{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0428934":{"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":"2023-03-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1955-07-25","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0428934\/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":" If Four Go\nHome Satisfied\nIke Gets Pat on Back From Eden;\nAll Feel Tension Lessened at Geneva\nBy STANLEY PRIDDLE\nGENEVA (Reuters)\u2014The Big Four heads of government were all home, or en route home, Sunday night, after\nexpressing satisfaction with their week-long conference\nto lessen international ten-1 '        :\t\nSion. of whether the cruolal Issues of\nLast of the leaders to leave Gen-!Germim \"unification and Europ-\n\u00abva was Sir Anthony Eden. Before | ean 5ecurit5' can.be \"solved,\nflying to London Sunday eve-! EI8ENHOWER HITS MARK\nning, the prime minister said the! The ministers also were ordered\nresults of the summit talks were I by their chiefs to develop studies\ngood and added: \"If they are, they ' or how to lower communication\nare in generous measure due to and trade barriers among the four\nPresident  Elsenhower.\" j nations.\nSoviet Premier Nikolai Bul- i Wes'e\u2122 delegates here agree\nganln labelled the conference a full\u00bb tnat President Eisenhower\n\"new step In the relaxation of was \"tne man \u00b0f the conference.\"\ntension, between equal..\" The I ^ sincerity with which he press-\nmarshal, who flew to Berlin |ed hls Proposals, his personal\nSunday for a visit to Communist charm and warmth of friendship\nMONDAY MORNING, JULY 25, 1855\nEast Germany, said the talks\n\"will have without doubt a powerful echo in International relations.\"\nA similar view was expressed\nSaturday by Eisenhower just before he flew home to Washington.\nHe said that the prospects of a j\nlasting peace now tre brighter j\nand the dangers of \"the overwhelming tragedy of modern war-:\nure less.\" , I\nALL AGREED ON AGENDA\nFrench Premier Edgar Faure, j\nwho flew home early Sunday af-'\nternoon, said the spirit and mutual\nunderstanding shown at the Palais des- Nations here would leave |\nft profound mark on international i\nrelations. !\nThe conferenoe ended 8atur- J\nday amid smiles, handshakes i\nand congratulations all around, j\nThe leaders had In six days of\nin the secret talks hit the mark\nwith the Russians, they felt, and\nmade the biggest impression in the\nWest's campaign to convince Moscow of its peaceful intentions.\nAmerican officials here said the\nRussians seemed even more impressed at the end of the week\nthan at the beginning by the American delegates' desire for peace.\nThey feel that now Russia no long- j\ner will be able to label the United!\nStates leaders \"warmongers.\" \u25a0\nParliament\nSaturday\n\u2014\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny with a few\ncloudy periods. Widely scattered\nshowers In afternoon. Little\nchange in temperature. Wind\nlight. Low-high at Cranbrook and\nCrescent Valley 55 and 75.\nNo. 79\nBy The Canadian Press\n| External Affairs Minister Pearson said patience, strength and\nocBslons agreed on all the Item. unity are required ,\u201e future East.\nof their agenda and laid down , West negotiations.\n. blueprint for follow-up by le.- ] opposition leader Drew said the\nter statesmen. j West shouW streM Russian fallure\nThe next three months will pro- [ to live up to pledges it gave when\nvide the solid test of whether the signing the UN charter in  1945.\nIN FRONT OF Nelson Avenue homes soon\nto be removed to make room for 8outh approach to the West Arm bridge, Raymond Concrete  Pile  Company  employee,  run test  drill\nhole, for the day when pier foundations are\nlaid. The three-man crew will move Northward\na. they progress, adding to exploratory drilling\nalready carried out.\u2014Dally New. photo.\nA LOT OF PREPARATION\naummit meeting haa justified .the\noptimism, expressed by all four\nleaders. Russian and Western\natatesmen will hammer away at\nthe problems at two forthcoming\nmeetings.\n1. At the end of August in New\nYork, when the United Nations\ndisarmament commission subcommittee, comprising tha Big\nFour and Canada, convenes. Private comments by Russian leaden\nIn their Geneva talks suggest .that\nagreement is not likely on President Eisenhower's offer to let the\nRussians peek at American military blueprints and bases it the\nRussians will do the same for the\nU.S.\n2. In October in Geneva, when\nthe Big Four foreign ministers will\ngive the earliest actual indication\nm i ii 111 iii 111 ii 11 in 111111111 mi i mil 1111 ii\nLicence for Puss?\n- Goodness No!\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Cat\nfancier* In Vancouver replied\nwith an angry feline hiss Saturday to a. suggestion that cats\nIn the city be required to have\nlicences.\nIt started In Saskatoon\nwhere city council is considering Imposing a two-dollar licence fee for female and one-\ndollar for tomo.\nThe chairman of the Animal\nDefence Emergency Council\nIn Vancouver said: \"We're.\nsolidly against It\"\n\"Cats are needed to keep\ndown rats and mice,\" said Mrs.\nT, S. Paterson, president of the\n.B. C. Cat Club. \"Licences\nwould reduce our cat population.\"\nThe president of the Vancouver Humane Society, Mrs. J.\nM. Mitchell, said: \"The cat Is\na poor man's pet, Licences\nwould be unjust.\"\nAnd 8PCA secretary-manager Tom Hughes said: \"It's not\npractical.\"\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiHii\nSocial Credit leader Low said it\nwould be a mistake to assume\nRussia has abandoned its long-\nrange policies despite improved\ninternational relations.\nHealth Minister Martin said the\nonly sure defence against thermonuclear attack is evacuation.\nH. W. Herridge (CCF\u2014Kootenay\nWest) urged that PFRA apply to\nall provinces especially British Columbia1.\nActing postmaster-general iPick*\nefggill promised a detailed reply\nMonday to charges that postal investigators shielded post office\nrobbers. ,\nDeath Takes\nJour in B. (.\nBy The Canadian Press\nFour persons lost their lives in\nviolent accidents in British Columbia during the weekend.\nDrownings accounted for three of\nthe deaths.\nPatrick Starrs, 7. of Vancouver,\nwas drowned Saturday while\nswimming at Crescent Beach near\nWhite' Rock. RCMP said the boy\ngot into difficulties while swimming off a wharf.\nAlso drowned Saturday was\nWallace C. Anderson, 56 of North\nVancouver, whose body was found\nfloating face down in Lynn creek.\nThe other drowning occurred in\nLake Windermere near the. Alberta boundary. The victim was\nGerald Thomas Griffin, 28, of Edmonton. A boat carrying Griffin\nand three other persons was\nswamped during a sudden storm\nSaturday. The other three were\nrescued after being in the water\nfor more than an hour.\n' The other death resulted from a\nhighway accident near Victoria\nSunday. Abraham Rosenthal of\nVictoria was killed when his car\ncollided with an express bus in\nSaanich. His wife was seriously\ninjured.\nBig West Arm Bridge Is\nAlready In the Building\nIt will be months before there offices in Vancouven and Toronto.\nThe latter company is currently\nemploying two Portland, Ore., men\nand a local man who .with drilling\nrig are running test drjll holes into\nthe ground beneath proposed foundations for piers. T^hey are operating at the, South abutment and\nwill wprk across the river to the\nNorth shore.\nVIET NAM\nELECTION SEEN\nAS POWDER KEG\nBy JOHN RODERICK\nSAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP)\n\u2014 A Canadian member of the armistice control commission e$tl-\nis much to show for their work,\nbut already the behind-the-scenes\nworkers are building the new\nbridge across the West Arm at\nNelson.\nAn accurate survey, from which\ncontractors will transform the\nbridge from paper into reality, is\nbeing made by Ramsay Murray of\nVictoria, resident engineer ior A.\nB; Sahdewjon arid:Co*rtpafly\"\u2022* Victoria, consulting engineers. *\nMr. Murray, a professional engineer originally from Scotland,\nhas engaged a staff of two local\nmen, Victor Bartell as instrument\nman, and Cameron Stallwood as\nrod man.\n\"We   will   begin   serious   work'South pier  being  used to  build j scribed by the Genev7 armistice\nnext   month,\"   Mr.   ^urray   Mid | some^ pieces for the centre piers | agreement.  But on  July   16  the\nSouth's premier, Ngo Dinh Diem,\nA large coffer dam will prob-, declared that as long as the North\nably be erect* on the South side ,j dornmated by Communism and\nof the structure, and the placing: resorts to terrorism and totalltar.\nian methods, he will not even tails\n\"They are forerunners for the mated sonjeitimeiago i^w4uld.t,ake,\nmain construction crews\"\" Ma'Mf'. | at'least' fi*e?'ffivlsiofis\"'bI rieuHaT\nMurray. The big contingent Is ex-1 troops to guarantee a free election\npected to start arriving in two ori in. Viet Nam.\nthree weeks time. j    That many soldiers,    he    said,\nIt is surmised that actual con-) would be required to police the\nstruction  will   commence  at  the I polling places alone.\nSouth pier and extend out into the j    Generai elections to reunite the\nlnv,er, material excavated for the I tw0 halves 0, Viet N\/am are pre.\nSunday night. \"We have to be a which must be floated out.\njump ahead of the contractors \u2014i\na week or two ahead at least.\"    i\nAn engineering feat of this mag-1\nnitude take a lot of time and preparation, Mr. Murray pointed out.;\nJoint bidders for the close to\n$3,000,000 bridge were Poole Engineering of Vancouver and the In- i\nternational firm of Raymond Con-j\ncrete  Pile   Company,  which   has;\nof those  centre  piers will be\nspectacular undertaking.\nAnii-Peronist\nGossips Warned\nBUENOS AIRES (AP) \u2014 The\nnewspaper Democracia, mouthpiece of President Juan D. Peron's\ngovernment, told rumor-mongers\nSunday they are playing with\nfire. It added: \"Be careful!\"\nA three column editorial in\nblack-face type on Democracia's\nfront page, aimed at politicians\nunwilling to join Peron's \"national pacification\" program as well\nas those who . spread anti-Peron\nreports, coincided with\" police announcement of the arrest of eight\npersons Saturday night for\nspreading rumors on street corners. \u25a0\"\nRobeson Sings,\nTalks at Border\n-Ne-\nwith them about elections.\nAt Geneva, Britain, the United\nStates and France agreed to urge\nDiem to change his mind and arrange the talks promptly.\nThe Communist Vietrninh foreign minister, ' Pham Van Dong,\ndispatched a message to Diem last\nWednesday inviting him to name\nWHITE ROCK, B.C. (CP)\ngro baritone Paul Robeson sang; the date and select a city on Viet\nand talked for two hours Sunday j namese territory for an election\nto a throng of 10,000 persons as- j conference. Diem has yet to re\nFire Menace Worst\nHistory\nSEVEN KIDDIES\nDIE IN FIRE\nRest of Family\nOf 12 Away as\nHome Burns\nHULL, Que. (CP1) \u2014 Seven of\n12 children in a Hull family were\nburned to death early Sunday,\ntrapped in the second storey of\ntheir frame home. '\nOne son and six young daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Aldoria Lau-\nrin died. The parents and five\nolder children were visiting outside the city for the night.\nVictims were: Gilles 7; Annette\n14, Nicole 13, Suzanne 10, Paul-\nette Oi.Dlane 5; and Lise 2.\nThe'blaze, worst fire disaster in\nthe Ottawa-Hull district in recent\nyears, broke out at 2:30 a.m.  ,\nHull fire fighters arrived almost\nimmediately but could not enter\nthe house until they had the blaze\nunder control 20 minutes later.\nThey found two bodies at the\nfoot of the staircase and two on\nthe upstairs landing. In an upstairs\ncloset they found the body of the\noldest .child, Annette, with the\nbody of the baby, Lise, held tightly in her arms, and the body of\none of the younger children at\nher feet\nSix Treated for\nAssault Injuries\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Six persons were treated in hospital for\ncuts and bruises following an attempted robbery and six assault\ncases here during the weekend,\n.;.. JohnsA.-.Sziadyk. told police he\nWas struck in the face with a\nshort piece of pipe wielded by a\nman who demanded money. He\nsuffered cuts to the nose, cheekbone and right eye.\nTwo girls' were assaulted in\ntheir apartment Sunday during\nan argument with a man.\nIn another case, Harry Stillman\nwas taken to hospital with chest\ninjuries and face cuts suffered in\na \"fight in en east end cafe. A\nmarried couple was\" arrested in\nconnection with the attack.\nAnother man, Frank Gormely,\nsuffeced-facial injuries when several men piled out of, a car,\ntripped him and beat him while\nhe was down. No reason was\ngiven for the assault.\nElsewhere, a man had his nose\ngashed when he was beaten by\nan assailant he refused to identify.\nsembled in Peace Arch-Park spanning the international border.\nRobeson,  until last  week  banned from, entering Canada by the; meeting at Geneva ended the In\nU.S.  government because  of al- j do-china   war   the uneasy peace\nceive the note but his answer, if\nhe makes one, will be no.\nThus a year after nine countries\nleged Communist leanings, was\nsponsored by the Red-tinged International Union of Mine, Mill\nand Snielter Workers (Ind.).\nIt was the fourth such concept\nstaged by the union at the border\nsince Robeson was denied permission to sing in Vancouver in 1952.\nSunday's concert was without\nincident as Robeson sang favorite\nspirituals and avoided controversy\nial subjects in short talks between\nnumbers.\nagain is menaced.\nDROWNED BOY\nIDENTIFIED\nWHITE ROCK, B.C. (CP) ~\nRCMP Sunday identified a seven-\nyear-old boy who was drowned at\nnearby Crescent Beach Saturday\nas Patrick Starrs of Vancouver.\nThe boy was drowned while\nswimming off Government Wharf\nat the beach.\nFraser Swallows\nBridge Span\nMISSION, B.C. (CP) \u2014 A 150-\nfoot span of a bridge linking this\nFraser valley town with Matsqui\nwas swept into th* Fraser river\nSunday.\nNo one was injured when the\nspan and a concrete pier crashed\ndown just after a car had passed\nover the section and another automobile was approaching it.\nIt was not immediately known\nwhat caused the span to be swept\naway.\nThe span sank in about 60 feet\nof water, and it was estimated it\nwill take about three months to\ncomplete repairs.\n21 New Fires Break Out in 24-Hours;\nWorst Blaze Razes 70,000 Acres\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Rampaging fires, eating like\ncancer through Ontario's forests, gained in strength\nduring the weekend.\n' A total of 444 fires were burning in the province\nSunday. Twenty-one new fires broke out in a 24-hour\nperiod ending* at noon Sunday, but only three fires were\nextinguished   in   the   same \"\"\nperiod.\nThirty-eight fires were out of\ncontrol. Eleven were in the Chapleau district, 10 in the Sault Ste.\nMarie district, five around Sudbury, four around Cochrane, three\neach ln the Kapuskasing and Go\ngama districts and one each near,\nLindsay and Swastika.\nThe worst fires were in the\nCochrane, Swastika, Chapleau and\n.Sault Ste. Marie areas. Seven new\nbush fires, all caused by lightning,\nbroke out Saturday around Sault\nSte. Marie.\nThe largest fire burning, near\nBlind River, has destroyed some\n70,000 acres of hardwoods.\nRAIN ONLY HOPE\nOnly rain can stem the growing\nfire hazard, the department of\nlands and forests said. No rain is\nforecast for the fire areas.\nOfficials sai,d the fire menace\nwaa without parallel in the province's  history.\nForestry fieldmen, doing their\nbest against hopeless odds for 25\ndays, urged on the 4500 volunteers\nrecruited from the streets to do\nwhat they could.\nThe heat was stifling.. Only a\nfew scattered showers fell during\nthe weekend but without effect.\nThe fires raced on. There was little\nwater to slow them. Forest streams\nran dry after weeks without rain.\nSixty airplanes dropped thousands\nof water bornbs, most of which\njust .fizzled like drops of water on\na hot stove.\n\"Father of UN\"\nCordell Hull Dies\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Cordell\nHull, former secretary of state, an\narchitect of the United Nations\nand champion of freer world trade\ndied Saturday at the age of 83.\nThe Tenn essee mountaineer,\nwho served longer than any other\nman as secretary of state\u2014and\nwon a Nobel peace prize and the\ntitle of \"Father of the UN\" \u2014 died\nin the U.S. Naval Hospital at nearby Bethesda, Md.\nHe suffered a stroke Friday, one\nof a number over the years.\nThe funeral will be held Tuesday at Washington's National Episcopal cathedral where Mrs. Hull\nwas buried after her death in 1854.\nThey left no children.\nHull in death evoked a flood of\npraise and' expressions of condolences reminiscent of the sentl-\nments voiced throughout the\nworld when he retired from public life 11 years ago.\nHull was born in a log eabln ln\nTennessee and he grew up to\nserve ln all three branofcee of\ngovernment.\nCommission lo\nHear Cuthbert\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The royal\ncommission investigating charges\nof corruption in Vancouver's\npolice force wll lresume Its hearings Thursday after a two-week\nadjournment,\nR. H. Tupper, QC, of Vancouver\none-man royal commission, announced Sunday the hearings will\nresume at 11 a.m. Thursday.\nMr. Tupper said the first witness\nwould be Det.-Sgt. Len Cuthbert,\nwhose attempted suicide a month\nago touched off the commission\ninquiry. Mr. Tupper indicated he\ncould not forecast what testimony,\nif any, Cuthbert would be prepared to offer,\nCORDELL HULL\nAnd In This Corner ...\nBERNAY, France (AP)f^-The truth hai come out about Marie\nII, the champion Normandy cow.\nSome of her milk apparently has been spiked with extra cream.\nMarie hat won numerous awards for her owner, Louis Flquet.\nHer milk production and Its butterfat content were beyond all\ncompetition. - *\nBut recently hushed talk began In dairy circles,\nFriday five policemen hid In bushes near where Marie was\nbeing milked for-a new quality check. Agriculture department\nofficials were close by.\nThey said they saw some flasks of cream added to Marie's milk.\nKurt Krammer, a German farmhand, was arrested, charged with\nfraud and jailed.\nTACOMA, Wash. (AP)\u2014Edward Whitey Kurowskl wasn't contented last September when he did what most bowlers dream\nabout\u2014rolled a 300 game.  He turned to golf.\nFriday Kurowski entered the golfer's dream world, getting a\nhole in one on the k50-yard fourth hole at Meadow Park course.\nHe used a No. 6 iron.\nA mecca for those trying to escape from soaring temperatures is\nLakeside Park at Nelson these July days. Warm sands, well washed\nthis spring during high water, call all sunworshippers, from the tiniest\nlad who likes to dig pools and make castles to the \"older folk\" who are\ncontent to get (done to a turn) between dips in the 60 degree water.\nTrees along the promenade lend gracious shade to those sitting on\nbenches or stretched out on green lawn while breezes from the lake\ndisperse the heat wave. Youngsters do not lack for amusements with\nthe merry-go-round, mountain climber, swings and teeter-totters seen\nhere. Situated among the trees, they are cool places for energetic\nkiddies to pass the time.\u2014Daily News photos.\n |f$PPWW^^\n\\su-v\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 25, 1955\nTONIGHT, TUESDAY\u2014Complete Shows 7:00-8:23\nGiant Double Feature Program \u2014 2 First Run Hits\nSecond Smash Hit\n3 YEARS IB THE MAKIHGi\n3 Millions TO MAKi\u00a3\nMST0FTEUSQF1\nClitic\nIlflll-PlCISlI\nEAYC.IURLOWE-MASSIMO SERATO\nWuitftWtMlhOMWyJtf\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nTHEATRE\nTONIGHT and TUESDAY\nCartoon\u20149:00 p.m.\nFeature\u20148:10 p.m.\n.Shorts\u201410:40   p.m.\nf't BUD and LOU are HICHFLYINC\n* \u2014r^j^\\ STUNTMEN...\nond Hollywood will\nnovor ba th* tam*l\ni\n\" DOOR   PRIZES TONIGHT\nAUTO VUE~\nDRIVE-IN\nTRAIL,  B.C.\nTONIGHT AND TUESDAY\nSHOW  8:45  P.M.\n\"River of No Return\"\n(Cinemascope!\nMarilyn Munroe, Robert Mltchum\nFeaturette Shorts\nI\nMANY AT RITES\nFOR E. MARSHALL\nLarge crowd) attended funeral\nservices held Sunday at Nelson\nand New Denver for Elbert Ernest\nMarshall, 48, of South Slocan, who\ndied Thursday following an accident at West Kootenay Light and\nPower Company at South Slocan.\nFueeral service at Thompson\nFuneral Home, Nelson^ was conducted by Rev. Canon W. J. Sil\nverwpod of' Church of the Re\ndeerner. Hymns sung were \"Unto\nthe Hills1 Around\" and \"Onward.\nChristian Soldiers\". Mrs. W. A.\nManson was organist. Pallbearers\nwere H. Sherratt, H. McDougall. P\nBarker, N. H. Roberts, T. Crossley\nand S. Konkin.\nCommittal service at New Denver Cemetery was conducted by\nRev. Paul Barber. Pallbearers\nwere Alexander Harris, Harry\nElesemore, J. L. Wilson, George\nEgberg, Randolph Harding and\nGordon Nelson. There were many\nfloral tributes.\nEarly Morning Storm\nCauses Heavy Damage\nCity public works crews labored | lay in ripples over the entire sem-\nfor nearly 19 hours Saturday to\nclear blocked sewers and shovel\ntons of rock** and gravel from the\nstreets after the third flash storm\nin a month.\nG. Q. Lake, city works superintendent, said hLs men were still\nworking on the last sewer blockage when the downpour of early\nSaturday morning plugged three\nsewers, and sent mud and water\nswirling into streets and into house\nbasements in the uphill sector\nand business house basements\ndowntown.    Six    truckloads     of\nDAYS ARE NUMBERED for this old stone\nshelter on city boulevard above CPR tracks near\nLakeside  Park,  which  will   be  demolished  to\nmake way for the bridge across the West Arm\nat Nelson. Shelter Is a relic from Nelson's street\ncar days, when it was Fairview terminus.\n\u2014Dally News photo.\nTrail Hospital Costs Problem Unsolved ....\nHigh Standards Responsible for\nLong Patient Stays, Cox Told\nABBOTT^COSTELLO\nMBBT THE\nTRAIL \u2014 The big $32,722 question apparently remained unanswered following a three hour\nmeeting between the Trail-Tada-\nnac hospital board and D. M. Cox,\nBCHIS commissioner.\nThe question concerns who is\ngoing to pay the $32,722 deficit the\nhospital has incurred during, its\nfirst six months operation and\nhow the continuing gap between I BCHIS to put the hospital in the\nincome and expenditures is going j position of haying to choose be-\ncellent    medical    and    hospital\nstanding.\n'He did not believe that the residents of Trail or critically 111\npatients in the Kootenays. who\ncame to Trail for specialized\ntreatment would want to see\nstandards of service drastically\ncut\nNor did he think it was fair for\nto be closed.\nBoard Member L. A. Read\ncommenting on the meeting said\n\"We got exactly nowhere.\"\nThe finance situation is developing into a major crisis. The deficit\ntween    continued    deficits and a\nstandard of service which would\nnot be fair to the citizens of Trail\nand district.\nVOLUNTEERS\nDr.    Endicott    stressed the fact ;\u201e\u201e\u201e ;\"  in\u2122~7 \"mi       u\"\n.    . ,       , son in 19^0. In Nelson he was en\nFRANK BURTON\nWAS CHAUFFEUR\nFOR DR. KING\nFuneral service for Frank John\nBurton, 61, who was found dead\nnear his home early Friday morning will be conducted at Thompson Funeral Home Tuesday afternoon.\nMy. Burton was born in Norfolk,\nEngland, and came to Canada in\n1914. He was chauffeur for the late\nSenator Dr. James H. King at\nCranbrook before moving to Nel-\nMrs. J. BrMif\nPasses al 72\nMrs. Helena Bright, wife of John\npie floor level.\nThe Hudson's Bay Company\nstore had water In its basement\nfor the first time in eight years.\nNew Grand Hotel was another to\nbe inundated.\nGROUND 8ATURATED\nHeavy gravel clogged CPR\ntracks in the area of Powell's\nlumber yard.\nCommenting on the nature of\nthe downpours, Mr. Lake said the\nflash rains have been of fairly\nlong juration. Ground is so saturated that the raindrops do not\ngravel   were   removed   from <h\u00abF become   absorbed.\ncorner of Ward and Baker Streets,     The surface runoff did most of\nNelson's  busiest  intersection.        | the damage in uptown Nelson.\nCrews will probably finish mop-!\nping up today.     \u2022 j\nPrincipal factor among causes\nof much of the uphill damage was\nthe break-away of a creek in the\nCherry Street area near Mountain\nA couple of the city's workmen were diverted during the\nday to stamping out a lightning\nfire up Five Mile creek In the\nNelson watershed^\nAs happens during most storms\nStation   which\" sent \"stones \"and!the lightning caused several fuses\nmud cascading  down   Cedar and!to blow in city electrical depart-\nLatimer Streets. ' ment   transformers.   The   depart-\n_,     ,  .        . ,     ... * ment lost a transformer on Was-\nMr.  Lake,  who  was  out  with _.     , .    \u201e ,        . .\n_ , . ,   _ _ x    ,       son Street in Rosemont, and fuses\nBright of Nelson died Friday at, work  crews at_ 3 a.m. Saturday,,^ Mew ,n trangformers \u201e\u201e Gra.\nsaid that in    2Vi minutes sewers    ..    _     .       . \u201e    .,   _,\n.   .      . . .   .       nite Road and North Shore.\nwere   brimming and   manho es      _    .       , .      ..\n6 During   late  afternoon  rain.\nthe age of 72,\nBorn in Liskeard, Cornwall,\nEngland, she moved to Lancashire\nwhen she was 11 and to Devenport\nDevonshire, at 15. She was married ] on Josephine Street, from Willow j j^ile without power for four hours\nbubbling, to above Robson Street.\ntree fell across the North Shore\nThe sewer blockages took^ place line_ leaving ^ \u00a7rea east of Six-\nto John Bright at Devonshire and\nthey moved to Canada, living at\nHosmer, B.C. for nine years, at\nRogers Pass, B.C. for one year,\nmoved to Trail in 1916 and to Nelson in 1942.\nShe is survived by her husband,\ntwo daughters, Mrs. Marion Richards of Trail and Mrs. Lillian\nVanderhoof of Bellingham. Washington, and a sister. Mrs. Lillian\nAnderson in Ireland.\nHealing Power of\nPrayer Set Forth\nThe healing power of true\nprayer was set forth at Christian\n.Science services on Sunday in uSe\nLesson-Sermon   entitled   \"Truth.\"\nAmong the scriptural selections; at Nelson,\n^read   was.the  account  of  Christ\nMoira Carmichael\nHonor Music Pupil\nWord has been received here\nthat Moira Carmichael, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. K. D. Carmichael,\nformerly of Nelson now in Montreal, recently gained first-class\nhonors in grade 10 music, and\nwon her school scholarship. She\nis at present taking a French\ncourse in Macdonald College, St.\nAnne de Bellevue, Quebec.\nMr. and Mrs. Carmichael and\ntheir family will be visiting Nelson in early August. Mr. Carmichael was district freight agent\nfor the Canadian Pacific Railway\n'Jesus' healing of the child with ' PRIOR CLAIM\nthe  \"dumb spirit\", including theJNEWLYN, England (CP)\nthat the board v i\\ed on a volun\ncurve was softening tffrough tough'tary bash and should not be\neconomy measures, however the saddled with such a major finan.\ncut in the per diem rate from - cia] headache.\n$12.80 to $12.55, board members be-j Dr Endicott noted that Vernon\nlieved. will likely send the defi- had been granted its request for\ncit rate climbing again. j a consultative service whereby a\nSaid Aid. Rennison: \"No opera-  team  of BCHIS    experts    would\ntion can continually pile up defi-1 come into Vernon and show the\ncits. I know of   no supplier,    no! board  where cost cuts would  be\nbank that will keep on increasing  made.\nihe size of overdrafts when the op-   CONSULTANT\neration concerned has no visible |    The    doctor    said    he felt the  ..._ ._      ^-.\nmeans of paying its debts off.\"      j board here would be equally will-1 *pf\u20acjl 'LD BOOST\nAt   this   week's board meeting I inS to have BCHIS make a survey | CANADA ABROAD\npayment    of    staff   salaries   and]here  to show the    board    where1 \u00ab\u00abDI\\VMl\/\nvouchers was approved, but there I economies could be achieved. On\nwas a  question  in  the  minds of i requesting    such    a    survey    the\nboard    members    as  to   whether I board  was told  it  would not  be [ both sides of the Commons as a\nthere would be enough money to'possible  for, months    as    BCHIS, weapon  in  the  ideological  battle\ncover   vouchers   at  next   month's  staf* had heavy commitments,\nmeeting. J  '\t\nBRIEF TO VICTORIA j PEARSON PLANS\nAid.   Rennison    said the board   niirrg AM \\\/ICIT\nwas   still    hopeful    that a  brief j KUV^ AN  Vial!\n\"aged in a plastering business. A\nheart attack was believed the\ncause of his death.\nMr. Burton is survived by two\nsisters, Mrs. W. E. McKim of Vancouver and Miss Phyliss Vincent\nBurton of London, England, and\na cousin, Charles Draper of Cranbrook.\nARTS COUNCIL\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The long-mooted Canada Council is regarded on\nwith the Communist world.\nBoth External Affairs Minister\nPearson and George Hees (PC \u2014\nToronto Broadview'') said Saturday\nnight a council of arts, recom\nmended by the Massey royal com-\n1951. could dp much to\nawaiting Health Minister Martin's(*   OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 External Af-\nattention in    Victoria    would re-j fairs Minister Pearson expects to mission in\nceive consideration. The minister j spend a week in Russia early inidi<:P'av Canadian arts and culture\nwill not return to  Victoria until j October, while on his way to Sin- abroad.\nCox of BCHIS\nTo Meet Hospital\nPlanners Todav\nCommissioner of the British Columbia Hosoital Insurance Service, D. M. Cox will meet with the\nouilding committee of the board\nif directors of Kootenay Lake\nleneral Hospital this morning, to\nfiscuss matters relative to the design of the proposed Nelson and\nDistrict hospital.\nMr. Cox, currently visiting hos-\noitals in southern B.C. also visited\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital during the\nweekend. KLGH board chairman\nJ. W. Graham said Sunday. Mr.\nGraham and hosoital administrator\nT. O. Reed will also attend this\n^norning's meeting.\nto Front, and from Hall to Cedar.|    RaiofalI on Saturday measured\nstreets, the first giving workmen eight-tenths of an inch,\nthe most trouble. |    Telephone    communications   ifl\nAt  Hume   Hotel,   where   water East Kootenay were also reported\nseeped into the furnace room on1 disrupted.\nJuly 7, excess runoff rose to the]\nsample    rooms.    Later    Saturday\nmorning an inch or. two of mud\nMrs. L. Gormley\nDies at Coast\nFuneral services will be held in\nVancouver today for Nelson resident, Mrs. Laura Gormley who\ndied at St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver Friday at the age of 74.\nMrs, Gormley is survived by five\ns.ons, George of Kimberley, Leo\nof Nelson, Frank of Vancouver,\nLe Gorie of New Denver and Leslie of California; six daughters.\nMrs. W. Shanks. Mrs. O. Crowell.\nMrs. B. LaRoche, Mrs. O. Kiggins,\nall of California, Mrs. W, Anderson of Nelson, and Mrs. D. Hilton\nof Holladay, Utah; 20 grandchildren  and one great-gran'dson.\nThe Weather\nNELSON TEMPERATURES\nMin. Max. Pre.\nSunday  ...\nSaturday\n63\n61\nTwo Men Aoooar\nAfter Cafe Fiahr\nCRANBROOK - Nikelot Krie-\n\u00bber was sentenced to one year at\nOakalla and Paul Kirlik was Put| gt. John's 55\non    probation    for    a    tw0'year Halifax 58\nperiod   when   they   were   found j Ottawa 59\nguilty     In     district    magistrate's] Kenora      55\ncourt of assault occasioning actual\nbodilv harm. Victim of the assault\nwas Ernest Glur. operator of :\ncafe near Cranbrook. who requlr\nRegina ,  57\nSwift Current   57\nCalgary   54\nKimberley          57\ned removal of an eye following the ! Crescent Valley\nassault.\n60\n)\n.05\nV\n.80\n68\n\u2014\n74\n.12\n77\n\u2014\n75\n<t\n84\n.01\n79\n\u2014\n75\n.60\n76\n.48\n78\n.08\nAug. 10. ''Until such time'as\" we! fiapore for a Colombo plan meet-!   J^Hees said^ Canada is known j    It occurred the night of May^7|p^dton\"\n Q._ ._. Fish-\nanswer his disciples received to ermen leaving this Cornish town\ntheir question as to why they did j f0r a day's fishing found a wag-\ni not cure the child: \"And he said j tail nesting in one of their bask-\nunto  them. This kind  can   come ' ets. They' left the basket behind.\nJ forth by nothing, but by prayer , \u25a0M^fr**\" 1 \u25a0'\n-and fasting\".  (Mark 9:2!)). - | EHT'\nThe   practical   power   of  prayer\n\u25a0 was also brought out in passages;\nread  from  \"Science   and   Health j\n\"with Key to the Scriptures\" by I\nMary Baker Eddy including the\nfollowing: \"Prayer cannot change I\n. the   unalterable   Truth.   Nor   can j\n' prayer  alone give us  an  understanding  of  Truth;    but   prayer, I\ncoupled  with 'a  fervent habitual i\n' desire to know and do the will of I\nGod. will bring us into all Truth.\"\nhear from the minister'we do not  ing. abroad mainly because of its ma\nknow what the score is,\" I    He told the Commons Saturday iterial assets, but little was known\nHe said one of the problems : night that arrangements for a visit f of jts cultural assets\nthe   invitation\nNEW POWER PLANT\nSAROB1, Afghanistan (CP) \u2014A\nnew power plant is being built\nhere by a German firm. Located\nabout 3.500 feet above sea level,\nit is to make use of the water\npower of the Kabul river. The\nplant, to have an annual capacity\nof 150.000.000 kilowatt-hours, is the'\nthird built in Afghanistan by Germans.\nfacing BCHIS officials Is the] to M,\nfact that there Is $29,000,000 to! Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov,\nbe apportioned to the various are being worked out in a satis-\nhospltals In B.C. The funds have! factory manner,\nall    been    earmarked and addl-<\t\ntional funds are not available;    \u25a0 ^fJHn MlSSBOnOrv\nIt  was  reported   that   Mr.   Cox   _ _   , _..       7\nconfined,himself to the question of. R\u00a9V. TesfOli DISS\navailable funds.    Policy, he said. J    ST. ALBERT, Alta. (CP)\u2014Rev.\nwas strictly un to the government. Jules Teston, OMI, 99, a missionary\nAVERAGE COST HIGHER jwho worked  almost continuously\nAvailable funds meant that among the Indians and Metis of\nTrail was to receive $12.55 per northern Saskatchewan and Al-\ndiem rate. Mr. Cox pointed out berta, died suddenly here Sunday.\nthat while Nelson received a peri He was the oldest, both in age\ndiem rate of $12.95 its average I and ordination, in the Oblate or-\nlength of \u25a0fitay of 7.6 days meant i der of Roman Catholic priests, and\nthat the average cost per patient was called the \"dean of Priests\" in\nwas $97, In Trail with a per diem J Canada   and   many   parts  of   the\n0f!    He recommended that the gov-\nI Kamloops     55   88    \u2014\n62   85    \u2014'\nworld. He was ordained in 1883\nand retired in St. Albert, about 20\nmiles northwest of Edmonton,\neight years ago.\n: Kleenburn L\n; Western Monarch\nf Gait \u2014 Greenhlll\n; Canmore Briquettes\nCoal:\nPHONE 889\nTowleR\nF\"el & Transfer\nGEORGE GREEN of Brampton, Ont., examines what may\nprove to be the biggest hailstone\never to fall on earth. Mr. Green\nsaw chunk of Ice, which\nweighed six pounds and was\nabout six Inches In width fall\non roof of house next door during.heavy rainstorm. Meteorological officials said clouds over\nBrampton at the time could\nhave produced hall, although\nthere were no other reports of\nIts falling. The largest recorded hailstone .weighed four-and-\na-half pounds and fell In Spain\n100 years ago.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nHEATING FOR HEALTH\nWhy Is It that Ill-health is associated with Winter? Because\ntoo few home owners provided a good heating system in their\nhomes.\nNew Comfort \u2014 New Safety \u2014 New Economy arc all combined '\nIn today's ultra modern heating systems.\nDISCUSS   YOUR   PROBLEMS   WITH\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING AND HEATING\n351 Baker St. Co. Ltd. Phone 666\nrate of $12,55 and an average\nlength of stay of 11.1, the average\ncost per patient was $138.\nThe additional cost of steam\nheat and the lack of outpatient revenue was discussed. (SCHMIDT CASE\nMr. Cox said that the Cominco-'AGAIN' ADJOURNED\nsubsidy of steam heat in the old)    Case involving charge of theft\nhospital, and the once large sum' of $700 against John Schmidt was\nof money received for outpatient\nrevenue had contributed to a\nhigher standard of care than\nwould have been possible by using\nonly BCHIS revenue.    ,\nNow that these two factors no\nlonger worked to the hospital's financial advantage, the board\nwould have to cut its cloth to suit\nits norkethonk.\nPENALIZED\nAid. Rennison noted that much\nof the cost problem was due to the\nnumber of serious cases treated at\nthe Trail-Tadanac hospital.\nHe c^uld' not see why Trail\nshould be penalized for nrovld-\n!nq the kind of excellent medical care which attracted the\nserlouslv III from many centres\nIn the Kootenays.\nHe pointed out that formerly\nmany malor canes from the Kootenays were taken to the coast\nwith resulting high transportation costs to the seriously 111.\nDr. W. J. Endicott, medical I\nstaff representative on the\nboard, did not see whv Trail\nshould suffer because of Its \u00abx-|\nadjourned in city court Saturday.\nThe adjournment was requested\nby defence counsel R. B. Allan\nand granted by Magistrate William Brown. Schmidt is also\ncharged with forgery of a $2500\ncheck. The case will re-open\nTuesday. *\nMONDAY PARK SHOWING\nPLANNED AFTER STORM\nThe Nelson Film Council was\nforced to postpone their film under the stars at Lakeside Park\nSunday evening' due to weather\nconditions. Rain began to fall on\nthe 350 patrons when the first\nfilm was about half over.\nThe same program will be shown\ntonight should the weatherman\nsupply finer weather.\nat  the   cafe   when   an   argument' Victoria 51\narose  among the three men  and' Seattle 51\nGlur    ordered    them    from    the'Spokane\npremises. Dishes were broken  in'Chicago 71\ner\"ment provide a substantial sum! the  ensuing disturbance and thelNew York  75\nFirst-naval vessel to circle North\nAmerica is HMCS Labrador,\nwhich recently made its way\nthrough polar seas frpm Atlaniio\nto Pacific. We're proud that the\nthree specially built landmgcraft\nshe carried to ferry men and\nsupplies to Arctic shore base*\nwere made of welded aluminum\n\u2014and that they did the job\/\nAluminum is active in th\u00ab\npatrol and defence of our coasts,\nskies and northern wastes. So it\nis good to know that Canada is\nthe world's second largest aluminum supplier with five producing plants in Quebec and\nBritish Columbia.\nALUMINUM COMPANY\nOF CANADA, LTD.\n(ALCANJ\nto the external affairs department\nwhich would help finance overseas\ntours of such Canadian cultural\ngroups  as  ballet corps.\neye injury was inflicted with\nbroken tumbler. Both accused\nwere arrested and charged, but\nwere later released on bail pending recovery of the victim. They\npleaded not guilty to the charge\non the grounds of self-defence and\nwere represented in court by Fred\n.Barry of Kimberley. R. E. Read\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The Ie-1 p,osecuted and called seven wit-\ngality of a radar speed trap wilHnesse8. The two defendants were\nRadar Trap To Get\nCourt Test\nbe tested in suburban Burnaby\npolice court next month.\nA Langley Prairie driver pleaded not guilty to speeding in a\nradar-monitored zone on the\nGrandvlew highway July 14 but\nhis case was adjourned to allow\nRCMP time to secure the testimony of an electronics expert.\nA second motorist said he has\nretained counsel to fight his'case.\nHis plea has not yet been heard.\nRESUSCITATOR CALL\nNelson Fire Department made a\nresuscitator call about noon Sunday. The person for whom the call\nwas made had recovered when the\nsquad  arrived.\nthe only witnesses on their own\nbehalf. Magistrate Richard Shiell\npresided at the hearing which todk\ntwo days to complete.\nThis advertisement is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by (he Government of British\nColumbia.\nJtop*Itch;\noft\/fsatt\nBftts-\nlieat flash\nOulckl Stop Itching of Insect bite*, heat rub,\neczema, hlvea, pimples, Kalei, scabies, athlete's\nfoot and other externally caused skin troubles.\nUse quick-actlnp, soothing, antiseptic D. D. D.\nPRESCRIPTION. Greaseleas, stainless. Stop*\nitch or money back. Don't suffer, Your drug*\nlist baa D. 6. O. PRESCRIPTION.       1-9\n000-\n\u25ba\nYou're always welcome at NIAGARA\nAt Niagara wo have the money you nood In the\namount you want. You may borrow up to $1500\nor more and tafco up to 24 months to repay . , .\nwith payments arranged on a monthly date selected\nby you. Loans up to $1500 ar*) life-insured at no\nextra cost to you\u2014and on many.amounts rales at\nNiagara are lower than elsewhere. Convenient ways\nfor you to borrow will be discussed privately so, if\nyou need money promptly\u2014come in anytime.\n\"fan aft fust a few of our many loan plant\"\nyou\nGET\nMONTHir PAYMENTS\n11\n13\n20\n24\n$300\n661.10*\n000\n1300\n} 11.37\nM.90\n139.10\n% 23.31\n61.93\n114.30\n$40*\n41.03\n\u20221.13\n$41.40\n73.90\n*0*t ef many of our canvenlonl own-dollar payment phr.j\nJOTE^-fTTTTTl\t\nIAGARA\nLOANS\nUJIJU-^^! BRANCHES FROM C0AST-T0-C0AST\nLOCATED IN NELSON AT\n560 Baker St. Phone 1636\n .\nf^cfe\nLightning Bolt Sets\nKinnaird Home Afire\nKINNAIRD\u2014The  home  of Mr\nPURCHASE of the 85-acre\nJessie, Woodward farm at Grand\nForks, one of the finest agricultural holdings In the Sunshine\nValley, was made recently by\nTony Lodder, above, a. young\nImmigrant from Holland who\nhad been helping operate It.\nDeveloped by scientific farming\nmethods, the sprinkler-Irrigated\nland consistently won Mrs.\nWoodward top places In the\nBetter Farms competition and\ntwice she was grand championship winner for owning the\nbest all-round farm In the valley.\nand Mrs. M, Brandson was extensively damaged when a lightning strike set it afire here during a thunderstorm at about 5:10\np.m. Saturday.\nThe bolt also followed electrical wiring to four other homes of\nthe upper bench, entering the\nmain fuse boxes burning surrounding areas.\nThe lightning evidently followed the wires down the roadway,\ncut 10 telephone wires serving the\nbench by the elementary school\nand streaked down to the transformer on the No. 3 highway\nwhere it exploded with a blinding flash, sending live wires\nacross the road. Electricity\nthrough the village was disrupted\nfor several hours, and telephone\nservice is still out in several\nhomes.\nPrompt action by the Kinnaird\nvolunteer fire department is\ncredited with preventing further\ndamage.\nAll fuse boxes In. the effected\nareas were immediately checked\nand at those showing damage the\nelectric wires were cut as power\nwas still flowing sporadically for\na time after the strike.\n.AR BOARDER\nDARTMOUTH, England (CP)\nA seagull is the pet boarder at a\nhotel in this Devonshire town. The\nbird nested on the tea terrace and\nis raising her young with the aid\nof tidbits provided by* paying\nguests.\nSeven Qirls Seeli Fair Queen Title\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 25, IMS \u2014 S\nINVERMERE \u2014Seven lovely\ngirls from Columbia Valley towns,\nFall Fair queen candidates, are\ncompeting for the right to reign\nover festivities at the annual East\nKootenay Agricultural and Industrial Exhibition.\nThe crowning will take place\nAugust 27 at the Athalmer Fair\ngrounds, and the queen and her\ncourt Mil open a gala dance In\nthe Lake Windermere Memorial\nCommunity Centre at Invermere.\nThe competitors for the title\nare Betty Erickson, Spillimacheen; Minnie Kamakawaji, Athalmer; Darlene Rotvold, Canal\nFlats; Shirley Kelly, Windermere;\nOlga Hendrickson, Invermere;\nDonna Zweirs, Edgewater, and\nDiane Bravener, Radium Hot\nSprings.\nBETTY ERICKSON\nMINNIE  KAMAKAWAJI\nDARLENE ROTVOLD\nEric Bourchierr Well-Known in\nRossland, Dies al Cricket Match\nROSSLAND \u2014 Eric Brian\nOrmsby Bourchier, well known\nRossland resident, collapsed and\ndied Sunday afternoon at the wicket during a cricket match ttt Tadanac between Trail. and Nelson.\nAs a mark of respect, his fellow\ncrlcketer;s abandoned the game.\nMr. Bourchier was born in Tip-\nperary, Ireland, March 31, 1895,\nand came to Canada In 1921.\nHe worked for. a while at Wilmer and then entered the employ\nof the Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company at Kimberley.\nIn 1929 he was transferred by the\ncompany to Trail and he took up\nresidence in Rossland.\nMr. Bourchier was choir master\nfor Sacred Heart Church.\nDuring the Second World War\nhe attained the rank of major in\nthe Rocky Mountain Rangers.\nHe was a prominent member of\nthe Rossland Light Opera Com\"\npany, taking solo parts ln their\npopular Gilbert and Sullivan op.\neretta productions.\nAn ardent sportsman, Mr. Bour\nchler was active in skiing, tennis,\nswimming and cricket.\nSurvivors Include his wife, Elsie Florence; six sons, Oswald,\nwith RCAF, Sea Island; John with\nRCAF'at Winnipeg, and Dr. Richard Bourchier, George, Peter ahd\nMichael, all In Rossland; three\ndaughters, Margaret, presently on\na three-month holiday ln Europe;\nMrs. Wlnnifred Schnidrig of Portland, Ore., presently visiting her\nfamily in Rossland, and Evelyn of\nRossland; a sister, Mrs. William\nDean ,of Okinawa, and three\ngrandchildren.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\n1 Glad To Leave China\nM. D. Jarell, eminent Trichologist, demonstrates\n\u25a0 causes of baldness and hoiv it can be prevented.\nHow To Have Hair For A Lifetime\nTo Be Demonstrated Here By\nFamous Trichologist\nOFFERS WRITTEN GUARANTEE\nAn exclusive interview by Ward Allen\nShipboard Friendship\nContinued in Procter\nRiondel LA Holds\ntSrawberry Social\nRIONDEL \u2014 The Ladies' Auxiliary to local 220, Mine, Mill, held\na delightful tea and strawberry\nsocial on the lawn of Mrs. J. Mus-\ngrove and Mrs. A. Kadin. Assisting them were' Mrs. K. Munro,\nMrs. F. Muise, Mrs. J. King, Mrs.\nPaddy Etmanski, Mrs. M. Hooper,\nMrs. C. Lynn, Mrs. H. Halliday,\nMrs. F. McWhinnie and Mrs. V.\nGendron.\nA cake, donated by Mrs. G.\nLihd, was won ^jy Mrs. B. Ra-\nmage.\nA novel feature was introduced\ncrets of one's teacup.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nLONDON, Ont. (Special) \u2014M.\nD. Jarell, Director of Jarell Hair\nExperts of Canada exploded the\n\"myth of baldness\" today in an\nexclusive interview.\n\"Baldness is unnecessary, costly,\nand a plague to mankind,\" says\nJarell. \"No man need be bald. No\nman need suffer the stigma of\npremature old age that is forced\nupon him because he is losing his\nhair. The Jarell method of hair\nand scalp treatment can prevent\nbaldness\u2014can turn colorless fuzz\ninto healthy, growing hair\u2014can\nmake your look youthful again.\"\nDEMONSTRATION TO BE\nHELD IN NELSON\nThis revolutionary method of\nhome, treatment for the hair\nand scalp will be demonstrated\nIn Nelson, Wednesday only, July\n27, at the Hume Hotel. Trichologist L. J, Zajlc will conduct\nthe private, Individual Interviews from 12' noon until 9:00\np.m. on July 27 only.\nThere is no cost or obligation,\nand you need no appointment.\nREASON   FOR   BALDNESS\n\"There is always a reason for\nbaldness,\" continued this nationally known authority. \"Hair cannot grow through a scalp that is\ninfested with dandruff, excessive\noilness, or extreme dryness. A\nscalp that has never been exercised cannot be expected to produce healthy hair.\" Men. and yes,\nwomen too, walk the streets today, completely devoid of nature's\ngreatest ornament\u2014hair. Simply\n' because they were not taught the\nbasic rules of hair and scale; hygiene while they were growing\nup. \"The simple answer,\" empha\nsized this expert is that children\nshould be taught the same simple\nbasic rules-of hair and scalp hy\ngiene that they are taught for the\nproper care of their teeth. If this\nWere the case, baldness would be\na rarity today!\"\nHEREDITY NOT INVOLVED\nTrichologist Jarell dodged\nIssues. He quickly took up the\nmost widely spread theory of\nbaldness \u2014 heredity. \"Mankind's\nunrealistic belief that baldness is\nhereditary stems from a misinter\npretation of the theory of gfen-\netics. Theory does not state that\nany person must be bald because\nbaldness exists in the family.\nWhat it does say, is that in some\nfamilies, a tendency exists towards an undernourished scalp.\"\nThe purpose of Jarell ..-Hair and\nScalp Experts is to teach the\nmethods of strengthening the\nweak scalp and nourishing it to a\nhealthy, vigorous condition. A\nhealthy scalp will grow hair, if it\nis not already completely bald,\"\nassures Jarell.\nIS THERE HOPE FOR THE\nCOMPLETELY   BALD?\nIn his travels throughout the\nUnited States and Canada. Jarell\nhas collected hundreds of testimonies of his ability to develop\nweak fuzz into healthy, mature\nhair. All of his clients have\nstarted with a private examination, hair and scalp analysis, and\na diagnosis of the disorder. Jarell\nis quick however, to tell a hopeless case that he cannot be helped.\n\"We strongly advise,\" says Jarell,\n\"that no person who is completely\nbald hold any hope whatsoever\nof regrowing hair. If there is any\nfuzz at all. we can restore,\nhealthy scalp condition and the\nhair will grow normally again as\nnature intended.''\nOFFERS A GUARANTEE\n\"Jarell Hair Experts of Canada\noffer a guarantee to any client\nwho enrolls for treatment. If he\nor she is not completely delighted\nwith results at the end of 30 days,\nthe money invested will be graciously refunded,\" pledged Jarell.\n\"We must have satisfied clients.\nWe must regrow hair. After all,\nit is our best advertisement.\"\nIS YOUR HAIR HEALTHY?\nIf you have a scalp disorder, or\nif you are worried about your\nhair, call Trichologist L. J. Zajlc\nat the Hume Hotel In Nelson\nWednesday only from 12 noon to\n9:00 p.m. The public is invited.\nThe examinations are private and\nopen to men and women. You do\nnot need an appointment, and you\nwill not be embarrassed or obligated in any way..\nPROCTER \u2014 World travellers picture business boomed. Soldiers,\nwho have been in China, Korea, sailors, and airmen flocked to the\nJapan, the Philippines and the j studios to be photographed In\nU. S. are holidaying in neighbor-1 China.\ning beach cottages at Procter and At this time the black market\nrenewing a friendship which had flourished and the speculators\nstarted aboard the American ship prospered. White Russians, Jews\nPresident Gordon when it left i and Europeans were anxious to\nthe Philippines in 1949. jget out of that troubled country.\nThey are Rev. and Mrs. A. F.\\ Infrequent   old   ships   in   various\nGavrel with their two young sons,; states of disrepair took  loads of\none of whom was born in Shang-! about 500 passengers at a time but  by Mrs  J. \u2122\u00ab \u2122\u00bb dre sed as\nhai  and  the   other  in Killarney, j there were 10,000 on the waiting  a gypsy, offered to reveal the se-\nSask., and David Vasserman and lists.\nhis 12-year-old daughter Jeanne I Finally in 1949. Mr. and Mrs.\nwho also'was born in Shanghai.] Vasserman and little Jeanne sailed\nMr. Gavrel is now pastor at the f on the SS Haven for the Philip-\nUnited-Methodtst Church in Ken-1 pines and then on the President\nora, Sask., alter spending 27 years Gordon bound (or the U. S. Mr.\nas a missionary in China. He was \\ Vasserman has written a story on\nreluctant to discuss conditions in \u25a0 his life in China,\nthat country, describing the sit- He has been bereaved by the\nuation only as \"desperate.\" He death of his wife, the only dark\nworked with the World Church'spot in his new-found life in\nCouncil in China and also with the. Canada. Jeanne is now in Grade\nSocial Welfare coming back to j VII in a Winnipeg school and is a\nCanada six years ago. He is vaca- natural, sunny girl who mixes\ntioning at Procter upon the re-j well and makes friends easily,\ncommendation of his friend, Rev. j Each year father and daughter\nA.R.T. Dixon' of Nelson and will! vacation together in a different\ngo from here\\to Ghost River, Alta.,! part of Canada in a plan to see\nwhere he and his wife will act as j and enjoy it all. This summer,\nhouse parents for the Canadian j along with their friends, the Gav-\nYouth Hostel Association for two | reis, they explored the Kootenays,\nweeks before returning to his I visiting Ainsworth, and taking the\nministerial duties at Kenora. Mrs. ] scenic trip on the Moyie to the\nGavrel says   she  is  very  happy  Lardeau.\nto be back In Canada.\nPHOTOGRAPHER\nMr. Vasserman lived for 32 years\nin  China  and  earned his living\nas a photographer, first as an assistant retouching  negatives  and\nlater as a manager for a studio\nand lastly as owner in business\nfor   himself.   He   learned   color\nphotography 14 years ago from the\nRussian artist, N.  Shirovsky. He\nhas photographed countless foreign diplomats and military personnel. He is currently employed\nin his chosen work in Winnipeg\nbut he thinks the pictures he takes\nnow cannot compare with his collection made  in  his travels.  He\ncommented-that it is a small world,\nfor in San Francisco alone he encountered hundreds of people who\nhad been in China at some time or\nanother. He is of Russian origin\nbut is now a Canadian citizen and\nmaintains that Canada is the best\ncountry In the world in which to\nlive for, he says. Life seems so with   exceuent  yields   in  alfalfa\nbeautiful and free.\" | and clover and only fair return in\nDISLIKED RICE |Timothy. Lateness of the harvest,\nLiving conditions are vastly dif- j which was further put back by\nferent   from   Oriental   ways   and poor weather of frequent thunder\nWasa Couple\nWed SO Yean\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Residents of\nWasa area since 1907, Mr, and\nMrs. George Hannant were' guests\nof honor of the Wasa community\nat its hall marking the 50th an\nniversary of their marriage at\nTryon, P.E.I. They remained in\nthat province for two years be\nfore settling in Ta Ta Creek area\non a farm where they continue to\nmake their home.\nNinety guests attended the sup\nper which was followed by a toast\nto the couple proposed by Rev.\nD. G. M. Herron of Kimberley\nand gifts from friends presented\non their behalf by Dan Hamilton.\nMusical program and community\nsinging concluded the evening.\ncall LONG DISTANCE\nSubstitute friendly, inexpensive\nLong Distance calls for routine\ntrips. Long Distance is effective, and\nthe money saved is profit earned.\nBRITISH- COLVMBIA\nTELEPHONE   COMPANY\nCrops Doing Well\nIn East Kootenay\nCRANBROOK\u2014Though weather\nconditions in late Spring have put\n.growth 10 days to two weeks behind average, field operators are i\nsatisfied with  the state of crops\nOnly extensive dry-farming\narea, St. Mary's Prairie, shows\nwheat in excellent condition.\nscheduled mostly for cutting as\ngreen feed within the next few\nweeks. Wet, cool June established\nearly growth well, particularly in\nWinter wheat, and intense heat\nand sunshine of the past two\nweeks has resulted In god straw\nlength and satisfactory heading of\ngrain.   \u25a0\nThough 10 days later than usual,\nhaying is proceding satisfactorily,\ncustoms. Rice Is the staple food\nof China, and Mr. Vasserman has a\ndeep aversion to it. It is served\nmixed with fish, pork or sea-food.\nThis, along with fresh fruits in\nthe south part, and a kind of cottage cheese made from beans and\nfried in peanut, oil forms the main\ndiet. Canned or powdered milk\nis used and a milk made from\nbeans but fresh milk is unavailable. Caribou are used as work\nanimals and beasts of burden.\nThe peasants work in their bare\nfeet in the water of the rice paddies and the women ' do their\nlaundry in the edges of rivers and\ncanals. Tuberculosis Is appallingly\nprevalent and everyone ls poor.\nROARING  TRADE\nMr. Vasserman was in China\nwhen Japan attacked in 1936. He\nwas also there in 1943 when the\nU. S. dropped an atomic bomb on\nHiroshima. Then the American\nliberators arrived and at least the\nstorms, may affect second hay cuts\nunfavorably.\nBeef stock now turned nut on\nthe range is thriving in good grazing  conditions.\nThree Nakusp Girls\nSave Stricken Bather\nNAKUSP \u2014 Three Nakusp girls,\nGracie Coates, Janette Gruen and\nConnie Robinson played a considerable part -in averting a\ndrowning tragedy at the CGIT\ncamp on Okanagan lake recently\nOne swimmer got into difficulties when seized with a cramp not\nfar from shore. Gracie, who was\nswimming nearby, got the victim\nand holding her with one arm,\ncaught hold of a boat rowed by\nJanette and Connie. Artificial respiration was administered and the\npatient was treated for shock. The\ngirls' Guide training in first aid\nstood  them in good stead.\nWHEN YOU SHOP\nAT LOCAL STORES!\nYou don't have to go to the big shopping centers to\nget \"a bargain I\" Your local merchants consistently give you\nthe most for your money: good selection of quality merchandise,\nfair prices, courteous service and convenient parking. And \u2014\nyour dollars spent locally help support and build your community. Shop at home and save!\nutyom\n(hnmcutifo\nThis message is brought to you\nby your community minded newspaper . . .\nPHONE 1844    -\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n gP';    : \u25a0        ' -\u2014 \u2014~\"\nt t ' yppyy^ ., ^ .fipfl^^\nEstablished April 22, 11)02 '\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\n THE   AUDIT  BUREAU   OF  CIRCULATIONS.\t\nMonday, July 25,1955 *\nIndustry To Come Back to Wesley\n\u2014 But With Multiplications\nForest Industry attention of the\nKootenays will be focussed, when\nCelgar Development Company Ltd.'s\npulp- mill- construction gets under\nway, on a spot three miles West of\nCastlegar and 30 miles West of Nelson that once before, was site of a\nlumber industry.\n- The 500-acre plant site was once\nknown as Wesley. It was a b'usy little\nplace in early days, with a lumber\nmill named for its owners, settlement, company store and nearby the\nYale Columbia mill.\nIn 1909 the Wesley mill and almost the entire settlement was de-'\nstroyed by lire, only a few shacks\nand the store being saved.\nIn 1923 the Lindsey Brothers used\ntht site as a pole yard. At that time\nthere were some of the original\nbuildings of the Yale-Columbia Lumber Company, a* water tank and a\nranch-house. A picture of Wesley\nthen is in the collection of C. Rae\nBerry of Robson, and is considered\none of the few existant of the site in\nit* earlier days. Another'view is provided in Mrs. K. Johnson's book,\n\"Pioneer Days of Nakusp and The\nArrow Lakes.\"\nIn the early 1930s the Wesley\nLumber Company rebuilt the mill\non the Lower Arrow Lake, but in\n1934-35 it was again visited by fire,\nand with it went the shacks and. store\nthat had survived the 1909 blaze.\nBy 1958, a start on a new -venture\nIb scheduled for Wesley. By 1961, according to the terms of the Celgar\nmanagement licence agreement, a\n300-ton pulp mill is to be completed.\nThe Wesley of the century's early\nyears never foresaw the days of a\n$30 million investment. But that's\nthe way of history.\nMotorist's Prayer\nThe Rev. Dr. Frederic C. Flem-\nming, rector of Trinity Church in\nNew York, has directed that copies\nof \"The Motorist's Prayer\", which\noriginally appeared in the London\nChurch Times, be printed and distributed to the public. The prayer\nfollows:\nGrant, me a steady hand and watchful eye,\nThat no man shall be hurt when\nI pass by.\nThou gavest life, and I pray no act\nof mine\nMay take away or mar that gift\nof Thine.\nShelter those, dear Lord, who bear\nme'company,\nFrom  the  evils  of  fire  and  all\ncalamity.\nTeach me to use my car for others'\nneed,\nNor miss through love of speed\nThe beauties of Thy world; that thus\nI may\nWith joy and courtesy go on my\nway.\nEverybody who has visited England'is familiar with the large L (for\nLearner) sign carried by all motor\nvehicles the drivers of which have\nnot passed their final tests and received their licences. We got a bit\nof a surprise the other day when,\ntravelling along the Oxford road, we\ncaught up with-an enormous trailer-\ntruck. It was transporting a heavy\narmy tank. Between the tank's tractors there hung the big, red L. And\nunderneath the letter were the words,\n\"GIVE HIM LOTS OF R'OOM.\"\nNo More Backing,\nFor Trade Fair\nFor those who have seen this year's\nInternational Trade Fa*lr at Toronto, the announcement by Rt. Hon. C. D. Howe, Minister of Trade and Commerce, that the government ia'withdrawing its support of the\nannual fair cornea as a surprise. On the face\nOf it, thii year's fair is the most successful\nof all, with 81 countries sponsoring 1500 exhibits.\nMr. Howe's reasons, however, are quite\ntonvincing, The Canadian exhibits are not\nthe memorable ones,*, and the fair was intended to sell Canadiiin goods abroad as well\nas to encourage foreign sales here. \"The government is satisfied,\" said Mr, Howe, that\nthe fair \"has played an extremely useful role\nin the re-establishment of overseas countries\nIn the Canadian market.\"\nMeanwhile, however, Canadian participation in the fair has been declining. Apart\nfrom some prestige exhibits by large Canadian companies and provincial and municipal exhibits, Canadian participation this\nyear* is \"very limited indeed\", said Mr.\nHowe.\nIn view of these factors alone, it is understandable that the government feels it\ncan do better by exhibiting Canadian goods\nin foreign fairs than by continuing its support of the Toronto event.\u2014Montreal Gazette.\nBuild in United States\nTreasury and\nBeer Parlors\nOne ot the most peculiar features of\nAlberta's treasury branch system is Its affinity for the liquor traffic.\nAn examination of official records indicates that hotels and beer parlors have been\nspecially favored by the treasury branches.\nDozens of transactions are recorded for the\nlast few years in which advances were made\nto hotels\u2014each no doubt with an active and\nflourishing beer parlor attached. The beneficiaries are found in communities all over\nAlberta. The loans range from a few thou\nsand dollars to sums in excess of $100,000.\nIn some instances the advances were apparently made to build new hotels, in others to\nenlarge existing establishments. In nearly\nevery case, however, the effect has been to\nincrease or .enlarge the liquor outlets in the\nprovince.\nWhen the treasury branches were first\nestablished 17 years ago, Social Credit leaders made many claims of what they would\ndo for Alberta. An argument that was not\nused, then or later, was that they would increase the sale and consumption of liquor\u2014\nyet this has actually become one of the organization's principel functions.\u2014Edmonton\nJournal.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of\npersona asking questions will not ba\npublished. Thoro la no oharno for thli\naervloa. QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE\nANSWERED BY MAIL exempt whore\nUltra la obvious necessity for prlvaoy.\nM. B. V., Thrums\u2014I washed a child'a white\ncotton dress which was stained with\norange pop ln (pots. When washed, Instead of turning white lt turned, yellow.\nCould you tell ma how to get yellow\nspots off?\nA bleach is the only way to remova\nthese stains. Do not make tha solution too\nstrong. Probably the first soaking will claan\ntha dress,\nReader, Creston\u2014If A and B parties are\nrenting a house on either side of a private road which they use for entrance,\nand party C is renting a place where\nit ls necessary to use the same road,\nwho is supposed to collect the rent from\nC for use of the driveway for admission\nInto C's property? Is it legal for parties\nA and B to' collect rent for use of road,\nor for tha owner of the houses and\nroadway, who ls renting to all parties?\nAlso, does not a renter have legal say\nas to tha driveway that goes with a\nhouse, or does the owner have the privilege of telling renters that people can\nwalk on said land where house ls built?\nOnly a lawyer can decide, this question.\nAlso, the situation is not very clear. If the\nroadway is the only means of access to the\nhomes of A, B and C, we Cannot quite understand why anyone should pay rent for\nthe use of it. Is there not some misunderstanding? Is not the rent for the house and\ngrounds including roadway or drive?   Put\nit this   way:   An   apartment-house owner\ndoes not charge his tenants rent for the\nhalls they have to use in order to get in\nand out of their homes.   Please consult a\nlawyer.\nCurious, Nelson\u2014I would like to know If a\nperson was married in Canada and went\nto the States to get a divorce and then\nmarried again in the States, would that\nbe considered bigamy if he lived in\nCanada afterward?\nThis again is a matter for a lawyer.\nCanadian Companies\n' Nine Canadian companies have established plants In the northern part of New\nYork State, and several are* con side ring such\na move, it is announced by the- commerce\ncommissioner of that state.\nOut here in the West we hear much\nabout United States companies which,\nthrough plants on this side, have become\nfactors in Canadian production. Not much\nis said about branches established in the\nUnited States by Canadian companies.\nThere is an increasing number of direct\nbranches or affiliates of Canadian firms in\nthe northwest states. One of our largest\nmining and smelting companies is establishing a mineral and fertilizer plant of major\nproportions not far south of the British Columbia boundary.\nThii movement of Canadian industry\ninto the United States field is being welcomed as part of the business of growing\nup. It is pointed out that productive investment outside works for a broader balanced\neconomy. Earnings of foreign branches help\nto pay for Imports.\u2014Vancouver Herald.\nGems of Thought\nThe masses must be loved and saved.\nThey can only be saved if powerful, actual\nstandards of excellence are set up before\nthem.\u2014Dr. Charles Malik.\nNone are more hopelessly enslaved than\nthose who falsely believe they are free.\n\u2014Goethe.\nNow more than ever we must keep in\nthe forefront of our minds the fact that\nwhenever we v take away the liberties of\nthose whom we hate, we are opening the\nway to loss of liberty for those whom we\nlove.\u2014Wendell Wilkie.\nIt's Been Said\nI* am absolutely convinced that no\nwealth in the world can help humanity forward, even in the hands of the most devoted\nworker in this cause. The example of great\nand pure individuals is the only thing that\ncan lead us to noble thoughts and deeds,\n\u2014Albert Einstein.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nhat*\u20141 \u00bb-1 torn* Oto\nBy Jimmy HadoJ\nTie office\nspace wms\nBEINlO RE-\n4RR4NGED,\nSOTHEFDOR\nDfMFT&MEN\near THE UNWANTED BACK\nROOM--\nToday's Bible\nThought\nSome lawyers wilf take a case\nthat is fraudulent ln intent and\nresult. Gossip and slander have\nthe same end. It is an unprofitable\npractice in the end.\ndunt dhL\nAnd after\nThE DRAFTERS\nFIXED THE\nPLACE UP-\nPRACTICALLY\nWITH THEIR\nOWN H^NDS-\nThe Service That Keeps\nBaC\u00ab Forests Qreen\n by LEtf WALKER\t\nIt is through forests such as the one above that\ncrews of young offenders build roads and trails, making it easy for rangers and crews to get to a fire should\none occur.\u2014B. C. Forest Service photo.\n\u2014I\u2014\u2014\u2014\t\nARTICLE  VIII\nBesides being of great assistance in keeping our forests green,\nthe B.C. Forest Service has done\nmuch in helping to re-eatabliah\ndelinquent boys of the province\nover the past years.\nThese young men from Oakalla\nprison and the Young Offenders'\nUnit in turn are helping the service by carving roads through\nthe B.C. wilderness while at the\nsame time they are helping carve\nnew lives for themselves.\nThroughout the years the service has operated training camps\ndesigned to gainfully employ\nteenagers during the summer\nmonths.\nThe camps are run under the\ndirection of the administrative\ndivision of the service, reforestation, parks and recreation. They\nhave proved successful in the\nthree forest districts of Kamloops,\nNelson and Prince Rupert.\nCredit for the starting of this\nyouth program dates back to 1932\nwhen ln the United States the\nCivilian Conservation Corps was\ncreated.\nIt wasn't until 1949 that B.C.\ncame into the picture when that\nsummer saw them operate one\n16-boy camp. From that time it\nhas been carried on and. proven\na value to both the boys and the\nservice.\nWhen it was first inaugurated\nin 1932 the world was seeing a\ndepression\". The CCC was formed\nwith    their    three-fold    purpose\nEnglish Main\nRoads-Mad!\nF. 6. Pearce\nYesterday we went through the\nlovely Hampshire countryside to\nAldershot. There had been a heavy\ndownpour of rain with thunder\nand lightning the evening before\nand there was a mist which disappeared in mid-morning as the\nsun rose higher. English main\nroads are good but there is little\ntime to admire the scenery for\ndrivers here are probably the most\nskillful and most dangerous of\nany in the. world. This is particularly so on Sundays and holidays,\nwhen there are more cars on\nthe road. The sea is such, a short\ndistance away that everyone goes\nthere on the slightest excuse on a\nhot day or a Sunday. There, the\ncongregation is so great that cars\nNovels Comprise List\nOf Mid-Summer Books\nThe latest books at Nelson Municipal Library will be\nespecially popular for Summer relaxation hours, whether\nfor home or camp. All are fiction choices.\nSaturday Evening Post\nStorioo, published by Random\nHousei\nEach year the editors of The\nSaturday Evening Post select the\n20. best stories published in the\nmagazine for a publication in\nbook form. This year's collection\nincludes short novels by Kay\nBoyle and Mackinlay Kantor and\nshort stories by F. Hugh Herbert,\nOliver LaFarge, David Karp, Jack\nSchaefer, John and Ward Hawkins and Paul Gallico.\nNectar In a Sieve, by Kamala\nMarkanoaya, published by John\nDay:\nThe story of Rukmani, wife of\nare continually passing. They have: a peasant farmer in' Southern In\nn0 rule that a passing car should; dia, and of the villages where life\nnot turn in until the driver can see! is determined by a relentless\nthe car behind in his mirror or! series of droughts and floods,\nthat a car should not keep too! The Mistletoe and Sword, by\nclose to the one in front as they| Ahya Seton, published by Double\nkeep close behind the one in front j day!\nand then pop ahead like a rabbit. Battle scenes, mysticism and\nThey pass on curves and they pass' romance combine in this story of\non hills, they pass in the third lane J Roman Britain,\nbetween two cars or a parked car| That Was Yesterday, by Ml\nand another and there would bejchael Home, published by Meth\nmore accidents if the oncoming\nmotorist did not have good brakes\nto save others from their recklessness.\nTWO-WHEELERS\nCyclusts  are   abundant   on   the\nTom Greenwood in Home's latest novel grows from Breckland\nfarm boy to feature writer for a\nbig national newspaper. It Is rich\nin  detail  and  the  characteristics\nEnglish joads. Young men and wo-, ot the Breckland country.\nmen in shorts, red in the face and\nperspiring heavily, out on a holi-\nay Jaunt; girls ln summer dresses clutching their billowing skirts\nand workmen cycling to the Job\nThe Rice-Spout Song, by Eileen Chang, published by Scribner:\nThe struggle of a young married couple for a bare subsistence\nand older and sedate people taking j a\u00bb related in this novel of present-\nbooks back to the library. They all! day ch'na. 'eads the peasants into\nkeep to the side of the road andia short-lived revolt against local\ngive hand signals but their pres-i authority\nBy the time a woman Is middle-\naged she's learned to value a doctor's sympathy a sight mora than\nhis medicine.\nence  complicates   driving.\nIt is not pleasant to pass them\nwhen a lorry (English for truck)\nis thundering down the other way.\nThere are'no children cyclists\non the majn roads and no children playing carelessly anywhere.\nThey do not think of walking In\nthe road and  defying motorists\nOn   these   winding troads   they\nwouldn't  dare,   not   more  than\nonce.\nThese winding roads slow traf\nfie. There are few places where\none can let the car do its best,\nbut with the number on the road\nthat is perhaps as well. England\nmay not have the greatest number\nof cars per capita bitf she has a\ngreater density per mile than any\nother country. English cars are\ntaxed on horse power which is\none reason why they are small but\nanother is that a speedy car is\nnot much use on these roads.\nBIG CARS AT\nDISADVANTAGE\nBig cars are at a disadvantage\nbecause some of the minor roads\nare narrow and roadside parking\nis difficult, while in city streets\nthey are awkward to handle.\nHeat Too Much For\nFlorida Bridge\nGREEN COVE SPRINGS, Fla\n(AP)\u2014A hot sun was too much\nfor the bridge over the St. Johns\nriver here. The drawspan expanded and wouldn't close properly, blocking traffic on the 2V\u00ab-\nmile bridge more than 30 minutes.\nSeveral hundred cars were lined\nup by the time the bridge tender\ngot it together again.\nThe Persistent Image, by\nGladys Schmltt, published by\nDial Press:\nA love story, unusual among\nrecent books of its kind, telling\nof the obstacles Svhlch stood be\ntween John Reiber and Helen\nCameron.\nA   Long   Way   From   Pimlico,\nby   Robert  Standlsh,   published\nby London: Peter Davies:\nThe life from 1915 to 1940 of a\nLondon   girl,  Kate  Grimsdale,\nclergyman's daughter, who works\nin a London department store and\ngoes on to create and manage t\nluxury resort in a remote Carib\nbean   Island.    She   manages   the\nlives of her own and her foster\nchildren   in   a   masterly   fashion,\nbut  is  le.ss   successful   with   her\nown life.\nExcelslorl by Paul Hyde Bonner, published by Scribner:\nThe author of \"Spor\" and \"Hotel Talleyrand\" sets his new book\nIn Zurich, and the central figure\nis the most notabje character in\nany of his books. Robert Eggll\nis the hero\u2014at 80 years.\nWHODUNIT8\nDead Reckoning, by Ken-\nSandford, published by Hutchinson:\nThose dead  included  a QC,  a\nman   like    Frankenstein,    seven\nmembers  of  Apollo  Mining  Recoveries Ltd.,  Constable Traviss,\netc.  Sizzling action involves the\nsleuth  in  a   fantastic  espionage\nplot in New Zealand, and a beautiful spy ls never far from the\ntrail.\n.   The Roblneau Look, by Kathleen   Moore   Knight,   published\nby Doubleday:\nAs  a   distant   cousin,   Cynthia\nRobineau could not have known\ntha sinister background of Jealousy and blackmail that split the\nRobineay clan when she went to\na reunion In Alabama's bayou\ncountry. She wasn't long In finding out. A 'phone call warned:\n\"You are on the murderer's list.\"\nSheep's   Clothing,   by   Austin\nLee,    published    by    Jonathan\nCape:\nA comedy-mystery, Austin Lee's\nfirst excursion Into fiction is concerned with Miss Flora Hogg who\non tha death of her police superintendent father, sets up as a private investigator. Her first client\nls an 80-year-old woman 'who\nwants investigated certain old\nhappenings In her house, the oldest of which occurs after Miss\nHogg takes up the case.\nHostile Sailor\nh Face Trial\nPLYMOUTH, England (AP) -\nAdmiral Sir Alexander Madden\nSaturday ordered Able Seaman\nJames McSporran to stand trial on\na charge of striking Vice-Admiral\nJohn William Eaton during an inspection parade last Wednesday.\nSir Alexander formally directed\na court martial to assemble Thursday at the Devonport naval base\nto try the sailor.\nThe hearing may provide some\nindication of why the sailor, who\nstands six feet, struck the five-\nfoot-six admiral. One theory is\nthat McSporran was just showing\nhis distaste for insoection parade.\nSOME DISPARITY\nThere has been some disparity\nin accounts of what happened' in\nthe incident which occurred\naboard HMS Berry while the ad.\nmiral was carrying out his inspec.\ntion.\nOne report was that the .seaman hauled off and belted the ad\nmiral two or three times. Another\nwas that he pinned him to the rail\nand butted him with his head.\nThe admiral was hustled to the\nship's sick bay with a two-inch cut\nover his eye and the navy placed\nMcSporran in a cell at the Devon-\nport naval barracks while it investigated the incident.\n^ in Death\nQUEBEC (CP) \u2014 A terror-\nstricken youngster, abandoned by\nhis playmates in a darkened monastery garden, was frightened to\ndeath by a snapping watchdog.\nA coroner's court inquest into\nthe death of 12-year-old Gilles\nBlanchette decided that he died of\na heart attack after a watchdog\nchased him and several companions, who were stealing apples\nfrom the garden of a Franciscan\nmonastery.\nPolice said the boy fell to the\nground when the dog appeared,\nwhile hia friends fled home without telling any one of the Incident.\nA 10-hour police search for\nBlanchette was unsuccessful, but\nhis body was discovered early\nnext day by Roman Catholic nuns\nas they walked- through the sanctuary.\nbeing:\n1. Worthwhile work for unemployed boys;\n2. The building of health and\nmoral;\n3. The protection and develop-\nment of forests and watersheds.\nAt the peak of Its operations\nthis movement had an enrollment\nof over half-a-mllllon youths scattered over the country In mora\nthan 2400 camps.\nIn 1938 when the country waa\nfaced with further depression, the\nproposal was advanced by Mr.\nHugh Savage, publisher of the\nCowichan Leader In Duncan, Vancouver Island, and a member of\nthe Provincial Legislature, that\nithe British Columbia Forast\nI Branch undertake a similar pro-\nI gram in this province. This was\nknown as the Young Men's Forestry Training Plan and waa ln\noperation for three yeara until\n1939.\nIt was at this time that the Dominion Government sponsored a dol-\nlar-for-dollar program across Canada known as the National Forestry program. The outbreak ot\nWorld War II terminated all such\nactivity in both Canada and the\nStates.\nIn 1949, the scheme was re-established with success and Hon. E. T.\nKenney, minister of lands and\nforests vigorously advocated a\ncontinuation and expansion of the\nplan.\nIn the legislature of 1951, he succeeded in having a sum of ?60,000\nallocated to the work with the result eleven camps were operated\nthat summer.\nMr. Kenney was so convinced\nwith the rehabilitative value ef\na period in the great Qutdoori\nthat he urged the transfer of a\nnumber of youthful first-offenders from Oakalla to one of the\nproject camps. His representations ln this regard to the Attorney-General of the province,\nHon. Gordon Wismer, were approved and the necessary authority secured from the Federal authority responsible for the institution.\nOn June 19, 1951 a group of 11\nboys were posted to the Monashee\nforestry camp In the Nelson Forest District. In matters of discipline the responsibility rested\nwith Bob Delldal who was appointed by the penal institution\nto act as custodian.\nThe boys were employed on\nconstruction of forest protection\nroads and trails, slash disposal to\nreduce fire hazard, and at times\nthey experienced fighting forest\nfires.\nOn several occasions the'boys\nwere found to be valuable in\nworking on surveys and with\ncompass work.\nReports from the District Supervisors, Rangers and foreman\nwere enthusiastic on the working\nhabits and general behavior of\nthe youths.\nAlthough there are no boys fn\nthe Nelson Fire District this aea- \u25a0\nson the three previous years saw\ncamps set up.\nLast year 20 youths were located at a camp in the heavily timbered area in the fire district\nabout 60 miles from Vernon on\nthe Kettle Valley area bordering\nthe Monashee highway.\nWhen the men arrived I. B.\nJohnson, Forest Protection Officer for the district laid out the\nprogram of work and provided\nthe specifications and equipment.\nThe men ranged in age from 18\nto 25 and it was found that when\naway from the prison environment these Jobs made tbelr rehabilitation much simpler when\ntheir sentence was up or they\nwere released on probation.\nIt was also found that those in\ncharge of the lads had no disci-\nnllne problems with the youths\nwho were allowed a minimum of\ncontact with the outside world\nduring their stay at the Summer\ncamps.\nThe boys while attending the\ncamps were supplied with cloths\nand tools including calk-boots,\n\"bone-dry\" clothing and power\nsaws. They built fire-protection\ntrails which when completed saw\nthe forestry crews move in with\nbulldozers to level and grade into\nroads. Several of these are even\nnow being used by logging firms.\nOne of the best parts of this\nco-operative venture was that the\nforest service would have had to\nput the roads in anyway even If\nthere were no prison yo'iths to\nassist.\nQueen and Duke\nSee Marlene\nL6NDON (Reuters) \u2014 Queen\nElizabeth and the Duke of Edin-'\nburgh sat up until the early hours\nlast week to watch glamorous\nMarlene Dietrich in a cabaret act\nat a private party in London's\nwest end. The Queen and her husband sat on a sofa and Just in\nfront, squatting on cushions, were\nPrincess Margaret and Princess\nAlexandra, daughter of the Duchess of Kent. At the end of each\nsong the Queen and Duke clapped,\nand the two princesses joined in\nthe audience's roar of applause.\n\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0'\u25a0\"'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0     \u25a0\u25a0 \u2014 ^_i__i__\t\n \u2014   1\nBargains\nA-Plenty\nat our\n53rd   Anniversary\nSALE\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLeaders In Footfashlon\nESTABLISHED 1902\nRecipes ...\nCookies Go on\nEvery Picnic\nBy ALICE DENHOFP\nIt's always fun to have something special to pull out of the\nhamper at picnics.\nH o m e m a de cookies always\ncreate a sure-fire success, especially a batch of good old-fashioned\nbaking soda goodies. Here are\nsome recipes that we hope you\nwill try. Each one is so easy, so\nquick to make that very little effort is needed,\nMolasses Drop Cookies are light\nyet substantial.\nTo make about 54 cookies, each\ntwo Inches in diameter, sift together 2 cups sifted all-purpose\nflour; Vt teaspoon baking soda and\nVz teaspoon salt, also teaspoon\neach ground cinnamon, ground\nginger and Vt teaspoon ground\ncloves.\nCream together thoroughly It\ncup srvrtening and 1 cup firmly\npacked brown sugar. Beat In 1 egg\nand 1\/3 cup dark molasses. Stir in\n2 tablespoon vinegar. Blend in dry\ningredients. Drop by teaspoonfuls\nonto cookie sheet. Bake at 375 degrees F. for 10 to 15 minutes. Cool\non cake rack.\nButterscotch Bars\nSift together ft cup sifted all-\npurpose flour. Vt teaspoon baking\npowder and Vt teaspoon salt. Beat\ntogether thoroughly 2 eggs and 1\ncup firmly' pcked brown sugar. Stir in Vi cup finely chopped\npecan nut meats, 1\/3 cup shortening, melted, teaspoon vanilla extract and tablespoon vinegar.\nBlend ln dry Ingredients.\nPour Into greased 13 by 9V, by\n2-inch baking pan. Bake at 350 degrees F. for 20 minutes. Remove\nfrom oven. 'Cut into 2Vi by 1V\u00bb-\nlnch bars. Cool. Makes 30.\nSpecial Favorite\nChocolate Checks for our final\nsuggestion, because chocolate is in\nuniversal favor.\nFor 28 lVj-inch squares, sift together ft cup sifted all-purpose\nflour, V4 teaspoon baking soda, Vt\nteaspoon salt.\nCream together 1\/3 cup shortening, 1 cup sugar and teaspoon vanilla extract. Beat in 2 eggs, 2\nsquares (22 ounces) unsweetened\nchocolate, that has been melted\nand cooled, and tablespoon vinegar.\nBlend ln dry ingredients and 1\ncup chopped nut meats. Spread\nmixture in greased baking pan\n(11 by 7 by \\Vt inches). Bake at\n350 degrees F. about 20 minutes.\nCool slightly.\nCut into W, inch squares. Let\ncool thoroughly.\nChristmas In July\nBUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)\u2014It may\nbe a little early \u2014 or a little late\u2014\nbut today is Christmas at the\nChurchill Tabernacle here. Rev\nRobert Kryman, pastor, celebrated\nChristmas Saturday, complete\nwith Nativity music, decorations\nand a Christmas tree to escape\nthe \"commercialism\" that accompanies Christmas in December.\nNelson Social\nMr. and Mrs. J. Wood, former\nNelson residents have returned to\ntheir home in Calgary after a visit\nwith their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. Lang, Victoria\nStreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J, P. Dion and children\nhave left to join Mr. Dion at Uranium City where they will make\ntheir home.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Pearl Kinbelle of Belling-\nham Is visiting friends in Nelson\nand district.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Edna McCullough of Vancouver Is visiting her mother, Mrs.\nJ. Watson, 406 Fifth Street.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nRCMP Inspector and Mrs. R. S.\nNelson have arrived from Brandon\nto take up residence at their home\nOn Latirrter Street.\n\u2022 *   *\nBert Daynard, formerly of Nelson, now of Trail, is in Nelson relieving at the Canadian Customs\noffice.\n\u2022 \u00bb   *\nMr, and Mrs. J. A. Duxbury and\ndaughter Sheila, 426 Hamilton\nAvenue, have left to take up residence in Salmon Arm. They will\nbe joined at the end of the Summer by their daughter Arlene.\n\u2022 *     a\nMrs. Percy Blckersgafs and\nthree children left for their home\nin Vancouver after visiting Nelson. They were accompanied to\nNew Westminster, by Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. F. Waters' grandson, Jimmy.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. M. Tayior, who has been\nthe guest of her brother-in-law\nand sister, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Lawrence, 824 Carbonate Street, for\nthe past three months, left Sundav\nfor Montreal whence she will*sall\naboard the SS Ascania for her\nhome in'Sunderland. England.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. P. G. Morey, 720\nHoover Street, have as their guest\ntheir granddaughter, Marilyn\nMorey of Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. Ed Ward, 714 Hoover Street, have returned home\nfrom a holiday at Vancouver,\na)      #      s>\nMr. and Mrp. W, T. Green and\nKASLO LA TOLD\nOF CONFERENCE\nKASLO \u2014 When Ladies' Auxiliary to Kaslo branch of the Canadian Legion met here recently, a\nreport, prepared by Mrs. J. Tonkin\nas zone secretary, was given on\nthe recent zone conference at\nEdgewood. It gave in excellent\ndetail an account of work done\nby Auxiliaries in West Kootenay.\nMrs. Shuto was elected as third\nmember of the executive to fill\na vacancy created by a member\nleaving   the   disrtict.\nPossibility of holding a tea and\nbake sale late in July was discussed.\nMrs. M. Meers was presented\nwith a corsage and card in honor\nof her birthday. A raffle was held\nand Mrs. J. E. F. Matthews held\nthe lucky number.\nNakusp Aid Ready\nFor Garden Party\nNAKUSP \u2014 At the monthly\nmeeting of the Ladies Aid to the\nUnited Church at Nakusp, held at\nthe home of the president, Mrs. N.\nWoldum, final arrangements were\nmade for the August garden party\nand bake sale to be held at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Miller.\n\"Happy Birthday\" was sung for\nthree members, Mrs. Hopp, Mrs.\nWensley and Mrs. E. C. Johnson,\nThe president made a gift of a\nbouquet of roses to Mrs. E. C.\nJohnson, who celebrated her 70th\nbirthday. Mrs. Hood, a former\nmember who. is visiting the district, was a guest.\nJowd&tL...\nYou Can Rely On\nSANITONE\nIts Gentle, Thorough Cleansing\nIs Nationally Known\nLADIES' and MEN'S\nSUITS, TOPCOATS\nOR SHORTIES \t\nSLACKS, TROUSERS\nOR SKIRTS  \t\n$1.25\n60*\nOUR CALL OFFICE SERVICE\nIN at9 A.M.-OUT at 4 P.M.\nKOOTENAY LAUNDR\n-* <ii> DRY CLEANERS\n1 s\\KT    PHONE 1175   N!.T'\nPHONE 1844\nfamily, 285 High Street, will leave\ntoday to visit relatives at Penticton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. h, E. Blackwell\nand family of 1524 Cedar Street,\nwill leave today for Vancouver\nwhere they will visit Mrs. Black-\nwell's brother-in-law and sister,\nMr. and Mrs. A. Y. Armstrong.\n* \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Vincent Fink have\nas their guests on the North Shore\nthe former's brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. J. Lafek and\ntwo children of Vancouver.\n.   ,   .\nMrs. Lillian Dickie left for Spokane accompanied by her brother,\nH. E. Stevenson, 715 Nelson Avenue, and niece, Mrs. Art Stevens.\nMrs. Dickie will fly to her home In\nDenvers, Mass.    .\nlong-Planned\nTrip Taken By\nProcter Woman\nPROCTER \u2014 Mrs. M. J. McDonald has lived in Procter for 25\nyears and all that time has entertained a yen to visit her former home of Tomkins, Sask.,\nwhere she and her late husband\nonce operated a hardware store.\nThis Summer she satisfied that\nlonging.\nShe and Mrs. A, Wickstrom of\nNelson who were friends in the\nsame Ladies' Aid in Tomkins,\nJourneyed together to that Prairie\ntown where they separated to visit\ntheir own friends and relatives.\nMrs. McDonald was the guest of\nher friend of yesteryear, Mrs. Henry-\nShe found her home town considerably changed and expanded,\nwith hundreds of trees planted on\nthe once bald plains. Many of her\nfriends had died and their children had children of their own.\nShe encountered rain and almost\nbottomless mud typical of that\npart of the country and which she\nhad forgotten, having lived so\nlong on san'dy. rocky terrain. Then\nfollowed the heat.\nShe visited Mrs. S. Moore who\nlived for many years in Procter\nbefore moving to Swift Current\nthree years ago. and Mrs. J. McEwen, once of Tomkins, but now\nof Medicine Hat. Mrs. McDonald\nwanted to see her granddaughter\nand great grandson, Mrs. G. A.\nBrady snd Brian formerly of Procter, In Calgary, but > the thought\nof the heat and the Stampede\ncrowds made her alter her plans\nand return home. She travelled\nback alone, leaving Mrs. Wickstrom still holidaying.\nMrs. McDonald, who celebrated\nher 84th birthday this Spring, is\nstill active in Ladies' Aid work\nand is a regular church attendant.\nShe leads a quiet life in her housekeeping suite in Procter and does\nall her own work. For recreation\nshe reads, crochets, hooks rugs\nand sews. She enjoys a game of\ncards and likes to have friends\ndrop in for a chat and a .cup of\ntea.\nChurch Grouos\nHonor Mrs. Wensley\nNAKUSP \u2014 Mrs. M. Wensley.\nwho celebrated her 80th birthday\nrecently was guest of honor at a\nsurprise tea on the lawn at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Miller.\nThe tea was sponsored by members of the United Church Ladies*\nAuxiliary1 and the Missionary Society. Mrs. Wensley, a Nakusp\npioneer, is a member of both\ngroups.\nA beautifully decorated birthday cake centered the tea table.\nMrs. Woldum. president of the\nW.A., presented the honor guest\nwith a vase of roses. A number of\nother gifts and cards were presented.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 25,1953 \u2014 I\nPattern A555\nfy,Dorothy Korby\nPROMINENT DESIGNER\nDorothy Korby pictures fashion for summer '55\u2014a three-part\nstory In one smooth, continuous line! Made just for each other,\nthese \"dress look\" separates\u2014blpuse and skirt, a shining blue\nsateen; cummerbund, cinching the waist with a splash of raspberry hue, They're young, wearable\u2014not limited to any one occasion, for their lines are 'simple, easy flowing, ever flattering!\nDetails are few, and cleverly concentrated at the neckline\u2014In\na perky bow, unusual back dip with asymmetrical buttoning\n(Miss Korby frowns on froufrou when the style Itself Is so becoming)! Her own sewing choices for this pattern original\u2014tissue\npique, linen, sateen, or one of the pretty ginghams so popular\nthese summer evenings. You'll love the way you look! Pattern\nA555 Is available In Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16 and 18. Size 16\nblouse and skirt require 5'\/2 yards 35-Inch fabric; cummerbund,\n% yard contrast. Send FIFTY CENTS (In coins) plus three cents\ntax for Pattern A555 to N.D.N. Prominent Designer, Pattern Department, 60 Front St. W., Toronto. Ont. Please print plainly\nYOUR NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, STYLE NUMBER and\nSIZE.\nDistrict Interest in\nWinnipeg Wedding\nSUNSHINE BAY \u2014 Of interest\nin Salmo, Creston and Procter is\nthe marriage of the former Joan\nHodge and T. A. Hibberd in Winnipeg. The bride is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Sewell\nof Sunshine Bay and yearly spends\nher vacation with them and visits\nrelatives at surrounding points.\nHer parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nHodge of Vancouver attended the\nwedding and stopped at Sunshine\nBay on the return journey. Mr.\nHodge has gone home but Mrs.\nHodge and sons Bill and John will\nspend a month with Mr. and Mrs.\nSewell.\nMr. and Mrs. C. B. Sewell of\nVancouver were guests of Mr.\nSewell's parents at Sunshine Bay\nbefore taking a trip to Creston\nand Radium Hot Springs on which\nthey were accompanied by their\ndaughter Elizabeth and Mr. Sewell's niece, Ann Fletcher of Salmo.\nJanice Fletcher is holidaying with\nher grandparents at Sunshine Bay.\nLITE\nMATCHSTICK\nBAMBOO\nand\nROLL-UP DRAPES\ni\nSend or Phone Measurements\nFor Quotation.\nProcter People Take Courses at Victoria\nPROCTER \u2014 Mrs. N. C. MacLeod, secretary of the Procter and\nDistrict Recreation Commission, is\nattending leadership courses given\nby the Provincial Department of\nEducation in Victoria and is vlsit-\nIng   friends   there' in   her   spare\nmoments. Mrs. MacLeod lived in\nVictoria for the entirety of the\nwar while her husband served as\nan officer in the Navy.\nW. A. Henke Is taking the course\nIn square dancing along with his\nSummer school studies in connec-\nSMALLER UN\nBEACONSFIELD, England (CP)\n\u2014The year-old international elub\nin ' this Buckinghamshire town\nnow has 150 members, representing 17 nationalities,\ntion with his teaching duties.\nNEWER METHOD\nRadioactive cobalt is being used\nin experimenting in sterilizing\ncanned foods in Australia.\n! TOURISTS! :\nHere's    where    you    (fan    I\nfreshen    up    your    travel-   \u25a0\nI   creased olothes, \u25a0\n\\      5 HOJUR SERVICE       \u25a0\ni EMPIRE i\nI        DRY CLEANERS        \u25a0\n\u2022   321   Baker Phone 288   |\nL m aa as \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 m \u2022 'al\nCanvon Fete Held\nBv Former Trailites\nCANYON \u2014 The family of Mr.\nand Mrs. Andrew Dembicki, for.\nmerly of Trail, held a reunion in\nCanyon recently on the occasion\nof their 41st,wedding anniversary.\nMr. and Mrs. Dembicki have been\nliving in Canyon since their retirement in 1952.\nTheir entire family was present.\nThey are Walter and Joan and\nthree children of Trail, Steve and\nAnn and two children of Drum-\nmondville, Que., Mary and Jim\nRicker of North Bay, Ont., and\nHarry and Lillian and two children of Vancouver.\nCRAWFORD BAY\nTEACHER WEDS\nCRAWFORD BAY \u2014 A wedding\nof local interest took place in\nCoeur d'Alene, Idaho, before a\nJustice of the Peace when Mrs.\nHazel Brown of Crawford Bay\nbecame the bride of Euan C\nCameron of Nanaimo.\n. The bridegroom has been on the\nMrs. Norma Derome of Edmonton, a relative of the bride, attended the ceremony,\nteaching staff of the Crawford Bay\nschool  for  the past two years.\nThey will reside in Nanaimo.\nCOOIN CAREFREE       ,\nDouble Full\nCIRCLE\nSKIRTS\nThe skirt with yards! and\nyards! of billowy glazed cotton material. Large attractive floral and leaf patterns\nwith wide attached belt in\ncontrasting color. Sizes 12,\n14, 16. Colors black, light\nblue, green.\n10\n95\nSLEEVELESS COTTON BLOUSE\nAn assortment of plain whites with Peter Pan\ncollar and smart gingham checks with 1 IA\nnovelty white collar trim     I a I 7\nPEDAL PUSHERS\n\u2022 Cool, \u2022 Colorful, \u2022 Practical Pedal Pushers are\njust right for hot summer days. See our bright\narray of sailcloth, denim and poplins. Sizes 12 to\n18. Dark and light. \u00bbk QQ\npastel shades   a4i\/0\nDENIM SHORTS\nKeep cool with a pair  of  denim  shorts.  Smart,\ncuffed style in bright summer shades.\nSizes 12 to 18\t\n2.69\nCHECK YOUR\nCANNING\nNEEDS NOW!\n\u2022 LIBERTY\nYour Canning Headquarters\nfor Fruits in Season\nMONDAY\nTUESDAY\nWEDNESDAY\nJuly 25-27\nOakanagan Salad\n18 Ib. lug\nFinest Quality Pickling\nCUCUMBERS\nOkanogan's Finest\nBING CHERRIES u\n20 LB. LUG FOR CANNING:  __\nCalifornia Field\nTOMATOES l\u201e    _\nRASPBERRIES -*\nCUCUMBERS 15c lb.\n$249\n32c\n__ $5.95\n29'\n2Sc\nCrate of 24 Bslcts. $4.93\nSTRAWBERRIES *\u00bb    $4.95\nPEAK SEASON, BUY N0W!2 BASKETS 47c\nCOB CORNFine Fiav\u00b0r Dozen      98c\nFROZEN FOOD CONTAINERS\nContains: 25 cartons, 25 ties, 25 poly bags, 25 tags.\nPINTS   $1.29   QUARTS $1.69\nPARAWAX: Sealing Wax  Lb. 18c\nCERTO      Bottle 29e\nRUBBER RINGS: Sealtitefor Gem jars .... 2 pkgs. 19c\nWIDEMOUTH LIDS:  Kerr .... Doz. 29c\nSUGAR 25 Ibs. \u2014 $2.45     100 Ibs. \u2014 $9.45\nPLASTIC BAGS: For frozen foods 24 for 59c\nCOLD PAK CONTAINERS 7 quart size $3.65\nA*}\ntasty Minute\nSTEAKS\nHamburger'\nFRESH GROUND\nSOLO Margerine:  2 lbs. 59c\nGOOD LUCK Margerine:.. 2 Ibs. 71c\n BffWiWPWpjJftlUllJ^J.. .     \u25a0     .   j   U...-\"J l.J.i.,1. .    , i. ........... n \u2014\u2014-. 1     ..,,.    \u25a0,...   \"; yi,..w. \u25a0;\u25a0-\u25a0?.* p7 ,,,,-,'..-,!,., i^^Jp^^^i*,;,:..J\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 25,1955\nSHIP-TO-SHIP \u2014 TJ. g, N\u00bbvy Undersecretary Thomas\nB. Gates rides high-line back to Sixth Fleet flagship from a\nsupply vessel during \u00bb NATO exercise ln the Mediterranean,\nRESCUE   PLANE   IS   RESCUED \u2014 Damaged on an attempted mercy mission In the Mediterranean, this U. S. Air\nFore* amphibian rescue plane ls towed to Malta by Britain's H.M.8. Wakeful. The Tripoli-bated aircraft was sent to provide\nmedical aid for an 111 crewman aboard a merchant vessel but was damaged In a sea londus alongside the ship.\nQUEEN MEETS ROBOT \u2014 A robot shakes hands\nwith Holland's Queen Juliana at an exhibition marking the\n100th anniversary of Haarlemmermeer Folder, near Amsterdam.\nPRIVATE TUNNEY \u2014 Jonathan Tunney, rlrht, son\nof former boxing champion Gene Tunney. Is shown with 8gt\nBoy Prosit after Joining Marine Carps Reserve at Trenton, N. J.\nLEVEL   C ROSSI N C \u2014 Thelma Hopkins, competing for Queen's University, Belfast,\n\u00ablns womens high Jump in a London track meet with a leap of nvo feet, flvs inches.\nPLUMED BONN IT\n\u2014 Opera star Lily Pons tries\non French Republican Guards\nhelmet during \"thank you\"\nParty In Paris for her hospitality to Guards' band in C. 8.\n?.' Y* \u2022NUmiMINT- Amelita Galii-Curcl.\n85, who retired from opera In 19S0, Is shown with her husband\nond accompanist Homer Samuels, In their Santo Fe, N. M* home\n\u2022 ETTER   THAN   W A L K I N C - It will be horsepower msteadof fqotpower for these London \"Bobbles\" training\non new lightweight motorcycles in familiar toll helmets.\nTIES ONJO\u00bb-\nLatest rage In Paris Is the us*\nof men's cravats as hair ribbons. Beauty expert Fernand\nAubry thought of the Idea and\nmen may soon be tleless.\nPROMOTEDTO GENERAL \u2014 Venesuela's President, Col. Marcos Peres Jlmenei,\nright, receives sword from Defense Minister Col. Oscar\" Mnizel Carta as Arst General (n Army\nin 10 years. Promotion, voted by National Congress, made President Jimenes Brigadier General.\nM1DCET TAKES A B R I D E _ Emit Feist, slrcus\nmidget ln Cologne, Germany, is greeted by show's tall man.\nBimbo, after marrying smiling salesgirl Therese Eichstaetter.\nLESSON    IN   MOVING \u2014 Everything was going fine along JO-foot-wlde Anaheim Blvd.\nla Long Beach,-Cal\u201e until movers had to turn this 44-foot-wlde apartment Building Into a 40-foot-\nwlde street. Problem was solved by removing power wires and cutting two feet off eaves.\nSPAGHETTI   BRAIDS \u2014 Agottlna DIMIohelis, lta|-\nlon television starlet, models an unusual bonnet with long straw\nbraids during a visit to the Island of Capri.\nPAINT  TEST \u2014 Los Angeles Fire Department representatives view test ln which part of\nmodel house with fire-resistant paint Is unaffected while untreated part goes up in flames. Purpose of paint is to retard fire spreading to give occupants time to escape.\n ..\u25a0>;\u25a0>-,,      :     ..,.,.,.-.\u25a0\u25a0.      '  ! \u2014 \u2014 ';\u25a0'    \u25a0. \u25a0...\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\". --^- ,:\u25a0   \u25a0   \u25a0     \u25a0 . \u2014 \u2014    .    \u25a0\u2022\u25a0    .\"-\u2014-T-;\u2014---^--; .wypi^W\nSPORTS\nBorrowed Players\nAssist Priest River\nBears Edge Kokanees\nIn Boxla Thriller\nThe Nelson Kokanees lost a B-, Wallach with the Bears'serving 21\ngoal lead Saturday night as the minutes   on   nine   penalties.   The\nTrail Golden Bears fought back for j Kokanees had six.\na  14-13  lacrosse  win  before  280     All three goal tenders had a busy\nfans at the Civic Arena. | nlgnti Bears na(J 63 snots on goal\nAfter taking a 7-0 lead in the and ^g Kokanees 52.\nfirst quarter, the Kokanees scored'    <.\u201e__\u201e\u201e. .\n,. ,    ., j  .    ...       Summary:\nfive more ln  the second  to  the\nBears' three. From that point\" on!    First quarter-1, Nelson, McLean\nthe Kokanees' defence was non-. (Armstrong.   Choquette)    :21;   2,\nexistent   as   the   Bears  staged  a' N<\"s\u00b0n. McLean (Choquette) 2:40;\ncomeback.   They   tied   the   game!3'  Nels\u00b0n'  Ma5\"> 2|45: 4' Nelson,\nwith  less than three minutes to (Gallicano) 3:26; 5, Nelson, Mayoj^.^\nplay. The winning goal came one 15:16;   6,   Nelson,   McLean   (Cho-\nminute and 40 seconds from the V\u00bbf\u00ab6>  am-  \u25a0\u2022 Nelson^ Gallicano\nfinal whistle.\nHarold  Mayo was high scorer\nfor   the   night   with   five   goals\nwhile teammate Bruce. McLean\npicked up four as did Leduc of\nTrail.\nTrail used the services of two\nnet minders. Starter Pete Boisvert injured his knee early in the\nsecond quarter and had to be replaced. Butch Hulbert finished the\ngame and gave a great exhibition Powell,\nof ball blocking as the Kokanees\nwere held at bay throughout the  (Palone,   Secco)   1:55;\nlast half of the contest, ~      \" \"'\"- *B '\nBoth Mayo and McLean domhv\n5:16\n.09\n12:14.\nPenalties\u2014Hunter, Lyons.\nSecond quarter\u20148, Nelson. Mayo\n(Gallicano) 4:28; 9, Trail, Leduc\n6:40; 10, Trail, Stewart 7:13; 11.\nTrail, Robertson 8:45; 12, Nelson,\nJacobson 9:30; 13, Nelson, Mayo!\n11:51; 14. Nelson, McLean (Cho-'\nquette) 14:20; 15, Nelson, Kuhn'\n14:50.. \u25a0\nPenalties\u2014Freno, Palone 2, and\n!\nThe Nelson Outlaw* and Priept i\nRiver came up with two fine\nbaseball games Sunday before 300\nfans despite the fact the American club arrived short five of\ntheir regular players, including\ntheir entire pitching staff..\nThe shortage of players on the\nIdaho club was unavoidable. Several of the players were forced to\nfight forest firest in their district.\nI Early Sunday morning effort was\n| made to reinforce the squad, 1\n1 was not successful.\nWith several Outlaw players\nstrengthening their lineup Priest\nRiver captured the first game 5-4\nbut the Outlaws came back\ntake the second 7-3.\nWith the usual sportsmanship\nbetween the Outlaws and their\nexisting, Wendy Keller\nwent to the mound for Priest\nRiver in the first game and was\nup against Stan Grill of the Out\nlaws.\nKeller proved a tough customer\nfor his mates as he whiffed 10\nand yielded five hits. He walked\nfive. Grill came up with the best\nperformance for the losing Outlaws. He struck out 15 and gave\nup three hits. He also walked\nfive.\nIn the second game Win Storgard went' the distance for the\nAmericans while Ed Isackson and\nDenny Kraft did the chores for\nthe Outlaws.\nStorgard strove to silence his\nex-teammates' heavy bats but the\nAmerican boys tired behind him.\nThe Outlaws rallied to aid Isackson and Kraft in giving them a\nsplit of the double bill.\nJim McNabb ended the game\non a thrilling note when he lofted\none of Storgard's pitches over the\nfence for a home run. Other extra base hits went to Isackson,\nJohn Cone and Sam Siminoff.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nSUNDAY\nNATIONAL LEAGUI\nFirst;\nChicago   000 30J 000\u2014 \u00ab   9   !\nPittsburgh    026 202 00x-12 19   0\nRush, Hillman  (3)  Tremel  (4)\nand Ctritc; Hall and Atwell. L\u2014\nRush.   HR: Chi-Fondy.\nSecond:\nChicago  ... 020 000 000 0\u20142   4   1\nPittsburgh   002 000 000 1\u20143   7   1\nJones, Pollet (10), Jeffcoat (10),\nand McCullough; Law and Atwell.\nL\u2014Jones,   HR: Chi\u2014Jackson.\nFirst*\nSt. Louis   000 202 010\u20145 11   2\nPhiladelphia   105 000 OOx-8   B\nSilverberg Captures\nSaskatchewan Title\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 25,1955\u2014 7\nPassmore Takes Flag\nOn 11th Straight Win\nated the game in the first quarter j 20, Trail,  Powell\n17,   Trail,\nPowell 5:47; 18, Trail, Powell (Palone)  6:35;  19, Trail, Lyons J6:49;,\n10;  21,  Trail,\n. |.   Stan\n-^oa^^ S ^rC^allicano, Preno, and\nthey   again   led   the   Kokanees, i Ford,\nnotching three of tive counters.\nBEARS RALLY\nFrom that point on it_ was all, \u2014\u2014\"\u25a0 ~^M_ (Robt,rtson) o:io\nPRINCE ALBERT (CP)\u2014Doug\n5ilverberg of Red Deer, Alta.,\nwon the Saskatchewan amateur\ngolf championship Sunday by defeating Charlie Bodziak of Prince\nAlbert   two   up   ln   the   36-hole\nTrail   as   the   fans   watched\ni    Fourth quarter\u201422, Trail, Rob-\njertson (Ford)  1:26; 23, Trail, Le-\njduc 7:00; 24, Nelson, Mason 7:45;\nthe! 25, Trail, Leduc, (Robertson) 9:\n129,\nKokanees fade away                        | Koberteon 13:20.\nIn all 33 minutes of penalties,\"   _   s\nTrail, Palone 12:40; 27, Trail,\nPenalties\n\u2014 \u2014 .        ,\u201e\u201e\u201e- mm-vI    penalties \u2014 Armstrong,\nwere dished out by ref\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\"\u00ab\u00a3 I stewart, Sec\u00ab, Leduc, Palone.\nHome   and   \"'Hofi   M   m8y\nKuhn,\njudge   of   play\nQUEBECKER SWIMS\nLAKE ST. JOHN\nROBERVAL, Que. (CP) \u2014 Quebec city distance-swimmer Jacques\nAmyot battled for 11 hours and 48\nminutes Saturday through storm-,\ntossed Lake St. John to become the'\nfirst person ever to swim across\nthe 21-mile stretch of northern\nQuebec water.\nAmyot was the only swimmer\nof five who Btarte'd to complete the\nfirst attempt ever made on the\nlake. He took to the water at 5:15\na.m. at Peribonka and swam\nashore at Roberval. still comparatively fresh, at 5:03 p.m.\nSocial Outcast\nWins $110,500\nINGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)\u2014 Alfred G. Vanderbilt's five-year-old\nSocial Outcast came from far\nback to win the $110,500 Sunset\nhandicap Saturday at Hollywood\nPark.\nJockey Eruc Guerin held off the\nKing ranch's Rejected in the\nstretch as the track record was\nbroken for the 1%-mile race. The\ntime was 2:40.6, a fifth of a second\nunder the track mark set ln 1946\nby Woorford farm's Historian,\nTRABERT BEATS\nSEIXAS TO TITLE\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) -Tony\nTrabert swarmed all over Davia\nCup teammate Vic Seixas Sunday\nto win the 56th Pennsylvania lawn\ntennis men's singles*championship,\n6-1, 6-2, 6-3.\nLeonard of Vancouver\nwon the Saskatchewan professional title with a 72-hole score\nof 269, 19 under par.\nLeonard also won the Saskatchewan Open with his Sunday\nrounds of 68 and 64 for a 36-hole\nscore of 132. His prize money\ntotalled $700.\nSilverberg, member of Alberta's\nWillingdon Cup team and former\nCanadian amateur champion, was\nthe first person from outside the\nprovince to win the Saskatchewan\namateur crown since competition\nstarted in  1906.\nLeonard carded a seven-under-\npar 64 on the final 18 holes, a\ncourse record. He and Canadian\nopen champion Pat Fletcher of\nSaskatoon shot 67 earlier in the\ntouwiament, a record which didn't\nstand long.\nMARTELL SECOND\nSecond in the professional tour\nnament was Henry Martell of Ed\nmonton with a 12-under-pat- 276\nfor the1 72 holes including a five-]\nunder-par 66 Sunday afternoon.\nFletcher had a 72-hole score of\n2V7 for third money. Harold Eids-\nvig of Winnipeg was fourth in\nthe professional with 284, Frank\nWilley of Edmonton registered\n289 and Danny Stack of Winnipeg\n290.\nIn the open event, Fletcher and\nEidsvig wera tied with 361 hole\nscores of 138.   Martell had 140.\nHomeniuk won the Saskatchewan junior title Saturday and\nwill represent the province in the\nCanadian amateur competition in\nCalgary at the end of the week.\nHis place on the Willingdon Cup\nteam will be taken by alternate\nDel Wilson of Regina.\nSecond low amateur was Silverberg with a 36-hole score of\n142.   Bodziak was third with 145.\nFor 17-year-old Homeniuk, Saturday's victory was the second\nstraight. He carded 142, the last\nround being a one-under-par 70.\nRunner-up was Bob Kennedy of\nMoose Jaw with 76 and 71.\nWilf's 15-year-old brother, Stan,\nput together roundf of 78 and 75\nfor the Saskatchewan juvenile\ntitle. Runner-up was Clayton\nRobb of Saskatoon with 157.\nGavilan Captures\nTen-Rounder\nBUENOS AIRES (AP) - Kid\nGavilan, former world's welter\nweight champion, outpointed Cir-\nilo Gil of the Argentine in a 10-\nround ftght Saturday. Gavilan\nweighed 143-yfc pounds, Gil 145.\nHelioscope Wins\nOver High Gun\nMONMOUTH PARK. N.J. (AP)\n\u2014William G. Helis Jr.'s Helioscope, in front all the way, beat\nKing ranch's High Gun by 1%\nlengths Saturday in the $13,530\nMonmouth handicap at Monmouth\nPark. Punkin Vine was third.\nWhite Sox Down, Yanks\nBack on Top of League\nFor Beautiful\nExteriors\nBy The Canadian Preu\nHalting a downhill slide that\nthreatened to knock them out of\nthe first division, New York Yankees Sunday came through with a\n7-3 and 2-0 doubleheader sweep\nNew York\u2014divided doubleheadersl\nto leave the runaway Dodgers still\n13 Vfe games in front of the Braves\nand 15 ahead of the Giants.\nThe Dodgers saved Don Newcombe (16-1) from almost certain\nover Kansas City to regain first I defeat coming from behind to de-\nplace from Chicago White Sox in j reat the Braves 9-7 In the first\nthe   American   League   pennant | game    but   Milwaukee   bounced\nclimaxed the spree. It was\nninth inning double by Mantle\nand Berra's home run that ended\na scoreless pitching duel between\nKucks and Arnie Portocarrero in\nthe nightcap.\nChico Carrasquel's three - run\nhomer off George Susce wai all\nPierce needed to win the opener\nBURNS\nLUMBER\n602 Bokor St.    Phone 1180\nRECREATION GROUND\nSCHEDULE\nJuly 25-31, 1955\nSoftball Diamond\nMONDAY:\n5:00- 8:15\u2014 Sr. Ladies' Softball.\n6:15- 7:30\u2014Babe Ruth Baseball\nTUESDAY:\n6:00- \u25ba-Sr. Men's Softball.\nWEDNESDAY:\n6:00- 8:00\u2014Sr. Men's Softball.\nTHURSDAY:\n5:00- 6:15\u2014Nelson Cricket Club.\n6:15- 1:30\u2014 Sr. Ladies' Softball.\nFRIDAY:\n6:00- \u2014Sr. Men's Softball.\nSATURDAY:\n2:00-       \u2014Nelson Cricket Club.\nBaseball Diamond\nMONDAY:\n6:15- 7:30\u2014Maple Leaf\nBaseball Club.\nTUESDAY:\n6:00- 7:30\u2014Outlaw   Baseball\nClub.\nWEDNESDAY:\n5:00- 7:30\u2014Maple Leaf\nBaseball Club.\nTHURSDAY:\n6:00- 7:30\u2014Outlaw  Baseball\nClub.\nFRIDAY:\n5:00- 6:15\u2014Babe  Ruth  Baseball.\n6:15- 7:30\u2014Senior Men's\nSoftball League.\nSATURDAY:\n2:00-       -Nelson Cricket Club.\nSUNDAY:\n2:00- 5:00\u2014Maple Leaf\nBaseball Club.\nCleveland Indians also planted\nboth feet firmly into fine pannant\npicture,   knocking   off   Baltimore\nback to thrash the Brooks 9-2 in|for   Chicago.    Sammy   White's\neighth inning single scored Jackie\nJensen with the tie-breaking run\nin   the   second   to   give   Willard\ntriumph over Connie\nthe nightcap.\nThe Giants whipped Cincinnati\n14-1 after the Reds had ended a\ntwice 5-1  and 5-2 to advance to seven losing streak witn a;Nlxon the\nwithin one game of the top and:64 Jirst game victory> I Johnson.\ntwo percentage points of second-] . _ , ,,    I    .r,\u201eu   \u201e ,, , ,      ,   ,,\nplace Chicago White Sox. !    Philadelphia's onsurging Phillies [    Bob  Feller  registered  the   2 5,\nThe Sox. who led the Yankees \">\u00b0k St ^ Cardlnalt '\u00bb camP   \u2122'\u00b0ry \u00b0f h'S C\"\"       \" '\nt,\u201ei\u201e\u00ab *_-. and 3-0 for their 14th | Wynn won his 12th of the season\nJackson, Woooldrlge (3), Smith\n(5), Lapalme (7) and Burbrink,\nSarni (4); Simmons. Meyer (7)\nand Seminick. W\u2014Simmons. L-\nJackson. HRs: StL \u2014Repulski\nPha\u2014Morgan.\nSecond:\nSt. Louis   000 000\u20140   3   0\nPhiladelphia     300 000\u20148   7   0\nCalled end of 6th. rain.\nPholsky, Schmidt (6) and Sarni; Rogovin   and   Seminick.   L\u2014-\nPoholsky.  HR: Pha\u2014Ennie.\nFirst:\nMilwaukee .. 132 000 010-7 16 1\nBrooklyn ... 110 007 OOx\u20140 8 0\nBurdette, Jolly '(\u00ab), Buhl (8)\nand Crandall: Newcombe, Bessent (3), Erskine (8) and Campanella. W \u2014 Bessent; - L \u2014Jolly.\nHRs: Mil \u2014O'Connell, Bruton;\nBkn\u2014Snider, Hodges.\nSecond:\nMilwaukee  .. 001 040 022\u20149 13   0\nBrooklyn   200 000 000\u20142   4\nCrone and Rice; Labine, Craig\n(5), Roebuck (8), Koufax (9) and\nWalker,  Howell   (6).   L\u2014Labine.\nHR: Mil\u2014Aaron.\nFirst:\nCincinnati .... 104 000 010\u20146 13 1\nNew York .... 000 201 100-4 6 2\nFowler, Black (9) and Burgess;\nGomez, Giel (3), Wilhelm (8),\nMcCall (8), Monzant (9) and Katt,\nHofman (8). W\u2014Fowler; L\u2014Gomez, HRs: Cin\u2014Kluszewski, Post,\nSmith; NY\u2014Dark.\nSecond:\nCincinnati .. 000 000 100\u20141   7   1\nNew York .  001 000 12x\u20144   9   0\nCollum,   Staley    (8),   freeman\n(8)   and   Bates;   Antonelli   and\nKatt. L\u2014Collum.  HRs: NY-Hol-\nman, Mays.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nFirst:\nWashington .. 000 001 002\u20143 10   1\nDetroit     100 202 02x-7 12   0\nRamos, Chakales (7) and Courtney; Bunning, Birrer (9) and\nHouse. W\u2014Banning; L\u2014Ramos.\nHRs: Det\u2014Kaline, Torgeson, Del\nsing.\nSecond:\nWashington . 200 001 000\u20143 10   1\nDetroit    000 000 000\u20140   7   1\nAbernathy and Courtney; Lary.\nCristante   (7),  Coleman   (9)   and\nWilson.   L\u2014 Lary.\nFirst:\nBaltimore .... 000 001 000\u20141 6 1\nCleveland .... 100 030 Olr\u20145 7 0\nMcDonald, Shallock (1), Uver-\nink (7) and Triandos; Feller, Narleskl (7) and Naragon. W\u2014Fell-\nL\u2014McDonald. HR: Cle\u2014\nRoien.\nSecond:\nBaltimore .... 000 101 000\u20142 12 1\nCleveland .... 211 000 lOx\u20145 10 1\nPalica, Johnson (5), Brown (6),\nDorish (8)' and Triandos: Wynn,\nNarleski (9), Mossi (9) and Hegan. W\u2014Wynn; L\u2014Palica.\nFirst:\nNew York \u25a0 . 001 600 000\u20147 10 0\nKansas City 002 000 010\u20143 9 1\nFord, Konstanty (8) and Berra;\nDitmar, Harrington (4) and Astroth. W\u2014Ford; L\u2014Ditmar. HRs:\nNY \u2014Kowron; KC \u2014 Renna, Zer\nnial.\nSecond:\nNew York .000 000 002\u20142 6 0\nKansas City 000 000 000\u20140 6 1\nKucks and Berra; Portocarrero,\nGorman (9) and W. Shantz. L\u2014\nPortocarrero. HR: NY\u2014Berra.\nBoston     000 000 000\u20140 7 0\nPassmore nine blasted their\nway to their 11th straight victory\nand the Nelson and District Fastball League pennant ln a home\ngame with the Riondel Giants\nSunday afternoon. Passmore produced 17 hits to wallop the Giants\n16-2 for their 17th win ln 19 contests.\nAftei coming a close second to\nthe Nelson Humes for the past\ntwo seasons, the jubilant Pass\nmore crew finally took home\ntheir first league title. It is now\nimpossible for the second-place\nHumes to capture first place even\nif Passmore should lose their remaining three games and the\nHumes win all theirs-.\nThe Passmore nine bunched ten\nof their hits within the first three\nframes to quickly gain a 10-0 lead\nwhich was stretched to 12-0 by\n.the end of the seventh inning.\nIn the eighth Riondel counted\ntheir only two runs while Pass-\nmore scored four more to com\nplete the scoring. Jack Volkin\nand BUI Osachoff each blasted a\none-run homer for Passmore in\nthe fourth and fifth innings respectively. These two were the\ntop hitters of the game with Osachoff hitting a phenomenal four\nfor five and Voikln hitting two\nfor two. Len Bay of Riondel came\nup with the best average for the\nvisitors when he hit two singles\nand a double in four times at bat.\nBill Konkin, Passmore's ace pitcher was the winning chucker, striking out nine and giving up eight\nhits and two walks.\nMcGregor and Bishop shared\npitching chores for the Giants.\nHumorous situation occurred\nbefore the start of the game\nwhen the Giants generously presented Passmore with a beautiful\npitcher's box on which the word\nRiondel was spelled out in nails\nIt is thought that the purpose of\nthis admirable gesture was to\ncement a warm sportsmanlike\nfriendship between the two clubs.\nBRAZILIAN BEATS\nMIGHTY HOAD\nLOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)\u2014LItUe\nRonald Morelra of Brazil Sunday\ndefeated Australia's Lew Hoad in\na major tennis surprise, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4\nin their North American zona\nDavis Cup competition.\nThe singles victory was meaningless, however, since Australia\nclinched the semi-final round Saturday by winning the doubles for\na 3-0 lead.\nHoad and Rex Hartwig took Just\n55 minutes to defeat Moreira and\nBob FalkenEurg 6-2, 6-4, 6-1 and\nwon a berth ln the zone final with\nCanada.\nIn Sunday's second singles match\nKen Rosewall of Australia defeated Falkenburg 6-2, 6-2, 6-3.\nAustralia thus took the playoff by\na 4-1 edge.\nTie,\nCanada Sweeps Cup * **,,\nNow On to Zone Finals\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn       66   31   .680 \u2014\nMilwaukee     52   44   .542 13ty\nNew York     51   46   .526 15\nPhiladelphia   ..   51   49   .510 lev,\nChicago     46   52   .469 20V4\nSt. Louis     43   50   .462 21\nCincinnati       41   54   .432 24\nPittsburgh   ..       37   61   .378 29V4\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew York       59   37   .615\nChicago       57   37   .606\nCleveland     58   38   .604\nBoston        55    41    .573\nDetroit       50   43   .538\nKansas City ... 38 57 .400\nWashington .... 38 57 .400\nBaltimore .... 28   64   .304\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nBy The Associated Press\nW.   L.   Pet.   GB\nSeattle   69   46   .600   \t\nSan Diego   65   50   .555\nHollywood    60    54    .526\nPortland   55   53   .509\nLos Angeles .... 57 59 .491\nSan Francisco .. 51   68   .447\nSacramento   50   65   .435\nOakland          49   66   .426\nSan Diego 7-0, Seattle 8-2.\nSacramento 5-0, Portland 3-3\nOakland 5-2, Hollywood 8-7.\nLos Angeles 3-1, San Francisco\n2-3.\n1\n1\n4\nVA\n20 >i\n20 'A\n29\n4\n&Vt\nWA\n12M,\nWA\n19\n20\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Canada\nmade a clean sweep Sunday of its\nsecond-round Davis Cup tl\n-.gainst British West Indies as Don\nFontana, Toronto, downed Peter\nPhillips of Gingston, Jamaica, in\nstraight sets, 6-0, 6-3, 6-3.\nIn the first match Sunday \u2014 the\nclosest of the five-match tie \u2014\nLorne Main of Toronto and Van\ncouver edged playing captain Ian\nMcDonald of the British West Indies 6-2, 4-1, 7-5, 2-6, 6-4.\nAttendance was estimated at 400.\nThe weather was clear and sunny\nwith  a light westerly breeze.\nThe Canadian squad now will\nmeet Australia in the North\nAmerican zone finals starting at\nwestend Mount Royal courts here\nnext Friday.\nBob Bedard of Sherbrooke, Que.,\nand Fontana downed McDonald\nand Frank Mott-Trille Saturday\n12-10, 6-3, 2-6, 6-4, in the doubles\nmatch to make sure of winning\nthe series.\nMiddlecoff to\nPGA Semi-Finals\nDETROIT (AP) - Cary Middlecoff, golf's greatest winner in\nprize money and prestige this\nseason, staged an almost incredible comeback Sunday to keep his\nwinning streak intact by beating\nJackie Burke on the 40th hole to\nenter the semi-finals of the U. S.\nPGA championship.\nBurke shot a flashy five-under-\npar 68 for the morning round\nover the comfortable Meadow-\nbrook course to gain what seejned\nto be *n unbeatable lead. But he\nskied to 73 in the afternoon while\nMiddlecoff shot a 68 to catch him\nwith birdies on the last two holes.\nThen after three sudden-death\nholes were halved in pars, Burke\nmessed up the fourth\u2014one of the\ntoughest on the course\u2014and took\na two-over-par 6 while Middlecoff\nwon out with a par four,\nMiddlecoff's victory earned him\n| a semi-final meeting today with\nTexan  Tommy   Bolt.\nWinner over Sam Snead and\nopen champion Jack Fleck, Bolt\ncrushed former open titleholder\nLew Worsham by an 8 and 7 margin.\nIn the other half of the 36-hole\nsemi-final draw, Shelley I^ayfleld\nwill meet swarthy Doug Ford, tha\ntournament's medallist and hottest\nputter.\nChicago       000 004 OOx\u20144 8\nSusce, Henry (7) and White; \\\nPierce and Moss. L\u2014 Susce. HR:\nChi \u2014 Carrasquel.\nBoston     100 000 010\u2014S   5 0\nChicago       010 000 000^1 10 1\nNixon, Parnell  (9>  and White;\nJohnson and Moss. W\u2014Nixon.\nSATURDAY\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nMilwaukee 11, Brooklyn 6.\nSt. Louis 2, Philadelphia 7.\nCincinnati Q, New York 2.\nChicago 2, Pittsburgh  10.\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nBaltimore 2, Cleveland 3.\nWashington 4, Detroit 10.\nSecond   game   ppd,   rain\nscore tied 4-4 in fourth.\nBoston 9. Chicago 7.\nNew York 7, Kansas City 8.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSacramento S, Portland 7.\nLos Angeles 9. San Francisco\nOakland 3, Hollywood 5.\nSan Diego 1, Seattle 5.\nSwoon's Son\nWins Handily\nCHICAGO   CHICAGO\nCHICAGO (AP) \u2014 Speedy\nSwoon's Son, the 8-to-5 favorite,\neasily won Arlington futurity Saturday by three lengths at Arlington Park.\nSwoon's Son impressively took\ncontrol of the six-furlong event\nfor two-year-olds and won $88,140\nI for his owner, E. Gay Drake of\nI Lexington, Ky.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\niRIENDLY\nlAMILY\nINANCE\nF\nPersonal Loans\nFor Bills, Fuel, Repairs. Care,\nor any good reason.\nMOUNTAIN    ,\nFINANCE CO. Ltd.\nSuite 212, Medical Arta Bldg.\nPHONE 1786\nTHERE'S A GREAT FUTURE IN AVIATION'.\nwith\nby  three\nheld  to\ni twice 6-\npoints   Saturday   were,^ ^ ^^ m th( ,ast 16'        the   ,ndian5   extended   their\na  split  by  fourth-place, ^ double wm moved the  winning streak to five\ntnA      Cnv       iifVin     Toll      frillr I a ' ..     i_ij.     t_i_     imu     i :.\nPhils to within a game and a half I hit his  12th  homer\nAl Rosen\nthe first\nBoston   Red   Sox.  who  fell  four\nlengths behind the Yankees. Bos-;*\"'*\" \u2014 ; - ----- . ......\nton struck back with a 2-1 victory i \u00b0(  the  th-rd-plac.  Giant*. Pitts-j game and drove in two runs in\nafter Billy Pierce had pitched the ' burSh's last Place Plrates drubbcd I lheA second'\n4-0 first  \"\u2014\"\u2022  *he   facl'nS   Chicago   Cubs   twice!    A   seven-run\nFord\nWhite   Sox  to  a  4-0 first  game\ntriumph 112\"5 ant\" 2\"* *or a sweeP \u00b0* \",e\nDETROIT STILL IN |four-game series.\nDetroit's fifth place Tigers, still: FORD GAINS 11TH\nin the running, dropped 7V4 games' Fine hurling by Whitey\nbehind when they were held to a! and rookie Johnny Kucks and\nsplit by Washington. After pound- j timely hitting by Mickey Mantle\nand Yogi Berra combined to end\nthe Yankees' losing ways. Ford\ngained his 11th victory in the\nopener when the Yankees explod-\nThe National League picture re-' ed for six runs in the fourth\nmained unchanged as the top three j against Art Ditmar. Mantle's two-\nteams\u2014Brooklyn, ~ ~      \"      '    '\ning out a 7-3 victory, the Bengals\nwere shut out 3-0 by Washington\nrookie Ted Abermathy in the\nnight-cap\nMilwaukee and i run   triple   and   Berra's   single,\n'Pcm-\u00a3 (>\u20ac i\/iw-ki.. dew\nffiV\nSCOTCH   WHISKY\ni Rc\nTHE   OLDEST   NAME   IN   iCOTCH-\nrAMOUS   FOR   OVER   300    rEARS\nThis advertisement It not published or displayed by the\nUauor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nsixth won the\nopener for the Dodgers. Duke\nSnider got his 34th homer and his\n100th run batted in. Henry Aaron\ndrove in four runs with a triple\nand his 22nd home run in the\nnightoap for the Braves.\nDECIDING   HOMERS     '\nHomers also decided the Reds-\nGiants twin bill. Wally Post hit\nhis 25th with two men on base to\nprovide Cincinnati with the win\nning runs in the first game.\nHomers by Bobby Hofman and\nWillie Mays (No. 30) snapped a\n1-1 tie in the second for Johnny\nAntonelli's eighth win..\n.Saul Rogovin, the American\nLeague castoff, ran his scoreless\nstring to 15 innings as the Phils\nwon two from St. Louis. Rain\nhalted the second game after six\nInnings. Del Ennis drove ln all\nthree Philadelphia runs in the\nsecond with his fourth home run\nin two days. Roy Smalley batted\nin three runs in the opener for\nthe winners.\nDick Hall, former infielder-ovit-\nfielder, making his first start for\nPittsburgh, s^uck out 11 as he\nturned in his first Major League\nwin ln the opener. Frank Thomas\nsingled home Jerry Lynch with a\nsingle in the 10th to win the\nnightcap.\nDUROCHER'S MOTHER\nDIES, AGED 78\nCHICOPEE, Mass. (AP)\u2014Mrs.\nClarinda Durocher, 78, mother of\nNew York Giants manager Leo\nDurocher, died at nursing home\nSunday after a long (lines.\nUnited Tips All-Stars; Ewaniuk\nScores Three in 3-1 Victory\nFERNIE \u2014 Femie United de-1 across the field pass from Steve\nfeated the Crows Nest Pass foot- j Servello.\nball league All-Stars 3-1 in Fernie\nSunday afternoon with Johnny\nEwanuick, Fernie's classy centre\nforward notching all Jhrea goals.\nMike Lieshout counted the lone\nAll-Star goal.\nEwanuick notched the only goal\nof the first half at the five minute\nmark on the United's first attack\non the All-Star goal. Five minutes\nlater Bill Whalley, Fernie goalkeeper made a spectacular save oi\nSteve Mezei's panalty shot.\nThe All-Stars domination play\nthroughout the first half, but were\nunable to net the ball. Ewanuick\nput Fernie two up five minutes af\nter the teams changed ends. Four\nminutes later Lieshout took advantage of Fernie's careless defense play and scored the All-Stars\nonly goal.\nTheo Lawmann, Fernie outside\nright was banished from the game\nleaving the United to play the\nfinal 39 minutes short handed. In\nspite of this the United pressed\ncontinually . and had complete\ncharge of play to the end of the\ncontest.\nEwanuick  got his hat trick  at\nI     15 minute mark of the second\nhalf,  heading   in  the   ball\nEYE OPERATION\nFOR BOBBY AVILA\nCLEVELAND (AP)\u2014Bob Avila\nCleveland Indians second baseman,\nunderwent a successful operation\nfor removal of a growth on his\neye Saturday.\nDr.** Don Kelly, team physician,\nreported Avila will be ready to\nplay Tuesday.\nCOMING OF AGE\nCROYDEN, England (CP) \u2014\nResidents of this Surrey town who\nere 21 this year are invited to a\ncivic reception and dance in October, organized by the .National\nAssociation of Local Government\nOffices.\nMETALWORKERS\nThe  Finnish   metalworking in\ndutsry now accounts   for   more\nthan 13 per cent of Finland's to-\nfrom tal exports.\nmrnmm\nIUCTRONIC\nINSTRUMENT\nAERONAUTICAL\nRADIO \u2022 RADAR\nAIRFRAME\nARMAMENT\nGet into a progressive field! Make aviation in the\nRCAF your career!\nIn the RCAF you get top aviation training \u2014 on\nthe latest equipment using up to date methods.\nYou become a specialist in the expanding aviation\nfield.\nThere's permanent employment, good pay, pension.\nmedical care and other benefits. Food, clothing and\nlodging are provided.\nNew courses art starting: get full information newt\nSee the RCAF Career Counsellor at\nR.C.A.F, Recruiting Unit, 422 7th 8t, South,\nLethbridge, Alta., Phone 6145\nTRAVEL AHEAD - WITH THf RCAF\n TU-yam-f-pw\npnpi\nmmmm\n\u2014 \u2014-T\u2014\n , , ,\t\nS \u00ab- NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 25, 1953\n1*\nVoF^-U\u2014\nL\nA\nB\nJ&sr\/fc\n>l\u00abPBRFecr\/|\nNt\n,-,\nOS.   V,\n*\\S.SuiisB\u00bb\u201ett*sc( \\\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nS\nsE\nC\nR\nIe\niT\n\\     Bowl\n1\n1 \"nes   1\nI\n\\ 00 c*> 1\n>\n\/&a &*\nr 4\/\ni\nJekva wl\n1\n 1\nPROFESSOR KRINSLE, IF\nWU\/WS IN DOUBT AS TO\n10UR LOVALTV W THE UNITED\n\u2666TATE9. 1 WIU HAV6 TO\nPLAC6 VOU UNDER CONDITIONAL\nARREST, FOR TREASON!\n\"usiness Sootliqht. . .\nToronto Market Confident as\n\u2022   By PATRICK  FELLOWS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nPrices of industrial issues edged\nforward cautiously but persistently on the Toronto stock market\nlast week. The advance generally\nnarslleled a forward movem\u00b0nt\nin New York, but whereas the\nlattpr showed, some early-week\nhesitancy ovpr the outcome of the\nGeneva conference, Toronto1 dls-\nnlaved contidence throughout.\nToronto, however, showed indecision over uraniums, which spent\nthe week in see-saw fashion.\nThe indexes for both industrials\nand base metals dosed the week\nat record neaks. The industrial5:\nadvanced 7.14 and the base metals\n3.34.\nGolds moved up more cautiously\nwith an Index gain of .11 while\nwestern oils had a mixed appearance for most oMhe week.\nPaoers and financial institutions\nled the move ahead in the industrial group.\nStocks to show improvement nf\ntwo points or better included B.C.\nPower.\nLEAD OILS\nBest gains in the western oils\nwent to Mid-Westem Gas, North\nCanadian, Dome Explorations\nWest, Calvan, Peruvian and Canso\nCanadian Atlantic dropped 65 to\n$6.40.\nWeekly index changes at Toronto: Industrials up 7.14 to 426 70\n(\"new high), golds up .11 to 85.05.\nbase metals up 3.34 to 204.32 (new\nhigh) and western oils down 1.90\nto 113.55.\nWeek's volume: 27,306,000, compared with previous week's 29,\n085.000.\nThe New York market began\nthe week with a note of uncertainty reflecting doubts about the\noutcome of the Geneva conference. Steels and aircrafts were\nmostly hit by early selling brought\non by a \"mild peace scare\" over\nGeneva. The market rallied in\nmid-week    and    ended    at    near\nrecord heights.'\nThe Associated Press average of\nI stocks was up $1.70 cents, big\ngest rise in four months, and\nclosed at $170.30, only a dime off\nthe record set two weeks ago\nMontreal generally followed the\ntrend at' Toronto with industrials\nholding chief sway in a general\nadvance.\ntheck Artists\nleading Weif\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Police\nhere said they have been notified\nthat four men are working their\nway to Vancouver from Winnipeg\ncashing forged certified cheques\non their way.\nBelieved to be driving a car\nbearing Ontario licence plate 856\u2014\n364, the foursome is said to be\ncashing cheques on forms of the\nCrown Trust Co., made out in favor of \"B. K. Williams\" or \"K.\nWilliams.\"\nPolice said the four men arleady\nhave duped several eastern merchants.\nVANCOUVER SUFFERS\nAt the same time, cheque detail detectives reported that passing of worthless cheques in Vancouver had reached' the highest\npeak of any year and was probably costing citizens more than all\nother crimes combined.\nDet. Bill Barkley, head of the\ndetail, said annual loss to city\nbusiness firms and citizens from\nbad cheques averages about $500,-\n000. He said the figure would\nlikely be exceeded this year.\nMost of 300 to 400 worthless\ncheques handled by police every\nmonth were forgeries, said Det.\nBarkley, who estimated as many\nmore were cashed but not reported to police.\nIiarlie Chase\n^med Among\nWanted Men\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 While\nsearch continued for an alleged\nkingpin in Montreal gambling,\npolice disclosed they have issued\nwarrants for the arrest of five\nother men, including Charlie\nChase, 24, of Montreal, Canadian\nmiddleweight boxmg champion.\nChase, member of Canada's box\ning team at the 1948 Olympic\ngames, and the four other men\nwere wanted for mid-week attacks\non the Ail-American and Mont-\nmare night clubs.\nBesides Chase, police said they\nare seeking Joseph Chambers, 30,\nStudent Held For\nDeath of Child\nBERKELEY, Calif, (AP)\u2014Burton W. Abbott' waa formally\ncharged with the murder of\nStephanie Bryan last week. The\n27-year-old University of California accounting student was returned to his Berkeley City jail\ncell after a brief preliminary\nhearing. Stephanie, a 14-year-old\nBerkeley high school girl, disappeared April 26. Her decomposed body was found in a shallow\ngrave near Abbott's family cabfn,\n200 miles north of here.\nfound'no trace of Frank Pretula,\ndescribed by them as a well-known\ngambler.\nA warrant was issued last week\nfor his arrest ln connection with\nthe outbreaks of violence in four\nMontreal nightclubs. Police described tHe outbreaks as the result\nRonald (Tommy) Jones 27, George of a war between rival gambling\nDemond, 29, and Lionel Deare, 34. groups and have named Pretula as\nMeantime, police said they have (the head of one of the groups.\nTail Waqqers Seek\nTroughs For Dogs\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Those dog\ndays* in Vancouver may be a little\n!ess severe this summer.\nThe Tail Waggers, an organization dedicated to befriending\nman's best friend, has asked Vancouver citizens to set out drinking\nwater in accessible spots while the\nhot weather lasts.\nA member of the Tail Waggers,\nStan Trent, says gasoline stations\nin most U.S. cities perform this\nservice but the practice Is new to\nVancouver.\nlively\nflavour\nperks you up when things\nget you down!\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY TV   -  Channel 4\n45\u2014Sign On\n15\u2014Secret Storm\n30\u2014House Party\n00\u2014Big Payoff\n30\u2014Bob Crosby\n45\u2014Bob Crosby\n00\u2014Welcome Traveler\n30\u2014TBA\n45\u2014Musical  Interlude\n00\u2014On Your Account\n30\u2014Valiant Lady\n45\u2014Brighter Day\n:00\u2014Variety Hour\n30\u2014Search  for Tomorrow\nGuiding Light\n00\u2014Love of Life\n: 15\u2014TBA\n30\u2014Gary Moore\n:00\u2014What's Cooking\n30\u2014Strike It Rich\n:00\u2014Rick Meyers Show\n:30\u2014 Doug  Edwards\n:45\u2014Sports on Parade\n:00\u2014Superman\n: 15\u2014News\n:25\u2014 Weather  Vane\n:30\u2014Western  Roundup\n:00\u2014Burns and Allen\n:30\u2014Godfrey's Talent Scouts\n:00\u2014Those Whiting Girls\n:30\u2014Ethel St Albert\n:00\u2014Westinghouse Summer\nTheatre\n00\u2014The Unexpected\n30\u2014Mr. and Mrs; Music\n45-TBA     ,\n:00\u2014Saleco News\n:05\u2014Boston Blackie\n.35\u2014Front Page Detective\nKHQ-TV - Channel \u00ab\n'9:25\u2014Test Pattern\n9:40\u2014Color Test Program\n9:55\u2014Bible Reading\n10:00\u2014Ding Dong School\n10:30\u2014You and Your Child\n10:45\u2014Sheilah Graham\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:00\u2014Tenn. Ernie Ford\n12:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n1:00\u2014Man From Texas\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n3:00\u2014Ted Mack's Matinee\n3:30\u2014It Pays To Be Married\n4:00\u2014Q's Kaleidoscope\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n4:45\u2014Modern Romances\n5:00\u2014The Founr Poster\n6:00\u2014Howdy Doody\n6:30\u2014Mr. Engineer\n7:00\u2014\"Little Theatre\"\n7:15\u2014 Gems of Melody\n7:30\u2014The Front Page\n7:40\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:4.5\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014Magnificent Doll\n9:30\u2014Robert Montgomery\nPresents\n10:30\u2014Liberace\n11:00\u2014Little Theatre\n11:15\u2014Grant\n11:30\u2014Curujin Time\n12:00\u2014Racket Squad\n12:40\u2014News Headlines\nKREM-TV \u2014 Channel 2\n3:45\u2014Test Pattern\n4:00\u2014\"Outer Gate\"\n5:10\u2014Health and Happiness Club\n5:15\u2014\"Calabooge\"\n6:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n655\u2014Newsbeat Spokane\n7:00\u2014Western Movietime\n7:55\u2014What's the Weather\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ...  1240 on the dial\n(Pacific Daylight Time)\nMONDAY, JULY 25, 1955\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:00\u2014 News\n7:05-Wake-Up Time\n7:10\u2014Farm  Fare\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7.:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014March of Truth\n7:40\u2014Wake-Op Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Women Today\n9:00\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n10:00\u2014CKLN  Entertains\n10:10\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Melodic Sketches\n10:45\u2014Story Parade\n11:00\u2014 News\n11:05\u2014Call One-Nine\n12:00\u2014Prairie News\n12:05\u2014Sportman's Corner\n12:10\u2014Spotlight on a Star\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Bing Crosby\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Radio Features\n1:45\u2014Matinee\n2:00\u2014Pacific News\n2:15\u2014Classic Corner\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matine*\n3:30\u2014Miscellaney\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Child's Guide\n4:45\u2014Camp   Wildernes\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n5:15\u2014Tops and Pops\n5:30\u2014Sports News\n5:35\u2014Sportlight on a Star\n5:45\u2014Sports News\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Musicale\n6:15\u2014Canada at Work\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014Summer   Fallow\n8:00\u2014Bob McMullin Show\n8:30\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n9:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Bev Foster Show\n10:30\u2014The Woman in Whits\n11:00-NEWS Nightcap\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\/\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning  Devotions\n7:55\u2014March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill  Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast  Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy *\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Composer's Corner\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Melodic Sketches\n10:45\u2014King Ganam Show\n11:00\u2014Kate Aitken\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:30\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm   Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTUESDAY, JULY 26, 1955\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:15\u2014Today's Guest\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Closed  Circuit\n3:45\u2014Today's  Music\n4:30\u2014Nursery Sing Song\n4:45\u2014Sleepytime Story Teller\n5:00\u2014At Home With the Lennickl\n5:25\u2014Traffic  Jamboree\n5:45\u2014News\n5:55\u2014Int.  Commentary\n6:00\u2014Violinist Francis Chaplin\n6:15\u2014Roving  Reporter\n6:30\u2014Let's  Make  Music\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square\n8:00\u2014Summer Songs\n8:30\u2014The Rhyjhm Pals\n9:00\u2014BB.C Drarrfa Series\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Robert McKenzie\n10:30\u2014Canadian Symphonies\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n8:00\u2014Play of the  Week\n8:30\u2014Voice of Firestone\n9:00\u2014TV Reader's 6igest\n9:30\u2014James Mason\n9:45\u2014Music of the Masters\n-0:00\u2014\"Behind the Mask\"\n11:30\u2014Wrestling from Hollywood\n12:30\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n(Programs subtect to change by stations without notice I\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n1:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.\u2014Phone 1300\nEvenings\u2014Phone 1033-R\nDally Except Sundays\nand   Holidays\nMc & Me\nREAD ANO USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nACROSS\n1. To crown .\n4 Asp\n9 River\nflowing\ntnto the\nMississippi\n10 A hospice\n(Turk.)\n12. Fog\n13. Enemy\nscout\n14. Behold!\n15. Old measure\nof length\n16. Courts\n17 Mulberry\n18. Short, thick\njackets\n20 Consumed\n21 Revived\n23. Minute\nskin opening\n26 Part of\npedestal\nbetween\nbase and\ncornice\n(Arch.)\n27 An Island\ngroup\n31 Help\n32. Native\nof Odessa\n36 American\nIndian\n(Lit.)\n37 Cover with\npavement\n38. Wine\nreceptacle\n39 Masurium\n(sym.)\n40 Any fruit\ndrink\n41. Precious\nstone\n12. One who\nshoots from\nambush\n44 Frozen\ndesserts\n45 Begin\n46 Through\nDOWN\n1 Republic\n(So. Ami\n2 Passageway\n3. Kettle\n4. Front pieces\non caps\n5. Tax\n6. Puts out\nmoney\n\/. Erbium\n(sym.)\n8. Told\n9 Measure\n(Heb.)\nII. City (Ohio)\n16 Tiny\n19 Worry\n20 Macaw\n(Braz.)\n22 Excess\nof\nchances\n23 Sacred\nsongs\n24. Natives\nof\nOhio\n(5. River\n(U. S.)\n28. A\nloading;\ndevice\n29. To refer\n30. Born\n33. A dressing\nfor pudding\nhhsiki oaaa\naWEHP-l   HfclEHEi\naaai-si i-iar-pr-i\naaa saaBEE\nhh Has    BHE\nBaaC-JBElHBfil\nSIHHI-iE   KHHH.-4\nhub Mais aa\nEnaBiEH aan\nsanaa Eii-maa\nEiaaRH saaas\nr-jsan Hmaa\nYesterdiy'- Aa-wef\n34. A\nshade\nof brown\n35 Negativs\nvotes\n37. Father\n41. Tear\n\\3. Neuter  .\npronoun\n%\n2\n3\nl\n-a\"\n5\"\nft\n7\nT\"\n%\n9\nl\n1\u00b0\nII\nIi\n^A\n13\nt\n14\nIS\n^\/A\nlb\n^\n17\nIS\n19\n%\n2o\nV\/,\nW\nV\/^\n21\nn\n23\n24\nIS\n^A\n^\n%\n?t>\nn\n28\n29\n30\n^\n^\n%\n31\n^\n32\n33\n34\n35\n3\u00bb\n1\n37\n^\n38\n39\n%\n40\n1\nAt\n42\n43\n\u25a0\n1\nM\n'fa\n45\n%\nAb\n\\^t\n7-25\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A 1\u00bb used\nfor the three L's. X for the two O's. etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nMDKW     AW     TRNOWZ     AWRO     RYJ\nLRGWN     RYJ     D     LDOO     NDKRO     VQKW\nUDAFWOC    DY     U R H H D Y W F F \u2014 W H D P E .\nN E F .\nSaturday's Crvptoquote: HOW STRANGE. THAT MEM.\nWHO, GUIDE 'THE PLOUGH, SHOULD FAIL TO GUIDE\nTHE PEN \u2014 CRABBE.\nDistributed by King Features Syndicate..\n ':\u25a0 :      - y\n. ^MuppyHMPtUL.,     .   \u25a0 .\n\u25a0\nwp\u00ab\ni43f\nSMALL INVESTMENT -\nThat's the Want Ad Story\nRETURNS\nPHONE 1844\nBIRTHS\nWONG \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Glen\nWong, 309 Carbonate Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nJuly 23, a daughter.\nANDERSON - To Mr. and Mrs.\nRichard Anderson, 606 Fifth\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, July 24, a son. '.\nOZEROFF \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Ozeroff. Appledale, at\nKoQtenay Lake General Hospital.\nJuly 24, a son.\nAUTOMOTIVE,'\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nHELP WANTED\nTHREE EXPERIENCED MECH-\nanics and one lubrication man\nfor established Ford Dealership\nin Central B.C. Must be qualified. Accommodations available.\nPhone collect 78T between 8\na.m. and 10 p.m. Ask for Bill\nGlanville.\nWANTED \u2014 ALL AROUND MAN\nto handle electrical and mechanical upkeep work In sawmill.\nYear round employment at Parson. B.C. School available up to\ngrade 12. Phone Creston 39 or 94\nfor interviews July 23rd.\nWE NEED A LOGGING CO'tf-\ntractor to haul logs about 7\nmiles. Must have full equipment for tree to mill operation.\nApply L. D. Moore Lumber Co.\nLtd.. Ymir. B.C. Phone IB, Ymir.\nPRODUCING MINE, NEAR NEW\nDenver, has opening for male\ntimekeeper and office assistant.\nTyping essential. State salary\nexpected and availability. Box\n10168, Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED \u2014 SECONTTcLASS\nsteam engineer for shift work.\nApply Master Mechanic. Crow's\nNest Pass Coal Company Lim-\niterl. Michel. B.C.\nEXPERIENCED LOGGING\ntruck driver for truck and\ntrailer. Must be able to top load.\n, Cook  Lumber Co..  Greenwood.\nSEE\nREUBEN BUCRGE MOTORS\nLTD.\nTODAY FOR THE LARGEST\nAND MOST COMPLETE\nNEW AND USED\nCAR SELECTION\nIN THE INTERIOR OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA.\nSITUATIONS- WANTED\nTOUNG LADY WILL-LOOK\nafter children while mother\nworks summer months. Phone\n1743-L-3.\t\nFOR ALL ODD JOBS PHONE\n255-R.\nHELP  WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nNOTICE-COME AND TiARN\na good profession that you\ncan become independent the\nrest of your life. Our new\nclasses are starting immediately anfl we want men or\nwomen from the ages of 17\nto 60. We teach Hairdressing\nand all lines of Beauty Culture. Write, wire or phone\nfor information to the O.K.\nValley Tairdressing School.\n453   Lawrence   Ave.,   Kelowna\n1954\nAustin A70\n1953\nAustin A40\n1953\nConsul\n1952\nAustin A40\n1952\nHillman\n1950\nAustin A40\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\n1955\nBuick Century\n1955\nPontiac Deluxe\n1955\nChevrolet Deluxe\n1955\nFord Fairlane\n1955\nMeteor Niagara\n1954\nChevrolet Deluxe\n1954 Plymouth Savoy\n1953\nChevrolet Deluxe\n1953\nPontiac Deluxe\n1953\nChevrolet Hardtop\n1952\nPontiac\n1952\nFord Automatic, radio\n1949\nFord   \u2022\n1948\nChevrolet\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\n1955\nChevrolet Pjckup\n1955\nGMC. Pickup\n1954\nFord Sedan Delivery\n1952\nGMC   Pickup\n1952\nDodge Pickup\n1952\nAustin Panel\n1952\nAustin Countryman\n1951\nChevrolet Pickup\n1949\nG.M.C. Pickup\n1951\nAustin Pickup\nMACHINERY\nDIESEL\nIDEAL POWER\nFOR SAWMILLS\nLight in weight, very rugged.\nA proven engine.\nWrite or Phone\nMACHINE SHOP\nPhone 593 Nelson, B.C,\nMachinery Repairs\nA FULLY EQUIPPED MACHINE\nSHOP TO SERVE YOU.\nMACHINERY SALES\nAND SERVICE.\nWelding,\nSteel Fabricating.\nSTEVENSON'S\nMACHINE SHOP LTD.\n708 Vernon St.   ' Nelson\nPhone 98\nFOR SALE\"- FAIRBANKS-\nMorse T120 power unit with\ngovernor mounted on 14\" I-\nshaft and pulley. Used 240 hours.\nApply Albert Maida, at 82 or\n1146-R, Nelson.\nRENTALS\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, dishes, linens and maid\nservice. Day, week, or monthly. Allen Hotel. 171 Baker St.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies: new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 230\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C. Ph.\nPAcitic 6357.\nPIANO FOR SALE - SCHIED-\nmayer & Soehne, Germany.\nGood tone and condition. Apply\nto Sandon Community Club.\nSandon.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP MET-\nals. copper, brass, lead, aluminum. Highest prices, prompt payment. Active Trading, 935 E.\nCordova. Vancouver.\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022\nWE PAY CASH FOR\nLATE MODEL CARS\nAUSTIN\nSERVICE AND SALES\nRUEBEN\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture, basement, 301 Baker\nSt Phone 47. \"We buy used furniture.\"\n200.000 BOARD FEET TIMBER\nstanding, road in. Some logs on\nskid ready to haul. Apply Fred\nKafakoff. Winlaw. B.C\nSMALL FRIDGE, EXCELLENT\ncondition, $50.00; metal couch\nbed, $5.00. Post Office, Queen's\nBay.\nBOMBER HOISTS. 1500 LBS. CA-\npacity, $45, while they last. Active Trading Co., 935 E. Cordova,\nVancouver.\nRADIATOR FOR GMC HALF-\nton pickup. $35. Box 10071 Daily\nNews.\nMotors Ltd.\nNelson, B C.\nPhone 1 135     803 Baker St.\n1947 FORD 3-TON TRUCK WITH\ndump, hoist: 1949 motor. Priced\nfor quick sale. Also Salsbury\nmotor scooter. Allan's Motor\nService, Davies Street.\nFOR SALE - 23 FT. FACTORY\nbuilt house trailer, complete\nAp. Oscar Hansen, Shell Station\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE - 20 FT. BOAT WITH\ncabin. 4 cylinder Universal Marine engine, inch cedar planking.\nAll weather lake boat. George\nSinclair. Creston. B. C.\nFOR RENT - TWO FLOORS 50'\nby 100' each; suitable for storage,   warehouse,   or   cars.   Apply\nMcDonald Jam Co.. 301 Vernon\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ECT. FOR SALE\n(Continued\nFOR SALE\u20142 CORNER LOTS,\ncorner of Kootenay and Innis.\nPhone 314-Y after 5:30 p.m.\nBUILDING LOTS IN ROSEMONT.\nApply 1418 Vancouver St. Phone\n'313-L-l.\n10 ACRES BETWEEN HIGHWAY\non Kootenay Lake. Good timber. E. Naelsen, Kootenay Bay.\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\n3  BEDROOM  HOUSE  ON  TWO\nlots uphill. $4500. Phone 245-Y.\nWANTED TO BUY - 2 OR 3\nroom cottage in Fairview. Box\n10209 Nelson Daily News.\nLOT FOR SALE, VIEW ST. 60'x\n120'.  Phone  1020-Y.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W. WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH.   S.   ELMES, ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nG. W. BAERG\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St.     Nelson     Ph. 1118\nand Box 34. Frutvale. B.C.\nSuccessor to the late A. L. Purdy\nBOYD C. AFFLECK M.E.I.C.\nB.C. Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nI. V. SHAYLER, P.C., BOX, 252\nKimberley, Phone 54.\nB.C. Land Surveyor, Engineer\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop,   Acetylene * and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593. 324 Vernon St.\nTIMBER CRUISER\nEUGENE H. HIRD\nSlocan City. B.C. Timber cruising.\nmineral claim inspection.\nAnywhere in B.C.\nSenafe Passes Pill     ;\n?or Foreion Aid\nWASHINGTON (AP) .- The\nSenate hai passed President\nElsenhower's $3,205,841,760 for-\nHan aid bill after beating back\nall floor efforts to chop down\nhis requests. The vote was 62\nto 22. The 8enate restored\n$567,100,000 In cuts made by the\nHouse of Representatives In the\nbill, and gave the president all\nbut $60,800,000 of what he\nasked.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 23, 1955 -\u00bb 9\nbusiness Spotlight. . .\n%t German Steel Pipe Plant\n$M Operating, Port Moody\nj\nChinese Entry\naws Changed\nOTTAWA (CP) - Unmarried\nchildren of Chinese-Canadians between 21 and 23 no longer are, being permitted to enter Canada,\nImmigration Minister Pickersgill\nsaid Saturday.\nHe told Walter Dinsdale (PC\nBrandon-Souris) in the Commons\nthat the government agreed June\n28, 1951. to give special considera\ntion to this group of children. But\nit was felt that all cases of this\ntype have been dealt with by now\nNow, he said, Jt is felt that Canada should revert to the ordinary\nlaw of permitting entry only to\nchildren of Chinese - Canadians\nunder 21.\nChurchill   turned   over   an   oil\nGROWING MARKET painted in 1930. called \"The Loup\nRefrigerator sales in Norway, River, Alpes Maritimes.\" It has\njumped from 5,000 in 1952 to 38,- been added to the gallery's per\n000 last year. manent collection.\n*uys Work by\nChurchill\nLONDON (AP) - Sir Winston\nCHurchill. already ranked among\nhistory's great as a statesman and\nwriter, has been given assurance\nthat he also will be remembered\nas a painter.\nThe 80-year-old former prime\nminister, who paints for relaxation\nand occasionally exhibits his pictures, was asked by the Tate Gallery, Britain's leading gallery of\ncontemporary art, for a sample f\nhis work.\nBy LARRY  8TANWOOD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The first\nplant  to  manufacture  steel   pipe\nin western Canada has gone into\nproduction on the west coast.\nCanadian   Western   Pipe   Mills\nLtd. is also the first major invest-\nMarilyn May\nTry Mm\nexl Friday\ni\nInstalment Buying Makes U. S.\nGovernment Watch Stock Sale\nTORONTO (CP) - The Telegram says Marilyn Bell may try\nto swim the English channel next\nFriday.\nThe paper's dispatch from\nFolkestone. England, quotes. John\nBurwell, Marilyn's navigator\nsaying the date is right for tides\nj and Gus Ryder, the 17-year-old\nswimmer's coach, as saying she\ncould well be ready.\nHowever. Ryder said that, if he\ndoes not think she is ready, he lis\nwill  not  rush  her. The Toronto! market\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nlelson\nMODERN THREE-ROOMED APT.\nCentral, heat and hot water, private entrance. 922 Kootenay\nStreet, Phone_713-Y.\t\nWANTED TO RENT - PRIVATE\nroom near CPR. Write Box\n10329. Nelson Daily News.,\nBUSINESS MAN REQUIRES \"TO\"\nrent 2 to 3-bedroom house. Wired\nfor range. Phone 958-X.\nConcrete Ltd.\n1      $13.50 cu. yd.\nPHONE 871\nDelivered in Nelson\nSAVE HME  - SAVE MONEY\nI \"Do It the Easy Way\"\nWANTED\u20143 BEDROOM HOUSE\nfor civil servant. Box 10462, Nel-!\nson Daily News,\n4 ROOM MODERN HOUSE, FUR-\nnished, 15 miles out of town.\nBox 10179. Daily News.\nSMALL TWO ROOM CABIN;\nwater and light. $15.00 per mo.\nPhone   1647-R.\nLIGHT'HOUSEKEEPING ROOM.;\n213 Victoria St. Gentleman preferred.\nFOR   RENT \u2014 3-ROOM   SUITE,\npartly furn. Adults. 311 Vernon.\nNew Star\nin any\nLegging Show\nA\nMCCULLOCH\nFOR   RENT -   1 AND 2 ROOM\nsuite. Apply 723 Silica.\nBEDROOM  TO  RENT  BY  THE\nmonth. Phone 474-X.\nFOR RENT - 4-ROOM APART-\nment. 40!) Silica St. Adults.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking. Buyers of\nscrap iron, batteries, brass,\naluminum, copper. Used parts\nfor cars-and trucks foT sale\nWestern Auto Wrecking, Box\n132, Granite Rd., Nelson, B.Q.\nBy ED MORSE\nNEW YORK (AP) - The US.\ngovernment cocked a watchful\neye at consumer credit last week\nas the American economy hit\nrecords.\nAmericans were buying on the\ncuff at a greater rate than ever.\nThey were making moi'e money\nand holding down more jobs, too.\nObservers commervted: If the\nrise in debt slackens, what will\nhappen to business? If business\nand jobs fall off, what will happen\nabout the current trend to easier\nterms.\nHEAVY CONSTRUCTION  UP\nMeanwhile, home-building\nslackened off moderately. Heavy\nconstruction bowled along at a\npace 25 per cent higher than the\nprevious record rate of 1953. No\nletup was in sight.\nDiscount houses waged hot warfare for the consumer's dollar.\nFood-b.uying was at the year's\nhighest level. Buying of housewares was at the year's lowest\ndue   to   seasonal   slackness,\nment In Canada \u2014 and the largest\nin North America \u2014 by West German industrial interests. . *\nThe sprawling $7,000,000 plrpp\nplant ls situated In the rapidly\nprowing industrial community of\nPort Moody, 17 miles east of Vancouver and overlooking the north\narm of Burrard inlet.\nThe Canadian company if a subsidiary of the Rhelnrohr organization of Duesseldorf, Germany,\nwhich has vast holdings in the\nhighly-Industrialized Ruhr valley.\nR. M, Reiner, vice-president and\nmanaging director of Canadian\nWestern, says the parent compajiy\nregards the development \"as_,B\npartnership with the people .-of\nCanada.\" w\nIN RECORD TIME\n'. Meanwhile, Rheinrohr has frtl-\nnounced plans for another multi-\nmillion dollar development to parallel the Port Moody plant now\nproducing steel pipe measuring\nhalf an inch to 4Mi inrfhes in diameter.\nThe new plant will be beared to\nproduce pipe up to 16 inches in\n' diameter.\nAll production, said Mr. Reiner.\naimed   at' meeting   Canadian\ndemands,      particul0y\ngirl, who last summer was the\nfirst person to swim Lake Ontario,\ntook up her training a few days\nago  after  a short illness.\nIf Marilyn does not make the\nattempt on Friday, the next favorable date is in mid-August, her\nadvisers said.\nto instalment buying\nAlthough   consumer   debt* had;dealers   noted   a\nreached a high tide of $31,600,000,-: from a week ago,\n000 the federal reserve board's pol-l    Railroad   carloadings   rose   22.4\n.icy of \"mild restraint\" remained per cent above the previous week\nMay Abandon 1956'\nCherry Carnival\nCHILLIWACK (CF)\u2014 The board\nof trade here is studying a proposal to abandon its July 1 cherry\ncarnival due to lack of public support for the annual event. The 1955\nCarUarnival was a financial failure,\nslight   letdown Chairman Jim Robertson reported.\nunchanged this week.\nRay N. Gidney, currency comp\ntroller, said no criticism of con-, monthly order of new freight cars\nsumer loans was intended, nor was\nthere any suggestion of credit\ntightening which might prevent\nsound and desirable financing.\nBut, he said, surveys indicated\nthere was a tendency in some\nareas to loosen credit terms, especially for automobile loans.\nMany bankers were also worried\nThe railroads, faced by a freight\ncar shortage, reported the largest\nsince February 1951\nThe stock market early In the\nweek suffered a case of Geneva\njitters through uncertainty about\nthe four-power conference but\nfinished the week strong, within a\nshade of a new record high. Big\ncorporations continued to report\nwhopping profits.\nNegro Professor\nAt Princeton\nAp-\nPRINCETON, N.J. (AP)\npointment of the first Negro to the\nfaculty of Princeton University\nwas announced. He ls Dr. Charles\nT. Davis, a member of the New\nYork University faculty, who has\nbeen named an assistant professor of English effective next\nSeptember when Princeton opens\nits 210th year.\nthose of the gas and oil industry\nin Alberta and British Columbia.\nAnnual potential capacity is 6UTOO0\ntons of' black and galvanized pipe,\nconduit and tubing. CI\nConstruction of the plant, which\nembraces IS acres of a 100-eWre\nsite, was launched in April, 1JB4.\nand company officials say it bis\ngone Into production in re\u00abord\ntime. \"5\nREPAY8 CANADIAN FAITH J\nThe main building is 862 ftet\nlong and measures 251 feet at Its\ngreatest width. The 145.000-square-\nfoot production flood houses two\ncomplete production lines for pipe,\nconduit and metal tubing.\nBetween 200 and 300 persons will\nbe employed at peak producjspn.\nOne of the foremost exponents\nof '\"'est Germany's entry Into\nwestern Canada's Industrial orlpit\nis Dr. Karl Bender, a director^of\nthe Rheinrohr organization.\nAddressing more than 800.-Jn-\ndustrialists, political and efvic\nleaders at the official opening, Dr.\nBender said:\n\"The plant represents the extent\nto which West Gurminy i\u00ab determined to go to repay the faith\nthat countries- nich as Canada\ndemonstrated toward w ^ during\nthe, early post-war years.\"\nBOAT\n16' LONG SITS 6 AND 5\nh.p.\nmotor.\nNext to new condi-\ntion.\nApply 2024 Topping Street.\nTrai\nfor\"\n, B.C.\nSALE\n- BOAT    HOUSE,\ntrailer and\n14-foot Walton type\nboat\n$235.\nPhone   668-L.\nPHONE 1807 DAYS, 882-Y EVE.\nWe buy bottles, scrap metal and\njunk. Independent Trader, 415V4\nLatimer St.. Nelson, B.C.\nENTERPRISE COAL AND WOOD\nstove. All white. Perfect condition. Phone 1312-L.\nWESTINGHOUSE 7 CU. FT. RE-\nfrigerator in good condition. Ph\n337-Y.\n5 HP.' JOHNSON OUTBOARD |\nmotor, new condition and guarantee. $175. and terms. Coleman\nElectric.\nWANTED TO BUY \u2014 SAW LOGS\nand cedar poles on Kootenay\nLake or rail. Kootenay Products. Box 450. Nelson.\nFOR SALE\u201414-FT. RUNABOUT.\n5^' beam, for outboard motor.\nT.  Allan, phone 58-W, Nakusp.\nWANTED TO BUY \u2014 TIMBER\nand bush land in vicinity of\nKootenay Lake. Apply Box 2736\nNelson Dailv News.\nFURNITURE AND HOUSEHOLD\neffects and dishes: Kelvinator |\nfridge. 817 Victoria St.. Suite A. j\nESTEY REED ORGAN. PLAIN,]\nsmall, cheap. Box 10444, Daily\nNews.\nUSED COAL AND WO~OD\nrange. Good condition. Phone\n1421-X after 5 p.m.\t\nWHITE ENAMEL COAL STOVE.\nWalnut dinette suite; both for\n$80.00.  Phone 62.\nFIVE TONS BALED HAY FOR I\nsale. $30.00 ton f.o.b. Perry's. Ap-j\nply Tim Rebalkin. Perry's. B. C. I\nLOST AND FOUND        ,\nLOST\u2014RONSON LIGHTER, SIL-\nver. initials E.K.. engraved \"from\nthe troop\", lost at Lakeside Park\nor North Shore close to ferry\nReward. Ed Kelter, Civic Centre.\nREWARD FOR RETURN OF A\nfemale Welsh Terrier. Phone\nTrail 1234-L collect. Resembles\na small Airedale in color and\nstyle.\nLOST - LADY'S BLUE PURSE\nbetween Salmo and Apex. Ph.\n510.X.\nPERSONAL\nATcfOH O LTCS ANONYMOUS\nBox 368. Ph. 161-L3 or 366-R.\nNrlson SatUj Npuib\nClassified Advertising Rates\nPer line. 1 time  20\n2 consecutive times 3.1\n3 consecutive times    45\n4. 5 and 6 consecutive\ntimes  60\n26 consecutive times $1.82\nNon-consecutive insertions      .20\na line per time.\nBox numbers .11 extra.\nPUBLIC    (LEGAL)    NOTICES\nTENDERS,   etc.\u201420c   per   line\nfirst insertion 16c per line each\nsubsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance ._ .30\nBy carrier per year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month            $ 1.25\nThree months \u201e     $ 2.75\nSix months        $ 5.00\nOne year      .   . $15.00\nMail in  Canada outside Nelson\nOne month        ...  $ 1.00\nThree months         $ 3.75\nSix months            $ 7.50\nOne year $10.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove   rates  plus  postage.\nWANTED \u2014 SECOND-HAND\nhay track and fork. Ph. 76-L-2\nRossland.\n\"3 CARS FENCE POSTS. WRITE\nto Box 10139 Nelson Daily\nNews.\nf\/o are proud to innounct\nthe great new\nMcCulloeh 4-30 A Chain Saw.\nIdeal lor 1-man lolling,\nbucking, limbing \u2014\nin timber up to 5 foot UiicU!\nSee us lor full detail*\nand free 'demonstration.\nNOW ON DISPLAY\nSee H. \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nWANTED\u2014TENT, 6' x 8'. PHONE\n1649-L.\nWANTED \u2014 2 GAS PUMPS. AP-\nply Box 10181 Daily News.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ECT. FOR SALE\nlc^e^f_airview7a~lovely\n3 bedroom family home in excellent condition. 2 bedrooms\ndown, one up, 15x20 living room\nwith brick fireplace. Wired for\nrange, full basement with garage doors. Coal furnace, lovely\ngarden. Half block to bus; near\nschools and park. $8500. Phone\n1338-R.\nFOR SALE \u2014 OLDER-TYPE 3-\nbedroom home. Hardwood floors\nupstairs and down. Modern\nkitchen, steel cabinet sink, combination gas range. Stone foundation. Oil furnacette. Downstairs newly decorated. Good\nlocation. Excellent buy for cash.\nKey at 910 Silica St. Ph. 795-L.\nfor^aleTn\">aTrView~~-=\"2-\nB.R. cottage: wired .for range\nand TV. New furnace. Cash or\nterms. \u2014 Phone 914-L.\nWELDING St EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n614 Railway St.       Nelson. B. C.\nPHONE 1402\nWhen Is Lamb\n-\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILyI      (Continued in Next Column)     [\u25a0\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A lamb la no !\nlonger a lamb when it loses its two\nfront milk teeth or its 'first coat\nof fleece, the government says. But\none opposition member isn't too\nsure whether restaurants know It.\nThe explanation of when a lamb\nbecomes a sheep was given in the\nCommons Saturday by Robert Mc-\nCubin, parliamentary assistant to\nAgriculture Minister Gardiner. He\nsaid a lamb becomes a sheep at\nI about one year of age. The teeth\nand fleece rule was generally accepted for marketing purposes.\nC.   W.   Hodgson    (PC-Victoria,\nOnt.) expressed some doubt.\n\"I think some of the lamb served\nl in  restaurants  had  lost all  their\nteeth,\" he said.\nBuying\u2014Selling\u2014Renting\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\nFIRST LINI\nSECOND UNI\nTHIRD LINI\nFOURTH UNI\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH LINI\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word )\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u00a9  Box numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\nPer Line\n1  Insertion\n2 Consecutive  Insertions\n3. Consecutive Insertions .\n6 Consecutive Insertions .\n26 Consecutive Insertions\n9 .20\n.33\n.45\n.60\n1.82\ne Minimum charge is two lines\ne  Add He for Box Number\ne  Deduct 10% from above rates if payment ts\nenclosed\ne  Take advantage of the low six time rate\nfl\nNon Consecutive Insertions 200 a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo ot Days Ad Is To Run \t\n '  Bill  Me   ... .      ,,\t\nYOUR  NAME\nADDRESS\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C.\n \u00ab$- NILSON DAILY NEWS, MONflAY, JULY 25\/1955\nTHOSE WOLF CALLS\n5 Heard on the beach are caused by girls wearing\n*; the new moulded-ta-fit\nViceroy\nWAVE SAVER\nSWIM\n\\     CAPS\nRegular Price .89\nThis Week-6jc\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\n. Koolaree Echoes\nJennifer Jones, Back In Films,\nPlays New Part Without Glamor\nBy  BOB THOMAS\npOLLYWOOD. (AP) \u2014 Jennifer Jones Is back at work, and\ntalking, which-is news in itself.\nVri actress, who is one of the\nless approachable of film stars,\nwm feeling pretty chipper on the\nojctitng day of \"Good Morning,\nMfsj Dove,\" and discoursed on\nl^vj in films and sundry matters.\nShe was made up as a New England school teacher of 60 years or\nmore, with severe hair-do and\nshapeless dress. Complimented on\nthfi makeup job, she replied. \"Flattery will get you nowhere.\"\nShe settled down in her dressing\nroo)n, which was bedecked with\nfleers, as is thet opening day\ncustom in films.\nIn \"Good Morning, Miss Dove.\"\nsh^has no love interest whatsoever. That, she sighed, in symptomatic of most films today.\nNO   LOVE\u2014BLAME8   MEN\n\"They don't seem to make the\nlove stories they used to,\" she\ncommented. \"Just when we start\ngoing back to love, someone comes\nalong and makes a wonderful picture with only men in it. 'That\nsets the girls back again.\n\"I think we ought to get even\nand make a movie with no men.\nDid they ever make \"The Women\"\nagain?\"\nShe was told MGM has plans to\nmake it into a musical, possibly\nwith Lana Turner, Grace Kelly,\nfete. -   .\n; Miss Jones added she enjoyed\n: doing romantic pictures like \"Lovej\nLetters\"\u2014\"That's What Makes the\nWorld Go Round.\" She said her\nlast picture at. 20th Fox, \"Love is\na Many-Splendored Thing\" with\n\u25a0William Holden, has a strong love\ntheme in it.\n\u25a0 FEW FILM\n-APPEARANCES\nThe Academy Award winner\n-has made amazingly few films\nsince rising to fame, with \"Song of\nBernadette\" (1945). Not counting\nthe Westerns she made at Republic as Phyllis Isley, her pictures\nhave totalled only 14. But she\nhopes to speed up her pace.\nShe would like to return to the\n.stage, despite the disaster of her\nlast venture. In 1954, she took\n\"Portrait of a Lady\" to Broadway\nand lt flopped.\n\"Everything was wrong with it,\nincluding me,\" she remarked. \"It\nwas a difficult experience. You\ncan tell when something ls bad,\nyet you have the hope that when\nyou walk onstage hundreds of\nlights will go on inside you. But\nof course that never happens, and\nthe play flops.\"\nHer immediate plans do not include working for her husband,\nDavid Selznick. He appears to be\nplanning'to produce films again\nbut she said, \"I think it would be\nbetter for him to make his first\npictures without me.\" f\nLooks as if the gang really must\nbe tired. They all slept right till\nthe gong went, then with a few\nexercises to remove sleep if was\noff to the lake for a good wash.\nThese little guys just seem to have\nan attraction for dirt, so that it is\nconstantly being checked by the\nleaders. Of course with no rain\nthings do get a bit dusty, so we\ndon't complain too severely.\nThis morning John Norris led\nour chapel service on the theme\nof friendship and told the interesting story of the \"Kid from Wood-\nchuck Corners\" always.a favorite\nwith the boys.\nThe driftwood hand craft group\nare really doing some nice work\nand the boys are quite proud of\ntheir varnished pieces. The Trail\nBlazers have cleaned a trail all\nthe way to the Prospectors Cabin\nand built a log bridge to cross the\ncreek just below it. That spot is\nreally a cool haven on a hot day.\nCabin 1 and 6 have really entered into a softball battle, they are\nengaged in the Camp Championship playoffs and also were drawn\nagainst each other in the Tin Can\nTrophy series. In the first game\nCabin 1 edged out Cabin 6 in a\n2-1 game. Brian Kelly and Jack\nRoss being the only scorers for\nthe winners, and Jacks' pal Dahlstrom was the only one to make\nthe circuit for the losers. They\nreally play it close. In the evening\ngame they met again this game\nserving a double purpose for the\nchampionship and the tin can.\nHowever, Cabin 6 turned the\ntables knocking Cabin 1 out of\nthe special series by a score of 3-1.\nThis time it was Maxwell, Dahlstrom and Johnson making the\ncircuit for the winners and Hufty\nthe only scorer for Cabin 1. Now,\ntomorrow, we will see Sabin 6\nmeet Cabin 2 for the Tincan\nchampionship and Cabin 1 for the\nCamp championship. We donU\nthink you will find better games\nanywhere. Cabin 2 found it quite\n*easy lo knock out their neighbors\nin the Trophy series by a score\nof 12-4. .\nThis was Leaders night at the\ncamp fire. These' characters dressed in pyjamas and with Burp\nStanley as MC just took over and\nled the camp in' a hillarious session. John Norris played the organ. Jack Steed his harmonica and\nukelele. Henry Scotsman McLachlan surprised all with his- two\nfingered selections on the knuckle-\nboard of the great organ. Reporter\nSach Sadler read a haunting account of something or other while\nthe ghost McLachlan hovered over\nhim and eventually the two went\ninto a macabre dance. The whole\nleader .group sang or led the entire camp in many songs. Cabin\n5 presented a very romantic skit.\nSo with Koolaree and Trees we\nended another very happy day.\nCAMPBELL,  SHANKLAND\n& CO.\n-gChartered Accountants\n'^76 Baker 8L Phone 235-\nAuditors\nWA. C. LAUGHTON\nd.     OPTOMETRIST\n'S     VI8UAL TRAINING\n\u25a0lass    Medical Arti Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\n\u00ab=\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n818 Front St. Phone 63\n' Have the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHAIGH\nIf    'HI TRU-ART\nff S1 yy Beauty   Salon\n\u25a0*     ^ Phone  327\n^\u00b0\"*%'\"r 576  Baker  Street\nSays Polio Hit\nM Helena\n119 Years Ago\nBy RON EVAN8\nCanadian Presi Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Poliomyelitis\nexperts say persons in countries\nwith high standards of living and\nsanitation are more vulnerable to\npolio epidemics than population\nin backward nations.\nThis aspect of 'the disease is\nshown in a report by 17 polio au<\nthorities from seven countries. The\nreport was prepared by the\nWorld Health Organization before\nthe Sf>lk vaccine was put under\nextensive test in the United States\nand Canada.\nSome points from the 400-page\nreport^\nPolio, a highly contagious disease, takes several forms, ranging\nfrom non-apparent infection to\nsevere  paralysis  and  death.\nThe disease is world-wide and\n\"sooner or hater every human being is subject to infection b'y one\nof the three known tynes of virus.\"\nEPIDEMIC8   IN   CANADA\nIn areas classed as epidemic\ncountries, such as Canada, the age\nof polio sufferers is rising and in\nsome places ha? gone above 30\nyears.\nIn Canada and other advanced\ncountries, children are not subject\ned to infection early. When the\ndisease breaks out there is a large\nbody of susceptible young people.\nOften the disease then results in\nparalysis of the legs or arms.\nThe first polio epidemic was recorded 119 years ago on the Atlantic island of St. Helena, 1000 miles\noff the African coast. Earlier the\ndisease was reported in England,\nItaly and India and was attributed\nto teething. ' \"foul bowels\" or\nfever.\nThe first serious outbreak in\nNorth America occurred in the\nNew England states in the 1890s\nand British Columbia and Alberta\nwere hit in 1910. Canada suffered\na severe bout in 1937, when there\nwere more than 2000 cases.\nSiqn Contract For\nA-Power Plant\nSCHENECTADY. N.Y. (AP) \u2014\nThe General Electric Co. has\nsigned a contract with Commonwealth Edison Co. for construction\nof a $45,000,000 nuclear power\nplant near Chicago. The plant, to\nbe financed entirely from private\nfunds, will be built on the Illinois\nwaterway 47 miles south of the\ncity,\nFRIENDSHIP GESTURE\nVIENNA (AP) \u2014 A 30-storey\n\"palace of culture and learning\"\nbuilt by the Russians was presented to the Polish people Friday\nby the Soviet ambassador in Warsaw, the Polish radio said. The\nbuilding was begun three years\nago at the suggestion of Stalin as\na \"symbol of Polish-Russian\nfriendship.\"\nMiss Sweden\nfakes Title\nLONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) \u2014\nMiss Sweden, a Grace Kelly with\nmuscles, has been named Miss\nUniverse, the world's most beautiful woman.\nThe judges, true to form, picked\na short-haired blpnde. but' there\nwas little else they could do \u2014\nblonde, blue-eyed, 21-year-old Hil-\nlevi Rombin was just that beauti\nful.\nBut the race was a close one \u2014\nMiss El Salvador, blonde Maribel\nArrieta. was only a few points behind. The other runners-up were\nin this order, Ceylon, Germany\nand -Japan.\nCanada's entry was a brunette\n\u2014Cathy Diggles of North Bay,\nOnt. who entered the Miss Universe contest after winning the\nMiss Toronto title. She went into\nthe semi-finals with 14 other contestants but was eliminated when\nthe' field was cut to five finalists\nlate Friday.\nCopper Strike\n% Nearer End\n\u25a0NEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Prospects\nfor a quick end to the strike in\nthe copper industry looked dim\nlast week as the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter\nWorkers (Ind.) rejected a wage offer by Phelps Dodge Corp.\nThe Phelps Dodge offer, covering its mines and plants in Arizona, was similar to that accepted\nby workers at Anaconda Company's mines and plants in Mon\ntana the previ6us week. The offer included wage boosts of from\n11 to 17 Cents an hour and\nprovements in hospital, surgical\nand medical benefits.\nThere, were no reports of progress toward settlement of strikes\nat the mines of Kennecott Copper\nCorp. oi*at ttie 12 copper and lead\nprocessing plants of the American\nSmelting and defining Co. Trade\nsources estimated that in the three\nweeks strikes have caused the loss\nof about 50.000 tons of copper and\nabout 20,000 tons of refined lead.\nStrikes in the Industry a year\nago cause da shortage of the metil\nthat still existed when the new\nstrikes began this month. Now the\nsituation is acute.\nSilver rose to a 35-year high at\n90% cents an ounce. There is\nstrong demand for silver, and the\nstrike at American Smelting has\nreduced the supply available.\nSome silver is being sent to Eur*\nope directly from Mexico.\nMajor metals prices:\nCopper \u2014 36 cents a pound, delivered. Foreign ^35-44.50 cents, nominal, New York.\nLead \u2014 15 cents a pound, New\nYork; 14.80 cents, St. Louis.\nZinc \u2014 12.50 cents a pound.\nEast Ct. Louis: 13 cents. New York\nSilver \u2014 90.75 cenls an ounce.\nNew York; 79 pence. London.\n wmm\n\"')\u25a0 ' \u25a0\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nBrockville, Ont. \u2014 W. Homer\nDrumraond, 67, a prominent member of the Masonic Order.\nHoney Harbor, Ont. \u2014 Albert\nBreithaupt, 84, Kitchener, Ont.,\nindustrialist. \u2022\nOttawa \u2014 Col. Norman McLeod\nHalkett, 64, medical advisor to the\nCanadian pensions commission.\nMoscow \u2014 Maj.-Gen. ' Dmitry\nAlexanandrovic Ventsel, a ballistics expert credited with numerous developments in Soviet artillery and aviation.\n\u2014-\u2014\u2014:\u2014\u2022\u2014\u2014-\u2014\u2014\u2014  \u25a0,\"..'_\u2014\u25a0\nCampney Opens Annacis\nIsland Industrial Site\n^illy Graham fo Take Part in\nited Church Mass Crusade\nCHARLOTTETOWN (CP) \u2014The\nUnited Church of Canada will\nlaunch a three-month Canada-\nwide stewardship crusade with\nmass meetings here Sept. 27.\nThe moderator. Rev. George\nDorey of Toronto, and Rev. J. S.\nBonnell of Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church, New York, will be\nmain speakers at the meeting. It\nwill be the first of a series of mass\nmeetings in major Canadian cities.\nPurpose of the crusade is to deepen and enrich spiritual life of\nchurch members.\nBringing greetings to the Char-\nlottetown meeting will be Prince\nEdward Island's Lieut.-Gov. T.W.L.\nProwse, Premier Matheson and\nMayor David Steward of Char-\nlottetown. Rev. E. V. Forbes, president of the Maritime conference\nof the church will preside..\nDates for other meetings are:\nHamilton, Oct. 8 ;Ottawa, Oct. 11;\nMontreal, Oct. 6; Bay of Quinte\nconference,- Oct. 10-14; western\nCanada, Oct. to Nov. 1.\nThe United-Church will co-operate with evangelist Billy Graham\nfor' their crusade in Toronto, holding it in conjunction with his evangelical meetings.\nLEISURE   PLEASURE \u2014 A British reservist steps out\nInto space from a military plane over the Salisbury Plain during\nweekend training with a parachute regiment\nRelatives Pop\n'loaf (all\nW Million!\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Progress is\nbeing made in the search for relatives to share in the $1,600,000 estate left by a wealthy, childless\ninsurance executive and his wife.\nEstate solicitors are looking for\nblood relatives of the late Mr. and\nMrs. Herbert Cfiplin Cox.\nThrough a newspaper and radio\npublicity campaign, relatives have\nbeen popping\" up across Canada.\nEstate lawyer George Finlayson\nsaid seven persons came to see\nhim Friday, Mrs. Amos Spence,\nwife of a barbershop owner in\nCalgary, claims she is a cousin of\nMr. Cox, and another relative\nturned up in Regina.\nFormer president of the Canada\nLife Assurance Co., Mr. Cox died\nin 1947, leaving part of his estate\nto his widow and part to employees of the company. When his widow died the next year, insurance employees became beneficiaries of the total trust fund.\nWILL DECLARED INVALID\nBoth legacies were contested\nand, after a long legal struggle,\nthe will was declared invalid and\nthe money ordered divided among\nblood relatives.\nRelatives are given In degrees\nof nearness. A number of fourth-\ndegree relathives have turned up\nfor Mr, Cox's estate and, unless\nthird-degree relatives are found,\nthey will share the legacy.\nIn Mrs. Cox's case, the nearest\nrelatives is sixth-degree and there\nare few claimants.\nMr. Cox was born In Peterborough, son of Senator and Mrs.\nGeorge A. Cox. Mrs. Cox, the former Louise Bogart, was born in\nPenn Yann, N.Y.\nBy LARRY STANWOOD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP) -\n.The first \"Industrial estate\" in\nCanada\u2014and, potentially, the\nlargest ever launched in North\nAmerica \u2014 has been officially\nopened on Annacis Island in the\nFraser River delta.\nThe 1200-acre site, planned to\nhouse much of the industrial expansion of British Columbia's\nlower mainland within the next\ndecade, is the first venture in\nCanada by the powerful British\norganization of Grosvenor estates.\nLaunched early in 1953 by the\nlate Arthur Hugh Grosvenor,\nDuke of Westminster, the estate\nis designed to provide buildings,\nservices and all facilities for industry on a lease-hold basis.\nCAUSEWAY OPENED\nAnnacis Island, a 3^-mile-long\nalluvial deposit in the middle of\nthe Fraser River just outside the\nNew Westminster boundary, now\nhas been connected to the mainland by a 1200-foot causeway, also\nofficially opened Friday.\nA two - storey administration\nbuildfng already has been completed and several contracts for\nfactories have been awarded.\nMost of. the 1200-acre' tract is\ntable-level. It .has one mile of\nwater frontage suitable for deep\nsea ship dockage and is connect\ned directly to  the mainland  vii\nChurchill Enjoys\n'\"fe of Ease\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Sir Winston Churchill for the first time in\nhis life is \"taking things easily,\"\nfriends close to the veteran statesman said Tuesday.\nIn the peaceful and relaxed atmosphere of his private country\nmansion, Chartwell, in Kent, he is\nspending the days writing a book,\n\"The History of the English-\nSpeaking Peoples.\"\nBetween spells of dictation,- he\nroams the Chartwell grounds in\nhis famous blue overall-like suit,\nenjoying the sunshine, feeding the\nfish in his ponds, sitting on a\nbench offering bread crumbs to\nthe birds.\nKEEPS STAFF BUSY\nBut even ln \"retirement\" the 80-\nyear-old'Chur-chlll ' is active\nenough to keep a team of secre-\nthe Canadian National and Canadian Pacific Railways.\nOfficiating at the opening was\nDefence Minister Campney, who\nhailed the development as \"a\nBritish enterprise which marks\nanother advance in the peculiarly\nclose relationship which haa always existed between this province and Canada's motherland.\"\nA MAJOR PART\n\"We welcome the Annacis Industrial estate,\" ' Mr. Campney\nsaid, \"because of the part it will\nundoubtedly play in that continuing growth of British Columbia\nindustry which has been the highlight of Canada's remarkable progress throughout the past quarter\nof a century . . .\"\nGeneral Sir Ouvry L. Roberts\nof London, director of the estate,\nsaid that the Duke of Westminster had chosen the site because\n\"of the great possibilities In your\nprovince\" and ' \"the tremendous\nindustrial possibilities\" of the\nFraser delta.\nRalph Chetwynd. B.C. minister\nof trade and railways, promised\nthe island would be \"directly connected\" with the government-\nowned Pacific Great Eastern\nRailway and B.C.'s northland\nwithin a year.\nMore than 1500 leading industrials of Canada, the United States\nand England attended the cere,\nmonies.\nlongest Session\nToiiph on Opposition Parlies'\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The current had recesses at Easter and at\nsession of parliament is virtually I Christmas and prorogued June 26,\ncertain to be the longest in modern 1954.\nWhite\nShirts\nFor Summer\nMost men prefer white\nshirts for summer wear.\nOur stock far complete with\nthe new pal collar, double\njor single cuffs.\nCountry Club $4.95\nClover Club $5.95'\nEMORY'S\nThe Man's Store\nhistory.\nThere now appears little doubt\nthe 139-day record established at\nthe last session will be smashed.\nThe record would be equalled on\nWedensday.\nSpokesmen for all parties believe business still to be considered probably will not be cleaned\nup until the end of the week. The\ngovernment is banking on Friday,\nwhich would be the 141st sitting\nday.\nThe Commons now has sat 136\ndays. It started sittings Jan. 7 and\nrecessed for 12 days at Easter. The\nlast session opened Nov. 8,  1953,\nO Dear...\nGANANOQUE, Ont, (CP) \u2014\nWhat's in a name?\nA summer visitor from Wynne-\nwood, Pa\u201e Mrs. Morrison Moose,\npuchased a doeskin skirt here\nSaturday at the clothing store of\nR. J. Deer.\nThe cost: 21 bucks.\ntaries busy taking dictation at unpredictable hours and for lengthy\nspells.\nHis intimates say that he feels\nfit and happy.\nSince he stepped down.from the\npremiership April 5, he has shown\nno anxiety to plunge into the\nrough and tumble of the House of\nCommons, though he attended to\nbe sworn in as the member for\nWoodford, Essex.\nMeanwhile both Conservatives\nand Labor members of Parliament\ncomment wistfully that the chamber lacks its old-time sparkle\nwithout Churchill. They are looking forward to the day when some\nbig debate will tempt him to open\nup with his first post-war speech\nfrom the back benches.\n\". News of the Day\nRATE8: SOo line, 40c line black face type; larger type rate, on\nrequest.  Minimum two lines,  10% discount for prompt payment.\nRotary Luncheon, Monday,-12:15\np.m., Hume Hotel.\nFuller Brush Representative\nDon E. Sargent \u2014 Phone 1335\nFor    Sale \u2014 Sleeping    Trailer.\n$160. Phone 833-Y.\nFilms Under the Stars Tonight.\nLakeside Park 9 p.m. weather\npermitting.\nKnitters\u2014For all yarn knitting\nneeds, we invite you to visit our\nwool department.\nEBERLE'S on Baker Street.\nPlate and Sheet  Glass   Mirrors\nfor cabinets, walls and doors.\nT. H. WATERS CO. LTD.\nPhone 156     101 Hall St.     Nelson\nCans for your canning. 2 and 2Vt\npound size, inside enamelled and\nplain. Burpee can sealing machines. HIPPERSON'S.\nGuaranteed Radio and\nTelevision Service\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n532 Baker St. Phone 1555\nRayon Damask Table Cloths and\nSets. Soft pastel shades. $2.98 to\n$6:50 set.\nTAYLOR'8 DRY GOODS\n\"Do It Yourself\"\nCuahlon your home with\nPllofoam from\n8TERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nDog muzzles, collars and leads\nand complete line of pet supplies.\nMAC8 FLOWER 8HOP\nPHONE 910\n4 room house for rent. Mark-\noff's, Slocan Park.\nWindow screening in all widths\n\u2014 24-inch to 48-inch. Screen doors\nin all standard sizes.\nHIPPERSON'S\nHot weather special \u2014 cotton\nmesh T Shirts in all sizes for ages\n2 to 18. White and assorted colors.\n69c.\nEBERLE'8 on Baker 8t.\nChimneys cleaned and topped.\nFurnaces, stoves cleaned by\nvacuum,\nPounder's Chimney Service\nPhone 1541-L.\nFor your summer camp purchase\none of our used fridges, two large\nand 3 Astrals, all in good condition. Also 4 used chests of drawers.\nWe Buy and Sell New and Used\nFurniture\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBURTON \u2014 Funeral service for\nthe late Frank John Burton will\nbe held on Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. at\nthe Thompson Funeral Home. Rev.\nCanon W. J. Silverwood will officiate and interment will be in\nNelson Memorial Park.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBRIGHT \u2014 Funeral service for\nthe late Mrs. Helena Bright will be\nheld on Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the\nThompson Funeral Home. Mrs. E.\nH. Paterson will officiate and interment will be in Nelson Memorial Park.\nTOUGH  ON   MEMBER8\nThis session has been tough on\nmembers, particularly those of opposition parties. Hours were long\nin the early stages due to a record\namount of committee work outside\nthe chamber, and there has been\nlittle letup since committees were\nclosed out in early June.\nThe Progressive Conservative\nfilibuster against indefinite extension of the wide powers of Defence Production Minister Howe\nlasted 10 days, delaying consideration of the estimates.\nWhen it became known the session would extend well into July,\nthe Liberals devised a holiday plan\nfor themselves. A large number of\nQuebec and Ontario Liberals were\naway from Ottawa during the first\ntwo weeks of July. They have\nsince returned and other members\nfrom more distant points have\ngone home for good.\nThe large Liberal majority In\nthe House enabled the plan to\nwork without the government being placed in any danger when\nvotes were called. Opposition parties had no such plan.   *\nAttendance by members of all\nparties has been reasonably good\nfor the last two or three weeks.\nDuring the defence production debate at least 30 of the 51 Conservatives were on hand at all times.\nJUDGE INTERESTED\nMONTREAL CP)-Blonde night\nclub dancer Anne Sobol took her\ndancing togs to court ready to\ndress up \u2014 or down \u2014 and perform for Judge Pascal Lacha\npelle. But the judge wasn't having\nany of it. Instead, he found her\nguilty of performing an indecent\ndance in the night club where she\nworked and sentenced her to five\ndays in jail, plus a fine of $100\nor another five days. Defence lawyer Maurice Pratte had said Miss\nSobol was willing to give a performance then and there to show\nthat she was \"well covered.\"\nSioux Claim\nTreaty Broken\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Saulteaux\nIndians, angry at being \"denied\nthe right\" to choose their own\nchiefs, claim that the federal and\nprovincial governments have dishonored an 1871 treaty. They\nthreaten to take their grievance\nto the Queen.\nAbout 30 reserve Indians from\nall over Manitoba \u2014 descendants\nof the original chieftains who signed the treaty at Fort Stone in\n1871 \u2014 met in Winnipeg to decide\non action to halt what they called\na government attempt to \"curtail\"\nthe Indian.\nIn a statement after the meeting,  the  Saulteaux Indians said:\n\"We want the right to choose\nour own chiefs and not to have\nthem foisted on us by what is\ncalled an election, but what is\nreally a case of taking what chief\nthe Indian agent recommends.\"\nAdvised how to vote\nIn Indian spokesman said the\nagent advises reserve Indians how\nto vote for councillors and chief,\nand \"naturally\" the people vote\nthat way for the good of their\ncommunity.\n\"But if a candidate refuses t&\nsign that he will work directly\nunder the agent, despite' his hereditary status, he cannot become\nchief. This we want to tell the\nQueen.\"\nBLAMES POOR  AGENT8\nR. F. Davis, regional supervisor\nfor Indian agencies, says any Indian bands which have the election system for selecting chiefs\nhave it at their own request.\nj \"I have had some poor agents,\"\n[ he said. \"I had to rid one reserve\n[ of an agent two. years ago.\"\nj The Indian spokesman said the\n1871 treaty provided that Indians\nwere Her Majesty's people and\n\"she shall deal with her servants\nwho do not do their duty in *\nproper manner.\"\n\"Instead, of this provision, the\ngovernment has done its utmost to\ncurtail the Indian \u2014 and we are\nopposed to this.\"\nFish Die of Heat\nCHARLESTON, W. Va. (AP) \u2014\nEven the fish are dying from the\nheat. \"Many streams are so warm\nthat we are losing fish,\" reported\nthe West Virginia conservation\ndepartment Friday.\nDECEIVE R\u2014This flower\npot Is actually a German electric clock. Face Is In a blossom\nwith the works in the pot.\nFlexible stem transmits motivating electric power.\nIced Salt Water\nTo Preserve Fish\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A new\nmethod of preserving fish in refrigerated sea water instead of\nice has been successful in tests\nbeing conducted on British Columbia's coast.\nOfficials of the Pacific Experimental Fisheries Station here report that 20,000 pounds of blue-\nback salmon unloaded, in Vancouver after being kept in cold\nsea water were \"in excellent condition.\"\nHowever, the officials added\nthat the method has not yet bffen\nproven commercially practicable.\nThey said cost of installing equipment and methods of handling\nfish were still being studied.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nWATCH REPAIRS\n20 YEARS EXPERIENCE\nNEISON, B.C\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Bake Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or White\nIt Makes Excellent\nHome-Made  Bread.\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nPHONE 238\nBeach Toys\n\u2022Plastic Wading Pool   $3.96\nPlastic Water Serpent .... $2.35\nPlastic Firs' Boat  $3.00\nBEACH PAIL8\n8wlm Goggles 89c, $1.19, $1.25\n8wlm Fins\n$3.50, $4.50\nCity Drug\n\"Your Rexall Pharmacy\"\nM\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_1955_07_25","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0428934","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}