{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0429099":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-03-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1955-07-13","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429099\/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":" _ _ _ ____\u2014__ _ ,\t\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nToday's Bonspiel\nProgram\n3-5 p.m.\u2014Women's Auxiliary to St. Andrews Church\nGarden Party.\n4 p.m.\u2014Junior Women's Hospital Auxiliary Strawberry\nSocial, Lakeside Park.\n6 p.m.\u2014Little League baseball, Kinsmen vs Lions, Queen\nElizabeth Park.\n8 p.m.\u2014Lacrosse, Trail Golden Bears vs Nelson Kokanees.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Films at Lakeside Park.\n(Garden party at city power plant will be held at 3:30\np.m. Thursday afternoon).\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllNlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nThree Provinces\nStill in Running\nEight rinks remained in the running in the World Summer Championship event of Nelson's Midsummer Bonspiel\nlate Tuesday night, with three provinces still being represented.\n  \u25a0   .     .     .       M \u25a0..',,.,\u25a0   -...    .1 \u201e..-,. -.'.,,\u25a0.\u25a0, I  '-I.       ...... \u25a0    .\nl\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny with a few\ncloudy periods Wednesday. Little\nchange in temperature. Light wlhda.\nLow-high at Cranbrook, Crescent\nValley 50 and 85.\nN&SON, B.C., CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 13, 1955.\nNo. 69\nOne rink from Edmonton, skipped\nby E. B. Olson, a former winner of\nthe championship, is rated highly\nto repeat, but will get stiff competition   from  several   other  rinks\nHEAVYS10RM\nHITS SASK.'\nHighways in Poor\nCondition; Bridges\nAre Washed Out\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 A heavy electrical storm rumbled across southern Saskatchewan Monday night\nand Tuesday, causing power breaks,\nfires, bridge washouts and flooded\nhighways.\nHardest hit was the Kroneau-\nBalgonie area, 20 miles east of Regina. Five Inches of rain fell at Kro-\nneau and district creeks swelled\nover highways. The top of one\nbridge was carried 100 feet.\nAt Balgonie, four inches of rain\nwas reported and the Canadian Pacific line was cut at Davin, five\nmiles south of Balgonie.\nDamage in Regina was confined\nto a few breaks of trolley-bus lines.\nThe rains left southern Saskatchewan's highway grid in poor condition. In areas of the southeast and\nsouthwest, where construction was\nunder way. some stretches were reduced to quagmires.\n(Tourists were reported halted at\nto dry out.\nTV CLOSES\n216 THEATRES\nTORONTO fCP) \u2014 During the\nlast 1^ years 216 movie theatres in\nCanada have closed and many more\nare expected to close before the end\nof the summer.\nOfficials of the Canadian film industry here Tuesday blamed television for the closings. They said\nattendance is \"greatly\" affected by\nTV.\nIn the last 1H years, 136 theatres\nhave been built, bringing the number in operation across Canada to\n1,857.\nR. W. Volstead, vice-president of\nFamous Players Canada Corp. Ltd.,\nsaid the theatres affected are those\nIn smaller communities and neighborhood theatres in large centres.\nBennett Turns 1st\nSod for Mill Start\nALBERNI, B.C. (CP) \u2014 Premier\nBennett Tuesday turned the first\nsod here for a newsprint, paper and\nboard mill to be built by MacMillan\nand Bloedel Ltd.\nThe ceremony signalled the start\nof an estimated $30,000,000 development of Vancouver island timber\nresources.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Two Quebec agricultural officials said Monday farmers in the province will\nface disaster if the present drought\ncontinues. The 'officials \u2014 Victor\nLafond of the provincial agricultural department and Edward Ste,\nMarie, head of the Assumption experimental station \u2014 said vegetable and grain crops will suffer\nconsiderable damage if there is no\nrain before the end of this week.\nwhich  have  been  going  at a  fast\nclip.\nF. D. Pilcher of Brandon, Man.,\nwith two big wins, advanced and\nwill meet L. V. Maurer of Nelson\nWednesday night. Other rinks remaining in the title play are L. C.\nFoot, Carstairs, Alta.; W. McFaull,\nSwift Current, Sask.; E. M. Fulton,\nRegina; D. Jack, Kincaid, Sask., and\nH. Tarasoff, Langham, Sask.\ntivic Centre curling rink was the\nscene of action packed curling\nthroughout Tuesday as curlers advanced in the race for the Hudson Bay trophy.\nAlso played Tuesday were the initial games in the women's section,\nwith two Nelson rinks leading the\nway along with rinks from Edmonton and Creston. One of the best\nwas the M. Luchak-M. Craig con-1\ntest that saw Mrs, Luchak of Edmonton win out over the ,Nelson\nrink 6-4.\nPlay also got under way in the\nsecond event, the Queen City, when\nfirst round games were completed.\nThis section also saw some top curling.\nMANY SPECTATORS\nSpectators numbering in the hundreds, who dropped in to witness\nNelson's curling classic,v received\nthrills as skips used every strategy\nin the book.\nIn as thrilling a contest as any\nin Dominion curling play, D. Jack\nof Kincaid edged E. Avery of Salmo\n7-6. The game was close throughout\nwith first one rink leading and\nthen\u201e.,thft- .other. Equally,-.exciting\nwas the match between A. W. Kennedy of Claresholm and Len Peerless of Nelson, The Alberta rink\ncame through with a final-end point\nto win 8-5,\nThe lowest scoring game of the\nspiel Hhus far took p|ace in the\nafternoon when S. Steinson of Cloverdale won 4-3 over D. Hardy of\nEdmonton. F. D. Pilcher of Brandon\nracked up two big wins earlier in\nthe day a 9-1 victory over L. Marshall of Duncan and a 12-2 win\nover Fred Wah of Nelson.\nDraw   secretary   R.   L.   Bruce\nitated late Tuesday that the women's  draw  originally  scheduled\nfor 2 p.m. has been changed to 10\na.m. due to the various Items of\nentertainment,\nMr. Bruce said draws were being\nrun off on schedule and curlers\nhad praised ice conditions as Old\nSol smiled down on them.\nEntries in the women's event\nreached 17 and is being played in\nfour sections via a square draw\nwhich is played off in a round robin.\nAt the completion of the draw, the\nfour section winners will enter a\nsemi-final to determine the finalists for the women's.summer curling\nchampionship.\nIn late games Tuesday some of\nthe closest competition came in four\nor five games.\nIn a high scoring picture W. G.\nStonehouse of New Westminster\ndefeated W. D. Hough of Edmonton\n13-12. R. E. Fath off Champion\nedged out D. P. McKeen of Sangudo,\nAlta., 8-7; J. Kubasek of Vauxhall,\nAlta. squeezed past C. Russell of\nClaresholm 6-5 and D. Hardy of\nEdmonton just managed to win over\nH. Martins of Edmonton 8-7. In the\nother game play on this same draw\nLou Chase of Vancouver whipped\nW. A. Keenan of Champion, Alta.\n15-3 to make him the second rink\nto score 15 or more points.\nBUSY SEWING CREW at the annual Mid-\nSummer Bonsplela have been Nelson Women's\nCurling  Club  members. Here they sew crests on\n1 sweaters for A. Treble and S. H. Lane of Fillmore,\n8ask. Sewing were, from left, Mrs. R. H, Bush,\nMrs. A, J. Hesse and Mrs. M. DeGlrolamo.\n\/ \u2014Vogue photo.\nSIX PERISH IN\nQUEBEt FIRE\nEarly Morning\nFire Sweeps\nThrough Home\nST. SIMEON DE CHARLEVOIX,\nQue. (CP) \u2014 A mother and five of\nher seven children died Tuesday in\nan early morning fire that swept\nthrough their frame home In this\ntown 115 miles northeast of Quebec\nCity.\nThe victims were Mrs. Albert\nChamberland, 50, Rachel, 16, Doris,\n14, Gladys, 8, Andre, 6, and Alain;\neight months. They were trapped\non the second floor of the two-\nstorey house when the fire started\nin the kitchen and spread rapidly.\nMr. Chamberland, working in an\nadjoining bakery, discovered the\noutbreak and shouted the alarm.\nTwo sons, Georges Albert, 17, and\nBenoit, 10, and two visitors, Francois Dufour and his son, Paul, heard\nthe shouts and jumped to safety.\nThe four scampered out of second\nstorey windows on to the roof of\na verandah and from there jumped\nto the ground.\nVolunteer firefighters summoned by the ringing of the parish\nchurch bell, tried unsuccessfully to\nrescue Mrs. Chamberland and her\nchildren.\nRAIL, HIGHWAY\nLINE TO ALASKA\nTO BE STUDIED\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Sen.\nWarren Magnuson (D\u2014Wash) said;\nTuesday the Senate foreign rela->\ntions committee has unanimously;\napproved and reported to the senate!\nfloor his resolution to establish an;\n11-member Alaska international rail]\nand highway commission. !\nThe group would study the feasi-\n600 Prisoners Riot\nbility of a rail and highway line!        ciM period\nPRINCE ALBERT (CP)\u2014 Six\nhundred Inmates of the Saskatchewan pentlentlary rioted for two\nhours within the prison walls late\nTuesday, setting fire to almost a\ndozen buildings before guards\ncould return them to their cells.\nThree buildings were burned to\nthe ground. The fires were set hi\n10 buildings simultaneously as the\nprisoners were in \\he yard iri an\nthough the Rocky mountain trench\nSix guards.were.hold-as-Hostages\nof western -Ctatfdrwifflfttlhg t&*|but were released almost immedI\nUnited States and Alaska,\nThe commission also would be directed to  study rail and highway\nshop, old shops dome, laundry, engineer ihop, fire hall and cement\nshed.\nAt 10 p.m. the stables, flour shed\nand cement shed were destroyed\nand grey plumes of smoke rose\nfrom the penitentiary property,\nMr. Crofton said no attempt was\nmade by prisoners to make a break.\nGuards lined the wall and held the\nprisoners back at gun point, he\nadded.   .\n, .Warden. C. C. Courts- was&oliday-.\ning in Prince Albert National Park\nconnections between coastal ports\nand cities, and main line routes\nfund by the commission to be most\nfeasible. ,\nately. Several shots were fired. De- at the time. He left Prince'Albert\nputy warden G. T. Crofton said one Monday and ls expected back to-\nguardand a prisoner were injured, day.\nin the riot j    Mr. Crofton s**d an investigation\nThe  prisoners  rushed  the  main was  started  as soon  as  prisoners\ndome, damaging buildings. At the\nsame time, fires were started in the\nstable, coal and flour shed, paint\nForest Fires Rage in Quebec,\nOntario; Travel Is Banned\nQUEBEC (CP) \u2014 Travel was\nbanned Tuesday in 100,000.000 acres\nof Quebec forest lands as fires approached two communities on the\nnorth shore of the St. Lawrence river. Women and children, choked by\nsmoke from fires two miles away,\nwere evacuated from Pointe Lebel,\na settlement of 50 families on the\nManicouagan river. Plans also have\nbeen made to evacuate the village\nof Franklin which has a population\nof 800.\nFlames are 10 miles away and fire-\nA blaze on the outskirts of Graven-\nhurst in the  Muskoka resort area\nwas reported held in check Tuesday)1\nnight.\nBut a two-mile wall of flame was\nwithin one mile of 200 cottages at\nKashe Lake, five miles south of\nGravenhurst. More than 100 men\nfought to control it.\nA 10,000-acre fire in the Blind\nRiver division of the Sault Ste.\nMarie district had forestry officials\nworried.\nAt   last   report   700   men   were\nfighting officials said neither com-; fighting   four   fires  raging   out  of\nmunity is in immediate danger. j control in the,Sault Ste. Marie dis-\nForest fires plagued Ontario too. trict.\nFULL SUPPORT\nGIVEN'BAY ROUTE\nLONDON (CP> \u2014 An annual\nreport on 'the Hudson Bay route\nTuesday gave the northern grain\nartery a full vote of confidence, and\nv axed optimistic about its future.\n' \"We feel, justified in reiterating\nour view that the Hudson Bay route\nbears favorable comparison with the\nSt. Lawrence  sea  route,\"  said the  Frenette, 28.'All are    charged    in\n14th report on Hudson Bay marine  connection  with   the     beating    of\ninsurance rates for 1955. It is pre-|drug addict Thomas Kinn3i ^ on\npared by the Commonwealth ship- False Creek flatg here June^2th.\nping committee.' \t\nIt   disclosed,   as   previously   announced,   favorable  insurance  rate  Report New Outbreaks\nwere returned to the cell blocks.\n\"It must have been planned, but\nwe had no indication,\" he said.\n4 Appear on Murder\nCharge; Remanded\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Four men\nwere remanded for another week\nwhen they appeared in police court\nTuesday on charges of attempted\nmurder. They are Robert Joseph\nTremblay, 32; Lucien Joseph Mayer,\n49; Charles A. Talbot, 36, and Marcel\nrevisions by the Institute of London\nUnderwriters for the 1955 season\nstarting next week.\nAnd it gave notice of studying the\npossibilities of channelling northern\nManitoba and Saskatchewan, timber\nthrough Port Churchill, Man.\nIt lauded the Canadian government program of research into ice\nconditions, and continuing efforts to\nmQke the route safer for navigation.\nPOSTED TO OTTAWA    .\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Appointment\nof Lt.-Col. M. J. D. Carson, 47, of\nToronto as deputy director of Protestant chaplain services at army\nheadquarters was announced Tuesday.\nALGIERS (AP) \u2014 Kidnappings,\nmurders and gun battles flared\nanew through sections of troubled\nAlgeria, French authorities reported Tuesday. In a 36-hour period,\nfour persons were found slain \u2014 two\nwith their throats cut \u2014 and several were wounded.\nTACKLES ROUNDTRIP\nDOVER, England (AP) \u2014 Florence Chadwick, the San Diego,\nCalif., secretary who holds the women's record for conquests of the\nEnglish channel,'today will try to\nbecome the first person to swim\nthe channel roundtrip without stopping.\nVIET NAM BEATS\nBACK REBELS\nSAIGON, Viet Nam (Reuters) \u2014\nSouth Vietnamese national army\ntroops have swarmed ashore from\nlanding craft and beaten back rebel Hoa Hao\u00absoldiers from a beachhead on the Gulf of Siam, it was announced Tuesday night.\nNational army, officials said they\nnow have surrounded rebel Hoa Hao\nGen. Ba Cut, whose forces opposed\nthe landing.\nThe rebel warlord's troops left\nseveral dead behind as they fell\nback from the beachhead after a\nshort battle, the announcement\nsaid.\nIt added that very stiff fighting\ntook place Monday, between Hoa\nHao and national army forces, and\nmany Hoa Hao were killed.\nBa Cut, long-haired, youthful\nguerilla leader, is one of the chief\nprivate army commanders opposing\nthe government of Premier Ngo\nDinh Diem. Diem has been driving\nrelentlessly against the rebels in a\nbid to assert firm control over turbulent South Viet Nam.\nNational army forces said Ba\nCut, now has taken refuge in a former Communist Vietrninh fortress,\nwhich he is commanding in person,\nNews From\nThe* Bonspielers' Home Towns\nAvalanche\nSwept 1000 Feet in\nWorst Climbing Mishap\nBy PHIL ADLER\nCanadian Press Staff V\/riter\nBANFF, Alta. (CP) \u2014 The broken bodies of seven boys\nwho dared towering Mount Temple and fell victim to an avalanche were brought Tuesday night to this scenic resort in the\nheart of the Canadian Rock\nies.\nThe young Americans who sought\nto reach to the top of the 11,636-\nfoot mountain, termed by veteran\nalpinists one of the most difficult\nclimbs in the Canadian Rockies,\ndied Monday when an avalanche\nswept them 1000 feet from the 10,-\n000-foot level.\nTwo others of the group of youngsters who attempted the adventurous assault were severely injured.\nTwo  others  escaped  injury.\nOne of the lurvlvon, tall, thin,\n16-year-old Tony Woodfleld of\nPhiladelphia, thook at he told\nthe \u00bbtory of the terror-stricken\nseconds when hundred, of ton, of\npowdery mow tumbred from the\nmountain's summit and swept the\nlittle party to death,\nHe ^id:\n\"I hlard Watts crying under the\nsnow. 1 used my shoe to dig him out\nand got everything out but one\nleg.\"\nRESCUE TOO LATE\nWatts   was   16-year-old   William\nCrane Population\nIncreases fo 25\nBy   ROY   UABERGE\n.    Canadian  Presi Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The nearly-extinct whooping crane is staging another comeback. Four young were\nhatched this spring to boost the\nknown numbers of the rare birds to\nat least 25.\nWorld population of the big, white\nentires sank to bn\" all-time low of\n15 in 1941 but rose slowly to 24 in\n1953. Thair numbers started dropping again until last year there were\nonly 21.\nW. W. Mair, chief of the resource\ndepartment's wildlife service, told\na press conference Tuesday that two\npairs of young whoopers were spotted by wildlife officials in Wood\nBuffalo Park.\nHe located the nest area of three\npairs of cranes \u2014 hitherto one of\nnature's best-kept secrets \u2014 50 miles\nwest of Fort Smith in the Northwest Territories. He said he will ask\nthe air transport board to ban low\n?lying ln the area to protect the\ncranes.\nThe heron-like birds with their\nseven-foot wingspread and buglelike voices once numbered In the\nthousands. Hunters killed them indiscriminately until United States\nand Canadian wildlife officials began protecting them. They banned\nshooting whoopers and made a sanctuary of their wintering grounds at\nAransas on the Texas gulf coast.\nPolicewoman Retires\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Mrs.\nGladys Purdy, who joined the city\npolicewomen's division two years\nafter her policeman husband died,\nretired Tuesday after 23 years of\nservice. Mrs. Purdy, who lives in\nBurnaby, intends to retire to Jordan River on Vancouver island.\nQUEEN  RIDES 'COPTER\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Two helicopters took off within a few minutes of each other Tuesday from\nthe lawns of Buckingham Palace.\nOne carried the Queen Mother and\nthe Duchess of Gloucester, the\nother, their attendants, on a visit\nto the RAF base at Hawkinge, on\nthe southeast coast.\n8WIFT CURRENT BAND WINS\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 The Swift\nCurrent, Sdsk., band played its way\nto top honors at the golden jubilee\nstampede band competition, carrying off the Calgary Exhibition and\nStampede Trophy and $100 cash as\nwinners of the Class 1 event.\nESTATE  OPENING\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP) \u2014\nThe Annacis island industrial estate\nIn the Fraser River delta near here\nwill be officially opened July 22,\nit was announced Tuesday.\nMALLARD WIN\nMINOT, N.D. (CP) \u2014 Minot Mallards rolled up eight runs in the\nthird inning to defeat Williston Oilers 10-8 in a Man-Dak League baseball game here, Zoomie McLean\nhomered for the Mallards as they\nhung the loss on Williston  starter\nTom Mulcahy.\nMAY STUDY DAM\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Prime Minister St. Laurent said Tuesday he\nwouldn't be surprised if the royal\ncommission looking into Canada's\neconomic future delved into the proposed South Saskatchewan dam and\nirrigation project. He was^ replying\nin the Commons to Hazen Argue\n(CCF\u2014Assiniboia.)\nPROPOSAL REJECTED\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 The Saskatchewan marketing board has turned\nthumbs down on a controversial\nproposal for a producer-controlled'\nlivestock marketing plan in the\nprovince. The provincial government has accepted the decision.\nThe board's report wasnude pub\nlic Tuesday by Premier Douglas.\nOIL WELL  IN CITY\nCAMROSE, Alta. (CP) \u2014 Cam-\nrose became the only city in Canada\nto have a producing oil well within\nits limits during the weekend when\noil was struck at the 3295-foot level.\nThe well is owned by Bailey Sel-\nburn Oil and Gas Ltd. It ts located\non 41st street, 500 feet north of 52nd\navenue.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 City council granted approval Tuesday for\nthe Vancouver firemen's band to\nappear at\" the annual Kelowna regatta in August after the invitation\nhad been rejected earlier. Approval\ncame after, council learned no cost\nwould be involved'-and''the fire department would not be' left short-\nhanded.\nCL08E PLANT\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The de Havil\nland aircraft company, with a strike\nof 1700 production workers at its\nsuburban Downsview plant in its\nsecond day, Tuesday laid off its 1300\noffice workers and declared the\nplant closed.\nParliament\nTuesday\nBy Tha Canadian Press\nThe Commons defeated 95 to 62 a\nProgressive Conservative motion,\nbacked by all opposition groups,\ncalling for reform of the Senate.\nAn all-party committee report\nrecommending limitation of some\nspeeches and debates at future sos\nsions was adopted by the. Com'\nmons.\nPrime Minister St. Laurent indi'\nctade eastern market prospects will,\ndictate the completion time of the\ntrans-Canada natural gas pipeline.\nThe Senate approved in principle\nsalary increases of $1,500 to $2,500\nannually for the transport, tariff\nand income tax appeal boards.\nACTION TAKEN\nAGAINST \"FLASH\"\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Libel action against the Toronto, weekly\nFlash was started in supreme court\nhere Tuesday by Wilfred A. (Busier) Clearwater, owner of a city\nauto-towing firm.\nThe suit for unstated damages is\nagainst John Blunt Publications\nLtd'., Toronto, for libel which Clearwater claims was contained in the\nFeb. 5 issue of Flash.\nThe weekly tabloid is also being\nsued by Vancouver police chief\nWalter Mulligan following a series\nof articles charging the city police\nforce with graft and corruption.\nThe articles led to the temporary\nsuspension of Mulligan and a full-\nscale investigation  into  the force.\nWatts of White Marsh, Pa. He died\nof injuries and exposure as they\nwaited for rescue . in, the freezing\nrain and hail that swept the mountain Monday night. Rescue came too\nlate.   .    .\nThe other dead:\nRichard and James Balis, 13-year\nold twins of Philadelphia; William\nWise, 15, Philadelphia; Miles Marble, 12, of Collegeville, Pa.; David\nChapin 15, of Stamford, Conn., and\nLuther Seddon, 13, of St. Louis, Mo.\nFrederick Sallard, 13, of Philadelphia, and Jerry Clattenburg, 14, of\nRye, N. Y\u201e. suffered severe injuries, shock and exposure and were\nbrought to hospital here. Their condition Tuesday night was reported\nimproving.\nWoodfield,   anchor   man   of  the\nparty, escaped injury. Peter Smith\n13, of Paoli, Pa., escaped with facial bruises.\nLACKED EXPERIENCE\nThe 11 boys were among a group\nof 22 who arrived here three days\nago with two camp councillors to\nview the wonders of the Rockies.\nOnly Woodfield, who has climbed\nmountains since the age of nine,\nhad much alpine experience.\nThey   assaulted   the   mountain\nequipped only with an Inch-thick\nmanlla  rope and  Ice axes. They\nwore   ordinary   boots  or  spiked\nbaseball or track ohoes.\nSeventeen of tfijj\u00a333rtioyi, with\ncouncillors O. D. Dickenson, a teacher at the University of Pennsylvania, and W. H. Oeser, a public\nschool teacher in Baltimore, started\nthe climb about 8:30 a.m. Monday.\nOeser dropped out. \u00bbt the 8500-\nfoot level to taki .'pictures. Others\ndropped off at 9000 feet and the\nremaining 11 started.off to reach the\npeak. They had turned to come back\nunsuccessful, when the avalanche\nroared down upon them.\n8AW AVALANCHE COMING\nWoodfield said:\n\"I heard and saw the. avalanche.\nOn the way up we had seen several\nsnow fails (small avalanches) and\nwe turned back because of that\n\"I yelled 'avalanche!' and dug\nmy axe into the ice and hung on.\"\nThe rope broke as the avalanche\nhit and the group waa swept down\nthe mountain. Only one boy died almost instantly\u2014the others suffered\nbroken bones and lay in freezing\ntemperatures awaiting help until\ndeath ended their suffering.\nYoung Smith, second man on the\nway down, clung to a rock formation by his fingers, then was swept\ndown too. He escaped with a bruised face and neck.\nOeser saw the tragedy but could\ndo nothing. He spent the hours until rescue came trying to comfort\nthe dying.\nThe accident was the worst in\nthe climbing history of the Canadian\nRockies.\n\"Hie attempt was made without\nthe knowledge of the staff of Banff\nNational Park.\nBanknotes Recovered\nLONDON, Ont. (CP) \u2014 Police\nsaid Tuesday night they recovered\n$18,000 in banknotes shortly after\nan unidentified man took them from\nthe front seat of a CNR express\ntruck late in the day.\nThe bills, believed to be old bank'\nnotes being returned to Ottawa for\ndestruction, were in a paper pac\nkage.\nIt was reported three men are\nbeing questioned in connection with\nthe robbery but police declined to\nreveal names.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Cana-\ndian dollar was up 1-16 of a cent at\na premium of 1 17-32 per cent in\nterms of U.S. funds Tuesday. Pound\nsterling unchanged at $2.78%.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The U.S,\ndollar closed at a discount of 1H\nper cent in terms of Canadian funds,\ndown 1-16. It took 98V4 cents Canadian to buy $1 American. Pound\nsterling $2.74%, dow nVt.\nU.S. dollar bid 98^4, asked 98\n17-32.\nCLAIM  DISMIS8ED\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Claim of\nowners of a Greek freighter for\n$4206 damages against a marine towing company was.dismissed by Mr.\nJustice Sidney Smith of B.C. Admiralty Court Tuesday.\nNelson:   Tuesday   10.30:   Monday\n10 40.\n1954   1948\nTrail        34.21 41.08 28.01\nRevelstoke      26.12   30.20   20 24\nWardner         7.53   9.45   5.15\nAnd In This Corner...\nLOS ANGELE8 (AP) \u2014 \"I'm Sergeant Friday,\" said the motorcycle officer to the motorist.\n\"And I'm Davy Crockett,\" said the driver.\nThey were, too: Sgt. Lester Friday and David W. Crockett, 20.\n\"We sure have It rough, don't we?\" sighed Crockett.\nSgt. Friday nodded and sighed, too, but-Just the same he wrote\nout the ticket for running through a red light.\nHAGERSVILE, Ont. (CP) \u2014 There were some red faces in a bank\nhere today.\nThe bank's alarm went off at 2 a.m. and police arrived to find the\nfront door wide open.\nPolice said the door was left unlocked and was blown open by a\nheavy wind.\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 Eleftherios Knvounldls, 34, has asked probate\ncourt to change his name to Larry Andrews. \"Even my wife can't spell\nmy name,\" he said Monday.\nLANCASTER, Pa. (AP) \u2014 The evidence was pretty clear today:\nBobby Lewis likes movies.\nPolice reported Bobby, who is 11, went to a theatre Monday af-\nternoonjo see a double feature bill of Western thrillers. Bobby stayed\nfor the second showing, then the third. He fell asleep.\nAbout 4 a.m. he groped his way through the darkened house to the\nfront door. His knocks attracted passersby who called police to get\nhim out.\n MJMtW^WWP\n r-         ll ...\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0'.\u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0,  \u25a0\u25a0      \u25a0\u25a0      ...     ,;     \u25a0\u25a0      .\u25a0  . \u2022      ,''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.    \u2022\u2022     '\u25a0\u25a0'     ,    \u25a0\u25a0\u2022    V.   >   .-\u25a0\u25a0 ~ ,'    \",.. \"    '.' -I-       \u2014 ^\u2014 !\u2014\"\n2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1955\nLost Timei Tonight \u2014 Complete Shows 7:00-9:05'\nMGM'S TREMENDOUS TEN-STAR DRAMA\n\"EXECUTIVE SUITE\"\nwith WILLIAM  HOLDEN, JUNE ALLYSON, BARBARA\nSTANWYCK, FREDRIC  MARCH, WALTER PIDGEON\nrmo\nMacMURRAY\nCH..LTON\nHESTON\nAMERICA'S BOLDEST ADVEHTURE! HIE LEWIS MID CLARK EXPEDITION\nwat\n-\" vistaVisiok\n-_^ uotiONKtvu J iocm7(omrf\nP0&*\nStarts Thursday\n\u25a0TH*\nHOR1\nCOIOH BY TBCHNICOLOR\nRegular Prices\nA FAMOUS\nPLAYERS\nTHEATRE\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nTHEATRE\nTonight and Thursday\nCARTOON\u20149:00 P.M.\nFEATURE\u20149:10 P.M.\n8HORTS\u201410:40 P.M.\n'ABBOTT AND COSTELLO\nMEET THE MUMMY\"\n10 Miles East of Nelson\nAUTO VUE\nDRIVE-IN\nTRAIL,   B.  C.\n\"It Should Happen to You\"\nJudy Holiday - Peter Lawford\nAlso\n\"Lone Hand\"\nJoel  McRae\nPLUS NEWS\nLILLOOET (CP) \u2014 Traffic on the\nPacific Great Eastern Railway between Lillooet and Shalalth. halted\nby a washout at Mile 107. has been\nrestored railway officials said Tuesday the washout, caused by a clpud-\nburst Sunday night, was small.\n\"Films Under\nthe Stars\"\nTONIGHT\u20149:00 P.M.\nLAKESIDE PARK\n(Weather   Permitting)\nComing\nThursday\nJuly 21st\n8 P.M.\nTickets Now On Sale at\nKOOTENAY STATIONERS\nAdmission $1.00\nAWARDED a University Naval\nTraining Division scholarship has\nbeen PO. David S. Leslie, 18, above,\nHampton Gray VC Sea Cadet Corps\nmember for five years. He is a son\nof Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Leslie, 203\nSilica Street. The award was made\nby the Navy League of Canada, the\nsecond to a Nelson aea cadet this\nyear. In April, a similar scholarship\nwent to PO Settimo Virion. Born in\nNelson, PO. Leslie Just oompleted\nsenior matriculation. His future\nplanB have not been settled.\nFilms at Park\nDraw Big Crowd\nApproximately 200 were present\nat Lakeside Park Tuesday night lor\ntht showing of the film \"Stratford\nAdventure,\" ln the Nelson Film\nCouncil's \"Films Under The Stars.\"\nThe iilm was originally scheduled\nfor Sunday, but was postponed because of rain. F. S, Aikins acted as\nmaster of ceremonies for the film\npresentations.\nThe official opening for the season of the Summer film series will\ntake place tonight when two foreign films will be featured.\nMoyie Notes\nMOYIE \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Bert\nBeck and daughter of Vancouver\nand Mr. Beck's mother of Kimberley, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. R.\nA. Smith and\" Charles Yoshie.\nJimmy Clarke, seaman from Nova\nScotia, spent a week visiting his\nparents at Moyie, en route to Victoria, where he has been transferred.\nOne       \"O^i '\nof dozens\nof plans...\n$400\nNiagara Loam range from\n$100 to $1500 or mors\nMONTHIY PAYMENTS\n6\n12\n15\n$71.41\n$37.02\n$31.13\ntoonj  ,t\\ $1,500 art llfo-irmirad\nof no ixtra teat fo yov.\nIIAGARA\nLOANS\nTRY REALLY LIVING:\nEnjoy the advantages of a truly modern bathroom in\nyour home. We have a wide range af plumbing fixtures\nat prices to meet the most exacting demands.\nDON'T   DELAY\nBecome One of Our  Many Satisfied  Customer,\nKootenay Plumbing and Heating\n351   Baker  St. CO   LTD. Phons 66B\nEnter Judgment\nAnd Costs\nAgainst Socreds\nCALGARY (CP)-Judgment for\n$12,400 and costs of $150 was .entered Tuesday at the court house by\nJames D.'MacDonald, Calgary barrister, against John Landeryou, Social Credit MLA from Lethbridge,\nand Roy S. Lee, Social Credit MLA\nfrom Taber.\nMr. Justice Neil Primrose granted\nMr. MacDonald a summary judgment, a judgment without the need\nof going to trial, ln Supreme Court\nchambers and lt was immediately\nentered at the clerk's office.\nThe judgment is apportioned evenly, each defendant being liable\nfor $6,200 and half the costs.\nA. W. Ludwig, appearing for the\ntwo MLAs who were disqualified\nfrom sitting in the last legislature\nbecause they were illegally renting\na building to the provincial government, consented to the summary\njudgment.\nR. H. Barron, counsel for Mr.\nMacDonald, did not proceed with\nthe other portion of the order he\nfiled last week\u2014a motion to cite\nboth defendants with contempt of\ncourt and have them jailed.\nMany Attend\nLaughton Rites\nClose to 90 oldtimers, friends and\nrelatives were present and there\nwere many floral tributes at St.\nPaul's United Church Tuesday afternoon for the funeral of welj\nknown Nelson pioneer and old-\ntimer, David Laughton.\nRev. G. W. Payne officiated at\nthe service with Mrs. T J. S. Ferguson assisting at the organ. Two\nhymns, \"O Love That Wilt Not Let\nMe Go\" and \"What ,A Friend We\nHave In Jesus,\" were sung.\nHonorary pallbearers included\nDr. T. M. Au!d, D. Wade, R. L.\nBruce, E. J. Boyes, E. Calblck, W.\nEuerby, F. Goucher, G. Lester, Dr.\nN, E. Morrison, R. G. Joy, C. Morris,\nM. Michelson. I. G. Nelson, E. Olson, R. A. Peebles, F. Phillips, J.\nRobertson, A. T. Richards, W. Stewart, C. Sewell, E. J, Leveque, T. S.\nStenson, E. Swanson, B. Wallace,\nW. J. Sturgeon. Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson and Alderman G, Eckmier.\nActive pallbearers were C. Belt-\nner, C. lsakson, S. J. Newell, J, McCuaig, J. Long and J. R. Swanson.\nInterment was in the Knights of\nPythias plot ,of Nelson Memorial\nPark.  '\nRetired railroader, active citizen\nand resident of Nelson for 58 years,\nMr. Laughton died Saturday at Kootenay Lake General Hospital at the\nage of 04.\nAMONG LOVELY FLOATS participating In\nthe big Mld-8ummer Bonspiel parade Monday\nnight was the Hockey Booster Club's Bonspiel\nqueens' float, above. Five of the seven queens rode\non the float. They were the Misses Joyce Moore,\nDorothy Bay, Marguerite Buhman, Florence Pere-\npelkln and Bunny Armson. In other floats'were\nElizabeth Relkoff ahd Lillian Miller. Bonspiel\nparade chairman was George Benwell and marshal\nwas A. B, GWker.\u2014Vogue photo.\nDecides Cancer\nNot Due to\nCigaret Smoking\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Tests with\nmice during an 18-month period\nhave revealed no connection between smoking and lung cancer, the\nBritish Empire Cancer Campaign\nannounced Tuesday.\nBut preliminary research suggested, a connection between cancer of\nthe stomach and certain soil characteristics, the report said. It said\nthere was increasing recognition of\nmany naturally-occurring substances capable of inducing cancer.\nThe report said that two preparations of artificially-produced\ntar from cigaret smoke have been\ntested in five strains of mice over\n18 months in tests at Leeds. There\nhas been a \"completely negative\nresult to date.\"\nResearch scientists from Britain,\nCanada, New Zealand, Australia,\nSouth Africa and Uganda are helping in the campaign.\nLeader Plays\nDictator Role\nBy RANGA8WAMY 8ATAKOPAN\nNEW DELHI (AP) - A fiery\nschoolmaster is determined to\nbreak an autonomous state for\nSikhs. He is causing some anxious\nmoments for government officials.\nThe Sikhs, a warrior sect within\nthe Hindu religion, are concentrated\nin Punjab state but are a minority\nthere. Some of the more extreme\nSikh nationalists want a new state,\nwith a Sikh majority, carved out of\nthe Punjab and neighboring states.\nThe Sikh demands carry potential dynamite in an India wher$\nreligious tensions sometimes explode. The Sikh nationalist agitation last year resulted in riots in\nAmritsar and Ludhiana. This spring\nPunjab officials banned the shouting of slogans inorganized processions.\nWENT TO TEMPLES\nThe ban was a signal for the\nSikh extremist organization, the\nShiomani Akali Dal, to launch a\n\"morcha\" \u2014 literally, an agitation.\nIt started with Sikhs first going to\ntheir temples, then walking into the\nstreets shouting slogans in open\ndefiance of the government ban.\nThe \"morcha'' still is going strong.\nThousands of Sikhs have been arrested.\nSupporters of the Akali Dal have\nbeen spurred by their winning 132\nout of 134 seats contested in recent\nelections for committees to manage\nSikh temples. The other two seats\nwent to Sikhs supporting the Pun\njab government and opposing a\nSikh state.\nThe Akali Dal leader. Master Tara\nSingh-, was among the first arrest\ned. His title of \"master\" derives\nfrom his former schoolmaster career. His flowing white beard match\nes his white robes and white tur\nban. He is the fatherly spark of\nthe Akali Dal, carefully coaching\nits every action. He does not hesitate to talk in terms of revolution,\nbloodshed and \"direct action\" to\nachieve  his  objective.\nThe word \"singh,\" meaning lion,\nis part of every Sikh's name. It\ndesignates him as a fearless warrior,\na member of Hinduism's most militant sect. Orthodox Sikhs do, not\ncut their hair or beards, for they\nrefuse to let a knife touch their\nskin \u2014 unless it happens in battle.\nTurbans cover their long hair, Their\nreligion requires each to carry a\ndagger.\nThere  are  about 6,000,000 Sikhi.\nForks Resident\nDies al Nelson\nResident of the Kootenay-Boundary district for over 30 year, Paul\nOsachoff of Grand Forks died at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nTuesday at the age of 73.\nMr. Osachoff was visiting his\ndaughter, Mrs. William Hadikan, at\nPassmore, when he became ill and\nentered hospital at Nelson.\nBorn in Russia in 1882, Mr. Osachoff came to Canada and to Vere-\ngin, Sask,, in 1898. He married in\nVeregin and farmed there for a\nfew years before moving to Brilliant. He came to Taghum in 1924\nand i# 1930 noved to Slocan tfark,\nMr. Osachoff spent a, year in Castlegar in 1949 before going to Grand\nForks where he had since made his\nhome.\nHe is survived by his wife; two\nsons, Nick of Grand Forks and Mike\nof Salmo; three dauehters, Mrs.\nWilliam Hadikan of Passmore, Lucy\nOsachoff of Vancouver \u25a0 and Mrs.\nPaul Markoff of Slocan Park; two\nbrothers, Fred of Mikado, Sask., and\nGeorge of Castlegar; two sisters,\nMrs. Dora Amootishkin of Pincher\nCreek, Alta., Mrs. Anastasla Podovinikoff of Veregin, Sask., and 10\ngrandchildren.\nFuneral services will be held in\nPassmore.\nThe Weather\nNelson  55 88 \u2014\nHalifax   57 73 .17\nToronto     54 76 \u2014\nRegina     63 72 .75\nCalgary - 50 78 .01\nKimberley  51 83 \u2014\nCrescent Valley   48 85 \u2014\nKaslo   53 80 \u2014\nPenticton   55 90 \u2014\nVictoria     50 65 \u2014\nSpokane   56 87 \u2014\nMrs. E. Ryleyr\nOldtimer, Dies\nFormeV Nelson resident for many\nyears. Mrs. Elizabeth Anne Ryley\ndied in hospital Sunday at Victoria.\nShe had been residing with Mrs.\nNorman MacLeod, also a former\nNelsonite.        '\nMrs. Ryley made her home on\nSilica Street while in Nelson and\nalso spent some time at Queen's\nBay. Until the death of her husband, she resided at Moyie and\nlater Metaline Falls, Wash.\nShe Is survived by two sons, Bryan of. 424 Houston Street, Nelson,\nand James of Fernie.\nFuneral services for Mrs. Ryley\nwill be held in Victoria Wednesday\nor Thursday.\nU.K. Exports to\nCanada Lower\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 British exports\nto Canada are down \u00a38,000,000 for\nthe first six months of 1955 as compared to last year, provisional trade\nfigures  showed   Monday.\nA board of trade spokesman, noting the trend, said \"We are always\nanxious at any decline in exports;\nand particularly when it applies to\nCanada.\"\nAt the same time, imports from\nCanada have jumped sharply, five-\nmonth figures for  this year show.\nBritish exports to Canada up to\nJune 30 have been provisionally estimated at \u00a361,831,000. For the same\nperiod last year, they were \u00a367,-\n848,000...\nThe Liberal newspaper, the News\nChronicle, suggests that Britain's\nexport trade with Canada is \"slip'\nping ominously.\" and anxiety is\nbeing felt with particular regard to\nimports in the first five months\nthis year worth \u00a3140,391,000. Last\nyear at the same time, imports from\nCanada  totalled only  \u00a391,203,000.\nCoast Ad Agency\nIn New Quarters\nVANCOUVER - When James Lo-\nvick & Company Ltd., was formed\nin 1948, the office was a Hotel Vancouver room. This week, seven years\nand $30,000,000 worth of advertising\nlater, Canada's fourth largest agency\nmoves into the Lovick Building, a\n12,000 square-foot modernistic headquarters at 1178 West Pender.\nHeaded by dynamic J. E. H. (Jimmy) Lovick, the company has grown\nfrom that hotel room with a staff\nof seven into a national organization\nwith offices in seven Canadian cities and combined staff in excess of\n150. Besides Vancouver, the offices\nar ein 'Calgary, Edmonton, Regina,\nWinnipeg, Toronto and Montreal.\nThe newt three-storey headquarters is a completely fireproof, reinforced concrete structure with an\nall glass front and back, designed\nby architect R. R. McKee to allow\nthe maximum of natural daylight.\nA television theatre and projection room dominate the first floor\nwhich is on basement level. This\ntheatre can hold 40 people for\nlarge presentations while individual showings are provided for within the projection room.\nMain executive offices are built\naround three sides of an outdoor ornamental pool and garden area at\nthe rear of the building which faces\non Dunsmuir Street. Art, copy and\nmedia departments take up the\nfront of the main floor facing Pender Street. The top floor is designed for office space.\n\"We find that business organizations are looking at advertising as a\nmeans of making sales and not as a\ngimmick to .play with\" explained\nMr. Lovick.\nStudy Natural Gas Offer. . .\nRossland Cracks Down   <\nOn City Fire Hazards\nRevised Draws\nFor Bonspiel\nA switch in Midsummer Bonspiel\ndraws in women's play was made\nlate Tuesday night.\nTo permit attendance at afternoon\nevents, the women's games scheduled for 2 p.m. were changed to 10\na.m. Men's 10 a.m. games were\nchanged to 2 p.m.\nThe draw:\n10 a.m.\u2014Mrs. Kennedy, Claresholm vs Mrs. FaUcfaski, Nelson; Mrs.\nGibbons, Chilliwack vs Mrs. Keenan, Champion; Mrs. Rogers, Edgeley\nvs Mrs. Smith, Rossland; Mrs. Purvis, New Westminster vs Mrs. Kuntz\nNelson; Mrs. DeGirolamo, Nelson vs\nMrs. Craig, Nelson.\n6 a.m. \u2014 Mitchell vs King; Kor-\ndich vs Owens; Farenholtz vs Edwards; Treble vs Towriss; Zak vs\nKaila.\n8 a.m. \u2014 Cubbins vs Gillespie;\nHunt vs Hough; McKeen vs Moore;'\nWallace vs Moir; McGowan vs\nStonehouse.\nBlack Sees Flood\nAreas of Slocan\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Hon, W. D.\nBlack, MLA for Nelson-Creston\nconstituency and Provincial Secretary, visited the flood damage areas\nof Slocan City, Silverton, Three\nForks and Sandon Tuesday.\nMr. Black also visited other points\nof interest, including the Dewar\nLight and Power .Company plant\nwhere he viewed the plant pipeline,\ndamaged in the Spring floods, also\nthe Western Exploration Mill at\nSilverton which resumed operation\nTuesday after a three week interruption because of floods.\nThe guest was honored at a luncheon at Glacier View Auto Court\nand a dinner at the New Market\nHotel, attended by members of the\nSlocan District Board ' of Trade,\nSlocan City council and New Denver and Silverton Village Commissioners.\nMr. Black was accompanied on his\ntrip to New Denver by N. F.\nBrookes and returned Tuesday\nnight With S. R. Dewis.\nROSSLAND \u2014 Report of Fire\nChief Dave Bisset to Rossland City\nCouncil Monday night stated that he\nand the assistant fire marshal H.\nJenns had made inspections of many\npremises during the past month.\nOrders were issued to the owners\nof the following premises to make\ncertain alterations and installations\nto provide a greater measure of\nsafety, as well as complying with\nthe Fire Marshal Act governing\nbuildings of the type mentioned.\nOrwell Hotel, Irvin Hotel, Empire\nBlock, Rossland Apartments, Vetere\nBlock, Allan Hotel, Columbia 'Apartments, Wise Apartments and Wilson Apartments. An order was issued the owner of the Queen's Apartments to discontinue occupancy\nof the premises, since it is considered unfit for occupancy in its present state. Time limits have been set\nin all cases. Failure to comply will\nresult in prosecution.\nA general tightening of regulations hai been called for by the\nfire marshal's department ilnce\nthe disastrous fire In Nelson, particularly with multl - dwelling\npremises\nC. H. Smith, representing the Inland National Gas Company from\nVancouver, told council that his\ncompany was interested in bringing gas to the district and distributing it. Feeling very certain now\nthat the gas company will be able\nto bring gas here, Mr. Smith stated\nthey would like to negotiate distribution agreements in Rossland. He\nclaimed that, with a franchise to\nservice the city with gas, such\nservice would be almost certain by\n1957. Mayor Harold Elmes promised\ncouncil would give this matter immediate study.\nCouncil passed a motion that a\ndog-tax colle::'jr be appointed.\nTransfer of a trades-licence for\ndelivering groceries was requested\nby P. J. Kennedy and granted by\ncouncil.\nLetters from the Hon. R. E, Som\nmers and P. A. Gaglardi signified\nthat the reconstruction of Black\nBear Hill will be carried out this\nyear with orders already having\nbeen given for this project.\nApplications of C. Tindall and P.\nTaylor for sewer connections were\nreferred to the improvement and\ndevelopment committee.\nA letter from P. McCarthy of the\nPublic Works Department stated\nthat the drainage problem on Black\nBear Hill would be given attention\nafter the reconstruction of that portion of the highway.\nInstallation of sewers is now at a\nstandstill according to Alderman H.\nKeffer, but work will start again\nwhen the necessary pipe arrives,\npossibly next week.\nAlderman H. L. Christian reported tha? blasting of rock at the\nball park to complete the ditching\nthere was nearly finished, and already showing results. That part of\nthe grounds is drying out. This will\nfinish the outside ditching. Forty-\neight feet of ditching \"which remains to be done at Cook Avenue\nPark will not be completed this\nyear.\nMayor Elmes and Alderman W,\nKeane will represent Rossland at\nthe UBCM convention this year.. D.\nCamozzi and S. Bremner will attend the assesors' convention.\nA request from the Royal Cana\ndian Shows lo set up in Rossland\nin August was not granted.\nMAKE 8URVEY\nAlderman Keane reported that he\nand W. Wadeson had made a survey\nof the water situation at the extreme north of the city boundaryi\nMr. Wadeson recommended that a\nlarger pump be installed to serve\nthe area, and inquiries have been\nsent to Pumps and Power Ltd., concerning this. Alderman Keane said\nthe people of Rossland were questioning why a re-assessment would\ntake place this year, and felt an\nexplanation was in order. Mayor\nElmes explained that the Equalization of Assessments Act had ordered\nthat re-assessment take place in the\nnext four years, and all assessments\nbrought to a certain standard. This\ncouncil had decided it wiser to\ncomplete the re-assessment this\nyear rather than do it piece-meal\nover the next four years.\nLONG-TERM   CURE\nSome discussion concerning the\ncondition of streets and sidewalks\nin Rossland due to the many rainfalls this year resulted in Mayor\nElmes stating thai the Board of\nWorks was going to put its attention on drainage, as that is the only\nlong-term cure for the situation.\nA letter will be sent the Department of Public Works requesting\nit to identify crosswalks on Columbia Avenue by white metal buttons or by  painting.\nIt was decided that monthly reports would be requested from the\nbuilding inspector and the electrical\ninspector.\nReceipts for the City of Rossland\nto the end of June stand at $148,723-\n.77 with disbursements $128,307.15.\nPHONE  1844 FOR CLASSIFIED-\nIn the Nick of Time\nNICOSIA Cyprus (Reuters)\u2014Minutes before a powerful, 17-pound\ntime bomb was due to go off, an\narmy , explosive experts removed\nIt from the chimney of the land\nregistry office here and neutralized\nit.\nThe office adjoins the British\ncommissioner's office and the court\nbuildings.\nDiscovery of the time-bomb follows by two days a daylight bombing of another government office\nduring the visit to this troubled\nBritish land colony of Colonial Secretary Alan Lennox-Boyd.\nThe bombings began in April, to\nemphasize the \"Enosis\" (union with\nGreece) campaign. An underground\nterrorist organization is suspected\nin the bomb incidents.\nMan Returned From\nOntario to Stand\nTheft, Forgery Charges\nJohn Schmidt will appear In city\nj cpurf today to face two charges, one\nof theft of over $700 and the other\nforgery of a $2500 check.\nSchmidt was apprehended by RCMP at Owen Sound, Ont., and Chief\nof Police Robert Harshaw flew there\nSaturday to escort him back to Nelson to stand charges today.\nHe is a former employee of the\nHume Hotel.\nKLEE.JBURN\nWE8TERN  MONA\nGALT - GREEN\nCANMORE   Briquettes\n--Coal\njettet ^\"w*\"\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\nARCTIC CATHEDRAL,\nMost northerly cathedral in the\nworld is the Anglican AU Saints'\nCathedral at Aklavik, N.W.T.\nAnswer False Alarm\nNelson Fire Department was callpd\nto another false alarm Tuesday at\n11:18 a.m.\nThe call came from the corner of\nHigh and Pine Streets and was believer] to have been made by children at play.\nUse FIREPROOF BLOCKS\nWHEN   YOU   BUILD   YOUR   GARAGE\nNo repairs or upkeep to worry about.\nUse, concrete blocks and\nBuild for a Lifetime   '\nTotal Cost of Blocks for\nAverage Garage $135.00\nDelivered in Nelson.\nWrit* or  phone  Trill  2105 \"collect\" for full   Information  or\ncontact K. W. DIXON Co., NELSON.    -\nKORPACK Cement Products Co, Ltd.\nSupplier for the  Kootenay of .Blocks  (Cinder or Concrete),\nChimney Blocks\n154 Wellington St. Troil, B.C. Phone 2105\nFEMALE HELP WANTED\nTwo bright, honest young, clerks for retail store,\nWilling to  learn with  advances, steady employment\nfor right party.\nAPPLY NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT SERVICE.\nAre Your Cheques as\nWell Protected\nAs he Is?\nThey Can Be\nWith   An\nF&E\nComplete thredding and Impregnation of Indelibly-Inked\nnumeralt into cheque paper\nfibre*, makes the imprint\nAL801_qTELY ALTERATION-PROOF\nAVAILABLE IN 3 STYLES OF.\nINDIVIDUALIZED PREFIXES.\nWe Service What We Sell\n536 Word St. Phone 200\n \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 I\n:  \u25a0    ...  :\u2014?\"^\u2014\n-\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0*:\u25a0;.\u25a0\u25a0,\u2022   ;    r~ 7_T_\u2014: ; ~' : 7\nIN \"SILVERY SLOCAN\"...\nFishing Rods Give Way to Counters\nAs Word of Uranium Find Spreads\nSLOCAN CITY \u2014 The Slocan is wary of \"rich strikes\".\nAnd it knows by .heart the gray-bearded prospector's tale of\ngold in the hills.\nToo often in its long and colorful mining history it has\nparticipated in the wild excitement of the big strike only to\nbe disillusioned as it slowly petered out.\nSo today most residents of the \"Silvery Slocan\" are sitting back waiting for a uranium find on their doorstep to\nprove itself before they show too much enthusiasm.\nBut the find, since news of it leafted out in May, is showing all the signs of a valuable\ndeposit,\nAlready more than 250 mining\nclaims have been filed and they\nare continuing to come in at a rate\nof 10 a week. Jackson Basin Mining\nCompany, whose claim-filing wakened the uranium fever ;md the\nonly company known to be involved, has 90 of these claims, covering\nwhat is believed the main body of\nore. Other claims are speculative.\nJackson Basin, which also has 18\nmen working silver-lead-zinc hold\nIngs at Retallac, 40 miles North of\nSlocan, has four field hands busy\ndetermining the quantity and value\nof the ore body. A line survey has\nbeen completed.\nA Nelson construction company\nhas begun excavation work at the\nmouth of an old tunnel in the heart\nof the strike to further determine\nthe extent of the ore body.\nTwo students, one in geology and\nthe other in physics, David Morgan,\nformerly of Wales, and Piero Ariotti\nof Northern Italy, are ascertaining\nthe amount of radio-active ore in\n-4-\nthe rock and they are apparently\nfinding enough to keep them on the\njob six days a week for the rest of\nthe Summer.\nIn their map-strewn cabin at Slo\ncan City the bewhiskered Piero\nand his fellow worker put a counter\non a sample of ground rock from\nthe claims and it returned a 2000\ncount.\nThe find is located on Lemon\nCreek six miles South of Slocan\nCity and covers 129,500 feet square\nof rugged timber and brush-covered mountain. The creek was once\nas famous for gold as it promises to\nbe for uranium today and traces of\ngold car* still be found by the pan-\nner. Speculative claims plus the\noriginal 93 cover 4000 acres.\nIf most local resldenti don't\nfee| inclined to drop their jobs\nand head for the hills with a\ncounter In hand, at least outsiders\nare impressed.\n\"I've been getting as many as\n25 inquiries a week,\" Mine Recorder W. E. Graham says, \"Some\n%r%e*i\/& yTiecCtifi\nFROM\nCJviiL\nSweet Mix Pickles\n49'\n26 oz\nior\nPotato Chips\n7 oz. pkg.  mf W\nNalley's  Toaited\nMarshmallows\n15 oz. pkg.\n39\u00ab\n69 oz.\nnflTi\nley's Dills\n79*\n|or.\nSalad Time\nDressing\n37'\n65'\n12 oz. jar.\t\n24 oz. jar\nChili Con Carne\n15 oz. tin.   mt J\nOVERWAITEA Sal\nPHONE 4\nmo\nWE DELIVER\nIN THE GREAT\nOUTDOORS!\nTHERE'S NO BETTER PLACE\nTO ENJOY YOURSELF\nTHAN AT\nTROUT LAKE HOTEL\nAND COTTAGES\nat\nFamous Trout Lake B.C.\n4 STAR ACCOMMODATION\nat\nREASONABLE RATES\nHotel Rooms From $2.50 Up To $5.00\nSingle or $3.50 Per Person Double For\nRoom With Private Bath. Cottages, Fully\nModern With Showers, Plumbing, Propane\nHeating and Cooking, Fully Equipped For\nOnly $7.00 Per Day.\nATTRACTIONS\nThe best 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  room   is open  every\nday  and  evening-and  the  meals\nand cooking are beyond Compare!\nFOR  FURTHER  INFORMATION\nWRITE: EARLE HATFIELD\nTrout Lake, B.C.\nby telephone, tome In person.\"\nPeople on their holidays are buying geiger counters instead of fishing rods and detouring through the\nSlocan Valley to try their luck fit\nthis newest of mining fads.'\nStill, not all valley residents are\nimmune to the catchy uranium fever. Some have shucked their pride,\ninvested in counters and put on\ntheir climbing boots.\nJoseph Braun of Winlaw, 15 miles\nsouth of Slocan City, has filed six\nclaims recently. Harold Avis of\nnearby. Pewy Siding has staked\neight, George Swanson and Mrs. M.\nWhite, both of Winlaw, have each\nfiled 10. These are recent claims.\nThere are many earlier ones and\nthey are staked all the way from\nWinlaw to the outskirts of Slocan\nCity.\nA HALF DOZEN\n'There must be half a dozen counters in the area,\" Mr. Graham es^\ntimates. \"It isn't uncommon to see\nsomeone park alongside Number\nSix highway and clamber up a steep\nbank, counter in hand, to try in a\nfew snatched moments, to strike it\nrich.\"\nThe harassed mine recorder \u2014'\nthere haven't been so many claims\nstaked since the fabulous days at\nthe turn of the century when the\nSlocan was famous for silver-lead-\nzinc\u2014has bought a counter for himself but \"I've been kept so busy filing other people's claims I haven't\nhad a chance to get out with it,\" he\ncomplains good-naturedly.\nNEVER IDLE\nNevertheless, it isn't standing idle.\nHe keeps it in his post officfe which\ndoubles as a mine recording office,\nand many who stumble on a promising-looking rock bring it in to \"put\non the counter.\"\nAnd still others borow it to trudge\nthe nearby mountains which have\nfelt the prospectors' tread since the\n1890's, only now the sharp prospector's pick has been replaced by the\nsmooth touch of the modern geiger\ncounter.\nDaniel Ban of Trail and his brothers James and George of New\nWestminster first knew there was\nradio-active ore in Lemon Creek. It\nis their original claims that form\nthe nucleus of the Jackson Basin's\n93 claims. The old \"Try Again\"\nmine has been restaked to become\nthe \"Discovery.\" It readily yields a\n1200 count\nWASHED OUT\nThe road to the uranium is winding and narrow and.pocked with\nholes dug by the Slocan's first prospectors who sought the gold it promised. It was washed out this Spring\nslowing operations. Lemon Creek's\nswift, clear waters still give up\ntraces to the pan and eight gold\nclaims have been staked in recent\nyears high up the creek by Howard\nParker of Slocan City, who has\nfaith there is still gold there.\nAnd so the silvt\/\/ Slocan whose\nrugged, picturesque hills have been\na challenge, since the first explorer\nsighted them may again keep that\nmany-times made and broken pro\nmise of riches in a new and modern\nway.\nKoolaree Echoes\nTwo Die iir East\nKootenay Mishaps\nGOLDEN \u2014 Industrial accidents\nat separate locations claimed .two\nlives recently in Golden district,\nRagner Skoldquist, employee of\nDawson-Wade in construction work\non the Trans-Canada Highway\nKicking -Horse section, died in\nstantly when a rock slide dropped\ndown onto the highway where a\n:rew was working. Others scattered\nin time but he got the full impact\nof the slide. He was 57 years old\nand is survived by his wife and\ndaughter. Funeral services were at\nVancouver.\nMike Kopytko, age 28, died in an\naccident at Giant Mascot Mine at\nSpillimachene. Prior to engaging in\nmining work he had been employed\nat Golden and Field for several\nyears. He grew up at Alonsa, Man.\nFuneral service took place at Sacred Heart Church in Golden. Surviving are his wife, two daughters\nand one son at Spillimachene, his\nparents at Alonsa, Man., four sisters, Eva, Anne, Christinia and Elsie\nat Alonsa, and eight brothers, Steve\nin Korea, Bill, George, Boris, Amel.\nRussell,    Donald    and    Larry    at\nContract Let for\nForks Road Work\nA $385,090.80 contract has been\nlet by the Department of Highways\nfor reconstruction of eight miles\nof road near Grand Forks and tenders have been called for reconstruction of 8.37 miles of highway\nfrom Yahk to Kingsgate.\nThe contract'was let to P. F.\nLaw Construction Ltd., Vancouver,\nfor an eight mile section between\nGilpin and Christina Lake, on the\nSouthern Trans-Provincial Highway.\nRed Sox Whip\nMontana Nine\nNATAL \u2014 Playing a return game\nat the Natal ball park, Natal-Michel\nRed Sox scored a one-sided 12-2\nwin over the Eureka, Mont., nine\nbefore k fair crowd. Previously in\na game played across the border\nin Montana the Red Sox scored a\nclose 9-7 win over Eureka.\nIn a game played previously at\nFernie the Natal-Michel Red Sox\ndumped the highly touted Fernie\nFalcons 7-1.\nHAPPY DAY NO. 8 - This look-\ned as if it might be Jupiter Pluvius\nday with the overcast that greeted\nus, nevertheless, things went along\nas usual. We did have our morning\ndevotions led by Bob Gray in the\ndining hall and Freddy conducted\nthe Chapel service in the lodge\nwith Gordon Service at the organ.\nSunday is always a free and easy\nday in camp which gave the boys\nan opportunity to catch up on their\nboating and to get in lots of swimming for it did clear up nicely in\nthe afternoon.\nThe evening campfire saw Cabin\n8 present the story of Joseph in a\nvery splendid dramatization with\nJohn Groom doing an excellent job\nin the part of Joseph. Most of the\nprogram was devoted to the singing\nof Spirituals and rounds.,\nHAPPY DAY NO. 7: We like to\nsee that heavy ground fog for it\njust means the sun is right above\nit and by the time breakfast is over\nthe camp is bathed in its warmth.\nThe boys are in the home stretch\nnow which spells this much: that a\nstage of perfection has been reached which makes It hard to judge\nthe tables or the cabins. Yesterday\nwe even let the ladies, Mrs. Service\nand Mrs. Robins, be the judge of\ntables and they found it ditflcult.\nThere is a tang in the air and the\nsmell of linseed oil, it's those craftsmen of Jack Steed's advancing in\ntheir driftwood project of lamps,\netc,, Stanley Vyse and Michael\nFlood being the most advanced in\nthe group.\nThe Rifle club has seventeen\nworking for badges. Gordon Service has completed his five targets\nfor the Bronze; Lloyd Cook has\nthree; Garry Brothers, Joe German,\nRon Allerlon, Gary Mitchell, Doug\nBishop, John MacLeod and Marvin\nMcLean all have two targets while\nthe following have one, Ross Petersen, Robert McLean, Don Daly,\nHenry McLachlen, Ken Gustafsen,\nBarry Wilson, Dave Carroll, Daryll\nMattson.\nThis morning a new course in leadership was commenced with the\nJunior Camp leaders and future\nprospective leaders under Director\nRobins' guidance. Junior Camp leaders are Ron Service, Jim Sadler\nHenry McLachlan, Denis Stanley\nMichael Bennett, Martin Harts,\nGary Brothers, Ron Hale and Joe\nGerman. Prospective leaders are\nNoel Cutler, Jon McLeod, Ken Bry-\nden, Don Armstrong, Norman Johnson.\nThe Koolaree Weatherbird says\nmake the most of every fine day so\nwe did just that and held our track\nmeet with following results:\n100 Yard Dash \u2014 Cabin 5 took all\nthree places with Stanley, Mitchell\nand Armstrong finishing in that or\nder for the seniors.\nIn the Intermediate event F. McClelland, cabin 2, first with Berry\nand Carroll of Cabin 3 in second\nand third place.\n\u25a0     Senior Shot Put \u2014 G. Brothers.!\nD. Stanley and Joe German.\nj    Intermediate   Shot   Put \u2014 John\nmm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1955\u20143\nMacLeod, Bev. Berry, Gary Mitchell.\nDishpan Race \u2014 Cabin 5 and Cabin 3 were the winners.\nSenior Football Throw \u2014 Brothers, German, Service.\nIntermediate Football Throw \u2014\nBerry, Parker, McClelland.\nLog Bucking: Senior: Cabin 5,\nStanley, German and Mitchell were\nthe Senior winners, while Cabin 2\nbeat Cabin 3 for the Intermediate\nhonors.\nSenior Crosscountry: Stanley,\nMcLachlan, German.\nIntermediate Crosscountry: MacLeod, Cutler, Robert Wilson.\nWe welcomed back to* camp our\ntwo Padres, Rev. J. Taylor of Trail\nand Jim Manly of the Slocan* From\ntheir reports we have been enjoying\nvery good weather compared to the\ncity dwellers. These fellows were\nclipped for sure, we hardly recognized these beardless ones. Van\nDyke Steed went part way with\nthe razor and Gray has yet to succumb.\nA lively campfire took place and\nJim Manly has revived his Cabin\nTwo crew so that they were able\nto put on a play entitled \"The King\nWith the Terrible Temper\" much\nto the amusement of all the campers. Scribes are up to the minute\nwith news, they now have reporters dashing in at the last minute\nwith choice bits for the gossip\ncolumn. They find this a sort of\nmeans of dashing in a bit of uncen-\nsored news. It's getting close to\n?ow Wow night so perhaps they are\nbaiting the paddle. Wot say Gellatly,\nand Smith?\nI guess we have had much better\nweather here at camp than you\nhave had at home Mom. Any contacts we have had with city folks\ncertainly Indicates more rain than\nwe see. The fellows are even working on sun tans now and staying in\nswimming much longer. Good night\nfor now and we'll be seeing you\nFriday.\nRossland Association Seeks $12,000\nLoan lor Curling Rink Construction\nROSSLAND \u2014 A request from\nthe Rossland Girls' softbpll team\nfor a grant of $250 was made at a\nmeeting of the Rossland Civic Activities Association. Directors granted this amount, stipulating that requisitions be submitted during the\nseason and expenses be kept as low\nas possible. Mrs. W. Ling, who attended on behalf of the-team, with\nMrs. S. Price and Joan Molyneux,\npromised a financial statement\nwould be turned inn at the end of\nthe season.\nPresident W. Torry announced\nthat the Junior Boys' Baseball had\nbeen granted $100 at a special RCAA\nmeeting. I Lavarato had requested\n$150 for this team, and was told he\ncould apply for more later, if it was\nfound necessary.\nWith the Rossland Curling Club\nhaving received promises of $6000\nfrom citizens of Rossland, and pos^\nsibly $1000 more, the RCAA had\napplied for a bank loan of $12,000.\nThis amount is considered sufficient\nto erect the walls and roof for the\nnew curling rink, and to provide ice\nsheets. An engineer's report on the\ncost of the completed curling rink\nis necessary before the bank loan\nis granted, and this report has been\ncausing some delay.\nDirector F. Grubisic, reporting\non the new seating being erected\non the West side of the arena, said\nthe cement work is nearly finished,\nand the framework about three-\nquarters completed. They are waiting for the decking, but the project\nIs progressing M'isfactorily.\nDirectors decided to endeavor to\nraise funds for arena operation, by\noffering various forms of entertainment to the public.\nOf the $40,000 gift from the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company last year, $29,810 has been\nspent to date.\nRECOMMENDED\nrORMlNiSTKr\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Congregation\nof Cranbrook United Church has\nrecommended David Haydeh, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hayden of\nCranbrook to the Kootenay Presby\ntery as candidate for the United\nChurch ministry. He plans to complete his junior matriculation at\nspecial sessions this fall in prepar\nation for beginning the university\nwork toward becoming a minister.\nHis schooling has all been in\nCranbrook. After several years\nwith the city electrical department\nhere he operated a chicken farm\nwhich he recently sold.\nThe treasurer's report showed\n$2157.28 in the sports fund, $245.08\nin the arena operating fund, $147.43\nin the artificial ice and $189.49 in\nthe arena building fund. Lacrosse\ngames in May and June have netted\n$502.78 for the lacrosse team, and\n$210.47 for the RCAA.\n\u25a0 Because some misunderstanding\nexists on teen-age admission to the\nlacrosse games, directors decided to\nplace a sign at the arena to the effect that all youngsters 14 years and\nover must pay student admission\nprices.\nGreenwood Plans\n21st Labor Day\nGREENWOOD \u2014 Greenwood\nwill celebrate its 21st consecutive\nLabor Day it was decided at a meeting here Monday.\nThe meeting named Fred Bell\nchairman of the program, Edward\nCooke, first vice-chairman, Hardy\nLawrence, second vice-chairman\nand Mrs. W. E. McArthur jr., secretary. Committees were formed to\nhandle different events for the\nsports day. Ladies Aid to the United Church will be In charge of a\nfireworks display. There will be a\ndance at night.\nPlanning to move? Call ut\nfirst. Our modern vans and\nskilled movers assure a SAFE\nmove wherever you go. We\nare agents for North American Van Lines, America'*\nleading long distance moving\norganization. It costs no more\nto   enjoy   this   finer   service!\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St\nNelson. B.C.\nPhone 33\nNakusp, Rossland\nSplit Doubleheader,\nNAkuSP \u2014 Nakusp and Rossland\nball teams split a doubleheader in\nNakusp. In the first game of seven\ninnings the visiting team shut out\nNakusp's star pitcher Louis DeRosa\nwith a score of 4-0. Leveratto struck\nout 14 batters, and allowed no runs.\nDeRosa was only able to score five\nstrikeouts, and allowed four runs,\nNakusp battery was DeRosa and\nHempseed, Rossland's Leveratto and\nPrice. H. Wilson was in charge of\nthe game.\nIn the second game B. Patterson\ntook the mound for Nakusp and\nscored a win of 3-1. He was credited with two strikeouts. McLelland\nof Rossland in five innings of play\nstruck out one. Laface, who relieved\nhim in the sixth, struck out three.\nRossland's only run was scored- ln\nthe fourth by Bertoia. Nakusp runs\nwere scored by Highland in the\nfirst, Yanagasawa in the fifth and\nYoshida in the eighth.\nPatterson and Hempseed formed\nthe battery for Nakusp. McLelland\nand Laface with Price as catcher\nwere Rossland's battery.\nWoodworkers' Industrial\nUnion of Canada\n^       Local 405\nBox 237    Cranbrook, B.C.    Phone 82\nFor the interests of the woodworkers and the public,\nyour executive wishes to announce these important\nchanges.\nYour new business manager will be Ray Masse.\nThe office has been moved to 133-9 Ave.  >\nWe trust these changes will facilitate the good\ncause of our union.\nLive in Ridgewood\nCOUNTRY ATMOSPHERE WITH   CITY   CONVENIENCES\n3  Miles East of Nelson\nMcNutt Cayzor Stock\nBought by MUC Corp.\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 A majority\nof stock owned by the estate of\nthe late Paul V. McNutt in Cayzor\nAthabaska Mines Ltd., large Canadian uranium mine development,\nlias been purchased by National\nUnion Electric Corp.. it was anr\nnounced Tuesday.\nThe Cayzor mines are located\nin the Beaverlodge district near\nUranium City, Sask.\nPurchase price of the stock was\nnot disclosed. McNutt, who was\nU.S. ambassador to the Philippines, died March 24.\nNATAL-MICHEL WINS\n3-0 OVE RBLAIRMORE\nNATAL \u2014 Behind the three-hit\npitching of Michael Halko, the Na-1\ntal-Mlchel    little    leaguers    scored '\ntheir first win of the season as they\nscored a 3-0 shutout over the Blairmore Little Leaguers.\nFIREPROOF\nHOUSEHOLD\nSTORAGE\nAGENTS FOR\nWILLIAMS\nLong Distance Moving and Storage\nPHONE 77\nTRUCK TERMINUS\n(NELSON) LTD.\n701 FRONT ST.\nWt\u00bbT     KM    \u2022\/    KOOJtNAV       LAKt\n>'\nLARGE SERVICED LOTS\n\u2022 Access To Lake\n\u2022 Unsurpassed Views\n\u2022 North Shore\n\u2022 3 Miles East of Nelson\n\u2022 Public   Utility   Water   Services\n\u2022 City Electrical Power\n\u2022 Restricted To Protect Owners\n\u2022 Price Range $575 to $1625\n\u2022 Bridge Will Increase Value\n\u2022 Information Phone 1143\nTha following lots below Ridgewood Road have   been sold: 1, 8, 9, 12, 13, and the lower half ef\nlot 7.  Lots 34, 33, 32, 31 have alio been sold.\nProperty For Sale by Mrs. S. G. Blaylock\n __,\u2014_\u2014\u201e .   .    _,\nmmmmm\nWmHW-y \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ~~'. ~ ' : ~ '\u25a0*\"  ., .  .   .,^ : : \u2014\u2014! ; : .. ..,;.\u25a0 ., \u201e,'. i l\".,!\"-\".-..   .  -,T\nNrlaon Saily Jfouia\nEstablished April 22.  1U02\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nWednesday, July 13, 1955\nRemoval of \"Quick Burners\" a S tep Forward\n\u25a0Removal of old buildings in Nelson\nthat can be categorized as fire hazards\nis a step that is well taken. Deputy Fire\nMarshal and City Council are doing\nthe community a service by taking a\nfirm stand on the matter.\nThere may be complaints from individuals that ancient, but revenue-\nproducing still, buildings have to be\nreplaced, but the community will not\ncomplain. The buildings' removal\nmeans that eventually new, safe structures, built to modern building code\nstandards, will be able to replace them.\nIn the town's centre this is particularly important. The old architecture\nof some landmarks may be fascinating.\nIn fact, some modern structures might\nlook less severe if some of the pleasant,\nimaginative work of past builders\ncould be duplicated in modern materials. But while the ancient structures\nstand they are in the way of something better. They have limited use,\n\u25a0and they hamper progressive plans of\nthose who would improve their community. Their worst feature, of course,\nis that they are of dry, highly flammable material. Their existence endangers other neighboring, more\nworthy structures. How much of a\ndanger they can be was dempnstrated\nin a recent hotel tragedy.\nCondemned residential as well as\nabandoned and former business buildings are going down. Within the city's\nboundaries, Nelson has few serviced\nlots for new homes. The community\ncan ill afford to have serviced land\noccupied by non-usable buildings.\nOrders for removal of the buildings\nsimply are recognition that they like\nmost else have a limit on usefulness;\nthey wear out. There is no possibility\nfor injustices. All owners have the\nright to appeal such orders to the Provincial Fire Marshal for a stay of their\nexecution and for a hearing;\nLETTERS TO THE EDITOR\nLettert to the Editor on any toplo of genuine Interest are welcome If they arc\nbrief, accurate and fair. No letter will be Inserted In whole, or In part, except over the\nsignature and  address of the writer.   Unsolicited  correspondence  cannot   be  returned.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader.    Names ol persons\nasking  questions  will   not   be  published.\nThere    Ib    no   charge   for   this   service.\nQuestions   WILL   NOT    BE   ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except whoro there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy-\nReader, Nelson \u2014 Can you tell me if Mansfeld\nCopperschist, Mining Company, Eisleben,\nGermany, is still operating?\nWe advise you either write to the Minister\nof Economics of the Deutsche Demokratlsche\nRepublik in East Berlin, or to Borne private\nbank in Western Germany which  might be\nable to get information for you. Eisleben is\nsituated in the Soviet occupied zone of Germany and it is impossible to obtain reliable\ninformation direct.\nK. S.,  Kaslo \u2014 Would you please  tell me.\nwhere I could obtain aptitude tests which\ncan be filled out at home? Also, where\ncan I obtain information on various vocations    such    as    engineering,    chartered\naccountancy, and so forth?\nWrite  to the  B.C.  High  School  Correspondence Courses, Weiler Building, Victoria,\nB.C.; and\/or the Institute of Technology Calgary, Alberta. From  both sources  you will\nreceive information on aptitude tests and the\nsubjects you mention.\nB. R. H., Nelson \u2014 Would like to know where\ninformation can be obtained on the Canadian Ground Observers' Corps, how to\njoin, and what duties and responsibilities\nare attached?\nGet in touch with Depot 11, RCAF, Vancouver. Full information will be supplied.\nH. H., Castlegar \u2014 Could you print names and\naddresses   of   a    few    Canadian    textile\nmanufacturers?\nAce Knitting Co., Ltd., Toronto, Ontario\n(cuffing and banding); Cp A. Hardie and Co.,\nLtd., Industrial, Toronto, Ontario; Scholler\nBrothers, Ltd., St. Catherines, Ontario; Ver-\nney Corporation of Canada, Ltd., Montreal.\nWe do not reply by mail unless a self-\naddressed, stamped envelope accompanies\nquestion.\nCollectivism in\nAutomobile Insurance\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014I am writing this letter in reply to an\neditorial, which appeared in the Nelson Daily\nNews on June 21st, re car insurance in Saskatchewan, and the comparative features of\nthe government-operated insurance, with the\nprivate companies.\nI am sure it is the intention of the Nelson\nNews to give a factual story in regards to\nthis question. Therefore I was surprised to\nfind that an editorial was written, before both\nsides of the picture was considered. I am of\nthe opinion that your editorial was written\nfrom a letter by E. N. Davis, which appeared\nin the Canadian Underwriter on behalf of the\nprivate insurance companies.\nIn the second paragraph of your editorial\nI assume that you are speaking of the licence\nplate insurance only. You state that \"under\nSaskatchewan coverage a driver responsible\nfor a collision is faced with $400 deductible \u2014\n$200 on account oi damage to his own car,\nand $200 damage to the other car.\" This is\nonly true if the accident happens in Saskatchewan, but outside Saskatchewan he is fully\ncovered on the damage to the other cart\nThe important feature here that one must\nremember is this coverage comes under the\npolicy that you buy with the licence plate.\nThe cost of this ranges from $5 on a 1934 car\nto $30 for a 1955 limousine. To be more specific\nthe cost for a 1948 medium-priced car is $17\nand this covers you for bodily injury up to\n$20,000, property damage to $2000, collision,\nfire and theft, and comprehensive. The last\nfour items comes under the $200 deductibe\nclause with the exception of property damage\noutside Saskatchewan. In addition there is a\npersonal injury compensation, which covers\nanyone who is Injured in an automobile\naccident. Under this clause if a wage earner\nis killed his primary dependent automatically\nreceives $5000 and a $1000 will be awarde'd\nfor each secondary dependent. If a housewife\nis killed $2000 will be granted to her family.\nCompensation is also provided for permanent\ninjury. This ranges from $500 to $4000. 'in\naddition a weekly indemnity amounting to\n$25 for wage earners and farmers and $20\nfor housewives is paid in those cases where\nthese people are unable to work as a result of\nbeing involved in an accident.\nAll the foregoing coverage comes under\nthe policy that you get with your licence plate\nwhich as I stated before costs $17 for a 1948\ncar. Now I ask anyone to compare this with\nThe Service That Keeps\nB.C. Forests Qreen\nby LEN WALKER\nwhat you can get for $17 from any private\ninsurance company. About the best you can\ndo is your pink slip coverage, which protects\nyou for public liability and property damage,\nbut as for collision, your wrap-around windshields, fire and theft, and passenger hazard,\nthat would be your own responsibility. What\nyou get for $17 in Saskatchewan will cost you\n$65.50 in the neighboring Province of Alberta.\nIf you wished further insurance to reduce\nyour $200 deductible on collision to $50, complete coverage on fire and theft, and comprehensive, and limits on public liability and\nproperty damage to $100,000 and $5000, then\nall you need to do is take out the package\npolicy which would cost you $25 more. There\nis no private insurance company that come\nnear these rates. That is why no political party\nin Saskatchewan will come out and advocate\nthat the present CCF policy be bandoned.\nIt is agreed by all that everyone should\nbe covered by insurance when it comes to\noperating motor vehicles. This is- the only\nway that the general public can have the\nmaximum protection. If this is the case then\nwe must find the molt efficient and economical way to give this to the people, and I am\nsure that the method used in Saskatchewan of\nincluding it with the licence plates is the\nmost logical.\nBy this method all the people pool their\npremiums in a common fund, and they receive\ntheir insurance at cost. That is why the\naccident rate took a downward trend in\nSaskatchewan last year. When the people\nrealize that all the savings comes back to\nthem in reduced premiums, they will be more\nconscious of safety.\nI cannot understand how this can be\nbranded as a monopoly or that automobile\ninsurance under umpteen different companies\nis a greater service to the people.\nIf one looks back into history you will\nrealize that whenever any service was found\nto be done better collectively than individually\nthen collectivism prevailed. For examples we\ncan name water, postal, highways, power,\nhospital, workmen's compensation, etc., and I\nam sure that Saskatchewan has paved the way\nfor automobile insurance, and it will not be\nlong until every province will adopt it regardless of politics.\nHoping that this will give a clear picture\nof Saskatchewan's automobile insurance,\nLEO T. NIMSICK, M.L.A.\nThe Clouds Lift\nA Little      ,\nSince time began man has watched for\nthe passing of dark clouds, with their threat of\nelemental fury. But never has so dark a cloud\nhung over him as the mushroom cloud of the\natomic bomb which rose awesomely over the\nNew Mexico desert ten years ago this month.\nWe have lived under this cloud ever since,\nwhich is not to say we have learned to live\nwith it. Now it seems that there is justification\nfor cautious optimism that this man-made\ncloud may be dispelled \u2014 for some years, at\nany rate \u2014 by the widespread efforts of the\npowers to relax world tension.\nThis is no less welcome because it springs\nmainly from a decision of the Soviets, as\nChurchill once put it, \"to leave off doing\nthings to us which we have not been doing\nto them.\" There is no danger in such a period\nof relaxation if we recognize that, besides\nan accumulation of difficulties within the\nUSSR since the death of Stalin, it is mainly\nour own efforts to build up a common defense\nwhich have brought the Soviets tto this\ndecision. We have won this respite, and it\nwill continue only so long as the Soviets remain impressed by our unity and strength.\nNor is this by any means mainly a military question. Far beyond the importance of\nconvincing the men in the Kremlin that they\ncould not defeat us in war is the importance\n\u25a0 of so strengthening and developing the\neconomic and political unity and the social\nsystem of the free world as to undermine the\nvery belief of Marxists that their system alon^-\noffers a better life for the working man\nOnce we can achieve this \u2014 and we have\ngone some way toward it since the end of\nthe war \u2014 we will have a very different\nworld situation.\u2014Financial Post.\nArticle VII:\nRadio comunication yearly is becoming more and more\nimportant to jjie B.C. Forest\nService and with its development fire losses have been cut\nconsiderably.\n.From within a large room\nsituated in the Forest Service\nbuilding here all radio comu-\nnicatlons for the Nelson Forest District are handled by\nexperienced radio men.\nEntering the room one sees\na long table set on runners on\nthe floor. The reason for the\nI runners, I was told, was so\nthe whole section can be\nmoved forward should work\non the radio equipment be\nneeded. Work then can be\ndone either at the front or the\nback.\nPlaced on the table is the equipment set In a semi-circle where\neverything can be handled from the\nchair in front The operator has\nplenty of space before him for his\nmicrophone and writing pad for\nnotes.\nModern in every way, the setup\nhas a remote control amplifier with\na six channel remote receiver with\neach channel a different frequency.\nThe various channels are needed\ndue to the severe noise received in\nthis mountainous area.\nThere is a channel for district reception and transmission; there is\none for inter-district so there can be\ncommunication with such places as\nVancouver, Victoria, Prince Rupert\nand Kamloops. This frequency can\nbe worked at will.\nThe various channels can be\nchanged in a flash with a dial such\nas a dial phone has. Also attached\nto the equipment is a semi-patch\nsystem that allows contact to be\nmade with anyone In the building\nwithout them coming to the radio\nroom.\nA large transmitter works either\nduplex or simplex. The duplex, like\ntalking on a phone, can be broken\nany time while the simplex allows\nno break in on a conversation. I\nBesides being a monitor  for all\nstations,   the   Nelson   headquarters\nacts as central for all ranger districts as well as the aircraft.\n25 YEARS IN SERVICE\nAt the head of its function is Lawrence Ott who has been in the forestry service for 25 years with the\nlast nine spent in the Nelson district.\nBesides overseeing radio communications, Ott does all repairs\neither in Nelson or out in the district. At headquarters he 'has the\nmost up to date test instruments to\nhandle all the maintenance required. In his station wagon he has\nradio equipment galore ready to hit\nthe road to repair the small units\nin the district.\nThroughout the Nelson District\nthere are about 165 radio sets ranging from small power up to\nabout1 200 watts. These sets are\nspread out over the strategic areas\nwhere they ire used by \"rangers,\nlookout men, boats, aircraft and\npatrolmen.\nWithin the district there are 10\nmobile units which are introduced\ntwo years ago. These have proved\nhighly successful and in some cases\nit was found posslble'to work an entire Nelson network from a single\nposition of the mobile unit.\nThe Service has portable radio\nsets which can be packed Into a fire\nor carried by suppression crews. The\nlarger sets weigh In the'neighborhood of 20 pounds but smaller sets\nweighing seven and a half pounds\nhave also proved valuable.\nEach ranger, and there are 22 in\nthe district, have at their disposal\nseveral sets depending on the size\nof his area within a district.\nAt a scheduled time each day the\nrangers are contacted but they can\nbe contacted at any time should the\nneed arise. Without this type of\ncommunication the forestry job\nwould be much harder.\nIn aircraft use the radio has been\na boon, especially in dropping supplies. Many times the V\/ind may\ncarry the food parcels away from a\n'camp. With radio on the ground the\naircraft can be contacted as to\ndirections ln dropping. Also the aircraft keeps in contact with headquarters every 20 minutes during a\nflight which lets them have an idea\nwhere he Is at all times, in case\nof accidents.\nRadio also plays an Important\nrole in other fields, said Ott. \"Many\nof our tractors are equipped with\nthem. If they happen to be working\nin a remote area constructing roads\nand a fire comes up in another area\nthey can be contacted quickly to\nget on the scene if neded. Also they\ncan be called to go out on another\nproject thus saving time.\n\"Suppression   crews   with 'radio\nsets can let headquarters know the\nextent  of  damage  being  done,\ncan call for extra help on a fire\nneeded.\n\"Although the control statioh is\nnot high powered it is gradually\ngetting that way,\" said Ott. \"It is\nusually open from six in the morning until 10 p.m. but if the hazard\nrequires it we remain open 2-1\nhours a day.\nLike all the other stations if they\nare banged up with fires the\nstandby period is-anywhere from 12\nto 15 hours a day. In bad fire\nseasons they have been known to\nremain open 24 hours a day for\nseveral weeks as close contact is\nkept.\nUnder the requirements of the\nDepartment of Transport all sta\ntions have a call number and if you\nhappen to be listening in when\nthey call, you will be surprised at\nShown at the controls in the radio room of the Forest\nService building in Nelson is operator Bud Butler. From\nthis panel Butler can contact lookouts, mobile units and\naircraft as they scan the country for fires.Wogue photo.\n\u00ab| ;, j||       HHfcKfl^^'**\"     >^*^\n'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0&\u25a0'\u2014\n-\n,jgji\u00bbiSS\u00bbM.\nFrom this bench with its up-to-date testing equipment, Lawrence Ott mends and tests all radio equipment in the Nelson Forest District,\u2014Vogue photo.\nsome of the tongue twisters heard.'\nBefore a lookout can operate a\nset he must go to school where he\nis taught how to use the radio and\nall about it and the equipment.\nEach morning and evening a\nschedule call is made with all\nstations reporting into headquarters.\nWith so many stations to be heard\nfrom it takes time but if an emergency should arise any lookout can\ncut in any time,\nShould an emergency arise a\nswitch can be turned and a gong\nhit which will tell all stations to\nstand by for orders.\nAll stations are kept up to date\non weather reports as the control\nroom each day gets the report from\nthe weather station at Crescent\nValley \u2014 another aid to the ranger\nand lookouts who strive to keep\nour forests green.\nJOINS FAMILY IN DEATH\nTAIPEI, Formosa (AP) \u2014 Police\nsay a man jumped fo his death\nfrom a downtown building because\nhis entire family in the South China\nprovince of Kwangtun had been\nexecuted by the Communists.\nGee Seeks lo Gel\nOld Job Back\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Georgt\nGee, expelled electrical union official, plans court action to establish\nhis right to return to his linesman's\njob with the B. C. electric Company.\nOusted from his business agent's\npost with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (AFL-\nTLC) for alleged Communist activity, and barred from his job because of the union's close-shop contract withthe BCE, Gee said he has\"\ninstructed lawyer Isaac Sbulman\nto seek reinstatement of his working privileges.\nGee, father of four children, has\nan appeal against his expulsion registered for the union's international\nconvention, which will be held in\n1958, and has had other appeals rejected, the last by the union's international executive council.\nPress Comment\nWe are all for safety, but sometimes we\nwonder, muses the St. Catharines Standard\n\"if those radar, devices in checking speed are\nnot for revenue rather than safety. Remember\nthe parking meters, installed to provide parking space for shoppers, and now a big revenue\nproducer.\"\nHe is a good man whose intfmate friends\nare all good, and whose enemies are decidedly\nbad.\u2014Lavater.\nYour Horoscope\nWarning goes out to exercise extreme\ncaution in any planned change in your business or in Iov\u00a3, A child born today will be a\nhard worker and ambitious but may suffer\nthrough lack of patience and balance.\nTheyTl Do It Every Time\nh*Mn*KlhM\u00ab\nBy. Jimmy Hatlo\nWELL,tVHJ--RUTU5y4MD\nOKRA-OH-OH-rfS eooo\ni ran into >tou~Hey~\nYOU'RE NOT \"WINKING OF\nBUMS THAT FLEXO REFLEX\nARE XXI? TAKE IT FROM ME -\nDON'T\/ iVE TRIED \"EM ALL-\nMyAtMCE-VOU CANY\nSEAT A LITTLE BOX\nCAMERA\nPOOR OL' V TO SAY NDTHIN'OF TALKING US OUT\n\/RUTLE^TOOK Y0P>>S4LE-TME0NLy THING BIOAtOUTW\nf UtH MONTHS TO \\ EVER BOUGHT IN MERE WAS STICKERS .\ni Sea HIS WIFE ON fey FOR HIS ALBUM-,. \u25a0 -M\nJTHE IDEA OF BUy-\/s>= \u2022XT) ,       d\n. INS A FLEXO-< \/NEXT MElX PULlY\/ f*?\"^; \u201e,\n[ NOW BISMOUnfeL\/ OUT THE SNAPS ^^XO-HELLO;\nH\/WEVOUR HEART SET\nON SOMETHING-AND ONE OF]\nTHESE WET-BLANKET BCWS\nWILL DO IT EVERy TIME \u2022\n(UTVUirToHCOMRoe,\nL<\u00a3. 611 E. CARVER ST,\n\"- PWLA., PA.\nToday's Bible Thought\nThou shalt not kill.\u2014Ex. 20:13.\nIf we allow ourselves to hate\nanyone we do not save ourselves\nmuch. Let God bring justice about\nwithout your ruining your own\nlife.\ndunt disL\nSometimes I think 1 wouldn't\nhave a man I couldn't boss, an\nsometimes I wish I had one that was\nman enough not to stand for bossin'.\nPROBLEMS?\nLET OUR WANT\nADS WORK\nFOR YOU...\nLooking for something special in\nan auto ... a home ... a worker\nfor your business? Then read, and\nuse the Want Ads for quick results!\nRemember, no other medium offer] 10 much for so\nlittle. Just think \u2014 your message on a post card sent to\nall our readers, would cost you hundreds ot dollars \u2014\nyet, this same message in a Want Ad, costs you just a\nfew cents per word. Get action and results \u2014 Use Nelson\nDaily News Want Ads, regularly.\nPHONE 1844\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n \u25a0 '.  : . \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0       \u25a0 , '   '\u25a0 '-\"'.     ~    \". '.: \u25a0' '. , \u2014 . :\u25a0\/ \u25a0. .';.     :\u25a0\n\u25a0\"\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0':\u25a0' !.f: \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0      \u25a0'\u25a0\"\u25a0     \u25a0\" :\u25a0\/ \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0: \u25a0 \u25a0  \u25a0\"\u25a0'\u25a0....- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 , \u25a0-'.:; --'.^;\nipy- - \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0'\nR, Andrew;^\nBargain-Packed\n53rd\nANNIVERSARY\nSALE\nof\nMEN'S SHOES\nCONTINUES\nNews Women\nArrive, Montreal\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014A British airliner touched down at Montreal's\nDorval airport Tuesday, bringing\nhome 72 travel-weary Canadian\nnewspaper women.\nThe plane arrived from London,\nlast stop on a European tour made\nby the group. The women, members\nor Associates of the Canadian Women's Press Club, hopped the Atlantic and scattered across the Continent a month ago to celebrate\nthe club's 50th anniversary.\nEleven of the women toured Russia for 11 days.\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWELL \u2014 Edwin Bainbridge\ns spending a holiday with friends\nln Cranbrook-.\nMr. and Mrs. W. L. Hepher have\nas their guests. Mr. and Mrs. J.\nHoliday-Smith of Robson. They\nplan to visit their son and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Smith at Kitimat\nbefore returning home.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Miller and family\nof Brideswell, are guests of Mr. and\nMrs. Norman  Bainbridge.\nKen Wallace and W. Shewan of\nVancouver have left for Calgary.\nMrs A. Hepher, who has been a\npatient in Creston Valley Hospital\nfor several weeks, has returned to\nher home.\nWatch (or  Our\nWeekend Specials\nYour\nGift Souvenir\nProblems\nSolved With\nLOCAL\nHANDCRAFTS\nFrom\nHOBBY SHOP\nPhone 224\ni   577 Ward St,\nNelson Social\nNels Bystrom, 910 Anderson St.,\nhas left for a four-month vacation\nin Sweden where he intends to visit\nhis 84-year-old sister. Mr. Bystrom\nis 78.\n...\nMrs. H. Leonard of North Vancouver is the guest of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. C. Robinson, 607 Second Street.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. William Baird of\nVancouver are visiting relatives in\nNelson for the summer. Mrs. Baird\nls a former Nelson resident.\n...\nF\/O and Mrs. L. A. Buckland of\nClaresholm have left for their home\nafter visiting Mr. and Mrs. Art Stevens, Falls Street.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. Wah Chu of Vancouver left Tuesday after visiting\nMr. and Mrs. George Kaiway, 802\nVictoria Street, en route to a holiday in the U. iS.\n...\nErnest Wah, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nF. Wah, 724 Victoria Street, is spending the week in Calgary, taking in\nthe Stampede.\n...\nMrs. A. Openshaw and son Jim,\n524 Anderson Street, have left for\na holiday in Calgary, Winnipeg and\nStoughton, Sask.\n...\nMisses Linda and Rita Gelinas,\ndaughters of Mr. and Mrs. G. H.\nGelinas, 417 Hoover Street, are visiting their grandparents, Mr. and\nMrs. A. G. Gelinas, in Victoria.\n...\nGeor|e Meakins and sons Donald\nand Dennis of Vancouver, formerly\nof Nelson, are visiting the former's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. David Meakins, 608 Sixth St.,\nalso friends at Nakusp.\n...\nMrs. Edith Biggar has returned\nto her home ln Victoria after visiting her mother, Mrs. C. R. Hamilton, 1023 Stanley Street. Sjie was accompanied on the trip by Mrs. M.\nV.  Trail  of  Victoria,  formerly  of\nNelson.\n...\nMrs. B. K. Ryley, 424 Houston\nStreet, left Tuesday for Victoria to\nattend the funeral of her mother-\nin-law, Mrs. E. A. Ryley.\nMrs. Percy Vickcrstatf and children Pauline, Valerie and Bobby\nof Vancouver are visiting the former's aunt and uncle, Mr, and Mrs.\nJ. F. Waters, 811 Carbonate Street.\nThey are also spending part of their\nholidays at Queen's Bay.\n...\nMrs. F. O. Hoole of Vancouver\narrived Saturday to spend the Sum\nmer with her son-in-law and daugh\nter, Mr. and Mrs. Bruca Clark, Hall\nMines Road.\n\u2022 .   \u00ab\nMrs. M. D.  Chadwick  of North\nBurnaby is the guest of Mrs. A. J\nHesse, 224 Baker Street.\n...\nFrank Woodrowe, formerly of\nRoseberry, has left for his home in\nNew Zealand after spending the\npast six weeks in Nelson as the guest\nof  Charles  Isaakson,  206  Victoria\nStreet.\n\u2022 *   .\nF.   H.   Stringer,   924   Carbonate\nDeer Park Notes\nDEER PARK\u2014Mr. and Mrs. H.\nJamieson and children Barry and\nBeverly of Fort St. John and Mr.\nand Mrs. Jack Jamieson and daughter, Barbara of Lebanon, Oregon,\nwere guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. Jamieson.    '\nMr. and Mrs, J. Reimer and\ndaughters Sharon and Wendy of\nWest Arrow Park, were guests of\nMr. and Mrs. C. T. Williamson, en\nroute to Renata where they spent a\nholiday.\nMiss Kate Wishart of Toronto\nWELCOME  CURLERS\nPHONE 1844\nStreet, has left for Vancouver accompanied by his son and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. William A.\nStringer and his mother-in-law,\nMrs. Fowles. '\n.   .   .'\nGeorge Trainor has returned from\nCalgary, where he, has been attending Calgary Technical School; to\nspend the Summer with hla parents, Mr, and Mrs. G. E. Trainor,\n618 Carbonate Street.\n\u2666 \u00bb   *\nMr. and Mrs. D. P. Lambert and\nfamily, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Wallace\nand family and C. Hamilton, all of\nVancouver, who \u00bbare in Nelson for\nthe Midsummer Bonspiel, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. T. N. MacGillivray, 702 Sixth Street.\n* *   \u2022\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Abraham of Wroxeter, Ont., announce\nthe engagement of their daughter,\nMary Elizabeth to Lieutenant James\nLewis Creech, RCN, youngest son\nof Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Creech of\nVancouver, B. C. The wedding wi]J'\ntake place in St. George's ChurcH,\nCornwallis, Nova Scotia, on August\n22. The groom graduated from Nelson High School in 1947.\nPRINCIPALS IN a wedding ceremony held in Nelson were the\nformer Josephine Hattle Simmons and Robert Ludgate Ramsay of\nBiggar, Sask. The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Ti Simmons of Lardeau, and the groom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. L, C.\nRamsay of Biggar.\u2014Renwick photo.\nFamily Re-United\nAt Anniversary\nCRANBROOK  \u2014  Residents    of\nreen   Lake   and   Meadow   Lake,\narrived \"to\"spend'a\"te\"n day holiday s^. ,\u00ab\"\"\u00ab mi' Mr- and Mrs- J- N-\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. W.\nKent.\nMiss April Allen has returned to\nher home here after spending a\nweek in Nelson, at the home of her\ncousin, Miss Sharon Hamblin.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Briggeman and\nchildren of Calgary, were the guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. Fred Briggeman.\nThey were accompanied by W. Briggeman of Trail.\nMiss Laura Stucklberger of Edmonton\nthe home of her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Stucklberger.\nLittle Bretfda Phelps, year-old\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. S.\nPhelps is a patient in Trail-Tadanac\nHospital.\nGauthier, observed their 50th wed\nding anniversary here as guests of\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Rippley Poss of Sherman Oaks\nCalif., visited New Denver for several days, have returned to California. Mr. Poss was in New Denver\nwhen a small boy with his father\n. 48 years  ago.  His father  was the\nspending a  holiday  at;owner of the Mountain Con Mines __ _ _  \t\nnine miles up the mountain from j Miles\"\"and' Mr. \"and   Mrs.   Eudore\ntheir son-in-law and daughter. Mr.\nand Mrs. Gordon Lyons. Their marriage took place at Deschamchault,\nQue. Mr. Gauthier worked as a\ncontractor in Saskatchewan until\nhe retired but they continue their\nhome in northern Saskatchewan.\nFamily reunion here at- the Gordon Lyons home brought their sons\nand daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nVaas, Christina Lake, Mr. and Mrs.\nLudvik Borevic. and Mr. and Mrs.\nRoland Gauthier, BeDevue, Alta.,\nand Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tonn\nCranbrook.\nOther sons and daughters unable\nto attend were Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nTUuuUiLCJiap,\nby, tlmuut U\/kucIeA,\nBonspiel   Special\nMen's\nDiamond Socks\nFine botany wool in colorful diamond designs. Nylon\nreinforced.\nAnkle length.\n.89\nCurlers' Kiddies!\nHoliday Cameras\nTake pictures of Dad \u2014and\nMom too, against the beautiful scenery of Nels*6n and\ndistrict. Brown bakelite\ncase, fixed focus lens. Takes\n8 pictures in color or black\nand white on 127 3 QQ\nfilm. Reg. 4.75.        3\u00abW\nAn HBC Special For Today's Winner!\nTo each member of the rink winning the day's play by the widest\nmargin The Bay offers any dress or sport shirt in the store at\nHalf Price I\nCongratulations to Tuesday's Winner:\nPILCHER, OF BRANDON, MANITOBA\nReg. 2.98\nCotton Skirts\nLadies' colorful\nSkirts. Sizes 12\nnovelty\npatterns\t\nSummer\nto   18   in\n1.99\nReg. .98 each\nFancy Tea Cloths\n79\n38x38 gay printed\nHayon Cloths     ...\n0mal lAfi. U)iiL\nVnwiuuL Wahlin,\nin\n\"DAVY   CROCKETT\"\nSandon. When Mr. Poss Sr., died,. GauUlieri Meadow  Lake,  Mr.  and\nhe left his son owner of the moun- Mrs Ja(,k Dal]yn uke yieW| AUa\ntain Con mines. He is a retired min- j and Miss Agnes Gauthier o\u00a3 Peace\ning engineer, having retired in May. j rtjver, Alta.\nIt was impossible to reach the\nmine so Mr. and Mrs. Poss expect to\nreturn again in August.\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Bradshaw\nand daughter Virginia, left for a\nthree weeks holiday at Meaford,\nOnt.\nMr. and Mrs. W. S. Henderson are\nat the Calgary Stampede.\nMr. and Mrs. Ralph Caffelle and\ntwo children, Sharon and Lorraine,\nwho were visiting Mr. Caffelle's\naunt, Mrs. A. L. Levy for a week,\nreturned to their home at LetlT-\nbridge.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Watareabe and\ntwo children of Vernon were guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. S. Oda.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Brooks of New\nWestminster are guests of their son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nStanley Pedley and two children.\nHenry DeRosa of Trail is the\nguest of his uncle and aunt, Mr. and\nMrs. E. DeRosa and daughter Mary.\nMr. and Mrs.  Clifford  Campbell\nand   two   sons   of   Edmonton   are\n] spending their holidays here visiting friends.\nImao Surayania of Calgary is visiting relatives and friends at New\nDenver.\nMr. and Mrs. L. R. Campbell and\nson-in-law and daughter Mr. and\nMrs. W. G. Thring and two children\nleft for a three weeks holiday, visiting their sons and daughters-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. John Campbell at\nPort Arthur anr) Mr. and Mrs. Mur\ndie Campbell at Barrie, Ont,\nand\nDelight  your  little   boy  or   girl\nwith   a   \"Davy   Crockett\"   frontier 'heir son Donald Campbell,\nquilt. Embroider adventurous scenes     Miss Shirley Cave of Needles was\nI on Davy's own life-to use as color-! 'he guest of Mr. and Mrs. Norman\nful wall pictures too.\nPattern .843: Davy Crockett quilt.\nEmbroidery transfers, directions.\nQuilt 64 x 90 inches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted1\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler.\nNDN, 60 Front St. W\u201e Toronto, Ont.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER,\nyour NAME and ADDRESS.\nLOOK FOR smartest ideas in\nNeedlecraft  in our Laura  Wheeler\nF. Brookes.\nMr. and Mrs. Andy Anderson and\ntwo daughters left for their holidays\nin Alberta and Fusiler, Sask, to visit Mr. Anderson's parents, Mr.-and\nMrs. O. J. Anderson.\nLindsay Carter and his mother\nMrs. A. E. Carter were Vancouver\nvisitors for a week when they attended the Watch Tower Assembly.\nMrs. C. N. Uphill and her mother-\nin-law Mrs. Thomas Uphill of Fer-\nTouring Writers\nReturn With\nMany Memories\nBy RON EVANS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer \u00ab\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Seventy-two\nfoot-weary Canadian newspaper\nwomen Monday night filed through\nLondon airport, crowded, aboard a\nBritish airliner and took off for\nMontreal after a European tour.\n* The women, all members of associates of the Canadian Women's\nPress Club, hopped the Atlantic and\nscattered across the continent\nmonth ago to celebrate the club's\n50th anniversary.' Monday night\nthey flew ln from Zurich, bristling\nwith bulging notebooks, souvenir\nhfcts, handbags and'perfumes, and\ntwo hours later they left for home.\nMost excited members of the\nparty were the 11 who toured Russia for 11 days.\n\"We covered 6,000 miles,\" said\nReta Myers, Vanacouver Red Cross\npublicist and leader of the party,\n\"from the Gulf of Finland to the\nBlack sea and back and forth in between.\"\nMost of the travellers were reluctant to discuss their journey \u2014\nthey planned to write or broadcast\nit \u2014 but they happily mentioned\nsome fleeting impressions. They recalled a morning tour of the Krem-\nlin and a meeting with former pre'\nmier Georgi Malenkov; an evening\nof ballet at Moscow's Bolshoi Theatre; tea served in bed aboard a\ncrack express-train to Leningrad,\nand two hour \"Victorian\" meals\nserved at 10 p.m.\nGUINEA PIGS\n\"I guess we were really guinea\npigs,\" said Miss Myers, \"We were\nthe first Canadian women to travel\nto Russia as individuals paying our\nown way \u2014 not as a delegation.\n\"There's definitely a softening In\nthe attitude there,\" said Miss Myers,\n\"They seemed to feel that we should\nknow one another better. Whether\nthat's Just a pose or not, I don't\nknow.\"\nTwo members of the Ruslan par\nty \u2014 Marjorie McEnaney of the\nCBC in Toronto and Angela Burke\nof the Toronto Star \u2014 took along\nmovie cameras and three more\ncarried still cameras. They said they\nwere allowed to take any photos\nthey chose.\nAngela Burke stayed behind in\nMoscow. Her companion said she\nhopes to visit Siberia.\nSome other club members were\nnot as excited by their travels.\nSaid Idabelle Melville-Ness, a freelance broadcaster from Saskatoon\nwho travelled to southern France,\nItaly and Switzerland with 37 others:\n\"To give you an honest answer,\nit was an endurance test. But we'll\ngo home with some happy memories.\"\nMrs. Marjorie Oliver, honorary\nclub president and organizer of the\ntour, chuckled: \"There's nobody\ntougher than a newspaper woman.\nWe've had a wonderful time and\nwe've been entertained like royalty.\"\n1l%3\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13,1951\u20145\nNatal Notes\nNATAL \u2014 Mj\\ and Mrs. Alf Ball\nof Lulu Wand, have been guests\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs, Len\nLittle.\nMr. and Mrs. William Beard of\nMichel were holiday visitors to\nLethbridge, guests at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. J. Parks.\nMr, and Mrs. Henry Eberts and\nfamily of Sparwood are spending\nthree weeks at Detroit, Michigan,\nat the home of the former's sister.\nMr. and Mrs. Pete Zelth of Natal\nare visiting at Taber, guests at the\nhome of her daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. KJassen;\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon Travis and\nfamily of Red Deer were Natal\nvisitors at the l^me of the former's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Travis,\nJr.\nMrs. F. Barker and daughter of\nCalgary are visiting relatives at\nNatal.\nMrs. L. W. Lowe of Natal is\nspending an extended holiday ln\nEastern Canada with her daughter\nand son.\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. .Bowman and\nfamily of South Burnaby are guests\nof John Volpattl. Mrs. Bowman, a\nformer Natal girl, Is visiting Natal\nfor the first time in 15 years.\nW_ Kaines of Penticton is relieving at the Natal vendors for,three\nweeks.\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Halko of\nLumby were guests at the home of\nthe former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nMike Halko.\nCreston Notes\nCRESTON \u2014 Stuart Cameron was\nhonored on his 87th birthday here\nby a surprise party held by friends\nat his Fifth Street home. He re.\ncelved many gifts.\nSee Our Selection of\nBeach Toys\nat\njAswnjanjL\nHospital Visiting\nCommittee Active\nNEW DENVER \u2014 A meeting ol\nthe Slocan Community Hospital Ladies' Auxiliary was held at the\nhome of Mrs. T. W. Clarke with\npresident Mrs. C. W. Nelson presiding.\nBuying committee report was given by Mrs. J. A. Greer.\nMrs. J. Draper of the visiting committee reported having visited the\nhospital regularly. Mrs. Don M.\nEdwards will visit for the summer\nmonths.\nMembers decided to dispense with\nan August meeting.\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Parlla-\nmentary Press Gallery has granted\nmembership to Vladimir Vashed-\nchenko, Ottawa correspondent for\nthe Russian Tass news agency. He\nsucceeds Ivan Tsvetkov who returned to Moscow last autumn.\nSee Our Windows For\nMid-Week Specials\nat the\nButrhertert-\nPHONE 527\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nCatalog (or 1955. Crochet, knitt.ng. I \u00bbie   are   holidaying   in   Vancouver\ncmbroldeiy   an   dlovely   things   .J with relatives.\nMiss Jean Stilborn, RN, of Melville, Sask., has joined the nursing\n| cents (or your copy  of this book j =ff of the Slocan Community Hos-\ni NOW! You will want to order every I Pllal-\nMrs. John Greenan and son Ross\nare visiting at Vancouver and will\nbe   accompanied    back    by    Mrs.\nGreenan's son Dongal who has been\nholidaying in Vancouver.\nAlbert. .Angrignon and two sons\nGene and Randy of Aldergrove are\nguests of the former's mother, Mrs.\nE. F. Angrignon.\nDennis Clarke of Claresholm, Alberta, visited his parents, Mr. and\nMrs. T. W. Clarke enroute to summer school at UBC, Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. L. P. Angrignon and\nfamily of Fruitvale visited the former's mother, Mrs. E. F. Angrignon.\nwear. Iron-ons. quilts, aprons, nov-1\ncities \u2014 easy, fun to make! Send 25,\n-ign in it.\nIT MAY BE\nYOUR LIVER\n\u25a0 Ufa's not worth living\nIt may be your lircrt\nEl a fact! ll takee op to tiro plntt at lira\ne fi tifty to keep your difeetirn tract b tap\n\u2022Impel If yoar lira- bile a not flowing freely\nroar food may not difeal. , . gas bloata off\nfour Btomach . . . you feel constipated ttni\nill the fun find iporkle go out of life. Thfit't\nwhen you noed mild gentle Carter'* little\nlirer PUls. Tbcee famous remuble pffle help\nmutate the 601* of tirer bile. 800a ytrar\n\u25a0 dilution etarte functioning properly find yoa\n\"   t happy Anyt ire here figfiin! IWl\n. Alvai\/t keep CnrWr'e Utfe\naad. 37* fit toot taunfafc\nled that r\nnr itay 1\nEmPQh\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nIF IRREGULARITY\nIS YOUR PROBLEM\nTRY NATURE'S GREAT\nFOOD COMBINATION\nFOR FITNESS AND RELIEF\nOF CONSTIPATION\n9071 j6-so\nWEEK'S  SEWING   BUY\nWonderful styles for sun and fun\n\u2014designed to fit, flatter the larger\nfigure., Sports-top, skirt, classic\nshorts\u2014mix and match fabrics, colors for many smart fashion changes\nall summer. Easy sewing \u2014make\nthem right away.\nPattern 9071: women's sizes 36,\n38, 40, 42, 46, 48, 50. Size 36 top and\nskirt, 4 yards 39-inch fabric; shorts'\ntake IM) yards,\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'\n(or this pattern. Print plainly SIZE.\nNAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUM\nBER,\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN. 60 Front St., W.,\nToronto, Ont.\nYou owe it to yourself to try' Kellogg's\nAll-Bran and milk as an aid to health\nand regularity. Here is a safe, natural\nway to improve your \"intestinal\ntone\"\u2014so essential to comfortable\nregularity. All-Bran, made from\nwhole-wheat bran, contains natural\nfood bulk which corrects the cause\nof constipation due to insufficient\nbulk. It is also an excellent dietary\nsource of niacin, necessary for normal\nfunctioning of the body. Kellogg's\nhas been making and improving All-\nBran for nearly 40 years. There is\nonly om All-Bran, Kellogg's\u2014the\noriginal laxative cereal, milled for\nmaximum effectiveness. We'll prove\nto you that All-Bran and milk will\ngive gentle relief'from constipation in\n10 days, or double your money back.\nKellogg's, London, Ontario.\nTOASTED FLUFFY\nMarshmallows 39cPer'^\nNot 36\u00a3 at advertized in our ad Tuesday\n|      tfew-PabkLUSHU3\njar speedy\nJ preparation\nI\n sfpippfi\nyWW*yyW   \u25a0     ,1\" \" \u25a0 '\n\u25a0\". .;'**';-1-.\"*''\u25a0:* .' ;  \u2022     J  \" ~\n\u2014\u2014-^\u2014^^^^^^\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13,1955\nPiano Player Raises Eyebrows\nIn M-Degree Packed Ballroom Ihe\nQueen Honors 200 of Her Subjects\nBy EDDY GILMORE\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 The Queen\npresided at an 80-minute investiture Tuesday, knighting and pinning decorations on ?00 of her subjects in the 90-degree sticky heat of\nthe packed palace ballroom.\nCoolest in the state ballroom,\nthronged with more than 1000\npeople, appeared to be 92-year-old\nSir Robert Ho Tung, Hong Kong\nfinancier who had a flunkey fanning him, and Roger Bannister,\nBritain's four-minute miler, who\nmoved through the ceremony at a\ncrawling pace. Both were decorated.\nWarmest, it seemed, was the\nQueen \u2014 who worked all the time\n\u2014 and a young piano player from\nthe band of the Grenadier Guards\nwho caused a raising of eyebrows\naround the palace by occasionally\ngetting close tp Dixieland jazz as\nhe  played  in the stuffy minstrels'\ngallery.\nBLAMED ON HEAT\nIt must have been the heat, be\ncause there is no record of any\nmusician ever \"swinging\" the piano\nbefore at such a palace ceremony,\nPeople talked about it behind their\nfans,\n\"My dear,\" said one lady from\nunder her picture hat, \"that young\nman is playing lively music \u2014 to\nsay the least.\" ,-.\nThe young man played on.\nHundreds of electric light bulbs\nfrom six; large chandeliers and 22\ncluster chandeliers glowed throughout the ceremony adding to the\nheat.\nThe Queen wore a beige silk\ndress with elbow-length sleeves.\nhigh-heeled white shoes, three\nstrands of pearls and a narrow\ngold belt,\nModern Living\nUndermining\nEskimo Workers\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Unprecedented mineral development in northern\nQuebec and Labrador has brought\nnew problems into the land of the\nEskimo. *\nThe projects have placed employment at the doorstep of the Eskimo's igloo, but Msgr. Lionel\nScheWer, Roman Catholic vicar in\nLabrador, believes the advance of\ncivilization into the north country!\nmay be coming too fast.\n\"Development .will bring chaos\nInstead of civilization to the Eski- j\nmo unless he ls carefully conditioned,\" said Msgr, Scheffer in a recent 'interview.\nHe will leave shortly for a two-\nmonth tour of his 350,000-square\nmile diocese. He hopes to cover i\nsome 5000 miles in the Ungava and\nLabrador regions.\nMining companies needed Eskimos, but exploitation should not be\npermitted.\nLIKE CHILD WITH  MONEY\n\"The Eskimo is child-like with\nrespect to money,\" he said. \"He will\nbuy whatever catches his fancy\u2014a\nuseless trinket or an expensive\nwatch. He rarely buys food, and\nsaving   his   beyond  his  ken.\n\"A real danger is the introduction of liquor in the mining camps,\nsomething totally unknown to him.\n\"He is also easy prey to disease.\nparticularly tuberculosis, and any\nwhite man's diseases brought to the\nnorth.\"\nBishop Scheffer said he hopes that\nthrough an increased mission program the Eskimo can be adequately\neducated and equipped to meet the\nchalelnge civilization will bring.\n\"The Eskimo is simple only ln\nthe r.on-complexity of his ilfe. His\nmind is alert and quickly grasps\nthe meaning of things with the\nproper guidance.\"\nCoast Barrister To\nAct for Cuthbert\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Detective\nSergeant Leonard Cuthbert, recovering from a self-inflicted bullel\nwound in the chest, will be represented by legal counsel at the royal\ncommission probe into charges of\npolice graft and corruption.\nH. A. D. Oliver, Vancouver barrister, has announced that his firm\nwould appear for Cuthbert at the\nprobe which opens today.\nDope Traffic Up\nIn Toronto Area\nSmash Postal Money Order Racket\nMONTREAL (CP) - A budding\nracket in counterfeit postal iponey\norders has been smashed postal\nmoney orders has been smashed\nhere by post office and city police,\nbut one man, believed to be the\nmastermind behind the easy money\nscheme, is still being sought.\nAuthorities have issued a countrywide warning to postmasters, banks\nand merchants to watch for the\nclever   Imitations.\nAbout 20 of the bogus money\norders%17 of which had been cashed\nKAMLOOPS (CP) \u2014 A police\nroad block for general checking of\ndrivers set up at the weekend had\n\u2014were in police hands by Monday.\nOfficers believe the mastermind\nnetted only about $2000 before his\nracket was discovered.\nunexpected results. One driver got\nso rattled he drove his car over\nthe edge of the bank and turned\nover before reaching the checking\npoint. Another driver heaved a carton of beer overboard and faced a\ncharge of throwing refuse upon the\nhighway.\nRELIVING   THE   PAST \u2014 Evelyn Nwblt, onetlm*\ntoast of Broadway and central figure ln the Thaw-White case\nof 1906, meets Joan Collins, British actress, who's portraying\nEvelyn In the story of her life being filmed in Hollywood.\nWeary Uranium Prospector Treks (0\nMiles to Get Help for Companion\nSTEWART, B.C. (CP)~A uranium hunter battered by 60 miles of\ntravel over mountain, muskeg and\nglacier reached this northern British\nColumbia mining town with word\nthat his companion was starving at\na wilderness lake.\nA few hours later the second man\nwas flown to safety, completing In\nminutes the trip that took three\ndays for the man who brought word\nof his desperate plight.\nRoland Legg, a Vancouver mining engineer, was in a state of shock\nfrom hunger and exhaustion when\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Morality squad\nofficers, who arrested three men on\ncharges of Illegal possession of\ndrugs, said Tuesday traffic in naV\ncotics in Toronto is on the upswing\nand this year may see a record num\nber of arrests,\nThe three brought to 58 the number arrested so far this year on narcotics charges, compared with 69\nfor the whole of 1954. I\nThe city's morality squad andj\nthe RCMP detachment here have\nbee nworking together to stamp\nout what they describe as one ot\nthe country's major narcotics distribution points. They said no \"big\ntime\" operators have been arrested.\nAn estimated 400 drug users here\nare paying $5000 daily for narcotics,\npolice said.\nController David Balfour said he\nwill ask the board of control to\nback police in a general drive to\nwipe out dope traffic in the city.\nHe said he will urge city, provincial\nand RCMP forces to combine\nstrength in the drive.\nCLASSIFIED  AD8  GET   RESULTS\nFrench Ratify\nAustrian Treaty\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 The French j\nNational Assembly approved by un- j\nanimous vote Tuesday the ratifica- J\ntion of the state treaty ending the ;\noccupation of Austria. j\nThe 613 members of the lower '\nhouse signified approval of the I\ntreaty, signed in Vienna May 15, j\nless than two hours after beginning .\na debate on the question. !\nThe state treaty which makes j\nAustria a \"free and independent\" j\ncountry, has already been ratified\nby the other three big powers \u2014 \u25a0\nthe United States, Russia and Brit- j\nain\u2014and completion of France's ra- \\\ntification alone remains to end the j\n12 years of occupation.\nThe treaty is expected to come J\nup for ratification in the upper\nhouse, the Council of the Republic,\nbefore the start of the parliamentary recess at the end of July.\nhe stumbled out of the bush and is\nrecovering ln hospital.\nHe set' out on the trek four day.-\nafter he and Howard Fowler ofSc-\nattle exhausted the fuel supply of\ntheir light plane trying to find a\nhole ln fog blanketing the area.\nThe lake where they were marooned Is only 35 miles north of\nhere but Legg covered twice that\ndistance in making the journey by\nfoot. One can of meat was all he\nhad for nourishment.\nIN GOOD CONDITION\nThe rescue pilots, Jack Anderson\nof Queen Charlotte Airlines and\nEmerson Wallace of Granduc Mines.\nsaid they found the 40-year-old Seattle prospector in good condition,\ncheerfully sitting by a campfire and\na pup tent\nFrom his hotel room here, Fowler\nrecalled how he and Legg had been\nfogged in at the 25-mile-long glacier-fed lake when their prospecting\nsurvey was finished,\nThe many attempts they made to\nfly out, trying to find a hole in the\nfog, had used all their fuel.\n\"We also were out of grub,\" Fowler said, \"and we knew either one of\nus would have to walk out for help\npretty soon if some plane didn't\nhappen to come along by chance.\"\nAfter four days of waiting, Legg,\nthe younger of the two started out.\n\"Before that, we took turns sleeping and watching for the fog to\nlift,\" Fowle rsaid. \"After Roland\nleft, I slept about 20 hours a day to\nconserve my energy.\"\nStewart is the northernmost port\nof B. C. and is situated at the head\nof Portland canal.\nSHOP AT HOME\nFOR ALL YOUR\nFAMILY'S NEEDS\nYOUR LOCAL STORES\nHAVE THE TRUE'*\n\"FAMILY\" SPIRIT\n\u2022 They're friendly\n\u2022 They know your needs\n\u2022 They understand you\n\u2022 They're ready to help you\nYou're always welcome\not any of our local stores\nand will receive friendly,\ncourteous service. The\nmoney you spend locally\nhelps you and your community!\nSHOP AT HOME WHERE\nYOU SAVE TIME AND MONEY\nAND MAKE FRIENDS\nReturned Warships\nIn Poor Condition\nBREMERHAVEN, Germany (AP)\n\u2014U. S. Navy sources say 35 small\nwarships returned by the Russians\nthis month were stripped of everything of value before being turned\nback.\nAn American officer told newspaper men the 30 patrol torpedo\nboats and five sub chasers loaned\nto Russia by the United States during the Second World War were \"in\nbad shape\" and probably will be\nsold as junk.\n\"Everything of valut In them,\nsuch as instruments and evaipment\nwas removed before they were returned,\" the officer said. \"The Soviets apparently beached them immediately after the war.\"\nChinese-Canadians Urged by Reds to\nBuy Stock in Overseas Investments\nVICTORIA (CP)-Red China is\nstriving to \"squeeze the Jast possible\ndollar from Canadian and United\nStates Chinese, a Victoria Chinese\nbusinessman told newspaper men.\n[ The informant said he did not\n.want his name disclosed at this\n'time. He said Chinese-Canadians are\nj receiving letters asking them tn increase thejr remittances in China\nland to invest in \"joint public-private\nj overseas investment companies.\"\n| In return the Communists promise they will grant special privileges\n1 lo dependents in China or Chinese\n: residents in Canada. They also\npromise they will \"protect all remittances.\"\nThe government promises a re-.\n'turn of eight per cent on investments. ,\n|    \"This  is all part of a  plan,\" he\nsaid,   \"to   provide   the   Communist\ngovernment with much-needed foreign exchange. It's a bit of alluring\nbait to catch the unwary.\"\nRELATIVES  DON'T  GET   MONEY\nVictoria residents who sent remittances to relatives in China have\nfound out their dependents can't get\ntheir money from the banks, he said\n\"They only allow the depend\nents to withdraw a few cents at a\ntime and this is done only after the\nrelatives have gone through a lot\nof red tape. They have to tell why\nthey want the money and what they\nare going to buy with it\/'\nHe added that Communists have\nstopped extorting remittances from\nChinese abroad as ransom for their\nrelatives because thousands of Chinese abroad were so angry they\nstopped sending money to dependents.\nt\nutyom\nThis message is brought' ro you by\nThe   Nelson  Daily  News.  The only\nnewspaper which  covers all  of the\nNelsOn Shopping Area\nSome things speak louder than words...\n~&~^r\\y\"-.'hiri  o**,*' .k-\u25a0<  ..    -\u25a0- \u2014 j^   ; hA^v^T' -\u2022-- fi\nEvery gleaming inch of this glamour car\nsays, \"Here's distinctive design expressed\nin perfect taste.\"\nIts sculptured metal sparkles with highlights that express the clean, simple beauty\nof Chrysler's motion-design for The\nForward Look.\nTum the key, and the mighty Chrysler\nV-8 engine comes to life. Let it whisper\ngently, then touch your fopt to the throttle.\nIts response Is thrilling at any range.\nInside the Chrysler you find a new\nexperience in luxury. Its appointments,\nsuperb craftsmanship, and fine materials\nexpress contemporary beauty at its best.\nYour dealer will gladly arrange for a\ndemonstration drive in this superb auto- .\nmobile. The experience will tell you that,\nyou belong in a Chrysler now. Why not\nphone him today ?\nChrysler New Yorker DeLuxe Four-Door Sedan\nThe beautiful new\nManufactured in Canada by\nChrysler Corporation of Canada, Limited\nJUNIOR-SIZE   )ET\u2014A youngster looks at one of the world's smallest Jet planes, tht\nFrench-built Payen PA-49 at an aviation show near Parts. Plate's wlngspan is just under II (eel>\nSEE THE NEW CHRYSLER, MOTION-DESIGNED FOR THE FORWARD LOOK, AT YOUR CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-FARGO DEALER'S NOWI\nPEEBLES MOTORS LTD.\n135  BAKER  ST.\nPHONE  1090\n >%^'*\"^'1'1 \u2022 \u25a0 ' \u2022\u25a0 \u25a0 .'     \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 ' -i\u2014\u25a0 : \u2014\u2014~ ~ ; -T .        ..'..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0. 1 ! \u2014\u2014 ' \u25a0 J   \u25a0 '   . 'i \"   \u25a0  '\u25a0\u25a0:,\u25a0!.,\nSPORTS\n(hound. ihiL'\nKOOTENAY * Spoti,\nNATIONALS WIN ON MUSIAL S HOMER\nAL Blows Lead; Conley,\nNuxhall Star on Mound\nNot since Nelson's jubilee year\nhave so many people converged on\nBaker Street to witness a parade.\nMonday's curling parade far exceeded those of the past few years and\nchairman George Benwell was given\nmuch credit for arranging it.\nThis year's spiel thus far has\nbeen one of the better ones, with\nvisitors raving about the entertainment and the calibre of curling.\nThe concert Monday was an affair\nmany will remember for a long\ntime. The bands, along with the\nDoukhobor Choir, gave splendid\nperformances, and it has been a\nlong time since Civic Recreation\ngrounds were loaded to capacity\nwith spectators.\nKeeping pace with the other ev-\ntnts of the day, the mixer in the\nauditorium proved more than successful. The hall was packed with\ncurlers, their wives and friends.\nMembers of the bonspiel committee had themselves a husy evening, but they never faltered as\nthey along with volunteers aided\nin looking after the wants of the\ncelebrants.\nOn the curling front Tuesday it\nwas old home week for the McKeen\nrink. Four sisters, Mrs. Lloyd, Mrs.\nMcAlpine, Mrs. McKay and Mrs.\nKeenan, met for the first time in\n20 years. The,meeting had been arranged a year ago when they decided to enter the spiel.\nOn going back to their motel last\nnight a further surprise was in\nstore for them. Their parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Pocock of Vancouver,\nhad arrived unexpectedly. All in\nall it was a real family reunion.\nCURLER  OF  DAY\nChosen as the curler of the day\nTuesday was F. D. Pilcher of Brandon, who came up with two big\nvictories to advance further along\nthe championship trail.\nCurlers and visitors alike praised\nthe work of all who had worked to\nmake this event the best. Wherever\none went they heard praise of the\nunique decorations in the ice, of the\nscenic trips around the district and\nof the many organizations that helped to make the classic.\nWith 17 women's rinks entered\nin the event, it marks the largest\nwomen's entry to date. Interest in\nthe game from the ladies ls steadily\ngrowing.\nMICKEY MANTLE\n, , Americans' big  gun.\nPassmore Takes\nTransfers;\nSalmo Also Wins\nLeafs Qalloptol7<7\nVictory Over Outlaws\nNelson Maple Leaf baseball club\nwhipped the Nelson Outlaws 17-7\nin a game played at the Civic Recreation Grounds Tuesday night as\na special attraction of the Mid-\nSummer Bonspiel.\nThe Leafs took an early lead as\nthey notched four runs in the first\nInning by Todd, Gare, McNabb and\nFrank Hufty. They added another\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nBy The Asoclated Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nAB   R   H Pet.\nKaline, Detroit .. ..   329 74 122 .371\nFox, Chicago     329 49 107 .326\nKuenn, Detroit 303 51   97 .320\nMantle, New York 296 75 94 .318\nSmith, Cleveland .. 346 70 109 .315\nDoby, Cleveland   ..   276 49   87 .315\nRuns \u2014 Mantle 75.\nRuns  batted  in  \u2014  Jensen,  Boston 71.\nHits \u2014 Kaline 122.\nDoubles \u2014 Finigan, Kansas City,\n23.\nTriples \u2014 Mantle 7.\nHome runs \u2014 Mantle 21.\nStolen bases \u2014 Rivera, Chicago,\n12.\nPitching \u2014 Konstanty, New York,\n8-0. 1.000.\nStrikeouts  \u2014  Score,    Cleveland,\n137.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nAB   R   H Pet.\nCampanella, Bkn ...  242 42   81 .335\nAshburn, Pha     281 48   92 .327\nAaron, Mil ... _ 339 54 109 .322\nSnider, Brooklyn . 310 74 99 .319\nKluszewski, Cin .      309 55   98 .317\nRuns \u2014 Snider 74.\nRuns batted In \u2014 Snider 89.\nHits \u2014 Aaron 109.\nDoubles \u2014 Snider,   Logan,   Milwaukee and Repulski, St. Louis, 20.\nTriples \u2014 Bruton, Milwaukee, 9.\nHome runs \u2014 Kluszewski, Cincinnati, 29.\nStolen bases \u2014 Boyer, St. Louis,\n15. ,\nPitching \u2014 Newcombe, Brooklyn,\n14-1, .933.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Jones. Chicago, 114.\ntwo markers in the next two innings\nwhen Kennedy in the second and\nLes Hufty in the third cams honie\nto send the Leafs oiit ahead 6-0.\nThe Outlaws struck back ln the\nfourth frame as they drove in three\nruns by Tom Marshall, Ron Nash\nand McNabb, only to see the Leafs\ngo ahead another run when Kennedy once again crossed the plate\nin the same frame.\nThe Leafs rallied again in the\nnext two innjngs on runs by Todd,\nGare, Bay, Frank Hufty, Les Hufty\nand Kennedy in the fifth and Les\nHufty and Scoles in the sixth, to\nenter tha seventh frame with a 12-\nrun lead. Kennedy came in for his\nfourth run of the game ih the\neighth inning while Outlaws Marshall. Nash, Cone and Grill brought\nthe score to 17-7.\nTop men at bat were Les Hufty\nof the Maple Leafs with a double\nand two singles, Maple Leaf Lorne\nBay with a triple, double and\nsingle, and Norberg of the Outlaws\nwith a double and a single.\nOutlaws managed only two hits\nfrom winning pitcher Les Hufty,\nwho gave only one walk and struck\nout eight before being relieved in\nthe eighth inning by Marsh Severyn, who allowed four hits, one\nwalk and struck out three. Outlaw\nchucker Norberg went the distance,\ngiving 12 hits, 10 walks and striking out five.\nSedgman Stricken\nWith Appendicitis\nMILAN (AP) \u2014 Frank Sedgman\nU. S. tennis champion ln 1951-52\nand now a touring professional, was\nstricken with appendicitis on Tuesday. An x-ray is being studied to\ndetermine whether an operation is\nnecessary immediately.\nF\nSIENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\nPersonal Loans\nFor   Bills,   Fuel,   Repairs,   Cars\nor any  good  reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. LTD.\nSulto 212,    Medical Arts Btdg\nPHONE  1786\nBUCS SELL CATCHER\nPITTSBURGH (AP)-Pittsburgh\nPu-ates Monday sold catcher Nick\nKoback to the Lincoln Chiefs, a\nPirate farm club in the Western\nLeague, for an undisclosed sum.\nKoback was signed as a bonus\nplayer by the Pirates in 1953, fol\nlowing his graduation. He hit .286\nin seven times at bat this season.\nNORFOLK, Neb. (AP) \u2014 Four-\nyear-old Christine Lee Elliot's parents were sure they saw her swallow a penny so they hurried her\nto a hospital here. They were\nright \u2014 but'also wrong. It wasn't\none penny that doctors took from\nher lungs. There were three pennies, apparently swallowed at different times.\nIP\n\u25a0 ?|M\nBiiiji\n\"**u**\"ni|f\nI.\nB   *\n'jjMPBR' ^H\n\u00ab__m9*\\\\\\\nWally Harvey\nNelson Defenceman\nSENIOR\nLacrosse\nTONIGHT\nCIVIC ARENA\n8 p*m*\nTrail\nvs,\nNelson\nADULTS 50c\nChildren, Students 25c\nPassmore Fastball Club trounced\nthe Nelson Transfers 9-5 in a Nelson\nand District Fastball League game\nplayed at Passmore Tuesday night\nTransfers grabbed a three-run\n\u25a0lead in the first inning on runs by\npitcher Ferworn, McDonald and\nMike Vecchio. Passmore returned\ntwo runs in the second and third\nframes by Konkin and Kinakin and\npulled ahead in the fifth when they\ndrove in four runs as Nazaroff, Evin,\nLakten and Konkin came home to\ngive the Passmore team a 6-3 lead.\nBoth teams added two more runs\nin the sixth inning as Voyken and\nKinakin scored for Passmore and\nDowes and Kennedy came in for the\nTransfers. The final run of the game\ncame in the top of the ninth when\nGorkoff scored Passmore's ninth\nrun. \/\nBenedettl was top hitter for the\nTransfers as he hit three for four\ntimes at bat. For Passmore it was\nKonkin who slammed two doubles\nand a single for five times at the\nplate.\nKonkin went the full route for\nPassmore as he gave eigHt hits, two\nwalks and struck out seven Transfers. Ferworn and Polonikoff shared\nmound duties for Transfers. Together, they allowed five hits, seven\nwalks and striking out two.\nTHREE HITTER\nSalmo chucker Bush pitched a\nthree-hit game at Salmo' Friday\nnight to lead his team-to a 2-tf victory over Transfers.\nThe first Salmo run came from\nScribner in the first inning, and the\nsecond from Colman in the ninth.\nTwo of the Transfer hits were made\nby Benedetti and the other by\nWright.\nIn securing the shutout, Bush gave\nno walks, and struck put six. Losing\npitcher Ferworn allowed five hits,\ngave one walk and struck out five.\nBy JACK HAND\nMILWAUKEE (AP) \u2014 Stan (the Man) Musial of St.\nLouis Cardinals lined a 375-fOot home run into the right field\nbleachers on the first pitch of the bottom half of the 12th inning Tuesday to give the National League a 6-5 comeback\nvictory over the American in\nthe 22nd all-star game.\nMuslal's  smash   set  an   all-star\nrecord for It was his fourth In 12\ngames, the  most ever played  by\nany man since the late Arch Ward\ndreamed   up   the   series   back 'In\n1933. Until  ha broke up the ball\ngame, Musial hadn't had a hit\nTrailing 5-0 as late as the seventh\ninning, the Nationals clawed back\nto win after they had been counted\nout   Mickey   Mantle's   tremendous\n425-foot blast into the centre field\nrtands with two men on climaxed\na four-run spurt by the Americans\nin the first inning.\nWillie Mays of the^ New York\nGiants sparked the \u25a0 Nationals'\ncomback with a single In each of\nthe seventh and eighth inning ]\nrallies. j\nSensational clutch pitching by!\nCincinnati's Joe Nuxhall and Mil- j\nwaukee's Gene Conley, the ultimate;\nwinner, curled the Americans!\naround their fingers while the Na-I\nticnals closed the series gap to 13-9\nin favor of the Americans,\nSMASHING CLIMAX\nMusial's winning blow provided\na smashing climax to Milwaukee's\nfirst taste of all-star play. Most of\nthe 45,643 fans knew the Americans\nmanager Leo Durocher had used\neverybody on his 25-mari squad ex-!\ncept Luis Arroyo, the St. Louis\nlefty. He had to let pitchers bat\nfor themselves in the late stages.\nConley, who had wofked a full I\nnine-inning game Sunday, simply\nthrew that ball past the opposition\nin hfs one-inning stand. Detroit's Al\nKaline, Washington's Mickey Vernon and Cleveland's AI Rosen all\nstruck out\nWARM   WELCOME\nThen Musial stepped to the plate\nto face Boston's Frank Sullivan, the\nfourth American league pitcher\nOne pitch, one home run. It was as\nsimple as all that.\nNo world series winner ever received a warmer welcome than\nMusial. Thetentire National bench\n\u2014manager, coaches and players\u2014\nwaited for him to touch homft\nplate as tho Americans straggled\noff the field.\nA costly error by Chicago's Chico\nCarrasquel who fumbled a grounder\nand then threw away the ball, trying for a force play, cost the Americans a run in tfte Beventh. Another\nerror by Rosen who let Kaline's\nthrow get through him at third base,\npermitted the Cubs' Ransom Jackson to score the tying run in the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13,1955\u20147\nBonspiel Results\nonly by reading about them in the)elghth In Mch Mse &en were ^\npapers. They were willing to  be-|out betore q,,. Nationals scored.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket ran into late selling Tuesday and slipped back from Its\nbest after a promising start.\nCanadian issues were mixed.\nDistillers Seagram added 3\/* and\nDome Mines gained >\/\u00a3. Canadian\nPacific fell %, International Nickel\n1\/4 and Hiram Walker %,\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Industrials\ngained at tha close of active trading on the stock market Tuesday.\nRoyal Bank, up 2% at 64, was\noutstanding. Other highlights included Bank of Montreal, up 2H,\nand Southern Canada Power, Dominion Glass and Algoma, each 2\npoints improved. Up IV4 were\nShawinigan, Noranda and Stelco.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket, led by industrial and base\nmetal issues, steered a steady\ncourse in higher ground Tuesday,\nIndustrials hit a record index\nhigh of 418.44 during early afternoon and closed at 418.42.\nBase metals ended at a three-\nyear index peak of 201.79 after\ncoming back from a mid-session\nslump. Sherritt Gordon was a feature of the group, jumping 50 cents\nto $9.85 after touching a high of\n10 Vi. Noranda gained IVi.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Sentiment\nwas depressed on the London stock\nmarket with a sharp setback in\nJune exports having an adverse\ninfluence.\nThe advance on Wall Street was\nreflected in firmness of dollar issues. Gold shares continued uncertain.\nDeciding Gas Price\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Price the\nB. C. Electric will charge for natural gas will be under city council\nscrutiny.\nCouncil decided Monday it would\ndupport the company's bid for a\nnatural gas franchise but added it\nwould conduct a rate investigation\n.rfter hearing a brief from the Civic\nReform Association.\nThe CRA asked the council to\nurge the Public Utilities Commission to reject the BCE's application.\nlieve all their fine press notices in\nthe early innings while the Nationals floundered in bitter frustration.\nConley, the towering 6-8 righthander who has won T1 games for\nthe  home-town   Braves,  had  Just\ntaken  up the pitching burden  in\ntha    12th    Inning.    Nuxhall,   the\nCincinnati lefty who was used In\nrelief In regular season play Saturday   and   twice   Sunday,    had\nstopped  tho   Americans  dead  for\n3   1-3   Innings,  striking   out   five\nmen.\nAt the end of  the  secon extra-\ninning game in the series history,\nSeeded Tennis\nPlayers Advance\nBy MEL MORRIS\nQUEBEC (CP)\u2014Bob Bedard of\nSherbrooke, Que., breezed through\ntwo matches Tuesday to advance\nalong with a squad of seeded players in the men's singles event of\nthe Canadian tennis championships.\nAll seeded players advanced and\nonly three were extended to three\nsets. Tenth-seeded Don Piatt of Toronto, eighth-ranked John Swann of\nVancouver and Paul Crania of\nBrooklyn, N. Y., all advanced.\nThe only seeded players missing\nfrom the list were Lorne Main of\nToronto, the tournament favorite\nwho does not arrive untir today,\nand llth-seefded Jim Bentley of Toronto, upset by Jean Marois of Quebec Monday.\nOthers to advance were Vancouver's Paul Willey, third-seeded, Da\nvid Piers of Truro, the Nova Scotia\nchampion, Henri Rochon of Montreal and Larry Barclay of Vancouver.\nOne seeded player was eliminated\nand another was extended to\nthree-hour match in the women's\nsection. Miriam Rainboth of Ottawa,\nsixth-seeded, bowed to unranked\nEleanor Dodge of Montreal and\nthird-seeded Connie Bowan of Hollywood, Calif., was extended to the\nlimit to down Mildred Thornton of\nBoston.\nHanna Sladek of Montreal, the\nfavorite, entered the quarter-finals\nand Louise Brown of Toronto, second-ranked, and Ann Barclay of\nVancouver, also advanced.\nIn the men's doubles, the top-\nranked pair of Bedard and Don\nFontana of Toronto whipped Mi-\nchaud and Jean Yves Laurin of\nQuebec 6-2, 6-4, and the second-\nseeded team of Willey and Barclay\ndowned Marcel Hebert and Guy\nMassicotte of Quebec, 6-0, 6-0.\nRochon and Swanh turned back\nJacques Giguere, Quebec, and Yvan\nCasault, Quebec, 1-6, 6-1, 6-1.\nIn women's doubles, Miss Bowan\nand Miss Barclay defeated Louise\nMorissette, Quebec, and Louise Jo-\nbin, Quebec, 6-1, 6-3.\nBond Market Steady\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Montreal\nbond markets were generally quiet\nand unchanged Tuesday,\nOn the corporate side, the convertible CPR 3^s of '66 fell %\npoint to 110^.\nCanada and municipal issues\nwere steady on the government\nmarket.\nA new issue of 5,250,000 Manitoba Hydro 3Y4S dated Aug. 1, 1955\nand maturing Aug. 1, 1975, were\nintroduced to the provincial market today. The bonds are guaranteed by the province of Manitoba\nand callable at par and accrued\ninterest after Aug. 1, 1973.\nSWELL PENSION FUND\nThe fans contributed to a gross\ngate of $179,545.50 (net $163,254,02).\nThe receipts, plus $110,000 from the\nradio-television rights, go into the\nmajor leagues' central fund which\nsupports the player pension fund.\nMantle's'425-foot homer with two\nmen on base in the first inning looked like the ball game until the Nationals came out of their daze. Mickey's screaming hit cleared a double\nfence and rolled on.\nOne run already had scored on a\nwild pitch, by Philadelphia's Robin\nRoberts before the New York Yankee centrefielder conected to complete a four-run inning. The second\nguessers quickly got busy, claiming\nmanager Leo Durocher should have\nstarted a lefthander instead of giving Roberts a chance to tie a record\nby starting his fifth all-star game.\nThe American lead was stretched\nto 5-0 in the sixth on a combination\nof a single by Yankee Yogi Berra,\na double by Kaline and an Infield\nout by Mickey Vernon of Washington. The double by Kaline was a\nhot smash off the left wrist of Eddie\nMathews, Milwaukee third baseman, that bounced into left field.\nMathews left the game for a trip to\nhoppital where x-rays of the wrist\nshowed he had escaped a fracture.\nPIERCE  SPARKLE8\nBilly Pierce, the slick Chicago\nlefty, gave up only one hit, a lead-\noff single by St, LouLs' Red Schoen-\ndienst in the first three innings. He\nfaced only nine . men because\nSchoendienst was caught trying to\nadvance on a ball that got away\nfrom Berra.\nEleven   Nationals  wer\u00ab   retired\nIn order by Pierce and Cleveland's\nEarly Wynn, his successor, before\nCincinnati's      Ted      Kluszewski\ndoubled In tha fifth,\nBut   the   Nationals   started   to\ncatoh up In the seventh.\nWillie Mays, hotshot of the 1954\nworld champion Giants, started with\na single. With two men out Hank\nAaron of Milwaukee walked. Then\nJohnny Logan singled, scoring\nMays. When Carraesquel fumbled a\nground ball by pinch-hitter Stan\nLopata of the Phillies and then\nthrew wild trying to force Logan\nat second, Aaron also scored.\nOnce again there were two out\nbefore things started to pop in the\neighth. Mays and Kluszewski sin\ngled, Jackson grounded a single to J\nright, scoring Mays with his second\nrun.\nWhitey Ford, the Yankee lefthander who took Over from Wynn\nin the seventh with a 5-0 lead, was\nreplaced by Sullivan. Aaron got his\nsecond hit, driving in the big Cincy\nfirst baseman. When Kaline's throw\nto third, trying for Jackson, got\naway from Rosen, Jackson came in\nwith the tying run. Only a brilliant\nplay by Carrasquel on Logan's\nsmash prevented further trouble.\nTed Williams left the game after\nbatting in the seventh with a record\nof a walk, single, infield  out and\na long fly out.\nLINESCORE:\nAmerican      400 001 000 000\u20145 10 2\nNational   ..   000 000 230 001\u20146 13 1\nPierce, Wynn (4) Ford (7) Sullivan (8) and Berra; Roberts, Haddix\n(4) Newcombe (7) Jones (8) Nuxhall (8) Conley (12) and Crandall,\nBurgess (6) Lopata (8) .'W\u2014Conley.\nL-rSullivan. HRs: Aipn\u2014Mantle;\nNat\u2014Musial\nSTAN  MUSIAL\n, fourth all-star homer\nWILLIE MAYS\n. sparks comeback.\nWATER SPEED\nRECORD BROKEN\nLAKE. ULLSWATER, England\n(AP) \u2014 Donald Campbell of Britain made an unofficial run tonight\nwith his turbo-jet speedboat Bluebird in speed faster than the world\nwater record.\nHe drove .the Bluebird at 185\nmiles an hour but it waa not in a\nrecord attempt. He said afterwards\nthat slight modifications might be\nmade before he makes an official\ntry at the world mark.\nThe 34-year-old son of the late\nSir Malcolm Campbell said the\nboat's power is \"simply terrific.\"\nCampbell made only one fast run.\nHis return run was in the 150 miles\nan hour class.\nHEAT CURTAILS\nLIONS' WORKOUTS\nKELOWNA (CP) \u2014 B. C. Lions\ncoach Annis Stukug has been obliged to curtail his day-time training schedule because of too hot\nweather.\nWinter weight rolled ott easily\nin the 90-degree Okanagan heat but\nthe burly gridsters will have to\nease gradually into their tough two-\nweek training schedule, coach Stu-\nkus Indicated.\nThe only players, not complaining\nabout the heat are the seven imports\nfrom Texas.\nFront Wheels\nBalanced\n$1.00 Each\nSTAR AUTO SERVICE\nYmir Rd.\nELECTRIC STARTING\n25 H.P. BIGTWIN\nPuih Button Starting; Gearshift;\nTakes   remote   d*|  T~\\ t,\ncontrols. f Kb r\nSold by\nNELSON\nMARINE\nSERVICE\nCity Wharf (Foot of Hali 8t.)\nPhone  1459\nSUPPLIERS OF:\n\u2022 Folding Seats.\n\u2022 Govt   Approved   Life - Saver\nCushions.\n\u2022 Oars.\n\u2022 Oarlocks.\n\u2022 Paddles.\n\u2022 Marine Paints and Varnishes.\n\u2022 Flnhlng Tackle.\n\u2022 Fibre Glassing Materials.\nWORLD'8\nSUMMER CHAMPIONSHIP\nFirst Round:\nD. Jack, Kincaid 7, E. Avery, Salmo 6.\nW. McFaull, Swift Current 8, F.\nMartins, Edmonton 4.\nJ. Ganske, Wetaskiwln 6, C. Russel, Claresholm 5.\nE. M. Fulton, Regina 8, J. Kubasek, Vauxhall 3.\nD. Hardy, Edmonton 3, S. Steinson, Cloverdale 4.\nA. W. Kennedy, Claresholm 6, L.\nPeerless, Nelson 5. ,\nJ. Harvey, Nelson 6, D. McVety,\nRegina 4.\nG, H. Montgomerie, Regina 5, L.\nJ. Maurer, Nelson 11.\nF. Wah, Nelson 8, L. D. Hicklng-\nbottom, Edmonton 6.\nSecond Round:\nH. Tarasoff, Langham 7, C. Mitchell, Vancouver 3.\nA. Waters, Nelson 11, H. Moore,\nSalmo 3.\nE. W. McGowan, Edmonton 10, E.\nC. Hunt, Nelson 9.\nW. J. Wallace, Vancouver 10, G.\nCubbins, Calgary 9.\nSalmo (rushes\nMaddens 10-1\nSalmo nine dumped Nelson Maddens to the tune of 10-1 at the Civic\nRecreation Grounds In a Nelson and\nDistrict Fastball League game\nTuesday ln conjunction with the\nMid-Summer Bonspiel.\nThe Salmo crew went ahead two\nruns In the first inning on runs by\nScribner and St. Dennis and counted two more In the third as Water-\nstreet and Kraft crossed home plate\nto add two more while holding the\nMadens scoreless. A fourth inning\nrally saw Salmo's St. Dennis, Waterstreet, Peters and Thor come\nhome to grab an 8-0 lead.\nThe only Madden run of the game\ncame ln the bottom of the fifth\nwhen pitcher Malinowski slammed\na home run\" from Salmo chucker\nHenne.\nSalmo added their final two runs\nin the seventh frame by Peters and\nThor.\nWinning pitcher Henne gave only four bits, walked seven and\nstruck out four men. Madden pitch-\nMalinowski allowed 12 hits,\nsix walks and struck out three.\nBig hits came from Maden Malinowski with a home run, and Salmo players, Scribner, St. Dennis\nand Thor who each slammed triples.\nREAD  THE CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nL. C. Foot, Carstairs 7, H. V. Ho*\nera, Edgeley 8.\nG. Moir, Salmo 11, D. OillespU,\nPenticton fl. %\nThird Round:\nW. McFaull, Swift Current t, I.\nSteinson, Cloverdale 5.\nD. Jack, Kincaid 13, A. W. Kennedy, Claresholm 8.\nE. M. Fulton, Regina 11, J. Qanake,\nWetaskiwln 7.\nJ. Harvey, Nelson \u00bb, L. J. Maurer,\nNelson 8.\nF. D. Pilcher, Brandon 12, T.\nWah, Nelson 2.\nQUEEN CITY\nFirst Round:\nF. D. Pilcher, Brandon 9, L. Marshall, Duncan, 1.\nG. H. Parrish, Nelson J. D. L. Id-\nwards, Airdrie, 4.\nH. Farenholtz, Nelson i, O. A.\nKennedy, Ft. McLeod 5.\nW. Smith, Minot, N. D. 8, J. A.\nOwens, Carstairs 8.\nT. Jones, Edmonton 8, A. Treble,\nFillmore 5.\nI. Staples, Creston 8, K. Kordloh,\nEdmonton 4.\nK. E. Zral, Cloverdale 8, T. M.\nTowriss, Princeton 7.\nH. Zak, Blairmore 9, M. Molingrot-\nski, Beardmore 11.\n, H. Kaila, New Westminster 5, L.\nLegg, Stettler S.\nL. Chase, Vanoouver II, W. A.\nKeenan, Champion 8.\nD. Hardy, Edmonton 8, Martini,\nEdmonton 7.\nJ. Kubasek, Vauahall 8, C. Russell,\nClaresholm 8.\nR. E. Fath, Champion 8, D. P. Mo-\nKeen, Sangudo, 7.\nW. 0. Stonehouse, New Westminster 13, W. D. Hough, Edmonton 11\nWOMEN'S\nWORLD CHAMPIONSHIP\nFirst Round:\nM. DeGlrolamo, Nelson 9, Punrtf,\nNew Westminster S.\nM. McLoy, Edmonton 10,1. Llttte,\nNelson 6.\nMoore, Nelson 8, M. Weir, Creston\n9.\nA. Barrett, Kelson T, B. Qibeon,\nPrinceton 4.\nM. Luchak, Edmonton 8, M. Crelg,\nNelson 4.\nPRIZED POSSESSION\nWteer's\nDE LUXE WHISKY\nIN SMART DECANTER\nThis advertisement is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by ihe Government of Britiib\nColumbia-\nde\/mef on -\nmonoRCu\nUSED CARS'TRUCKS\nSeaijour\nFORD-\nMONARCH\nDEALER\nwhat\nmeans\nEVERY USED CAR AND TRUCK THAT\nRATES THE A-l SIGN HAS BEEN\nElocondillonod by export sorvlcomon\nfor appearance and performance.\nInspected and chocked for safety.\nPrlcod for outstanding value.\nTruthfully and aecuraloty adv\u00abrtlied.\nWarranted by ypur Ford-Monarch Dealer\nand backed by hii reputation.\n1\n >.\u25a0\u25a0 ' \u2022 .. \u25a0\u25a0'\" . \u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0    !\u25a0. -.'  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022  '\u25a0\u25a0.\"\u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0 '..!\".!iw.-!.-wpyv .\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13,19SS\n.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u2014\n-\u25a0     '       I   '     - ~\nI\n\u2014, j ' ; '\u25a0 : : \u25a0\t\nA\nB\nN\n\u2022'\u25a0E\nk\nH\nsi\nR\nY\nC\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA1\nN\nG\nE\nR\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\n, S\nR\nIf\nt #\nI G\nB N\nIt\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\nDESPERATION!\n\"HOW CAN Bill\nPREVENT THE\nPIANE FROM\nREACHING ITS\nDESTINATION\n-AND KEEP\nSCHMIDTS\nSECRET OUT OF\nTHE HANDS OF\nFOREIGN\nASENT5?\nfflE PRESSES HIS FOOT OM THE TUBE. MEDIATELY THE EHSIH6\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally Newt does not hold  Itnolf responsible In tht event\nof an error In the followlno lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prlcei)\nMINES\nAcadia  Uranium 13V4\nAkaitcho    58\nAlgom Uranium     23.75\nAnacon   Lead      3.40\nAnglo  Huronian      13.00\nArea\nArjon\n.62\n.11V\u00ab\nAtlas Y K     16.00\nAubelle    \u201e 12\nAumaque  31\nAunor     2.15\nBagamac    _ 1214\nBarymln     2.88\nBase Metals  65\nBelloterre           2.11\nBldgood Kirk  10\nBobjo 60\nBoymar Gold  10\nBralorn-          2.80\nBroulan      1.42\nBuffalo Ank  85\nBU\u00ab Can     21\nBuff Red Lake  11%\nCalinnan     37\nCampbell R L       7.00\nCan Mai  45\nCanalask Nickel  17\nCanmet      3.45\nCariboo  Gold 70\nCastle Treth           4.90\nCentral Patricia  90\nCentral Pore  18\nChesterville 42\nChimo G      2.15\nCoast Copper   38\nCochenour .\/ 75\nCoin Lake 11\nCons Golden Arrow  41\nCons Min & Smelt    37.50\nCons Sannorm  31\nConwest      5.80\nDelnite     82\nDetta R L  37\nDome       15.25\nDonalda   48\nDyn0           1.51\nEast Malartic       2.32\nEast Sullivan\nEastern Metals\nElder Gold \t\nElsol\t\nEureka\n3.95\n1.32\n.62\n.11\n1.19\nFalconbridge       29.00\n~ .15\n4.95\n17.25\n6.60\n.88\n.37\nFed Kirk\nFrobisher   ..\nGeco   \t\nGiant Yel .\nGod's Lake\nGold Hawk\nGolden Manitou       2.80\nGold Hawk       37\nGunnar Gold  -   18.15\nHallnor         3.25\nHardrock   .'. 15V4\nHasaga     20\nHeadway       1.41\nHeath    11\nHollinger         23.65\nHomer Y K  24\nInspiration         1.73\nInt Nickel    72.75\nJonsmith     72\nJoliet Que ...: 45\nKerr Addison     16.75\nKeyboycon  13\nKirk-Hudson Bay  32\nKirkland Lake       .42\nLabrador           16.50\nLake Dufault       1.34\nLakeshore        5.50\nLake Wasa  23   \u25a0\nLamaque       3.50\nLeitch    63\nLexindin    61\nLittle Long Lac       1.24\nLouvicourt    41\nMacassa        1.90\nMacfie Ex  20\nMackeno 80\nMacDonald 99\nMacLeod  Cock       1.45\nMadsen R L         2.00\nMalartic G F      1.86\nMclntyre Pore  ._  82.25\nMcMarmac    .\"     .39\nMcWatters  28\nMining Corp     24.25\nMoneta       1.07\nNat Ex       1.72\nNew Alger  51\nNew Bid  30\nNew Calumet  80\nNew Delhi             1.07\nNew Goldvue  _ 17\nNew Kelore  4014\nNew Mylamaque         .27\nNew Thurbois  55\nNipissing        2.58\nNoranda     58.00\nNorgold    70\nNormetals        5.15\nNorth Inca  ...._ 11V<\nO'Brien    ....^ ) 62V\u00ab\nOgama  ...\u201eii \u201e......, 20\nO'Leary 30\nOslsko  50\nPamour    52\nPickle Crow       1.26\nPioneer      1.82\nPlacer Devel    34.35\nPreston E D  -      8.90\nQuebec  Copper   \u201e .  3.70\nQuebec Man      1.23\nQuebec Nickel      2.45\nQueenston 19\nQuemont    26.25\nRadiore       2.65\nRayrock          3.25\nReeves Mac       1.85\nRegcourt           > .22\nRoche L L  27\nSan Antonio        1.61\nSherritt Gordon         1.02\nSigma M         5.00\nSilvermiller   87\nSllanco   24\nSiscoe   52\nStadacona    28   .\nStarratt Olsen  12\nSteep  Rock        12.00\nSudbury Cont  28\nSylvanite       1.40\nTeck Hughes          3.15\nThompson-Lund  64\nTorbrlt       1.25\nUnion Mining  30\nUnited Keno          7.25\nUpper Canada       1.01\nValor    90\nVentures    38.25\nVicour    55\nViolamac      3.95\nWaite Amulet   \u2022 14.50\nWright Hargreaves       2.05\nOILS\nAnglo Can      5.75\nB A Oil    30.58\nCalgary & Edm     17.25\nCdn Atlantic      6.80\nCdn Collieries     12.85\nCentral Leduc       2.10\nDalhousie    \u00ab      .16\nDel Rio             1.61\nFed Pete            6.10\nImperial Oil     39.00\nInter  Pete      29.00\nKroy       1-35\nLib Pete      3.35\nMid Cont   48\nNat Pete       1.95\nOkalta              1-72\nPacific Pete  - 12%\nRoyalite  1314\nUnited Oils           1-70\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi     -    32%\nAlgoma Steel     751k\nMont Loco    18\nMoore Corp    40\nNat Steel Car :  29%\nPage Hershey   70\nPowell River   52%\nPower Corp    60\nRuss Ind      :... 1614\nShawinigan    .'  69%\nSimpsons A   1914\nSoutham    44\nSoutham       44%\nStandard Paving  33%\nUnion Gas of Can    48\nUnited  Corp B    22%\nUnited Fuel A   61%\nUnited Steel       15\nWeston George    97\nWinnipeg Gas   1214\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nCariboo  Gold  \t\nGolconda        \t\nHighland Bell     \t\nPac Eastern Gold\t\nPend Oreille  \t\nPioneer Gold \t\nQuatsino \t\nReeves  MacD  ...:\t\nSheep Creek           1.03\nSherritt Gordon       9.60\nSilver Ridge         32\nSilver Standard  43\nSurf Inlet     12\nWest Exp         66\nWest Tungsten\t\n108\n183%\n24\n18\n63\nVA\n50%\n7%\n10514\n13%\n.    18\n.    15%\n.   34\n.   40\nYale :        .14\nOILS\nAnglo Cdn -      5.75\nA P Cons         35\nCalgary St Edm     16.75\nCdn Anaconda  15\nHome    :.    11.00\nMid West Gas      3.80\nNat Pete             1.85\nOkalta Com       1.70\nPacific Pete           12.00\nPeace River Gas       9.60\nRoyalite     12.75\nVanalta  22\nVulcan 45\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates  _     5.00\nWestern Plywoods     17.50\nUNLISTED\nJackson Basin Mines    45\n.93\n.72\n.30\n.60\n.12\n4.95\n1.81\n.22%\n1.80\n12\nMetals Prices\nNEW YORK (OP) -\nLead, N.Y., .15\nZinc, East St. Louis,\nSilver. N.Y., .90%.\nSpot prices:\n12%\nWINNIPEG   GRAIN\nWINNIPEG    (CP)\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 75%.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.03%\nWinnipeg\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ...   1240 on ihe dial\n(Pacific Daylight Time)\nV\/EDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1955\nAluminum\nAmer Tel & Tel .\nArgus   \t\nAtlas St\t\nBathurst  Power\nBeattie Bros \t\nBell Tele \t\nBrazilian \t\nB C Elec 4%s ....\nB C Fore&J  \t\nB C Packers A ....\nB C Packers B ....\nB C Power A \t\nCan Cement    \t\nCan Packers B   36%\nCdn Brew  29%\nCdn  Canners     36\nCdn Car St Fdy   28%\nCdn   Celanese     22%\nCdn Dredge   26%\nCan Oil   24%\nCdn Pac Rly   33%\nCockshutt       7%\nCons Min St Smelt   37%\nCons Papers  39%\nDist Seagrams    ..  38%\nDom Foundries            27%\nDom Steel St Coal B   17%\nDom Stores  ,  39\nDom Tex     7%\nEddy  Paper  60\nFleet Air   2.25\nFord'A  - 127%\nGatineau     111%\nGoodyear pfd  - 53\nGypsum  Lime    60%\nHiram Walker   173%\nimperial Oil  -  39\nImpj.Tob   11%\nInt Metals  37\nInt Nickel  72%\nInt Pete     29\nInt Utilities   40\nLaura Secord  22%\nLoblaw A     43\nMaple Leaf Milling   13%\nMassey Harris    t      11%\nMcColl Frontenae     4114\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up  Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n715\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014March of Truth\n7:40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Women Today\n9 '0\u2014Homemakei Harmonies\n10.00\u2014CKLN Entertains\n10:10\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Melodic Sketches\n10:45\u2014Story Parade\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Call One-Nine\n\"12:00\u2014Bonspiel1 News\n12:05\u2014Sportsman's Corner\n12:10\u2014Shopper's Guide\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm  Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Here's Our Story\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLYTV   -  Channel 4\nll;00-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\u2014 On Your Account\n2:30\u2014Valiant Lady\n2:45\u2014Brighter Day\n3:00\u2014What's Cqoking\n3:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n3:45\u2014Guiding Light\n4:00\u2014Love of Life\n4:15\u2014Armchair Adventure\n4:30\u2014Garry Moore\n5:00\u2014Strike It Rich\n5:30\u2014Variety Hour\n6:00\u2014The Party Line\n6:30\u2014Doug Edwards\n6:45\u2014Perry Como\n7:00\u2014Front Row Centre\n8:00\"-Jungle Town\n8:15\u2014News\n8:25\u2014Weather Vane\n8:30\u2014Cowboy G-Men\n9:00\u2014 The Millionaire\n9:30\u2014I've Got a Secret\n10:00\u2014Godfrey and His Friends\n11:00\u2014 Patti Page Show\n11:15\u2014Ames Brothers\n11:30\u2014Front   Page   Detective\n12:00\u2014Heart of the City\nKHQ-TV  - Channel 6\n9:25\u2014Test Pattern\n9:40\u2014Color Test Program\n9:55\u2014Bible Reading\n10:00\u2014Ding Dong School\n10:30\u2014You and Your Child\n10:45\u2014Sheilah Graham\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:00\u2014Tennessee Ernie Ford\n12:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n1:00\u2014Yukon Manhunt\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n3:00\u2014Ted Mack's Matinee\n3:30\u2014It Pays To Be Married\n4:00\u2014 Q's Kaleidoscope\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n4:45\u2014Modern Romance\n5:00\u2014Pinky Lee\n5:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n6:00\u2014 Howdy Doody\n6:30\u2014Mr. Engineer\n7:00\u2014Vigalantes Are Coming\n7:30\u2014 The Front Page\n7:40\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014Request Performance\n8:30\u2014My Little Margie\n9:00\u20141 Led Three Lives\n9:30\u2014Amos 'N' Andy\n10:00\u2014This 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\u2014 News Headlines\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\u2014Burns Bonspiel Broadcatt\n3:30\u2014Miscellaney\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Music on Two Pianos\n4:45\u2014Legends\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Tops and  Pops\n5:30\u2014Sports News\n5:35\u2014Spotlighl  on a Star\n5:45\u2014Prairie News Hihglighta\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Musicale\n6:15\u2014Folk Themes\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\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTHURSDAY, JULY  14,   1955\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7\" 15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014 Musical   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\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Composer's Corner\n10.00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Melodic Sketches\n10:45\u2014King Ganam Show\n11:00\u2014Kate Aitken\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten  of the Air\n11:30\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C   Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five To One\n1:00\u2014The Concert Hour\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014Prairie Picture\n4:45\u2014Mystery at Wind Whistle _.\n5:00\u2014At Home With the Lennickl\n5:25\u2014Traffic Jamboree\n5:45\u2014News\n5:55\u2014International Commentary\n6:00\u2014Musicale\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\u2014 News\n10:15\u2014Canadians Around the World\n10:30\u2014Conversation\n\u25a0\u25a0\".\u2014\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n5 \u2022>\u2022 A M\nKREM-TV \u2014 Channel 2\n3:45\u2014Test Pattern\n4:00\u2014\"The Angelus\"\n5:10\u2014Health and Happiness Club\n5:15\u2014Don Ricardo Returns\"\n6:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n6:55\u2014Newsbeat Spokane\n7:00\u2014Wed.  Night Fights\n7:45\u201411th Round\n8:00\u2014The Lone Ranger\n8:30\u2014Disneyland\n9:30\u2014Clary Wright Show\n10:00\u2014Masquerade Party\n10:30\u2014\"King of the Zombies\"\n11:30\u2014'Matter of Murder\"\n12:45\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice I\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n30 a.m. to 6 p.m.\u2014Phone  1300\nEvenings \u2014 Phone 1033 R\nDally  Except Sundays\nand  Holldaye       *\nMc & Mc\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nACROSS\n1. To wash\n6. Slides\n11. Spring\nmonth\n12. Light boat\n13. Point\nof IttnA\n14. Equipment\nfor fishing\n15. Hewing\ntool\n16. Equal\n17. Affirmative\nrep.ly\n18. Argent\n.(sym.)\n19. City in\nFrance\n21. Tell\n23. Whcateh\nflour (India)\n27. Make into\na statute\n28. Mohammedan religious\nwar\n29. Mix\n30. Unit of dr}\nmeasure\n(Sp.l\n31. Put out\n33. Part of\n\"to be\"\n34. Luzon\nnative\n37. Question\n38. Man's\nnickname\n39. A pickle\nsauce\n41\u201eSmell\n43. The little\ngirl in\nWonderland\n44. Maxim\n45. Vaults for\nvaluables\n46. Harrowlike battle\nformation\nDOWN\n1. A bet\n(Roulette)\n2. Plain\nor\nclear\n8. Pet\nnanu\nfor a\ndog\n4. Strike\n5. Elevated\ntrain\n(shortened)\n6. Frighten\n7. Varnish\ningredient\n8. Covered\nwith Ink\n9. Rod .\n10. Observes\n14. Not wild\n16. Famous\nEnglish\nstatesman\n18. God of war\n19. Mother-\nof-pearl\nfl?\n20. Sanctl.\n(led\nperson\nJ2. Me.\ndieval\ntype\nof\nshort\ntale\n24. Definite\narticle\n25. Malay,\nan\npeople\nnative    t\nto '\nPhil. Is.\n26. First man\n(Bib.)\n28. Knave\n(Cards)\n30. An aquatic\nvertebrate\n32. Receptacles\nfor flowers\n\u2022t'j    Haacs\naaaaa heiumb\n\u25a1 aa   BUHHUilH\naasiiiHH HEia\naaaasia uutju\nHauua uaaau\nHBaSB   HaSHii\nVcnterday'l Answer,\n34. Macawi\n35. Tissue\n(anat.l\n36. Arabian\nletter\n38. Jewish\nmonth \u25a0\n40. Frozen\nwater\n41. Poem\n42. Female ruff\n44. Exclamation\n1\n1\n3\nA\n5\ni\n<\u00b0\n7\na\n<>\n10\nII\n'A\n13.\n13\n%\ni4\n^\n\\i\n%\nlb\nf\/t\nIT\n18\nfA\n19\nSO\n^\/A\n^\n^\n31\nrt\n^^\n33\n34 '\nIS\n36\n37\nm\n2&\nV,\n^\n3\u00b0\n4\n'^\ny<\n31\n31\n%\nSs\n34\n3ff\n36\n^t\n^7\n^A\n38\n^\n39\n40\n^\n41\n43.\n4j\n1\ntti\nIS\ni\nAb\n7-13\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nls LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A la usti\nfor the three L'a, X for the two d's, etc. Single lettera, apo\u00ab\u00ab\ntrophies, the length and formation of the worda are all hints.\nBach day the Code lettera are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nSUTSK WM YEU ACAU SUTSK, HZO\nNECA  WM  NECA \u2014 KTZS.\nYesterday's   Cryptoquole\u2014THE   BIRD   FORLORN   THAT'\nSINGEfH WITH HER BREAST AGAINST A THORN\u2014HOOU\nI\n mm*m^^**\n\u25a0   f-> .\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022        ' .. '.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;'. ;;:\"\u25a0'\u25a0\nfpwpp\n\u25a0 * \u2022 **;*:* :m*   **;  * .\n\u2014\u2014\n-\n\/W!\nMORE FUNDS for VACATION FUN\nUSE WANT ADS\nPhone\n1844\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nMH.P. BIG TWIN~EVINRUDE~l952\noutboard motor, A-l condition,\nlow.hourage, like ne\\\u00ab(. For fur-\ntHer particulars write P.O. Box\n1313, Kimberley, B. C.\nBIRTHS\nSTRAND - To Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sdand of Moyie. at St. Eugene\nHospital. Cranbrook, July 8, a daughter. .\nHELP WANTED\n\"McKIM JR.-SR. HIGH SCHOOL,\nKIMBERLEY CITY\n(32 Teachers on  the staff)\nOne teacher tor Mathematics plus\nsome Science.\nS. B. Scale: $3,000 to $5,200 (12\nyrs.)\nGood working conditions: Kimberley is situated in beautiful Rocky\nMountain Trench country, with all\noutdoor sports, hunting, fishing, ect.\nal hand.\nEnclose copy of latest Inspector's\nReport anr> apply to:\nJ. R. Pearse, Secretary-Treasurer,\nSchool  District No. 3   I Kimberley)\nBox 1329. Kimberley. B. C.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nblSTRIBUTORSHIP BEING SET\nup for Lustre Craft, an amazing\nnew household product. Only two\nmen needed for West Kootenay\ndistrict. Car essential. Contact L.\nA. Jacobson, New Grand Hotel,\nJuly 14, 10 a.m.; also Astoria Hotel\nin Trail, July 15. 10 a.m.\nExperienced logging truck\ndriver for truck'and trailer. Must\nbe able to top load. Kooke Lumber Co. Ltd., Greenwood. B. C.\nWANTED -LICENSED SCALERS.\nApply National Employment.\nELDERLY COUPLE NEED HOUSE\nkeener 612 Carbonate\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nlady^needsIiospital'WORK,\nexperienced    nurses    aid   Phone\n1623-R-3.\t\nIF BUILDING A HOME OR RE-\nmodelling, for reasonable estimates   phone 1883-L\nFOR    ALL\n256-R\nODD    JOBS    PHONE\nRENTALS\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, dishes. Unens and maid\nservice. Day week, or monthly\nAllen Hotel. 171  Baker St\nFOR RENT \u2014 TWO FLOORS 50'\nby 100' each; suitable for storage,\nwarehouse, or cars. Apply McDonald Jam Co., 301 Vernon.\nBEDROOMS FOR RENT, WEEK\nor month. Double bed or twin\nbeds, modern home, men preferred. Block off Baker. Ph. 683-X.\nFor rent - fully equipped\ncafe for rent. Apply Royal Hotel.\nGrand Forks. B\u00a3.\t\nLARGE HOUSEKEEPING ROOM,\nfully furnished with fridge; for 2.\n171 Baker.\nOFFICE SPACE FOR RENT. 16x60\non ground floor. Apply 554B Stanley or Phone 723-R,\nWANTED- HOUSEKEEPING\nroom, close in. Box 2908 D^ily\nNews.\nUNFURNISHED   NEWLY DECOR-\nated (wo room suite. Ph. 1652-X\nROOM  FOR  RENT DOWNTOWN,\nphone 934-R.\n3 BEDROOM HOUSE CLOSE IN-\navailable July 15. Phone 135.\n4     ROOM    SELF    CONTAINED\nsuite. Phone 1652-X.\nNEWLY DECORATED 2 ROOM\nsuite for rent. 723 Silica.\nFOR RENT, FURNISHED APART-\nment. Suit couple. Phone 713-X.\n3   ROOM   COTTAGE   FOR  RENT\ndos-- in   Phone 1647-R,\nUNFURNISHED SUITE. ADULTS\nAi'i   1st   Phone eve- 967-L-2.\nFOR    RENT,    HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Ph. 405-L.\nBEDROOM    TO    RENT  BY   THE\nmonth. Phone 474-X.\nLAND ACT\nNolice of Intention to\nApply to Lease Land\nIn Land Recording District of\nRevelstoke and situate on the\nwest shore of Upper Arrow Lake\nabout one-quarter mile south of\nthe northeast corner of Lot 861.\nKootenay district, Province of\nBritish Columbia.\nTake notice that Pingston Creek\nTimber, Ltd., a logging company\nduly incorporated under the laws\nof  the   Province   of   British   Columbia and having its registered\noffice at 191 Baker Street. Nelsdn,\nB.C.. intends to apply for a lease\nof the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted\non    the   west   shore   of   Upper\nArrow   Lake   about   one-quarter\nmile south of the northeast corner  of  Lot 861,  Kootenay  District\n(hence   southerly   following   the\nshore of the lake 5000 feet; thence\neasterly   at   right   angles   to  the\nshore  line  150  feet;  thence northerly and parallel to the shore\nline  to a   point  150  feet easily\nfrom the point of commencement;\nthence west 150 feet to the pont\nof. commencement; and containing\n20  acres,  more   or   less,   for  the\npurpose of a booming area.\nPINGSTON CREEK TIMBER LTD\nPer.  \"S. Sinnerud\"\nAgent.\nDated June 22, 1955.\nFOR  SALE  MISCELLANEOUS\nLUMBER LIQUIDATION SALE.\n2x4. 2x6, 2x8, 1x4, 1x6, 1x8, 1x10.\nAll dressed stock R\/L. $30.00.per\nthousand B.M. Delivery price\nwithin 30 mile radius of Passmore,\nB.C. S. Kudra, Passmore, B.C.\nFor immediate appointment ph.\n1702-R, Nelson, or write Passmore\nP.O: Also we have Cull Lumber\nR'L. Immediate delivery. Approx\n4000 B.C. $22.50. Phone 1702, Nelson.\nLEAVING COUNTRY \u2014 MUST\nsell immediately 1953 Mark 7\nJaguar, Kelvinator refrigerator.\nZenith washing machine, bedroom suite, Northern Electric TV,\nhigh chair, folding crib, bed\nchesterfield, chair, sewing machine, etc. J. H. Eastman, Canadian\nExploration. Salmo. B.C\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\n& Metals Ltd.. 250 Prior St.. Van\ncouver. B  C. Phone PAcific 6357\nSHIP US\nYOUR\nSCRAP\nMETALS.\ncopper,\nbrass,\nlead.\naluminum\nHighest\nprices.\nprompt\npayment\nActive\nTrading\n935  E.\nCordova\nVancouver\nFOR SALE \u2014 CHESTERFIELD\nsuite, large Coleman oil heater.\nwood and coal stove with water\njacket, bedroom suite; owner leaving town. Phone 792-X.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\n3 9 ACRES\nCLOSE TO TOWN\n1\u2014Good land, all cleared. 4-room\nhouse on stone foundation. \u2014\nNeeds repairs Barn and wood-\nAhRdea, Buy. ^750\nSome Terms.\nCOMFORTABLE HOME\n-500 Block Latimer Street. Two\nbedrooms, dining room, living\nroom and bathroom on ground\nfloor; also two bedrooms upstairs. Cement foundation,\ngood basement; cement floor,\nfurnace with automatic stoker.\n1'A lots in garden,    $(j8()0\netc.\nPrice\nSome Terms,\n1\/2   ACRE   .\n3\u2014Attractive ground. 6-Mile, and\nNEW 3-BDRM. BUNGALOW\nNeeds a little finishing. Oil\nheat. Picture window. Bright,\nmodern kitchen.       $85Q0\nTerms\nOR $8000 CASH\nC.W.Appleyard\n& CO. LTD.\nT. C. LA:.iB'!RT. Office Manager\n392 Baker St. Phone 269\nEstablished 1912\nReal Estate and Insurance Agents\nP.O. Box 26 Nelson, B.C.\nSUBURBAN STORE\nAND 5 ROOMED DWELLING\nAND 2 LOTS\nCorner   store   with   lunch - Ice\ncream counter, doing a nice turnover.    Very   good   school   trade\nLat- . $9500\nFull price ^\nTerms.\nAgencies Ltd.\nPhone 135 or Eves. 1065-X\nLOWER FAIRVIEW, A LOVELY 3\nbedroom family home in excellent condition. 2 bedrooms down,\none up, 15x20 living room with\nbrick fireplace. Wired for range,\nfull basement with garage doors,\ncoal furnace, lovely garden. Half\nblock to bus, near schools and\npark. $8,500.00. Phone 1338-R.\nAPARTMENT HOUSE,. 5 SUITES\nrented $150 monthly, 4 rooms for\nowner, 2 bathrooms, utilities,\nbasement furnace. $14,000. Maher,\n914 Stanley, Nelson. B.C.\nELECTRIC VIBRA-HARP FOR\nsale. Highly polished steel ban\nproduce beautiful, shimmering\ntones. White pearloid and chrome\nfinish, like new .Phone 982-Y.\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture, basement. 301 Baker St\nPhone 47. \"We buy used furniture.\"\nNORGE AUTOMATIC WASHER\nand drier, combination coal, wood\nand electric range. All nearly\nnew Apply H. Nixon. Bonnington\nOIL, STOVE. COMBINATION RA-\ndio. refrigerator, and other articles. Ph. 743-Y-3.\nBOMBER HOISTS. 1500 LBS CA-\npacity. $45. while they last Active\nTrading Co., 935 E  Cordova. Van\nI  ROOM   COTTAGE   FOR  RENT.\nClose in. Phone 1647-R.\nTWO ROOMED FURNISHED APT.\n$35.00. 718 Silica. Phone 1342-L.\nFOR  RENT.  2-ROOM SUITE,\nply 614 Victoria St.\nWANTED    MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY; CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking Buyers of\nscrap iron, batteries. Brass, aluminum, copper Used parts for cars\nand fc-ucks for sale Western\nAuto Wrecking. Box 132 Granite\nRd..  Nelson. B. C.\nPHONE 1807 DAYS. 882-Y EVE.\nWe buy bottles, scrap metal and\nJunk. Independent Trader, 415*4\nLatimer St.. Nelson. B.C.\nS K I L TON'S BEATTY REPAIR\nshop. For all wringer rolls and\nwasher repairs. 415A Falls St\nPh. 91.\nLARGE OFFICE SAFE. SACRI-\nfice price. For immediate sale\n3W South Slocan.\nWOOL FOR SALE. EXTRA LONG.\nHugh Graham, Erickson. B. C.\nNORGE FRIDGE, 8 CU. FT, GOOD\ncondition. Phone 1384-L.\n2<A\"  8MM.  IKOTON  TELEPHOTO\nlens. Phone 1795-X.\nSTRAWBERRIES FOR SALE. P. J\nLebedoff. Glade. B.C.\nMACHINERY\nWANTED TO BUY - SAW LOGS\nand cedar poles on Kootenay\nLake or rail. Kootenay Products.\nBox 450 Nelson.\nDIESEL\nHEAVY EQUIPMENT\nWE NEED several mechanically\ninclined and reliable men to train\nfor positions in the Tractor and\nEquipment industry If you are\nnot making better than $90 per\nweek or you don't have all year\njob security, you owe it to your-\n;olf to write for free facts, without obligation, about this training\nand our Advisory Placement\nService.\nTRACTOR TRAINING SERVICE\nBox   2656   Nelson   Daily   News\nFOR SALE IN THE BEAUTIFUL\nKootenay Valley at Kaslo. old-\ntype house. 4 rooms on 4 lots, for\ncash $2600.00. Mrs. Heide, Kaslo,\nB.C.\nWILL PAY CASH FOR SUITABLE\nsecond mortgages or agreements\non Nelson properties Give details\nand discount you will allow\nReply Box 4024 Daily News\nFOR SALE NEAR APPLEDALE.\nMap 191. Lot 122. Blocks 190 and\n383. Any reasonable offer will be\nconsidered. Write Mrs. Rosa Nev\nVerwood. Sask.\n3 BEDROOM HOUSE ON VIEW ST.\nFull basement, large lots, fruit\ntrees and garden. Outside city\nlimits. Phone 1099-L.\nMUST SELL 1 THREE BEDROOM\nhouse, $7500; 1 two bedroom house\n$5500. Terms. Phone 914-L after\n4 p.m. ' \t\n2 BEDROOM HOME ON 2 LOTS:\nall on main floor with hot water\ntank and wired for range. Apply\n916 Josephine.\nFOR SALE 1 CHOICE LOT. 50x120\nFairview Heights. Phone 1671-R\nafter 5:30.\nFOR SALE-3 BEDROOM HOUSE\nwith any amount of land up to\nlots   Phone 667-L-l.\nFOR SALE-2 BEDROOM HOUSE\npriced'$3000. PhoVle 241-L-3.\n3   BEDROOM   HOUSE   ON   TWO\nlots. $4500 cash or terms. Ph. 245-Y.\nDUNWOODY CABINS AT LAKE-\nside Park   806 Second. Nelson\nWanted to buy - timber\nand   bush    land   in   vicinity   of\nKootenay Lake.  Apply Box 2736\nNelson   Daily   News.\nUSED PIANO. DESCRIPTION AND\nprice, please.  Write  to E\nGen. Del.. Rossland.\nFOR TRADE-\nF.   H.\n1949 KAISER WILL\ntake t? ton pickup of equal value\nPhone 816-L-2\nFARM, GARDEN AND\nNURSERY\nFRESH STRAWBERRIES FOR\ncanning now on sale. Apply W. W\nSeminoff, Taghum.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nfor one or two. Apply 417 Carbonate.\nROOM   AND  BOARD.\nVictoria St.\nAPPLY 622\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS BOX\n383   Phone  161-L-3 or 366-R.\nD2 CATERPILLAR WITH POWER\ntake-off. generator and lights. In\nvery good condition. Best offer\nWrite J. Bath. 190 Reservoir Rd .\nTrail. B.C.\nBaldpate ducks which nest on\nthe prairies have white feathers on\ntop of the head.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nIN VICINITY OF FRUITVALE -\nService station, store, garage and\nhouse partly built. Operating now.\nWonderful opportunity for auto\ncourt, trailer and camping space.\nMust sell due to owners handicap.\nPrice $8300. Terms with liberal\ndown payment. Apply Box 10059.\nNelson Daily News.\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY  AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFebruary & March hatched pullets\n\u2014 Hampshires. Leghorn - Hampshire Cross, White Leghorns and\nother breeds. Get these for early\nlayers. Write for Price List\nRUMP & SENDALL LIMITED\nLangley. B.C.\nFOR SALE - 100 EWES AND\nlambs. Apply R. D. McGregor.\nCrawford Bay.\nYOUNG COW FOR SALE. FRESH-\nened few months ago. Cheap. Apply William Popoff. Perry Siding\nWANTED - HEAVY LOGGING\nhorse. Ken Doi, Slocan City\nGOOD MILKING COW FOR SALE.\nApply Paul Juraloff, Slocan Park.\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nFOR SALE - CAFE IN DISTRICT\neentiV Must sell because of ill\nhealth. Revenue from rooms will\ncover payments. Price reasonable\ninterest 4 per cent. Additional lot\nfor expansion only vacant lot in\nbusiness section. Write Box 9695.\nDaily News, Nelson. B. C.\nLOST AND FOUND\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nLOST  -  BABY'S    GREY    FELT\nMexican jacket hand embroidered\nwith wool, size 2; early Tuesday\nevening downtown. Please phone\n1207. Reward.\nLOST - ANSCO SUPER REGENT\n35 mm. camera Tuesday, July 11\nbetween Latimer and Vernon St.\nPlease call 11(50, extension 3.\nLOST ON BAKER SATURDAY -\nBrown rimmed glasses. Phone\n318-R-l. Reward.\t\nT705T~^~LADiESr \"EXPANSION\nwrist watch. Phone 378-R-2. Re-\nward.\nLOST - A RROWN SUIT JACKET\nReward. Call Savoy Hotel.\nReducing\nOF USED EQUIPMENT\n1953 Ford Pickup\n1952 International Pickup\n1952 Studebaker Pickup\n1951 International Pickup\n1949 International Panel\n1952 Pontiac Sedan Delivery\n1950 Morris Oxford Sedan\n1948 Ford Coupe\n1953 Ford 3-ton.\n1947 International K-7\nTRADES and TERMS\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 Front St.\nPhone 1400      Nelson, B.C.\nSEE\nREUBEN BUERGE MOTORS\nLTD. TODAY\nAND\nDEAL WITH CONFIDENCE\nWITH\nTHE LARGEST CAR DEALER\nIN THE INTERIOR OF B.C.\n1955 Zephyr\n1954 Austin A-70\nLow mileage.\n1953 Austin\n1952 Henry J\n1952 Hillman\n\"552 Morris Oxford\n1951 Morris Minor\n1950 Austin\n1949 Austin\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1955 Meteor Miagara 4-Dr.\n1955 Ford 4 Door Fairlane\n1954 Chevrolet 4-Door\n1954 Plymouth Belvedere\n4-Door.\n1953 Pontiac 2-Door\n1953 Chevrolet Hardtop\n1953 Ford 4-Door\n1953 Chevrolet 4-Door\n1952 Ford 4-Door\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\n1949 Chevrolet 4-Door\n1949 Ford 4-Door\n1948 Chevrolet 4-Door\n1946 Chevrolet 4-Door\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1954 Ford Sedan Delivery\n1952 G.M.C. Pickup\n1952 Austin Panel\n1952 Dodge Pickup\n1951   Austin Pickup\n1951  Chevrolet Pickup\n1951   Austin Countryman\n1949 Ford One Ton\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1953 BSA Motor Bike\nSPOT CASH\nFOR LATE MODEL CARS\n\"   AUSTIN\nSERVICE AND SALES\n.    AUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n(Continued\n1953 CHEV. SEDAN LIKE NEW;\none owner. Preway oil heater one\nyear old. Two 45 gal. drums. Make\nme an offer. Phone 656-H.\nFOR SALE 14-FT RUNABOUT.\n5tt' beam for outboard motor T\nAllan'. Dh   58-W   Nakusp. B   C\nFOR   SALE   -   ll'-6\"   CAR   TOP\nboat. Phone 1547-L.\nNrfautt llaHii NpttiB\nClassified    Advertising Rates\nPer line, 1 time .20\n2 consecutive, times .35\n3 consec. tive times .45\n4. 5 and 6 consecutivo \u25a0\ntimes 60\n28 consecutive times $1.82\nNon-consecutive insertions     .20\n\u25a0 line per time.\nBox numbers .11 extra. \"\nPUBLIC    (LEGAL)    NOTICES\nTENDERS, etc. - 20c per line\nfirst Insertion 16c per line each\nsubsequent insertion\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS'10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not. More  Than  Listed  Here)\nBy carrier per ween\nin advance . .30\nBy carrier per year $15.80\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month $'1.25\nThree months  .     $2.75\nSix mbnth's     $ 5.50\nOne year $15.00.\nMall tn Canada outside Nelson\nOne month . ......    $ 1.00\nThree months     $3.75\nSix months _    $ 7.50\nOne vear $10.00\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE.   W    WIDDOWSON   &   CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St, Nelson\nS   ELMES.   ROSSLAND, B\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEYORS\nG. W. BAERG\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St      Nelson      Ph. 1118\nand Box 34, Fruitvale, B. C,\nSuccessor to the late A. U, Purdy.\nBOYD  C   AFFLECK,  M.B.I.C.\nB.C. Land Surveyor P Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St. - Nelson     Phone 1238\n| a   V   SHAYLER,   P.C.   BOX   252\nKimberley, Phone 54.\nB C Land Surveyor, Engineer\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop.     Acetylene ond\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593, 324 Vernon St\nTIMBER   CRUI8ER\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nSPECIAL BUY\nCaterpillar\nWith hydraulic angle dozer and\nhyster D4 winch and operator's\nguard.\nONLY   $3100\nSea\nH   \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nYOUR JOHN DEERE,\nMcCULLOCH PEALER\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n614 Railway St.      Nelson. B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nNelson\nREABY-MIX\nConcrete Ltd.\n$13.50 cu. yd.\nPHONE 871\nDelivered in Nelson\nSAVE TIME - SAVE MONEY\n\"Do It the Easy Way\"\nWELDERS!\nWe Carry a Good Stock of\nSTELCO ELECTRODES\nSteyenson's\nV MACHINE SHOP LTD.\n;  \u25a0 \u2022 70B VEKNON ST.\nNELSON PHONE 98\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13,1953^9\nCalgary Livestock\nCAU3ARY (CP) - Several classes were 25 to 50 cents higher as\ntrade continued strong and active\non the livestock market Tuesday,\nReceipts were 1070 cattle and 15\ncalves, mostly good to choice dry-\nfed steers and heifers.\nGood to choice dry-fed butcher\nsteers were 25 to 50 cents above\nlast week's close; medium quality\n50 cents or more higher in spots;\nall classes of good to choice dry-\nfed butcher heifers 50 cents higher\nfor the week, odd sales topping\n$19; good to choice fed ye^rlingrf\nin keen demand at the week*'s advance of 25 to 50 cents; cows 25-50\ncents higher for the week; bulls\nsteady;  good  stock steers ln  keen\ndemand at firm prices; veal calves\nsteady to strong.\nChoice dry-fed. butcher steers\n20.75-21.25; good 19.50-20.50; medium 18-19.25; common 14.50-17.50;\nchoice dry-fed butcher heifers'\n1825-18.75 good 17-18; medium.-^-\n16.75; common 12-15.50; choice ^ed\ncalves 20.25-20.75; good 19.25-20;\nmedium 17.50-19; good cows 12.50-13;\nmedium 11.50-12 25; common 10.25-\n11.25; canners and cutters 5.50-10;\ngood bulls 13-14; common to\nmedium 9-12.50; good feeder steers\n17.50-18.25; good stock steers 16.5Q-\n17.10; common to medium 12-15 50;\ngood to choice veal calves 21-25;\ncommon to medium  12-20,\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nFORK LIFTS\nBACK HOES\nLOADERS\nDOZERS\nHeadquarters for\nWorld-Champion\nTERR ATRAC\nCrawler Tractor* & Equipment\nSALES    \u2022    SERVICE    \u2022    PARTS\nAlso Dealers for the\nFollowing Equipment'\nLorain\nShovels, Cranes, Backhoes,\nRubber Tired Crawlers,\nLoaders\nTrojan\nFour Wheel  Drive\n. Front End Loaders\nJunkers\nFree Piston Type\nPortable Compressors\nRustori ;\nDiesel Engines\nMine Locomotives\nPower Plants\nUniversal\nCrushers\nWashington\nLogging Equipment\nEUGENE H. HIRD\nSlocan City, B.C. Timber cruising,\nmineral claim Inspection.\nAnywhere ta B.C.'\nCLIMBING  FOXES\nGrey Foxes have been known to\nraise their young in hollow trees\n25 feet above the ground.\nBennetts Ltd.\nMACHINE SHOP\nPhone 593\nniVtVTton St.\nBuyiiig-^-Selliiig\u2014Rentiii\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n\u25a0\u25a0>     mmmm\nFIRST LINI\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINI\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH  LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH. LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word )\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\n.ueoen oyerge\nMotors Ltd.\nNelson, B C.\nPhone I 135    803 Baker St\nPer Line\n1   Insertion\nFOR SALE, 1954 RANCH WAGON\nmaroon color, in excellent condition. Mileage lesl than 8.0OU\nGuarantee still good. Price $2300\nFor Cash $2200. Mrs. Robert\nSimpson. Moyie, B.C.\n5 TON G.M.C. MODEL 470, AIR\nbrakes, new tires. Eight ton trailer with logging brinks. Price\n$5500. McDowell Motors Ltd., Vernon, B.C. \t\n52 V4-TON CHEV. \"$1000.00. $\"500\ncash rest financed. Apply P\nGritchen.- Procter\nTOR*SAL5:::T05b AUSTIN, EXCEL-\nlent mechanical condition. Cash\nor terms. Phone 826-R-l.\n(Continued in Next Column)\n2 Consecutive   Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions\n6 Consecutive Insertions\n26 Consecutive  Insertions\n$ .20\n.33\n.43\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge Is two lines\n\u2022 Add He for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rates if payment It\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low six time rate\nNon Consecutive Insertions 20$ a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Oyer 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo of Days Ad Is To Run .\n-*--'-\u2014' \"-\u25a0  Bill^Me  _..i __1\t\nYOUR   SAME\nADDRESS\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson,\nB.C.\njm\n \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0  \u2014^\n\"*\u2022\"*\u00ab\n 1 ,\u2014\n\u2022 '\u2014:\u2014\t\n,\t\nli-NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1955\n:---\u25a0-     For Those Unpleasant i\nSUMMER\nCOLDS\nNeo Synephrin Nasal Spray .  $1.00 - $1.25\n| Neo Synephrin Nose Drops for Children .75\nPrivine Nose Drops .       .95\nPrivine with Vaporixer .'. $1.30\nSuper Anahist Nasal Spray  $1.00\nFrom 217 Tablets ., .35 - .90 - $1.85\nFrosst Tablets for Children .45 -     .95\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nFarm Union at Saskatchewan Meeting\nFavors Renewal of Wheat Agreement\n^SASKATOON (CP) \u2014 More than\n88$ delegates at the Interprovinclal\nJ'ijrm Union conference approved a\nr||Jolution favoring renewal of the\nInternational Wheat Agreement\nWhich ytpires July 31. 1956.\n'^The resolution for renewal is\nbfjjed on the proviso that floor\nand ceiling prices should not be\nlowered from the present level and\nthat quotas allocated to foreign\nliSuntrles be \"fair and reasonable.\"\nV^The IFUC, which speaks for\njipie 200,000 farmers in Ontario,\nJfesitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta\nand British Columbia, also went\npji; record in expressing the desire\nt|jt the United Kingdom consider\nreentering any future agreement.\n\u00bb?aprUC will again seek the appointment  of  a  representative on\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\n., . Phone 327\n'**<\u00bb d76 Baker Street\n' i \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0-_\nthe advisory committee to the Canadian delegation of the IWA, Representatives of the participating\ncountries are due to meet later\nthis year to discuss renewal of the\nagreement.\nJacob Epstfiin Weds\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Sculptor Sir Ja\ncob Epstein has secretly married\nhis 50-year-old secretary and model,\nMrs. Kathless Garman, it is reported\nThe New York born artist, fi, now\nis en route to New York aboard the\nFrench liner Liberte, which left\nSouthampton last week. His bride,\na model for many of his most famous statues, was reported heading\nfor Italy to avoid publicity. The\nLondon Daily Mail said the couple\nwas married in London last week.\nHave the Job Dono Right\nVIC GRAVES\n\u25a0 \" LIMITED\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nLabor Advocates\nCoastal Trade\nfor Home Vessels\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canada's three\nlabor congresses Tuesday urged the\nI'pyal commission on coastal shipping to recommend that coastal\ntrade be restricted to Canadian vessels.\nThe union' groups, with a combined membership of about 1,100,000,\nappeared before the commission on\nthe second day of hearings by the\nthree-man body' under the chairmanship of Mr. Justice W. F. Spence\nof the Ontario Supreme Court.\nThe coasting traffic under investigation by the federally-appointed\ncommission is the haulage between\none Canadian port and another on\nthe seaboards, the St. Lawrence\nriver and the Great Lakes.\nAt present, low-wage British vessels may enter it on the same terms\nas Canadian carriers under a 1931\ntreaty.\nThe 100,000-member Canadian and\nCatholic Confederation of Labor,\nlargely centred in Quebec, sajd if\nCanada is to regain its place in\nmaritime shipping arid ship construction, there must be an immediate program including:\n1. Limitation of coastal and inland shipping to vessels built and\nmaintained in Canada.\n2. Government organization of a\nmerchant marine on a sound basis,\nwith inadequate equipment replaced by modern ships.\n3. A national navigation policy\nproviding for subsidies for Canadian ships doing business abroad\nor at home, provided they use Canadian construction, repair and\nmaintenance facilities.\n4. The federal government's Canadian maritime commission to include labor representation.\n5. Placing of Canadian ship construction and repair industry under\na national labor code for fair minimum labor standards.\nThe brief of the TLC, made public several weeks ago, included these\nrecommendations:\n1. Canada should commit itself\nto a policy of building and maintaining a merchant fleet \"commensurate y\/ith her position as the\nthird-largest trading nation in the\nworld.\"\n2. Ocean shipping must be taken\ninto account if practical steps Are\nto be taken to maintain k 'stable\nshipbuilding industry.\n3. Action should be taken to recruit and maintain adequate forces\nof trained personnel in the Canadian shipping and shipbuilding industries.\nte\nf\nu\u00bb\u201e\n<N*\nCOMPLETE\nAUTO SERVICE\nW\\\nICm\nYou Don't Have to Worry\nAbout Your High Mileage Vacation Driving ai\nBEAR\nWHEEL ALIGNMENT\nWill give you scientific adjustment.\nAlways Be Safe and Sure\nI With well adjusted brakes.\nBEAR\nWHEEL ALIGNMENT\nSave Those Tires from Wear\nI\nBEAR\nWHEEL ALIGNMENT\nFor True Safe Driving\ni\nWHEELS\nOUT OF LINE.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCOMPANY  LIMITED\ntphonesg s*\nLOCATED AT 323 VERNON STREET\nPhone\n35\nFOR FULL\nINFORMATION\nKnow What Uranium Ore Looks Like?\nProspectors Can See Samples Here\nE. W. FLORENDINfc\nThe prospector ls again showing\nhis worth by playing an Important\nrole in meeting the demand 'or new\nmaterials, and we still need him to\nfind the mineral deposits. At the\npresent time uranium appears to\nbe uppermost in the prospector's\nmind, now that atomic energy has\nopened up a new chapter in the\nmetals industry. Adequate, supplies\nof uranium were. unknown when\nthis new era of atomic energy came\ninto being, in fact we learn that\nsome uranium deposits were discovered by accident, when searching\nfor copper in the Congo, S.A.\n. We understand that there are a\nnumber of minerals which are associated with, uranium ore minerals, which may lead to uranium ore\ndeposits. There is the possibility that\nthese other minerals may mislead\nthe prospector and naturally result\nin the waste of time and effort.\nFor instance, it is recognized that\nall granites contain some radioactivity which can be detected by a\nGeiger counter. The reason for this\nis apparently due to the presence\nof thorium and potassium minerals,\nwhich one generally discovers in\ngranite and pegmatitlc rocks.\nWith a view to assisting those\nnow engaged or interested in the\nsearch for radioactive ore in this\ndistrict, the Chamber of Mines of\nEastern B. C. has obtained some new\nspecimens from the Department of\nMines and Technical Surveys, Ottawa and the Eldorado Mining and\nRefining Limited, Beaverlodge operation.\nFrom Ottawa, we received conglomerate ore specimens, one being\nfresh material from underground\nand another weathered specimen\nfrom the surface. The latter shows\nthe manner in which the pyrite in\nthe ore was oxidized and largely removed by weathering leaving a yellow stain. It is believed that much\nof the uranium was also removed\nin this way from the surface exposures. The yellow material of the specimen should not be confused with\nthe brighter yellow of many secondary uranium minerals, as it is\nentirely or mainly iron. These con\nglomerate specimens came from the\nBlind River region, Ontario.\nFROM BEAVERLODGE\nA representative suite of the Beaverlodge uranium .mineralization\nhas been received, which no doubt\nwill also be of interest to prospectors. This suite consists of black\npitchblende and red alteration from\nthe Ace mine, together with a brown\npitchblende (hematitic) and red alteration from the same mine, \"\"also\nsurface specimens showing weathering products\u2014yellow uranium oxides. Other surface specimens show\nuranium oxides (yellow and orange) with minor green copper\nstain, these are from the Lost Vein,\nEagle Mine.\nWe are informed that the typical\nbrick-red alteration in the specimen is a frequent association with\npitchblende  mineralization,   but  It\nshould be borne in mind that red\nalteration.may occur without pitchblende and pitchblende without red\nalteration. Some of these specimens\nshow fairly massive mineralization,\nnevertheless we should remember\nthat veins of pitchblende as little as\none-eighth,of an Inch ln width can\nmake ore.\nThe Chamber will be pleated to\nshow these specimens together\nwith other uranium ore specimens\nto anyone who Is Interested In\nthis particular subject, a total of\n20 specimens being on exhibit\nhere.\nThe Chamber has received radio\nactive specimens which we are\nInformed come from the Rexspar\nproperty, which It a recent discovery, and we hope to receive a\nspecimen from the Jackson Qasln\nMining Company, who are now\nIn the process of driving a tunnel on their property on Lemon\nCreek, with a view to determining\nthe extent of their radioactive explorations.\nGEOLOGI8T8 INTERESTED\nA comparison of the varied specimens in the Chamber should be\nof interest to those now prospecting\nfor this important mineral. A number of field geologists have visited\nthe Chamber recently, checking records and specimens with a view to\nlocating new properties in the Kootenays, including mining men from\nU.S.A., which would tend to show\nthat interest in this area is coming\nto the fore. ,\nDuring the month, the B. C. Mining Association held their meeting\nin Nelson, and as guests of the\nChamber, President H. E. Doelle,\nvisited the Chamber of Mines, many\nof the leading mining men in this\ndistrict being present. Dr. A. G\nPentland, geologist, was also a visitor, renewing old acquaintances,\nhe took the opportunity of examining new specimens which were\nbrought to his attention.\nOther visitors were M. D. McArthur of White Rock; Warren\nCrowe, Waneta; A. E. Smith, Goodyear Tire, Winnipeg; he is also the\nvice-president of the Chamber of\nMines in Winnipeg.\nG. Oram of Bulolo, New Guinea;\nF. Woodrow of Invercargill, New\nZealand, J. Kesling, Roanoke, Va.,\nSamuel P. Moyer, Spokane; S. Hag\ngird, Copper Mountain; A. D. Mac\nIsaacs, Noranda Mining Co., Ltd\nVancouver; Carl J. Bailer, Portland;\nJ. E. Crockart, Calgary; Larry Ree-\nker, Ephrata, Wash.; J. C. Brown,\nJLos Angeles; Lewy Carpenter and\nRoger Leidy of Walla Walla, Wash.\nD. J. Brown, Victoria; R. Talbot,\nLondon, Ont.; L. R. Spink, Spokane\nand many others from near and far.\nH. C. Hughes, chief inspector of\nmines in company with J. W. Peck\nlocal mining inspector, also visited\nithe Chamber, Mr. Hughes passing\ncomplimentary remarks on our exhibits, particularly specimens of\nrare minerals.\nB. W. Florendine,\nSecretary-Treasurer.\nAppoint Duncan\nMan Senior\nOfficer Afloat\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Commodore\nErnest Tisdall, 48, of Duncan, B. C,\nand Halifax will assume the new\nappointment of senior Canadian officer afloat Aug. 16, the navy announced Tuesday.\nCommodore Tisdall, a destroyer\ncommander during the Second\nWorld War, will fly his pendant in\nthe aircraft carrier Magnificent.\nCapt. A. H. G, Storrs, 48, of Victoria\nand Halifax, remains as captain of\nthe Magnificent.\nThe navy explained that appointment of a chief for all ships in the\nAtlantic command will take some\nof the load off the flag officer, Atlantic coast, who now has responsibility for all shore bases as well.\nCommodore Tisdall will be succeeded as commander of HMCS\nStadacona, Halifax shore base, by\nCapt. Edward Finch-Noyes, 46, of\nOakville, Ont., and Halifax.\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\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC  HALL \u2014 8:00 P. M.\nRose Beauty Parlor will be closed\nfrom July 18 to August 6.\nDon't forget the Rebekah Basket\nPicnic today at Lakeside Park.\nNelton and Granite Road Wl have\ngraciously contented to be present\nand enjoy the Oldtimert' Picnic.\nPatients In Kootenay Lake Gen\neral Hospital can have the Daily\nNews sent to them every morning.\nPhone 1844, Circulation Department\nDally News.\nUted Beds complete with Spring\nand Mattress. $25 each,\nSTERLING   HOME   FURNISHERS\nBricks, lime, cement, flue-lining.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St. - Nelson - Phone 156\nFor your summer camp purchase\none of our used fridges, two large\nand 3 astrals, all in good condition,\nalso 4 used chests of drawers.\nWe  Buy and  Sell  New and   Used\nFurniture.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\nSwim Suits and Swim Trunks-\ngood variety of styles.\nEBERLE'S on Baker Street\nWindow screening in al widths\u2014\n24-inch to 48-inch. Screen doors in\nall standard sizes. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S\nATTENTION  MEMBERS OF THE\nCANADIAN LEGION AND\nLADIES'AUXILIARY\nMembers are requested to meet\nat the Canadian Legion on Wednes.\nday at 3:15 for the purpose of attending the funeral of our late comrade Thomas Parkinson.\nSLABWOOD FOR SALE. LONG\nC0RD8 OR CUT TO STOVE\nLENGTH. \u2014 PHONE 330-L.\nBoard your pets at Blue J Kennels under veterinary supervision.\nPick-up arranged. Nelson 773-R-4.\n| FUNERAL NOTICE\ni BOURGAULT \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late Yvonne Maves Bourgault of Salmo will be held Thurs\nday at 2 p.m. at Thompson Funeral\nHome. Rev. G. W. Payne will offic\niate and interment will be in Nelson\nMemorial Park.\nWhy not call 1249-L for remodeling repairs, roofing and etc. All\nwork guaranteed.\nMark your calendar for Wednesday, July 20 for Oldtimert and Wl\nPicnic.\nChimneys cleaned and topped.\nFurnaces, stoves cleaned by vacuum\nPounder's Chimney Service.\nPhone 1541-L.\nCans for your canning. 2 and VA\npound  size,  inside  enamelled  and\nplain. Burpee can sealing machines.\nHIPPERSON'S\nATTENTION   G0LFER3\n1 Mixed two-ball foursome tonight.\nTeeing off 5:00 p.m. Dinner will follow.\nNo-Iron Print* These fin* cotton prints really need no ironing.\nWash, dry and wear. 36\". yd. $1.35.\nTAYLOR'* DRY GOODO\nCARD OF T.HANKS\nThe family of the' late Mr. David\nLaughton wish to thank their\nfriends and neighbors for their\nmany messages of sympathy and\nbeautiful floral offerings, with spec\nial thanks to Dr. N. E. Morrison for\nhis great kindness and considers\ntion to Mr. Laughton during his ill\nness.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nIn Victoria, on July 10th, 1955,\nElizabeth Ann Ryley, aged 6J years,\nof 236 Richmond Road, a resident of\nNelson and district from 1919 prior\nto coming to Victoria in 1952. Wld\now of the late Bertram Hurst Ryley,\nshe Is survived by two sons, Bryan\nof Nelson and James of Fernie, B. C.\nAlso four grandchildren.\nFuneral services from McCall\nBros. Floral Funeral Chapel, Vic\ntoria, on Wednesday afternoon July\n13th at 1:30 p.m. Rev. Dr. J. G\nBrown officiating. Interment ln Roy\nal Oak Burial Park.\nCommons to Start\nSaturday Sitting\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The Cmomons\nwill start Saturday sittings this\nweek in a final drive to wind up\nthe work of Parliament within two\nweeks.\nA notice of motion extending the\ndaily sittings to six days a *eek\nwas placed on the order paper today by Prime Minister St. Laurent.\nApproval of the motion Wednesday\nwill mean that the House w'll sit 45\nhours a week Monday through Saturday.\nThe current session started on\nJanuary 7.\nCoal Problem\nSplits Party\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 A $1.75-a-ton\nincrease in the price of coal has\npresented Prime Minister Eden's\nConservatives with their first political crisis since their success in the\nMay general election.\nThe coal problem has created a\nsplit in Eden's own party, and it\nhas brought demands from the La\nbor opposition that the fuel and\npower minister, Geoffrey Lloyd, resign.\nSEE OTHER BOOSTS\nThe revolt by priva'e Tory MPs\nwas vividly demonstrated in the\nHouse of Commons in a noisy debate\nover policy for the state-run coal\nindustry. The price boost is to come\ninto effect next Monday, and is expected to produce a chain reaction\nof price boosts in other industries\ndependant upon coal.\nThe noisy scene was climaxed\nwhen Gerald Nabarro, a Conserva\ntive and joint secretary of the party's fuel and power committee ir\nparliament, announced that because\nof the gravely ur \u25a0sfactory character of the minister's replies he\ncould raise the whole coal price\nissue again.\nAnother Tory, Terence Clarke,\ntold Lloyd his present coal policy\nwas getting nowhere. He warned It\nwould wind up by bankrupting the\nwhole country.\nMunro Resigns\nFrom \"Flash\"\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Ray Munro,\nwhose series qf articles in the Tor\nonto tabloid Flash sparked the royal\ncommission investigation into the\nVancouver police department, said\nTuesday he had resigned from the\nmagazine.\nMunro said he submitted his resignation Monday and that it is effective Aug. 7.\n\"I am through with the news\npaper business,\" Munro sai4- \"I'm\ngoing into something else. But I\nwill go right down the line with\nFlash. I have accomplished my purpose and will be available when the\ncommission wants me.\"\nACCOMPANIED BY\nBODYGUARD i\nMunro and his bodyguard, Jack\nWhelan, a former detective on the\nVancouver police force, have been\nsubpoenaed to appear before the\ncommission which starts its hearings Wednesday.\nMeanwhile, city prosecutor Stewart McMorran met Tuesday with officials of the royal commission investigating the charges of graft and\ncorruption. Officials refused to re\nveal any details of the conference:\nheld in the office of J. G. A. Hutcheson, counsel for the commission.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL   TRAINING\nMedical  Arts   Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nCURLERS * VISITORS\nCITIZENS\nDuring Bonspiel Week any purchase in our store\nentitles you to a\nFREE DRAW!\nWINNER RECEIVES\nA CURLING SWEATER\n(Genuine Indian Knit)\nand a COAT OF MAIL\nThe Beit Garment You Ever Wore\nEMORY'S LTD.\nThe   Man's   Store\/\n15-Year-Old, Sent Home by PPCLI\nWith Hon. Discharge, lo Re-Enlist\nBy KEITH ARM8TRONG\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 A Winnipeg\nboy who won his paratrooper's\nwings at 15 before the army\nlearned his real age and sent him\nhome, was 17 Tuesday. And, you\nguessed it \u2014 he can hardly wait to\njoin up again.\nRobert Campbell enlisted in the\nPrincess Patricia's Canadian Light\n(alls Musicians\nUnion Diclafors\nOTTAWA (CP)-Action to prevent the Musicians' Union blocking\nmilitary bands from playing at public functions was demanded In the\nCommons.\nLt.-Col. Douglas Harkness (PC-\nCalgary, North) said military bands\nshould be under no dictation from\nany labor union in Canada or the\nUnited States. The defence department was being \"wishy-washy\" in\nnot taking immediate steps to prevent this sort of dictatorship.\nDefence Minister Campney said\nnothing can be done by the Musicians' Union to prevent bands of the\narmed services playing at military\nfunctions. However, permission of\nthe union must be obtained before\nmilitary bands could play at events\nwhere a civilian band otherwise\nwould perform.\nWOULD BREAK UP BAND8\nMost members of militia bands,\nhe said,\"are members of the Musicians' Union. If action were taken\nto permit military bands to play at\ncivilian functions most union members of bands would leave the mili\ntia. This would jeopardize the fu\nture of militia bands.\nCol. Harkness said the command\ning officer of the Calgary Highlanders last fall authorized the\nunit's pipe band to play at a Calgary Stampeders football game.\nHowever, his order was countermanded by the Musicians' Union in\nToronto.\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\n576 Baker St. Phone 235\nAuditors\nInfantry Sept. 16, 1953, telling the\nrecruiting officer he would be 18\nin January. He says he had his\nparents' consent.\nWhen he got an honorable discharge last June, Bob promised:\n\"The day I'm 17 I'll' just enlist\nagain.\"\nHe plans to come close to keeping his word. Tuesday was hla\nbirthday and he'll join the permanent force in August. In the\nmeantime he's working for the\narmy.\nThe day he got his discharge he\nenlisted as a cadet and went to\nthe cadet camp at Dundurn for\nthe summer. When he turned up\nwith parachutist's wings on his\ncadet uniform the other cadets\nwouldn't believe it. But Bob convinced them.\n\"I just showed those cadets my\ndischarge papers and that proved\nto them that I had been in the\narmy,\" he said.\nBob said he doesn't know if he\nwill have to take aU his training\nover again.\n\"I hope It will just be a 'recap',\"\nhe said, \"although I guess I wouldn't\nmind one way or the other because\nI like it so much. I imagine they\nwill send me back to Calgary.\"\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and  REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n518 FRONT ST. PHONE 63\nEllison's\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nMakes   Delicious   Bread   the   Easy\nand   Quick  Way.\nTry a  Package  Today\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nFOR FOOT COMFORT\nSANI-PED\nSani-Ped Foot Powder   60c\nSani-Ped Foot Cream  76c\nSani-Ped Foot Balm  75c\nAthlete's Foot Ointment   1.00\nRexall Fungi-Rex Spray .... 1.69\nCity Drug\n\u2022YOUR REXALL PHARMACY\"\nNOW.' good\/year\nTUBELESS AT A\nNEW LOW PRICE\n\u2022 Made with Goodyear's exclusive 3-T cord and Grip-Seal\nconstruction\u2014increases blowout resistance\u2014reduces puncture delays.\n\u2022 Buy one, or a complete set\u2014\nyou can mix 'em or match 'em.\n\u2022 White sidewalk also available\nat slight extra cost\nNOW ONLY\nAND YOUR\nRECAPPABLE TIRE\n(.lie 6.70x15)\nBARGAINS IN REGULAR TIRES TOO!\nSize 6.06 x 16 Goodyear Pathfinder now\nonly $13.75 and your reeappable tire\nBuy now for safe summer drivingl\nIi\n\u25a0'*-\"\u25a0\n___\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1955_07_13","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0429099","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}