{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0428956":{"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":"1955-06-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0428956\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" : \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-. 1\t\nCanada's Price\nFor Hydro Power\nIJC Problem\nHope For Formula, Set of Principles,\nOr Possibility of.Treaty Negotiation\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The International Joint Commission\nhas been asked by the government to discuss what benefits\nCanada should receive from the United States for hydro\npower generated in the U.S.\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Variable cloudiness.\"\nA few showers, Little change in\ntemperature. Winds north 10 todojr.\nLow-high at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley 45 and 75. \u2022\u25a0\nwith Canadian water.\nThe measure was passed at the\nnight sitting and sent to the Senate for approval. Social Credit members, who say it will permit federal\ninterference in provincial affairs,\nexpressed opposition to giving the\nbill final reading but did not force\na recorded vote.\nResources Minister Lesage made\nthe announcement Tuesday as the\nCommons began detailed study of\ngovernment legislation tightening\nfederal control over international\nrivers.\nThe legislation, approved in principle by the Commons, provides\nthat anyone, including provincial\ngovernments, must obtain a federal\nlicence before constructing dams in\nCanada on rivers flowing into the\nU.S,\nThe provision would block a deal\nbetween the British Columbia gov\nernment and the Kaiser Corp. of the\nU.S. for a dam on the lower Arrow\nlakes of the Columbia river system\nto feed a power plant at Bonneville,\nWash. The federal government ob\njected    to    the    arrangement    or\nDutch Princess\nLays Cornerstone\nTHE HAGUE. Netherlands (Reu-\nI ters)\u2014 Canadian-born Princess\" Mar-\nI griet, 12-year-old third daughter of\nI Queen Juliana, placed the cornerstone Tuesday of the new $300,000\n\\ Canadian embassy chancery here.\nA full-dress band and 90-man\n| guard of honor from the 2nd Regi-\nI ment Royal Canadian Horse Artil-\nl-lery paraded as the blue-eyed,\n[ auburn-haired princess arrived to\nI carry out her first official function\nI on her own.\nCanadian ambassador Thomas A.\nj Stone led her by .the hand to her\nI leat next to Dutch Prime Minister\nI Willem Drees, and then rose to say:\nI'^Canadians have a pride in considering you as their own particular\n[princess and have for you a very\n[deep affection and sentiment.\"\nHanded a silver trowel, the prin-\nIcess slowly and deliberately spread\nIthe cement and lowered the stone\nIslab into place with help from the\n\u25a0 ambassador and a builders' repre-\nllentative.\nShe tapped it with a hammer,\nland signed a declaration saying the\nIstone was \"well and truly laid\" and\n\u25a0slipped into it an aluminum cap-\nBsule which will be buried in the\n[embassy's foundations.\nAlso to go in are pictures of the\nDutch royal family, Canadian and\nDutch currency bills ranging from\n($1,000 downwards marked specimen.\nt.C. NUCLEAR PHYSICS\nSTUDENT TO U.K.\nTORONTO \u2014 Two brilliant stud-\n\u25a0ents from Winnipeg and Vancouver\n\u25a0will study for two years in the\n|United Kingdom as the first winners of Shell science and engineer-\nling post-graduate scholarships. The\n(scholarships are valued at approximately $4000 each.\nWinner Theodore P. Schaefer of\n\u25a0835 McDermot Avenue, Winnipeg,\nnas been studying physical chemistry at the University of Manitoba\nvhere he earned his BSc degree last\n[year. George B. Chadwick of 918\nVest 19th Ave., Vancouver, has\nbeen specializing in nuclear physics\n^t the UBC where he received his\n3A degree two years ago.\ngrounds B.C. would be selling out\nits waterpower resources for peanuts.\nWOULD DEFINE PRINCIPLES\nMr. Lesage was asked by Howard\nGreen (PC\u2014Vancouver Quadra)\nwhether the government has taken\nany steps leading to the negotiation\noT a treaty with the U.S. on downstream benefits. The government\nindicated previously Canada should\nreceive power from the U.S. in return for Canadian water used to\ngenerate power across the international boundary.\nMr. Lesage said he has asked Gen.\nA. G. L.    McNaughton,    Canadian\nchairman   of   the   commission,   to\nraise the question before the commission. He hoped to receive its report in the \"not too distant future.\"\nThe commission would attempt\n-   to find  a formula  applicable  on\nboth aide* of the border. If a formula could not be found, at least\na set of principles could be laid\ndown.\nThe study was being made to determine whether It would be possible to negotiate a treaty with the\nU.S. on downstream benefits, Mr.\nLesage said.\nMr. Lesage also announced con\nstruction and operation of existing\nprojects in the Columbia basin will\nbe licensed automatically by the\nfederal government However, he\nsaid this special arrangement\nshould not be interpreted as estab'\nlishing a precedent.\nHELP  IN  FINANCING\nA. B. Patterson (SC\u2014Fraser Valley) and H. W. Herridge (CCF\u2014\nKootenay West) urged joint feder\nal-provincial development of the\nColumbia basin's hydro resources.\nMr. Patterson and George McLeod (SC\u2014Okanagan-Revelstoke)\nurged that the provinces be assisted\nto obtain capital for such projects\nand Mr. Herridge said public funds\nshould be used.\nMr,. Lesage said federal participation in power development is a\nmatter of major policy,\nThe government would oppose\ndevelopment of projects which\nwould be controlled by American\ninterests. However, there might not\nbe the same objection to use of U.S.\ncapital for a \"Canadian concern.\"\nOttawa Boosts\nMunicipal Grants\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Payment of\nfederal grants in lieu of taxes to\nmunicipalities in which crown-\nowned married quarters are located was approved Tuesday night\nby the Commons.\nThe action was taken by an\namendment to legislation now before the House almost doubling\nfederal grants to municipalities in\nplace of taxes on crown property.\nBroadening of the legislation to\ninclude grants in lieu of taxes on\nmarried quarters housing defence\npersonnel was' recommended by\nthe banking and commerce committee. The grants will be at the\nlevel of municipal taxation.\nThe legislation provides that the\ngovernment will pay a municipality full tax rates where the value\nof federal property exceeds two\nper cent of total property assessment.\nWhifton Envisions\nA Woman's World\nOTTAWA (CP) - The future as\nseen through the eyes of mayor\nCharlotte Whitton is enough to\nmake the strongest man's hair grow\nlong and his trousers turn to skirts.\nShe has envisioned a Commons\nand Senate, in the year 2055,t in\nwhich the women members graciously ensure protection of the\nrights of men.\nt An anticipatory smile playing\nacross her face, she spoke, too, of\nthe day Ottawa again will find a\nman capable of winning the mayor's\noffice \u2014 held by her since 1951.\nMiss Whitton described her visions to the Ottawa Women's Press\nClub and the Charlotte Whitton\nCommittee \u2014 which feted her following her last civic election win\nin December.\nShe saw men, in 100 years,, taking a steadily-mounting interest in\nchurch missionary societies and\n\"men's auxiliaries.\"\nShe saw newspapers containing\nmen's social pages. But always the\nwomen would respect and preserve\nmen's rights and privileges in the\ncommunity.\nAnd on that day \u2014 AD 2055 \u2014 Ottawa, at least, would look back 100\nyears to the start of it all \"with\nthat old devil,\" Mayor Whitton herself.\nTaxicab Strike\nHits Singapore\nSINGAPORE (AP) \u2014 Singapore's\n2000 taxicabs disappeared from\nthe streets Tuesday as drivers joined in a Communist-backed general\nstrike protesting the arrest of six\nChinese union officials.\nThe taxi walkout left thousands\nstranded without public transportation. The city's 13 bus lines were\nshut down Sunday wnen 6000 employees .walked off their jobs.\nBut the union leaders said the\nrest of their members would join\nthe walkout shortly. This threat\ncame after this British colony's\nlabor government turned down a\nunion offer to call off the strike in\nexchange for the release, of the six\nNo major violence has been\nreported so far, but authorities\nare keeping a sharp lookout.\nStrike-sparked riots last month\ncost the lives of four persons.\nTHE WORLD'S'MOST POWERFUL itralflht-llnb-atom smasher\nIs nearlng completion at the University of Minnesota In Minneapolis.\nThe actual atom-smasher Is the long tube that runs through the\ncentre, of the picture, which lo four feet in diameter and 100 feet\nlong. It was built with a U.S. Atomic Energy commission grant of\n$1,600,000. Ions, travelling through a lino of copper sleeves suspended\nIn the centre of the barrel, will be accelerated by millions of electron volts. After passing through the. final stage-of the tube, the\nIons will emerge from a muzzle blast Into targets of nuclei at a\nspeed of about 60,000 miles per second.\u2014(Central Press Canadian.)\nExpensive Plumbing\nOTTAWA (CP) .\u2014 Canadians\nspend more than $300,000,000 a year\nrepairing or replacing rusty water\npipes, leaky radiators and other\nmetallic materials eaten by corrosion. The estimate was made Monday by Dr. H. D. Smith of Halifax,\nchairman of the National Research\nCouncil's associate committee on\ncorrosion research and prevention,\nin a report on the committee's annual meeting here.\nBODY FOUND\nALERT BAY, B.C. (CP) \u2014 Body\nof Wallace Wilson, 45, one of four\npersons drowned in a boating accident near here last Friday, was recovered Tuesday.\nAdenauer to Prepare\n[For Meet With Soviet\n. By JOHN 8CALI\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014West Ger-\nhan Chancellor Konrad Adenauer\nlaid Tuesday night he probably will\npccept  Russia's  invitation  to  visit\nMoscow but such a trip \"must be\n|horoughly   prepared\"   in  advance.\nAdenauer disclosed his attitude\n|oward the Russian bid at a press\nonference-reception for him by\nlorrespondents after his talks with\nPresident Eisenhower and State\nsecretary Dulles. \u2022\n] Earlier Eisenhower and he had\npsued a joint declaration that only\nly collective-security arrangements\nIan Germany assure her indepen-\nlence. They rejected any Russian\nIttempt to get her to accept a neural role in exchange for unifica-\nlon.\n| The German leader indicated his\nrip to Moscow might have to wait\nIntil late summer. Thorough preparations \"require time,\" he said.\nOf the Big Four conference July\n18 in Geneva, Adenauer said he\ndoes not expect it to produce any\nEast-West disarmament agreement.\nIt will be too short and the problems involved too intricate for such\na troublesome issue to be settled\nthere, he explained.\nHowever, Adenauer said, \"it\nwould be desirable\" for President\nEisenhower and Russia's top representative to \"declare their determination to realize and transform\ninto reality controlled disarmament,\nand not only talk about it in negotiations and committees.\"\nWaisx 3juoek.\nNelson:   Monday   10.70;   Tuesday\n11.50.\n1955 1948\nRevelstoke     28.10   26.52 29.64\nTrail     31.99   35.66 45.28\nWardner   11.73   10.24 9.26\nTELLS OF NEW VITAMIN\nLIVERPOOL (CP)\u2014Dr. Charles\nH. Best of the University- of Toronto, co-discoverer of insulin, arrived in Britain Tuesday. He came\nto deliver a lecture to the Royal\nSociety in London on a new vitamin, choline\u2014hitherto unrecognized as a dietary factor\u2014which can\nbe used in the treatment of some\nliver, heart and kidney complaints.\nPeron Orders Bishops\nOusted, Questioned\nBy FRED  L. 8TROZIER\nBUENOS AIRES (AP)\u2014President\nJuan D. Peron's government Tuesday ordered two Roman Catholic\nbishops discharged from their posts\nand called them in for questioning\nbefore a federal judge investigating\nrecent disorders. (i. . V .\nA cabinet decree accused* them of\npromoting disorders involving\nchurch and of Peron supporters.\nThe bishops, accompanied by two\nother clergymen, were called to\nfederal police headquarters to face\nthe judge. There was no sign they\nwere under arrest.\nThe decree ended the -bishops'\nauthority under the government,\nwhich recognizes Catholicism as\nthe state religion.\nHowever,  a high  church  source\nsaid Santiago. Luis Cardinal Copello\nmight keep them in their present\npositions  although separated from\nofficial government titles.\nBURN BISHOP IN EFFIGY\nPjjtjPeron workers gathered in a\nniijjjr mass meeting at which the\npresident, promised to maintain or.\nder..   \u2022'\u2022   -:       \" \u2014'\u25a0    * '   \"'\n\"I promise that as always and\nwith the highest degree of prudence\nI will enforce compliance with thfe\nlaw without violence, but in every\ninstance,\" Peron said.\nAfter the meeting part of the\ncrowd marched to the plaza facing\nMetropolitan cathedral. One group\ncarried an effigy dressed as a\nbishop. Halting before the cathedral, they hanged the effigy from a\ntree and set it afire.\n3 CHARGED WITH\nATTEMPT MURPER\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Robert\nGordon, a 21-year-old logger from\nNelson, B.C., held as a material witness in the attempted slaying of a\ndrug addict, today- was remanded\nPolice said Gordon was walking\nuntil June 20 on $1,000 bail,\nalong the False Creek flats with\nRay Kinna, 29, when they were attacked by six other men early Saturday.\nGordon fled, but Kinna,'described\nas a drug addict by police chief\nWalter Mulligan, was tackled by the\ngang. and severly beaten with an\nangle-iron bed bar.\nCharged with attempted murder\nare Robert Joseph Tremblay, 33,\nformerly of Montreal; Marcel Alfred Frenette, 28; Charles A. Talbot, 36, and Lucien Mayer, all of\nVancouver,\nINDIAN PRIME MINISTER Nehru salutes the honor guard that\ngreeted, his arrival at Moscow's central airport. The top Soviet\nleaders, Including Premier Bulganin, at left, turned out to greet\nNehru, who received the warmest reception accorded any visitor to\nMoscow In recent years, In a brief address at the, airport, Nehru\nsaid: \"I have long wanted to see this great and famous city, and I\nam now very glad-to be here,\" Nehru's sixteen-day visit to Russia\nto discuss International situation with Soviet leaders Is his first trip\nthere since 1927, when he came as an obscure rebel opposed to\nBritish rule.\u2014(Central Press Canadian).\nQueen Mary's Crew\nJoin U.K. Strikers\nSOUTHAMPTON, England (Reuters) \u2014 About 150 members of the\ncrew of the liner Queen Mary voted\nTuesday to join the more than 500\nseamen striking here and at Liver\npool for better pay and working\nconditions.\nThe 81,000-ton Cunard liner docked Monday .night irom New York.\nThe wildcat seamen's strike has\nalready tied up the 35,674-ton Cu-\nnarder Mauretania here. Penned in\nLiverpool are the Cunard liners\nSaxonia (22,000 tons), Ascania (14,-\n400 tons) and the Britannic (27,666\ntons), and the Canadian Pacific liner Empress of Australia (17,379),\nBurnham Scrapbook\nGoes To Museum\nREGINA (CP)\u2014A scrapbook on\nthe Northwest Territories Exhibition held at Regina In 1695 will\nbe placed In Saskatchewan's new\nMuseum of Natural History here.\nDr. Lewis Thomas, provincial\narchivist, said Tuesday he received the scrapbook from the\nestate of the late Brigadier-General F. W. E. Burnham, formerly\nof Arrow Lakes, B.C,\nThe scrapbook was prepared by\nLt.-Gov. C. H. Mackintosh of the\nNorthwest Territories who managed the exhibition.\nSwallows Teeth, Dies\nGALENA, Md. (AP) \u2014 A man\ncoughed so hard here he swallowed\nhis false teeth and choked to death.\nGeorge F. Hillderg, 62, was pronounced dead by Dr. R. C, Dodson,\ncounty medical examiner. Dr. Dodson said Hillderg's throat was\nblocked by his false teeth after he\nswallowed them during a coughing\nspell.\nParliament\nTuesday\nBy The Canadian Press\nPrime Minister St. Laurent said\nhe deprecates newspaper stories\ncarrying statements attributed to\nunnamed officals.\nThe Commons passed revised unemployment - insurance legislation\nafter defeating 108 to 61 a Progressive Conservative move to delay\npassage.\nThe government proposed pay\nments of $2.50 an acre to prairie\nfarmers on land they are unable to\nseed or put to summerfallow due to\nfloods.\nThe Commons passed a bill low'\nering the starting age for blind pensions to 18 from 21 and increasing\nmeans-test income ceilings.\nSenator Ralph B. Horner (PC-\nSaskatchewan) said federal hog-\ngrading regulations should be less\nstringent.\nProgress Reported in\nDock Strike as Rail\nWorkers Back to Jobs\nBy ADRIAN BALL\nLONDON  (Reuters) \u2014 British rail officials  embarked\nTuesday night on the task of restoring normal train service**\nafter,leaders of 500,000 rail workers approved a settlement\nterminating a 17-day national\nFrance Mourns\nRace Track Dead\nBy HAROLD SIEVE '\nLE MANS, France (Reuters) \u2014\nFrance banned all automobile racing Tuesday pending new safety\nregulations as government leaders\nattended memorial services for the\n82 victims of Saturday's crash at\nthe 24-hour endurance race here.\nThe new regulations, drawn up\nby experts to ensure that Saturday's tragedy is never repeated, are\nexpected to modify radically the\nconditions of the Le Mans classic.\nAt present cars ofVwidely-differing\ntop speeds compete.\nIn addition to the 82 dead, 105\npersons were injured when a German Mercedes sliced into the crowd\nand exploded. Eight of the Injured     \u201e\u201e, ,\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e     fmK   , \u201e\nhav* had to.hav*4imb8i*mpu1\u00abt\u00ab^ .-J^QQTOlUm-The. mum-\n_-: ... . V _    **   L^   \"        nlnnli+v     nf    Woof  \u25a0 VsTifAli'trpr     W\/in\nThe bells of ancient Le Mans\ncathedral toiled over this shuttered\nprovincial town Tuesday as mourners filed into the old church for\nmemorial services. A black-edged\nFrench flag-flew at half-mast over\nthe cathedral.\nThe Catholic priest who officiated witnessed the accident and\ngave extreme unction to many of\nthe dying.\nPM Advises\nAgainst Quoting\nUnnamed Officials\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Prime Minister\nSt. Laurent said Tuesday newspapers would be \"better advised\"\nnot to report statements attributed\nto unnamed officials.\nHe was replying in the Commons\nto Opposition leader Drew who said\na Canadian Press report Monday\nnight had an unnamed department\nofficial discussing a subject \"which\nthe government refused to discuss'1\nin the Commons.\nThe subject is the announced retirement Aug. 31 of Lt.-Gen. Guy\nSimonds, - 52, chief of the general\nstaff, and his succession by Maj.;\nGen. Howard Graham, 56, now\nchief of the army's central command.\nMr. Drew, rising on a question\nof privilege at the Commons opening, said the official's comment on\nGen. Simonds' retirement was issued in the form of a statement\nhanded to the .press. He demanded\nthe name of the official.\nActually, the defence department has issued no statement concerning Gen. Simonds' retirement\nexcept for the brief announcement\nlast week by Defence Minister\nCampney that^ the general is being retired because he has \"completed the normal four-year tour.\"\nMr. St. Laurent said he didn't\nknow the name of the official.\nCritic To Marry\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014George Jean\nNathan, veteran New York drama\ncritic, will be married at sea next\nMonday to actress \"Julie Haydon\nduring a voyage Jo Latin America,\nMiss Haydon, 44,'and Nathan, 72,\nsail'Friday, on the liner Santa Rosa.\nThe wedding will be performed by\nits commander somewhere in Caribbean waters.   \u25a0\nBLIND WORKERS TO MEET\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Nearly 1000\nworkers for the blind will meet\nthis month in Quebec City. The\nnational office of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind announced Tuesday that the 29th annual convention of the American\nAssociation of Workers for ' the\nBlind will be held here June 19\nto 24. Prime Minister St. Laurent\nwill welcome delegates coming\nfrom all parts of North America,\nCLERGYMEN TO RUSSIA\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Seven Church of\nEngland ministers left London by\nplane Tuesday for a visit to Russia.\nThey are rank-and-file clergymen\nof British parishes, and their visit\nis unofficial as far as the Anglican\nchur.eli.is concerned. They will be\nguests .for two weeks of the synod\nof the* Russian .(Orthodox) Church\nstrike.\nThe' most serious rail stoppage\nin British history was ending with\nthe return to work of members of\nthe Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen.\nSir Brian Robertson, chief of the\nTransport Commission, promised\nan early resumption of passenger\nservices and predicted freight trains\nwill be operating normally within\na few days,\nThe agreement reached between\nthe commission and union leaders\nprovides for a resumption of work\nby the 70,000 strikers \"forthwith.\"\nThey are assured of pay increases\nunder a - promise by \u25a0 the com*\nmission to begin detailed talks on\na new wage settlement for all of\nBritain's rail workers within seven\ndays.\nEFFECT8 NOT OVER.\nThe strike halted 80 per cent of\ntrain services and plunged the\ncountry into an official state of\nemergency within three days of its\nMay 29 start.\nEmergency train service operated\nby the non-striking National Union\nof Railwaymen kept essential goods\nmoving. Trucks and buses were\nmobilized to haul \u2022 supplies and\npassengers. But the government has\nwarned    cumulative    effects    will\nVANCOUVER WINS\n$3 MILLION CUT\nIN ASSESSMENTS\nclpality of West Vancouver won\nmore .than $3,000,000 reduction In\nits assessment- roll \"set by the provincial government >''.\nThe B.C. assessment appeal board\nfixed the municipality's 1955 assessment of homes and buildings at $30,-\n763,798,' compared to -the \u25a0 $33,987,-\n334 set by the provincial assessment\ncommissioner.\nIts decision sustained an appeal\nmade last month by the municipality.\n'The ruling means West Vancouver's assessment roll will be approximately 10 per cent lower than\nexpected.\nCoast Alderman To\nStudy Homes Project\nVANCOUVER (CPV \u2014 Aid.\nGeorge Cunningham has been an.\npointed to launch a study into a\nsecond subsidized housing project,\nmainly to house aged and low-income groups.\nHis plan, Aid. Cunningham said\nMonday night, \"will not be duplicate of Little Mountain,\" at present\nthe only municipally - subsidized\nhousing development. The Little\nMountain project, built with federal and provincial funds on city\nlands, has been criticized as subsidizing persons on higher income\nlevels,\nAgreed Charges Bill\nMay Be Held Over\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Government\nlegislation to give railways more\nlatitude in setting \"agreed-charge\"\nfreight rates may be left until the\nnext session of Parliament.\nles foi\nn. Hi|\nshow  up   in   export   and   import\nfigures not yet compiled.\nLabor Minister Sir Walter\nMonckton steered the talks between trade union chiefs and\nrailroad executives through tholr\ndelicate final stages In a day of\nIntense negotiation. He won n\nround of cheers from the House\nof Commons when he announced\nthe strike's end.\nA referee of \"impartiality, In\"\ntegrity and acknowledged judgment\" will hear the views of all\nparties and name what he con*\nsiders- appropriate basic wages :\nthe engineers and motormen.\ndecision will be accepted without\nquestion by all parties.\nThe referee is 58-year-old Lord\nMorris, judge who has presided\nover many industrial-dispute hearings. He is expected to start work\nwithin 24 hours, hearing interested\nparties separately and privately.\nDOCK 8TRIKE\nThe outlook also brightened on\nTuesday in the dock strike that\nhas held up activity in six major\nports for 23 days, halting export*\nand affecting mofe than 250 ships.\nThe National Amalgamated Stevedores, and Dockers Union, seeking\ncountry-wide bargaining recognition, announced \"considerable pro.\ngress\"'ln negotiations with the giant\nTrades Union Congress aimed at\nending the stoppage.\nA concurrent strike of seamen ii\nholding up the sailing of five trans-\nAtlantic liners and threatened\nTuesday to spread to the Curiafder\nQueen Mary. About 150 of tho\nQueen Mary's crew decided to Join\nthe stoppage.\nThe rail strike Is estimated to\nhave cost the railroads \u00a31,000,000\na day. The rail system already\nhad been operating at a loss, despite several Increases of passenger and freight rates In recent\nyearj.\nTo Attend To\nCanada's Economy\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 An expert-in.\neconomic surgery, a man whose\ndeft skill has saved many a sick\nfirm from the abyss of bankruptcy\nhas been picked by the government\nto help diagnose and prescribe for\nCanada's economic health in the\nnext quarter-century.\nAppointment of Walter L. Gordon, Toronto - born management\nconsultant and accountant, as chairman of the royal commission to\nlook into Canada's economic future,\nlikely will be announced by Prime\nMinister St. Laurent in the next\nfew days.\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014Canadian dollar was 1\/32 higher at a premium\nof 1 9\/18 Per cent in terms of U.S.\nfunds Tuesday. Pound sterling up\n1\/16 of a cent at $2.79 7\/16.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014U.S. dollar\nTuesday closed at a discount of\n1 17\/32 per cent in terms of Canadian funds, down 1\/32. It took 98\n15\/32 cents Canadian to buy $1\nAmerican. Pound sterling $2.75'A,\ndown 1\/16.\nAnd In This Corner ...\nTORONTO  (CP)\u2014Talk about painless extractlonl :\nPolice today charged two men with stealing $300 from the pockets\nof three sleeping deptists in their hotel room here.\nThe dentists were attending a convention.\nNORWICH, England (Reuters)\u2014Blind Peter Barr got into an\nargument with his wife, struck his fist on his palm\u2014and suddenly the\nwoman he had never seen materialized before his eyes.\n\"In about 15 minutes I could see,\" the 34-year-old man said\nThursday. \"The first thing I did was kiss my wife, then I broke up\nmy white stick and threw it in the fire.\"\nBarr has been blind for three years.\nLINDEN, N.J. (AP) \u2014Rev. Charles Varga, a Roman Catholic\npriest, said a church-sponsored modesty campaign among dress shops\nis under way here and In some other parts of the United States,\nUnder the plan shop owners affix a special tag to dresses which pass\nmodesty requirements.\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Never, never underestimate your adversary\nand turn your back on him.\nThat's what patrolman John R. Spagna did Monday while supervising removal of a boisterous rooster from a back yard on E. 9th St\nThe rooster let the.cop have it with beak and claws.\n\u25a0 \"He came at me viciously when my back was turned,\" Spagna\nrelated later.   \"The force of it was so great it threw me forward.\nYou should have seen that rooster. It must have weighed nine pounds\nor more.\n\"I had the urge to pull my revolver or use my night stick\u2014which,\nof course, wouldvbe against regulations. But I had the urge and that\nbig black-and-grey bird must have recognized it. He retreated-quickr\nly. But not before he Inflicted pretty painful damage to me.\"\nThe rooster finally was subdued and taken to an animal shelter.\nSpagna went to hospital to have his lacerations treated.\n'     I\n__\n : \"\u25a0\/^\n-.;., ':\u25a0''\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 ! '\u25a0\nlAomvofi\"-*\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15,195S\nPLEASE NOTE\u2014SHOWS STARTS AT 6:30\u2014Complotc Show* 6:30-9:20\nFEATURE AT 6:40 - 9:30\nNever, never will you forget\nthe girl who became a star,\nand a woman at\nthe same momentl\nPrlcei:\n75c\n50c\n25e\nTax I nel.\n'Active talderatlon' From Victoria\nFor Preventative Home Brief\nSTARLIGHT\nDrive-In Theatre\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nCARTOON \u2014 8;50\n\"DISTANT  DRUM8\" \u2014 BlOO\nRoom   For   Ons   More\u2014Cartoon\nLast Complete Show 9i00\nThe critics say\u2014An exciting\nadventure tale of the Florida\nEvergladei which ii made to\norder for action minded audiences,\n\"CaiyGrant'l\nBetsy Drake]\nRoom For\nOne More'J\nA truly wonderful comedy\nthat should enjoy unlimited\naudience praise. A real comedy masterpiece.\nAUTO VUE\nDRIVE-IN\nTRAIL,   B.  C.\nTONITE end THUR8DAY\nTime 9:10    *\n\"MA AND PA KETTLE\nAT HOME\"\nMargery Maine and Percy Kilbride\nPLUS \"THE FAKE\"  \u2014  NEWS\nTrail Miss Gets\nYMCA Position\n\u25a0 TRAIL J- Nan Patton, daughter\not Isaac P. Patton and the late Mrs.\nPatton, 1952 Third Avenue, has been\nappointed Girls' Work Secretary at\nthe St. James Family Y.M.C.A.,\nWinnipeg. Her new work will commence in mid August.\nMiss Patton will attend the\nY.M.C.A. Camp Stephens on the\nLake ot the Woods as camp nurse\ntor six weeks prior to taking* up her\nnew duties as \"Y\" Secretary. She\nwill be the first full time woman\nSecretary on the Winnipeg Y.M.C.A,\nstaff.\nMiss Patton has just completed\nher training at Essondale as a\npsychiatric nurse. She received her\neducation at the J.L. Crowe High\nSchool, and was active in the Trail\nY.M.C.A. with Bill Naylor and Bert\nGreene. She was a member of\nKappa Gamma Hi-Y and represented Trail at the National HI-Y\nConvention at Lake Couchiching,\nOntario, ln 1952.\nStargazers May\nSee New Comet\nMT. HAMILTON, Calif. (API-\nWant to see a new cornel?\nThen be up just before dawrOget\naway from artificial lights as far as\npossible and look at the northeast\nsky about 15 nr 25 degreeB above\nthe horizon. Binoculars will help.\nThe brightest star ln that part of\nthe sky is Capella. The comet is\nfive degrees (10 times the diameter\nof the moon) west of that star. The\ncomet has a star-like body and a\ntail-length three or four times the\nmoon's diameter.\nFrom the University of California's Lick observatory here Dr.\nHamilton M. Jeffers and Elizabeth\nRoeroer spotted the new sky figure\nTuesday morning, 48 hours after its\ndiscovery by an astronomer in\nCzechoslovakia.\nThe new comet will get a little\nbrighter as the moon wanes the\nnext couple of nights, Dr, Jeffers\nsaid, and may become plainly apparent to the unaided eye. Whether\nit will move over into the evening\nsky is yet to be determined.\nSalvation Army\nCitadel Stuccoed\nExterior of the Salvation Army\ncitadel at 511 Victoria Street is\nhaving its face lifted. Its red brick\nwalls are being stuccoed. The work\nwhich was begun about two weeks\nago and is expected to be completed about the end of tha week.\nDo You Need a\nSINK\nOf  Fine  Quality?\nReasonably\nPriced?\nWE HAVE\nIT!\nDrop in Today to\nKootenay\nPlumbing\n351 Baker St.      Phone 666\nand  Heating Co.  Ltd.\nDies in Jamaica\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Robinson\nJ. (Bob) Moore, 49, veteran western\nCanada newspaper man, died Monday night in Kingston, Jamaica, it\nwas learned here Tuesday.\nAt the time of his death, Mr.\nMoore was on leave from his job at\nbusiness editor of the Vancouver\nProvince and his post as president\nof the Newsmen's Club of British\nColumbia.\nHe is survived by his widow, who\nwas with him ln Jamaica, and two\ndaughters, Carol and Sally of Vancouver. A son died several years\nago.\nMASS SUNG FOR\nMRS. TROZZO\nMany friends and relatives attended funeral service for Mrs\nFrank (Carolina) Trorzo at the\nCathedral of Mary Immaculate\nTuesday morning.\nRev. Father F. Monaghan celebrated requiem mass for Mrs.\nTrozzo, who died Saturday in Kootenay Lake General Hospital. She\nwas 76.\nThere were many floral tributes.\nInterment was in Nelson Memorial\nPark, Pallbearerfe were George\nMunch, A. R. Kruk, M. A. Woyna,\nFrank \"Trozzo of Cranbrook, L,\nSimone and Louis Coletti. Rosary\nwas recited at Thompson Funeral\nHome Monday night\nNelson Film Council\nElection Tonight\nNelson Film Council will hear\ncommittee reports for the past year\nand elect new officers at their an\nnual meeting tonight in the Cana\ndian Legion hall. Retiring7 president\nis C. R. Higgens.\n\u25a0Art award winning film will a\nbe shown and the public is invited\nto attend.\nJamboree Scouts\nGet $50 (hecks\nFive Nelson boy scouts of the\nSixth Nelson St. Saviour's troop received $50 checks Tuesday night to\ngo towards their expenses at the\nWorld Scout Jamboree at Niagara-\non-the-Lake this August\nAt a ceremony in the Memorial\nHall, the boys were presented with\nthe checks by J. F. Morrison on behalf of the fund committee, worn;\nen's auxiliary and scout and cub\ntroops who together raised close to\n$650 for a special scout room in the\nMemorial Hall and Jamboree assistance fund.\n\"Upn you rests the responsibility\nto the scout movement in this part\nof the world,\" Dean Leadbeater\ntold the boys, Stephen Barrett, Ted\nSwendson, Charlie Morrison, Fred\nWah and Gerry Poulin.\n\"We trust you will recognize the\nprivilege and honor of attending a\nworld scout Jamboree where you\nwill come face to face with boys\nfrom every part of the world,\" he\nsaid, speaking before the boys, their\nparents and scout leaders. \"We will\nalso expect great things from you\nwhen you return, In leadership and\nstimulation of the scout movement\nln Nelson.\"\nAssistant scout commissioner E.\nK. Evans outlined th? privilege, duty and responsibility the boys share\nln attending the jamboree, after\nwhich the boys were congratulated\nby those present.\nStephen Barrett is the son of Dr.\nand Mrs. G. R. Barrett, Ted Swendson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Swendson, Charlie Morrison, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. F. Morrison, Fred Wah,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wah and\nGerry Poulin, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nP. E. Poulin, all of Nelson.\nBequest for provincial government approval of a preventative\nhome - for pre-delinquent juvenile\ngirls here ls receiving \"active' consideration,\" Attorney General Robert Bonner has said, \u2022\nIn a telegram to Rev. Canon W.\nJ. Silverwood, chairman of the Nelson Juvenile Court Committee, the\nAttorney General also gave assurance that he hoped to give \"early\nadvice\" concerning the home.\nThe committee has two projects,\none n temporary experimental preventative home and the other t\npermanent establishment. It was\nthe latter dealt with ln the brief\nto the Attorney General.\nThe temporary home was established on an experimental bails ln\nNelson ln April to meet a growing\nheed to rehabilitate \"pre-delln-\nquent\" girls before it became nocos\nsary to send them to the Girls' In.\ndustrlal School. It has not yet been\napproved by the government nor\ndoes It yet receive any financial\nsupport from the government.\nMr. Bonner's wire was ln response\nto requests from the Juvenile Committee for government approval of\nthe experiment, the first of Its kind\nin B.C.\nAt the same time the committee\nhas received letters from two other\njuvenile committees In the Kootenay, Kimberley Juvenile Court\nSommtttee and Trail Citizens Committee, both voicing approval and\nexpressing interest ln the home.\nBoth committees Indicated Interest In attending a joint meeting\nwith Nolson to \"make a thorough\nstudy of this situation.\"\nRev. Canon Silverwood laid that\nwhen word wes received from Mr.\nBonner concerning the \"early advice\" mentioned in his telegram, the\nmeeting would be called to discuss\ntht Juvenile delinquency problem,\nthe value and possible future of\nthe home and-possible establishment\nof e similar boys home.\nTRAIL MAN\nHEADS FORESTERS\nKELOWNA, B.C, (CP) - George\nH. Summerj of Trail was elected\nhere Tuesday as.grand\"patrl\u00bbrch of\nthe Grand Encampment, Independent Order of Foresters.\nAbout 900 delegate! from B.C.\ncentres are attending the 64th annual session of the grand lodge of\nB.C., the Rebekah Assembly and\nthe Grand Encampment.\nJ. Zimmerman, 60,\nOf Renata Passes\nJoseph Zimmerman, SO, of Renata\ndied Monday In Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.\nMr. Zimmerman, who farmed at\nRenata for four years prior to 1951,\nwas born in Budapest, Hungary,\nand went to Czechoslovakia as a\nchild. He worked ln different parts\nof Czechoslovakia before coming to\nCanada ln 1926, first settling at\nGrimshaw, Alberta. In 1929, his\nfamily joined him and they took\nup a homestead at North Star, Alberta. He moved to Renata ln 1947\nand continued farming till ill health\nforced retirement in 1951.\nHe ls survived by his wife,\nAugustina; three sons, Joseph of\nNakusp, Albert and Anton of\nPowell River, one daughter, Mrs.\nEleanor Wiesner of Nelson and 17\ngrandchildren.\nFuneral service will be Nelson\nThursday.\nNurses Report\nOn Convention\nA report on the annual May convention of the B.C. Registered\nNurses Association in Penticton\nwas given by delegate Miss Joan\nSutcliffe before the final monthly\nmeeting of the Nelson chapter in\nthe Nurses Home Tuesday night.\nThe .13 members present heard\nMiss Sutcliffe outline the program\nof the convention, which included\nexhibits, social events, banquets,\nmeetings, various addresses, student\nnurse fashion show and a visit to\nthe Penticton Hopital.\nMiss Sutcliffe, who attended the\nconvention along with Miss Flora\nMcLean and Mrs. W. Bucknell, summarized the talks on the aims of the\nRegistered Nurses Association, nursing education and promotion and\nregulation of sound employer-employee relations. She outlined the\nmftny reports heard In the three-\nJay meet, Including the district reports, finance, legislation and student nurses association. Miss Sutcliffe reported that Miss Alberta\nCreaser was re-elected president of\nthe provincial group for a second\nterm. It was pointed out that in 15\nyears the number of registered\nnurses in B.C. had doubled,  with\nFlood Threat\nEases in B.C.\nBy The Canadian Presi\nBritish Columbia rivers continued\nto rise slowly Tuesday, but cooler\nweather la expected to slow the\nrunoff of mountain snow packs\nthroughout most of the province.\nMain concern was the North\nThompson river, which caused five\nfamilies to evacuate from the Clearwater area near Kamloops.\nA spokesman for the Federal water resources division In Vancouver\nsaid the drop ln temperatures may\nprovide a three-day break in the\nbuilt-up flood watera .\n\"We are expecting a steady rise\nIn nipst places for the next three\ndays. We can't predict beyond that\nperiod. ,  \u2022\n\"However, if the coastal cool\nweather spreads inland, we hope it\nwill slow melting of the snow\npacks,\" he said.\nOnly other flooding in the interior was reported south of Creston\nwhere the Kootenay lapped over a\nlow-lying curve ot the Creston-\nPorthlll highway.\nThe Weather\nBy The Canadian Preii\nNelson  49 76    -\nSt. John's  50 76   .(\nMontreal    58 70   .;\nOttawa      56 71    -\nNorth Bay   51 72    \u2022\nKenora   56 79    \u2022\nBrandon     53 79    \u25a0\nRegina     52 84\nSwift Current   55 83\nMedicine Hat 49 81\nCalgary     45 74\nEdmonton   48 76\nclose to 7000 nurses ln the province  Crescent Valley  43 66\n.04\nin the 1954 count.\nDuring the business meeting,\nchaired by Miss Flora McLean, lt\nwas reported that home nursing\nclasses had been completed for the\nseason and that the recent hospital\nday had been successful. A vote of\nthanks was extended by Miss McLean to the members who assisted\nwith the recent blood clinic and bIbo\nIn the Community Chest Drive. Miss\nMcLean reported that donations\nhad been made to the Strathcona\nFire Relief Fund both from the\nchapter and the Individual member!.\nYOUR INSURANCE ADVISER\nFairview Cubmaster\nWins Certificate\nWhile a dozen members of his 3rd\nFairview Cub Pack watched Cubmaster Fred Westfall Monday night\nreceived his preliminary \u25a0 training\ncourse certificate from a member\nof the executive council, Nelson District Boy Scout Association.\nThe certificate signifies successful completion of Scouting leadership part I, practical training and\nqualifies the holder to continue toward a Scout Leader warrant.\nPresentation was made by R. H.\nProcter, vice-president of the Council.\nMr. Westfall with Assistant Cubmaster E. P. Baker has had 24 boys\nln training over the Winter months.\nThe sessions in the Hume School\nactivities room concluded for the\nseason with the presentation meeting.\nWilliam Godfrey\nFuneral Held Here\nFuneral service for William Godfrey of Kaslo was conducted at\nThompson Funeral Home Tuesday\nmorning. Pallbearers were members of Canadian Legion Branch 51,\nNelson. Interment was the Soldiers\nPlot of Nelson Memorial Park.\nGIRL FOUND DEAD\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A young\nunidentified gu\/1 was found dead in\na skid road roominghouse shortly\nafter noon today, possibly from an\noverdose of drugs.  '\nThe girl, found in the hall bathroom of the building, had been\ndead for only about half an hour\nwhen police arrived.\nPenticton    .,  47 74\nVancouver    49 62\nVictoria     47 59\nWhltehorse   M 63\nSpokane     42 67\nKOOTENAY'S oherms and Nelson's Mid-Summer Bonspiel will\nbe televised from Spokane Friday afternoon In a 15-mlnute program arranged by Len Qreen-\noword, above, bonspiel acting\npresident R, L. Bruce said Tuesday. Former Kasloltc, Mr. Green-\nsword will also devote his KGA\nCanadian Hour program to the\nbonspiel Friday night. Last year\nhe helped arrange a bonspiel cav-\naloade to Spokane and alio visited\nNelson Bonspiel week to make a\nbroadcast. It Is hoped a strong\ndelegation will attend the broad-\noasts to ipeak on tha  programs.\ni\nStumpage Rates High, Commission Told...\nTimber Sales by Auction'to\nPrivate Owners Suggested\nA suggestion that up to one-third\nof B.C. timber or Umber lands be\nsold by public auctipn to private\nowners, and a statement that stump-\nage rates have increased Several\nhundred per cent over the years\nwere made by two Kootenay loggers in evidence to the royal commission on forestry here Tuesday.\nHenry Murton of Edgewood and\nH. R. Smith of Blewett, lumber\noperators, were the only witnesses\nto testify on first day of the commission sittings here under Chief\nJustice Gordon McG. Sloan at the\ncourt house.\nIn answer to questions from commission cqunsel C. C. Lock, Mr.\nMurton said he objected to the perpetual clause in forest management\nlicences. It was \"almost impossible\nto administer.\" His alternative suggestion was that up to one-third\n(actually two-thirds considering\ntree farms) of timber or land bo\nsold by public auction to private\nowners. This method would save\nthe government, the risk of fire or\ninsect damage. Asked by C. W.\nBrazier, counsel for the Interior\nLumber Manufacturers Association,\nwhether he thought most loggers\nwould favor this method, Mr. Murton was not prepared to answer,\nbut said he had done so himself.\nSmall privately-owned tree farms\nwere another necessity, Mr. Murton\nbelieved, but under the present legislation he had not been able to buy\nland for one.\nMr. Murton said he still favored\nthe cubic scale, suggested government scalers for the interior, and\nfelt that everyone who owns forest\nland should practise good forestry.\nRegarding government scalers,\nMr. Murton said the scaler is now\npaid by the company but ls to represent the government. There was\n\"reason to doubt\" that he did represent the government at times. It\nMrs. Tyler Heads\nMusic Teachers\nMrs. C. W. T*yler was elected president of the Nelson Registered Music Teachers for the coming term at\nthe annual meeting Monday night.\nOther officers elected were, vice-\npresident, Mrs. P. Deerward; secre-\ntary-treasurer, Mrs. G. H. Lee; executive, Mrs. R. Bain Oliver; bulletin, Mrs. L. A. McPhall; publicity,\nMrs. T. J. S. Ferguson.\nArrangements were made for local participation in the tenth biennial convention of the Canadian\nFederation of Music Teachers to be\nheld in Vancouver July 2 to 6, in FREDERICTON (CP) - A stay\nwhich Nelson will be represented! \u00b0' execution until July 26 was\nby Mrs. McPhail, Mrs. Oliver and j ^'^onday to the cased Mrs.\nMrs. Ferguson.\nwas a matter of weighing a government scaler against costs, he agreed\nwith Mr. Brazier, with the alternative solution being more checks on\nscalers.\nThe nature of Mr. Smith's complaint presented in a brief-was settlement of an account with the B.C.\nForest Service. He testified he believed a refund was due him from\nfour timber sales and had refused\nto pay further stumpage until this\nrefund was paid him. He now owed\n(600 ln accrued stumpage.\nSpeaking of stumpage rates, he\nsaid they had Increased from $1.50\nto (8.80 per thousand over the years\nwhile price of lumber had Increased only from (35 to (45 per\nthousand. Stumpage rates represented about 20 per cent of the\nprice. Mineral tax paid by mining\ncompanies was only two per cent.\nMinerals could not be replaced\nwhereas forests were perpetual. At\npresent' stumpage rates, operators\nwere \"going behind\" as much ai (5\na thousand, Mr. Smith believed.\nA second brief presented by Mr.\nSmith dealt wl^th amendments made\nto the Mineral Act In 1947 which\nMr. Smith thought affected the forest Industry, but which Mr. Justice \\\nSloan felt perhaps was out of the\njurisdiction of the commission.\nCommission  hearings  here   continue today and Thursday, and later i\nln the month the commission will j\nsit for three days each at Penticton |\nand Kamloops.\n\u2022MilMMMHiiwi\nKLEE4SURN\nWE8TERN MONARCH\nGAIT - ORSENHIL\nCANMORE   Briquettes\nStay of Execution\nAt the convention, Donald Brown,\nformerly of Nelson, has been chosen to represent Alberta in a song\nrecital which will feature artists\nfrom each province. Being introduced to the convention by his former\nmusic teacher, Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson of Nelson, he will sing a\ngroup of folk songs, a \"song cycle of\nRavel, two selections from a|\nVaughan Williams opera and a set\nof German lleder.\nAlso Included in the convention\nprogram'will be Internationally reputed musiciaps and speakers such\nas Arthur Loessler of Cleveland,\nOhio; Dr. Stephen Balok of Seattle;\nHarry Adaskin of UBC, J. J. Wea-\ntherseed of Toronto ajid Russell\nStanding of Winnipeg. Demonstration lessons, panel discussions and\nstudent interludes will also make\nup a part of the five day program.\nLlna Thlbodeau, 26, of Upper Sie'\ngas, N.B., convicted in April of murdering her husband and sentenced\nto be hanged June 29.\nSPEED8 ON NELSON AVENUE\nEdward Kledyk of Nelson was\nfined (25 ln city court Tuesday for\nexceeding the Nelson Avenue speed\nlimit Monday night. He pleaded\nguilty before Magistrate William\nBrown.\nHCoal\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nA   TREAT   FOR   YOU\nAND  YOUR   FRIENDS\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St.        Nelson\nPHONE  1844  FOR CLASSIFIED\n$266,000 Loss in Gross Revenue\nReported by West Kootenay Power\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Gross revenue of West Kootenay Power\nCompany dropped (266,395 to (810,-\n119 in the year ended March 31, It\nwas disclosed, here Tu'esday by the\ncompany's annual report.\nThe revenue drop, lt showed, was\ndue to loss at Trail of Consolidated\nMining and Smelting company's\npower load. The mining company\nbegan   operating   its   own   hydro\nplant \"on the Pend d'Oreille river\nlate In 1953.\nThe power company's hydro\nplants generated 64,862,400 kilowatt\nhours'In comparison with 105,878,-\n700 in the previous year.\nRevenue from operations totalled\n(795,164,- compared with (1,047,348\nIn 1954 and (1,409.917 in 1951. Net\nearnings before deductions were\n(446.760 compared with (492,269 in\n1954 and (683,382 in 1951.\nOne\nof dozens\nof plans...\n*400\nNiagara Loam rangt from\n$100 ta $1500 or moro\n\"He's afraid to let go\u2014no\nINSURANCE!11\nHouetmon. hillirrd.\nai rai iteniiY ax ltd\nrittE 1   GENERAL    INSUHANCr.\nPHUHES 1112     1512\nMONTHLY fAYMINTS\nA\n11\n15\n(71.41\n$37.02\n(91.13\nloam to SI,$00 ore Ula-inturod\nat no oxtra coif fo you.\nIAGARA\nLOANS\nIMNCHII CO*IT.(O-COAST\nThis idvertisement ii not publisher, or\nHiipliyerl hv the Liquor Control Board,\nor by the Government of [Inuili\nColumbia.\n|    55-4\nA STURDY ALL-STEEL\nTypewriter Stand\nReg. Value $13.25\nWith tho Purchase\nof a Famous Make\nPortable\n\u2022 Sterling    or    Deluxe\nModel Smith Corona\n\u2022 Deluxe Royal\n\u2022 Remington \"Quiet-\nRlter\"\nThese portables have all the features\nof standard offlco typawrltars.\nSELLING AT REGULAR PRICES\n$. J, Vrbwatt & fr\nWE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL\n536 Word St. .. Phone 200\nAnnual Meeting\nNELSON FILM COUNCIL\nLEGION HALL, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13th, 8 p.m.\nElection of Officers, Committee Reports\nSPECIAL FILM SHOWING\nPUBLIC WELCOME\nIN THI GREAT\nOUTDOORS!\nTHERE'S NO BETTER TLACE\nTO ENJOY YOURSELF\nTHAN AT\nTROUT LAKE HOTEL\nat\nFamous Trout Lake B.C\n4 STAR ACCOMMODATION\nat\nREASONABLE RATES\nHotel Rooms From $230 Up Tq $5.00\nSingle or $3-80 Per Person Rouble For\n,Room With Private Bath. Cottages, Fully\nModern With Showers, Plumbing, Propqne\nHeating and Cooking, Fully Equipped For\nOnly $7.00 Per Day.\nATTRACTIONS\nThi b\u00abst fishing In the Kootenays, and you can drive direct to\nthe hotel In about 4 hours from\nNelson,\nBoats and Motors.\nSwimming and Hiking.\nTrap Shooting and Archery\nOur dining  reom  Ii open  every\nday and  evening  and the  meals\nand cooking are beyond comparel\nFOR FURTHER INFORMATION\nWRITE: EARLE HATFIELD\nTrout Lake, B.C.\n3=\n ' \u25a0\u25a0    V \u25a0      -   \u25a0 \u25a0 -\"--^^z^:r:^y-^-     .--       -        ^\nJ\n r\u2014\u25a0 :\u2014' '\u2014.*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 * .* \u25a0\u25a0 -:\t\n\/57J\nScholarships Presented.\nCeremonies for KimberleyV\nLargest Graduation Class Held\nKIMBERLEY\u2014Fifty-seven itu\ndents, largest graduating class In\nthe history of P. J. McKIm High\nSchool,   received   diplomas   from\nJ. Noble, School Board chairman,\nat annual graduation exercises.\nScholarships  were   presented   to\nthe following students by representatives of the sponsoring organizations: $175, Parent-Teacher Association, Dorothy Callaghan; memorial\nscholarship   in    fine   arts,   Lynn\nOliver; $100 Sullivan Chapter, IODE\nscholarship for general proficiency,\nChester Gris; $25Q Lions Club scholarship in commercial, technical and\nvocational fields, Joan Miller; $300\nLocal 651, IUMM & SW scholarship,\nRaymond Turner.\n$75 Kimberley Nurses' Chapter to\nthose Intending to pursue a nursing\ncareer, Patricia Morrison.\n$50 Kimberley Women's Liberal\nAssociation teacher training award,\nNorma Wood.\n$50 Canadian Legion No. 67 scholarship, Catherine Ross.\nMorrison.\nJunior Red Cross president, Eleanor Russell.\nWork In drama and public speaking, Ray Turner.\nStudents' Council president, Joan\nMiller.\nThe invocation was given by the\nRev. F. A. McPhee and the address\nby school Inspector Ivan Jeffrey.\nRaymond Turner was the class valedictorian. %\nThe presentations were preceded\nby a banquet for 265 persons in the\nhigh school cafeteria and followed\nby a dance.\nMembers of the graduation class\nof 1955 are: Carole Aikins, Bette\nAnn Alcock, Carol Annesley, Carmen Bet, Norma Bradford, Ronald\nBrown, Hugh Cassidy, Judith Chis-\nholm, Shirley Edwards, Bernard\nEngstrom, Mary Lou Faulds, Chester Grjs, Allan Handley, Rita Howse,\nTerrance Jeffery, William Jenks,\nBea Lou Joe, Garland Joe, Glen\nJohnston,   Cynthia   Jones,   Vernon\n$100 Scandinavian Sisterhood KuntZ| Ray Lundstrom, Ruth Mark-\naward for proficiency  in English,\nRaymond Turner.\nSpecial music award presented for\nI the first time this year as the gift\nof   H.   Yarwood,   Kimberley   High\nSchool   music   instructor,   Chester\nI Gris.\nStudent Council awards were\nI presented to the following outstand-\nllng students in the various fields\n[by L. H. Garsten, vice-principal of\nI the high school: scholarship, EMeanor\nI Russell; runners-up, Judy.Chosholm\nland Joan Miller; Raymond Turner;\n(runner-up, Garland Joe.\nCitizenship. Joan Miller; runners-\nlup. Judy Chisholm and Lynn Oliver;\nI Raymond Turner.\nArts and letters, Lynn Oliver;\nI Raymond Turner; runner-up, Terry\niJeffrey.\nAthletics, Shirley Ann Nicholson,\nECynthia Jones, Judy Chisholm;\nIrunners-up, Mary Wightman and\nIjoan Miller; Ron Brown and Ross\n|Patterson; runner-up, Terry Jeffrey.\nAll around block \"K\", Joan Mil-\nJudy Chisholm, Lynn Oliver,\nTerry Jeffrey.\nSpecial award for top scholarship,\nRaymond Turner.\nFor service: Y-teen president, Pat\nt Planning to move? Call us\nfirst. Our modern vans and\nskilled movers assure a SAFE\nmove wherever you go. We\nare agents for North American Van Lines, America's\nleading long distance moving\norganization. It costs no more\nto  enjoy  this  finer  servicel\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.\nNelson. B.C.\nPhone 33\nstrom, Tom Masich, Joan Miller,\nEllen Mitchell, Katherine Moore,\nDonna Morrison, John Murphy,\nLynn McFarlan, Lois McQuarrie,\nHarvey Nash, Robert Nesbitt, Shirley Nicholson, Ilene Nielson, Hay\nOhnstad, Lynn Oliver, James\nO'Neill, Ross Patterson, Morris\nQulnn, Warren Robertson, Mervin\nRonquist, Catherine Ross, Eleanor\nRussell, Annette Sanche, Jill Scho-\nfield, Eanes Simpson, Paul Smith,\nRobert Smith, Trudy Stevenson,\nRay Turner, Robert Weir, Mary\nWightman, Eric Williams, Norma\nWoods, Terence Wright, Douglas\nZentner.\n7 Graduate From\nN. Denver School\nNEW DENVER\u2014Seven graduates\nof the Lucerne High School received\ndiplomas at graduation exercises.\nAfter a banquet given by the\nParent-Teacher Association Student\nCouncil President Ken Yokoyama\nwelcomed the parents and guests\nand called on J. L. Wilson, Norma\nBrookes, W. G. Thring and Q. A.\nForsythe to present the track trophies.\nWinners In the girls' events were\nMarilyn Detta and Jacqueline Sen-\nning, in the boys', Allan McPhail\nand Walter Welch, Tommy Koba-\nyashl. Ken Yokoyama, Chlcko Oka\nand Frances Bohan were the recipients of scholarship awards.\nSchool inspector J. J. McKenzie\nof Nelson presented diplomas to\nFrances Bohan, Leonard Erickson,\nErnest Harding, Barry Morrison,\nJeanette McDonaugh, Ronald Okura\nand Walter Welch.\nRonald Okura won the citizenship award and Leonard Erickson\nand Kay Inouye received the House\nCup for summer house.\nThe program concluded with a\ndance until midnight.\nFashion Show,\nAf Open House\nKIMBERLEY - Over 600 par\nents and friends attended the annual \"Open House\" at McKim Ju\nnior-Senior High School, held under the sponsorship of the Home\nEconomics and Industrial Arts Department in co-operation with the\nMusic and Arts Department.\nInstructors are: Home Economic\nMrs. A. Dovell and Miss E. Curran;\nMetal Work, George O'Neill; Woodwork, M. Kelly; Art, A. Bate and\nMusic, R. Yarwood.\nActual t classes, displays and a\nfashion show of dresses made by\nthe girls were well attended. Musical selections by the Rotary High\nSchool Band added to the program.\nRefreshments were served in the\ncafeteria by the Parent-Teachers\nAssociation, proceeds to purchase\ncreams and sugars and teaspoons\nfor the organization's use.\nHouse One Again Scores Vicfory af\nFernie Elementary School Track Meet\nFERNIE\u2014House One, rolling up a I rglo and Lynne Hamilton 1, Shirley\nAUCTION\nSALE\nCANCELLED\nThursday, June 23, 1955\nWe are pleased to announce the sale advertised\nfor Mr. Chas. Flick, Edge-\nwood, B. C, is cancelled\nsince he has satisfactorily\ndischarged his obligations.\nMAT. HASSEN\n& SONS\nAUCTIONEERS\nARMSTRONG.'B. C.\nSets $900 Grant\nROSSLAND\u2014A delegation from\nthe Rossland Swimming Pool Society attended the Rossland Civic\nActivities Association meeting to\nrequest a grant of $900. This\namount was to cover a deficit of\n$650 from last season's operations,\nand $250 to start operating this\nyear. Directors authorized the\ngrant, and appointed George Kent\nto represent the RCAA at the annual meeting of the Swimming Pool\nSociety. Appearing on behalf of\nthe society were Ches Edwards, T.\nE. Davies and R. K. W. Greene.\nFAIR DATE8\nGeorge Dyson, for the Fall Fair\nBoard, asked confirmation of the\ndates September 6 to 10 inclusive,\nfor use of the arena. This was confirmed, and the rental set at $200.\nsame as last year. Directors said\nthe onus would be placed on the\nFall Fair Board to ensure no nails\nwould be driven in the new floor.\nFor the boys' juvenile baseball\nteam, S. Price and E. Walters asked\na grant of $100 for buying equipment. It was explained by the directors that the grant recently\ngiven the Boys' Baseball Association was Intended to include the\njuvenile team. If it was found ,|he\ngrant to the Association was less\nthan required, financial help could\nbe requested at a later date,\nA letter from Vancouver confirmed the sale of the Kerrisdale\nArena floor, and it will be taken\nout of that arena June 15.\nIn reply to a query* from the\nRCAA, the Calgary representative\nof H. J. Miller Enterprise informed\nthe directors that as yet no cement\nfloors had been laid over plastic\npipe.\nAt a special meeting, directors\nhad rescinded the motion which\nawarded the completion of the\narena seating to Stanley and Hau-\nkaas. This project will be done on\na cost plus basis and use volunteer\nlabour.\nSigning officers were authorized\nto borrow $2500 to pay the insurance premium on the arena.\ntotal of 109 points, won the Fernie\nElementary Schools track meet for\nthe third year In succession.\nHouse Four was second with 97,\nHouse Two third with 82, and House\nThree trailed with 57 points. The\nHouse supervisors are: House One,'\nMrs. B. Walls, and Lloyd Hamilton,\nHouse Two, Mrs. Pearl Gordy and\nPaul Pezel; House Three, Miss K.\nSchreiner and Miss Emma Chub-\nra; House Four, Mrs. J. Reynard,\nand Miss Esther Whalley. The general supervisor and organizer of the\ntrack meet was Leon Rushcall. Miss\nMary Kusnir was recorder. The\nstarter was Tom Marasco, the jump\njudges Barry Quail and Alan White\nand race judges Leslie Zuffa, Tom\nEvans and Frank Condon,\nThe complete results follow,  in\norder of first, second and third. Figures after names indicate house.\nGIRLS'  EVENTS\nSix years old\u2014Joan Hunter 1,\nRosemary Humphrey 4, Paula Fetzko, 3.\nSeven years old, Darlene Sclippa\n3, Roxy Guzzi 1, Penny Marcer 1.\nEight years old, Joyce McConachie 2, Kathleen Stelliga 3, Georgina\nSmith 1.\nNine years old, Marion Konieczy\nPaulette Girou 2, Evelyn Hurin 2.\n10 years old, Marion Albo 1, Dorothy Maio 4, Betty Koran 4.\n11 years old, Joan Morris 3, Rob-\nina Rawson 2, and Judy Butler 1,\ntie for second.\n12 years old, Patricia Thome 2,\nSusan Roberts 1, Carol Bax 2.\nCrab race, 9 and under, Georgi\nSmith and Dianne Arbuckle 1, Maureen Parsons and Linda Kniert 1,\nLinda White and Judy Morris 3.\n10 years and over, Dianne DeGeo-\nTymchuk and Piera Papa 2, Christine Brenner and Margaret Roberts\n2\nSack race 9 and under, Maureen\nParsons 1, Ronnie Skllllng 4, Georgina Sohye 3.\nRelay, 8 years old, House Two,\nHouse One, House Four; 9 years old\nHouse Four, House One, House Two;\n10 years old, House Four, House\nTwo, House One; 11 years old, House\nOne, House Two, House Four.\nRelay, 12 years old, House Thrive,\nHouse One, House Four.\nBroad jump, 9 and under, Judy\nSmolek 1, Doreen Zuffa 3, Carrie\nTaverna 4; 10 and over, Patricia\nGray 4, Helga Neswetter 4, Frances\nDrew 3.\nBOYS' EVENT8\nSix years old, Arthur Peters 3,\nJohn Scott 2, Terry Polacik 2; 7\nyears old, Fred Harbinson 2, Helmut Hahn 1, Robert Koran 2; eight\nyears old, Ronnie Parker 4, Marvin\nDeGeorgio 3, Kenneth Dicken 2;\n9 years old, Craig East 2, Peter Miki-\ntick 4, Jimmy Poch 2; 10 years old,\nArmand DeGeordio 2, Albert Hesketh 1, Richard Schaff 2; 11 years\nold, Robtrt Hutchinson 2, Duane\nStarr 4, Jim Polomark 2, and Stewart East 4, tie for third.\n12 years old, Bill Thomson 1, Ron\nWhite 4, Harry Haigh 4, Murdo McPhee 2, tie for third.\nQuarter mile run, 10 years and\nover, Bryan Wright 4, Earle Price\n4, Arthur Parsons 2.\nCrab race, 9 and under, John\nKrawchuk and Kory Neidig 1, Terry Danlelson and Arthur Watson 1,\nGeorge Broster and Gerry Gregg\n4; 10 years and over, Wayne Murdoch and Earle Price 4, Bruce Boyd\nand Don Appleby 2, Ken McCona-\nCLUB THANKED FOR\nCLOTHING GIFT\nGRAY CREEK\u2014At the Women's\nClub meeting at the home of Mrs.\nC. C. Feenie, the president reported\nthat she had received a most appreciative letter from the Unitarian\ngroup for clothing sent lor Korea.\nA letter from-Mr. Kocher was read\nstating the possibility of starting a\nRecreation Commission ln Gray\nCreek. He. would arrange a public\nmeeting at which A. W. Thiessen of\nNelson, regional consultant, would\nexplain the situation, After some\ndiscussion it was resolved to defer\nthis matter until the next meeting\nin September.\nThe club will undertake repair of\nthe Hall clock, also purchase a tray\nand dishpan.\nMrs. LaPlante conducted a competition In which everyone was\ntimed. Mrs. Feenie's speedy thinking\nwon. Mrs. Dale' Johnson and Mrs\nStillwell were guests.\nchle and Bryan Wright 4.\nSack race, 9 and under, Wayne\nSmith 1, Bobby Salanskl 4, Don\nWright 3.\nRelays. 8 years old, House One,\nHouse Three, House Four; 9 years\nold, House Three, House Four, and\nHouse One; 10 years old, House\nThree, House Two, House One; 11\nyears old, House Two, House Three,\nHouse Four; 12 yeans old, House\nOne, House Four, House Two.\nBroad jump, 9 and under, Dennis\nCloss 4, Terry Danlelson I, Wayne\nHarold 3; 10 years and over, Ken\nMcConachie 4, Heinz Bednar 1, Robert Craig 3.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15,1935 \u2014 3\nMrs. S. Howe Named\nForks Lifeguard\nGRAND FORKS - Mrs. Sam\nHowe has been appointed lifeguard\nat City Park at Grand Forks with\nduties to commence July 1.\nMrs. Howe was the only application to come before City Coun\ncil. She will be paid $55 per month\nfor being on the job daily from two\nto five In the afternoon.\nTHI8 WEEK ONLY\n$1.25\nLUBRICATION\nAt the\nSTAR AUTO SERVICE\nYMIR   ROAD\nFIREPROOF\nHOUSEHOLD\nSTORAGE\nAGENTS FOR\nWILLIAMS\nLong Distance Moving and Storage\nPHONE 77\nTRUCK TERMINUS\n(NELSON) LTD.\n701 FRONT ST.\nAluminum\nRoofing\nTHE ONLY ROOF\nTHAT LASTS FOREVER\nYou will be amazed at the low cost, and ease of application. We are qualified to calculate your exact\nrequirements, so that you can do-it-yourself.\nCOLUMBIA\nTRADING COMPANY\n902 Front St.\nPhone 1511\nA ship travelling at 30 knots is\ncovering the equivalent of nearly\n35 land miles an hour.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLISTER BEAVER UP\nTO OLD PRANKS\nLISTER\u2014Beaver, which have\nbeen contesting ownership of\nwater with Lister residents,\nscored aground in the battle the\nother day, but not for long.\nWhen householders awoke\none morning recently, they\nfound themselves without water\nfor cooking breakfast.\nBeaver had again diverted the\ncommunity's water supply into\na swamp where their colonies\nhave been built. The traditional hard workers had even rolled\nrocks into the Water District's\ndam.\nIt took Lister people three\nhours to get the water flowing\nthrough the \"proper\" channel\nonce more.\nIIIIIIIHIIHIIIHMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIII)\nIT MAY BE\nYOUR LIVER\n\u25a0 lifo'o not worth Ilrini\nIt may bo your UVarl\nttr. a holt II takes up lo two pinto ol liver\nUa \u2022 day to keep joor ditatin trnet m top\nshape! If your Utot UU k not florins freely\nroar food may not dnrcol. , . fan bloats on\nrenr stomach .. . too fori eewtipsted en5\naU tho fun and sparkle fo ont of hfe. That's\n\u2022ben too neod mud Rondo Carter's LitUs\nliter Pub. These famous rentable pill bob)\nstimulate the flow of liver bile. Boon your\nlisation starts fuoeUonini properly and ran\n\u2022eel that happy dayi ara here ajtflini Don't\nmrt stay sunk, always keep Carter's Littb\nEra. Pals on bead. 3f< etTonr djSiel\nANNOUNCES\nNEWft^MSOUNES!\nREGARDLESS OF CLAIMS OF ALL OTHER COMPANIES B-A MAKES THIS PLEDGE:\nto moke\n\u2666WSMfWeWtsWa)*\nslllllllllltlHtt\nB-A PLEDGE\nWE AT B-A MAKE THIS PROMISE TO THE MOTORING PUBLIC. WE WILL NOT\nPERMIT A SINGLE COMPETITOR \u2014 no, not a tingle one \u2014 TO OFFER GASOLINES\nSUPERIOR TO OUR NEW 1955 B-A 88 AND 98.\nIT IS OUR SINCERE BELIEF THAT NEW 1955 BA 88 AND 98 ARE THE FINEST\nGASOLINES IN CANADA TODAY. AND, NO MATTER WHAT OTHERS DO OR SAY\nWE WILL KEEP THEM THE FINEST-IN POWER. IN PERFORMANCE, IN ENGINE     J\nPROTECTION. j\n\u2666\nIT IS ALSO OUR BELIEF THAT YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER MOTOR OIL THAN |\nOUR OWN PEERLESS HEAVY DUTY MOTOR\" OIL J\nTHIS IS NOT A BOAST. NOT A CLAIM. IT IS A PLEDGE TO YOU, THE CANADIAN X\nMOTOR 1ST-A PLEDGE BACKED BY THE RESOURCES - and the integrity - OF THE \u2666\nBRITISH AMERICAN OIL COMPANY LIMITED. \"    X\nitllllllllllMIIIIIIIWttWIHUimtimtHlllllllllllltlWIIIIIIIMIHIIIIIIIIIIIH\n\/^^-l^ui^^^t\nPRESIDENT,\nTHE BRITISH AMERICAN  OIL COMPANY  LIMITED\nFINEST GASOLINES-BAR NO\n ^^^^^^f^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^r'^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^.\nIPP^-NAii    j\n^^^\n\u25a0\"vy.' \u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0:.:\u25a0\u25a0.\u2022:;\u25a0\n\u25a0 '\nEstablished April 22. 1802\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall,\nPost Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nWednesday, \/une 15, J 955\nSenior Hockey\n\u2014 What's Its Future?\nThe prospect of dwindled league\nentry and the known expensiveness of\ncompeting in today's senior hockey are\ntwo matters that must be occupying the\nthoughts of those who devote themselves to the district's premier exhibition sport. We don't envy their problems.\nIt cannot be denied that senior\nhockey is good for a town. It is also\ngood for the arenas located in senior\nhockey centres. Whether hockey of a\nlesser category would do the same job\nis problematic. It has elsewhere, but\nKootenay fans have been conditioned\nto expecting some of the best ice performances in the nation. Whether they\nwould transfer their allegiance is a\nquestion; and to attempt the experiment would not only be a question, but\na gamble.\nMaintaining a competitive senior\nhockey team is financially burdensome.\nThose Interior centres that have them\nknow to just what extent. Do the teams\nin return draw enough out-of-towners.\nto visit? Do they provide enough in\nthe way of recreation and entertainment? Is their existence essential to\nthe successful operation of civic centres\nand arenas?\nThey are debatable points. But so\nfar the fans have always answered\n\"Yes.-\" Fan support is the only source\nof answers to such questions.\nWhether the fans are willing to continue to give the same answer and the\nsame support in the future is the poser\nthat must be causing the wrinkles in\nthe hockey leaders' brows. The aspirin\nconcession around a senior hockey\nforum must be something to contemplate.\nKimberley Dynamiters have \u2014 at\nleast ostensibly \u2014 withdrawn from the\nWestern International Hockey League.\nThe deatheof this great club might be\nenough to put the rest of the WIHL in\nthe grave, if it is also accompanied by\nthe withdrawal of Spokane Flyers, subject of recurring rumor. Senior hockey\nteams, however, have a habit of getting\nfrequently close to death's door, but\nnever quite lifting the latch. It may be\nso yet in the case of the Dynamiters.\nThe old executive may find a means of\ntransfusion, or some new leader may\ncome along to light the return path.\nBe that as it may, the conditions\nthat threaten the life of the league,\nthat give cause for such historic clubs'\nto announce they no longer find it\n\"economically sound\" to continue, all\nare symptoms that must be heeded.\nThe diagnosis is a lot easier than\nsuggesting a cure. But this coming season or one of those coming in the not-\ntoo-far-away future is going to require\na remedy. Hockey is such an ingrained\nthing in the Canadian community\nstructure that in any situation regarding it the best interest of the community, as well as that of the player, the\nclub, the executive and the league, has\nto be studied.\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters to the Editor on any topic of\ngenuine Interest are welcome If they are\nbrief\/accurate and fair. No letter will be\ninserted In whole, or tn part, except over\nthe signature and address of the writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.\n\"Up To Us To Prove-\nWorthy of\nPop Wallace's Gift\"\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014As acting Prime Minister of the Nelson High School, and on behalf, of the student\nbody, I would like to pay our respects to the\nlate T. A. Wallace. This man was more than\njust a well-known figure in teen-age circles;\nto students he was an organizer, a'helper, and\na tradition. But I think only half of \"Pop\"\nWallace has departed from us. We will surely\nmiss his dynamic personality, and the smile\nwith the pipe sticking out between it. But the\nother half of Mr. Wallace will continue to\nthrive, grow and mature as long as there Is\nhigh school curling in B. C.\n\"The father of B. C. high school curling\"\nhas given to students something of which we\ncan be justly proud. It is now up to us to\nprove ourselves worthy of the gift whffch Mr.\nWallace has given to us.\nBonspiels will come and go, but behind\nevery school bonspiel held in B. C. the name\nof T. A. (Pop) Wallace wiU be a lasting and\ncherished memory.\nGERRY BORCH,\nMinister of Finance,\nNelson High School.\nBlood Is Free, Giving\nIs Not Damaging\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014I was distressed to hear from one of\nthe Red Cross donors of a vicious rumor that\nis being circulated around Nelson and district\nto the effect that our Canadian, Red Cross\nBlood Transfusion Service is not free; that\npatients in our hospitals pay a high price for\nthis lifesaving privilege. Also that there is a\nyoung Vancouver woman who has given her\nblood so often that she has been stricken In\nconsequence with such severe anemia that she\nhas been put in hospital for treatment.\nThis local donor, while admitting that the\nprocess of giving her blood is painless, nevertheless says that she as well as a number of\nother donors she was speaking of are seriously\nconsidering not attending any future blood-\ndonor clinics.\nAlthough I know that these rumors are\ncompletely false, and I did my best to enlighten\nher as to the real facts, I think she still has\nher grave doubts about the matter.\nI think it would be a splendid Idea for\nyou to publish in your paper an article refuting such erroneous rumors, and stating clearly\nthe true facts about the Canadian Red Cross\nBlood Transfusion Service\u2014not only that it is\nfree to all of us, if and when we need lt, but\nit is harmless to the donors who are allowed\nto give their blood.\n(MRS.) RENTE HOBSON, R.N.\nR.R. No. 1, Nelson, B. C.\nVerse\nGraduation\nJune is here, and the scholars smile\nDown the home stretch in the scholarly mile.\nBut behind the twinkles, behind the cheer.\nIs there hesitation? Is there fear?\nThe end of learning for another spell:\nDoes it mark heaven? Does it mark hell?\nThe lad with the sling a young gallant is now;\nWill he take the palette? Will he take the\nplow?\nThey stagger with ambition. Is the aim In sight\nTo receive a diploma, or to sign up and fight?\nTheir heads spin. We wisea ache to foretell:\n\"The world's not so vast; all will be wail.\"\nBut then, no  one told us;  and soon they'll\npossess\nA diploma of courage to make life'i grade\nless.\n\u2014ALICE BROWNE.\n1860 Daniel Street,\nTrail, B. C.\nYour Horoscope\nMixed influences attend this anniversary.\nDo not take needless risks, and keep on good\nterms with those in authority and associates,\nwhich you can do. Today's child may be very\nenterprising, keen and alert.\n? Questions ?.\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not be published.\nTher* Ii no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there Is obvlouo\nnecessity for privacy.\nReader, Nelson\u2014I read not long ago that a\ncertain tribe of Indians could cure cancer\nby a salve they made from herbs. Would\nthis be possible?\nNo; no paste or salve will penetrate the\ntissues far enough to destroy deep-seated\ncancer cells. There is no\" treatment known\nwhich has -a selective action on cancer cells.\nAlways consult your doctor about any matter\npertaining to cancer.\nInterested, Riondel\u2014Will you please tell me\nwhere I should write to get my birth certificate?\nIt all depends on where you were born.\nIf you were born in B. C, write to the Department of Vital Statistics. Parliament Buildings, Victoria, B. C. If born elsewhere In Canada, write the Department of .Vital Statistics\nat the Parliament buildings in the capital city\nof the province In which you were born. If\nborn in Britain, write to the Department of\nBirths, Marriages and Deaths, Somerset House,\nStrand, London, W.C. 2, England, enclosing\nmoney order for seven shillings and sricpence,\nobtainable at any post office. If born outside\nthe Commonwealth, apply to the nearest consul\nrepresenting your country and he will take\nup the matter for you.\nB. B. B., Slocan Valley\u2014What should I do if\nmy horse overate? What should I do if my\nhorse overworked and goes lame In the\nfront foot?\nGet in touch with Dr. J. J. Carney, Agricultural Department Court House, Nelson.\nCurious, Trail\u2014I would like to know If when\na lot has been cut down, who is responsible\nfor the retaining wall, the contractor or\nthe owner? Do they have to replace dirt\nwhich has been washed away from my\nlot?\nIt would depend upon your contract with\nthe  contractor.  We advise you  to consult a\nlawyer.\nWho Was Wiser?\nTourists, says one who has recently returned from touring, seem to divide into a\nfew main types. One ty]5e is represented by\nthe middle-aged spinster, frequently a retired\nschool-teacher, always accompanied by a companion of the same sex and type.\nHoneymooning and young married couples\nare rare, at least during the winter months.\neconomic reasons probably forbidding distant\ntravel. One sees a fair number of middle-aged\nor elderly couples. Frequently these couples\nexpand to threesomes through the addition of\nthe wife's sister. In that case the sisters look\nas if they had stepped from a drawing by the\nlate Helen Hokinson, and their smaller escort\nusually has a harried look.\nThe commonest tourist type is the wandering widow. One can imagine that she has\nalways had the belief that travel broadens one,\nthough she has not done badly in that respect\nat home, but she was never able to stir her\nhusband out of his rut. Now, with children\nmarried, husband tucked away and the insurance money safely banked, she is having the\nbelated time of her life. This year she may be\nin Mexico, next year viewing the Alhambra or\nthe Taj Mahal. While the insurance money\nlasts, she is out to get the benefit of it, and\nwho can say that she Isn't wiser than her husband, who paid the premiums and had no fun\nin return?\nDinosaurs on Wheels\nThe dinosaur in its day grew to a length\nof \"80 feet The modern car is far from tSiat\nyet, but its rate of growth is disturbing. Here\nand there both press and private citizens have\nentered mild protests against the increasing\namount of space the modern car takes up in\nstreet and garage. Now even an auto maker\nhas expressed misgivings at the trend.\nThe head of a firm that makes both big\nand little autoj told the Detroit Motor Club\nthe other day, \"Cars 19 feet long, weighing\ntwo tons, are used to run a 118-pound housewife three blocks to the drug store for a two-\nounce package of bobby pins or lipstick.\"\n\u2014Brantford Expositor.\nIt's Been Said\nThe one who will be found in trial capable of great acts of love is ever the one\nwho is always doing considerate small ones.\n\u2014F. W. Robertson.\nToday's Bible Thought\nHe was mighty In the Scriptures.\n\u2014Acts 18:24.\nIf we live by any book it is important that its teachings by constructive and inspiring. The Bible\nstimulated a race of former slaves\nto attain great power and advancement. Some philosophies turn men\nbackward.\nHOUND OF SPRING\nMM\nNo Polio Cases Among Vaccinated\nChildren Reported Yet in Canada\ndjunt disL\nBusiness Spotlight. . .\nFirst Civil Flight Carried IS\nPassengers From France to U.K.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Examination\nof salk vaccine results has revealed no cases of polio among\nchildren inoculated with the vaccine ln Canada, health department\nofficials said Tuesday.\nAn official said it is too soon\nto judge the vaccine 's results on\na large scale because Canada ls\njust getting- Into the polio season.\nTo June  4  there were 90  polio\nViews\nfrom the\nNews Front\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 International civil passenger flights had\ntheir origin 35 years ago and something about the first undertaking is\ntold by International Civil Aviation\nOrganization, the world body that\noperates under the United Nations.\nThe first flight of that kind is believed to have been a trip between\nFrance and England Feb. 8, 1919,\nsays ICAO's bulletin embracing reports for the current ninth session\nof the ICAO assembly.\nThe flight started from Tous-\nsus-le-Noble, southeast of Paris, and\npassed over Versailles, Paris, Amiens. Boulogne and Folkestone,\nlanding at Kenley, near London.\nElapsed time was two hours and a\nhalf.\nThe aircraft was a  Farman Go-\nSays Atom Would\nA house full o' younguns used to\nbe somethin' you tended to In your\nspare time, but now women think\nit's a career to raise one.\nBy DAVE MclNTOSH\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Maj.-Gen.\nsibility that atomic weapons would\nJohn Rockingham foresees the pos-\nkeep down casualties.\n\"The sooner we get them, (atomic\nweapons) the better,\" the tall,\nbarrel-chested commander of the\n1st Canadian Infantry Division said\nin an interview here.\nIn the Second World War, most\nmajor attacks were made by massing men and material at one point\nfor a break-through. Such an operation today, in the face of atomic\nweapons, would be considered\nsuicidal.\n\"Look at what the Germans\ncould have done to us at Nijmegan\nIf they had had an atomic bomb,\"\nGen. Rockingham said. \"We had\neight divisions crammed into an\narea three miles wide. I can think\nof dozens of other similar situations during the last war.\"\nFIRST SINCE 1944\nThe \"red-patch\" division\u2014Gen.\nRockingham refers to his troops\nas \"my warriors\"\u2014will undergo\nits first atomic-tactics training .this\nsummer at Camp Gagetown\/N. B,\nIt will be the first divisional exercise in Canada and the first for\nthe Canadian Army since 1944,\nwhen the last workouts were held\nIn Britain in preparation for the\nsecond front.\nThe emphasis will be on mobility and communications. \"If communications break down, everything is lost,\" Gen. Rockingham\nsaid.\nAll or most of the aircraft will\nbe on the \"enemy\" side. This will\nenable the division 'staff to determine how well concealed and dispersed troops would have to be in\nthe event of atomic attack.\nHath, powered by two engines of\n260 horsepower each and with a\nspeed of 100 miles an hour. Between 11 and 13 passengers were\ncarried and they were served lunch\nduring the flight. The pilot was Lu-\ncien Bossoutrot and there was at\nleast one other crew member, a mechanic.\nFIRST REGULAR SERVICE\nSix months later\u2014 Aug. 25, 1919\u2014\nthe world's first regular daily passenger service was begun between\nLondon an\u00ab4 Paris by a British company, with a converted wartime\nsingle-engine aircraft.\nIn August, 1954 \u2014 the year embraced by the report \u2014 services by\nFrench and British airlines were\napproaching 1.500 flights a week.\nThere were also regular mixed services, carrying passengers, cargo\nand mail, accounting for 660 flights.\nOnly cross-channel flights between England and France were included in these figures.\nThe bulletin said the continuous\n35-year upward trend In all categories of traffic on all international and domestic scheduled airlines\ncontinued in 1954 but the over-all\nrate of gain was less than for 1953\u2014\nabout 10.4 per cent compared with\n13.5 per cent.\nNumber of passengers carried ln\n1954 was estimated at 57,800,000, an\nincrease of 5,800,000 or 11 per cent,\nover 1953. The Increase in 1953'over\n1953 was 10 per cent. Average\ncrease for the 1945-54 decade was\n25 per cent\nBy JOHN M. HIGHTOWER\nWASHINGTON (API\u2014The Soviet\ngovernment seems to have embarked on a campaign of confusion designed to becloud Western arguments about the real issues for the\nforthcoming Big Four conference,\nAmerican soorces say.\nThat appears to be a major purpose of the Tass news agency comment issued Monday in connection\nwith Russia's formal acceptance of\nthe Western invitation for a top-\nlevel meeting at Geneva July 18.\nThe United States welcomed the\nSoviet acceptance, as did Great\nBritain and France.\nThe Tdss comment made it clear\nthat hardly anything else is settled.\nIt also made clear that the Russians are following up their \"peace\"\noffensive with a full-scale propaganda drive to rally public opinion\nin the free and neutral countries\nto support the kind of conference\ndiscussions thev want.\nWANT  NO   INTERFERENCE\nTass said there is no problem\narising from Communist rule of\nthe countries of eastern Europe and\nthat they will not allow anyone to\n\"interfere in their internal affairs.\nPresident Eisenhower and State\nSecretary Dulles have insisted re^\npeatedly that there is a grave problem arising out of the satellites'\n\"captivity\" and that thjs is a major\nsource of world tension.\nMoreover, it \\s the American position that these countries wer-% \"enslaved\" only because the Soviet\ngovernment from 1945 to 1948 repeatedly violated the Yalta agreement and forced Communist\ngimes on them.\nTass said the activities of \"international   Communism\"   are   not\nproper subject for discussion.\nTass took the line that the Soviet\nUnion has made a number of con\ncessions and constructive proposals\nsuch as signing the Austrian treaty\nand conducting recent negotiations\nwith Yugoslavia. This comment implied that the U.S. has refused to\ngive the Russians credit for making\nconcessions, and now is refusing to\ncome forward with \"constructive\nproposals\" \u2014 apparently offers of\nWestern concessions.\nThe American view Is that the\ntensions of the cold war started\nbecause the Soviet Union .set out\nto communize as much of the world\nas it could.\ncases this year among unInoculated\nchildren, only 70 per cent of the\nfive-year average for the period.\nFive persons have died of polio'\nin  1955 but the official said they\nprobably were patients who caught\npolio last year or earlier.\nResults of Salk Inoculations have\nbeen watched carefully ln every\nprovince since the inoculation program began In April.\nEach province makes Its own\nobservations, sending weekly reports to Ottawa. The health department here compares results ln\nage groups to which vaccine has\nbeen administered with results in\nage groups not yet Inoculated.\nKootenay River\nAt Flood Slager\nBonner's Ferry\nBONNERS FERRY, Idaho (AP)\n\u2014 The Kootenai River reached the\n31-foot \"flood stage\" here at 10\na. m. Tuesday. The weather Bureau said it should crest at 31.5\nlater in the day and then start\nfalling.\nDikes protecting the town of\nsome 2500 persons were still holding firm but barriers protecting\ntwo farms in the outlying Copeland district gave way Monday and\nflooded some wheat land.\nThere was some concern hera\nthat a. constant battering over a\nperiod of days would weaken the'\n35-foot dike in town. Some residents were flooded out last year\nand there was widespread damage\"\nIn 1948.\nThe Weather Bureau said cooler ;\nweather has put the brakes on ,\nmountain snow melt and that \"if\nwe get the bulge through Tuesday \u25a0\nthe river won't be able to recover.*\nThe river was up more than a j\nfoot overnight from the 29.9 read- J\ning Monday.\nOne Missing in\nNiagara Wreck\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CB) \u2014 I\nFour people swam to safety but a\nfifth was believed swept over th*\nHorseshoe falls on Monday ln 1\ncabin cruiser which struck a submerged object in the Niagara river.\nBoat owner Ray Moore, 42, of\nBuffalo, N..Y.. ls missing.\nThe 18-foot cruiser struck a submerged object in the pre-dawn\ndarkness near Grand Island, five\nmiles above the falls.\nThe boat floated downstream and\nwas partially broken up among th\u00ab\nrocks before it plummeted over th\u00bb\nbrink of the falls near the Canadian\nside. Wreckage later floated ashoreJ\nTherapeutic Values\nIn Dramatic Work\nSELKIRK, Man. (CP) - A play\nwritten, produced and acted by patients of Selkirk Mental Hospital\nwas performed Monday night.\nDr. Edward Johnson, hospital\nsuperintendent, said the play had\n\"excellent therapeutic value.\"\n\"So many patients got well and\nwent home during the preparation\nof the play and so many new actors\nhad to be substituted that it took\nfive months to produce,\" he said.\nThe play, \"A Royal Romance,\"\ndealt with nobility in France and\nSpain in the J7th century.\nSAVED BY DEEP FREEZE\nCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) \u2014 A\nscientist disclosed Monday night\nthat frozen foods placed in a deepfreeze less than a mile from an\natomic blast in Nevada May 5 were\nfound edible, tasty and frea from\nradiation. Still to be determined,\nsaid H. P. Schmltt, research director\nof the National Association of\nFrozen-Food Packers, is whether\nthe foods have lost any ndtritlonai\nvalues.\nSpring...\nWedding,\nInvitations\nthe time\nanc\nAnnouncements.\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPT.\nCARRIES THE VERY LATEST\nPAPETRIES IN WEDDING\nSTATIONERY FOR THE\nPROSPECTIVE BRIDE\nTO CHOOSE FROM.\nCorrectly printed and properly\nworded are the essentials for\nwedding stationery . . . you can\nbe assured of these when you\nplace your order with us.\nALSO\nWEDDING CAKE BOXES\nand ENCLOSURE CARDS\n\u2022        Ask To See Our Samples\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nCommercial Printing Dept.\n266 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\n \u2022'.\"\u2022\u2022\nmw^V'^. v    \u25a0  \u25a0 \u2022\u25a0.    .   IJ'\"M\u00abupil^\u2014^~\"\n___.._._.__.^,_.r. ........    :..^.  ,_\u201e....  ..V,,V..,      .,   \u201e...,-,..,.-;,.,.     V|T...,...7-.,^..^>...,r.^-.-._       ^        .\u201e,-.-._.,\u201e .^_..___._7 ^____TV_____\u201e. . \u201e_,,.,^rvT__T. - \u2014_\t\n\/575\nWEDNESDAY\nMORNING\nSPf CIAL!\nSAVE $1\nChildren's\nCANVAS\nSHOES\nIn blue and white or plaidi\nSpecial $1.95\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLEADERS IN  FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nRainbow Colors Make Hit\nIn'London's Slide Shows\nMoyie Notes\nMOYIE \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Elmer\nElingson from Estevan, Sask. have\npurchased the Moyie Lake Log\nCabin from Mr. and Mrs. C. Heller.\nMr. and Mrs. Heller and son will\nleave Moyie after the school term\nfor the West Coast.\nMr. and Mrs. Nelson Smith of\nCranbrook, and sons and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Eddy Smith.\nWhitehorse, Y.T., and Mr. and Mrs.\nEugene Smith from Vancouver,\nwere visitors at the home of Nelson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A.\nSmith.\nMrs. Langdon of Vancouver Is the\nguest of her son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. P. W, Langdon\nj of Moyie.\nMr. and Mrs. Russell Hawk from\nVancouver called on'Mr. and Mrs.\n, R. A. Smith on Wednesday. Russell\n| attended the Moyie School here. He\ni end his parents mqved to the coast\n: in 1911.\nMrs.  Roberts,  mother of Harold\nI Roberts, visited her son and family\n1 Sunday.\nBritain exported 368,000 pair of\n[\u25a0hoes to Canada in the first quarter\nlof 1955, against 268,000 a year\nI earlier.\nSee Our Windows For\nMid-Week Specials\nButchertena\nPHONE 527\nBy MUhlEL PENN\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Shoes this\nsummer are gayer than ever.\nColors range from an off-white\nangelica shade to vibrant tan; from\na new yellow called absinthe, a\npastel columbine pink and Capri\nblue to a \"shock\" range which includes poster red and a bright\ngrotto blue.\nStripes and two-color combinations are also featured. A new\nstriped effect on black patent looks\ngood. Up to the minute, too, with\nsome of the latest A-line garden\nparty and Ascot outfits are shoes\nin the new lustre calf with candy\nstripes in colors matching the dress.\nEdward Rayne, the Queen's shoemaker, is showing them with\nstriped heels and a matching bow\non the front of low-cut pumps. A\nvariation of this theme is a combination of contrasting shades for\nthe collar and heel. Thus, a black\npatent shoe has pink, yellow or\nred collar and heels. An Angelica\ncalf has a juniper calf cpllar and\nheel.\nWHOLE HOG\nOn some models, Rayne goes the\nwhole hog and produces two-toned\nshoes. Half of one open-toe, sling-\nback model is in blue, the other\nhalf in columbine pink. There is a\nsimilar combination of lavender and\nyellow, or sycamore and ivory.\nNew materials also make shoe\nnews this summer. Practical, hard-\nwearing calf has been given a\nmother c'pearl finish and has invaded the cocktail scene.\nJewelled effects on calf skin\ncarry it right through the evening,\nwhile a new tanning process reproduces a fabric appearance on\nleather.\nMost dramatic in effect, perhaps,\nis the introduction of vinylite, a\nplastic material .which \"gives\" to\nthe foot and makes for increased\ncomfort as well as pandering to\nthe present craze for the \"naked\nlook.\"\nIf some evening you see coming\ntowards you what looks like a lone\nbow or,diaman)B;ci&gp'fixed to the\ntop of,the foot,'do not be alarmed.\nCloser,inspection,wttl reveal a vamp\nin v^nyiite,-, transparent, almost invisible, ib'tit holding the' sjibe firmly\nand comJoribly \\n place.'  \u25a0'\nPresbyterian Aid\nPlans July Picnic\nNEW DENVER - Plans for a\npicnic to be held in July were made\nwhen the Ladies' Aid to Knox Presbyterian Church met at the home\nof Mrs. Roy Laybourne.\nCards and novelties were sold\namong members.\n(fatoW, 'Dafaueui, ffmmtcufo\nICG\ncream\n^\n(\n(\n( oPyout-fitrttfa\n| bhty^ht. with,,,\n*\u2022 m\nQUICKEST, EASIEST,\nHOMEMADE\nICE CREAM EVER!\n\u2022 Ready to freeze\n|n one minute)\n\u2022 Cuts freezing\ntime in Vi I\n\u2022 Costs only a few\ncents for a big\nserving!\nMix for a minute;;:\nfreeze until firm... serve! That's all it\ntakes to make wonderful homemade ice cream with Royal\nInstant Pudding. No long list of ingredients. No complicated recipe. No second mix and jreezel Try some soon.\nshdkl vet\/A childHh make, fhtir owri\nICE CREAM COMESf\nLet the youngsters make delicious ice cream cones that\nare wholesome as well! Your\ngrocer has fresh crisp cones\n. . . and creamy, smooth\nRoyal Instant Puddings!\nSimple Recipe On Every Packagel\nBy Y. LABERGE\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)-Her husband's\nfishing trips are no cause of gloom\nto Lady Moyra Browne. She goes\nalong and hauls in fish with equal\nskill.\nThe 38-year-old daughter of the\nEarl of Bessborough \u2014 governor-\ngeneral of Canada from 1931 to 1935\n\u2014says she sympathizes with the\nCanadian housewife whose husband\nleaves her alone during the fishing\nseason.\nBut her husband, child surgeon\nDr. Denis Browne of London, England, says the lonely housewife\nshould try Lady Moyra's remedy\nand \"go along for the trip.\"\nCAUGHT LARGE TROUT\nThey have been visiting Gover.-\nnor-General Vincent Massey. Dr.\nBrowne will address the joint convention of the British and Canadian\nMedical associations which starts\nin Toronto next Monday.\nSo far they have founti the fishing here good. Last week Dr.\nBrowne netted a 13-pound lake\ntrout near St. Marguerite's, Que.,\nin the Laurentian mountains.\nIt took two hours and fifteen\nminutes to reel in the trout.\n\"Lady Moyra helped me all the\nway,\" Dr. Browne said. \"She kept\nthe line untwisted and helped me\nland the fish which was far too big\nfor our net.\"\nTHEIR WAY HARDER\nThey also enjoy hunting\u2014\"shooting,\" Lady Moyra calls it, \"because\nit's only hunting when you do it\nwith horses and hounds.\"\nDr. Browne says his wife excels\nat potting ducks and partridge.\n\"But we don't shoot partridge\nthe way you do in Canada,\" she\nsaid. \"We don't flush them from\nhiding and shoot them as they fly\ninto the air.\n\"Instead, we build blinds in the\nmiddle of fields and shoot them in\nfull flight, which is much more\ndifficult.\"\n0A\u00a3AL \"Up. Wiik\n9280  14W-24J4\nWEEK'S   SEWING   BUY\nMost flattering princess lines fashion this lovely summer dress \u2014\nperfectly proportioned for the shorter, fuller figure! A joy to sew\u2014\ndiagram shows how EASY it is!\nYou'll want to make several for day\nand evening occasions \u2014 in shantung, linen, gay cottons!\nPattern 9280: Half Sizes 14^, 16%,\n18V8, 20^, 22*4, 24%. Size 16% takes\n4V8 yards 39-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35c)\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly SIZE,\nNAME, ADDRESS, STYLE, NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN, 60 Front S. W\u201e\nToronto, Ont\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n5-; PILLS -\nHew Scholarships\nAnnounced by\nRossland PTA\nROSSLAND \u2014Musical talents of\nmany nationalities were enjoyed at\nthe final meeting of the' Rossland\nHigh School Parent-Teacher- Association. The program, based on the\nUnited Nations theme, was Introduced by Program Convener Mrs.\nRuth Harrod. \\\nMr. and* Mrs. Otto Niedermann\nrendered Scotch selections with Mr.\nNiedermann. and his violin, and\nMrs. Niedermann at the piano;\nthree French 'songs were sung by\nMrs. J. Rozek, accompanying herself on t*e guitar; the Misses Helen\nand Pat Nora as a duet.^sang two\nNorwegian numbers, with Miss\nHelen Nora playing the accompaniment. Mr. and Mrs*. Niedermann\nthen presented two Viennese selections, and Joseph Guercio of Trail,\na tenor, sang two Italian songs. A\nquartet from 'The Gondoliers\"\u2014\nMrs. Jean 'Ellison, Miss May MacDonald, Ronald Groom and George\nBourchier, presented two selections\nfrom that operetta with Mrs. L.\nKempston as accompanist, and Eric\nBourchier as speaker.\nIn thanking the entertainers. Mrs.\nHarrod expressed the hope that this\ntype of program would bring to\npeople a better understanding ' of\none another, and of the ways in\nwhich different nationalities can\nwork together to build a better\nCanada.\nDuring the business meeting Dave\nShaw, in charge of scholarships and\nawards, announced new scholarships for this year. The Rossland\nChapter, Registered Nurses' Association, has increased its awards to\ntwo, to include the runner-up. The\nIUMM and SW has signified that an\naward of $100 will be given to each\nhigh school in this district for a\ngrade twelve student, and an award\nof $200 will be open to grade thirteen students. A joint scholarship\nfrom the Rossland Co-operative\nTransportation Society and the\nRossland Credit Union, will be\nawarded on the results of departmental examinations.\nMrs. P. Bateman was appointed\nrepresentative of the High School\nParent-Teacher Association on the\nteacher placement committee.\nMrs. Levy Appointed\nTo Church Committee\nNEW DENVER\u2014The June meeting of the Slocan Community Hospital Ladies Auxiliary was held at\nthe home of Mrs. James A. Greer\nand owing to such a poor attendance of members the executive\nand Mrs. Ada L. Levy conducted\nthe business meeting. Mrs. James\nDraper reported on Hospital Board\nmeeting. Mrs. Greer gave a report\nfor the Buying and Sewing Committee.\nMrs. Levy was appointed to Sewing Committee for remainder of\nthe year to replace Mrs. R. Olson\nwho has left the district. The secretary was instructed to send a letter of appreciation to Mrs. Olson\nfor her interest and the work done\nfor the hpspital while in New Denver.\nLister Notes\nLISTER \u2014A large number of\nneighbors and friends gathered at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. A. W.\nSinclair for a surprise party in\nhonor of Mr. Sinclair's 81st birthday. Those attending from Creston\nwere Mr. and Mrs. George Jacks,\nMr. and Mrs. Hilton Young and Mr.\nand Mrs. W.> Fraser.\n*****\nMiss Irene McKee', hostess with\nTCA at Montreal and daughter of\nMrs. D. J. McKee, is now flying\nthe Atlantic going to London, Paris\nand Dusseldorf, Germany,\n*    *    \u2022\nMiss Shirley Huscroft. daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. John Huscroft,\nhave been visiting in the British\nIsles since last September and is\nnow traveling on the continent,\nModel of School\nUnique Gift Container\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 The model of a\nschool was the unique gift container used when Miss Nan Woods entertained for Miss Frances Johnstone of the Elementary teaching\nstaff.\nThe kitchen shower was held at\nthe home of Mrs. J. E. Johnson,\nMorrison Subdivision, with 21\nguests present. Games were played\nduring the evening.\nCentring the tea table was a cake\nin the form of a Guide, made by\nMrs. Beverley Garvin.\nChurch Collection\nMade With Fish Nets\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) \u2014\nThe collection at a church service\nhere Sunday was collected in a net\non the end of a fishing pole. About\n400 boat owners from this community, Niagara Falls, N.Y., and Buffalo, N.Y., attended the first service\nof the Niagara Frontier Power\nSquadron by anchoring their boats\nin the river. One boat went to each\nof the 75 vessels picking up the collection.\nSocial\nson oocia\n\u25a0 Humfe' Lethbridge of North Vancouver, formerly of Nelsbn, Is visiting friends in Nelson.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nDr. and Mrs. John C. Carpenter,\nson Jack and daughter Andrea, of\nVancouver are the guests of Mrs.\nCarpenter's mother, Mrs. A. E. Winlaw, 1012 Josephine Street.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. C. B. Mutchler, 814\nVictoria Street, returned Friday\nfrom Chicago where they attended\nthe Rotary International Convention and visited Mr. Mutchler's brother-in-law-and sister, Mr. and Mrs.\nCarl Gutsche.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. John Bringsli, 706\nSixth Street, have as their guests\ntheir daughter-in-law, Mrs. Ed\nBringsli and grandson, David, of\nVancouver.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nA dinner party in honor of Mr.\nand Mrs. A. E. Norri6 who will be\nleaving soon for Castlegar, was*held\nSaturday night at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. W. Graham, 424 Robson Street.\n\u2022 *   \u00bb\nMrs. FV Hallett, Medical Arts\nBuilding, has been called to Prince\nGeorge through Ihe illness of her\ndaughter, Mrs. S. Madley.\nFamily Gathers for\n50th Anniversary\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Family of Mr.\nand Mrs. George Yadernuk gathered recently to tender their congratulations at a party on the occasion\nof the 50th anniversary of their\nmarriage in the Ukraine. They\ncame to Canada 43 years ago and\nlived in southern Alberta until 1923\nwhen they came here. Mr. Yadernuk was with the railway then\njoined the city works crew where\nhe is still employed.\nTheir children are Alex and William in Cranbrook, Nick in Edmonton and John in Port Hammond,\nMrs. A. Sjrogen, Mrs. Aurelio, Mrs,\nRon Atkinson and Mrs. R. Ferrier\nat the coast, and Mrs. Mary Tibicli\nin Alberta, They have 30 grandchildren.\nEAST AFRICA IS\nSUBJECT OF\nSOROPTIMIST TALK,\n\"Life in East Africa\" was the topic of guest speaker Mrs. Warwick\nBucknell, Superintendent of Nurses at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, to the Nelson Soroptimist International's regular dinner meeting. Mrs, Bucknell, speaking to the\ngroup for the second time by popular request, was introduced by Mrs.\nEileen Welsh.\nMrs. Bucknell gave vivid descriptions of her experiences in some of\nthe'hospitals in East Africa. Animal\nand insect life was described. She\nended her address in praise of the\nbeauties of this area. \"The scenery\nhere is as beautiful as could be\nfound anywhere.\" Miss Eileen Mackenzie thanked the speaker for her\naddress.\nMATERNITY TOP3\nJust TWO main pattern parts to\neach of these cool maternity tops \u2014\ncould anything be easier, prettier?\nSew dressy and casual versions \u2014\ntrim with embroidery!\nPattern 605: Matternity Misses'\nSizes 12, 14, 18, 18, 20. Tissue pattern transfers. State size.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENT8 in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60. Front* St. W., Toronto.\nOnt Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nLOOK FOR smartest ideas in\nNeedlecraft in our Laura Wheeler\nCatalogue for 1955. Crochet, knitting, embroidery and lovely things\nto wear. Iron-ons, quilts, aprons,\nnovelties \u2014 easy, fun to make! Send\n25 cents for your copy of this book\nNOW! You will want to order every\nnew design in it\nPHONE 1i844\nMy and Mrs. Douglas Cummins,\n921 Silica Street, have returned\nfrom a short trip to the Lardeau.\n'.***\u2022\nC. W. Reeve Harper, 1313 Front\nStreet, left Monday for Victoria\nwhere he' will attend the annual\nB.C. municipal officers convention.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr.\" and Mrs. C. D. Pearson, 806\nVictoria Street, will leave today\nfor Grand Forks en route to Kamloops where they will entrain for\nPrince Rupert. While there Mr.\nPearson will attend the Grand\nLodge session of AF & AM.\n\u2022 *   *\nSt. Paul's Church circle No. 1 held\nits second meeting of the month at\nthe home of Mrs. R. A. Peebles,,312\nLatimer Street.\nMrs. W. Ironmonger, 408 Latimer\nStreet, who is leaving for a four-\nmonths tour of England next week,\nwas honored at a gathering at the\nhome of Mrs. Alan Smith, 1009\nStanley Street. Ten women attended\nthe tea at which gifts were presented to Mrs. Ironmonger.    -\nMr. and Mrs. N. R. Sardich, 402\nNelson Avenue, returned Monday\nfrom Vancouver where Mr. Sardich\ntook part in the official openings\na new Gardner-Denver building.\nWhile there, they were guests of\ntheir daughter and son-in-law, Mr.\nand-Mrs. W. F. Anderson and son\nBob' Wassick.\n\u2022 *   *\nAmong those In Nelson this week\nto attend the funeral of the late T,\nA. Wallace were Mr. and Mrs. A. L.\nBissillion and family, Gary, Bob\nand Brian, of Calgary; Flying Officer and Mrs. W. J. Holland and\nsons Raymond, Joe and Mike of\nClaresholm, Alberta; Mrs. Maud\nThompson of* Spokane; Mrs. Joe\nLombardo of Vancouver; James\nCameron of Cranbrook; John W.\nWallace and sister Mrs. Eva Hen-\nson* Dorothy Wallace of Castlegar;\nMrs. A. M. Chesser of Trail.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13,1953 \u2014 3\nPTA Awards job\nStudy Awards\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 At a special assembly at P. J. McKim Junior'Se-\nnior High School Mrs. A. S; Oliver,\npresident of the Parent-Teachers\nAssociation, presented job - study\nawards t6 four senior students.\nWinners were:\nFirst \u2014 Miss Judy Ann Desbri-\nsay (Nursing); Miss Margaret Archibald (Secretarial Work).\n2nd \u2014 Miss Judy Chisholm\n(Teaching).\n3rd \u2014Miss Beverley Nelson (Nursing). \u2022\nHonorable Mention \u2014 Miss Margaret Lukas (Law) and Miss Rena\nGris (Law).\nCOAST WEDDING\nOF INTEREST HERE\nOf interest to Nelson residents is\nthe marriage of Melita Bergmann,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. J.\nBergmann of Nelson to Chrysanthe\nJoseph Barsreau, RCSME, son of\nMr. and Mrs. C. Barsleau of Meyr-\nonne, Saskatchewan.\nThe marriage took place at St.\nMary's church in Chilliwack June 4.\nWATCH FOR OUR\nWAREHOUSE\nCLEARANCE\nSALE\nTOMORROW\nLEGION AUXILIARY\nCARDS NET $21\nFOR FIRE FUND\nA sum of $21.10 was turned o\\\nto the Strathcona Fire Relief Fu\nby  the  Ladies'   Auxiliary   to   the\nCanadian Legion from the proceeds\nof a card party in the Legion Hall.\nUnder convener Mrs. Irene Day\nand master of ceremonies S. J.\nNewell, winners were Mrs. Lund.\nMrs. S. J. Newell, Mrs. M. C. Carlson and Mrs. Elliot.\nAssisting Mrs. Day were Mrs. C.\nO. Anderson, Mrs. B. Gray, Mrs. F.\nCastle, Mrs. G. Thompson, Miss\nMay Meers.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nWomen Delegates Flocking\nTo Banff for Convention\nBANFF, Ala. (CP) \u2014 Delegates\nfrom Australia, Mexico and the\nUnited States will join Canadians\nat the annual convention of Quota\nClub International, a women's service  club,  here June  26-30.\nPresident Dr. Bertha M. Luckey\nof Cleveland, Ohio, will review the\nyear's projects and a new slate of\nofficers will be elected.\nElsie Gregory MacGill, aeronautical engineer from Toronto, is one\nof  the  main speakers,  titling her\nWalt Disney Means To Give TV Fans\nFull Value at Disneyland Preview\nBy   BOB  THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD -TAP)\u2014Walt Disney, who has already proved that\ntelevsiion can be used to promote\nhis other enterprises, will use the\nmedium to its fullest extent when\nhe previews his Disneyland Park.\nPlans are shaping up for a giant\ntelecast from the Anaheim, Calif..\npleasureland on Sunday, July 17.\nPublicity departments of Disney\nstudios and th* ABC network are\npolishing u ptheir best adjectives\nfor the event.\nThe show will be unique in at\nleast one respect: It will be the first\ntime a Disney TV offering will be\nseen on a live basis. Walt will be\non the screens to conduct his millions of fans on a tour of his dream\nproject.\nTO USE 22 CAMERAS\nIt will be a 90-minute attraction\nfrom 4:30 to 6 p.m. ABC has lined.\nup three sponsors for the show and\nannounces that 22 cameras will\nroam the 160 acres of the one-time\norange grove. This is claimed to be\na record, but no doubt other networks will dispute this statement.\nFive thousand guests are being\ninvited to the preview, including\n1000 press and numerous film stars,\nIt's reported that the 48 governors\nwill be asked to raise the flags of\ntheir    states    on    the    Disneyland\ngrounds.\nThe Disney people do things thoroughly. There will even be a preview of the preview. The regular\nDisneyland show on July 13 will\nfeature a-hour report on the final\npreparations for the park.\nThis will be the only new segment\nof the current season of reruns.\nWILL SHOW ALL\nDisney has said that he won't\nstint on showing the TV audience\nthe wonders of his park. He plans\nextensive tours of his four realms\n\u2014Tomorrowland, Frontier, and Ad-\nventureland and Fantasyland.\n* Most other showmen would resist\nshowing too much to the home\nviews-for fear it would lessen the\nbox-office take. Disney doesn't hold\nlo this.\naddress \"Danger, Women Thinking.\" Mrs. H. M. Schweitzer, provincial commissioner of the Saskatchewan Girl Guides Association,\nwill speak at a luncheon June 28.\nINTERNATIONAL CLUB\nRepresenting Australia will be\nMrs. Elsie Dash, who governs the\nclub's 26th district in that country.\nB. I. M. Strong, superintendent of\nBanff Park, will welcome delegates\nat the opening luncheon June 26.\nQuota, a service club for women\nexecutives in the business and professional fields, has 290 clubi\nthroughout the U.S., Canada, Australia, Mexico and Alaska, representing 8900 women. There are 29\nclubs in Canada.\nBegun in 1919 by five women In\nBuffalo, N.Y., Quota's main interests\nare aid to the deaf, girls' service\nwork, international aid for children,\nand community service projects.\nWatch for Our\nWeekend Specials\nMEAT MARKET \u2014 Phone 832\n3*V BASEBALL FANS\nFOR REAL LIVE BASEBALL\nTHERE'S NOTHING TO COMPARE\nwith rca Victor\nTV\n$249\"\nCompletely Installed In Your Home\nPriced\nFrom\nEASY TERMS AVAILABLE AT\nBEN SUTHERLAND\nMUSIC AND APPLIANCES\n\"SERVING NELSON AND DISTRICT SINCE\". 1927\"'\n645 I.AKER ST. NELSON, B.C. PHONE 258\nt in i~r \u2022inTis\u00bbifiissi\nI\n   ,ii   .w^^mm iiiiiiujii.iii    ,i   -^--\u2014-^^i^^ppiipiii|i\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15,1955\nDoor Opening Specials\nPERSONAL SHOPPING ONLY\nNO PHONE, MAIL OR C.O.D. ORDERS\nReg. .59, SI\nSUMMER JEWELLERY\nSpecial clearance of necklets, earrings and bracelets. | Q\nEach   e\\y\nIMPORTED\nPILLOW CASES\nClosely woven snowy white pillow\ncases, made from high count quality cotton. Regular size. ^ Q\nLimited quantity. Each .... emmir\nCHILDREN'S SUNSUITS\nLimited quantity. Mostly boys'\nbetter quality cottons. | QQ\nSizes 2 to 6 I \u00bbX <f\nSpecial I PEDAL PUSHERS\nColorful poplins in solid, red, navy\nand striped patterns. Elasticized\nwaist. QQ\nSizes 3 to 6x  \u2022<? +\nReg. .69\nIMPORTED\nTERRY TOWELS\nSlight imperfections, lovely pastel\nshades. Large 22x40 size. AQ\nSpecial  \u00bb'Tr^\nReg. .79\nMISSES'T-SHIRTS\nScoop kneck broadcloth T-shirts.\nBright colorful checks. AQ\nSpecial      Try\nMEN'S T-SHIRTS\nAll cotton in fine balbriggan knit.\nShort sleeves, crew neck, AQ\nWhite only. S,M,L  *T7\nBOYS'T-SHIRTS\nWhite cotton, balbriggan knit to\nfit boys ages 6 to 3ft\n14   .3V\nScatter Cushions\nVery special offer. Cute corduroy\ncovered, scatter cushions in a wide\nvariety of attractive pastels and assorted shapes. You will want two or\nthree at this exceptionally | ^Q\nlow price.  Special \t\nFeather Pillows\nTea Towels\nSoft and absorbent colourful check\npatterns in red, blue, green, gold on\nneutral* ground.       A \u00bbw*f\nSizes 15%\"x29\" ..\".... 1 for \u2022 IJ\nFoam Rubber\nPillows\nPlump, soft and well filled with sterilized chicken feathers . . . durable\ncotton ticking cover.\nSize 17\"x25\"\t\n1.99\nReg. 6.95. \"Millfoam\" head pillows\nare\u2014   '\n\u2022Allergy Free.\n\u2022 Soft and Bouyant.\n\u2022 WillNotSagorPack.\n\u2022 Cool\n\u2022 Odorless\n\u2022 Sanitary\nSpeeial\n5.99\nBIG SAVINGS!\nDACRON DRESSES\nWe made a special purchase and pass\nthe saving along to you in this low price\n. . . several dollars below usual value.\nCool, summer dresses fashioned of\n100% Dacron material ... the wonder\nfabric of lasting freshness. Choose your\nfavorite styles from a wide selection of\ncharmers in light ground prints that are\nperfect for summer days. Sizes 12 to 18,\n38 fo 44\t\nColorful\nPRINT SKIRTS\n\u2022 Bright and gay. \u00bbCool and fresh\nin a wide variety of patterns.\nStyled for your hot weather comfort. Sizes 12. to 20\t\nSPECIAL!\n2\n69\nCotton\nHALF SLIPS\nCool and practical half slips of\nquality dacron and cotton material,\ndeep eyeletwork band at hemline.\nWhite only. Sizes: small, medium,\nlarge \t\n1\n79\nBig Saving! T-SHIRTS       RAYON BRIEFS\nFashion-wise T-shirts, priced so low because of\nspecial planning and purchasing. Styles too numerous to detail here ... square, turtle, ^ mmgm,\nV-necklines . . . brushed cottons, ^B #9\nmulti-strips,   interlock   knits ' ' \u00b0\nMisses' sizes\t\n1\nSpecial purchase at a saving makes\nthis low price possible . . . neatly\nfinished in durable rayon material.\nWhite and pastel shades. Women's\n49\nJERSEY GOWNS\nThe luxury look at a low sale price\n. . . styled in sleek rayon jersey\nmaterial with loads of lace on bodice. Shades of pink, blue, maize.\nWomen's sizes\t\nSals! COTTON BLOUSES\n1\n69\nChoose from a wide selection of pretty styles inl\n. cool cottons . . . stripes, ginghams, broadcloths,!\nprints, Dan River plaids ... sleeve- ^ _ - f\nless, short and long sleeve styles in ''\u25a0991\ngay colours. ' ' ^ \/.\/ U \\\nSizes: 14 to 20 _ ,\t\n1\nTriple Roll Anklets\nFirst quality, knitted of combed cotton yarns\nin the popular Roll-a-Cuff style and sale\npriced to save you money. White shade only,\nwith nylon reinforced heels and toes. JJ Q\nWomen's sizes 9 to 10*^  tj\/\nChild's Anklets\nKnit from 100 per cerit combed cotton with ribbed cotton cuff. 1Q\nSizes 6 to Vh    e\\7\nWhite Nylon\nHANDBAGS\nThe perfect summer handbag, .woven from\n100 per cent nylon, in the     ^   tf\\t\\\npopular  draw-string  type.      ^Lu   99\nLarge size,\nin white only \t\n5, \u25a0 *vu\n1\nChild's Cotton Anklets\nSpecial offer on nylon reinforced cotton ankle\nsocks with elastic rib cuff. First quality, in White\nonly. Sizes 6 to 8%. A <\u00a3|\nT pairs 3>l\nSpecial\nCotton-Training Pants     Kiddies' R      pan,ie$    Bi      GiHs' Bfiefs\nReal  va hip  in  miatiTv nantipc  nf pnr- ' ** \u25a0*\nReal value in quality panties of cotton Balbriggan material . . . every\npair first quality in good roomy cuts,\nWhite shade only.\nSizes 2 to 6  \u25a0\/ pairs\nPretty styles for girls taking sizes 2\nto 6 . . . quality rayon with embroidered nylon side J d*l\n :.... mt pairs \u2022$ I\npanels\nJ pairs ^) I\nSHORTS n SHIRTS\nStyles for girls taking sizes 8 to 12\n... the same quality rayon with attractive embroidered nylon 3Q\nside panels  ,JS\nMen's SUMMER SPORT SHIRTS\n2\n8\nStyles for boys and girls\nin cool cottons that are\ncute 'n colourful . . .\nshorts with shirt to\nma,tch or contrast. Sizes\n4 to 6x \t\nPEDAL PUSHERS\n1\n99\n,-s For girls taking sizes 8 to\n|' j 14. First quality at a saving\n\\ j of one-third. Assorted pat-\nW   terns to choose from in a\nvariety of colors \t\n1\n99\nSAVE! T-SHIRTS\nSpecial Buy!\nGIRLS' DRESSES\nSave Up To $2! Usual 3.95 and 4.95 Values!\nA Special Feature for Father's Day Shoppers!\n\u2022 Cool, 100 per cent nylon plisse, short sleeve style.\n\u2022 Colourful Dan River  cotton prints, short sleeve\nstyle.\n\u2022 Handsome  bold  check  cotton  sport  shirts,   long\nsleeve style.\n\u2022 White, plain shades, printed designs.\n\u2022 Sizes small to extra large.\nBoys' Summer Sport Shirts\nAt a Sale Price\nCool cotton plisse material in popular short\nsleeve style . . . easy to launder too! Novelty\nWestern prints in wanted, summer shades.\nSizes 6 to 14.\t\nBoys' Denim Jeans     Combed Cotton T-Shirts\nFirst quality'shirts with short sleeves, crew necklinl\n... in jacquard or novelty stripe patterns ... some bolif\nstripfes in the lot. Top fashion colors.  ^       1   iCI\n  JL forl.O,\n1\n.29\nEvery dress first quality . . . sale priced too!\nSavings of up to half regular prices on crisp\ncottons or nylons in pretty ^ ff\\t\\\nstyles . . . prints and plain ^ 99\nshades . . . popular colors.\nSizes 2, 3, 3x\t\n1\nA special price for rugged jeans in a good\nroomy cut. . . sanforized denim that retains\nfit after washing and wears exceptionally\nwell. Finished with strongly sewn seams, bar\ntacks and rivets, zipper closure, | QQ\nroomy pockets. Sizes 6 to 16    XiWW\nMen's Underwear\nDurable knit cotton in military rib stitch\ngenerous  cut  and  neat\nfinish at a sale price. Athletic shirt, or shorts with\niy\u00ab\" elastic waistband    q\nBoys' sizes\n39\nMEN'S ANKLE SOCKS\nSave over 50c on these regular 1.50 anklets! A\nfine Father's Day gift item! Selection includes all\nwool, wool and nylon, and all nylon QQ\nsocks. Fancy and plain shades; 10 to 12 ... \u00bb<r<r\nStripe and novelty patterns in cottons and cotton-rayon mixes. Sizes 1\nto 3 with button on\nshoulder ... 2 to 6 with\ncrew neck \t\n49\nKIDDIES' JEANS\nMake of sturdy blue denim . . . sanforized to retain fit . . . neat,\nsnug fitting boxer elastic waist, 3 pockets. Boys'\nhave zipper closure. Sizes 3 to 6x\t\n1.29\nSUMMER SPECIAL!\nWOMEN'S SANDALS\nComfortable wedge heel sandals in leather\nor linen fabrics. Some have \"foamtread\"\ncushioning with nylon mesh vamp. Blue,\nred, multi-color, beige or green. Sizes AVz\nto 9  : '.\t\n2\n29\nChild's T-Strap Sandals Men's Lightweight Jackets]\n1\n99\nStufUy English make with\ncrepe rubber soles, leather\nuppers. White and colors.\nSizes 6 to 2 \t\nMen's Canvas Runners\nHeavy canvas duck uppers,\nboat style with foam cushion insole and heavy rubber\ngrip outsoles. Sizes 6 to 11\nA  big  selection  of  nylon  gabardines,  houndstootj\nchecks, fibrene splash weaves\u2014-all     ^m.    ^.\nwith  rayon  silk   lining   and   zipper     f^M   y'\nfront. Blue, grey or brown. Sizes 36\nto 44 \t\n8\n2\n.50\n\u2022iiii.\n T\"\"\"\nPPW vu '\" \u25a0'\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\"\u25a0! ^ffppWP\n,       * \u25a0-.*      v\" ~\n\/Sir\nWELTERWEIGHT CHAMPION Carmen BasINo playi with Ms\nS-year-old nephew Freddy Thune at his home in Chlttenango, N.Y.,\nshortly before going to the dentlit to check up on a lore front\ntooth. Basilio defeated Tony De Marco of Boston June 10 In the\n12th round of a scheduled 15-round title bout at'Syracuse, N.Y,\u2014(AP\nWlrephoto).\nSanlee Amateur\nStatus Questioned\nPARIS (AP) \u2014 Avery Brundage,\npresident of the International Olympic Committee, said Tuesday he has\nasked the American Amateur Athletic Union to investigate the amateur\nstatus of mile-runner Wes Santee.\nBrundage said he had studied a\nstory printed in a San Francisco\nnewspaper \"which made very serious charges against Santee in the\nmatter of accepting expense money.\nshould be looked into. I have not yet\nheard from Ferris.\n\"No action has been taken against\nSantee yet and I don't know that\nany will be. However, the charges\nare certainly too serious ta let\nthem stand.\"\nBrundage said the story claimed\nSantee of the University of Kansas\nreceived more expenses than needed\nin recent California meets.\nSantee has denied the charge and\nFerris' AAU has said his status Is\nall right\nFAMOUS CENTRE\nTlie Royal Pensioners' Hospital at\nChelsea, England, was designed by\nSir Christopher Wren in 1681.\nSCIATIC PAINS\nBOTHER BABE\nGALVESTON, Tex. (AP) \u2014 Babe\nDidrikson Zaharias is \"not responding satisfactorily\" to physical-therapy treatment for sciatic pains, St.\nMary's Infirmary reported Tuesday.\nThe famous woman golfer entered hospital a week ago because of\npains in her back and right leg.\nIt Is believed the pains, could be\ncaused by a ruptured disc In her\nspine. Tests showed the pains are\nnot an indication of any recurrence\nof cancer, for which Mrs. Zaharias\nwas operated on several years ago,\nan official said.\n5 TEAMS TO VIE\nFOR CENTRAL CUP\nFERNIE\u2014Fernie will be the mec-\nca of football fans from Lethbridge\nto Kimberley June 19 when all five\nteams of the Crows Nest Pass Football League. will compete in the\nCentral Cup tournament The draw\nwill be held at 10 a.m. with play\ncommencing immediately after the\ndraw, and continuing throughout\nthe day. Teams entered are the\nLethbridge Legion, Lethbridge\nANAF, Michel Buffaloes, Fernie\nUnited and Kimberley Canadians.\nLethbridge ANAF are the present\nholders of the cup.\nFor a friendly\nGreeting\nYou can offer your guests no friendlier\nwelcome than \"Black & White\".\nBlended in  a  special  way  from\nthe pick of all Scotland's whiskies,\n\"Black & White\" is the outstanding\nexample of just how good Scotch\nWhisky can be.\nBUCHANAN'S\nBLACK&WHITE\nSCOTCH   WHISKY\nOhe Sectetfo In the Blaulmty\nBy appointment\nto tho lata King Goorgo VI\nScotch Whitley Dlitllttn\nJamos Buchanan & Co. Ltd.\nDistilled, blended and bottled in Scotland\nAvailable in 26Vi oz. and  1316 02. bottles\nQualifying Rounds Played In\nWomen's Golf Championship Event\nMembers of the women'\u00ab lection\nof Nelson Golf and Country Club\nhave played qualifyina rounds for\nthe club championship. The first\ngame will be played by June 30,\nand the finals have been set for\nSeptember 11.\nThe draw follows:\nChampionship flight \u2014 H. Townshend vs B. Lakes, E. McLeod vs S.\nCameron, G. Bradley v\u00ab A. Stur-\ngess, B. Hesketh vs B. Wicken, E.\nMcGregor vs D. McBride, J. Sutcliffe vs I. Peacock, I. Locatelll vs\nB.  Bensted  and H.   Noxon  vs L.\nDill.\nfirst flight-J. Young vs J. Miller, B. Clarke vs P. Grieve, E.\nBrown Vs P. Jack, J. Coates vs J.\nMorey, H. Sloan vs A. Leveque, E.\nCummins vs R. Allan, A. Lawrence\nvs I. Sample, I. Fleury, bye.\nConsolation events will be held\nfor both flights.*\nIt ii hopea that newer members\nwill take part in a two-ball foursome June 22. Also coming up is\nthe 18-hole competition for the\nBlanche Pollard trophy July 1, for\nplayers with a 30 and over handicap.  A large entry is expected.\nWilliams Slams Fifth\nHomer in 12 Games\nBy Tha Canadian Press\nTed Williams, who has revitalised the Boston Red Sox since his return to the lineup, continued to\nswing for the fences Wednesday as\nthe Sox exploded for a 12-4 victory\nover the Kansas City Athletics.\nWilliams hit his fifth homer ln\ntwelve games and doubled twice to\ndrive in three runs in the one sided\ncontest.\nThe slugger pushed his American\nLeague batting average from .341\nto .378 before retiring ln favor of\nGene Stephens after his seventh inning bases-empty* homer into the\nrightfleld pavilion.\nIn the only other afternoon action\nthe New York Giants took a B-fl\nshutout victory over the Chicago\nCubs in the National League.\nGail Harris, rookie first baseman\ncalled up from the minors to add\nsome punch to the New York attack, came through with his fourth\nhomer in five games to help Ruben\nGomez to his third win against\nthree defeats.\nSince the return of Williams to\nactive duty the Sox have now won\n\u2022six of their last seven games. Winning pitcher against the As was\nFrank Sullivan who gave up all\nfour Athletic runs on two-run homers by Vic Power and Bill Wilson.\nNorm Zauchin, a rookie trying to\ntie down the first baseman's job in\nthe absence of Harry Agganis who\nis III, contributed a three-run homer\nand drove in four of Boston's eight\nruns in the third inning. Besides his\nhomer he walked the second time\nup with the bases loaded for his\nfourth RBI.\nJim Plersall also contributed a\nhomer to the Sox 12-hlt attack.\nNew York's 'first shutout of the\nseason, reduced the Cubs margin\nover the third-place Giants to 2Vt\ngames. Willie Mays hit his 17th ho-,\nmer of the season as both Giant homers came in a three-run second\ninning against loser Sam (No Hit)\nJones, whose record la now six wins\nagainst eight losses.\nGomez scattered eight hits for his\nvictory.\nA freakish play enabled New\nYork Yankees to retain their slim-\nmed-down American League lead\nTuesday night with a 7-6 victory\nover Detroit Tigers ln 10 innings\nwhile the runner-up Chicago White\nSox and the revived Cleveland Indians stayed Just off the pace with\nvictories.\nIn the National League Brooklyn\nDodgers moved to an lH4-game\nlead by pounding Cincinnati Red-\nlegs 9-0.\nThe Yanks wrapped lt up against\n'CHICAGO (AP) \u2014 Manager Leo\nDurocher Tuesday denied published\nreports he had said his New York\nGiants were playing \"lazy ball.\"\nDurocher admitted he expressed\nchagrin over failure of pitcher Sal\nMaglie to cover first base in a losing game to St. Louis Cardinals\nSunday.\n\"But anybody who says I singled\nout any players with a charge of\nlazy ball is a liar,\" said Durocher\njust before the Giants whipped the\nCubs 5-0.\n\"A number of sports writers\nheard me say that if Maglie had\ncovered first on that play in New\nYork, the game would have been\nover and we would have won,\"\nsaid Durocher.\nOn the play, a drive by Wally\nMoon of the Cards hit an umpire\nand deflected to the Giant first\nbaseman Gail Harris, who could\nhave thrown out Moon if Maglie\nhad covered.\n\"I did express admiration for the\nway Whitey Lockman has been\nplaying the last 10 days or so and\nsaid it's too bad some of his spark\ndidn't rub off on the others,\" Durocher said.\nthe Tigers on Mickey Mantle's\nsingle in the extra inning, but got\nthe chance only after a thfee-run\nrally in the ninth that was climaxed by Harry Carey's scamper on a\nfour-base error.\nCarey had hit in front of the\nplate with two out and Mantle on\nthird by way of a Ferris Fair error.\nPitcher Al Aber fielded the ball but\nthrew well past first and Carey\nraced all the way\" around to score\nthe tying run.\nNOREN 8TARTS RALLY\nIrv Noren started the rally and\nhelped ease starter Ned Garver out\nof the game by slamming his second home run of the contest.\nThe White Sox beat Baltimore\n1-0, scoring as Saul Rogovin walked in the winning run in the eighth.\nJack Harshman allowed just three\nOriole singles, but Sandy Consuegra\nhad to come ln to pitch a double-\nplay ball to Hal Smith for the clincher in the ninth.\nCleveland took a twi-night\ndoubleheader from Washington,\nwinning the first 0-4 in 11 innings\nand grabbing the nightcap 3-1 behind rookie Herb Score's two-hitter.\nDale Mitchell's pinch-single scored\nthe first of two Cleveland runs in\nthe 11th to win the opener after\nRalph Kiner pinch homered with\ntwo out ln the ninth to tie it up.\nSLIDER SMACKS KITH\nJohnny Podres hurled a seven-hit\nshutout for the Brooks as the Dodgers ran across six runs in the second\nInning. Duke Snider boosted the\nspree with his 20th homer of the\nseason. It came with two on.\nHomers by rookie Gail Harris and\nWillie Mays gave the Glafi'ts three\nruns in the second and sent Sam\n(No-Hit) Jones to his eighth defeat. Ruben Gomez won his third\nwhile hurling the first shutout of\nthe season by the New York staff.\nA homes also won for Milwaukee\nBraves. Ed Mathews belted his 14th\nwith a man on in. the eighth to beat\nRobin Roberts and Philadelphia\n4-2. Mathews had three of the seven hits given up by Roberts, who\nnow is 9-5.\nPittsburgh broke out for eight\nruns in the fourth inning to rap St.\nLouis Cardinals 10-5. Dale Long\ndrove home four of the Bue runs,\nhitting a solo homer in the second\nand contributing a double and\nbases-loaded single as 13 Pirates\ncame to bat in the fruitful fourth\n. 8M2<\nThis advertisement is not published oi displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Archie Moore\nand Bobo Olson took time off from\nheavy training Tuesday to sign the\nofficial contracts for their light-\nheavyweight championship at the\nPolo Grounds June 22.\nOlson, the middleweight king,\nsaid he was down to about 171\npounds, or four under the limit for\nthe title bout. Moore, who will be\ndefending his 175-pound diadem,\nwouldn't say what he weighed, but\nobservers estimated the veteran\nhad pared to around 180 pounds\nwith a week to go.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPhiladelphia  ..   001 000 010\u20142 10 1\nMilwaukee 000 200 02x\u20144   7 1\nRoberts and Seminick; Burdette\nand Crandall. HRs? Phil\u2014Hamner,\nMil\u2014Tanner,  Mathews.\nNew York     031 010 000\u20145 9 1\nChicago   .. 000 000 000\u20140 8 0'\nGomez and Westrumi Jones, Hillman (4), Perkowski (8) and McCullough, Cooper (8). L\u2014Jones. HR:\nNY\u2014Harris, Mays.\nPittsburgh .... 010 800 001\u201410 14 3\nSt.  Louis      100 020 002\u2014 5 13 1\nKline, Purkey (7) and Atwell;\nJackson, Lawrence (4), Jones (5),\nPholsky (8) and Sarni. W\u2014Kline.\nL\u2014Jackson. HRs: Pgh\u2014Long. St L.\n\u2014 Moon (2).\nBrooklyn       180 001 100\u20149 14 1\nCincinnati       000 000 000\u20140   7 1\nPodres and Campanella; Klipp\nstein, Ridzik (2), Freeman (2),\nBlack (8) and Burgess. L \u2014 Kllppstein. HR: Bkn\u2014Snider.\nAMERICAN.LEAGUE\nDetroit       000 040 002 0\u20146   8 4\nNew York   .    012 000 003 1\u20147 12 2\nGarver, Aber (9), Zuverink (10)\nand Wilson; Wiesler, Grim (5), Konstanty (7), Morgan (10) and Berra\nW\u2014Morgan. L\u2014Zuverink. HR: NY\n\u2014Noren (2).\nChicago       000 000 010\u20141 8 1\nBaltimore     000 000 000\u20140 3 1\nHarshman, Consuegra (9) and\nLollar;  Rogovin,  Moore   (9)   Byrd\n(9) and Smith. W\u2014Harshman. '\nRogovin.\nKansas City ..     00 020 020\u2014 4   9 1\nBoston     008 300 lOx\u201412 12 1\nDitmar, Sleater (3), Gorman (4)\nand W. Shantz; Sullivan and White.\nL\u2014 Ditmar. HR: KanC\u2014Power, Wilson; Bos\u2014Zauchin, Piersall, Williams.\nCleveland ..   000 120 001 03\u20148 11 1\nWashington   000 200 200 00\u20144  9 0\nGarcia, Mossi (7), Narleski (9),\nLemo n(ll) and Naragon, Hegan\n(9); Pascual, Stobba (8), Chikales\n(10) and Courtney. W\u2014Narliski. I\/\u2014\nChakales. HR: Cle\u2014Kiner.\nCleveland       001 100 100\u20143 9 0\nWashington     100 000 000\u20141 2 2\nScore and Hegan; McDermott,\nSchmitz (7), Shea (9) and Fitzgerald. L\u2014McDermott.\nHumes'Kavanagh!\n3-Hib Maddens\nHumes remained on top of the\nNelson District Men's Fastball!\nLeague'with a 3-1,victory over!\nMaddens Tuesday night at Civic\nRecreation Grounds. DennyyKava-\nnagh threw a three-hlttef to best\nMaddens' Jmaeff.\nThe win gave Humes a 5-1 record\nand a half-game lead over runner-\nup Transfers, who have a 6-2 standings. Passmore is Just a game from\nthe top with 4-2 for the season.\nHumes broke a 1-1 tie with two\nruns in the fifth. A walk to Lee\nHyssop, a single by Al Theissen and\nMaurice Renwick's double gave the\nHumes the game. They got eight\nhits altogether with Theissen and\nFrank Hufty getting two each.\nHumes took the lead in the third\non two walks and Theissen first\nsingle but Maddens tied it in the\nfourth and an error, a passed ball\nand  Miller's  single.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE IS, 1953 \u2014 7\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW   L Pet. Gbl\nBrooklyn     44   13 .772 \u2014\nChicago       33   25 .569 11V4\nNew York     30   27 .526 14\nMilwaukee      29   28 .509 15\nPhiladelphia     23   31 .426 19%\nCincinnati     22   30 .423 19Vt\nSt Louis     22   31 .415 20\nPittsburgh       19   37 .339 24%\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW   L Pet. Gbl\nNew York     39   20 .661 \u2014\nChicago    -   33   19 .635 2V,\nCleveland      35   22 .6*14 3\nDetroit    30   25 .545 7\nBoston       26   31 .456 12\nWashington    22   34 .393 15%\nKansas City     22   33 .386 16\nBaltimore    ' 18. 39 .316 20\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014 Cricket results today:\nSurrey 243 and 109, Essex 143 and\n147. Surrey won by 62 runs.\nLeicestershire 132 and 209, Warwickshire 292 and 52 for 1. Warwickshire won by 9 wickets.\nNorthamptonshire 326 and 6 for\n0, Nottinghamshire 148 and 183.\nNorthamptonshire won by 10 wickets.\nGloucestershir! 157 and 101 for\n4, Glamorgan 228. Match abandoned,\ndrawn, no play today because of\nrain.\nKent 172 and 184. Somerset 227\nand 132 for 7. Somerset won by 3\nwickets.\nSussex 361 for seven declared and\n135 for 5 declared, Cambridge University 232 and 267 for 6. Cambridge won by 4 wickets.\nOxford University 181 and 242.\nWorcestershire 230 for 7 declared\nand 194 for 5. Worcestershire won\nby 3 Mckets.\nSWAPS, 1968 Kentucky Derby winner, beats\nDetermine to the wire to win the $109,800 Californian In world record time of 1:40 2\/5 for the\nmile and one-sixteenth race at Hollywood Park.\nInglewood, Calif., June 11. Mister Gus (5) (centre, on rail) was third.\u2014(AP Wlrephoto).\nRichardson, Perry\nTo Face Aussies\nBy JACK FARROW\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Hamilton Richardson, young Davis Cup player\nfrom Baton Rouge, La\u201e and Bob\nPerry of Los Angeles emerged\nTuesday as the sole United States\nhopes to turn back the strong\nAustralian challenge ln the singles\nof the London grass courts championships.\nRichardson reached the third\nround by defeating Vladyslav Sko-\nneckl, an exiled Pole, 6-3, 7-5, at\nthe London Queen's Club. Perry\nqualified by turning back P. Williams of South Africa, 1-6, 6-3, 6-3.\nOne Canadian qualified for the\nthird round\u2014Bob Bedard of Sherbrooke, Que., who defeated Nicola\nPietrangeli, top Italian player, 5-7,\n7-3, 6-4.\nln the men's doubles second\nround Rex Hartwig and Lewi6\nHoad of Australia defeated Bedard and Don Fontana of Toronto\n6-3, 6-3.\nGardnar Mulloy of Miami Beach\nFla., and Malcolm Fox of Baltimore, Md., were eliminated. Mulloy was beaten by Ian Vermaak\nof South Africa, 6-3, 6-3. Bobby\nWilson, 50-year-old Briton, defeated Fox 6-0, 7-5.\nTonjr Trabert of Cincinnati, Ohio\nand Vic Seixas, Philadelphia, are\nnot competing in the singles.\nAll the Australian stars \u2014 Hoad.\nKen Rosewall. Hartwig and Mer-\nvyn Rose \u2014 breezed through to the\nthird round. Hoad, top-seeded in\nthe tournament and trying for his\nthird straight title, defeated countryman   Adrian   Quist,   6-4,  '6-4\nRosewall, seeded No. 1 for Wimbledon starting next Monday, eliminated A. D. Russell of Argentina,\n6-1, 6-4.\nRose eliminated Abe Segal, South\nAfrica, 8-6, 6-4 and Hartwig whipped Horgon Fobes of South Africa,\n-2, 6-0.\nKennedy Receives\nTrophy 2nd Time\nTORONTO (bp) \u2014 The !X. P.\nBickell Memorial Cup Friday was\nawarded to Ted (Teeder) Kennedy\nof Toronto Maple Leafs hockey\nteam for the second time in the\ntrophy's three-year history.\nThe cup honors the memory of\nthe late mining magnate who was\nformerly president, chairman of the\nboard, and director of Maple Leaf\nGardens. It Is awarded annually to\nthe outstanding player on Toronto's\nNational Hockey League team. Goalie Harry Lumley won it in 1954.\nMaple Leaf Gardens officials announced Tuesday that the board of\ndirectors has decided to award the\ntrophy, valued at $10,000, to the retiring team captain.\nKennedy was earlier awarded the\nHart trophy, as the most valuable\nplayer in the National Hockey League this season. He won the Bickell\ncup in 1953 It* first year.\nThe Irawaddy River in Burma\nstretches a mile from bank to bank,\nas far as 200 miles from the sea.\n162 To Tee OH in\nU.J. Open Golf\nSAN FRAMOISCO (AP) \u2014 Tfc\u00abj\nstock of hard-luck Sam Snead and\nintense Cary Middleco\u00a3f took a\nsharp jump Tuesday and Ben Began became less a terror for aspirants to the United States open golf\nchampionship.\nHowever, most of the IM professionals and 30 amateurs who tee OH\nThursday insisted that the weekend's 72-hole battle would be a fight\nwith the course and the weather ai\nwell as with men.\nSTANKY REJECTS\nSCOUTING OFFER\nFAIRHOPE, Ala. (AP> \u2014 Bddi*a\nStanky, released May 28 as manager of St. Louis Cardinals, said\nTuesday he had turned down a\nscouting offer with the Cards and\nis free to deal with other major\nleague clubs.\nHe said he had reached tihe agreement with Dick Meyer, vice-president and general manager of the\nNational League club.\nF\n&IENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\nPersonal Loans\nFor   Bills,   Fuel,   Repairs,   Cars,\nor any good reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. LTD.\nSuite 213,    Medical Arts Bldg.\nPHONE 1786\nTHI  SIGNALMAN\n\"Get lt there first; but first, \"get lt right.\"      '\nSignals \u2014 nerve system of the Canadian Army \u2014 a\nhigh-speed, accurate combination of radio networks,\ntelephone and teletype systems and motorcycle despatch\nriders.\nThe Royal Canadian Corps of Signals, with other\ncorps, offers hundreds of good-paying, lifetime careers.\nThe opportunities for advancement, special training and\ntravel are many. A visit to. your Army Recruiting Station\nwill soon show, without obligation, how you can fit In.\nRemember, in the Army you team up with men and\nleaders you can. rely on \u2014right down the line.\nSERVE CANADA AND YOURSELF IN THE ARMY\nTo bo eligible you musl be 17 fo 40 years of age, skilled tradesmen to 45. When\napplying bring birth certificate or olher proof of age.\nApply right away. Write, 'phone or visif ihe Army Recruiting Station nearest your home.\nNo. 11 Personnel Depot, 4201 West 3rd Avenue, Vancouver. B.C.\nTelephone CHerry 2111\nor\nCanadian Army Information Centre, 647 Seymour Street, Vancouver, B.C.\n, Telephone PAolflo 6046\nor\nThe Army Recruiting Station or Militia Armoury nearest your home.\nf      \t\n_^^^__^__\n \u25a0^ TTTrnr- \u2014 ...   ;      -^^i^pjjp\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15,1953\nL\nr\nL.\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nU\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA\nN\nG\nE\nR\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT.\nD\n0\nN\nA\nL\nD\nb\nU\nc\nk\nB\n,U\nZ\nS\nA\n\u2022W\nV\nE\nR\nI\nG\nG\nS\n\/\\\nmm\n.^rtT?\nG**a*3 \u2022^Pj\u00a3\\\\ \\\nv L\nn   ,V^\\\/^\"\n?}\n^p^^pTf\nb-15\nCU,B|_    p\n\u2022     Amdc-Aw,\u2014\u25a0\nI TRADED ELMO\nTO GRETCHEN FOR\nTWO CUT-OUT\nBOOKS AND\nSOME\nBUBBLE GUM)      dl,\n'SgpmmmBm.\nT NO LOOSE BRICKS ^\nP TOLSE-N SLEPT IN\nTHIS OLD CELL... HE\nf IN THE WALL OR   <\nIN THE FLOOR -\n\/MISHT HAVE HIDDEN\n-04E MONEV  WITHIN*   J\nEASV REACH.-   JJj\n\u25a0HWv^^\n919\n\"i\n; WH\ngM\nl^hl ''~'\u00a3<i\n^^^A\n^IS i\n^^i0M\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally Newa does not hold  Itself reioonilbU In th. event,\not an error  In the following lists.\nNew taguerre  IJtf\nNew Rouyn Merger  12\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES (Closing Prices)  .  '\nAcadia Uranium 12\nAkaitcho  .,.'..: 58\nAlgom Uranium     19.75\nAmal Larder  16\nAnacon Lead        3.40\nAnglo Huronian  _    13.15\nArea    \u25a0  .64\nArjon , 13\nAtlas Y K     12.00\nAubelle    13V4\nAumaque  12\nAunor    -    2.15\nBagamac    13V4\nBarymin       2.85\nBase Metals ...\nBelloterre  \t\nBevcourt  \t\nBobjo   \t\nBoymar Gold\nBralorne \t\nBroulan      1.61\nBrunswick        11.35\nBuffalo Ank ....\nBuft Can     \t\nBuff Red Lake\nCaliffaiv . ...\nCampbell R L .\nCan Mai   .\nCanalask Nickel 14\nCanmet  \u2022\u2022     2.47\nCariboo Gold 28\nCastle Treth      3.20\nCentral Pore ....'. 16V4\nChestervllle    34\nChimo G\nCochenour\nCons Denison\n.75\n2.30\n.11\n.38\n.10\n2.70\n.62\n.17 V,\n.11\n.40\n1.30\n.48\n2.56\n.75\n11.75\nCons Golden Arrow        \u202223V<\nCons Mattar\nCons Mining St Smelting\nConwest      \u25a0       \t\nCons Discovery \t\nCroinor\t\nDelnite \t\nDetta R L \t\nDome        \t\nDonalda  \u2014-\t\nDuvex \t\nDyno ...\nEast Malartic       JM\nEast Sullivan        135\nEastern Metals g3^\nElder Gold      j'05\nEureka     ,,'qq\nFalconbridge          \u25a0,\u201e,,\nFed Kirk \t\nFrobisher   \t\nGeco\nGiant Yel    \t\nGod's Lake \t\nGoldcrest\nGold Eagle\nGolden Manitou\nGunnar Gold       ,'\u201e\nHallnor\nHardrock\nHasaga   \t\nHeadway\nHeath   ........\nHollinger\nHomer Y K\nHudson .'Bay\n.15%\n38.50\n3.80\n3.85\n.20\n.81\n.16'A\n16.00\n.36\n.20\n1.49\n4.40\n15.85\n6.15\n.63\n.13\n.11\n1.80\nNow Mylamaque    27\nNew Thurbois ..I..:..! 40\nNipissing      2.73\nNormetals      4.16 \u2022\nNorth Can 13\nO'Brien    I.... 65\nO'Leary   ;...; 30\nOslsko 41  '\nPaymaster    36\nPickle Corp       1.36\nPioneer       1.95\nPlacer Deve!       35.00\nPowell Rouyn  59 \u2022\nPreston E D        8.75\nQuebec Lab  11V\u00ab\nQuebec Man      73\nQuebec Nickel       2.55\nQueenston 19\nQuemont       22.50\nRadiore       2.90.\nRayrock     4.50\nRegcourt   26\nRoche L L  31\nSan Antonio       1.75\nShawkey      10\nSherritt Gordon     7.15\nSilvermiller    96\nSilanco  22\nSiscoe 46\nStadacona   28\nSteeloy       15V4\nSteep Rock       11.85\nSudbury Cont       7.25\nSylvanite         1.50\nTeck Hughes      -     2.65\nThompson-Lund  68\nTombill 35\nTorbrit :.      1.25\nTrans Cont Res 36\nUnion Mining    25\nUnited Keno          7.70\nUpper Canada       1.03\nValor  80\nVentures      33.75\nVicour     56\nViolamac      3.40\nWaite Amulet     14.00\nWright Hargreaves       2.04\nOILS\nAnglo Can      6.00\nA P Consolidated  37\nB A Oil       28.75\nCalgary and Edmonton     15.25\n2.47\nImp Tobacco   11\nInt Metals  35%\nInt Nickel  68\nInt Pete      2*f\nInt Utilities     41-\nLaura Secord 19%\nLoblaw A  -  44%\nLoblaw B        80\nMaple Leaf Milling  10%\nMassey Harris          10%\nMcColl Frontenac   40V,\nMont Loco    16%\nMoore Corp   iuVt\nNat Steel Car   29%\nPage Hershey   72\nPowell River   52%\nPower Corp  6OV4\nRuss- Industries  :  18%\nShawinlvan     64*6\nSicks Brew   28%\nSimpsons A     19\nSteel ot Canada  53\nStandard Paving   33%\nTaylor Pearson        9%\nUnion Gas of Can  49%\nWestern Grocers A  4014\nWeston George      83%\nWinnipeg Gas    13\nMetals Prices\nCentral Leduc\nCentral Explorers       5.uu\n3.25\n.11%\n.20\n1.29\n.11\n24.50\n.14%\n61.25\n.    .\u25a0 1.80\nInspiration     ..,,\nInt Nickel       m\\\\\nJack Waite    J..,\n.Toilet Quebec       \u2122\"\nJonsmiln            ,'.\nKerr Addison     1B\u2122\nKeybnycon       ;-      \u2022\"\nKirkland Lake            \u2022\u00ab\nKirk-Hudson Bay Ja\u2122\nLake Dufault         J-M\nLakeshore        \u00bb\u2022\u00a3>\nLakeshore  \\L\nLeitch        f\nLexindin  '^\nLingman  (new)    16\nLittle Long Lac       1-34\nMacassa      11\"\nMacDonald       1-64\nMacfie Exnloration        .14%\nMacLeod Cock       1-63\nMadsen R L      1-92\nMagnet  15\nMalartic G F      1.85\nMcMarmac 47\nMoneta  55\nNational Exploration       2.18\nNew Alger 65\nNew Bidlamaque  30\nNew Goldvue  - 13\nNew Kelore     45\nDalhousie\nDel Rio\t\nFederated Pete\nHome\n16%\n1.71\n4.85\n10.00\nImperial Oil   39.00\nInter Pete  -  26.50\nKroy      1.32\nOkalta       1.37\nPacific Pete   12.50\nRoyalite   12.12%\nUnited Oils         1.50\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi               34%\nAigoma Steel   69\nAluminum        101%\nAmer Tel & Tel  184\nArgus         23%\nAtlas St      .'  18%\nBathurst Power   63\nBeattie Bros       7%\nBell Telephone  49%\nBrazilian       '%\nB C Electric 4s  95%\nB C Electric 4%a  105%\nB C Forest      12%\nB C Packers B   14%\nB C Power A          32%\nBuilding Products   45\nBurl Steel   27\nBurrard A   8%\nCan Cement   39\nCanadian Canners .\u2022  37%\nCanadian Car Sz Fdy   28%\nCanadian Car St Fdy A  28%\nCanadian Celanese   22%\nCanadian Dredge   21%\nCan Oil  22\nCanadian Pacific Rly  34%\nCockshutt ..                 7%\nCons Mining St Smelt   38%\nCons Papers  40\nDist Seagram       38%\nDom Foundries         23%\nDom Steel & Coal B   17%\nDom Stores         38\nDom Tar St Chemical   13%\nDom Textiles     7%\nDom Magnesium   18%\nFamous Players   26\nFanny Farmer  27\nFord A  125\nGatineau       32\nGatineau 5% pfd   113\nGoodyear    155\nGreat Lakes    , 4514\nGypsum Lime   61 V>\nHiram Walker  71\nImperial Oil     39\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\n*   KXLYTV  - Channel 4\nll:00r-Slgn On\n11:15\u2014Secret Storm\n11:30\u2014House Party\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff\n12:30\u2014Bob Crosby\n1:00\u2014Welcome Traveler\n1:30\u2014Road of Life\n1:45\u2014Musical Interlude\n2:00\u2014On Your Account\n2:30\u2014Valiant Lady\n2:45\u2014Brighter Day\n3:00\u2014Old World Flavor\n3:30\u2014Search (or Tomorrow\n3:45\u2014Guiding. Light\n4:00\u2014Love of Life\n4:15\u2014Woman's World\n4:30\u2014Garry Moore\n5:00\u2014What's Cookin\"\n5:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n6:00\u2014The Party Line\n6:30\u2014Doug Edwards\n6:45\u2014Perry Como\n7:00\u2014Front Row Centre\n8:00\u2014Jungle Town\n8:15\u2014News\n8:25\u2014Weather Vane\n8:30\u2014Cowboy G-Men\n9:00\u2014The Millionaire\n9:30\u2014I've Got a Secret\n10:00\u2014Godfrey and His Friends\n11:00\u2014Girl Wrestling\n11:30\u2014Colonel March of Scotland\nYard\n12:00\u2014 Heart of the City\nKHQ-TV - Channel 8\n10:10\u2014Test Pattern\n10:25\u2014Color Test Program\n10:40\u2014Bible Reading\n10:45\u2014Sheilah Graham\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:00\u2014Tennessee Ernie Ford\n12:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n1:00\u2014Rescue Squad\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n3:00\u2014Ted Mack's Matinee\n3:30\u2014The Greatest Gift\n3:45\u2014Concerning Miss Marlowe\n4:00\u2014Hawkins Falls\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n4:45\u2014Modern Romance\n5:00\u2014Pinky Lee\n5:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n6:00\u2014Howdy Doody\n6:30\u2014Mr. Engineer\n7:00\u2014Fighting Devildogs\n7:30\u2014The Front Page\n7:40\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014Request Performance\n8:30\u2014 My Little Margie\n9:00\u20141 Led Three Lives\n9:30\u2014Amos 'N' Andy\n10:00-This Is Your Life\n10:30\u2014Curtain Time\n11:00\u2014People Are Funny\n11:30\u2014The Whistler\n12:00\u2014Secret File. U.S.A.\n12:40\u2014News Headlines\nKREMTV - Channel 2\n3:45\u2014Test Pattern\n4:00\u2014Trouble Preferred\n5:10\u2014Health and Happiness Club\n5:15\u2014She's In the Army\n8:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n6:55\u2014Newsbeat Spokane\n7:00\u2014Wed. Night Fights\n7:45\u2014Henny & Rocky\n8:00\u2014The Lone Ranger\n8:30\u2014Disneyland\n9:30\u2014Clary Wright Show\n10:00\u2014Masquerade Party\n10:30\u2014Let's Go Collegiate\n11:30\u2014Criminal Investigations\n12:45\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.\u2014Phone  1300\nEvenings \u2014 Phone 1033- R\nDally Except Sundays ,\nand  Holidays\nMe & Me\nIN   CRE8TON   IT'S\nCreston Electric\nFOR   R.CA.   VICTOR   TV\n8ALES  ANO   SERVICE\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014Spot prices:\nLead, N.Y.. 15.\nZinc, East St. Louis, 12.\nTin, N.Y., 93%.\nSilver, N.Y., 89%.\nVancouver Stocks\nmines\nBeaver Lodge 71\npralorne     2.60\nGiant Mascot        80\nGrandvlew       -      .35\nHighland Bell    .  50\nPac Eastern Gold  13\nPend Oreille       5.00\nPioneer Gold       1.90\nQuatsino 17\nSheep Creek  .,      1.07\nSilver Ridge  : 26\nSilver Standard         52\nWestern Exploration 55\nWestern Tungsten  13\nYale      51\nOILS\nAnglo Canadian         6.00\nA P Consolidated      37\nCalgary & Edmonton     15.00\nCanadian Anaconda   17\nCommonwealth   .           3.40\nHome          10.33%\nMercury         .06%\nMid West Gas      3.50\nOkalta Com          1.38\nPacific Pete         12.25\nPeace River Gas       8.55\nRoyalite      11.50\nVanalta  22\nVulcan    -      .37\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates  _      5.05\nInt Brew B              5.25\nWestern Plywood    17.50\nJackson Basin Mines  39\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ...   1240 on i-he dial\nat (Pacific Daylight Time)\nWEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1955\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up  Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Rise 'N' Shine\n7:50\u2014March of Truth\n7:55\u2014Wake-Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Women Today\n9 **0\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n10.00\u2014CKLN Entertains\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Musicale\n10:30\u2014Story  Parade\n10:45\u2014Musical Fill\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Call One-Nine\n12:00\u20145 Minutes .'or Freedom\n12:05\u2014Notice Board\n12:10\u2014Shopper's Guide\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm   Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Here's Our Story\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Hollywood   Calling\n1:30\u2014Radio Feature\n1:45\u2014Matinee\n2:00\u2014Pacific News\n2:15\u2014Classic Corner\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Miscellaney\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Music   tor  Young Fianlstf\n4:45\u2014Legends\n5:00\u2014Sacred  Heart\n5:15\u2014Tops and Pops\n5:30\u2014Sports News\n5:35\u2014Spotlight on\n5:45\u2014Bowling News\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014CBC Retorts\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014The Wed. Nite Program\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Supplement\n10:30\u2014Starlight  Ballroom\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nStar\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTHURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1955\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7-15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical   Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning  Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8 15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014 BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Composer's Corner\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n1015\u2014Happy  Gang\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\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five To One\n1:00\u2014The Concert Hour\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada  Matins*\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014The Last of the Mohicam\n5:00\u2014At Home Wi*th the Lennicki\n5:25\u2014Traffic Jamboree\n5:45\u2014News\n5:55\u2014International Commentary\n6:00^Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Roving  Reporter\n6:30\u2014Footloose\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Toronto Promenade Concert*\n8:30\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n9:00\u2014Vancouver Concert Orchestra\n9:30\u2014Eventide\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Peter  Lowe's Talk\n10:30\u2014Parade of Choirs\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n44. Game fish\nDOWN\n1. Spade-like\nImplement\n2. Excellent\n3. Birds as a\nclass\n4. Spread\n13.A spree\n.(slang)\n15. Con-\nStella-\nHon\n17, Boiling\nup\n20. Crowd\nUKH(=iM   I--IOMISIJ.\n\u25a0uiatdHH  HtauiiH\nHHHH   13*31*!]   Hii\naia aaaci hub\naa Han t-mm\nuna maa\nHCilia   KIHCl   HE\niaS@   aMMMJ   HII\ngrass to dry 21. A\n'5. Chinese city      remnant\n6. Jumps\n7. Literary\ncompost-\n\"*  tion\n8. Seesaw\n11. French\n.     chalk\n25. Hunters\n26. A\nwork\n27. A tenant\n29. Audience\n30. Sounds\n31. Deities\nYesterday's Answer\n33. Before\n(naut.)\n37. Cuckooa\n38. Operatic\nmelody\n40. Talk\nACROSS\n1. Begone!\n6. Nickname\nfor\n\"Cheater\"\n0. Possess\n10. A garden\nwater,\nconveyor\n11. Drank hard\nand often\n12. Owrturn\n14. Girl's  name\n15. Having  a\nhandle\n16. Permit\n17. Unit of\nwork\n18. Vote of assent\n19. A gathering\nfor baking\nclams\n22. This abbreviation  is  a\nwarning for\nmotorists\n23. Boy's nickname\n24. Tavern\n86. Correlative\nof either\n28. Mingling\n32. A size of\ncoal\n34. Loiter\n35. Cry of t\ncow t\n36. Unjust\n38. Hot\nand dry\n39. Piece of\nrock\n{0. Coarse\nll. Ireland\n42. Assistant ^\n13. Remainder\nDAILY CRYMOQUOTE-Here's how to work itt\nAXYDLBAAXR\nU   LONGFELLOW\nOne Utter simply stands for another. In thlB example A ls 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 hint*.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nHDHCB      JWM      XPQMZG      JHWMKB\nLl      PQJOHKI      ILC      MLX      PWDQMV\nYHHM      W      GLKTQHC\u2014SLPMGLM.\nYesterday's Cryptoquotc: UNTWISTING ALL THE CHAINS\nTHAT TIE THE HIDDEN SOUL OF HARMONY\u2014MILTON.,\nSlslribuud hi Ulna Features Syndicate\n1\n1\n2\n3\n4\nft\n5\n6\n1\nV\nVi\n%\n9\nV4\nIO\nti\nII\n^r\n11\nli\n14\nV4\n15\n16\nVA\n17\n^\nIS\n19\n70\n21\n^A\n21\n%\n^\n25\nVA\n54*\n25\nf\/A\n^t\nIto\n27\n^\n28\n\u25a0!\u25a0\u2022)\n30\n31\n32\n33\nVa\nH\n%\n-55\n3fc\nn\nn\n38\n39\nV\/l\n40\n1\n41\nY\/}\nto.\n^\n%\n45\nV\/A\n44\nVA\n \u2014\u2014\u2014_-\nr    ..... r        f,\n 1 \u25a0 . \"*^- \u2014t\n\u25a0   *\u25a0   \u25a0. \u25a0*\u25a0  * T~~ \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0* -;*'   \u25a0*   '-  \u25a0** -. \"\"\" -,-,\",,< .\"\u25a0 !.-\u00ab\u25a0-\u25a0:\"'\n\"\"--'\"\u25a0\n'5^  I\nMORE FUNDS for VACATION FUN\nUSE WANT ADS\nBIRTHS\nTAYLOR \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nKenneth Taylor, General Delivery,\nNelson, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, June 12, twin boys.\nBOETTGEE - To Mr. and Mrs..\nClarence Boettger, 519 Latimer\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, June 13, a daughter.\nCHOQUETTE \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nArthur Choquette, 702 Houston\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, June 13, a daughter.\nMCDONALD \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs\nJames McDonald, Ymir, at Kootenay Lake General Hospltal, June 13.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED\nTwo edgermen for night shift,\ndouble edger, must know grades,\nrate $2.13. 1 rough grader, night\nshift, to grade behind resaw in\nsawmill, rate $2.03V4. Contact\nDiamond Match Co., Superior,\nMontana. U.S.A.\nWANTED IMMEDIA'WLY-MILL\nsawyer for 15 M capacity mill\nMust be acquainted with grading\nrules and be able to saw according to grade. Good wages and\nsteady Job for right man. Box 179\nWvnndel. B.C.\nXCTUAL JOBS IN CANADA, U &.,\nSo Am., Europe. To $19,000. Travel paid. Write Employment-Info.\nCenter. Room C-48. 4 Green S\u00bbt.\nBoston. 14.\t\n\u25a0XPPLICATIONS WILL BE RE-\ncelved for permanent or relief\nNelson' Dally News paper route\ncarriers. Apply Circulation De-\nnartment,\nDOTATION OPERATORS: EX-\nperienced flotation operators required. Apply Box No. 9920 Dally\nNews. ^ ______\n\u25a0QUALIFIED MECHANIC-APPLY\nCentral Truck and Equipment Co.,\nNelson, B.C., Phone 1810.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nFEMALE HELP WANTED\nNelBon Auto Court Operator requires manageress to take full responsibility of operation including housekeeping, laundry, reser-\n' vatlons and meeting public. Living quarters supplied but no one\nwith children under 15 will be\nconsidered. Apply in own handwriting giving age and experience.\nWRITE BOX 5169, DAILY NEWS\nPART \"TIME STENOGRAPHER-\nLegal experience preferred, starting June 27. Good wages. Box\n5168. Daily .News. Nelson. B. C\n\"WOMAN TO DO HOUSE WORK\nand help care for children. North\nShore home, close to Drive-In\nTheatre. Phone 442-R.\t\nSITUATIONSWANTED _\nNOTICE^CESSPOOLS AND SEP-\ntic tanks cleaned, reasonable\nrates. Free inspection. Out of\ntown calls. Write Fred Wiyrick.\nBox 78. Trail.\nHANDY MAN WANTS CARPEN\"\nter work or kalsomlning. Phone\n258-R.\nIF BUILDING A HOME-OR RE-\nmodelllng, for reasonable estimates, phone 1883-L.\nUNLIABLE PAINTERST SPRAY,\nbrush or roll. Phone 1623-R-3.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nSHERIFF'S SALE\nUnder and by virtue of a Warrant\nof Execution issued out of the Vancouver Registry of the County\nCourt of Vancouver wherein Norman Wholesale It MfJ. Co. Limited\nls Plaintiff and Nelson Sales St Service Limited is Defendant, and other Writs, to me directed, I have\nseized and offer for sale by tender\nall the right, title and interest of\nNelson Sales St Service Limited of\nthe City of Nelson In the following\ndescribed chattels:\nStock' in  trade located  at 748\nBaker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nEquipment and fixtures.\nWritten  offers  will  be received\nby the undersigned up to 4:00 p.m.,\nWednesday, the 22nd day of June.\n1055.\nTerms of Sale \u2014 Cash.\nThe highest or any offer not necessarily accepted.\nFurther information may be obtained from the undersigned.\nTHOMAS G. C. FOX,\nSheriff for South Kootenay,\nCourthouse, Nelson. B. C.\nLAND  REGISTRY  ACT\n(Section 161)\nIN THE MATTER of The South\nHalf of Lot 7 Block \"B\" of Lot 8022,\nKootenay District, Plan 804:\nProof having been filed at my office of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 18456-A to the above mentioned lands tn the name of E\nLeonard Bourne and beaming date\nthe 18th November 1818 I HEREBY\nGIVE NOTICE of my Intention at\nthe, expiration of one calendar\nmonth from the first publication\nhereof to Issue Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu of such lost\nCertificate. Any person having any\ninformation with reference to such\nlost Certificate of Title is requested\nto communicate with the undersigned.\nDated at Nelson, B. C.\nthis 28th day of May, 1955.\nL.  A.   McPHAIL.\nDenuty Registrar.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES. FARMS\nETC.. FOR SALE\n.      RENTALS\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING*\nrooms. dishes, lineni and maid\nservice. Day. week, or monthly\nAllen Hotel, 171 Baker St.\nf-ROQM SUITE. LOVELY LOCA-\ntion, close to Civic Centre. .Very\nnice rooms, semi-furnished 912\nVernon   Phone 757-X\n\u25a0DESIRABLE WELL-FINISHED\nSuite available, automatic laundry. Apply 224 Behnsen St. or\nPhone  130.  Fleming Apartments.\nFairview,\n\"SELF CONTAINED 3 ROOMED\nmodern apt., frig, and electric\nstove included, steam heat, 300\nblock Baker. Phone 841-L after\n5:30 p.m.        \t\n\"4-ROOM HOUSE FOR~RENT. AP-\nply 612 Innis St. or phone 1263-Y\nfrom  5:30-6:30\ntlVIL SERVANT WITH SMALL\nfamily desires house rental in\nNelson. Reply Box 190. Creston\nFOR RENT: DESIRABLE 3-ROOM\napartment, private entrance. 517\nCarbonate St   Ph.  1097-X.\nFOR RENT OR SALE-3-ROOM\nhouse and two lots in Salmo. Apply Box 8908. Nelson Dally News.\n\"ATTRACTIVE 3-ROOMED SUITE.\nPhone 697-X. Private entrance.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   CLOSE\nin, private entrance. Ph. 1077-X.\nFOR   RENT   -   SMALL  2-ROOM\nfurnished apartment. Phone 337-Y.\nWANTED    MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking. Buyers of\nscrap iron, batteries, brass, aluminum, copper. Used pRrts for cars\nand trucks for sale Western\nAuto Wrecking. Box 132 Granite\nRd..  Nelson,  B. C.\nWANTED TO BUY - SAW LOGS\nand cedar poles on Kootenay Lake\nor Tail. Kootenay Forest Products\nBox 450, Nelson.\nWANTED-TIMBER. LARGE OR\nsmall tracts. Paul Johnson, 12A.\n'K.W.C. Block, Nelson. Phone 151\nWANTED\u2014TIMBER, LARGE OR\nsmall tracts. Paul Johnson, 12A\nK.W.C. Block, Nelson. Phone 1568\nWANTED-POSTS   AND   POLES\nBox 9767. Nelson Daily News.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES. ETC.\nWANTED   -  SMALL MALE*\" PUP\nfor little boy. Phone 520-L.\nHOUSING\nPROBLEM?\nMay We Help You Locate\nIn the Right District\nAt the Right Price?\nUNEQUALLED VALUE\nSkilled renovation and workmanship of 2 B. Room Home on 3\nlevel lots, centrally located. Featuring Planter-divide of L.R. and\nD.R. Convenient built in kitchen\nand new bath room $7500\nfixtures.  Only . **\nSOLD NORTH SHORE LOT\nExcept Triangle Lot 74'x65' near\nbridge site. $770\nPrice     *\nFAIRVIEW LOCATION\nNew 2 B. Room Home built by\nowner. Smart new features of\nPhillipine Mahogany finish. Pad-\nio Terrace garden. Call 99 for\ninformation on N.H.A. Purchase\nPlan.\nPROFITABLE\nBUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES\n__,\u201e, $4500 $30,000\nCafe. Duplex Apt. House. Grocery and Coffee Shop. Also Resort Cabins on scenic Kootenav\nLake with rentals of boats and\nmotors.\nBLACKWOOD\nAGENCY\nReal Estate St Insurance\n536 Ward St. Phone 99\nOpen Every Wednesday\nAttractive 3 Bedroom\nHome\nWith living, dining, den with\nfireplace, kitchon. Oak floors\nthroughout. Full cement basement wilh \"Combustioneer\" hot\nair heating to each room. 3 lots\nin lawn. Garage, til 'Sflfl\n$4000- down. VU.OVV\nApply Suite 1 \u2014 373 Bake'r St\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nFOR SALE - 50 ACRES, 6 ROOM-\ned log house with water piped ln,\n2 In. pipe, lots of good timber and\nwood. 2 miles south of Slocan\nCity, B.C. Apply to Mrs. T. Boudier, Slocan City, B.C.\nFOR SALE-12 OF THE flNtST\nbuilding sites in Nelson, also\nsmall house ln Salmo, house must\nbe moved to new location. Apply\nBox 9907, Nelson Daily News.\nWILL PAY CASH FOR SUITABLE\nsecond mortgages or agreements\non Nelson properties. Give details\nand discount you will allow\nReply Box 4024 Dally News.\nKW 2-BEDROOM HOME, FULL\nbasement, automatic oil furnace\nheating each room, wired for\nrange, Fairview. $8500. Terms:\n$3800 down. Phone 1272-R,\n\"FOR SALE-LOTS 33x20, 80x106,\n65x100, 65x120. All level cultivated land, some fruit trees. Also\nchicken coop, barn and garage.\nApply 2115 Falls or Phone 1773-R.\nSmgll House, Fairview\nCentrally   located,   almost   new,\n$5200, terms. Write Box 3394, Nelson Daily News.\nROOMlB HOUSE ANTJ BATH1.\n6 lots in Fairview. Close to school\nand bus, splendid view, $4500,\n$2000 down   Phone 792-X.\nFOR SALE-5-ROOM HOUSE, 6\nacres of land, all under cultivation. For particulars Phone 37-Y\nor write P. Larsen, Salmo.\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR SALE-\n311 Observatory St. Phone 516-R\nSee Mr. Vingo, 316 Hoover St.\nRANCH F6R SALE-47 ACRES, 4-\nroom house, running water. Apply\n\u2022 L. Masura, Ymir. '\nS R**OOM HOUSE FOR SALE.\nRosemont, close to C.P.R. Phone\n185-L-3 after 5.\nTJUN\"vVOOt)V CASi-NS AT LAKfi-\nslde Park. 806 Second, Nelson.\nrttOOM BUNGALOW. APPLY 318\nObservatory evenings\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nFOR SALE IN SLOCAN CITY-\n7 rooms, large pantry and bathroom, new Beach range with\nwater front, wood heater, quantity Of shingles, 3% lots, 12 fruit\ntrees and garden, new chain link\nfence. House needs some repair.\nPrice $2500 or $2000 cash. Apply\nD. and A. Boyd, Riondel, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 14-ACRE FARM,\nwater, electricity, garden, strawberries in, 1 cow, 1 heifer. 300 6-\nweek-old pullets, 300 cockerels, 50\nlaying hens. Mnssey Harris Poney\nTractor with all equipment. 2 garden tractors, small Sawmill and\nall farm tools. Apply A. Chernoff,\nThrums.\nNORTH SHORE MODEL HOME\n2 B.R., spacious L.R., with fitted\ncarpet, open fire place, and large\npicture windows. K. with nook\nOil heat and garage attached.\nBuilt 1949 on choice view lot opp.\nferry Owners leaving district.\n$4000 will handle. Phone 1709.\nFOR QUICK SALE OWING TO\nIllness, 8 acres, two cleared, large\nchicken house, garage, modern 5-\nroomed bungalow $4000 or $1000\ncash and terms. Phone 606-R-l\nmornings.\nOWNER TRANSFERRED. SPLEN-\ndid buy, 3-bedroom bungalow.\n520 Gordon Road. Phone 1315-X.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nSEE\nREUBEN BUERGE\nMOTORS LTD.\nTODAY\nAND\nDEAL WITH CONFIDENCE\nWITH THE LARGEST\nAUTOMOTIVE DEALER\nIN THE INTERIOR OF\n.    BRITISH COLUMBIA\nNew\n1954 Austin Convertible\nNew\n1954 Austin Sedans\n1954 Austin Sedan.\nLow mileage.\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1952 Morris Sedan \u25a0\n1952 Morris Sedan\n1950. Austin Sedan\n\u2022 \u2022    *\n1955 Chevrolet Sedan\n1955 Pontiac Sedan\n1955 Dodge Hardtop\n1955 Zephyr Sedan\n1954 Plymouth Sedan\n1954 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Ford Sedan\n1953 Pontiac Tudor\n1953 Chevrolet Hardtop\n1953 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Ford Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951  Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Ford Tudor\n' 1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1949 Chevrolet Tudor\n1948 Chevrolet Sedan\n1947 Plymouth Coupe\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1955 Chevrolet Pickup\n195.1   Meteor Ranch Wagon\n1950 Plymouth Suburban\n1950 Studebaker Pickup\n1949 Ford Pickup\nAUSTIN\nSERVICE and SALES\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\nPhone\n1844\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n(Continued)\n'41 PLYMOUTH SEDAN IN GOOD\ncondition for salt or will trade\nfor late model trig or oloctrlc\nrungs. Phone 17S9-L.\nFdR\"sAL_-n 'ton' COLUMBIA\nTandem axle logging trailer. Air\nor vacuum brakes, George Christian, Creston, B.C\n1949'FORD ifOUR DOOlfl SfibAN\ngood condition. Prloo $780.00\nPhone Ull-L-2,\nfor SAleYibbo FlwroSETC\nso 2 dump boxei. 1 IVi-ton endless\nchain block. Phone 1312-R.\nF<SR H.R_--^*WHEfiL 'flRiVfi i-\nton dump truck \u00abt Shorty's Repair Shop, 714 Biker. <\n19S.\"fiO*DGE JOTTTi TM\n$450.00. Reg Bales, Savoy Hotel.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDRY KINDLING WOOD. 1 CORD\n$12, 2 cords $23. Slabwood, 1 cord\n$12, 3 corda $30, Also cull lumber, good for fences, barns, sheds,\nrepairs, wood, etc. 2 carrier loads,\napprox. 4000 b.m. material, special\n$22.50. Ph. Markoff Store, Pass-\nmore 2-X.\nLUMBER LIQUIDATION SALE\n2x4, 2x8, 2x8, 1x6, 1x8\n$30 per Thousand B.M.\nDelivery Anywhere\n-   Across Markoff Store\nS. KUDRA, SLOCAN PARK, B.C.\nPhone Passmore 2-X\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and.\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings, chain\nsteel plate and shapes. Atlas Iron\nSt Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St:, Vancouver, B. C. Phone PAcific 6357.\n8N FORD TRACTOR, POWER\nPulley and 14-ln. 2-furrow stubble plow, $900; 1 quiet milk cow,\n$150. M. Hampton, Arrow Park\nB.C.\nSHIP US YO-ft SdRAP *MEtALS\ncopper, brass, lead, aluminum\nHighest prices, prompt payment\nActive Trading. 935 E. Cordova\nVancouver\nCUTLER'S NEW AND US|D\nfurniture, basement, 301 Baker St.\nPhone 47. \"We buy used furniture.\"\nTHOR IRONER, HIGH CHAIR,\nCrib, two Raleigh Bikes, racer\nand men's, excellent condition.\nPhone 60.\nFOR SALE - 15.J CU. FT. DEEP\nfreeze Frigidaire, new condition.\nWood turning lathe with motor.\nPhone 1237-Y.\nFOR SALE-ELECTRIC IRONER,\nSinger sewing machine, console\nmodel, perfect condition. Ph. 1027.\nBOMBER HOISTS, 1500 LBS. CA-\npacity, $45, while they last. Active\nTrading Co.. 935 E. Cordova, Van\nSMALL UPRIGHT PIANO, OAK\ncase, recently remodeled. $375.\nPhone 881-Y.\n1 NEW TYPEWRITER WITH\nRussian keyboard for' sale. Apply\nGeorge Kemoff, Perry Siding.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nFebruary & March hatched- pullets\n\u2014 Hampahirtu, Leghorn-Hampshire Cross, White Leghorn,! and\nother breeds. Get theie fpr early\nlayers. Write for Price Lilt,\nRUMP St SENDALL LIMITED\nLangley, B.C.\nFOR _A1*-66'od, HtSAVY tOd*:\nging horse, Weight 1800 lb;. Rea-\n\u25a0onably priced. R. J. Dauphlnals,\nSalmo, B.C\nfor sale - ii*_AW \u25a0 mm\nhorses and pack horse; also fresh\nmilk cow, heavy milker. Abey'i\nRanch, Lardeau.\nWANtEft - STJtcTOT cawee;\ncowt, bulls and calves. Eales, Savoy Hotel\nPORK FOR SALE - HAL!1 OR\nwhole, reasonable. Phone 171.\nMILCH GOATS FO*R SALE-MSB*.\nH. C. Brown, Kaslo, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 1 AYEftSHIRE COW,\nfreshened June 18. Ph, 165B-Y-2.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nWHITE SPOT CAFE FOR SALE\nor lease, seating capacity 120 persons. Twilight Room downstairs,\nseating capacity 60\u2014beer and\nwine , licence. Three suites upstairs. Approximate v o lu m e\n$140,000. Apply White Spot, Fernie, B.C.\nSERVICE1 STAtlMt AnB FTvT.\nroomed house and cabin on one\nacre of land, garage and office.\nApply Box 183, Salmo.\nYOUR INVESTMENT GUARAN\nteed to-party Interested in profitable housing project, view property. Box 9736, Dally News\nATTRACTIVE CpFFEE SHOP;\nall new equipment. Good location\nopposite post office. Write Box\n649, Phone 125, Grand Forks, B. C.\nGROCERY STORE AND COFFEE\nbar, 4-roomed house, close to\nnew high school, 402 Fifth St.\nPHone 180-R.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST AT LAKESIDE PARK SAT-\nurday afternoon, child's dress,\nsize 6, plain blue cotton bodice,\ncheck skirt. This was new and a\nbirthday present. Please return to\n920 Nelson Ave., or phone 485,\nAlso found \u2014 child's navy blue\nblazer. About same size. Apply\nsame address.\nWOULD PERSON WHO PICKED\nup boy's navy red lined jacket by\nmistake in dugout at Civic\ngrounds Saturday please phone\n753-R.\n1237-L evenings.\nFOUND  -  BOY'S\nCivic Theatre.\nBIKE.  APPLY\n_JOATS AND ENGINES _\nOUR COMPLETE STOCK OF OUT-\n' board Motors to be sold at cos).\n. Evinrude IV, HP; Scott Atweter\n9 HP; -Law-ion 8 HP. Hurry, they\nwon't last it this price. Armstrong\nHardware, Kaslo, B.C. -\nWANTKD-ONE WHP M\u00bbrh}e\"or\nalt cooled Inboard. Could be usfld\none, providing in A-l shape.\nPlease write to Goe, Yeiovlch,\nBox 719 Fernie, B.C.\nTOb\"\nSOT! TOT RUNABOUT.\ntv,\" beam for outboard motor. 1\nAllan, ph  98-W. Nakuip. B C\nFOR SALE; 16 FOOT UVNCH\nand boat house, Phone 128, Kas-\nlo, BC.\nNrltum lathi T&tma\nClassified Advertising Rates\nPer line, 1 time .... JO\n2 oonaooutlvo time* \u2014- ~5\n> eonseottive timea ....- ,49\n4, 9 and 9 consecutivo\nUmei      ... . ._      *>\n29 consecutive times $1.82\nNon-oonsooutivo insertions    JO\na line per time,\nBox numbera ,11 extra.\nPUBLIC    (LEGAL)   NOTICUB\nTENDERS, etc, - We par line\nfirst insertion Ito per Use each\nsubsequent insertion..    .\nALL ABOVE* RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not More Than Lilted Hare)\nBy carrier per week\nIn advance  M\nBy carrier per year   . .    $11.90\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month    __    $ La\nThree monthi _______   $ $.78\nSix monthi     $ 7.90\nOne year    $18.00\nMall in Canada outddo Nelson\nOne month , $ 1.00\nThree months 8 179\nSix months    $ 9.90\nOne year    ..  _.,.    $10.00\nWhere extra pontage- Is required\nabove   rates   plus   postage.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nNelson\nREADY-MIX\nConcrete Ltd.\n$13,50 cu. yd.\nPHONE 871\nDelivered ln Nelson\nSAVE TIME - SAVE MONEY\n\"Do It the Easy Way\"\nPolice On Guard At\nBurnaby Residence\nBURNABY. B. C. (CP) - Mrs. V.\nFielding   told   police   Monday  she\nhad received three telephone calls\nLOST\u2014LADY'S    GOLD    WATCH, threatening her son Len, who cap-\nLakeside Park, gift..Reward. Ph!- Jured Oakalla escapee Oliver Mun\nroe Saturday\nA    police    patrol    guarded    the\nFielding residence during the night.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE IS, 19SS \u2014 !\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nFOR YOUR\nROUGH,\nTOUGH\nI   JOBS\nJOHN DEERE\nH40\" CRAWLER\nTo-ah fob Hat stymie wheel-type\ntreoton are jobs ior this rugged, herd-\npuaohmg \"king of the lightweights.\"\nIt's tho John Dean \"40\" Crawler,\nshown above dealing brush with tha\n6-foot (root-end done ble.de.\nToo'v* been wanttag to get your\nhands on a crawler Uce this. Mow is\nyew chanoe. Phone as ot drop la and\narrange ior your teat drive. Thero'i no\nohUgatton whatsoever to yon.\nSe*\nH. \"Frit.\" Fartnhottz,\nC. Ross or Alox McDonald\nyour john deeri,\nMcculloch dealer\nMAC'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n614 Railway St.      Nelson. B.C\nPHONE 1403\nf_l\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK  (AP> \u2014 The stock\nmarket reversed Itself Tuesday an#:\ndeclined under the weight ol1 mod,,\nerate selling in the final hour.     \u2022*'I\nCanadian   stocks   on  the  NeK*1i;\nYork exchange were lower. HIra\u00bbj>i\nWalker dropped. %, Mclntyre fety   C\nH, Canadian Pacific eased Ml antft.\nDome   Mine!  and   Distiller!* Sea-\ngrams both lost M,.  International\nNickel gained Vt.\nTORONTO (CP)-Prices ended\nslightly higher in all major sections\nafter touching index highs amid\nactive trading at the Toronto stock\nexchange Tuesday.\nIndustrials edged up to an all-\ntime peak and then fell back to,\nend slightly up on the day.\nBase metals moved cautiously to\u00ab\nthe highest index level ln the last-\nthree years and then dropped in\")\nlater trading. Western oils gainqj-\nstrongly In the last half hour to\nend on a 1B54-1M5 peak. The golds'\nwere firm.\nMONTREAL (OP) - Bttoymt\npaper, utility and bate metal sec- '\ntlons spearheaded an industrial\nclimb to higher ground at the dose\nof aetive trading on the stock market Tuesday.\nInternational Power advanced l'\npoints, Quebec Power ftt, Morgan*.\n2H, Bathurst B, Us and MoOoll'\ni%. Southern Canada Power','\nAluminum and Canadian Oil were)\neach a point improved.\nLONDON (ReutereJ \u2014 Rising\nhopes concerning the labor attaga\ntion end some good eornpeny.steto-\nments Imparted a generally Brnt\ntone to the markets. \u00a3\u2022\nIn rails Canadian Pacific moved\nup with other transatlantic Issue*\nin reflection of Wall Street strength1\novernight.\nSec Us For JOHN DEERE\nQuality Farm Equipment\nRoominghouse Death\nFrom Natural Cause\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Death of\na 58-year-old woman ln a slum-area\nroominghouse Sunday was due to\nnatural causes, police said Tuesday.\nThe woman was Identified as\nFlorence Molloy.\n- An unidentified 50-year-old man\nheld In connection with the death\nwas released following the official\nreport on the woman's death.\nLanza Pays Heavily\nFor House Damage\nSANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) *.\nMario Lanza, by court order, win\nhave to pay $40,361.66 for damages\nto a '1200,000 Beverley Hills home\nwhich he leased for 28 months.\nA court awarded that amount to\nMr. and Mrs. Norman Kaiser Mon?\nday. They own the mansion which\nthe singer and his family rented\nprior to last January. The judg?\nment was entered by default when\nLanza failed to appear in court\nMrs. Kaiser said that at the end\nof the $l,250-a-month lease she\nfound her home and grounds a\nshambles of \"debris, dirt, filth and\ndesecration.\"\nHOUSEHOLD FURNITURE. LEA-\nving city. 817A Victoria. Phone\n1389-L.\nELECTRIC HAWAIIAN STEEL\nguitar, with amplifier for sale.\nPhone 1288-L after 5:30 p.m.\nHURRY.  HURRY.  LIMITED  SUP\nply nt ton soil.  Phnne 794-R-l.\n2-WHEEL  UTILITY   TRAILER\n350-L-l or 607 Second St.\nWHITE BABY BUGGY AND CRIB\nlike new. Phone 61S-Y.\nFLOAT LOGS FOR SALE CHEAP.\nPhone 1190 or 1662-L eve.\nFARM, GARDEN AND\nNURSERY\nlofors I.\nPhone11135    803 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE-EATON'S 4 WHEEL\ned trailer with tires. Phone 447.\nonl\n(Continued in Next Column)\nNETTED GEM SEED POTATOES\nfor sale. Phone 210-Y-l.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS BOX\n388   Phone 161-L-3 or 366-R\nSLENDOR TABLETS ARE EF-\nfective. 3 weeks' supply $2; 9\nweeks $5. At all druggists.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nAS8AYERS AND MINE.\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE.   W    WIDDOWSON   &   CO\nAssayers. 301 Josephine St.. Nelson\nH   S   ELMES    ROSSLAND   B   C\nAssaver Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS  AND   SURVEYORS\nG. W.. BAERG\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St.      Nelson       Ph. 1118\nand -Box 34, Fruitvale, B. C.\nSuccessor to the late A. L. Purdy\nB;C.L.S.\nBOYD  C   AFFLECK.   ME.I.C\nBC  Land Surveyor P  Eng  (Civili\n518 Gore St     Nelson     Phone 1238\nS    V    SHAYLER.   PC    BOX   252\nKimberley,  Phone 54.\nB C Land Surveyor Engineer\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop     Acetylene snd\nelectric welding, motor rewind\nIne   Phnne 593   324  Vernon St\nafR\nTIMBER    CRUISER\nTimber Cruiser   Anywhere In  BC\ng   HIRD   SLOCAN  CITY   BC\nWinnipea Grqin\nWINNIPEG   (CP)\u2014Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed. 83V4.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.047\/s.\nCLIMBING  HEN\nWESTON HILLS, England (CP)-\nA hen laid eggs In a magpie's -nest\n15 feet up an apple tree in this Lin-\ncoln&'ire district.\nBuying\u2014Selling\u2014Rentie;\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\nFIRST LINE,\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\n(Each group ot numbers or letters count os one word.)\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\nPer Line\n1  Insertion\n2 Consecutive  Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions .\n6 Consecutive Insertions .\n26 Consecutive  Insertions\n$ .20\n.35\n.43\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge it two lines\n\u2022 Add lie for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rates It paymen* Is\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage ot the low six time rote\nNon Consecutive Insertions 20< a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo of Days Ad Is To Run      .\n\u25a0Y0UR   SAME   ' ' ^  B.II  Me        .\nADDRESS    , ,  Payment Enclosed  _^\u2014.\u2014\nNelson Daily. News\ndlveirtisirsg Department, Nelson, B.C.;\nClarified .\nmmtmmvammmmnWmmmammMtMum\nMil\n - fl \u25a0 '\u25a0''.'\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY,>JUNE 15, 1955\nWe Are Happy to Co-Operate With\nDR. JAMES E. ROYCE,\nPrincipal of Notre Dame College\nin offering you an opportunity to secure a copy\nof his recently published book. -\n\"PERSONALITY\nAND\nMENTAL HEALTH\"\nThis book gives the reader a broad introductory survey\nof modern dynamic arid clinical psychology, as a\nb'osic text in mental hygiene and the psychology of\nadjustment.\nWe will be pleased to hove Dr. Royce\nautograph your copy.\n'3.85\nNANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nStart Momentous Voyage on a Raft\nAcross Atlantic Ocean lo Europe\nSOREL, Que. (CP) \u2014 The good\nraft Iotiapathonom. Iroquois ior\n\"The Lost One,\" slid gently along\nthe St. Lawrence river Monday,\nheaded for the Atlantic and high\nadventure.\nBound for Europe by the grace\nof .a sail and ocean currents, it left\nMontreal Saturday and stopped\nhere \u201450 miles downstream \u2014late\nSunday. Its four-man, French-\nspeaking crew then arranged to get\na tow to Quebec City.\nConstructed of red cedar logs\nlashed together with hempen ropes,\nthe raft was blessed and christened\nwith the Indian name Iotiapatonom\nand the French name L'Egare\u2014both\nmeaning \"The Lost One\" Saturday.\nCHRISTENING DRY\nThe christening was dry because\nwell-wishers found Quebec Liquor\nCommission stores closed when\nthey went to buy champagne. They\ncompromised by passing the hat\nand collecting $17 for the adventurers, who have made no secret of\nthe fact they needed money.\nAboard the raft are: Henri Beaudout, 28, skipper and originator of\nthe expedition; Bernard Corieul, 25.\ncook and navigator; Gaston Van-\nackere, 28, photographer, all three\nnatives of France; and Paul La-\npointe, 24, radio operator, the only\nCanadian.\nThe raft was piled high with\nwooden crates, tin cans, containers,\nrope, cases of oranges and a supply\nof 4,000 cigarets. A late addition\nwas a case of cognac.\ntilFTS FROM SPECTATORS\nThe crew received gifts of canned\nfood from enthusiastic spectators\ncrowding the Yacht Club de Sorel\nwhere    the    craft   anchored,    sur\nrounded by a swarm of'amall motor\nboats.\nThe raft will remain in Quebec\nCity two days to pick up additional\nsupplies and then continue downstream, it was learned. It is powered by an 18xl0-foot sail and has\n'a small wooden rudder.\nThe men hope to take advantage\nof the Gulf stream, 500 miles off\nNewfoundland, and reach Europe\nin two months.\nThey have no idea yet where\nthey may land in Europe if they\nare successful in their attempt.\nThe trip's purpose is adventure\nand to prove, Beaudout said in an\ninterview, the legend of an Indian\nwho was found stranded on the\ncoast of Portugal before the time of\nColumbus.\n\"It was assumed by later historians that he had somehow crossed\nthe ocean in his wooden tree-hewn\nskiff,\" said Beaudout.\n\"Besides, who knows, we may\nwrite a book and make a million!\"\nOkanagan Hospitals\nOppose Wage Freeze\nSALMON ARM, B.C. (CP) -\nEesolution was passed by delegates\nto the quarterly meeting of Okanagan Regional Hospital association\ncalling on the B. C. government to\nreconsider its recent wage freeze\norder.\ni The resolution will be sent to* the\nB.C. Hospitals association for approval and submission to the cabinet by a delegation from the provincial organization.\n; It urges the government to \"accept the liability for which the\nhospitals are both legally and morally committed, the matter of employees wages.\"\n\"Failure to obtain reconsideration of the wage freeze directive\nwill mean the hospitals will be\ncompelled to repudiate legal and\nmoral obligations, or to reduce\nstaffs and curtail expences in a\nmanner which would be detrimental to services to patients,\" the\nresolution  says,\n\"If this appeal fails there is no\nalternative but to reduce hospital\nstaffs and services,\" Mr. Ward said.\nHe said hospitals acted irr good\nfaith when they made their agreements on wages, and this placed\na moral responsibility on the government.\n\"The hospitals do not have the\nmoney to pay the increased salaries and wages and the government should realize the situation\nand provide the additional money\nrequired.\"\nCanadian Stabbed\nTo Death In N.Z.\nROTOR.UA, N. Z. (Reuters)-\nJames Edward Goodin, 36-year-old\nCanadian marine engineer, was\nfound stabbed to death Tuesday,\ntwo weeks after he had been convicted of assaulting a young Maori\nwoman.\nGoodin's body was. found in a\none-roomed Maori home at nearby\nHinemoa Point, with a sheath knife\nburied in his stomach. Police arrested a middle-aged Maori and\ncharged him with manslaughter.\nGoodin was fined \u00a310 two weeks\nago for assaulting a Maori girl, who\nescaped from him after a chase\nacross farm fields.\nCharge Soldiers\nWith Man's Death\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Two soldiers\nstationed at Currie Barracks h,ere\nwere charged with murder in connection with the death of John\nMcAlpin, 65-year-old retired railroader, who died in hospital Sunday\nfrom a severe beating,\nPoiice charged that Tpr. Donald\nGarrow and Tpr. Ronald Ransom\nbeat McAlpin over the head with a\nfour-foot plank May 30 in an alley.\nThe man never regained consciousness despite two operations.\nRansom was arrested near the\nrear of a light truck where McAlpin lay unconscious. Garrow was\ncaught a block away after a chase.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL   TRAINING   \u2022\nMedical   Arts  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nPhone 327\n676 Baker Street\nCoin Drunkometers\nFor Self Testing\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP) \u2014 Coin-\noperated drunkometers with which\nyou can give yourself an intoxication test are a future possibility, says a Stanford University\nmedical scientist who specializes\non the effect of alcohol on the\nsystem,\nAfter a cocktail party or an eve\nning at the tavern you could deposit a coin in a slot, breathe into\na bag and out would come a little\nslip showing how much alcohol\nthere is in your blood, The reading could be a guide as to whether\nyou should drive home or let somebody else take the wheel,\nPlant Strike Over\nBRANTFORD (CP)\u2014A five-day\nstrike at the Canadian Westing-\nhouse Company's plant ended Tuesday as 80 workers returned to their\njobs, Members of local 555, International Union of Electrical Workers (CIO-CCL), the employees won\nan increase of 12 cents an hour for\nmen, bringing their rate to $1,29,\nand 10 cents ah hour for women,\nbringing their rate to 98 cents an\nhour.\nNEW EXECUTIVE of the Nelion Kinsmen Club is pictured here. Left to right are director G. A. Clark,\nwho served as secretary last year; vice-president R. A, Jack, director L. G. Catley, director J. E. Keegan,\nwho was president in 1954-55; president-elect J. G. Allan, secretary L. M. McBride and treasurer C. J.\nGolllng. The new officers will be Installed later this year.\u2014Vogue photo.\nU.S. Urged lo\nCopy Canada's\nFamily Allowance\nWASHINGTON (CP) - A United\nStates senator proposed Tuesday\nthat the U.S. embark on a study'of\nCanada's family allowance program\nwith a view to setting up a similar\nscheme.\nSenator Richard Neuberger (Dem.\nOre.) told a press conference he\nplans to introduce a Senate resolution calling for the establishment\nof a committee to study the Canadian program and report on the\nfeasibility of such a proposal for\nthe U.S.\nNeuberger expressed high praise\nfor the Canadian system.\nThe committee, if established,\nlikely would travel to Canada to\nobtain information from families\nreceiving the payments, from opponents of the Canadian progsam\nand from federal and provincial\nauthorities who administer it.\nNeuberger estimated the cost of\na similar program in the U.S. at\nbetween $3,500,000,000 and $4,000,-\n000,000 a year, compared with the\nCanadian total of $350,000,000.\nVincent's Last Moments Resigned\nAfter Earlier Kicks and Curses\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Carnival\nroustabout Lawrence (Corky) Vincent died Tuesday, cursing and\nkicking at the hangman he had tried\nto cheat by swallowing poison \\n his\ndeath cell.\nVincent, 29, who three times had\nstood trial for the shoelace-slaying\nSept. 12, 1953, of 12-year-old Donna\nLee Corbett at Quesnel, B. C, fought\nto the end.\n^The trap was sprung at 1:10 a.m.,\nless than 24 hours after he had failed\nin a suicide bid. He was pronounced\ndead seven minutes later.\nPrison officials said he \"had to\nbe persuaded\" to walk to the gallows. They did not amplify the\nstatement except to state he walked\nhimself and was not carried.\nKICKED  HANGMAN\nAt the gallows, he twice kicked\nat the hangman, and cursed and\nspat at him,\nThen, settling down, he said in a\ncalm voice:\n\"Right, whenever you're ready.\"\nVincent was found lying in a\nstupor   in   his   death   cell   Monday\nAdvises Council\nFor Painters\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Alan Jarvis\nof Ottawa, director of the National\nGallery of Canada, says artists\nshould form a Canada Council to\nsend the country's culture abroad.\nHe told the 10th annual convention of the Canadian Arts Council\nCanada's growing cultural- maturity justifies creation of such a body.\nThere would be no problem\nfinding men to run the council.\nwhich had been recommended under the Massey commission. But\nCanadian artists must be clear on\nwhat they want the council to do, I\nMr, Jarvis said. ,\nAGAINST  FOREIGN   FIRMS\nThe council went on record as\nbeing \"against the employment \"of\nforeign firms to design our local\nand national needs before having\npreviously-explored the Canadian]\nfield.\"\nJohn  C, Parkin of Toronto was]\nelected  council president. He sue\nceeds Roland  Charlebois of Montreal.\nHonorary vice - presidents, rep\nresenting ihe provinces,' include:\nWynona Mulcaster, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan; H. G. Glyde, Edmonton\nAlberta; Lawren Harris, Victoria\nBritish Columbia. \u25a0\nafter taking poison, A stomach\npump was used and he was reported\nout of danger some hours later.\nPrison officials would not divulge\nany details, and it was not known\nhow he obtained the poison.\n115 Oldfimers\nEnjoy Concert\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 The Knights of\nPythias were hosts to approximately 115 oldtimers when they held\ntheir annual banquet and concert,\nan event looked forward to by the\nolder members of the community.\nGuests were welcomed by P. 01-\nsen on behalf of the Knights and\nby Mrs. Beduz on behalf of the Pythian Sisters.\nMrs. Sarah Leigh ton was presented with a corsage and Ben Keer\nwith a boutonniere as the oldest\nlady and gentleman present. j\nFollowing the banquet bingo andi\ncards were enjoyed. A concert was!\nthen presented, artists being George-\nJames J. Scanland, Kenny Scan-i\nland, George Williams, Bev. Bates, ]\nLynnette Nimsick and E. Bailey, F. j\nBarraclough, L. Beduz, Mr. and\nMrs. P. Olsen, and Mr. Vincall. Accompanists were Mrs. V. Vohrad-\nsky and Mrs. B. Archibald^ D. Corrie was master of ceremonies for\nIhe entertainment.\nNO BLAME IN\nTOT'S DEATH\nCRANBROOK \u2014 No blame was\nattached to anyone by the coroner's jury in the inquest into the\ndrowning June 8 in a lily pond of\nRodney Donald Grey, 21 months,\nonly child of Mr. and Mrs. Donald\nGray.\nEvidence showed. the boy had\nwandered with another youngster a\nblock from his home and they were\nseen entering the heavily hedged\nproperty at 426 11th Avenue. There\nwas no one home at this property\nand apparently both children, were\nplaying in the decorative pond.\nWhen Rodney's .father started a\nsearch for him a half-hour after he\ndisappeared he located the body in\nthe pond, and his efforts at artificial\nrespiration were unsuccessful.\nREAD  THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nFirst Run lor\nRenata Ferry\nRENATA\u2014Renata Toll Ferry on\nLower Arrow Lake operated for\nthe first time Sunday.\nLeaving Renata, three crossings a\nday are scheduled for 7 a.m., 11\na.m. and 4 p.m., with additional\nruns if requested at special rates.\nThe crossing is half a mile. Art\nKoch of Renata operates the ferry\nThe first to cross Sunday from\nRenata to Vancouver were Mrs\nWithers, Mrs. , White and Mr.\nSchwantz of Vancouver. Renata\nSchool bus for high school children\nwill leave for Castlegar daily by\nferry from Renata instead of from\nacross the lake.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nFuller   Brush   Representative\nDon E. Sergent \u2014 Phone 1335\nReserve Sept. 7 for Trinity Garden Tea at E. M. Stiles, North Shore\nLA to FOE meet tonight 8 p.m.\nSocial evening.\nBINGO, TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL\u20148:00 P.M.\nJA& BUqhwaj^L\nNo. 3 Hope-Cascade good. Rough\nsections Greenwood to Cascade.\nRossland to Goatfell, paving Kua-\nkanook area, balance normal. Goat-\nfell to Crows Nest generally good\nconstruction work Yahk to Ryan.\nNo. 6 Nel way Vernon-Nel way-\nSouth Slocan. normal. South Slo-\ncan-Needles, fair to good. Needles-\nVernon, fair.\nNo. 95. Fair, rough spots. Banff-\nWindermere, fair.\nNelson-Kaslo-New Denver-Kaslo-\nLardeau - Gerrard, fair to good.\nFlooding conditions experienced in\nMcBride area. Water over northern\ntrans-provincial highway at Swift\nCurrent bridge two miles west of\nMount Robson.\nExecutions Put-\nOver To November\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Executions\nof Donald Keith Cathro, 26, and\nChow Bew, 42, Tuesday were put\nover from June 21 to Nov. 22, pending appeal to Supreme Court of\nCanada.\nThe reprieves were ordered in\nsupreme court by Mr. Justice A. M.\nManson.\nThe men were convicted of murdering 65-year-old Ah Wing in his\nconfectionery store during a robbery attempt Jan. 6.\nMixed  two-ball  foursome  at the\nNelson Golf Club tonight at 5 p.m.\nMount St. Francis annual Open\nHouse Day, Wednesday, June 22.\n2 to 4 p.m.\nFarm for sale\u2014With good build\nings. Cheap for quick sale. Nick\nVerigin, Ymir, B. C.    .\nPlywood of all kinds.\nFull sheets or cut sizes.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156      101 Hall St.      Nelson\nLong lasting washable Rayon\nCurtains. 42x81. Special $3.49 pair.\nSTERLING   HOME   FURNISHERS\nNELSON ROD AND GUN CLUB\nGeneral business meeting, last un-\ntill Fall, tonight, 8 p.m. Legion Hall\nNylon Sheers, Nylon Nets, White\nLaces. Satins and Taffetas for the\nJune Wedding.\nTAYLOR'S  DRY GOODS\nTry the most powerful light\nweight Homelite Chain Saws at\nHomelite Sales and Service, 104\nBaker St., Nelson.\nSTART   SAVING\nInvestors' Syndicate of Can. Ltd.\nJan. S. M. Harts\nR,R. 1 \u2014 Phone 289-X-3 \u2014 Nelson\nEveryone welcome a't the Junior\nHigh Auditorium, 2 p.m.. Wed. Display of sewing, girls'\" choir and\nsquare dancing.\nNew \"Stretchie\" swim suits in all\nsizes. Trunks for boys from $1.49.\nSwimsuits for girls from $1.59.\nEBERLE'S on Baker St.        .\nUse Green Cross Garden Guard\nfor the control of vegetable insects.\nComes in handy pump-gun duster\ncontainer. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nThe Nelson and District Teachers'\nAssociation will be at home in\nhonor of Miss Enid Etter this afternoon at the Hume School from four\nto five o'clock.\nClearance    Sale    of   Community\n1847 Rogers and Kings Plated Flatware,   broken   lines   regular   stock\npatterns at near wholesale price,\nBUTTERFIELD JEWELLER\nChimneys cleaned and topped.\nFurnaces, stoves cleaned by vacuum\nPounder's Chimney Service.\nPhone 1541-*..\nPatients in Kootenay Lake General Hospital can have the Dally\nNewB sent to them every morning.\nPhone 1844, Circulation Department,\nDally News.\nFor destroying flies, mosquitoes,\nants, bed-bugs, wasps, etc, use\nGreen Cross D.D.T. Household\nSpray. One spraying remains effective for weeks. \u2014 A positive\nkiller. HIPPERSON'S.\nTHIS WEEK'S SPECIAL\nHardwood bookcases in walnut\nand natural finishes, $16.95. One set\nof maple double bunks with new\nspring-filled mattresses, $89.50 com\nplete. Also on sale one Inglis and\none General Electric washing ma\nchine. In excellent condition.\nWe  Buy and  Sell   New  and   Used\nFurniture.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\nThe All Union Picnic Committee\nwishes to extend an invitation to all\nlocals of Nelson and District to join\nthe committee by sending two or\nmore deleqates to act on the com\nmittee at their next meeting to be\nheld on Sunday at 7.00 p.m. ln the\nEagles, In Nelson, 19 June.\nAny local interested, In the district, can obtain Information of\nwhat took place at the first meetinq\nby contacting Mr. A, Nlssen, P.O,\nBox 181, Salmo, B.C.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nZIMMERMAN \u2014 Requiem mass\nfor the late Joseph Zimmerman will\nbe celebrated at the Cathedral of\nMary Immaculate on Thursday at\n9 a.m. Rev. Father F. Monaghan\nwill be celebrant and interment in\nNelson Memorial Park. The Rosary\nwill be recited at Thompson Fun\neral Home Wednesday at 8 p.m.\nB. (. Debt Lower\nBy $14,185,1\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A reduction\nof $14,785,000 in the debt of British\nColumbia for the year ending\nMarch 31, 1955 was announced in a\nreport released by the provincial\nfinance department.\nPremier Bennett, who also holds\nthe post of finance minister, said\nat a press conference that B. C.\n\"now is in the best financial position it has ever been in since it\nwas a province.\"\nThe report showed the province's\ngross debt at March 31 was $226,\n204,706 compared with $269,000,000\nin 1952 when the Social Credit gov\nernment took office. The net debt,\nwhich is the gross debt reduced by\nthe amount of cash on hand and\nmonies in sinking funds and other\nreserves, was $136,970,780 at March\n31.\nPremier Bennett said the net debt\nwhen his government took office\nin 1952 was $191,000,000.\nHe said the net debt \"now ls\nseveral million dollars lower\" than\nthe March 31 figure, but would not\ngive an exact figure for the present\ndebt.\nHe said the debt reduction policy\nhad cut interest charges almost in\nhalf and had given the province a\nstrong credit rating.\nPERON DISCHARGES\nTWO BISHOPS\nBUENOS AIRES (AP) - The\ngovernment Tuesday stripped two\nRoman Catholic bishops of their\nofficial positions in the Buenos\nAires diocese. This is a right the\ngovernment claims under the\nagreement making Catholicism the\nofficial religion  in  this country.\nThe government accused Rt.\nRev. Ramon Novoa of instigating\ndisorders last weekend. Tato has\nbeen auxiliary bishop of the arch\ndiocese and acting head of the\nchurch in Argentina because of the\nCopello. Novoa has been provicar\nof the archdiocese.\nThe decfee from President Juan\nPeron's government said an old\nSpanish law authorizes the government to discharge Church authorities who in some way violate their\nduties. The church may assign them\nto other duties.\nSix Years Jail For\nRobin Hood Bandit\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014 Robert Mc\nKay, 42-year-old truck driver, Tuesday was sentenced to six years for\nthe June 6 \"Robiij Hood\" holdup\nof a downtown branch-of the Canadian Bank of Commerce.\nHe drew one year each, concurrently, on two charges of forging income tax return slips.\nMcKay robbed the bank across\nthe street from his home of $2600\nwith a pencilled note slipped to a\nteller. Then he paid off debts, tipped\na cab driver $40, gave away money\nto needy friends and thew a party.\nHe was arrested during the festivities after the spending spree drew\npolice attention. All but $200 was\nrecovered.\nWelsh Nationalist\nRefuses To Serve\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Service in\nThe British armed forces was described as \"waste of a Welshman's\nenergies\" by Edward Rees, 21-year-\nold Welsh nationalist, before a conscientious objectors draft appeal tribunal here.       .\nRees. who said his objection to\nnational service is \"purely political\", was appealing against the refusal of the Swansea tribunal to\nclassify him as a conscientious objector.\nHe now is serving a 12-month\njail sentence for refusing to attend\na \"medical examination for army\nservice. While in prison he unsuccessfully contested last month's general election as a Welsh nationalist.\nThe tribunal's decision will be\nannounced in \u00bb few days,\n\"Sure to Please\"\nFather's Day Gifts\nHere are the Gifts Dad really\nwants . . , cool, comfortable togs\nfor his Summer Wardrobe!\n\u2022 SPORT SHIRTS \u2022 SHIRTS\n\u2022 PYJAMAS \"BELTS\n\u2022 SHORTS \u2022 SOCKS\n\u2022 STRAW HAT \u2022 TIES\nSLACKS and JACKETS\nEmory's Ltd.\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nCommons Welcomes Proposal lo Cut\nTime Limif for Speeches, Debates\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Drastic changes\nin the rules of the Commons aimed\nat streamlining its work were proposed Tuesday in the unanimous report of an all-party committee.\nTime limits for speeches would\nbe shortened and length of debates\nlimited. The number of weekly\nworking hours would remain the\nsame, but the times of Friday sittings would be changed to bring\nin a morning sitting and eliminate\na night sitting on that day.\nThe House received the report\nwith enthusiastic desk - thumping\nfrom all parties, indicating eventual passage. The report was referred to the committee of bhe\nwhole for consideration.\nMain provisions include a 30-\nminute restriction on speeches'\nmade while the House is in committee of the whole, cutting 10\nminutes off the present time, and\na similar limitation on speeches\nmade while the Speaker is not in\nthe chair. Exceptions include the\nprime minister and the opposition\nleader, and cabinet ministers and\nprivate members under certain circumstances.\nLIMIT'OF   10   DAYS\nThe debate on the address in\nreply to the speech from the throne\nat the sessional opening, which now\nhas no time limit, would be held\nto 10 days.\nThe budget debate \u2014 also unlimited now \u2014 would be held to\neight days.\nMorning sittings would be held\nduring the throne speech debate\nto expedite its finish. This debate\noften has dragged on for \u25a0 weeks.\nRestrictions- also would be placed\non private members' days \u2014 on\nwhich matters brought by rank-\nand-file members are debated, At\npresent, Monday is private members' day until the House votei\notherwise late in the session. Under\nthe proposed rules, private members would be allotted six Mondays and Jwo Thursdays.\nADENAUER PREFERS\nDELAYING VISIT\nTO RUSS LEADERS\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Chancellor Konrad Adenauer ot West\nGermany was reported to prefer delaying any visit to Moscow until after the July 18 Big Four conference.\nAmerican and German Informants said that was Adenauer's attitude toward his invitation to talk\nwith Russian leaders.\nAdenauer, who arrived here on\nTuesday, conferred with State Secretary Dulles and was invited to\nlunch with President Eisenhower.\nInformants who reported Adenauer is in no hurry to meet with\nRussia's leaders said it is his view\nthat intensive preparation would be\nneeded before any such meeting, including a close look at the results,\nit any, of the Big Four meeting in\nGeneva.\nectacular Landing\nAir Force Pilot\nSp\nBy\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 An auxiliary air force pilot walked away\nfrom a crash landing at International airport here Tuesday after he\nwas unable to lower the landing\ngear of his Mustang fighter.\nFO Bill Vogel, 24, of Vancouver,\na pilot with 443 City of New Westminster Squadron, circled the airport for half an hour struggling\nwith his hydraulics gear. Air force\nofficials said a handle had broken\noff the unit.\nThe RCAF fire department soaked a section of bhe grass alongside\na runway while crash trucks and\nan ambulance stood by. FO Vogel\nskidded his aircraft in on its belly,\nbreaking the propellor and ripping\naway the air scoop.\nAstronomer Doubtful\nOf Flying Saucers\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Dr. R. M.\nPetrie, director of the Dominion as-\ntrophysical observatory at Victoria,\nsays he doesn't believe in flying\nsaucers.\nSpeaking to the Royal Astronomical Society of Winnipeg, Dr. Petrie\nsaid his belief still does not stop\nVictoria residents' from calling him\nin the middle of the night, asking\nhim to train his 73-inch telescope\u2014\nthe largest in Canada\u2014on mysterious objects. One night' a shining\nssilver object turned out to be a balloon sent up by the meteorological\noffice to test amospheric conditions.\nDr. Petrie said that after several\nsimilar experiences he Is convinced\nflying saucers have a terrestial origin and can be explained simply.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 FRONT 8T. PHONE 63\n'Copter Survivors\nWalk To Safety\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) \u2014 Two\nsurvivors of a helicopter crash arrived back to safety after walking\nthrough rugged northern bushland\nfor eight days.\nPilot David Copley and engineer\nNick Temperley of Toronto wer\u00ab\nflown to Gander after walking exhausted out of the woods at Little\nHarbor Deep earlier in the day.\nTheir civilian 'copter crashed hj\ndense fog June 8 on a flight from\nTorbay airport near St. John's to\nGoose Bay, Labrador. They carried the few rations available and\nstarted their trek to civilization.\nDelayed by the fog and rugged\nbush country studded with hills\nand lakes, they managed only two\nmiles 'a day until they reached\nLittle Harbor Deep, on the east\ncoast of the peninsula stretching\nnorth from Newfoundland's west\ncoast.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Trading was\nactive and strong on the- livestock\nmarket Tuesday, particularly on\nbutcher cattle. The price undertone\nwas stronger. On offer were 1,072\ncattle and 12 calves. Bulk of sales\nwere medium to good steers, heifers and cows.\nChoice butcher steers 18.75-19.50;\ngood 17.75-18.50; medium 16.50-\n17.50; common 14-18.25; choice butcher heifers 17.25-18; good 16.25-17;\nmedium 15-16; common 13.50-14.75;\nchoice fed calves 18-18.75; good 17-\n17.75; medium 15.75-16.50; good\ncows 13.25-14; medium 11.75-13;\ncommon 10.25-11.50; canners and\ncutters 6.25-10.\nGood bulls 14-14.50; common to\nmedium 10-13.50; good feeder steers\n17-17.75; good stock steers 16-17;\ncommon to medium 14-15.75, good\nand choice veal calves 20-25.50;\ncommon to medium 10-19.50.\nHogs closed steady Monday at\n25.65 for grade A, two loads going\nto eastern Canada at 20.15 live-\nweight rail grade; sows gained 10\ncents at 13.\nNo lambs offered.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\n576 Baker St. Phona 28*\nAuditors\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nEllison's\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nMakes   Delicious   Bread   tho   Easy\nand   Quick   Way.\nTry  a   Package  Today\nELLISON MILLING\n&  ELEVATOR  CO. LTD.\nSelect Your Gift For    \/\nFATHER'S DAY*\n* SHAVING KITS\n* KODAK CAMERAS\n* BINOCULARS\n* TRAVEL   ALARM   CLOCKS\nFATHER'S   DAY   CARD8\n6c \u2014 26c\nCity Drug\nifOTTR REXALL PHARMACY\nI\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. 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Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}