextra-exp.nse themselves, particularly in-vlew of today's competitive market.\n, In announcing the $3-a-ton increase, Clifford Hood, president of\nUS. Steel Corporation made it plain\nthat the company-was keenly aware\nof the problems posed by raising\nprices at a time. of growing competition fbr consumer dollars,  \"\n\"Competitive conditions,'.' he explained, demand \"a lower price adjustment that: would otherwise be\nJustified\", by:the .nine to 12 cents-\n^n-hour 'swage-insurance-penSion.\npackage.- won by the Steelworkers\nUnion.- (CIO).\nCON8UMER8. OPTIMI8TIC\nThe price.rise found steel consumers optimistic about tall prospects but, confronted with immediate headaches involving slack sales\nand bulging inventories.\nAuto makerijvere putting more)\nstress on' inveirtory reduction, less\non setting now production marks.\nIt was becoming Increasingly evl\ndent that, there would be no new\nproduction surge before the change\nover tp-1955._nodeIs.\nBut there were sustaining factors,\nSAYS LOSS LEADERS\nPUT LITTLE MAN\nOUT OF BUSINESS\nVICTORIA . (CP) \u2014 Representatives of two Victoria organizations\nattacked the federal Price Maintenance Act which forbids manufacturers from seating prices for their\ngoods. '    \u25a0   .,\nThey presented the only two Victoria briefs to the restrictive trade-\npractices commission sitting here.\nThe commission Is touring Canada\non an investigation of \"loss leaders,\" the1 practice of seljing some\narticles cheap to'efttlce customers\ninto stores.\nThe two representatives were\nWilliam Palmer bf the Independent\nMerchants Co-Operative Association, who spoke for 61 stores, \"and\nM. A. Kent of the Victoria branch\npf the Canadian Association of\nRadio and Appliance Dealers.\nMr. Palmer said price maintenance by manufacturers is the \"answer, to . prevent small businesses\nfrom going out of business.\"\n\"Loss-leader\" tactics by chain\nstores were' creating Vmonopoliea\"\nin Victoria. Cigarets, jce cream,\neggs and certain' tinned goods were\nbeing used as \"loss-leaders.\" These\ntactics wouid push small merchants\nout of business.\nMr.: Kent demanded the Price\nMaintenance Act be replaced by\ngovernment approval of price, set-,\nting and controlling by manufacturers.    -\ncostal faith.\nMr. Irangi, here on a speaking\ntour and to attend the 19th biennial conference of the Pentecostal\nAssemblies.of Canada at Winnipeg\nin September, siid money and en\nergy the government could spend\non social and! educational facilities\nhad to be diverted to fighting, the\nterrorists.\nMost of the native' Inhabitants of\nKenya are opposed to the. Mau\nMau but some are forced to cooperate with the group, Mr. Irangi said\nin an interview.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nfore;,'and'there was every Indica\ntloq the' boom would continue.\nHeavy construction c 0 n t r acts\nawarded In the second quarter were\nfive per cent more than, the boom\nlevels -qt Aprii-May-Ju'ne 1953..\nBaseball Scores\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nWHEN PLANE: ANB| PILOT:fly through the air separately, 'tt':-'\nusually meant trouble. In this, case,,However.,th\u00ab,ttaHIIHBtfilt(\na*, i- nine   *M__    _*_,\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0 1 J_    _>\u00a3  '_*   __.!____.!__.__.    IBI__._._.____.   '-a __...'____.!.     \u25a0 _r_-_<_s   .  _\u25a0_._,_,* _.._,'_\u25a0  \"\u25a0\",-\nactjvat the result of a timing Illusion. L^CmAr.Jtblt OttTtoklna\n\u201e_.. .\u201e \u201e ...... ., .._.,..  \u25a0_..   .       .   ihrlivifl i\n. .jped from\n\u2022 low-flying training plant\npart In a. recent demonstration of S-Wlvtftlibhn.iiuee hy th'r Ntvfl\n^.ite'Ll'&'II _ Mril* ,at: Mlaml'a lister field, (taped: ffaS\na building mto the school's lake Just        \t\nflew fbyr-AR Wlrephot-,\nNew York\nPittsburgh .\nBrooklyn    .\nPhiladelphia\nSt. Louis\t\nChicago ..,.:.\nPlrstV:--' .y,.:,\nCincinnati .:\nMilwaukee :\nSiceWd.,' r\nClndnhatl ':.\nMilwaukee\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nf|rsty.c\" ;\nWashington\nNew j York,\nseoonci:,'\nWashington\nNew York\n.200 110 500\u20149 1*0\n. 000,401 000\u20145 B. 2\n... 002 021 001\u20146 9 1\n':. 000 130 03x\u20147 9 1\n. 000 040:020\u20146 .9 0\n.105 000 lOx\u20147 13 3\n010.011 001\u20144- 9 2\n001 100 36x\u201411 16 5\n.:. 000 000 -OHM 4 0\n000 110 OOx\u20142 3 0\n002010 002 00f-5 13 0\n001 201 001 01-r8 13 3\nSteel Decision\nBoosts Zinc\nfirar---.\"\"'\";,...\nchieago-) <......;\nCleveland \t\n8*eoh\"dY\nChicago ...\nCleyeliirid. J,\u201e\nDetroit'1:-....':,...\nBaltimore' ...':.\nPhiladelphia\nBoston-.s,...'.\"...'..\n014,010001\u20147 mi\n001 012 000-4 112\n.-. 100 000 001\u20142 4 0\n,:. 000 001 02x\u20143 8 0\n...'100 000 201-^4 8 1\n.\u00bb .000 041 00xT5 7 0\n.\u201e 000 000 000-0 8 1\n.;.: lpp clo bbk\u20142 5 6\n.'jl0\\020 001-. .7 0\n. 000;130 04x-r8-JO 1\nHOTDBteFIELp',! England. (CP)\n-*i A-policeman smiled as small\nboys .threw stones at, a cotton mill\nhere, because firemen Wanted eer.\ntain windows imasBed'to'reach a\nhlaze 'Inside. 'But the fufl stopped\nWheh'.-tbi; first':y611ey. '\u25a0 brbkeJthe\njwrdng windows,.,.,;    ., \u25a0 , \u2022 \u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0'\nNEW YORK (AP)-Zlnc buying\npicked up late last week with the\nlabor agreement in. the steel industry. Copper demand continued good\nbut lead dealings were quiet.\nGalvanizers, who coat steel products with zinc, reentered' the. market as soon' as the threat of a possible .steel  strike  was. removed.\nPurchases of zinc by these users\nhad been virtually at a standstill\nfor several weeks.. \\\nTrade sources said copper sales\nin June probably totalled nearly'\n105,000 tons, compared with 98,500\nin May. Orders placed for July delivery already total 35,000 ton's;\nDuring the week, President Elsenhower signed a bill continuing\nthe suspension'of the import tax\nof two cents a pound on copper for\none year. The duty would' be re-\nimposed if the price falls below\n24 cents a pound. '\u25a0'-'.':\nMany lead consumers will shut\ndown their plants this month for\nvacations, a -fact that .contributed\nto the light, demand for that metal.\nMajor,metals prices: '  . ..' .:\nCopper\u201430 cents a pound, delivered. Foreign 29.50-30 cents, New\nYork..'        j-     \/'    '\u25a0\u25a0'...'.       \u25a0[.\nLead\u201414 cents a pound, New.\nYork;-. 13.80 cents, St'. Louis.\nZinc\u201411 ceijts a pound, East St.\nLquls; 11.50 cents, New .York. ,.\n. ...Aluminum\u201421.50 cents a pound,\ningots, shipping point. Pigs; .20\n.cents.:,.- ':\u25a0','.   .-' \u25a0'  \u25a0\nNickel\u201460 cents a pound, \/electrolytic ,' cathodes,, Port' Colborne,\nOrjt, U.S. duty, included.   ;-.'',.' |\n]PIatinum-^$84 announce, wholesale; '$87, retail.,   i' '\u25a0\u25a0.        .   ,-'-:\n. Silver\u201485.25cents, an ounce, New...\n\u25a0York; 73.125 pence, -ftondon.    \"','\u2022'{\nTin\u201496.50 cents a pound, .New\nYork. '\u25a0'.:,;       -,:,.\"  .\"  ';\u2022\n:., DENVER^ (AP)\u2014Adlat, Stevenson\nurged members of his party \"to do\nwhat.'ca'n.be done to make u_r for\nth -edeflclt'in leadership\" in the.\nRepublican adm&istration.\n\"Vye ;must make this-admlniS\"\ntration succeed ... because it is the\nonly administration We have,\" the\n1952-Democratic presidential candidate declared in an off-the-cuff address 'to a Deinocrotjc luncheon\nhere. He added that If the administration fails in the foreign field;\n\u25a0 LONIlOlfffiP) - The house In\nStepney where .three Riissisin an-i\narChi_ti_'dled'ln.the\"slegS of Sidney! the nation'mas' fai}.\nStreet:.-ini 1911; is to\/be dtimoilshed.j ' The national situation, Stevenson\nSiryWlriitort';cauroUll,;i_jen' ^ofie said; Is'\"far too perioliis for us as\ntedretaryfc directed operations against the gunmen.who slew several\nipolioemen in -tho- battle..'\nDemocrats , to. derive any partisan\nSatisfaction or pleasure\" from Re-1\npublican shortcomings,', '\nWatch Harris\nSays Thunderer\nLONDON (CP)-JThe Times, re\nviewing the Canadian',:'\u25a0 cabinet\nchanges^ says the \"reorganized\nteam\" looks like a strong one and\ntabs Walter Harris, new'minister of\nfinance, as the man to watoh for\nstill higher promotion.:\nIn an. editorial, The TimeS says\nthat the cabinet revision, as announced by Prime Minister St. Laurent on. Dominion Pay, indicates'\none of two things: division in the'\nministerial ranks or Supreme con-*\n1 idence ot the government in its\nparliamentary strength. The Times\nchooses the second answer,\n\"The Liberals bettered their own\nexpectations in last year's general\nelection, and feel they have years\nof security ahead in which newcomers to the highest rank can\nprove their capacity!\" '\nFinance minister Harris looks the\nmost -promises candidate for. promotion\" with departmental experience in both home and external\noffices, and as personal assistant\nto the prime minister.\"\nJL A\n. 'V-.\nC LAUGHTON\nbpTOMmisT\nVISUAL TRAsNINO       '-\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206        .    Phono 141\nPRO\nSlacks\nBy Warren K. Cook\nA; very impottbnt cbntrl->.\n, bution to: your appear-'.\n. ance. They streamline};\n\u2022 the. middle. No bulging?\nwdist-band,, no extra belt\/.\npleats lie flat, hips arev\ntrlrh. .       ',{\nIn:a variety of materials'!\narid shades. m\nf mpry's Ltd|\n,' THE'MAN'S STORE yJ\n'Box 100 Phone Sll\"\nPECULIAR.'PIE8T8 .     ,'.'-.'M\n\u2022The oven-bird, a type of wo6\nwarbler, builds nests with an atb)\ned roof somethihg like a dutc\nwen..'- .   ;.' I\nHAVE rbUR FURNlTURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\ntt the \"Ii\nNelson Upholsfeiy;\n409 Hell Street       .   Phone 146\nW1G.NTON\nMOTORS UD^I\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\n*\u00bb *\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART ^\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 827 .'.\n676 Baker 8treet\nCAMPBELL, SHANKUND\n); v & co,>:\u25a0'\u2022;.'\"\/.\u25a0.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditor*\n676 Baker St Phono 23!\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED 4 REPAIRED\nRECORIIMQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616. l-RONt   ST. PHONE 63\nTHOMPSON\n,  FUNERAL HOME\nTJls'tinctive funeral Service\" .\nAMBULANCE 8ERV1CE\n515 Konteoaj St Phone 36!\nHave tho Job. Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\n'\u25a0'\"\u25a0 RASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nYour Own Home Made Bread\nla. Tattler' Made  Prom .\nEllison's U-Boko\nBread Mix\nAsk Your Grocer or Call est\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nGovernment' Licenced\nC W. HOUSE\nElectrical Contractor\nNorth Shore - Phone 1724-L4\n\u2022   Nelson   B.C.\nLet Ui Dispense Your\n^DOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION       .\nRELIABLE SERVICE.\n8ave With 8afety At Your\n. Rsxall Store\n\"Try :Us for Lower Prices\"\nCity Drug\n', COMPANY\n\"Nelson's Modern  Pharmacy\"\nPhone 34, Day - 807-R, Night\n'\u25a0:-'-'\u25a0 :::''Wivey \\':\n\/NTHENEWJ54\nYou've probably seen all 'thirt'ee\nbeautiful Chevrolet models for '54 Ai\nhave you yet treated yourself tp a dri\\\nin this great car? K you haven't yo\nonly know-half the story, becaus\nChevrolet beauty is just the beginnin\n... there's Chevrolet performance an\nChevrolet comfort .to learn about, 0\nthe best way to learn is right at tl\nywlieel pf, a Chevrolet. You and yo\nwife come in'and take a \"Prove-\n- YqUistlf 'Drive\"--_h this flhest-of^\nChevrolels sooil    - \"\u25a0\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1954_07_05","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0427477","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}