{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0429101":{"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":"1955-07-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429101\/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":" ''';-V.4v'' '\" \u25a0   '   '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 W ''\u25a0   '     - .\u25a0-\"!\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0' .''\u25a0'\u25a0' '   \u25a0'\"'\u25a0\" '   ' r~~~' : ~~ ' \u25a0\n__      T__^.:^,^__.r._i\u201e...__l.__.^\nALEK8ANDER TIJLUPNIKOV of the 8ovlet ministry of agriculture, one of the group of Russian experts touring North\nAmerica's farmlands, ii given a drink of milk from the refrigerator of Anne Alleman on a farm near Des Moines, Iowa. Mr,\nTulupnlkov hat admitted he is much Impressed by what he has\nseen, particularly by such things as home refrigerators.\nMalay To Elect First\nLegislative Council\nSecurity Measures Taken in British\nProtectorate Against Terrorists\nBy FREDERICK COLEMAN\nKUALA LUMPUR, Malaya (Reuters) \u2014 Security'pre-\ncautions against any last-minute Communist intervention\nwent into force today as the people of Malay voted for the\nfirst time to elect a legislative council.\nA triple alliance'of Malayan, Chinese and Indian organizations\u2014pledged to achieve independence from Brit- j about 140 miles southeast of Con-\nain by 1959 and to offer an amnesty to Communist teror-1 stantine.   Numerous   farm   fires\nists\u2014was firm favorite to win in eve-of-poll forecasts.\nThe Malay Negara (Country) party is the only other\nm5\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy with showers,\na few thunderstorms near the\nmountains afternoon and evening.\nA little warmer. Winds light. Low,\nhigh at Crescent Valley and at\nCranbrook 50 and 70.\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 27, 1955\nNo. 81\n\u00bb KILLED IN\nRIOTS SO FAR\n10,000 Moroccans\nShout For\nSultan's Return\nMEKNES, French Morocco (CP)\n\u2014The death count from nationalist\nrioting in Meknes climbed to 19\nTuesday. Fifteen persons were\nkilled outright in disorders Monday and four more Moroccans succumbed to bullet wounds inflicted\nby French police and soldiers!\nOfficial figures put the wounded\nat 50, including several Frenchmen hurt by stone-throwihg mobs.\nThe latest rioting in this troubled North African protectorate\nbroke out as the new French resident-general, Gilbert Grandval,\nvisited Meknes. About 10,000 Moroccans, many of them veiled women, shouted for the return of\nFrench-exiled Sultan Sidi Mohammed ben Youssef, who backed\nthe nationalist cause,\nFresh clashes also were reported in Algeria, another French\nNorth African troublespot.\nReports reaching Paris said 15\nAlgerian rebels were killed and\nfour taken prisoner in a battle\nwith French forces   near Cheria,\n| were set by guerrillas in the Con-\nI stantine area.\nCPR lo Fix\nMission Bridge\nVANCOUVER \u2014 Canadian Pacific Railway officials stated today\nthat men and equipment would\nbe on the scene Wednesday to\ncommence preliminary work on\nthe construction of a new pier and\nnew span to replace the section of\nthe Mission bridge over the Fraser river which collapsed suddenly on Sunday.\nCompany engineers estimate\nthat it will be probably three\nmonths before rail and highway\ntraffic can be resumed over the\nbridge.\nStill Need 150\nBerry Pickers\nCHILLIWACK, B.C. (CP) \u2014 An\nappeal for 150 berry pickers in\nthe upper Fraser valley has been\nissued by the National Employment Service here. Most growers\nare paying four cents a pound and\nothers are offering a half-cent a\npound bonus for pickers who will\nstay the entire season. More than\n500 pickers have been placed in\nthe area to date.\nSte. Anne Honored\nSTE. ANNE DE BEAUPRE,\nQue. (CP) \u2014 Thousands of Roman\nCatholics, the lame and the sick\namong them, gathered Tuesday at\na riverside shrine here to mark\nthe Feast of SteT Anne, mother of\nthe Virgin Mary,\nThe pilgrims came from many\nparts of Canada and the United\nStates to pray for cures or special\nfavors. Some were in wheel-chairs\nand others were on crutches.\nCHILDREN'S ARSENAL\nCHIDLOW, Australia (Reuters)\n\u2014A policeman lectured school\nchildren Tuesday on the danger of\nexplosives. The talk so impressed\nthe youngsters they produced\ntheir treasured arsenal \u2014 three\n25-pound shells, several smaller\nshells, 529 grenades, a pile of\nassorted detonators and a heap of\nrevolvers and rifle ammunition.\n(iiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii\nPhoney Petition\nGets 47 Names\nWEST VANCOUVER (CP)\n\u2014 Reginald Mullen claims\ngome ptfople will sign anything and to prove his point,\nhe successfully circulated a\nphoney petition which netted\n47 names in  two hours.\nMr. Mullen, representing a\ngroup wishing to build a new\napartment, told council here\nMonday night the document\nwas circulated to discredit a\nprevious petition by residents\nopposed to the new apartment.\nMr. Mullen's phoney petition urged a compromise, that\nthe site chosen for the apartment be used as a park \"dedicated to the memory of Capt,\nGilbert Question-Faggett of\nHMS Fluke Dolphin, who\nforewarned in his report on\nfirst sighting these shores\nagainst mutilation by settlers\nand speculators who but little\n\u25a0 prize the surpassing natural\nbeauty of the new world.\"\n(liiiiimiiiiiiiuuiiiimiii 11 ii i mi 11\ngroup strong enough to up\nset predictions.\nAll federal citizens above the\nage of 21, including those who can\nneither read nor write, make up\nthe electorate of 1,280,000 Malays,\nChinese Indians, Thais and others.\nIt may take two days .before all\nvotes are counted, but a definite\ntrend indicating which party will\nform Malay's first-elected government is expected by late tonight,\nThere are 129 candidates for the\n52 seats in the legislative council\nfor elected members. It will be the\nfirst elected majority in the, 50,800\nsquare-mile British protectorate,\na 500-mile long peninsula, rich in\ntin and rubber, on the southern\ntip of the Asian continent.\nThe council had previously been\nentirely nominated. There will\nstill be 46 nominated members,\nrepresenting the tin and rubber\nindustries, other commercial interests, trade unions, and fractional minority races.\nTERRORIST BACKDROP\nNine of the elected members\nwill join a cabinet headed by Sir\nDonald MacGillivray, the high\ncommissioner. It includes three\ngovernment officials.\nThese ministers will govern\nmost of the domestic affairs of\nMalaya as a first ste ptoward the\npromised goal of self-government. But the high commissioner\nwill have the power of veto and\nalso will control defence and internal security.\nAbout   4,000   terrorists holding\nout in the jungle   against   40,000\nBritish troops form a dark background  to  the  polls,  and  police\nand troops will be standing by in\na struggle for their own survival,\nArmed guards will escort electoral  officials  In   Communist\nareas.\nTuesday, eve of the elections,\nsecurity forces killed 11 terrorists and captured three\u2014highest\nbag In several months. Among\nthe dead were the leader of\nCommunists In the Selangor\narea and four women.\nDOLLAR   LOWER\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 The Canadian dollar closed ^ lower at a\npremium of 1 19-32 per cent in\nterms of U.S. funds. Pound sterling\n5-18  higher  at  $2.78   15-16.\nBOOTLEG TO\nSAVE HOME\nVANCOUVER   (CP)   \u2014   Bootlegging was given in police court\nI i1111f111111111\u25a0\u25a0111111\u25a0\u25a0111 11111\u25a0111111\nPLEA IGNORED,\nYOUTH DROWNS\n8T. JOHN'8, Nfld. (CP) \u2014\nA 17-year-old youth wai\ndrowned Monday because hii\nfrlendt thought he was fooling\nwhen they heard him call for\nhelp. After Jumping Into a\npond he yelled: \"I can't jwlm,\nI can't swim, I really can't.\"\nWhen they realized he wai\nserious It was too late. His\nname was withheld until his\nfather In the Arctic Is notified.\nr i \u2022 \u25a0 i \u25a0 11 \u25a0 11111111 \u25a0 \u2022 i \u25a0 \u25a0 1111111 r 111111111 \u2022\nPolling Heavy al\nIsrael Election\nTEL AVIV* (Reuters) \u2014 Silent\nMoslem women, shrouded from\nhead to toe in thick black robes,\nvoted Tuesday with Jews who\nhave come here from 70 countries\nin Israel's third parliamentary\nelection. Polling was relatively\nheavy, despite a stifling heat wave.\nProvisional results were expected\nat about midnight local time, but\na definite trend will not be indicated until today.\nEarly this evening it was estimated that some 60 per cent of\neligible voters had cast ballots.\nAbout 80 per cent were expected\nto vote before polling stations\nclosed at 11 p.m.nocal time.\nPolice headquarters here reported that polling was orderly in\nmost parts of the country, except\nin Tamra village near Acre where\n18 persons were injured ln a\nbrawl between voters.\nMore than 1,000,000 Israelis were\neligible to vote for 1306 candidates\nWealher No Aid\nTo Hi\nhere Tuesday as one means of j from 18 parties, contesting 120\nraising the motgage on the family \\ seats in the Knesset (parliament)\nhome. l under a proportional representa-\nWilliam Lawson, 81, pleaded\nguilty to a charge of keeping\nliquor for sale. His 76-year-old\nwife pleaded not guilty. Both are\nold age pensioners.\nDetective William Miller testified Mrs. Lawson told him: \"I\nhave to raise $3000 or lose the\nhouse \u2014 after that I'm going to\nquit.\"\nThe Lawsons were remanded\nuntil Friday.\nAlleged Bandits\nFace More\nSerious Charges\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Two\nmen charged with robbery with\nviolence following an attempted\nholdup and pistol whipping here\nMonday may be charged with attempted murder, it was indicated\nin police court today.\nRobert L. Spence, 21, and Joseph R. R. Scott, 25, were arrested\na few minutes after attempting to\nrob a cafe manager, A. Henri Fed-\ndersen of $5000. The victim said\none of the gunmen stuck a revolver towards him and he heard\nthe hammer click several times in\nmisfire.\nIn police court prosecutor Paul\nDelaney   told   Magistrate   Oscor\nOrr an attempted murder charge\nmight   be   laid.   Bail   was  set  at 111191111911111111\n$10,000.\ntion system. Major parties are ex-\npremier David Ben Gurion's mod'\nerate Labor Mapai party and the\nright-wing   General   Zionists.\nBOY DIES IN\nHIGHWAY MISHAP\nHOPE, B.C. (CP) \u2014 A 15-year-\nold boy was killed and two adults\nseriously injured 35 miles east of\nhere Tuesday when a Michigan\ncar^mtssed a turn on the Jartupus.\nHope-Princeton highway.\nRCMP withheld all names until\nrelatives could be notified.\nThe United States car apparently missed a turn and plunged 35\nfeet down an embankment.\n4 Officers To Aid\nTupper Commission\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Vancouver police commission Tuesday\nassigned four officers to assist the\nTupper commission investigating\ncharges of corruption and laxity\nin  the  police department.\nMayor Fred Hume, commission\nchairman, said the four officers\nwere being assigned at the request of commissioner Reginald H.\nTupper, who is expected to resume\nhis inquiry Thursday.\nLog House Goes\nSUDBURY, Ont. (CP) \u2014 Sud\nbury has just lost to progress its'\nlast log house. Workmen clearing j\nthe site for a new Dominion gov-;\nernment building have demolished ]\nthe 67-year-old structure. It was!\nbuilt in 1888 as a residence fori\nCPR employees and was recently'\n| a second-hand store. Some of itsj\nhand-hewn white pine timbers are;\nas long as 40 feet and 15 by eight!\ninches wide.\nWHONOCK (CP) \u2014 The body\nof an unidentified man was recovered from the Fraser river near\nWhonock    Tuesday    by    RCMP.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The U.S.\ndollar closed today at a discount\nof 1 19-32 per cent in terms of | Police said the body, badly de-'\nCanadian funds, up 3-32. It took i composed, appeared to have been!\n98 13-32 cents Canadian to buy $1 in the water for about a month.!\nAmerican. Pound sterling $2.741 It was clad in brown shirt and]\n7-16, up 9-16. | blue denim pants,\nllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nGrateful Man Pays\nBack Found Money\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 George\nShepherd reached London\nTuesday after a 10,000-mile\njourney \u2014 just to drop a\npound note on the sidewalk\nin Bayswater square.\nFor the 48-year-old Shepherd, now a 'prosperous lumber dealer in Sarawak, jt will\nbe a sentimental act of remembrance.\nDuring the depression,\nShepherd ws walking through\nBayswater square with only\ntwo pence in his pocket. He\nfound a pound note. His luck\nchanged   for  the  good.\n\"I hope someone who is as\nbadly off now as I was before\nwill find the note I drop,\" he\nsaid.\nIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMII\nDONALD CAMPBELL plloti his turbojet\nspeedboat Bluebird over waters of Ullswater\nLake, England,'July 23 during run at which he\nset a new world water speed mark of 202.32\nmiles an hour, The 34-year-old speed king broke\nthe old world record of 178,4 miles an hour set\nby American Stanley Sayros three yean ago.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Tuesday\nwas not a good day for Ontario's\nforest fire fighters. Winds' were\nhigh, and temperatures hot; arid\nthere was little rain.\nFlames licked at timber and\nbrush over 200,000 acres in the\nprovince ln an unrelenting onslaught against the efforts of 6000\nmen and millions of dollars in\nequipment.\nNeither the flames nor the men\nmade much headway.\nThe situation is somewhat the\nsame,\" T. E. Mackie, chief of the\nforest protection division of the\nOntario lands and forests department, reported Tuesday night.\n\"It wasn't a good day for fire\nfighting.\"\nSomewhat the same\" meant\nmore than 150 f,ires still crackled\ntheir way through valuable forests across the province, the worst\nblaze roaring uncontrolled over\n100,000 acres north of Blhid river\n90 miles east of Sault Ste* Marie.\nOrphan Lad Goes\nTo Top Man\nAMMAN, Jordan (AP) \u2014 Until\nMonday two things dominated the\nlife of a Bedouin Arab boy named\nMohammed Ali Muhisn \u2014 a problem and an ambition.\nFor at 13. he found the life of a\nnomad pretty tough. He had practically no money. He had no prospects. He had no parents.\nMuhisn's problem was what to\ndo with his life, and how he was\nto get an education.\nMonday he decided the time had\ncome for action, but his story was\nonly for the king.\nSo it was that as Jordan's 20-\nyear-old King ^ussein drove into\nAmman, a small boy ran up beside\nthe sleek car and waved for him\nto stop. The king stopped.\nFive minutes later, Muhisn was\nsitting beside him, driving: to the\npalace of the queen mother; where\nhe was fed and clothed.\nTuesd\/y the orphan pregared to\nstart-6n-\u2022 expensive TCduiJation\" -**\nwith the king footing the bill,\nYouth Out On Bail\nHurt In Car Crash\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A\nyear-old youth was seriously\njured early Tuesday while his two\nteen - aged companions escaped\nwith minor injuries when the\nstolen car in which they were\nriding crashed into a power pole\nin an 80-mile-an-hour chase. Police said the injured youth, driver\nof the stolen vehicle, is at present\non $5000 bail pending hearing of\nan earlier car theft charge.\nEva Peron Posters\nDestroyed by Vandals\nONE OF MANY happy Canadian boys Is James Forsyth of\nWillowdale, Ont. He is heading\nfor the world boys' camp at Me-\nlun, France, where hundreds of\nyoungsters from all over the\nworld are converging for a\nYMCA conference. \u2014 Central\nPress Canadian.\nAnniversary of President's Wife's\nDeath Remembered in Argentina\nBUENOS AIRES (AP) \u2014 On the national day of\nmourning for Eva Peron, vandals Tuesday defaced posters\nand monuments erected to her memory in towns of Buenos\nAires province.\nThe dynamic blond wife of President Juan D. Peron\ndied of cancer  three  years\nago.\nThe incidents occurred as Peronista legislators ended a week-long\nsquabble and accepted President\nPeron's directive to change officers .of the national House of Deputies. The move was a defeat for\nthe party's Labor wing.\nPolice said the vandalism occurred in three towns near the\ncapital and a newspaper reported\nan attack in another town.\nIn addition, police said, a bomb\nexploded at the local branch of the\nHouse Expects\nProrogue Today\n2 Gold Miners\nSlrikeil Rich\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP) \u2014\nOne hour's work in their mine\nearned two brother. $40,000 when\nfive cwt of ore yielded 1226 ounces\nof  gold.\nThe brothers, Ernest and William Wright, after prospecting\nwith varying success for 23 years,\n\"struck it rich\" in the Mount Clifford area of western Australia.\nTen years ago they were prospecting in the same area but gave\nup when a thunderstorm flooded\ntheir workings. Early this year\nthey  returned.\nSince March their mine \u2014 the\nBeau Don \u2014 has produced a total\nof about $85,000 worth of gold.\nAnother 12 tons of ore with potentially $75,000 worth of gold has\nstill to'be \"crushed.    '**\"\"\"* *\nSpeaking from Kalgoorlie, the\nnearest big town, Senator V. S.\nVincent said: \"We are taking the\nnews calmly here. Nothing like a\ngold rush has started yet, but we\nare all watching and waiting de-\nwith  great  interest.\"\n19-. velopments\nPenticton To Have\nSquare Dance Fun\nPENTICTON (CP) \u2014 The second annual B.C. square dance\njamboree will be held in conjunction with the Peach festival Aug.\n18-20. Festival officials said Monday more square dancers have already registered for the jamboree\nthan had up to the time of the\nfestival last year.\ngiving Costs Up\nWASHINGTON   (AP)   \u2014   The! ^T^nv\ngovernment reported Tuesday that TOT HUNG OUT TO DRY\nU.S. living costs edged up slightly\nin June to the highest point in\n1955. They were still a bit lower\nthan June last year. The rise \u2014\nthe first recorded since last No-\nverr\/er \u2014 was attributed to small\nincreases for food, housing, transportation, personal care and medical expenditures.\nTERMITES   CLOSE   BRIDGE\nNORTH VANCOUVER fcp) \u2014\nMunicipal officials in North Vancouver have closed the Lynn\nValley Canyon Park suspension\nbridge for repairs following discovery that one of the supporting\ntimbers has been riddled by termites. Repair work, estimated at\n$2600 will start immediately.\nFORT DODGE, Iowa (AP) \u2014\nMrs. Wilma Banta, 23, accused of\nhanging her two-year-old son on\na clothesline to \"dry,\" was sentenced to 30 days in jail Monday\nThe mother of three children\npleading guilty told police she\nhung the boy on the line by his\noverall strap because he could\nnot be trained properly.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Prorogation\nof the current session of Parliament was virtually certain for\ntoday as the Commons moved\nswiftly Tuesday through the last\nof its sessional business.\nThe Senate, after brief afternoon   and   evening   sittings,  was\nGeneral Confederation of Labor in { adjourned until 1 p.m. today, by\nthe' town of Olavarria. The build'\ning front was damaged and win-1\ndowg were blown out but there\nwere no injuries.\nOn this third anniversary of Eva\nPeron's death all public activity\nexcept transport and essential\nservices halted for 24 hours. Radio\nstations broadcast only subdued\nmusic and memorial programs.\nPolice accounts of the vandalism\nsaid unknown persons tore off a\nplaque at the' foot of a memorial\nin the town of Miramar.\nIn Balcarce, the hands of a\nclock erected by workers' con-.\ntribstions in her memory were\ntwisted. The clock's hands had\nbeen stopped at 8:25 p.m., the\nminute of her death on July 26,\n1952.\nIn.San Antonio de Areco, two\ntar bombs were tossed on the Eva\nPeron monument in the town\nsquare.\nOn the troubled political front\nhere,    the    Peronista. deputies\nem  record of  139 dayjj^,:\nyear.\nbowed -to the- pre\u00abld4nV*rd\u00abr4toc'sa^on: p*e f?rtor^\"\u00b0fli\nby accepting the resignations of\ntheir   leaders   and   designating\nreplacements,  Tho   party's   new\ncandidates   are   certain   to   be\nelected when the House meets,\nprobably   today   since   It   holds\nall   but   a   dozen   of   the   1666\nseats.\nEdmonton Murder\nFirst in 2 Years\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014Two men\nwho were drinking in a hotel room\nwith William G. Finch Monday\nnight were held for questioning\nby Edmonton police Tuesday\ninvestigation continues into what\nwhat police described as the city's\nfirst murder in two years.\nFinch's body was found Tuesday\nmorning in bushes in the northeast\npart of the city. Police said there\nwere cuts and bruises on his head.\nThere was no mud on his shoes\nand his pockets were empty. '\nThe two suspects were picked\nup Tuesday afternoon when police\nbegan combing the city to learn\nof Finch's actions Monday.\nwhich time the Commons was\nexpected to complete its work.\nThe House began the day by\nunanimously waiving its 10 p.m.\nadjournment rule and then tied\ninto the last of the departmental\nspending estimates standing in the\nway of a windup of the session\nwhich began Jan. 7.\nMembers gave final approval to\nestimates of the mines and state\nsecretary's departments and several minor government branches.\nAt supper adjournment the House\nwas well into the spending allocations for Revenue Minister Mc-\nCann's department \u2014 which includes the CBC \u2014 and the only\nother major department to go\nthrough was finance.\nProgress was delayed briefly as\nCCF members debated their passage this- seession on the last\noccasion on which they could be\nconsidered. -\nIt was the 138th slttiS&jtti\nNORTH VANCOUVER (CP) \u2014\nGame department officials Tuesday warned parents in the upper\nCapilano area to keep a close\nwatch on their% children because\na cougar is known to be prowling\nthe nearby bush. A game department hunter is trying to track\ndown the animal.\n\"T-\nAustria Celebrates\nIndependence Day\nBy  HUBERT  HARRISON\nVIENNA (Reuters) \u2014 Austrian\nindependence becomes an established fact today. It ends 17 years\nof foreign domination and 10 years\nof uneasy existence in the front\nline of the cold war.\nAt 10:15 a.m. local time, the\nfour-power council of British,\nAmerican, French and Russian\ncommanders meets for the last\ntime to dissolve the group \u2014\nsupreme authority over the little\nnation since 1945.\nBefore jubilant crowds, soldiers\nof the four powers, will lower\ntheir nations' flags over the Allied\nCouncil building here.\nMeanwhile, In Moscow, the last\nact ratifying the Austrian state\ntreaty will be deposited by France\nconcluding one of the most\ntangled chapters of East-West\nnegotiations since the Second\nWorld War.\nOther acts ratifying the May 15\ntreaty have been deposited in\nMoscow by Britain, the United\nStates and Austria. *\nThe agreement ends an occupation that began at the end of the\nSecond World War and persisted\nthrough almost 10 years of the\ncold war as Russia turned down\nWestern bids to reunify and\nevacuate the country.\nBut last spring a surprise move\nby Moscow produced Austrian-\nRussian agreement on treaty terms\nand signalled the beginning of an\napparent cohd war thaw.\nRadio announcers will speak\ninto programs to tell Austrians\ntheir country is free again the\nmoment news of the last ratification deposit has been received.\nIt is a public holiday and Austrians will throng beflagged\nstreets to celebrate their first day\nof independence since Adolf Hitler's troops annexed it in March,\n1938.\nMAY TAKE CIVIL\nDEFENCE TRAINING\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Pharmacy\nstudents at the University of British Columbia may take civil defence training.\nThe feasibility of introducing\nthe training will be studied next\nmonth by B.C. government and\nB.C. branch of the Canadian Pharmaceutical Association prior to the\nassociation's annual convention in\nVancouver.\nACTRESS   GRETA    GARBO,\nwearing shorts and the inevitable dark glasses, walks from a\ncabana on the Lido In Venice,\nItaly, where she is vacationing,\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nAnd In This Corner ...\nESSEX JUNCTION, Vt. (AP) \u2014 Police, firefighter! and state\npolice, cheered by local small fry, tried for five hours Monday to\ncapture a 40-pound baboon.\nThe pursuers went from tree to tree trying to capture the animal. Then they tried a lady monkey as a lure, plus drugged bananas and a fire hose.\nFinally, a police chief James Mulcahy ordered the elusive visitor shot.\nNo one knows where the baboon came from.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Joseph Gorzynski, 49, Tuesday was bound\nover in the amount of $100 to keep the peace after a neighbor, Andrew Burke, accused him of hitting him over the head with a pail\nfilled wtih water.\nEvidence was that Burke slept outside during the heat wave\nand Gorzynski objected to his snoring.\nST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) \u2014 Lieut. Paul Smith, pilot of a\ncoast guard helicopter, saw a man waving frantically from the\nbeach.\nTrained In rescue missions, Smith descended until he was hovering a few feet from the sand.\nThe man and his friend focussed cameras, took several pictures and waved Smith on his way.\nLONG BEACH, N.Y. (AP) \u2014 The car was parked in a no-\nparking zone and patrolman William Miller clearly saw his duty.\nHe wrote out a $2 ticket.\nIt wasn't so clear who would pay the fine. The car happened\nlo be the Miller.family car, left there by the patrolman's wife while\nshe and the children went to the beach.\n\"Shete going to pay the fine herself.\" Miller commented.\n\"I'll pay it all right,\" his wife said later, \"but I'll use his\nmoney.\"\n ^^^^^m\n\u25a0 \u25a0::\u25a0\u25a0'--'\u25a0%\nw^^^^p^w^w\nvfW-V '' \u2022'\"\"   \u25a0!\u25a0-\"\u25a0.   '-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JULY 27, 1955\nTONIGHT - THURSDAY\nComplete Shows 7:00-9:00\nA Lush Tropical Body...\n' Completely surrounded by Terror\nand Temptation.\nExtro: \"VISTAVISION VISITS MEXICO\"\n- Late News Sport: \"GRIN UP\"\nCMC\nIfMOM\nPUrili\nrnfitii\nSTARLIGHT      |\nDRIVE-IN I\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT       I\nCartoon\u20149:00 p.m. '\nFeature\u20149:10 p.m.\nShorts\u201410:40 p.m.\nBud Abbott, Lou Costello\nMeet the \"Keystone Kops\"\nDOOR   PRIZES TONIGHT\nThe Installation of our cinemascope screen has been held\nup by the rain.\nWATCH FOR OPENING\nANNOUNCEMENT!\nAUTO VUE\nDRIVE-IN\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTONIGHT AND THUR8DAY\nShow Time Approx. 8:45\n\"Phantom Speaks\"\nand\n\"Valley of The Zombies\"\nPlus News\n76-YEAR-OLD\nMOTORCYCLIST\nVISITS CRESTON\nCRESTON, B.C. (CP) \u2014 Edward\nLewis Smith. 76. of New Westminster. B.C.. left here Tuesday for\nCranbrook on the second leg of\nhis 1.500-mila motorcycle trip\naround the province.\ns He left home July 10. planning\nto visit friends and relatives. He\nstayed with his two sons, Harold\ntend Roy, while visiting here. He\n'planned to visit a daughter in\nCranbrook.\nCAR TESTING\nSTATIONS\nLIKELY FOR B.C.\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 The provincial government is considering\nintroducing motor vehicle testing\nstations In B.C,\nPremier. Bennett .says \"studies\nare being made\" and that the government feels it is time to consider\nentering that field.\nThe city of Vancouver operates\na testing station which has become\nso busy it may be necessary to\nstretch the usual six-month re-\ntesting period to nine months\nLights, brakes, steering, and other\ndevices  are  inspected.\nSchmidt Found Guilty\nOf Check Forgery\nJohn Schmidt was found guilty\nof forging a $2500 check by Magistrate William Brown in city\ncourt Tuesday and was remanded\nto  July  28 for  sentence.\nAt the same hearing he changed\nhis plea on a second charge of\n'theft of $700 to guilty and the\ncase was adjourned to August 2.\nMoney was allegedly taken from\nthe Hume Hoted where Schmidt\nwas a former employee.\nR. B. Allan is defence counsel\nand B. K. Arlidge, crown counsel.\nRITES HELD FOR\nMRS. H. BRIGHT\nFuneral services were conducted\nat Thompson Funeral Home by\nMrs. E. H. Paterson of the First\nOhurch of Christ Scientist Tuesday\nafternoon for Mrs. Helena Bright.\n: Two hymns, \"He That Hath God\ni His Guardian Made\" and \"I Know\nI No Life Divided\" were played by\n'Mrs. W. A. Manson, organist.\nPallbearers were H. J. Wilton,\n; W. Riley, J. A. Gillis, L. J. Ayre,\n;p. Scott and P. Bush. Interment\n'. was in Nelson Memorial Park.\n; District resident for 40 years,\nj 2nd Nelson resident for 13 years,\nMrs. Bright died Friday at the\n, age of 72.\n\"Films Under\nThe Stars\"\nTonight \u2014 9:10 p.m.\nLakeside Park\n\"Die Bajerisehen\"\n(German   Legation)\n\"Break Through\"\nOTHER SHORTS\nWeather Permitting\n! Brother of Yahk\nWoman Dies at 65\n; Funeral services were held in\n| Vancouver Tuesday for John Henry Harrison, brother of Mrs. S. J.\nI McCartney of Yahk. Mr. Harrison\ndied Thursday at the age of 65.\nHe Is also survived by three\nbrothers, Roy of Boston, James of\nSeattle and Charles of Duncan\ntwo sisters .Mrs. James Felt of\nSeattle and Mrs. E. Goodman of\nVancouver.\nHerridge\nSpeaks for\nPension Rigm\nOTTAWA (CP) - A union request for federal recognition of\nan employee's so-called \"vested\nright\" in his pension equity was\nlaid before the Commons Tuesday night.\nH. W. Herridge (CCF\u2014Kootenay\nWest) supported the staVid of the\nInternational Union of Mine, Mill\nand Smelter Workers, which asked\nthat workers under non-contributory pension plans acquire full\ntitle on their pension equity after\nthe age of 50 and after 20 years'\nservice.\nHe read to the Commons a letter\nthe union sent to Finance Minister\nHarris asking for the right on behalf of members employed by the\nInternational Nickel Co. and Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co.\nat Trail and Kimberley in British\nColumbia and at Sudbury and\nPort Colborne in Ontario.\nRULES STUDY\nRevenue Minister McCann said\nthe letter was turned over to him.\nHe had replied to the union that a\nstuly is being made of all revenue\ndepartment rules and regulations\nregarding pension plans, with a\nview to proposing changes.\nThe union's letter said the\n\"vested right\" should be granted\nto workers, partly on the ground\nthat the companies' contributions\nto pension plans are deductible for\ntax purposes and represent a\nconsiderable amount that does not\ngo into the treasury.\nIt added that of $25,600,000 in\nthe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting pension fund, $10,900,000\nrepresented tax savings from the\ntax-free contributions. The international Nickel fund included\nmore than $27,000,000 in tax savings.\nThe letter said workers who\nnow leave the companies after 20\nyears' service, but before reaching retirement age, receive no\nbenefit from the pension plans.\n:   ' aL \u00bb\nS661.10?\nloci ono oxamplo of our loans t<\n&1500. ThH amount has an ovon\ndollar payment plan . . .\n20 month5 at\n$40.00.\nUattsi or* towtr on many Niagara loam.\nIAGARA\nLOANS\nJ BRANCHES COAST-\n560 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1636\nTRACING PHONEY COIN\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Police\nare attempting to trace the source\nof a counterfeit 50-cent cent piece\nthat turned up in the cash register\nof a downtown cafe here. Investigators said there was no evidence of a counterfeiting gang\noperating in the city, however.\nThe Weather\nBy The Canadian Preit\nA few showers are expected\nacross the province -Wednesday\nbut they will be less frequent\nthan Tuesday and some sunny\nperiods can be expected Wednesday afternoon. Temperatures Wednesday will be only slightly higher\nthan the rather cool values reported Tuesday.\nNELSON       55     73     .29\nHalifax         58     75     \u2014\nMontreal       62     89      \u2014\nOttawa          59     92      \u2014\nToronto  :....\u00bb   .66     94     \u2014\nWinnipeg         58     70     .16\nBrandon         51     71     .06\nThe Pas       52     67      \u2014\nRegina     . 59    76     .12\nSaskatoon       55    81     .09\nPrince Albert       52     64     \u2014\nNorth Battleford ...     54     75     .03\nSwift Current       53     78     .57\nMedicine Hat       53    84     \u2014\nLethbridge       51     82      \u2014\nCalgary         47     74     .01\nEdmonton         53     70   1.27\nKimberley         49     68     .03\nCrescent Valley ....     46     57     .28\nKaslo       58    61     .06\nGrand Forks       53     61     .29\nKamloops        53     70     .01\nPenticton         56     67     .07\nVancouver        54    61     .23\nVictoria       52    62     .08\nPrince Rupert       50     64     .12\nPrince George       49     55     .11\nWhitehorse       53     74      \u2014\nSeattle     .'.      53     69     .61\nPortland         58     66     .38\nSan Francisco     53     53     \u2014\nLos Angeles        62     76     \u2014\nChicago             76     99     \u2014\nNew  York          73     85      \u2014\nTO ATOMS CONFERENCE\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Frank A.\nForward. University of British Columbia metallurgy expert, has\nbeen appointed advisor to\" the 28-\nman Canadian delegation to the\n80-nation \"Atoms for Peace\" conference in Geneva Aug. 8-20.\nAs head of the UBC mining and\nmetallurgy department. Prof. Forward has initiated and head research projects into methods of\nextraction and recovery of uran-\n: ium from Canadian ores.\nNelson Cadets\nIn OK (amp\nVERNON \u2014 Ten Nelson boys\nare among more than 600 B. C.\nand Alberta army cadets now in\ncamp in thifi Okanagan \" Valley\ncentre taking seven weeks training.\nRepresenting more than 80 Cadet corps in the two provinces, the\nteen-aged youngsters \u2022 travelled\nhere by road, rail and air from\nhome towns located. from Vancouver Island to the Saskatchewan border.\nCourses during the seven-week\nprogram are split into two main\ncategories. These are the Senior\ni Leaders' Wing, training more than\n400 boys as instructors in infantry subjects for their own corps;\nand the \"D & M\" Wing, training\n200 youngsters In driving and\nmaintenance of three-ton army\ntrucks. Other boys are training\nas rifle coaches. |\nTraining is undertaken by Regular Army, Militia and Cadet Services of Canada officers and NCOs\nassigned to cadet training for the\nsummer.\nFollowing are Nelson boys al\ncamp: C-W02 Michael Wolfhard;\nCS Sgt. Michael Bennett; C-Cpl.\nHarvey Neilson; C-Cpl. Charles\nKidd; C-Bdr. Victor Smith; C-Bdr.\nBrian Acres; Cadet Roy Abraham-\nson; Cadet Michael Horswill; Cadet Robert Sturgeon; Cadet Lloyd\nAtwell.\n20 Mile Swim of West\nArm of Lake Planned\nThe Straits of Dover. Lake Ontario and the Juan de Fuca Strait\nhave been conquered by swimmers. Nelsonites in the near future\nmay attempt to swim the 20 miles\nThis boat, its weathered planking coming apart\nfrom its stem, is all that serves at Lakeside Park as a\npatrol or rescue craft. It is not used because it is not\nusable.\nDuring past week, lifeguards weje ^unable to\npatrol a swimmer who attempted an unaccompanied\nswim of the West Arm. \"We didn't have a boat with\nwhich to go after hifn\", questioners were told.\nSeparation of planking from the bow piece is\nshown in the photo above. The craft hasn't been\nlaunched this season because orelocks are not serviceable and because of its unseaworthy condition.\n\u2014Editorial photo.\nMaintaining Health, Preventing\nDisease Work ol Public Health\nMORE   HOSPITALS\nThis year an estimated $153.-\n774,000 will be spent on the construction of hospitals, sanatoriums,\nclinics and similar buildings in\nCanada, $37,144,000 more than in\n1954.\nSpecial\nOffer\nOne Only Left\nCAR TOP TOUR-A-TENT\nDiscount for Cash\nor Terms, 12 Months To Pay.\nTOUR-A-TENT \u2014 SALES\nBox 324, Nelson, B.C.\nTO STUDY AGEING   '\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Dr. Syd'\n1 ney M. Friedman, 39, and Dr. Con\nstance L. Friedman, 34, of the\nUniversity of British Columbia\nanatomy department, have been\ngranted a \u00a3400 prize for medical\nresearch into the problems of\nageing.\nThe husband and wife team,\nwhich studied the use, storage and\nsecretion of fluids by ageing rats,\nwas awarded the top prize of five\noffered this year by the Civa\nFoundation of London.\nKleenburn . . .\nWestern Monarch\nGait \u2014 Greenhlll\nCanmore Briquettes\nCoal\nPHONE 889\nTowleR\nFuel & Transfer\nThe extensive Services \"as near\nto you as your telephone\"' provided by the Public Health Service in\nBritish Columbia were outlined\nby Dr. Howard T. Lowe. Medical\nHealth Officer for Selkirk Health\nUnit, in a vocational talk to the\nNelson Rotary Club on Monday.\nOrdinarily people go 10 a doctor \"to get well, not lo stay well\",\nsaid Dr. Lowe. Medicine is thought\nof as \"curative rather than preventative.\" The public health service however is concerned with\n\"maintenance of health and prevention of disease.\"\nIts program is largely educational. Only when the practical aspect of something is too extensive.\ntoo expensive, of too long duration or involves legal problems is\nit carried out by the service rather than through practitioners.\nAn example locally is tuberculosis\ncontrol.\nPublic health is not a one-man\nshow but is very much a team effort, the speaker stated. It involves understandings between\nprovincial, national and international health departments. It requires the services of doctors, nurses, nutritionists, sanitary inspectors and several others, all of\nwhom have training in public'\nhealth.\nAll public health services are\ndivided . into \"programs\". These\nprograms, available to British Columbians if needed, include maternal hygiene, infant hygiene,\nschoolmedical program, communicable disease control, sanitation,\nindustrial hygiene, mental hygiene, nutritional consultation,\npreventative dentistry, laboratory\nservice, health educational service, public health research, vital\nstatistics, care to elderly people,\nmedical care plan and drug addiction,\nThe services provided in a particular locality depend on what\nthe area requires. Public health in\nNelson is concerned with well\nbaby clinics, immunization, school\nmedical examinations, sanitation,\ntuberculosis control, children's\nconsultative clinics, air evacuation service, polio vaccination,\nfluoridation survey, community\ndental clinics, prenatal classes and\npollution.\nWith regards to sanitation. Dr.\nLowe said principal concern here\nwas a sanitary milk supply and\nsanitation in restaurants. Dr\nLowe mentioned the \"wonderful\njob\" being done by sanitary inspector R. G. Scott.\nRegarding tuberculosis control,\nDr. Lowe said there is a \"fair\namount\" of the* disease in this\narea because it is a mining dis\ntrict. Tuberculosis and silicosis\nare closely related.\nOf fluoridation he said that in\nSelkirk unit are the only two districts in B.C. where the water\nsupply has natural fluoride, these\nbeing at Nakusp and in the Blay-\nlock sub-division. A survey of Nakusp children was taken In the\nFall of 1953 and the lower tooth\ndecay ration among these children\nwas \"significant.\"\nRegarding    pollution,    surveys\nfrom   Procter  to  Nelson   on   the\nWest Arm of Kootenay Lake.\nSeveral parties are busy on\nplans to promote the event. It\nshould prove a tough grind for\nswimmers as some currents will\nbe encountered near Procter. Water temperature has been near 60\ndegrees.\nTom Murphy, winner of last\nyear's three mile swim from Kokanee, has already expressed his\nwillingness to attempt the long\nswim as has Shawn Harold.\nEd Kelter said an Invitation to\nMrs. Ann Merawa of Vancouver\nwould be sent. At present she is\nentered in the Lake Ontario swim.\nI Mr. Kelter trained Mrs. Merawa\n; years ago at the Coast.\ni Should the swim be attempted\n; it is likely it will take place the\n! latter part of August when the\n, water will be a little warmer.\nhave been taken on the Kootenay\nRiver to determine what effect\nsewerage which empties into the\nriver has on the water.\nThe cost of public health ser\nvices is about $2 per capita per\nyear. The population of Selkirk\nUnit is about 25,000 with the cost\nper year about $43,000. Of the $2\nper person, 30 cents is paid by lo\ncal school boards and the balance\ncomes from the provincial govern\nment,\nThe work of the medical health\nofficer in particular includes determining what services are required locally and it is his responsibility to see that the services\nare arranged for and the program\ncarried out.\nPublic health services are not\nintended to take the place of but\nare intended only as a supplement\nto services received through family doctors, said Dr. Lowe.\nDr. Lowe was introduced by O.\nC. Odegard and thanked for his\naddress on behalf of the club by\nE. C. Wintemute.\nThe Nelson ciub will be represented at a Rotary club dinner in\nSpokane this week at which the\npresident of Rotary International\nwill speak.\nGuests were Tom Ferguson of\nLethbridge, Gordon D. Herbert\nof Kelowna, William Dobbs of\nRossland, Gerry White of New\nWestminster, and Alex Eastwood,\nDave McLaughan, Ted McKillop,\nBert Harrison and Hugh Robertson, all of Vancouver.\nA short sing-song was conducted by Kenneth Counsell,\nTowns Favor\nB.C. Police\nVERNON, B.C. (CPI-Two cities\nin the Okanagan want the return\nof the provincial police to British\nColumbia.\nThe B.C. provincial police were\nabsorbed by the RCMP in August.\n1950. Since then, the RCMP has\npoliced most centres in B.C.\nEnderby and Vernon will present resolutions on the matter to\nthe Okanagan Valley Municipal\nAssociations meeting in Enderby\nThursday.\nNATIONAL COSTS\nVernon objects to the cost of\npolicing municipalities bein\nbased on a percentage of a total\ncost of the force including musical\nrides band tours and other expenses.\nThe city alleges such expenses\n\"are not essential to municipal\npolicing, but national in character.\"\nEnderby alleges the increased\ncost in RCMP policing is unreasonable\" and is in favor of petitioning\nthe attorney-general for re-establishment of the autonomous provincial force.\nIn  other  matters  to   be  considered by the OVMA meeting,\nKamloops and Summerland will\nseek  abolition   of  the  70 cents\nper diem hospital costs.\nRevelstoke    seeks    relief   from\ntaxes imposed on diesel fuel for\nproduction of electricity and Summerland  wants  the  tax  removed\non materials used in municipally-\nowned irrigation systems.\nAVERAGE OF 84.6 In his\nSenior Matriculation departmental examinations has been\nobtained by Ronald Graham,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. J. W, Graham of 424 Robson 8treet In\nNelson. Ron obtained honors In\nchemistry, physics, mathematics,\nEnglish and French. He has attended schools In Calgary, Vancouver, New Westminster and\nNelson and will attend the University of British Columbia-or\nMcGill University of Montreal\nthis Fall where he will study for\nhis doctor's degree In engineering. He took his Senior Matriculation at Nelson Senior, High\nSchool. For the past four summers he has been employed by\nthe Canadian Pacific Railways\nat Banff.\nPENTICTON TO\nHAVE KOOTENAY,\nYALE TAX OFFICE\nOTTAWA (CP) - A new tax\ncollection office is planned for\nPenticton, B.C., Revenue Minister\nMcCann informed the Commons\nTuesday. He said it will serve the\ncounties of Kootenay and Yale.\nThe office probably would not\nstart operations until the end of\n1956. Space would have to be ob\ntained, a staff formed and recorc\ntransferred   from   the   office\nVancouver.\nAUSSIE SCOUTS COMING\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A cc\ntingent of 34 Australian Scou\nand leaders will be guests of thi\nBoy Scout Association here for\nfive days early in August. The\nAustralians will make the stopover on their way to the 8th World\nScout Jamboree at Niagara-on-\nthe-lake Aug. 18-28.\nMISS RAE LARUE\n. . . of Nakusp was top student at Notre Dame College In\n1954-55 with an average of 83.2\nIn her Senior Matriculation\nexams.\u2014Vogue photo.\"\nDo You Need a\nSINK\nOf Fine Quality?\nReasonably\nPriced?\nWE HAVE\nIT!\nDrop in Today to\nKootenay\nPlumbing\nand Heating Co., Ltd.\n351 Baker St.     Phone 666\nKelowna City Plan\nChosen by\nPNE For Exhibition\nKELOWNA (CP)\u2014The city of\nKelowna will be featured in an\nexhibit sponsored by the B.C.\nDivision of Community Planning\nAssociation of Canada at the PNE.\nDeputy minister of municipal affairs, J. E. Brown told council:\n\"We feel that Kelowna is a good\nexample of a well laid out city\nand in addition is protected by a\nregulated area  surrounding it.\"\nYugoslav Consul\nVisits Vancouver\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A former\nYugoslav editor and now that Balkan country's consul-general in\nCanada said here Tuesday his\ncountry hopes for free diplomatic\nrelations with both East and West.\nHere on his first visit to-western\nCanada since moving to Toronto,\nKole T. Casule said \"in an interview that Yugoslavia has adopted\na new phase of diplomatic policy\nhe termed \"active co-existence.\"\nHe said it should permit \"a freer\nexchange\" of people and ideas between countries.\nMr .Casule said he felt strongly\nthat small European countries\nshould have the right to speak for\nthemselves, although caught between communism and democracy.\nPeddle-Pushers Not\nar Back East\nPopulc\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Women in\nWestern Canada like to dress more\ncasually than\" their eastern cousins, says H. Kostman, owner 6f a\nchain of dress shops in Canada\nand the United States.\nMr. Kostman, here on a pleasure tour of western Canada, said\nthe main distinction between wo-\nthe main distinction between\nwomen's dres sin western Canada is the prevalence of faded blue\njeans and padol pushers.\n\"We're selling lots of blue jeans,\nand pedal pushers from' our Edmonton plants,\" he said, \"They\ncan't seem to sell them back East,\nthough. Apart from that, you'll\nfind no great division between\neastern and western fashions.*'\nMany at Funeral\nFor F. Burton\nMany friends paid final tribute\nto Frank John Burton Tuesday\nafternoon at the funeral service\nconducted by Canon W. J. Silver-\nwood at Thompson Funeral Home.\nTwo hymns were played by organist, Mrs. W. A. Manson, \"Unto\nthe Hills Around\" and \"Abide\nWith Me\".\nPallbearers included M. J. Stall-\nwood, J. D. Heighton, A. B. Ron-\nmark, C. Easy, W. Hampshire and\nF. Postlethwaite. Interment was\ni in  Nelson Memorial  Park.\nNelson resident for many years.\nMr. Burton was found dead outside his home on Morgan Street\nFriday. He was 81 years of age.\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.\nNelson\nIN THE GREAT\nOUTDOORS!\nTHERE'S NO BETTER PLACE\nTO ENJOY YOURSELF\nTHAN AT\nTROUT LAKE HOTEL\nAND COTTAGES\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 Koote\nnays, and you can drive direct to\nthe hotel In about 4 hours from\nNelson. The roads are In good\ncondition,\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.\n \u2014\n'\n\u25a0'r'1-': ?'\u25a0\u2022;''\u25a0\u25a0''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nt\n\u25a0\u25a0:>!\u2022\/\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0.   \u25a0:',1;,^.;-;W\n\u2014\n^m\nIn Kimberley Area ..\n597 of 832 Ratepayers Favor\nHospital Improvement District\nKIMBERLEY - To date 597 of\n832 property-owners in the proposed Selkirk Hospital Improvement District which surrounds\nthe organized territory of Kimberley and roughly corresponds to\nthe Kimberley School District,\nhave signed the petition for creation of the district which' would\nbe a preliminary ro provision of\na $1,250,000 hospital to replace the\npresent old three-storey frame\nstructure at Kimberley.\nRefusing to sign the petition\nwere 56 property owners, while 60\nneither refused nor approved, and\n119 remain to be canvassed. Provincial regulations require approval by 70 per cent of all property-\nowners in rural areas for application for establishment of a hospital improvement district to be\nconsidered.\nIf approval is given and the\ndistrict established six trustees\nwill be eldoted representing Chapman Camp, Marysville, strictly\nrural area and industry to reach\nagreement with the city as to the\nrelative financial responsibility of\nthe organized and unorganized\nterritory.\nPLEBISCITE\nWheh this fact is established\nalong with the amount of financing necessary from the whole hospital district?a ratepayers plebiscite would be required to authorize raising of the respective totals. If ratepayers support was\nsufficient, the project would then\nbecome eligible for substantial\nfinancial help by the provincial\nand Dominion governments.\nKimberley district hospital established as a Cominco hospital\nln the late 1920's on a small scale\nwas closely and impartially inspected by an international firm\nof hospital engineers last year,\ntogether with district hospital requirements and population trends\nand the final recommendation was\na new 61-bed building on a new\nlocation expandable to 100 beds\nas need increased in the district.\nThe board of management of the\nhospital this spring considered\nth eneed so acute' that members\nbelieved discontinuation of all\npublic hospital service for Kimberley was the only alternative\nto the new building.\nArchitects' model of the proposed new building, already extensively displayed here, will be\nshown at the Pacific National Ex\n8!\/2-POUND BULL\nTROUT TAKEN\nBY FERNIE MAN\n.NATAL\u2014,A well known sportsman and hunter, Mike Camllli of\nFernie, has reported' catching a\nChar or better, known as a Bull\nTrout weighing SVt pounds. The\nfish was caught in the Elk River\nat Hosmer ahd is regarded as the\nlargest of t'his species to be caught\nin this district from the Elko Dam\nto Michel in the past 25 years.\nHis father, J. V. Camilli was a\nwell   known   fisherman   also.   In\nDelayed Alarm\nMade Firemen\nLale al Fire\nDELTA, B.C. (CP) - Misdirected alarms caused firemen to\nbe an hour late at a blaze here\nwhich levelled the two-storey\nhome of Mr. and -Mrs. O. Nicholson, mink ranchers.\nMr. Nicholson suffered serious\n1920   he   caugm   a   large   Chan burns durinS an'attempt to save\nweighing over 14 pounds at Olson,\nB.C. which used to be a favorite\nspot for big fish many years ago\nMany of the oldtimers in the district will remember this catch.\nEject Negro\nDancing With\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Bernard\nDolman, 18-year-old Negro, claimed Tuesday he was ejected from\na dance hall for dancing with a\nwhite girl.\nHe told reporters two policemen\nremoved him from the dance hall\nafter he told the manager it is illegal to prohibit dancing between\nNegroes.and white persons.\nHe said he plant to complain\nto the Ontario labor department,\nwhich administers laws forbidding\nracial discrimination.\nDolman   identified   the   dance\nhall as the Palais Royale at west-\nend Sunnyside.\nAGAINST CLUB RULES\nJoseph Broderick, manager and\npart owner of the Palais Royale,\nsaid Dolman was put out because\nhe argued against the hall's \"no\nmixed .dancing\" rule.\n\"The policy of the club Is not\nto allow mixed dancing. I won't\nhave a colored fellow dance with\na white girl. It always leads to\ntrouble. That's why I won't have\ncolored bands. That always leads\nto trouble too.\"\nBroderick said he allows Negro\nv.aluable mink breeding records\nfrom the blazing house.\nLoss ls estimated at $20,000.\nNorth Delta volunteer firemen\nsaid they were an hour late reaching the fire because a passing\nmotorist, flagged down by Nicholson to telephone the alarm, had\nfirst called the wrong departments.\nFirst calls were made to Burnaby RCMP and the New Westminster fire department, then to\nthe South Westminster -brigade\nwhich contacted the North Delta\nhai], only two miles from the\nburning house.   ,\nFiremen said they were also\nhampered in bringing the fire under control when a pump became\nclogged with mud.\nMr. Nicholson said he had spent\n20 years cpnjpiling the records and\nother charts of his 2,100-mink operation.\n. J couples to dance together and he\nhihition this summer at request of I also lets unaccompanied Negro\n, the B. G. Insurance Commission, j b\u00b0y\u00bb l?i\"*\u00bb long (u4b.ey, just sit\n 1 and listen to the music.\"\nTHE PARTY LINERS\nNEIGHBORLY\nNORML* knows she's not\nalone on her party line.\nOthers Must phone too.\nBy keeping her calls short.\nNorma has her party\nline neighbors doing the\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE COMPANY\nKASLO SCORES\n22-13 WIN OVER\nNEW\u00a3DENVER\nKASLO \u2014 Kaslo baseball team\nscored ll'runs in the last two innings to defeat the New Denver-\nSilverton'team 22-13 in a game\nhere.      '..\nKaslo led 3-0 after one inning\nand added two more in the second and Shird while the visitors\nscored four. New Denver'scored\nnine in the fourth and fifth and\nKaslo six. The Slocan team failed\nto score m the final two Innings\nwhile Kaslo was scoring their 11.\nL. Kyndbk started the New Denver pitching chores and was relieved by R. O'Grady* with B.\nLeask doing the receiving. D. Shin-\nizer started for Kaslp and was relieved by R. Norberg with Clarke\nBowker catching.\nJ. G. Sinclair of Kaslo umpired\nthe game.\nVisitors\u2014L. Kynock, A. Avison,\nB. Leask, B. Morrison, L. Kynock,\nK. Wilson, R. O'Grady, L. Erickson, J. Husberg, and L. Harding.\nR. Ogrady' was coach.\nOn the Kaslo team was T. Bod-\nentfhuck, Clarke Bowker, R. Norberg, S. Norberg, A. Bodenchuck.\nJ. Tonkin, L. McHardy, D. Shimizu and D. Bavington.\nFIREPROOF\nHOUSEHOLD\nSTORAGE\nAGENTS FOR\nWILLIAMS\nLong Distance Moving and Storage\nPHONE 77\nTRUCK TERMINUS\n(NELSON) LTD.\n701 FRONT ST.\nDoing Thesis on\nShores' Geology\nGrAy CREEK \u2014 Percy Crosby\nof Chevy Chase, Maryland, U.S.A.\nis collecting da(.a for a thesis on\nthe geology of the shores of the\ncentre part of Kootenay Lake\nstretching from Lockhart to Riondel on the East and including\nProctgr, Balfour and Ainsworth\non the West, also five miles inland. Mr. Crosby at Gray Creek\nstated he. chose this part of the\ncontinent because of the many\nproblems in rock formation. So\nfar he found his expectations\nfully justified. He expects to take\ntwo years' vacations. Mr. Crosby\nis a graduate of Harvard University.\nGov't Rejects\nTrail's Request For\nHomes' Appraisal\nTRAIL, B.C. (CP) \u2014 Council's\nrequest for an independent appraisal of the value of 175 Central\nMortgage   and  Housing  Corpora-\nTwo-year-old Arthur Roderick Love of Newark, N.J,, appears\nunhappy over crowded conditions In the tub he Is using as an\nImprovised swimming pool to get relief from oppressive heat A\nneighbor's dog, Poaches, made Itself at home In the tub and Is\ngetting no encouragement.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nHarvey Murphy Denies Jobs in\n. (. Await Miners From East\nVANCOUVER   (CP) \u2014 Harvey! Coal Co. colliery at Glace Bay.\nMurphy,   British   Columbia    re-l    \"j.  haven't  heard  of  any jobs\ngional director of the International going around and I'd advise east\nUnion of Mine, Mill and Smelter! coast   miners   to   thoroughly   in-\nWorkers   (Ind.)   Tuesday   denied vestigate prospects before coming\n$60,000 Unpaid.\nNELSON DAILY NfcWS, WED., JULY 27,1955 \u2022\n$69,000 Rossland..\nTaxes Collected\nROSSLAND \u2014 Gordon Seafoot\nand J. Blell approached city council this week about several matters which Included a hazardous\ntree on a neighbor's property, the\nseepage of stagnant water on to\ntheir properties, lack of oil on the\nroad behind their properties, and\nthe need for some precautionary\nmeasures to deal with traffic.\nThese matters were reierred to\nthe proper committees for action.\nAn application for a licence to\noperate a Standard Oil service\nstation was received from Fred\nSImlster and referred -to the fire\ndepartment.\nA complaint of R. Watkinson\nconcerning . surface water running onto his property was referred to the board of works.\nK. L. Jorgenson requested that\nWashington street be widened between Phoenix and Princess avenues.\nDrainage pipes which were\ncrushed when the Galleon grader\nwas cleaning an, alley of weeds\nhas caused water to run in all\ndirections on George Gowing's\nproperty and the problem was referred to the board of works.\nA  letter  from  the Vancouver\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Four teen-\naged boys 15 and under were\ncharged with burglary after police\nrecovered 9300 clgarets and two\ncases of beer stolen from Northland Navigation Ltd. during the\nweekend.\nProvince Informed council they\nhad asked their distributor to see\nthat the nuisance of papers littering the streets be checked.\nH. McCandless, building Inspector,  reported  $60,805 in  building\npermits   since   the   beginning   of\nthe year.\n8EWER WORK\nAlderman H. Keffer announced\nthat the Phoenix Avenue newer\nline Was nearly completed, with\nall the necessary pipe riow in\nRossland. Victoria Avenue sewer\nline will start this week.\nAbout an acre of the playground\npark has been cleared of stumps\nand rocks,\" according to Aid. H. L.\nChristian, and the Rotary Club\nwill soon be able to start its project there.\nOn the request of Alderman\nW. Keane, $125 expense money\nwas voted to enable fire chief\nDavid Bishet W attend the B. C.\nFirefighters convention at Powell\nr.Iver. He also mentioned that the\ntwo inch water line on Park Street\nhad been' completed. Alderman\nAustin stated that $69,000 tax money had been collected to date\nwith $60,000 still to be collected.\nThe board of works has Installed six catch basins and laid nearly 15,000 gallons ol oil on city\nstreets.\nBarrett Lawrie has been appointed collector of dog licence fees,\nIt was decided to hold monthly\nmeetings of the parks committee\nduring the summer months.\nthere  are  jobs  in  B.C.  for  east\ncoast miners.\nMurphy was commenting here\non House of Commons. reports\nfrom Ottawa Monday that work\nexisted on the west coast for Nova\nScotia coal miners, 800 of whom\nhave been thrown out of work\nfollowing   closure    of   Dominion\nPGE Opened lo\nTraffic Again\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Railways\nminister Ralph Chetwynd said\nTuesday the mainline of the Pacific Great Eastern railway now is\nopen after a month's stoppage\ncaused by floods in the Quesnel\narea.\nFills and railway trestles were\nknocked   out   by   a   cloudburst.\nDamage ls estimated at $300,000.\nI    Mr.  Chetwynd  also  announced\ni tenders will be called within the\nj next two weeks for a 25-mile see-\nto homes in Upper Sunningdale   tion north \u201e, FrinC\u00a3 GeorgGi\nhas been rejected by the govern-1 ___:\t\nment, H. W. Herridge, CCF member of Parliament for kootenay\nWest, *has advised council. The\ncity sought the apprajsal after\ntenants termed proposed prices\ntoo high.\nout to B.C.,\" said Murphy.\n\"There aren't enough jobs for\nthe men now in the province so I\ndon't see how there could be\nmuch for miners from the Maritimes.\"\nMurphy said coal miners from\nAlberta had taken up an earlier\ndemand for extra miners and\n'there's not much room for anybody else.\"\nIn the Commons Monday, H. W.\nHerridge (CCF \u2014 Kootenay West)\nsaid there was mining work at\nTrail, B.C., site of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co.\noperation?.\nUse FIREPROOF BLOCKS\nWHEN YOU BUILD YOUR GARAGE\nNo  repairs  or upkeep to worry\nabout. Use concrete blocks and\nBuild for a Lifetime.\nTotal Cost of Blocks for\nAverage Garage $135.00.\nDelivered in Nelson.\nWrite or phone Trail 2106 \"collect\" for full Information or\ncontact K. W. DIXON CO., NEL80N.\nKORPACK Cement Products Co. Ltd.\nSuppliers for the Kootenay of Blocki (Cinder or Concrete)\nChimney Blocki\n154 Wellington St.       Trail, B.C.       Phone 2105\nDEATH RULED\nACCIDENTAL\nBY DROWNING\nINVERMERE \u2014 Coroner'i Inquest Jury Tuesday Into the'\ndeath of Gerald Thomat Griffin, 28, of Edmonton, 8aturday\nnight at Lake Windermere, returned a verdict that death wai\naccidental by drowning when a\nboat capsized In a,sudden squall.\nNoTjIame wai attached to anyone. J\nThe body wai found Monday\nevening In dragging operatloni\nby RCMP and has been returned:\nto Edmonton for.burial.\nSAFE MOVING\nis a SCIENCE!\nLet our trained, courteou,\nprofessional movers \"tike the\nload off your mind!\" Your\n(inert furniture, dishes and\nother possessions will bo\nscientifically packed and\nhandled with the utmost care\nPhone for estimate.\nWest\nTransfer\nGo.\n719 Baker St.   Nelson, I.C\nPhone 33\nFERNIE DEFEATS\nNATAL 6-2\nRubber Cheque\nArtists Busy\nVANCOUVER   (CP)   \u2014   Police\nwarned Tuesday that the boorains\n\"rubber cheque business\" is boun:i\nNATAL - Playing a return ex-j t0 dupe Vancouver businessmen oi\nhibition game at the Natal ball;..much  more.. than   the  averagc\npark the Fernie Falcons handed j annual toI1    f mm m year\nthe  Natal-Michel  Red  Sox  their!\nunless more stringent identifies-\n| tion rules are applied.\nj    Detective Bill Barkley, chief of\nI the police cheque detail, revealed\nmore. The Red Sox scored their  j that  lhe  bad  cheque  artists  are\nfirst defeat as they came from behind to score a 6-2 win behind\nthe steady hurling of Wilf Ash-\nonly   runs   ln   the   fourth\nlong double by Ben Serafini with\ntwo mates aboard.\nErrors proved costly for the\nlosing Red Sox. The visitors scored\ntheir only run in the first inning\nwhen Buchanan hit for the circuit with the bases empty. Whal- j tent bank accountS| he said,\nley Krall went the route for the 1<Too many businesg people are\nlosers, but poor support paved the1\noperating mainly against stores or\nhotel beer parlors but are also be\ncoming brazen enough to victimize\nan increasing number of banks.\nMost of their worthless cheque;\nare forgeries but many are simply\ncheques written against non-exis-\nway for the loss after he pitched\none of his better games.\nRed Sox had won three straight\ngames including a 7-1 decision\n| over the Falcons until absorbing\ntheir initial loss. The other two\nwins were over the Eureka, Mont.,\nj njne in a home an dhome encoun-\nj ter. The game was umpired by\n; Tom Krall of Natal and Quido D'-\n\u2022 Angelo of Sparwood.\nWINNIPEG fCP) \u2014 Overseas\ncables at the Winnipeg Grain Exchange Tuesday sail that Russia\nhad sold a cargo of corn to the\nUnited Kingdom and had offered\nwheat, i a cargo of durum wheat\nr.nd oats to Antwerp, Rotterdam\nand the United Kingdom.\nwilling to accept a stranger and\nhis cheque at face value,\" Det.\nBarkley added. \"Persons who do\nthis get stuck every day of the\nweek.\nDet. Barkley said the best method of stamping out the bad\ncheque business is the \"fingerprint system\" now in use in many\nparts of the  United  States.\nThis involves businessmen making strangers place their fingerprints on the back of their cheques\nbefore cashing them.\n\"Then we'd find cheque losses\ndropping\u2014but fast,\" he said.\nHelps You Reduce Swollen\nPainful Piles\nHire I, a nice, clean, eeiy wiy to let\nreal relief from tht nailing dtitreu ot\n\u2022wo len, painful pll,, without the inconvenience of ointment., pll. pipn or lup-\nPosltoriw. r\n' Tht Herat ta ta taking, Juet on. .mall\nHem-Kola Tablet, with water, two or\ni \u2122\"\u21222S * **>\u2022 Vl'\"la 'hroueh eflec.\n\u00ab\u00ab. .INTERNAL action. Quickly ..ll.\ncon.Up.bon, t.11.\u2122. Itchlo,, loren.u ,\u201ed\nP.m. Help, .brink pile, and permit, them\nto heal.\nWhy luffer ueedleuly when Hem-Roid\nofferj you ao much. Get a package tod.y.\nBea for younelf how nice Hem.fiold 1, to\nuie, how effective it I, ,\u201ed how much\nmore comfort it will quickly brin, you.\nAll drug, itorae, Low cost. Money refunded If you are not 100% pleeud.\nSix ways to beat the heat\nDo you know the first days of\nsummer hit you harder because\nyour \"sweat system\" is .rusty;\nthat you're often cooler with\nyour shirt on than off; that\nwomen stand heat better than\nmen?\nAugust Reader's Digest brings\nyou fascinating facts about your\nbody's cooling system, tells you\n6 easy rules for keeping cool.\nGet your copy of August\nReader's Digest today: 36\narticles of lasting interest, including the best from leading\nmagazines and current books,\nin condensed form.\nMR. EMPLOYER:\nWE'LL BRING IN\nTHE WORKERS!\n' \u00a3\u2022\u2022 :\nOur \"Help Wanted\" ads reach out to\nbring in the best applicants available\nfor any type of job!\nIt's a known fact: Whenever you want to fill a job opening, the best place to advertise is in this paper. . . . Our\nwide readership- includes the finest workers in almost\nany field \u2014 and, we are noted for always listing the\nvery be$t jobs available. It's so important to get the right\nkind of workers these days. Let us help you do the hiring\nwith effective advertising! '\nSAVE MONEY AND GET ADDED\nIMPACT: RUN YOUR AD FOR\n3 TIMES... OR A FULL WEEK!\nstat\nfi;W;\nQet Action and Results\nPhone 1844\nThe Nelson Daily News\n -}V\"i$ym\nr^mmmr^^W^^^W^^^^I^\u00a7,\nEstablished April 22, 1902\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.\t\nWednesday, July 27, 1955\nPrejudice in Child\nThis problem of prejudice in the\nhuman mind has been the subject of\nmuch intensive study by social scientists, especially in recent years.\nValuable work has been done in this\nfield during the post-war years under\nthe auspices of the United Nations,\nespecially through one of its' associated' agencies, the United Nations\nEducational, Scientific and Cultural\nOrganization. I believe it is desirable\nto take advantage of the research that\norganization has done.\nOne thing that most students\nhave agreed on is that prejudiced\n'; people, like 116*065, are not born\u2014\nthey are made. Prejudice is something that is acquired. It is often\npassed from one generation to another. It is frequently the result of\ndeliberate propaganda, sometimes by\none nation against another, sometimes by one group within a nation\nagainst another group, and sometimes by one person against another.\nIn addition to this, it is often found\nin children at a very early age. We\nall know from our own observations\nthat prejudice can be acquired by\nchildren, and usually the source of\nStarts With Parent\nprejudice in young children is the\ninfluence of their parents.   .\nMost parents, of course, do not\nwant their children to-have prejudices. However, students of this problem have found that children acquire\nprejudices by the example of unfortunate behavior; by observations of\nother* people and by other expressions of superiority. Students of\nprejudice have discovered that much\nof the time, we older people do hot\nrealize that we are in fact passing on\nour prejudices to our children.\nThis, it seems to me, is one of the\nmain things that Canadians, and\nespecially Canadian parents, should\nkeep in mind if they want to do sofrie-\nthing about prejudice and discrimination. Prejudice is a very subtle\nthing, and even the students who\nhave spent a lot of .time in research\nand study of the problem admit that\nthey cannot analyze it completely.\nHowever, it is safe to say that the\nbest way to work against it is first to\nexamine our own attitudes and try to\ndevelop a fair and open mind about\nother human beings who are different from ourselves.\u2014Hon. Walter,\nHarris.\nGasket-Blowing\nVia Terle&ram\nFollowing the rejection of the original\npipeline plan, Mr. St. Laurent, the Prime\nMinister, announced that the Cabinet had\nbefore it three - alternative plans, one ot\nwhich might include Port Arthur in its\ntranscontinental route.\nLike any good burgomeister, Port Arthur's mayor, Fred Robinson, and his aldermen wanted to know more, and wired their\nmember, Hon. C. D. Howe, asking for an\nInterview. They got their reply., with this\nnasty little reminder tagged on the end:\n\"It is my understanding that you were\nelected to represent the citizens of Port\nArthur and that I was elected to represent\nthe same at Ottawa, I hope that you are\ndoing your job as I am attempting to do\nmine.\"\nWe know that the ministers and members of Parliament have free mailing privileges, but we wonder if the taxpayers have\n' to foot the bill on full-rate commercial telegrams when, a minister feels called on to\nbeat the heat by blowing a gasket in 41\nwords?\u2014Calgary Herald.\nBack to Land?\nMany men who have entered the coal\nmines of Nova Scotia in past timet* have\ncome from the land, many are the sons of\nmembers of the farming population, and\nmany others would, it goes without saying,\nbe happy to establish themselves on the\nland if they were given that measure of\nencouragement and assistance, financial and\notherwise, which has been extended through\nthe years to other classes of workers by both\nthe federal and provincial governments.\nWithout going*into detail at the moment, there are opportunities for people to\ngo oft the land, or back to the land, in this\nprovince today\u2014in mixed farming, in stock-\nraising (cattle and sheep), in poultry-raising, in dairying\u2014and where men are left\nunemployed as a result of a decline in coal,\nmining, there would appear to be no reason\nwhy a considerable percentage of them\ncould not be settled in some branch of the\nland industry.\u2014Halifax Chronicle-Herald.\nThe Halogens\nPeople put chlorine in their drinking\nwater to kill the germ-bugs, and they put\nfluorine in it to delay the onset of that day\nwhen your true teeth play you false. Now it\nseems a pity to use only two of the four\nchemical elements which make up that little\ngroup called the halogens. A third halogen,\nIodine, could go into the drinking water to\nkeep down goitre. But the fourth ... ah,\nthere's the one that would do more good\nthan all the other three put together. It is\nbromine. Bromine, in the form of bromides,\nwould stop people from worrying about\nfluorine In their water.\u2014The Fort William\nTimes-Journal.\nBali and Chain\nWe 'are fascinated by the story from\nWellington, New Zealand, about the man\nwo, drinking in a pub with his friends,\nheard a sharp click and, looking down, noted\nthat a 40-pound ball and chain had been \u00bb\nlocked to his ankle. Noting that this impediment bore no resemblance to his wife, he\npicked it up and started after a short, dark\nman who was hastening out of the pub. He\nfailed to catch him, and had to go to the\npolice to have the ball and chain removed.\nThere should be, of course, a moral to\nthis tale, but we're darned If we can find.\none. It could .not, naturally, be a warning\nagainst marriage sent down to Wellington,\nNew Zealand, by Providence. This seems\nunlikely. Perhaps the real moral is that men\nshould avoid drinking in pubs with their\nfriends. Or perhaps they should never do\nso. unless accompanied by their wives.\u2014The\nMontreal Star.\nYour Horoscope\nExercise the utmost caution in all your\naffairs, especially concerning elders and\nproperty. Today's child may be beset with\ndifficulties, mostly caused by an unsympathetic nature, which can be'corrected while\nthe child is young.\nIt's Been Said\nBeing a parent used to be one of the\nmost simple, natural, inevitable developments in the world. But nowadays one has\nno business to be married unless, waking\nand sleeping, one is conscious of the responsibility.\u2014Abraham Flexnen\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of\npersons asking questions will not be\npublished. There Is no charge for this\nservice. QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE\nANSWERED BY MAIL except where\nthere  Is obvious necessity for pr.lvady.\nAnother Subscriber, Kimberley\u2014If a tenant\npays the taxes, does that meap he owns\nthe house?\nThe owner of a house ls the person who\nholds the deeds of possession. If the tenant\npays the taxes it is just a private arrangement between landlord and tenant.\nC. H. B\u201e Boswell\u2014Can you tell me where I\nmay obtain very thin cedar veneer?\nBurns Lumber Company, 620 Baker\nStreet; K. W. Dixon Company, Ltd., 305\nBaker Street; T. H. Waters and Co., Ltd., 101\nHall Street, all of Nelson, can supply you\nwith cedar veneer. <.\nJ. A. B., Kinnaird\u2014Could you tell me,who\ngot the contract for the Nelson bridge,\nand if they have an office in Nelson?\nPool EngineeVing,  together  with Raymond International Construction Company,\nobtained the contract. Their representative\nin Nelson is R. Murray, Resident Engineer,\nRaymond International Construction Company, c\/o Department of Highways, Nelson.\nConstant Reader, Nelson\u2014Is there a Spirella\ncorset agent in Nelson?\nCan other-readers help? Watch our advertising columns for their notices.\nL. W., Castlegar\u2014Just to settle an argument,\nwhen did San Francisco have the first\ncable car? And was it the first street car\nin the city?\nSan Francisco had its first cable car In\n1873, replacing the earlier horse street car\nof that period.\nT. T., North Shore\u2014Is there an agent in\ntown for I.E.L. chain saws?\nSinnerud Truck and Tractor, Ltd.. are\nagents for I.E.L. chain saws.\nGems of TKou^ht\nBEAUTY\nTho' we travel the world over to find\nthe beautiful,,we must have it in us or find\nit not.\u2014Ralph Waldo Emerson.\nBeauty from order springs.\u2014William\nKing.\n* *       *\nTo cultivate a sense of the beautiful is\none of the most effectual ways of cultivating an appreciation of the divine goodness.\n\u2014C. N.' Bovee.\n* *       *\nThe embellishments otythe person are\npoor substitutes for the charms of being,\nshining resplendent and eternal over age\nand decay\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n* *       *\nInstead of a gem or a flbwer. cast the\ngift of a lovely thought into the heart of a\nfriend.\u2014George Macdonald.\n* *      *\nIn all ranks of life the human heart\nyearns for the beautiful; and the beautiful\nthings thai God makes are His gift to all\nalike'.\u2014Harriet Beecher Stowe.\nNaming a Hotel\nIt appears that in this whole business\n(naming the new CNR hotel in Montreal^\nthere has been a little too- much hurry, and\nthat a lot of people would like to stop the\nmachinery. The situation is delidate. . . ,#\nThe Queen has complacently consented *>\nthe request (that her name be used). It was\nonly later that an opposition, polite but firm.\nwas taken into account. It is too late for a\ncorrection which would greatly please numbers of Canadians? The Governor General\nof Canada is at present in London. It is on\nhis presence there that some people build\ntheir hopes. ... It is thus (if the Sovereigns\nwere informed of the sentiment of the population) that all would come to order, to the\ngreat satisfaction of Canadian opinion. Chateau Frontenae, Chateau Maisonneuve, a\nhappily-inspired trilogy.\u2014Le Patrie, Montreal.\nPress Comment\nBUT NO FLASHLIGHT\nThe glove compartment of the average\nauto contains rouge, powder, comb and mirror where a flashlight ought-to be.\u2014Kitcha\nener-Waterloo Record.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hado\nTWE\u00bbJ IM ThE\nRXJRTU ItWllfe\nNO-IT WMS\n\u25a0THIRD'\nOimL disiL\nMHO MGOERS\n4TTrlEST4y-PUT\nBOYS WHO T4KE. UP\nSR4CE IN THE\nLUNCHROOM-\ny-z7\nI never could see how come it's\nwicked to pray for things if it\nain't wicked to wish for 'em.\nHow Do English\nChildren Grow\nThat Way?\n. . . F. B. Pearce\nThe English are said to take\ntheir pleasures sadly. Whether this\nis true or not, they certainly are\nvery calm and quiet under most\ncircumstances. in* a cafe or restaurant there is no high-pitched\nvoice or the animation so common in North America. Men and\nwomen seem to have a real equal\nity, and there is no noisy domina\nHon by the women; and as for\nchildren, their behavior In public\nis exemplary. They are neither\nassertive nor subservient, but as\nutell behaved as their parents.\nBath is a city of considerable\nantiquity and historical interest.\nWhile there we saw many parties\nof school children with their\nteachers. Though they were obvi\nously enjoying themselves, there\nwas no pushing, running or shout\ning. The guide at the Roman baths\ntalked to the children in our\nparty, not to the adults, and they\nresponded by giving him all their\nattention. I have seldom seen chil\ndren so absorbed in listening to\nwhat they were being told. If\ntrjere is any difference between\nCanadian and English education,\nit may be that. English children\ncan concentrate more on the subject in hand.\nApparently all schools can make\nthese expeditions. We saw elementary children visiting a garden in\nStratford, and a party of adolescent girls looking hopelessly\nEnglish in their floppy school\nhats. The guide had just pointed\nto the monument to the inventor\nof the bath oliver biscuit, and\nwhen I remarked that they didn't\nknow the bath oliver, they smiled\nand said they did.\nCOMMAND LANGUAGE\nEnglish children are quiet, but\nnot shy and speechless. The fourteen-year-old boy who told us\nabout the Teddy Boys also spoke\nabout his school most interestingly. Another boy of nine gave me\nvery clear directions how to reach\nhis school, and got off his bike to\naccompany me part way so that I\nshould be sure to find it. Even\nchildren in the nursery schools\ncould answer questions quite well.\nThey all seem to have a command\nof clear language.\nDuring the war, with all Its\ndangers and terror, the British\nwere subconsciously determined\nthat the race should not peflsh,\nand   concentrated   their   efforts\nS W A N   DIVE \u2014 BY   A   SWAN \u2014 What appears to be a iwan with eight headi to\nnothing more than a mother swan ducking Its hea\u00abTbclow a pond surface to search for food for\na brood of U-day-otd cygnets when a Pittsburgh photographer snapped tho picture.\non   the   care   of   the   children.\nThey gave them special rations,\nmilk, orange Juice and cod liver\noil, and established school meali\nfor them. The result Is clearly\ndiscernible. The children everywhere are robust and healthy.\nMilk Is still supplied free to'all\nchildren and school meals to all\nwho wish for a nominal  sum.\nThese   meals   as   plain,   wholesome and  attractive. A  centra]\ncommittee in each area plans the\noverall diet, but each cook has\nfreedom to make the menus. In\none nursery school the cook was\nmaking pink sponge cake to go\nwith   stewed   peaches   because\nshe liked the children to have\ncolor  In their meals.  Id every\nplace  It seemed the cooks en-\nJoyed  turning  out  good   meals\nfor the children.\nOne   of  my   friends  remarked\nthat he was surprised how quickly\neven   little   children   learned   to\nride a bicycle. This may be due'to\nthe physical education program in\nthe infants' schools, which are for\nchildren from five to seven. This\nis directed but not controlled, and\nthe children love it. The little, girls\nquite unself-consciously strip off\ntheir dresses and clamber through\na jungle gym, hand head^down or\nswing by their hands. They walk\nalong two-by-fours five or six feet\nabove the floor, or use a jumping\nhorse.\nBoys and girls play together,\nbut each sex prefers its own\ngames, and each child car* choose\nhis own. While some were high-\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014Bulk of early\nofferings at the livestock yards\nTuesday comprised butcher steers\nand heifers of medium quality. On\noffer up to 11 a.m. were 575 cattle\nand 15 calves. Strictly-choice\ngrain-fed butcher steers were becoming scarce. Trade was active.\nGood to choice dry-fed butcher\nsteers strong to 25 cents higher;\nfair to medium generally steady;\ngood to choice dry-ted butcher\nheifers firm; fair to medium grass\nheifers sharply discounted; good\ncows steady at Monday's advance\nof 25 cents; bulls steady; good\nstocker and feeder steers steady;\nveal calves strong.\nChoice dry-fed steers $19.50 to\n$20.25; good $18.50 to $19.50; medium $17 to $18; common $14 to\n$18.50.\nChoice dry-fed heifers $17.7!$ to\n$18.50; good $18.50 to $17.50; medium $15 to $16; common $10 to\n$14.5u.\nGood cows $11.50 to $12.50; medium $10.25 to $11.25; common $9\nto $10; canners and cutters $4\nto $8.50.\nGood bulls\" $12 to $13; common\nto medium' $9 to $11.50.\nGood stock steers $15.50 to $17;\njumping and others playing ball,\none seven-year-old was keeping a\nwooden hoop rotating around his\nbody by the movement of his hips.\nThis is in-ikeeping with the national belief in freedom of choice.\nCut (osis to\nSave Coal,\nSays Prudham\n\u2022\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Canada's eoal\nindustry must cut production oost!\nif it is to survive, Mines Minister\nPrudham says.\nHe told the Commons that Nova\nScotia coal mines, aiming at\nwider markets through cost-cutting mechanization, have not\nachieved that goal.\nAs for the industry in Alberta,\nthere is no solution in sight to revive the mines to their former\nposition in the face of competition\nfrom big surpluses of oil and gas.\nJohn . Blackmore (SC, Lethbridge) asked for greater federal\naid in getting Alberta coal into\nOntario markets.\nMr. Prudham said there are difficulties. Alberta coal could not\nbe stored. And the furnaces of\neastern industries were adapted\nto different types of coal.\ncommon to medium $12 to $15.\nGood and choice calves $21 to\n$25; common to medium $10 to $20.\nHogs steady Monday at $28.7$\nfor A grade; sows $13.10 to 313.23\nliveweight.\nGood lambs $20 to $21; good\newes $5 to $7.50. ...    .\nToday's Bible\nThOUght-\nBehold I stand at the door and\nknock Rev. 3.80.\nJob was in a quandry. he did not\nknow where to find God. All the\ntime the Infinite was knocking at\nthe door of his heart. A child can\nsay come in.\nMore for Your Money!\nWHEN YOU SHOP\nAT LOCAL STORES!\nYou don't hove to go to the big shopping centers to\nget \"a bargain!\" Your local merchants consistently give you\nthe most for your money: good selection of quality merchandise,\nfair prices, courteous service and convenient .parking. And \u2014\nyour dollars spertt locally help support and build your community. Shop at home and save!'\nV>\nx\nThis message is brought to you\nby your community minded newspaper ...\nPHONE 1844\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nl\n \u25a0\u25a0'7 ,-; \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:-:.-vjT-vr-.-y tt^- 7^ ; ; ji ; \u25a0 . .    .    ,..,...  .; . ...   ..,.,. ,    ,   ...... ..... , .  ,. .   ,. r .     .....    ,  .  ,,    ..     .    ....      I.     .\nBargains\nA-Plenty\nat our\n53rd   Anniversary\nSALE\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLeaders In Footfashlon\nESTABLISHED 1902\nNelson Social\nby, 3jojlVlcl (jJhsurfsA\nMiss Jean Bluett of London,\nEng., ls the guest for six months\nof her cousin, Miss Dorothy Smith\nand Mrs. R. Newcomb, 510 Kokanee Avenue.\nCpl. and Mrs. G. R. Ross and\nson Stewart have left for Wey-\nburn, Sask., where they will visit\nthe former's parents en route to\ntheir home in North Bay, Ont.\nCpl. and Mrs. Ross have been the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. D. McCuaig\nFront Street.\n* a    a\nMrs. F. W. M. Drew, 37 High\nStreet, is holidaying for several\nweeks in Vancouver.\n\u2022 a     a\nMr. and Mrs. H. R. McCardell\nand family have returned to their\nhome at 902 Fourth Street after\nvisiting relatives fh Vancouver.\na    a    a\nMrs.   Roy   Pollard,   816   Silica\nTV SQUARE\nLovely decoration \u2014smart pro-\nSTAY-AT-HOME\nWOMEN RAPPED\nBY SENATOR\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Housewives\nwho spend all their time at home\nare just so much deadwood, says\nSenator Muriel Fergusson.\nWomen should take an interest\nin life around them, the Liberal\nsenator for New Brunswick said\nin an interview. With modern,\ntime-saving appliances, they have\nextra time to devote to being good\ncitizens, without neglecting their\nfamilies.\nFor instance, said Mrs. Fergus-\nson, one of five women ln Canada's 102-seat upper chamber,\nwomen's clubs are both \"^ery interesting and a wonderful source\nof education.\"\nMrs.   Fergusson,   58,   practises\nwhat she preaches. She has led a\nbusy public life and belonged to\nnumerous women's groups.\nAFTER AN  ILLNESS\nAdmitted to the New Brunswick Bar in 1925, she was readmitted, in 1936 following an ill-\nShe  became   clerk   of  the\nPHONE. 1844\nStreet, has returned from Vancouver where she visited her sister, Mrs. J. A. Fethersponhaugh,\n\u25a0 formerly of Nelson:   \"- \u25a0\nMrs. Mary Reggln, 410 Gore\nStreet, is a patient in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital,\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. J. Smith left for\ntheir home in Calgary after visiting relatives in Nelson, Including\nthe former's brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. J. R Ramsden of the North Shore.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMr. and Mrs^C. B. Mutchler, 814\nVictoria Street, have as their\nguests their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Dobbs and\nsons, Jimmy. David and William\nof Ross'land.\nMrs. R. J. Wiginton returned\nTuesday to her home at 615 Latimer Street, after spending a month\nin St Paul's Hospital in Vancouver where she received medical\nattention. She was accompanied\nhome by Mr. Wiginton's brother\nand sister-in-law\/ Mr. and Mrs,\nR. L. Wiginton of North Vancouver.\n\u00bb   *    \u00bb\nMrs. J. Blazina and daughter\nHelen of Calgary, formerly of Nelson, are visiting friends in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Burns, 823\nSixth Street, left Tuesday for Van-\nMr. and Mrs. J. C. Loomer have\nreturned to their home at 715 Hendry x Street from Victoria and\nVancouver. They were accompanied home by the latter's\nmother, Mrs. E, Bedolth of Vancouver.\nChoir Honors\nTwo Members\nThe Senior Choir of First Baptist Church held a fellowship hour\nat  the   home   of  leader   Norman\nGibson  in honor of two of their\ncounty and circuit courts for Vic-I members. Miss Iris Reid and Mr.\ntoria   county   and   judge   of   the\ntection!  Easy  crochet this  pretty! county probate court,\ncover to fit any size TV set. i    From 1944 to 1947 she was pro-\nPattern 747: Crochet directions! Uncial counsel for the wartime\nfor TV square 28-lnches in No. 301 Prices and trade board and be-\ncotton; smaller in No. 50; larger! tween 1947 and 1953 was director\nin  mercerized  crochet  and  khit-'of family allowances and old age\nting cotton. Easy \u2014 so lovely!\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted!\nsecurity for New Brunswick. She\nwas the first woman to hold all\nthese positions.   In 1953 she was\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler, j apP\u00b0jnt,ed4}\u00b0 ^fj^l\nNDN, 60 Front St. W., Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER your NAME and ADDRESS.\nHer latest distinction is being\none of three women on the 26-\nmember parliamentary group representing Canada  at the current\nPET PROJECTS\nMrs. Fergusson has numerous\npet projects she hopes to further\nduring   her   political  career\u2014re-\nTrtrtw  w\u00bb *   * i j       i     inaugural meeting of NATO par-\nLOOK  FOR smartest Ideas  in' , , ,,        .    ra   ,\n._    ,,       ., , _ ,._     .    : hamentary associations  in Paris.\nNeedlecraft in our Laura Wheeler I \u201e\u201e\u201e \u201e\u201e\u201e,_\u201e\t\nCatalog for 1955. Crochet, knitting,]\nembroidery and lovely things to\nwear. Iron-ons, quilts, aprons, nov- \\\ncities \u2014 easy, fun to make! Send1 ,   , .,,, ,, .\n25 cents for your copy of this book j habilita ion programs for women\nNOW!   You   will   want  to   order I ln Penitentiaries similar to   hose\nevery new design in it. 1 Prov'ded Ior men' rem0,val,\u00b0f .un\"\nI employment insurance limitations\nj on married women and reduction\n! of succession duties for widows,\n( Recently she became chairman\nj of the Canadian Welfare Council\nI committee on the aging. She has\nbeen a vice-president of the council for some years.\nDistinctive\nand Beautiful\nHANDCRAFTS\nBY LOCAL ARTISTS\nAND CRAFTSMEN\nHOBBY\nSHOP\n577 Ward St Phone 224\nGeorge Kelly whose marriage will\ntake plare this week. A gift of a\nscenic picture of Bonnington Falls\nwas made to the couple.\nAYLESBURY, England (CP) \u2014\nMeal allogances for prisoners in\nBuckinghamshire prisons have\nbeen raised from Is 6d to 2s 6d.\nYour Doctor...\nElderly People\nNeed Vitamins\nBy   HERMAN' N.   BUNDE8EN,\nMD\nThe basic dietary needs of the\nelderly are relatively' simple.\nAn expert on nutrition of the\naged, W. H. Sebrell, lists the 4aily\nrequirements as: One pint of milk\nor its equivalent. Some of this\nmay be taken in the form of\ncream soups, milk toast, puddings\nand In other forms.\nOne serving or tomatoes, oranges or grapefruit, or their juices.\nYou can substitute salad greens or\nraw cabbage if you wish, provided\nyour doctor does not advise\nagainst them.\nOne serving of yellow or green\nvegetables, some of them raw.\nOne serving of potatoes or other\nvegetable or fruit.\nOne egg each day, or at least\nthree  or four a week.\nOne serving of whole grain\ncereal, wheat or oatmeal.\nOne serving of meat, poultry,\nsea food or other foods rich in\nproteins.\nAll bread or flour should be\nenricheM or whole grain. Butter or\nmargarine, fortified with vitamin]\nA, should be used. Peanut butter]\nor other fats rich in vitamins are\nalso advised.\nSome doctors maintain that you\ncan get sufficient vitamins and\nminerals from your foods alone.\nBut let's look at this thing realistically.\nYou aren't going to get your\nproper share day in and day out,\nbecause you simply aren't going\nto eat what you should eat each\nday. As you get up in years, your\nneed for vitamins and minerals\nincreases, At the same time your\nappetite and ability to digest foods\ndecline.\nFood, of course, contains unknown factors which you can get\nin no other way. However, you\ncan and should get supplemental\nvitamins and minerals. Therapeutically, it's more important to raise\nthe total intake of your vitamins\nthan it Is merely to supply a single\nvitamin which you might lack,\nSome vitamins, you see, act as\ntriggers for others, thus benefiting\nyou even more.\nThe modern multivitamin tablet\nis one of the few examples In\npharmacy where the \"shotgun\"\ntreatment is more practical than\nthe \"rifle\" treatment aimed at the\nprecise location of trouble.\nIf you  are 50  or. older, better\nRecipes...\nCold Drinks Should\nRefresh, Nourish\n         ,\u2014, \u2014-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JULY 27,1935 \u2014 5\nl\nBy MARGARET CARR\nOn hot summer days, what is\nmore refreshing than to stretch\nout under the shade of a big tree\nwith a cool drink by your sidei\nIf you have lost the desire for\nfood then be sure to drink cool\ndrinks that are wholesome foods.\nCold drinks can be refreshing\nand at the same tjme nourishing.\nDoes your family like eggnogs\nor do they, think  of them aa a\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Mr, and Mrs.\nStanley Pedley and two sonos had\nas their guests, Mrs, Pedley's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. D. McLeau of Vancouver for\nseveral days.\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Collier of\nLardeau w6re weekend visitors\nin New Denver and Rosebery.\nMr. and Mrs. John Dowling and\ntwo daughters, Joy and Cheryl\nLou of Chemafiius, B.C., were the\nguests of Mr, and Mrs. A. L. Harris\nand visited old friends.\nMrs. E. M. Kirkwood had as\nher guests, her niece Mr. and Mrs. I\nHector Jameson and two children\nof Fort St. 'John, B.C., en route\nto visit Mrs. Jameson's mother,\nMrs. Frank Diamond in Salmon\nArm.\nMr. and Mrs. Andy Anderson\nand two daughters, Sandra and\nSigrid returned from two weeks\nholiday at the home of Mr. Anderson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Olaf\nJ, Anderson and two, brthers, Olaf\nK. and Roald Anderson in Fusilier,\nSask. and also visited his sister,\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Coulsey and\ntwo children of Erskine, Alberta,\nThey were accompanied back by\nhis brother, Olaf K. Anderson,\nwho will visit with relatives here\nand at Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. Ted G. Clever and\ndaughter Barbara, and Mrs. Cle-\nver's father, Mr. Shaw of Vancouver visited Mr. Clever's two brothers, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Clever\nand Mr;and Mrs. Hermann Clever\nand family, Gilbert and Diane.\nThomas P. McKinnon of provincial government office is relieving\nin the office at Kaslo for 10 days.\nMr. and Mrs. Raymond Hillstad\nof Wells have taken up residence\nin the C. W. Nelson cabins on\nEleventh Street. I\n(Dama. lAft Wiik\nTftaJiLatL Wlwdbi\nWatch for Our\nWeelcend Specials\nMEAT MARKET \u2014 Phone 832\nMARGARET MERCIER of\nMontreal will soon sail for England to Join the Sadler's Wells\nballet company, where she will\nbe the only Canadian in the\ntroupe. She will be with the\nfamous group on Its next North\nAmerican tour. \u2014 Central Press\nCanadian.\nOld-time* eatiri die ese\"!\nSEALED IN SPECIAL\nAIRTIGHT WRAP\n\u2014so you get that superb\nnatural flavor as fresh\nas if the cheese were cut\nbefore your eyes!\nMILD (as most folks like\nit). Look for the blue\nlabel.\nMEDIUM (with a touch of\nBharpness). Look for the\nsilver label.\nOLD (sharp and nippy).\nLook for the gold label.\nIn 8-oz. and 13-oz.\n9311     12-20130-42\n8NAP TO 8EWI\nSee this honey of a dress! Then\nstudy the diagram! Did you ever\nsee such an easy sew? Few pattern\nparts, minimum details. Get this\non your sewing machine right\nnow! Make it up in crisp cotton,\nprint silk, or shantung!\nPattern 9311: Misses' Sizes 12,\n14, 16, 18, 20; 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40.\n42. Size 16 dress requires 37\/8 yards\n35-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY - FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN, 60 Front St.. W.,\nToronto Ont.\nstart thinking about these vitamin\nand mineral supplements right\naway. Take it from me, you'll be\nglad you did.\nfood for Invalids? A plain egg-\nnog made of milk, egg and flavoring can be as cool, and satisfying as any other drink, or the\nflavor may be varied by substituting fruit Juice for all or part\nof the milk and by beating in\neither a whole egg or the beaten\nwhite. If the whole egg is being\nused, it Is best to mix the fruit\njuice with the beaten yolk and\nthen just before serving, fold in\nthe \"beaten white. Raspberry juice\nis particularly good used in this\nway and apricot nectar or grape\njuice will give an eggnog a party\nair<\nCool, appetizing and always a\nfavorite with adults is cafe au lait.\nThis is hot coffee mixed with plenty of hot milk, then chilled and\nserved icy cold. It ls a simple\ndrink, easy to make and just the\nthing to serve to summer guests.\nMILK  DRINKS\nWhen a scorching day is predicted, a quick drink that appeals\nmost to some Is plain ice-cold\nmilk. However, in summertime,\nplain milk does not always appeal\nto everyone. Often just a slight\nchange in the flavor ofithe milk\nwill remedy the problem. Just\nadd a little chocolate or fruit\nsyrup to the cold milk. As a matter of fact, It ls a good Idea to\nkeep plenty of these syrups In\nthe refrigerator ready for any occasion. Chocolate or fruit syrups\nare easy to make and to prepare\na flavored drink you need only\nadd a teaspoonful or two of syrup\nto each glass of milk.\nAnother simple, easy way to\nchange the flavor of milk is to\nadd crushed fresh fruit or even a\nlittle jam to the cold milk. Crush\ned peaches mixed with ice cold\nmilk and a spoonful of ice cream\nis a drink which the family will\nlove, right to the last drop. Many\nmilk drinks may be turned into\nmilk shakes by adding a little ice\ncream to the flavored drink, and\nshaking it well.\nGARNISH FOR\nCOOL DRINKS\nFruit garnishes really give a\ndrink a party air so use plenty of\nthem. Fruits such as cherries, melon wedges, raspberries, grapes,\nare ideal for the purpose. Mint\ngrows in abundance in many gardens but is often forgotten until\na roast of lamb appears on the\ntable. Pop a sprig in a glass of\ncold drink. It will give it that refreshing touch.\nOntario, B.C.\nInterest In\nNelson Riles\nMadeleine Marie LaPlante,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ovila\nLaPlante of Nelson, become the\nbride of Gerald Edwih Tilbury,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Tilbury\nof Fort William, Ontario, in a\nceremony at St. Paul's United\nChurch conducted by Rev. G. W.\nPayne.\nThe bride wore a white taffetta\nsemi-formal with net overlay,\nprincess headdreSs wifh pearl accessories. Miss Shirley Lewis of\nVancouver was maid of honor and\nMiss Annette LaPlante was\nbridesmaid. Bride's attendants\nwore identical pink semi-formals\nof taffetta with net overlays.\nJack Tilbury of Fort William,\nbrother of the groom, was best\nman and Brian O'Niel, formerly\nof Fort William was groomsman.\nUshers were Bud Beauchamp and\nJames Christie, Jr.\nThe bride's bouquet was coral\ngladiollas with white stephanotis.\nThe bride's attendants bouquets\nwere  of  blue  and  white mums,\nA reception was held at Arm-\nson's Dining Room at which several telegrams from Ontario and\nB.C. were read.\nThe bride's going away outfit\nwas a sand tweed box suit with\npink accessories. The newlyweds\nwill honeymoon in Fort William\nand the United States. Following\ntheir honeymoon they will live at\n418 Nelson Avenue. The groom is\nemployed with the CPR here and\nthe bride at the Bank of Montreal.\nBUY\nON OUR BUDGET PUN\n10% DOWN\nBalance 18 Monthi\nMany At Dance\nPROCTER \u2014 The second of a\nseries of successful summer dances\nstaged as tourist attractions in\nProcter was almost postponed by\nthe power stoppage during the\nelectrical storm Saturday night.\nHowever, the lights came back\non at the starting time of 10\no'clock and a record crowd attended and enthusiastically applauded\nthe announcement of another\ndance next month. The series began with the Dominion Day celebration and will end with the\nLabro Day dance.\nFree Day for\nMothers\nPopular Idea\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Eve Latham,\nprogram director of the Ottawa\nYWCA, has set up a \"day-off-for-\nmothers\" scheme.\nYoung mothers bring, their children to the Y, place them with\nnursery attendants, and enjoy a\nwhole day free, taking part in\nsports, painting classes, study\ngroups and listening to guest\nspeakers.\nAbout 19 women enrolled in her\n\"ladies day out\" classes when she\nbegan them this spring.\nProviding Interesting programs\nfor married women is one of her\npet projects because with today's\ntime-saving, housekeeping gadgets, young mothers want more activities outside the home, she said\nin an interview.\nMiss Latham, a native of Toronto, began working with the\nYWCA in Ottawa 13 years ago.\nLater she served as executive director of branches in Moose Jaw\nand Regina, Sask., finally returning to Ottawa.\nShe says she encountered one\nsurprise in her scheme:\n\"When I proposed to teach the\nwomen smocking and sewing, they\npreferred to have classes in civic\naffairs.\"\nDoes a Spot On\nYour Clothes Spoil        [J\n\u2022 Your Whole Appearance?'\nTOURIST SERVICE\n5 HOURS\nSee Our Windows for\nMid-Week Specials\nat the\nEMPIRE\nDry Cleanen\nButcherteria\n321 Baker St.\nPhone 288 .\nHIGHEST QUALITY\u2014\n\u201e LOWEST PRICES |\nSUMMER\nCLEARANCE\ny4 to y3 off\non Our Fine Stock of\nQuality Ladies' Apparel\nDresses ReT^\u00a3eSsdtr____ 5.00 to 25.00\nI Shortie Coats lr&%^lfaL 15.00 to 25.00\n\u2022     f                       nl                  Cottons, nylons, dacrons. ^ AA   \u25a0_.   C AA\nbummer Blouses r^ to $7.98. From    z.UU to o.UU\nSummer Sportswear\n\u2022 Summer Handbags\nBathing.suits, pedal pushers,\nshorts, T-shirts and 1 \/     \u25a0 _   1 \/    i^ff\ncotton skirts ....     74 10   73  Ott\n1\/4 to Vz Off\nSPECIAL\nSummer Hats\nVi Price\nTAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS SALE AND SAVE\nDOLLARS ON THESE WONDERFUL BUYS\nAll Sales Final \u2014 No Exchanges, No Refunds\n596 Baker St.\nPhone 942\n^W^\n m \u25a0\u25a0..  \u25a0 :rT,,i!\/;.\u25a0..\u25a0*\u25a0-.\u25a0\u25a0:\nW^ \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0{>\u25a0 <\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 <\u25a0?\u25a0-.    i   \u25a0        \u2014-\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u2014\u25a0-\"\n'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0      \u25a0 .\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0\n,,,w!.,, ,\u25a0 . \u25a0 '\n.    .'\u25a0.    V      '\niPv---     .,JJI.U^^^^\"^iiii\u00abiPW^i\u00ab^\n^     -   '    !  ' \u25a0: \u25a0\u2022\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JULY 27,195S\nBusiness Spotlight\nUnion Forces Ready fo Unite\nOn Coastal Shipping Fight\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Union\nforces are gathering their power\nfor a struggle against British and\nforeign shipping In Canada's coastal trade, it was reported here.\nHal C. Banks, president of the\n14,000-member Seafarers' International Union (AFL-TLC), said he\nwill raise the matter as a delegate\nat a special conference of the\nAmerican Federation of Labor, beginning in Chicago Aug. 11. Mr.\nBanks, recently returned from an\nInternational labor conference at\nHelsinki, said In an Interview the\nproblem already has been discussed among some Canadian unions.\nURGED RESTRICTION\nCanada's three labor congresses\nhave urged a royal commission on\ncoastal shipping to recommend\nthat the coastal trade\u2014including\nGreat Lakes business\u2014be restricted to Canadian vessels.\nThe Trades and Labor congress,\nln a brief submitted to the com-\nColonel Debags\nElderly Lawyer\nLEWES, England (Reuters) \u2014A\nbemedalled colonel and former\nlecret agent was sentenced Tuesday to six months ln prison for\nforcing an elderly lawyer to walk\nhome without his pants in a dispute over a will.\nRetired, monocoled Lt.-Col. Alfred Daniel Wlntle. 57, pleaded\nguilty to a charge of assault after\nadmitting he had lured 71-year-\nold Frederick Nye to his apartment last April and forcibly removed his pantg \u2014 or \"debagged\"\nhim ln the local terminology. But\nthe colonel went down with guns\nblazing.\n\"I was going to fly his trousers\nin triumph from my flagpole at\nhome,\" said he in his confession\nwith s fierce flash of his monocle.\n\"But unfortunately J was arrested\nbefore dawn.\"\nHe added that he planned the\nescapade in order to get himself\narrested and \"ventilate\" what he\nthoght was unfair treatment of\nhis sister in a will drawn up by\nNye,\n\"No trouble with\nIRREGULARITY\"\nWrites tyr. J. C Hfflis, of Halifax,\nN.S.: \"It'E a pleasure to be rid of harsh\nlaxatives. I've had\nno trouble with\nirregularity for 18\nmonths, since taking your gentle,\neffective laxation\ncereal\u2014Kellogg'a\nAll-Bran.\" This\ntestimonial is typical of thousands\nreceived each year for All-Bran tha\noriginal, natural laxative cereal. The\ngreat advantage of All-Bran is it corrects the cause of irregularity due to\ninsufficient bulk. All-Bran, made from\nthe whole wheat kernel, supplies\nnatural food bulk. It is a good-tasting\ncereal tha^ has helped milliona. All-\nBran will give gentle, effective relief\nfrom constipation within 10 days or\ndoablt your money back. Get\nKellogg's, the one and only All-Bran.\nKellogg's, London, Ont.\nBest liked\nby\nmillions\nmission July 12, went so far as to\nrecommend that all vessels except\nCanadian and American should be\nbarred from inland waters, even\ninternational traffic. Crux of the\nissue now is the building of the\nSt. Lawrence seaway, with its opportunities for foreign shipping\noperating with wages and other\ncosts below those of Canadian\nships.\nMr. Banks, who represented Canadian and American seamen at\nthe Helsinki conference of the\nInternational Transport' Workers\nFederation, said his plea was generally well received.\nBRITAIN'ONLY\nEXCEPTION\nBritain was the sole exception\u2014\n\"unfortunately the top British\nleaders were not at the conference,\" said Mr. Banks. They were\nunable to attend because of a dock\nstrike in progress at the time.\nMr. Banks said Britain currently has some 30 vessels plying in\nthe Canadian inland trade\u2014far\nmore than any other country.\n\"The Scandinavian delegates\npromised 100 per cent support at j\nHelsinki,\" he added. \"The Swedes\nsaid that If they heard of any of\ntheir ships causing trouble they\nwould pull them out immediately.\nNorway said it has no intention of\ngetting into such trade.\n\"Germany Is not a great factor\nas yet, but some keels have been\nlaid. The Austrians are also preparing.\"\nHAS \"HOPE  OF RELIEF\"\nMr. Banks said he has \"great\nhopes of relief\" from the royal\ncommission which has not yet\nfinished its work.\n\"As for the unions, the CIO,\nAFL, CCL and TLC are air very\ndefinite in their feelings on this,\"\nhe added. There had been \"formal\"\nmeetings among \"teamsters, railroad brotherhoods and longshoremen.\"\nAmerican and Canadian unions\nwere in agreement on the matter,\nfeeling that the \"lakes are traditionally American and Canadian.\"\nThe U. S. already had a law stating that ships in coastal service\nmust be U. S.-built and U. S.-\nmanned. This regulation was relaxed in the case of Canadian\nships to \"mutual advantage.\"\nMr. Banks said any action the\nunions might take to back up\ntheir views would be decided at\nconferences later.\nDISPENSING   WITn   THE   HORSE \u2014 The Germans have come up with a new twist to harness racing competition\nfor at a Berlin sports show the sulkies are towed by drivers on scooters powered by five horsepower engines.\nNot To Replace Broken\nSpan at Mission City\nMISSION CITY, B. C. (CP) \u2014 shores of the Fraser. And he said\nHighways Minister Gaglardi told\nan emergency meeting here the\ngovernment will not build a\nbridge across the Fraser river to\nreplace the CPR span which collapsed Sunday.\nThe decision curbed hopes in\nMission City and Matsqui that the\ncollapse of a pier and span of the\n50-year-old bridge linking the two\nvillages would prompt the government to consider erecting a\nnew structure.\nMr. Gaglardi, .here to inspect the\ndamaged rail and motor bridge,\ntold councillors, village commissioners and board of trade members from Mission City, Matsqui\nAbbotsford and Sumas. Wash., the\npresent flow of traffic in the area\ndoes not warrant a new span.\nONLY WHERE\nNECESSARY\nHe acTded that the record of his\ngovernment \"proves it \"builds the\nbridges where necessary.\"\nThe minister said no effort will\nbe spared to provide transportation between the north and south\nhe was now trying to obtain land-\nI ing barges to ferry trucks carry-\nj ing produce across the river to the\ncanneries irr Mission City.\n\"I assure you,\" he told the meet-\n| ing, \"the farmer will suffer no\ni loss as far as perishable foods are\nconcerned. They are of prime consideration.\" ,\nMr. Gaglardi also said he had\nbeen assured the CPR would re-\n, store service over the old bridge\n: \"in a couple of months.\"\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Prest\nLONDON \u2014 Admiral Sir Percy\nNoble, 75, Britain's leader in the\nBattle of the Atlantic against Hitler's submarine fleet in the critical\ndays of the last war.\nSHELBURNE, N.S. \u2014 Mrs. Ann\nWilson, 104, believed to be Nova\nScotia's oldest resident.\nDALLAS, Tex. \u2014 Jim Crocker,\n54-year-old radio veteran who was\nI the first \"Dr. I. Q.\". Crocker joined\nstation KRLD in Dallas as chief\n..announcer in 1938 and gained recognition as the first \"Dr. I.Q.\" of\nthe question and answer show.\nACINC   GRACEFUL!. Y \u2014Former silent screen stars\n* Ben Lyon and Bebe Daniels are happy as they celebrate 25th\nwedding anniversary in their London, England, home.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nFormer Slave Dies\nRALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Death\nhas come to Rufus Holloway, a\nformer slave who placed his age\nat 117 years. Holloway was born\nNew Year's day, 1839, In a slave\ncabin on a plantation. Until he\ndied Sunday, he was spry and active, and walked two miles to\nchurch  regularly,\nS500 Canadian Air Cadets Mix\nPlay and Work af RCAF Camps\nMoby Dick May Have Made Gregory\nPeck Less Eager For Tame Whale\nBy  BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) \u2014 Movie\nproducers will be happy to hear\nthat Gregory Peck is over his\nwanderlust.\nThe last time we checked up on\nhim he was home from two years\nof film-making abroad, but he was\nnot ready to stay put. He was\nbearded and ready to shove off for\nEurope again to play Captain\nAhab in \"Moby Dick.\" That was\na year ago.\nToday he's clean-shaven and\ncontent to remain in his California\nhomeland. And if any picture\ncould cause an actor to lose his\nlove for travel, \"Moby Dick\" was\nit.\nIt's possible that his local outlook is also improved by the fact\nthat Veronique Passani, the 22-\nyear-old French writer, is here\nnow. But that's a matter he won't\ndiscuss, so we'll return to \"Moby\nDick.\"\nThe picture started filming off\nthe Irish coast. Just about everything went wrong, including the\nweather. Then the huge, man-\nmade whale got lost in heavy seas,\n\"The line broke and it vanished\nin the storm,\" Peck recalled. \"The\nnext day they searched all over\nfor it, but not a sign was found\nThere was one report that it was\nseen off Belgium some time later.\nMore ocean scenes were needed\nto depict the South Pacific. Since\nthe  angry North Atlantic  would\nnot suffice, the company had to\nplan another location jaunt to the\nCanary islands. This followed\nlong months of shooting in Wales\nand London.\nPeck admired the Canaries, but\nhe had a brush with disaster there.\nHe was aboard a new whale, along\nwith director John Huston and a\ndozen others. A tow rope again\nsnapped, casting the crew adrift\nin a squall. Hours later they\nreached safety.\nHuston, a tireless practical\njoker, provided another scare for\nPeck. For the last scene of the\npicture he planned to show a section of the whale rising out of\nthe water with the dead Ahab in\ntangled  ropes. ,\n\"I noticed they were building a\nsection of the whale,\" Peck said,\n\"but Huston wouldn't tell me what\nit was for.'In a voice pitched so I\nwas sure to hear, he told the art\ndirector that he was saving the\nscene for the last.\"\nOn the final day, the actor found\nwhat was expe'cted pf him \u2014 he\nwas to be strapped on the whale's\nside, lowered into the water and\nthen surfaced. A \"frogman\" was\nnearby in case there was trouble.\n\"It was a terrible experience,\nbeing helpless under the water,\"\nPeck said. \"It was probably only\n15 seconds, but it seemed like\nI eight minutes. Huston, who was\nenjoying himself immensely, took\nthe shot four times.\"\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 More than\n5500 Canadian boys will spend at\nleast part of their summer holidays in close-up study of what\nmakes airplanes fly.\nThey are 14- to 18-year-old\nmembers of Canada's Air Cadet\nLeague. Most will attend two-\nweek courses at special camps at1\nAir Force training centres. Some!\nwill learn to fly at four-week I\nsessions at civilian flying clubs. Ai\nfew will visit other countries as!\nexchange cadets. I\nFormed in 1941 as a pool for\npre-trained RCAF recruits, the'\nleague now graduates about 5000'\nboys a year. Officials estimate that!\n1000 of them \u2014 one in five \u2014 join \\\nthe RCAF.\n275   SQUADRONS\nThere now are ,273 air cadet\nsquadrons in Canada's 10 provinces and membership totals more\nthan 19,000.\nThe Air Force foots the bill for\ntheir training, equipment and\nuniforms, while the League, a\nvoluntary organization, promotes\ncommunity interest and raises\nfunds to support existing squadrons and help form new ones.\nSUMMER   CAMP\nEvery summer some 5000 cadets\nspend two weeks' in camps at\nRCAF stations at Greenwood, N.S.,\nClinton, Ont., and Abbotsford, B.C.\nThere they continue their studies,\nparticipate in sports and fly as\npassengers in service aircraft.\nA senior group of 17- and 18-\nyear-olds \u2014 usually one from each\nsquadron \u2014 learns to fly each\nsummer through a scholarship\nplan   started  in   1948.  Four-week\ntraining sessions are held at 33\nflying clubs across the country\nand at the end successful cadets\nqualify for private pilots' certificates.\nTuition for 250 of these older\ncadets is paid by the Air Force.\nThe League pays their travelling\nexpenses and board, and this year\nraised tuition fees for an additional 50 students. The 1955 courses\nare expected to bring to 2800 the\ntotal who have learned to fly\nunder the plan, many of whom\nnow are RCAF or commercial aircrew.\nNEW COURSE\nThis summer a new drill Instructor's course will be held at\nAbbotsford, B.C. It will train 100\ncadets including those selected for\na drill competition with United\nStates air cadets Aug. 27 at the\nCanadian National Exhibition at\nToronto.\nExchange visits with cadets\nfrom other countries are the United Kingdom, the United States,\nNorway, Holland. Sweden and\nDenmark. In previous years, 421\nCanadian boys made such visits.\nAir force authorities say they\nare pleased with the league's effectiveness  as a  recruiting pool.\n\"The Air Cadet movement is\nlooked to by the RCAF for a well-\nmotivated, partially-trained and\nvoluntary flow of recruits,\" Air\nMarshal C. R. Slemon, air chief\nof staff, said. \"The League's\nachievements in this direction\nhave been extremely heartening.\"\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nPalrtianki-Mono\nShallow Well Water\nSy*tem. Capacity 400\n' gallon, per hour. Salf-\notllnfl, Doublo-acting,\nSotf-priming.\nF-M Syitemt are baclted ^.\nby a company with over\n120 year* of experience\nIn   the  bonding of    , ,-\nmechanical   equipment,     y\n^\u2022\u2014 \u00bb every f-M pump\n*\u00a3s%\\ carrle\u00bb a lo g \u00bbhow-\n-'*\u2014-'- |ng actyal \\feflvery\nof water to the\n.-,,\u00bb lank, certified by\nr**Z-*'& an '\"dependent\nzS&'^ta laboratory.\nWhether you need a system to\nsupply the needs of a largo\nfarm, or to provide enough for\nhousehold use in a small\ncottage, there's a Fairbanks*\nMorse Water System for tho I\npurpose. Every unit, whether\ntor deep well or shallow well\nose\u00bb is bivlt to give a lifetime of\neconomical, trouble-free sew'\nvice. Most systems come fully\nassembled for easy, low-cost\ninstallation. Let us give you\nfull details;\nJ. P. KIERAN\nR.R. NO. 1, NELSON '\nadventure\nfor young men\n!\u25a0 v=\nThe Canadian Army offers adventure to\nyoung men with an appetite for excitement, outdoor living and travel. Must be\nprepared to face danger. Apply only if\nbetween 17 and,40, physically fit and\nready to travel at short notice.\nTraining is complete and thorough-\nsecond to none in the world. Food and\nsuitable clothing provided. All duty travel\nexpenses paid. Good starting pay with\nreal opportunity for further training,\nadvancement and rewarding career.\nQualify and you start right away.\nService is with men from every part of\nFor full information,write, phone or visit\nCanada. Training Incjudes fleldcraft,\ntactics, physical fitness, use of the wid\u00ab\nrange of modern infantry weapon*. This\norganization is one of the finest of its\nkind in the world.\nTe bo ollgiblo you must be 17 to 40\nyears of age, skilled tradesmen to 45.\nWhen appjylng bring birth certificate or\nother proof ef age.\nJoin and you share In the pride and\nadventure of guarding Canada's freedom. Join and you share in the honour\nof serving in a famous Regular Infantry\nRegiment-\nPrincoit Patricia'. Canadian light Infantry\nTh* Quoon'o Own Mfloj of Canada\nNo. 11 Porconnel Depot,\n4201 West 3rd Avenue,\nVancouver, B.C. \u2022 Telephone CHerry 2111\nfir\nCanadian Army Information Centre,\n547 8eymour Street,\nVancouver, B.C. \u2022 Telephone PAclflc 6046\nor-\nThe Army Recruiting Station or\nMllltla Armoury nearest your home,\n \u25a0fm*~mmmm*w$mmm.\n'' V95I    I\nSPORTS\n(hojuut Bul\nin\nSpoil\nE>uck hunters in British Columbia except in the most\nnortherly district will be allowed a slightly lengthened\nseason and a possession limit of four days' bag during the\n1955 season, according to an announcement made today by\nthe Canadian Wildlife Service of the Department of Northern Affairs and National Resources. .     ;\nThe daily bag limit is 10 ducks, provided that at least\ntwo of these are pintail or baldpate. Twenty-five coots and\neight Wilson's snipe may also be taken daily. In the Provincial Electoral District of Nelson-Creston three geese may\nbe taken in one day, and elsewhere in the Province five\ngeese is ]he daily limit.\nThe Province Is again divided\ninto three districts for waterfowl\nhunting. Open season for ducks\nand^geese begin on dates varying\nfrom September 1 north of the\n57th parallel to October 15 in District No. 1 which includes the\nsouthwestern part of the Province and the North and South\nOkanagan Electoral Districts. The\nWilson's snipe season begins in\nall districts on the same day as\nthe waterfowl season.\nOpen season on band - tailed\npigeons in the area west of the\nsummit of the Cascade mountains\nand south of the Electoral District\nof Atlin will be from September\n3 to October 2.\nUntil this year, it was nearly\nimpossible to cast a fly on a spinning outfit with any degree of\nsuccess.\nThis is because plastic bubbles\nand similar floating weights\nwhich were attached to spinning\nlines to make the cast also serve\nto scare the fish with their characteristic splash.\nIn spinning one is casting'the\nlure which contains its own\nweight. In fly casting, one casts\nthe line and tha fly goes along\nfor the ride.\nFishermen are now using a\nshort, heavy tapered sections of\nlines called \"wet heads.\" Just tie\nthese 34-inch long sections of line,\nwhich weigh a quarter of an\nounce, on the end of your spinning\nline, attach a leader and fly to the\n\"wet head\" and youg are in business.\nThe surprising thing about\nthese \"wet heads,'1 or \"spin heads\"\nas they are variously called, is\ntheir low cost.\nThey really are nothing but a\nheavy torpedo section of silk or\nnylon fly line. y\nCurrent prices of spinning reels,\nor at least the kind that are being\nused most in the Kootenay, range\nfrom $20 to $30. Thus it is not ex\npected that the modest $1 for a\n\"wet head,\" will hold back its\nuse.\nIn*fact you can even make your\nown \"wet head\" by taking a piece\nof level A or AA fly line, splicing\nloops on each end, and using this\nto cast. This, in fact, is how the\nidea got started with steelhead\nfishermeQ on the Coast a few seasons back.\nThe \"wet head\" sinks immediately. It hits the water like a\nloose piece of spaghetti and.goes\nstraight to the bottom.\n\"Wet heads\" are not the complete answer for making fly fishing an easily learned sport since\nthey cover only half the field-\nleaving the dry end still exclusively to fly rod operators.\nRedmen Drub Kokanees\n22-5 to Retake Lead\nNO, IT'S NOT A PLEET of miniature motor\nboats, It's Just the fceglnner'o class taking swim*\nmlng Instruction fromxrecreatlonal director Ed.\nKelter at Lakeside Park. A good kicking action\nIs the aim In this phase of the lesson. Classes thli\nyear are the largest In history.\nDally News Photo.\nFord Beats Middlecoff\nTo Capture PQA Crown\nCricketers lo\nMeet Okanagan\nCricketers in the Kootenays and\nthe Okanagan will appear on\ntelevision at the coast if proposed\nmatch between the teams can be\narranged.\nCharlie Rushby of the Nelson\nCricket Club said Tuesday plans\nare under way to have an all-star\nteam from Nelson and Trail meet\na like team from Vernon* Kelowna\nand Naramata on September 4 in\nTrail.\nWord has been received from\nGeorge Leng of Vernon that they\nare interested in the proposed\nmatch but a final decision can't\nbe giyen until a few small details\nare cleared up.\nNelson's next home game will\nbe against Trail on August 6 at\nthe Recreation Grounds. The last\ntime these two teams met, last\nSunday tye game was called off\ndue to the death of Eric Bouchier,\none of the Trail players who\ncollapsed early in the match.\nSecretary Charlie Rushby stated\nTuesday a letter of deepest sympathy had been sent to the Trail\nclub from Nelson on their loss of\na fine sportsman.\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 Doug Ford,\nan expert shotmaker who needed\nonly a title to stamp him as a great\ngolfer, won the United States Professional    Golfers    Association\nBASEBALL SCORES\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nFirst:\nKansas City   000 003 000\u20143   9   0\nWashington    002 240 lOx\u20149 17   2\nBoyer,   Ceccarelli (4)    Fricano\n(5) Harrington (7) and W. Shantz;\nPorterfield, Ramos (6) and Courtney. W\u2014 Portefield; L\u2014 Boyer.\nHR: Was\u2014Sievers.\nSecond:\nKansas   City   002 100 000\u20143   8   0\nWashington    000 100 000\u20141   7   1\nKellner, Gorman (7) and Astroth; Shea, ^Pascual (6) Abernathy (9) and Edwards, Courtney.\n(9). W\u2014Kellner, L\u2014Shea.\nCleveland .. 000 100 000\u20141 5 0\nBoston   ..        000 210 02x\u20145 11   0\nScore, Santiago (5) Mossi (7)\nand Foiles, Naragon (7); Sullivan\nand White. L\u2014Score. HRs: Cle \u2014\nDoby; Bos\u2014Williams, White.\nChicago       000 000 000\u20140   4   0\nNew York ..   000 001 OOx\u20141   7   2\nDonovan and Lollar; Byrne and\nBerra. HR\u2014NY\u2014Berra.\nDetroit      103 010 10Q 002\u20148 12   0\nBaltim.     002 020 002 000\u20146 13 , 0\nHoeft, Birrer (6) and House,\nWilson (12);'Moore, Dorish (4)\nZuverink (9) Wight (10) and\nSmith. W\u2014Birrer; L\u2014Wight. Hrs:\nDet\u2014Tuttle, Kaline. ,\nDetroit      100 204 000\u20147 11   1\nBaltimore   ..   100 000 010\u20142   9   3\nGarver and R. Wilson; J. Wil-\n\u25a0 son. Zuverink (6) and Smith, Gas-\ntall (7). L\u2014J. Wilson.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE A\nPhiladelphia 102 000 000\u20143 9 0\nMilwaukee     001 050 OOx\u20146   8   1\nWehmeier, Negray (5) Miller (7)\nand Seminick; Spahn and Crandall. L\u2014Wehmeier.\nN.   York   500 000 000 001\u20146 11   0\nChicago    012 000 020 000\u20145 13   2\nMaglie, Giel (3) Wilhelm (7)\nGrissom (8) Liddle (1) and Katt,\nHofman (12); Davis Jeffcoat (9)\nPerkowski (12) and Chiti, Cooper\n(9). W~Liddle; L\u2014Jeffcoat. Hrs\u2014\nChi\u2014Sauer, Banks.\nBrooklyn ... 112 000 000\u20144 8 1\nCincinnati       000 110 000\u20142   7   1\nNewcombe and Campanella;\nMinarcin, Klippstein '3) Freeman\n(6) Nuxhall (9) and Burgess. L\u2014\nMinarcin.\nPittsburgh 010 000 020\u20143 7 2\nSt. Louis 001 000 000\u20141 6 0\nLittlefield and Shepard; Arroyo\nand Sarni. HR: Pgh\u2014J. O'Brien,\nFreese.\nThis advertisement is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nROSSLAND \u2014 Rossland Red-\nmea regained sole possession of\nfirst place in the Western International Lacrosse League Tuesday\nwith a 22-5 victory over the Nelson Kokanees in Rossland.\nAfter  the  opening   period   It\nwas no- contest as the Redmen\ncompletely dominated the play.\nJack Laface Was the main reason\nfor victory at he sharpened hii\nshooting eye and  notched nine\ngoal*. Harold Mayo wai tops for\nthe Kokanees with two markers.\nKokanees started fast and for a\ntime lopked as though they would\ncapture  their  first  game   on   the\nRossland floor. With the Redmen\nsporting a two-goal lead the Kokanees came up with four straight\ngoals to take the lead for the one\nand only time in the game.\nFOUR WITHOUT REPLY\nFour unanswered goals in the\nsecond quarter gave the Redmen\nthe. lead again and they never\nrelinquished it. Jack Laface and\nBert Bertoia each notched a pair.\nMayo cut the Redmen's lead to\ntwo goals shortly after the second\nhalf got under way but that was\nthe end of the scoring for the\nKokanees. The Redmen took over\nand almost scored at will.\nSeven goals turned a close contest into a route. By the close of\nthe third frame the Redmen held\na 14-5 edge.\nThe last frame saw the Kokanees completely crumble under\nthe continuous pressure of the\nRedmen. They scored goals in\nbunches never letting up, and at\ntimes their passing and shots had\ntho Kokanees baffled.\nThe game was a clean affair\nwith six penalties being handed\nout, all to the Redmen.\nQueen's Horses\nIn the Red\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Queen Elizabeth, with 22 thoroughbreds in\ntraining is In the red on this season's racing.\nSo far she has had only four\nwinners on the flat since the season opened in March and they\nhaven't brought in enough to cover bare expenses.\nThe Queen can bank on a few\nmore winners but hopes of any\nbig prizes are slim. The most valuable race left is the Doncaster St.\nLegqr in September and she has\nno strong challenger for that\nevent.\nExperts estimate it edsts \u00a3750\na season to keep a horse in training In Britain. That means the\nQueen's race bill this year will be\n\u00a316,500.\nBritish race writers estimate\nthat by the end of the season the\nQueen will be \u00a310,000 on the\nwrong side of the ledger.\nBedard Toe Has\nThem Worried\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Bob Bedard had a bit of minor surgery\nperformed on an infected big toe\nTuesday and there was some hope\nthe husky Sherbrooke boy can test\nit tentatively  at  tennis  today.\nA physician opened the toe to\ndrain the pus. Bob was told there\nis a chance he can work out briefly today or by Thursday at least.\nThere was some worry earlier\nthat the painful infectipn would\nprevent the Sherbrooke, Que.,\nplayer from starting for Canada\nagainst Australia Friday in the\nDevis Cup North American xone\nfinal.\nBedard, nationally ranked No. 2,\nwatched his teammates at practice Tuesday. He worked out\nMonday although a blister on the\ntoe bothered him. Lateri nfection\nset in.\nAlthough Canada Is very much\nthe under dog in the coming meeting with Australia, there has been\na feeling that one or two upsets\nmay crop up during the matches,\nand Bedard's . loss or physical\nhandicap would put a severe\ncrimp in these hopes.\nCoast Rowing Crew\nTrained On Skis\nPORT DALHOUSIE (CP)\nVancouver's navy crew risked\nbroken bones and spills last winter to train for this week's 73rd\nannual Royal Canadian Henley regatta. They took to the hills on\nskis.\nThis is unique in the rowing\nworld but Lt.-Cmdr. Tony Penley,\ncoach of Henley's Cinderella kids,\n(doesn't think  it extraordinary.\nchampionship on his first try by\ndefeating Cary Middlecoff 4 and 3\nTuesday In a thrill-packed ifcatch\nthat ended on the 33rd hole.\nFord, 32, has been a pro less\nthan six years and only became\neligible for the PGA tournament\nthis year. Playing almost perfect\ngolf for an entire week and refusing to bend under pressure, he\nswept through six strong opponents in a succession of sub-par\nrounds to' take, the title.\nHe is only the second player in\nthe 37-year-history of the PGA\ntournament to win the title on his\nfirst attempt arid the fourth qualifying medallist to go clear\nthrough.\nThe stocky son of a veter&n\nYonkers, N.Y., pro won the medal\nwith a sub-par 36-hole score of\n135 and thus joined Walter Hagen,\nOlin Dutra and Byron Nelson on\nthe short list of tournament-winning medallists. The only player\nbefore him who had won this rugged match play test of skill and\nendurance the first time he tried\nit was Tom Creavy of Albany,\nN.Y., in  1931.\nTuesday  Ford dropped  behind\nearly in the morning round and\n. didn't  get  ahead  until  the  26th\nI hole.  Then  as  Middlecoff  wilted\nunder an intense sun and humidity\nDoug never let him get away.\nLeague-Leading\nRoyals Meet\nSalmo Tonight\nThe Nelson Royals, league leaders in the West Kootenay Ladies'\nFastball League,' will travel to\nSalmo tonight to take on' last\nplace Salmo.\nRoyals are having a successful\nseason, but are being hard pressed\nby Trail who hold down second\nplace. Rossland Royals are in\nthird spot of the four team loop.\nIt is anticipated Verda Pratt\nwill go to the mound for the\nRoyals against Salmo. Several\nnew players Gall Christoferson.\nMargaret Eye and Lorain Stall-\nwood will also be in the lineup for\nthe Royals.\n450 Signed Up\nFor Swim (lass\nSwimming classes at Lakeside\nPark this year are the largest ever\nheld according to Ed Kelter, recreational director.\nMr. Kelter reported Tuesday\nthat about 450 have signed up\nfor the classes and every day sees\nlarge numbers turn out. Temperature \"of the water is aBout 60 degrees.\nKIWANIS STILL\nHOLDS LITTLE\nLEAGUE LEAD\nW\nPet   GB\n.725\n.545 2\n.461 3\n.416 3^4\n,363 4\nKiwanis     8\nLions    6\nKinsmen     6\nRotary     5\nGyro-1    4\nIn the last week's play, Kinsmen won two of three games td\ncome from the cellar position to\nthird place in the Nelson Little\nLeague.\nKinsmen won over Gyro 15-14\nand then defeated Rotary 11-8,\nThird game was a battle-with the\nLions for second place with the\nLions winning 10-7.\nThe Kiwanis team continued to\nshow the way with a victory over\nthe last place Gyros 14-4.\nOutlaws Travel\nTo Metaline For\nGame Tonight\nThe' Nelson Outlaws with two\nwins in two starts agafnst the\nMetaline Falls club \u25a0 this season\nwill try to make it three in a row\ntonight when they travel to the\nAmerican centre for an exhibition\ngame.\nRon Nash of the Outlaws said\nnine players would travel, and as\nan added attraction all nine would\ntake a turn on the mound for the\nOutlaws.\nThe Outlaws have an abundance\nof checkers with Win Storgard,\nWendy Keller, Johnny\/Misuraca\nand Stan Grill ready for duty at\nj all times. Catcher Ron Nash at\nI times has taken to the mound and\nI has always proved tough as has\nI catcher Ed Isackson.\nBASEBALL'S HALL OF FAME at Coopers-\ntown, N.Y., opened Its doors to, six baseball\ngreats. From left: Joe DiMaggio, Gabby Hartnett,\nFrank (Home Run) Baker, Ted Lyons, Ray\nSchalk, and  Dazzy Vance, The f.pst four were\nelected last January by 10-year members of the\nBaseball Writers ABsn. The latter two were appointed by the Hall of Fame committee on veterans.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Cricket results Tuesday: *\nSouth Africa 171 and 500, England 191 and 256 fourth test. South\nAfrica won by 224 runs.\nMiddlesex 89 and 241, Hampshire 336. Hampshire won by an\ninnings and 6 runs.\nKent 214 and 201, Glamorgan\n187 and 165. Kent won by 63 runs.\nGloucestershire 2(& and 184 for\nB declared, Sussex 269 and 163.\nGloucestershire won  by 16 runs.\nYorkshire 354 for 3 declared and\n46 for 0, Warwickshire 98 and 298.\nYorkshire  won  by   10 wickets.\nSurrey 394 for 8 declared and\n35 for 2, Worcestershire 158 and\n270. Surrey won by 8 wickets.\nLancashire 372 for 9 declared\nand 25 for 1, Northamptonshire\n517 for 9 decjared. Match drawn.\nDerbyshire 287 and 225 for 9 declared, Nottinghamshire 252 and\nfor 5. Match drawn.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JULY 27,1953 \u2014 7\nBabe Ruth All-Stars\nLeave for Vantouver\nNelson's all-star team selected\nfrom the Babe Ruth League under\nmanager Al Anderson left Nelson\nthis morning for Vancouver where\nthey will participate in the provincial baseball playoffs for the\nright to advance to the world\nseries.\nThe team selected by the mana-j\nger and coaches Ernie Gare and\nJack  McMillan  are  makinjj  the\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0ir ii \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0in 11111 ii in ji 1111 nil i\nAttention All\nMuskrat Hunters!\nTORONTO (CP)_A call like\na \"broken-up Hollywood kiss\"\nlures muskrati like anything,\n\u25a0ays F. L. Hall, government\nforester In Ontario's Cochrane\ndistrict.\nHe gave a demonstration that\nsurprised   veteran   conservation\nofficers who had heard of calls\nfor    moooe,    wild    geese    and\n- crows \u2014 but not for muskrats.\nHe explained his techniques:\n\"The muskrat call Is made by\npressing the lips lightly on the\nback of the hand and drawing\nthe breath like a broken-up\nHollywood kiss. It Is most ef.\nfectlve.\"\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLeafs Play Host\nTo Fruitvale\nThe Nelson Maple Leafs after\ntwo straight losses to the itrult-\nvale All-Stars will attempt to get\nback in the win column tonight\nwhen they play host on the diamond here. *\nAll-Stars captured a win Sunday at home against the Leafs by\na 5-3 score. Previously they had\ndefeated the Leafs 2-1 In Nelson.\nManager Frank , Hufty said\nMarsh Severyn would likely be\nchosen for the mound duties with\nLes Hufty and Jimmy Todd ready\nfor relief work. It is expected\nTony DeRosa would work for the\nAll-Stars,\ntrip by car and will play against\neight other teams on July 29 and\n30. Should they win this series\nthey will advance to the regional\nplayoffs in Capilano Stadium\nAugust 8 and 6 against American\nteams.\nThe winner of the regional playoffs will make the trip to Austin,\nTexas, for the world series late\nin August.\nThose making the trjlp ara Ken\nBlakeman, Blair Olson, Mike\nBorch, Bernie Monteleone, Don\nHolmes, Ken Moffat, Earle Farenholtz, Calvin Fredrickson, Gordon\nWood, Gordon Jeffs, Don Stevenson, Dennis Bond, Berry Waters,\nDave Grundy and Joe Portelance.\nEast Kootenay\nYouths lo Have\nGolf Tournament\nSchool age youngsters in Cranbrook and district will have their\nchance at a golf tournament all\ntheir own the first week in September when under the directorship of pro Frank Tesluck of\nCranbrook an event will be run.\nBoys and girls will come from\nKimberley, Fernie* and Wardner\nto vie for the MacKinnon trophy\nwhich in other years has been\nposted for Cranbrook youths only.\nIt was suggested this year by\nC. E. MacKinnon, son of the trophy donor, that the tournament\ninclude district youths.\nF\nRIENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\nPersonal Loans\nFor Bills, Fuel. Repairs, Cars,\nor any good reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. Ltd.\nSuite 212, Medical Arts Bldg.\nPHONE 1786\nAGAIN INJUNE...\nAnother All-Time\nSales Record!\nIllustrated: Lruirentian Sport Coupe\nA smashing increase of\nstill further proof of Pontiac's overwhelming popularity!\nThe facts speak for themselves. In the\nface of a buyers' market, Canadians from\ncoast-to-coast are picking Pontiac at the\nfastest rate in history ... a sensational\n64 % boost in sales over the same period\nlast year!\nThese thousands of delighted drivers\nhave found every claim made abo'ut\nPontiac is genuine and true!\nStarting with styling, they've found that\nPontiac's sleek, gleaming beauty is literally breathtaking. Inside and out, there's\na wealth of luxurious details, all designed\nwith the driver's comfort in mind.\nPontiac offers more models and series\nthan any other car\u2014twenty-three magnif-\nicent'models in six stunning series!\nPontiac is the only car giving you a\nchoice of three engines\u2014the economy\nand power of the 145 hp Big \"6\"; the\nmighty 162 hp \"Strato-Flash\" V8; or the\ntremendous surge and go of the 180 hp\n\"Strato-Streak\" V8. And teamed with\nthis vast power range tie Jour transmissions, giving yon every possible driving\nease, from Synchro-Mesh to fully\nAutomatic\nIt all adds up to this . . . yoa can be\nabsolutely sure of finding a Pontiac with\nthe exact combination of Beauty, Luxury,\nPower, Performance and Price that you\nwant\u2014a combination that is unbeatable\nin value received for every dollar spent.\nRecord-breakingthousands of Canadians\nhave already found that Pontiac U THE\ncar for 1955. Visit your dealer and\nprove to yourself-rOU CAN'T MAKE\nA BETTER BUY THAN THE 'J J\nPONTIACI\nA GENERAL MOTORS VALUE\n-\u00aeI\nPontiac\nWIGINTON   MOTORS LTD.\n281 Baker St.\nPhone 121\n rv* r. ! .11 ., .  ,   ,--.. ;.\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JULY 27, 1955\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nTh* Dally Newt does,not hold Itiolt responsible In tha event\nsi an error In,the following litis. -  \u25a0 ...\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nj y y w\n' yyv\nyvw\\\n''y\/\\'\\\n>^><\\''\nAN     Vs.\n\"    f r \\            - f  , V\n\/W\/S HAS HAD A IOT OF\nMysrep\/ous th\/mss happen\nATH\/SJMNCH POISONED\nWATEP HOLES, CUT FENCES,\nSTOLEN CATTLE-\nAND NOW SOMEONE HAS MET \u25a0\n7W EASTERNER WHO PLANNED\nTO BUY 7H\u00a3-\/&GetS RANCH\/\nSi\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES   (*\u00b0,ln\"  Pr'M,) y\nAcadia Uranium 1214\nAlgom Uranium     22.00\nAmal Larder \u2022  \u201e 17\nAnacon Lead      3.35\nAnglo Rouen       1.70\nAtlin RuH 27\nAubelle 10\nAunor      2.16\nBarnat    1.09\nBaska Uranium 48   ,\nBase Metals  82\nBlbis Yukon  12%\nBobio    \u201e 66\nBrilund      1.83\nBroulan       1.37\nBuffalo Ank  74\nBuff Can         18\n\u25a0Buff Red Lake       .12\nCampbell C,       13.35\nCampbell R L  '7.25\nCan Met       1.95\nCentral Patricia  :      1.05\nChimo 1-75\nCoin Lake       .13\nConiaururn  56\nCons Denison .'....   11.50\nCons M & S       38.00\nCons Orlac  :....      J3\nConwest     6.50\nCon Sub      4.50\nCons Discovery     4.20\nCons Howe     4.80\nDelta M  32\nDonalda 43-\nDyno            1.33\nEast Malartic      5.25\nEast Sullivan      6.40\nElder Gold    51\nFalconbridge     28.75\nFaraday       2.58\nFrobisher         4.80\nGeco            17.00\nGiant Yel        6.55\nGod's Lake  80\nGoldale   43\nGoldcrest 27\nGolden Manitou       2.90\nGold Hawk  32\nHeadway         1.34\nHollinser         22.50\nHomer Y K        .'-0\nHudson Bay     62.50\nInspiration       1.61\nInt Nickel     76.50\nJaculet            -36\nJoliet Que 43\nJonsmith  61\nKenville              -13\nKerr Addison     16.55\nKeyboycon  13\nKristina  21\nLabrador     17.\"J\nLake Lingman         -17\nLakeshore       5.40\nLeitch  64\nLexindtn         45\nLittle Long Lac      i-J5\nLorado       2.76\nMacassa              J-65\nMacDonald       l0\"\nMacfie Ex         .20\nMackeno       .'. 65\nMadsen R L         215\nMalartic G F       185\nManeast  \"..       .58\nMart McNeely 10\nMcKenzie R L        -37\nMcMarmac       28\nMining Corp     24.10\nNew Alger  40\nNew  Bidlamaoue  z\u00bb\"\u00ab\nNew Harricana  32    1\nNew Jason         12\nNew Thurbois  40\nNoranda     57.50\nNorgold        -50\nNormetals       5.85\nOsisko           -50\nPardee         l.\u00bb5\nPickle Crow           UJ\nPlacer Develop     33.75\nPurdy M         42\nPreston E D      8.35\nQuebec Lab -10\nQuebec Nickel      2.46\nQuemont v    26.25\nRadiore       2.65\nRayrock       2.70\nSan Antonio            1-65\nSherritt Gordon      9.75\nSteep Rock     13.85\n'Stadacona            .28\nSilver Miller         .95\nSullivan Con       6.65\nSylvanite             1.36\nTeck Hughes  ,     3.10\nTomblll         .31\nTorbrit '   120\nThomp-Lund      ...'.      1.56\nTrans Cont Res 40%\nUnited Keno       7.75\nUpper Can       1.01\nValor   . 78\nVentures    38.15\nVicour       48\nViolamac    '..'    3.20\nWright  Hargreaves  !..     2.00\nYankee Canuck 24\nYakeno  13\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINE8\nBeaver Lodge        .75\nBeta Gamma 21\nBralorne              2.70\nCariboo Gold       .66\nGiant Mascot 75\nGranduc i      .,    5.30\nGrandvlew       .26\nHighland Bell  57\nJackson Basin 40\nNat Ex . .       1.37\nPac Eastern Gold 13\nPioneer Gold       1.50\nQuatsino    ,      - .24\nReeves MacD       1.75\nRexspar  65\nRix-Athabaska Uran       1.45\nSheep Creek              1.30\nSherritt Gordon       9.65\nSilback Prem       16\nSilver Ridge            28\nSilver Standard         40\nSunshine Lardeau        35\nSurf Inlet         9\nTaylor       29\nVan Roi         VA\nWestern Exp  _      \u00ab\nYale   48\nOILS\nAltex        25\nAnglo Cdn         590\nCalgary & Edm    16.50\nCharter       1.80\nChamberlain        30\nGas Exp        82\nHome        10.50\n6V4\n150\n11.25\nR.40\n13.75\n7\n36\n1.55\n22\n80\n46\nYale           .48\nOILS\nAnglo Can       6.00\nB A Oil         33.00\nCal & Ed     17.00\nCdn Atlantic       6.40\nCan Decalta  68\nCentral Leduc     2.00\n5.05\n. 5.05\n6.70\n5.75\n3.10\nll.no\n1.31\n3.50\n.35\n.95\n1.20\nMercury\nOkalta Com \t\nPac Pete \t\nPeace River Gas ......\nRoyalite      \t\nRoyal Cam \t\nSparmac \t\nUnited   ....:\t\nVanalta   \t\nVantor  \t\nVulcan    ,\nYankee Princess        67.\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Dist    \"   ....:.      2.20\nAlta Dist VT       1.80\nB C Forests          13%\nB C Teliephone   49.00\nInland Nat Gas         3.05\nLucky Lager          5.15\nMacM & Bloedel B  40.50\nMid Western      4.70\nPowell River  56.00\nTrans Mtn     38.50\nWestern Plywoods   20.25\nWestminster Paper   27.00\nOttawa Inquiring\nInto'Sugar Merger\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The combines Investigation branch It\nmaking a formal \"preliminary\nand Informal Inquiry\" Into the\naction of the British Columbia\nSugar Refining Co. Ltd. In\nobtaining control of the Manl.\ntoba Sugar Co., Justice Minister\nGarton laid Tuesday.\nHe informed CCF leader Cold,\nwell In the Commons that the\nInquiry Ii to determine whether\nthe transaction raises any question under the federal Antl-\ncomblnet Act.\nMr. Coldwell asked two weeks\nago whether an Investigation\nwould be considered.\n8EA STINGS\nDYMCHURCH, England (CP) -\nThe sting has been put into sea\nbathing on the Kent coast. Thousands of jelly-fish have invaded\nthis resort and druggists'have been\nkept busy copying demands for\nanti-sting lotions.\nCentral Ex\nChem Research\nCommonwealth Pete\nFederated Pete\nGreat Sweetgrass ......\nHome \t\nKroy   \t\nLiberal Pete \t\nMarigold   \t\nMid Cont \t\nNat Pete \t\nOkalta       1.60\nPac Pete     11.25   <\nPounder         1.32\nTriad        7.05\nUnited Oils     ,  1.58\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi     35V4\nAlgoma Steel*  74s\/i\nAluminum          103\nAmer Tel* Tel  187%*\nArgus      24%\nAtlas St   20\nBathurst Power  63%\nBeattie Bros        7V4\nBell Tele   52\nBrazilian       T\/,\nB C Electric 4\u00a5<s   105\nB C Forest          137',\nB C Packers B  16%\nB C Power A   37%\nBurns A       17%\nBurrard A        9%\nCan  Cement    40V<\nCdn Breweries  29%\nCdn Canners      36\nCdn Car & Fdy    2H%\nCan Chem Co  U.'A\nCdn Dredge  -  26%\nCdn Pac Rly   37%\nCockshutt       10%\nCons Min & Smelt  37%\nDist Seagram   .   40\nDom Mag   21\nDom Steel & Coal B   13%\nDom Stores      39%\nDom Textiles          8\nEddy   Paper        75\nFamous Players  '.  24\nFanny Farmer  '... 26%\nFord A   138\nGoodyear      147\nGreat Lakes    44\nGypsum Lime   60\nHiram Walker   43V(\nImp Tob     11%\nInt Metals   37%\nInt Nickel   76%\nInt Pete       26%\nLaura Secord.  21%\nLoblaw A     43%\nLoblaw   B        82\nMassey Harrif  11V.\nMont Loco   18%\nMoore Corp     41\nNat Steel Car   34%\nPage Hershey    70%\nPowell River   55%\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ...  1240 on rm dial\n(Pacific Daylight Time)\nWEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1955\nPower Corp \t\n    66\nRuss Ind    \t\n     13%\nShawinigan   \t\n    70\n    29\nSimpsons A\t\n     19%\nStandard Paving \t\n     33\nSteel of Canada \t\n    iV.i\nTaylor Pearson      \t\n      9%\nUnion Gas of Can \t\n    49%\nUnited  Steel   \t\n     17\nWestern Groc \t\n  128\nWinnipeg Gas   \t\n    12%\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:00 New.s\n7:05\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:10\u2014Farm  Fare\n7:15\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 c\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Women Today .\n9:00\u2014Homemaker  Harmonies\n10:00\u2014CKLN Entertains\n10:10\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Melodic Sketches\n10:45\u2014Story Parade\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Call  One-Nine\n12:00\u2014 Prairie News\n.12:05\u2014Sportsman's Corner\n12:10\u2014Shopper's Guide\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Tex Williams Show\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Radio Feature\n1:45\u2014Matinee\n2:00\u2014Pacific News\n2:15\u2014Classic Corner\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada  Matinee\n3:30\u2014Miscellaney\n3:45\u2014B.C.  Roundup\n4:30\u2014Music on Two Pianot\n4:45\u2014Legends\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Tops and  Pops\n5:30\u2014Sports  News\n5:45\u2014Tex Williams Show\n5:50\u2014 News\n6:00\u2014Musicale ,\n6:15\u2014Musicale\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and  Roundup\n7:30\u2014The   Wed.   Night  Program\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Supplement\n10:30\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTHURSDAY, JULY 28, 1955-\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical  Minutes\n7:30\u2014 News\n7:35\u2014Musical   Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning  Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical   March  Past   s\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's   Bill \u2022 Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything   Goes\n9:00\u2014BBC  News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy   .-\nQ^O-'-Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Composer's  Corner\n10:00\u2014 Morning 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 \u2022\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada  Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program  Resume\n3:45\u2014Today's  Music\n430\u2014Prairie Picture\n4:45-Mystery at Wind Whistle\n5:00\u2014At Home With the Lennick\n5:25\u2014Traffic  Jamboree\n5:45\u2014News\n5:55\u2014International Commentary\n6:00\u2014Violinist\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:30\u2014Footloose\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Toronto  Promenade\nConcert\n8:30\u2014Winnipeg  Drama\n9:00\u2014Vancouver Concert Orch.\n9:30\u2014Eventide\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Canadians Around the\nWorld\n10:30\u2014Conversation\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n\"3H- i}\nTELEVISION\nFOR TODAY     .\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\nKHQTV - Channel 6\nll:00-Slgn On\n9:25\u2014Test Pattern\n11:15\u2014Secret Storm                  '\n9:40\u2014Color Test Program\n11:80\u2014House Party\n9:55-Bible Rading\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff\n10:00\u2014Ding Dong School\n.12:30\u2014Bob Crosby\n10:30\u2014You and Your Child\n1:00\u2014Welcome Traveler\n10:45\u2014Sheilah Graham\n1:30-TBA\n11:00\u2014Home\n1:45\u2014Musical Interlude\n12:00\u2014Tennessee.Ernie Ford\n2:00\u2014On Your Account\n12:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n2:30\u2014Valiant Lady     \u25a0\n1:00\u2014Untamed Fury\n2:45\u2014Brighter  Day\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n3:00\u2014Variety Hour\n3:00\u2014Ted Mack's Matinee\n3:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n3:30\u2014It Pays To Be Married\n3:45\u2014Guiding Light\n4:C0\u2014Q's Kaleidoscope\n4:00\u2014Love of Life\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n4:15\u2014Armchair Adventure\n4:45\u2014Modern Romance\n4:30\u2014Garry Moore\n5:00\u2014Pinky Lee\n5:00\u2014What's Cookin'\n5:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n5:30\u2014 Strike It Rich\n6:00\u2014Howdy Doody\n6:00\u2014Bob Andrews Show\n6:30\u2014Mr. Engineer\n6:30\u2014Doug Edwards\n7:00\u2014Zorro Rides Again\n6:45\u2014Sports on Parade\n7:30\u2014The Front Page\n7:00\u2014 Front Row Center\n7:40\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n8:00\u2014Jungle Town\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:15\u2014News\n8:00\u2014Request Performance\n8:25\u2014Weather Vane\n8:30\u2014My Little Margie\n8:30\u2014Cowboy G-Men\n9:00\u20141 Led Three Lives\n9:00\u2014The Millionaire\n9:30^Amos 'N' Andy\n9:30\u2014I've Got a Secret\n10:00\u2014This Is Your Life\n10:00\u2014Godfrey and His Friends\n10:30\u2014Curtain Time\n11:00\u2014Patti Page Sh\/ow\n11:00\u2014People Are Funny\n11:15\u2014Ames Brothers\n11:30\u2014The Whistler\n11:30\u2014Damon Runyan Theatre\n12:00\u2014Racket Squad\n12:00\u2014Safeco News\n12:40\u2014News Headlines\n12:05\u2014Heart of the City\nKREM TV\n\u2014 Channel 2\n3:45\u2014Test Pattern\n8:00\u2014The Lone Ranger\n4:00\u2014\"Daughters of the West\"\n8:30\u2014Disneyland\n5:10\u2014Health and Happiness Club\n9:30\u2014Clary Wright Show\n5:15\u2014\"Dudes Are Pretty People\"\n10:00\u2014Masquerade Party\n6:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n$:30\u2014\"Slightly Honorable\"\n6:55\u2014Newsbeat Spokane *\n11:30\u2014\"Bank Alarm\"\n7:00-Wed. Night Fights\n12:45\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n7:45\u201411th Round\n(Programs subieci to change\nby stations without notice )\nTELEVISION SERVICE\nREAD AND USE\n8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.\u2014Phone 1300\nEvenings\u2014Phone 1033-R\nThe Nelson News\nDally Except Sundays\nand  Holidayi\nWANT ADS\nMc & Me\nACROSS\n1. Rocljjy\nisland I Bay\nof Naples)\n% Strong\nboxes\nII Once more\n12. Entertain\n13. Brownish-\nrod chalcedony (pi.)\n14,Taut\n15 Skill\n16 Male goose\n17. Land\nsurrounded\nby water\n20 Wealth\n22 Arabian\ngarment\nI pi I\n26 Did not\nwork\n27 Fat\n28 Skin\n29 Sovereign\nof a Mohammedan\ncountry\n30 Being the\nsecond\nmentioned\nof two\n32 Effervescent\n35. Likely\n38 Of an area\n39 Theater\nlobby\n41 Belgian\nmarble\n42 Musical\ndrama\n43 Miry __\n44. Dialect\nvariant of\n\"pretty\"\nDOWN\n1 HouwmH.I\n2 Culture\nmedium\n3 Minute\nportion\n4 Free\n5 Those in\noffice\n6 The devil\n7 Improvable\n8. A supply\n9 Being\n10 Prophet\n16 Fuel\n18 An old\nsailor\n(slang)\n19 Guided\n20 Tear\n21 Fish   *\n23. A\nJudas\n24. Man's\nname\n25. Coin\nI Jap.)\n27. Retired\n19. Pig\npen      ,\n31 A narrow',\nback street\n32. Barriers\n33. River\n' i Russ.)\naau ijl4h:-]h\n80374   HB'ja'Jfe:\nehebi aiaaaao\naim aaaa aa,\nHHEHaa asrjE\nasiE uia@E\naaaaa aaiagpi\nansa ana\ntaagg mcanHBS\nam issan sisd\nBiaaaHH uuui?\nHHHBH   BSE:\n**u(itniii>'t. Answer\n34 Vetivcr\n38\u00bb Saucy\n37 Shelf in\na trunk\n39 Dandy\n40. Open (poet.|\n1\n%\n3\nA\n5\ny\/,\n6\n7\nB\n9\nIO\nII\n%\n12.\n13\nT\"\nfA\n14\nIS\n^\/A\n^\/A\nIfe\n^\n%\n'7\nIB\n19\nf\/A\nty\n%\njo\n31\n^\n22.\nIT,\n2+\n2ST\n2fe\n%\n?7\n28\nm\nJ9\n'^\n%\n^\nio\n31\n^\/\/t\nV\/A\n33.\n55\n3*\n^\n^\n35\n56\n37\n36\n^'\n39\nAo\n41\nV\/\nAt.\n-t-3\n%\naA\n7-27\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work iti\nAXYDLBAAXR\nls LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A ls use\nfor the three L's. X for the two O's. etc. Single letters. i;w*\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all r.int*\nEach day the code lettera are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nEY     CEJC     HJNYCE     EJMCYCP     IT\nAKRE     MEJQQ'   TPC    IY   \\K T T P R Y T C\u2014\nZ A P G Y A I M . \"\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS A DIFFERENT THING TO\nSAY MANY THINGS AND THINGS TO THE PURPOSt, -a\nSOPHOCLES.\nDistributed by King Features Syndicate\n T'v'<VAI''.U\"::-;'^;\n-   \u25a0 '.\"\u25a0'    \u25a0 ':''  \u25a0\u25a0 v.:-'\" \u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.v;?:!v':\"\\\";:\n.\n5UJL,,.   -. \u25a0 . ' \u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\":''!-^-\n. \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0    \u25a0\n1^53\nSMALL INVESTMENT - LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story - PHONE 1844\nBUSINESS AND\n'jlOFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA8SAYER8 AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE  W. WIDDOWSON it CO.\nAssavers. 301 Josephine St. Nelson\nH    b    ELMES. ROSSLAND. BC\nAdsayer. Chemist, Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBIRTHS\nACKERT\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Don\nAckert, 4658 Clarendon Street,\nVancouver, at St. Vincent's Hospital, July  25,  a son.\nHELP WANTED\nDECKHAND B.C. CIVIL SERV-\nice, Kootenay Lake Ferry, Department of Highways, Nelson.\nSalary $233 per month. Applicants must be British Subjects,\npreference given to ex-servicemen. Apply District Engineer,\nDepartment of Highways, Nelson, not later than August 10th,\n1955. .\t\nWANT\" TO MAKE EXTRA\nmoney for clothes, holidays or\nthat new car? Full and part time\nmen and women wanted to sell\nbeautiful unbreakable dishes.\nReady acceptance for people\nfor people with families. Reply\nto Box 101, 231 Examiner Building. Calgary for full particulars.\nTHREE\" EXPERIENCED MECH-\nanics and one lubrication man\nfor established Ford Dealership\nin Central B.C. Must be qualified Accommodations available.\nPhone collect 78T between 8\nam. and 10 p.m. Ask for Bill\nGlanville. ;\t\nWNEED A LOGGING CON-\ntractor to haul logs about 7\nmiles. Must have full equipment for tree to mill operation.\nApply L. D. Moore Lumber Co\nLtd.. Ymir, B.C. Phone IB, Ymir.\nPRODUCING MINE,\"NEAR NEW\nDenver, has opening for male\ntimekeeper and office assistant.\nTyping essential. State salary\nexpected and availability. Box\n10168, Nelson Daily News\nWANTED - SECOTTd CLASS\nBteam engineer for shift work.\nApply Master Mechanic, Crow's\nNest Pass Coal Company Limited. Michel, B.C.\nEXPERIENCED LOGGING\ntruck driver for truck and\ntrailer. Must be able to top load.\nCook  Lumber Co., Greenwood.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nOFFERS\nPlainly marked on the envelope \"Offer for House No. 2\"\nwill be received by the undersigned up to 12 o'clock noon, 8th\nAugust 1955 for House No. 2\nbeing situated on Lots 1 and 2\nBlock 47, Nelson City, Plan 226\nand known as 904 Nelson Ave.,\nNelson, B.C.\nThe dwelling may be inspected between the hours of 10 a.m.\nto 4 p.m. on the 28th, 29th, 30th\n\u2022of July and 1st of August, 1955\ninclusive and further information obtainable upon application\nto the Office ofthe Government\nAgent, Court House, Nelson, B.C.\nThe structure is to be sold on\nan \"as is and where is\" basis and\nit is a condition of sale that it\nis to be removed from site within 15 days of notification of\nacceptance of a successful bid.\nThe site shall be left free from\ndebris, and earth disturbed in\nconnection with the removal\nshall be backfilled.\nOffers should be accompanied\nby a certified deposit cheque or\nmoney order, made payable to\nthe Minister of Finance for 10%\nof the amount offered. The successful offer will be subject to\nSocial Services Tax and the\nhighest or any offer will not\nnecessarily-be accepted.\nCHAIRMAN,\nPURCHASING  COMMISSION\nPARLIAMENT   BUILDINGS,\nVICTORIA. B.C.\nJulv 25th. 1955.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nYOUNG     LADY WILL    LOOK\nafter    children while    mother\nworks  summer months.   Phone\n1743-L-3.\nWOMAN WILL CARE FOR\nchildren while mother works.\nPhone 306-R.\nFOR   ALL   ODD   JOBS   PHONE\n256-R.\nHELP  WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nNOTICE-COME AND LEARN\na good profession that you\ncan become independent the\nrest of your life. Our new\nclasses are starting immediately and we want men or\nwomen from the ages of 17\nto 60. We teach Hairdressing\nand all lines of Beauty Culture. Write, wire or phone\nfor information to the O.K.\nValley Tairdressing School.\n453   Lawrence    Ave,   Kelowna\nMACHINERY\nRENTALS\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, dishes, linens and maid\nservice. Day. week, or monthly. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker St.\nWANTED TO RENT - TWO OR\nthree bedroom home. Fairview,\nbridge engineer. Box 10185 Nel-;\nson Daily News.\nUSED\nEQUIPMENT\n1\u2014BYRES BEARCAT SHOVEL\n% yd. with backhoe. A-l.\n1\u2014 INGERSOLL RAND\nPORTABLE   COMPRESSOR\n105 CFM. Like new.\n1\u20143-TON SPECIAL CHEV.\nTRUCK\nwith hyd   dump box.\n1-SKAGTT HEAVY DUTY\nLOGGING JAMMER\non 4-ton G.M.C. truck. Ready\nto go with all rigging.\n1\u2014SKAGIT HOIST\nwith 2 main drums and 2,\nswing drums.\n1-USED ANGLE DOZER\nfor wide gauge D4, TD9 or\nHD5.\n1\u2014CARCO WINCH\nfor D4, TD9 or HD5.\nSee H \"Fritz\" Farenholtz.\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nMAC'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n614 Railway St. Nelson. B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nWANTED TO RENT - ONE OR\ntwo bedroom house, preferably\nFairview. Box 10186 Nelson\nDaily News.\nFOR RENT - TWO FLOORS 50'\nby 100' each; suitable for storage, warehouse, or cars. Apply\nMcDonald Jam Co.. 301 Vernon\nWANTED TO RENT - PRIVATE\nroom near CPR. Write Box\n10329, Nelson Daily News.\n\\VANTED TO  RENT - 3 BED-\nroom   house,   long   term   rental.\nPhone 1761-R2.\t\nFOR  RENT \u2014  4 ROOM  CABIN.\ncompletely     finished,    modern.\nAoply 912 Sixth .Street,\nBUSINESS MAN  REQUIRES \"TO\nrent 2 to 3-bedroom house. Wired\nfor range. Phone 958-X.\nWANTED\u20143 BEDROOM HOUSE\nfor civil servant. Box 10462, Nelson Daily News\ni ROOM MODERN HOUSE, FUR-\nnished. 15 miles out of town.\nBox 10179. Daily News.\nSMALL TWO ROOM CABIN;\nwater and light. $15.00 per mo.\nPhone   1647-R.\nFCm RENT \u2014 MODERN f-\nroom apartment. Available Aug.\n1. Phone 583-R.\nCapacity   from %   yd. lo m\nyds. Front end loading, rubber\ntired. Torqmatic transmission;\nno clutch wear.\nOPTIONAL ACCESSORIES:\n4 WHEEL DRIVE.\nPALLET    FORKS,     BULLDOZER      BLADE.      SNOW\nPLOW. CRANE HOOK.\nWrite or Phone\n5ENNETTS\nMACHINE SHOP\nPhone 593 Nelson. B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOM.\n213 Victoria St. Gentleman preferred.\n\u25a0 FOR-RENT - 3-ROOM   SUITE,\npartly furn. Adults. 311 Vernon.\nFOR RENT \u2014 BEDROOM WITH\nor without board. Phone 1035-R.\nFOR  RENT - 4-ROOM^APAR,F\nment. 409 Silica St. Adults.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nFebruary & March hatched pullets \u2014 Hampshires, Leghorn-\nHampshire Cross, White Leghorns and other breeds. Get\nthese for early layers. Write for\nPrice List.\nRUMP & SENDALL LIMITED\nLangley, B. C.\nFRESHENED COW FOR SALE\nApply Sam Makortoff, Hills\nB.C.\nPERSONAL\nMachinery Repairs\nA FULLY EQUIPPED MACHINE\nSHOP TO SERVE YOU.\nMACHINERY SALES\nAND SERVICE.\nWelding,\nSteel Fabricating.\nSTEVENSON'S\nMACHINE SHOP LTD.\n708.Vernon St. Nelson\nPhone 98\nSEE\n,REUBEN BUERGE MOTORS\nLTD.\nTODAY FOR THE LARGEST\nAND MOST COMPLETE\nNEW AND USED\nCAR SELECTION\nIN THE INTERIOR OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA.\n1954 Austin A70\n1953 Consul\n1953 Austin A40\n1952 Morris 4 Door\n1952 Hillman\n1950 Austin\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1955 Buick Special Hardtop\nFully equipped.\n1955 Buick Century 4 Door\n1955 Ford Fairlane 4 Door\n1955 Pontiac 4 Door\n1955 Chevrolet 4 Door\n1954 Plymouth 4 Door\n1954 Chevrolet 4 Door\n1953 Pontiac 4 Door\n1953 Chevrolet Hardtop\n1953 Chevrolet 2 Door\n1953 Ford 2 Door\n1952  Pontiac 4 Door\n1952 Chevrolet 2 Door\n1950 Chevrolet 4 Door\n1949 Ford 4 Door\n1948 Chevrolet 4 Door\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1955 Chevrolet Pickup\n1955 G.M.C   Pickup\n1955 Chev Sedan Delivery\n1955 Chev Station Wagon\n1954 Ford Sedan Delivery\nRadio.\n1954 Austin Pickup\n1953 Chev Sedan Delivery\n1953  Ford Pickup\n1952 Dodge Pickup\n1952 G.M.C. Pickup\n1951 Austin Pickup\n1951   Meteor Bandwagon\n1951   Austin Countryman\n1951   Chev Pickup\n1950 Ford 2 Ton\nGood rubber.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nWE PAY CASH FOR\nLATE MODEL CARS\nAUSTIN\nSERVICE AND SALES\nRUEBEN\nMotors Ltd.\nNelson,  B C.\nPhone I 135    803 Baker St.\n1947 FORD 3-TON TRUCK WITH\ndump, hoist; 1949 motor. Priced\nfor quick sale. Also Salsbury\nmotor scooter. Allan's Motor\nService, Davies Street.\nFOR SALE- FAIRBANKS-\nMorse T120 power unit with\ngovernor' mounted on 14\" I-\nshaft and pulley. Used 240 hours.\nApply Albert Maida, at 82' or\n1146-R, Nelson.\nWANTED - LARGE TRUCK\nwith tandem trailer for highway\nlog haul contract. Cook Lumber\nCo.. Greenwood, B.C.\n22 FT. HOUSE TRAILER, FUR-\nnished, washing machine, rang-\nette. beds, electric brakes. Apply\n1653   Kootenay   Ave.,   Rossland.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ECT. FOR SALE\n4 Bedroom Home\nVt mile from ferry. 100' lake\nfrontage, lawn and garden.\nLarge living room and fireplace Convenient kitchen\nand breakfast nook. Full basement and lake bathers shower.\nConvenient $ J 2,500\nTerms. Price       *r\u00ab~jvw\nFairview\nFamily Home\n4 B.R. Home. L.R., Convenient\nkitchen, and breakfast nook.\nFull basement and new furnace.   Beautifully  landscaped\nCn-Only...        W000\nProperty Near\nUranium Claims\n131 acres 2 miles from Slocan\nCity: 20 acres cleared. 8-room\nhouse, 2-car garage and cabin.\nApp. 100,000 ft. timber and\nwater rights. JgQOO\nFull Price \u00abkv\u00abv\u00ab   ,\nOnly $500 Down\nNorth Shore\nUnfinished House\nLocated  above approved new\nbridge approach. Full founda- .\ntion and sub floor. Garage fin-\nished except $5500\ndoors. Only .. ^\n\u2022 \u2022*\u2022\nLet Us Help You With Your\nNew COMPOSITE POLICY\n\u2022 \u2022\u25a0 \u2022\nCD.\nBlacks\n536 Ward St.\nPhone 99\nFOR SALE\n3 BEDROOM HOME\nlust south Nelson cily limits\u2014\n6 acres level land in hay and\ngarden \u2014 some fruit trees \u2014\nnew barn \u2014 with a large\nwood-lot, some farm equipment \u2014 just what you are\nlooking for \u2014\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP MET-\nals, copper, brass, lead, aluminum. Highest prices, prompt payment. Active Trading, 936 E,\nCordova, Vancouver.\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture, basement, 301 Baker\nSt Phone 47, \"We buy used furniture.\"\nG. W BAERG\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St.     Nelson     Ph. 1118\nand Box 34, Frutvale, B.C.\nSuccessor to the late A. L. Purdy\nBOYD C. AFFLECK M.E.I.C\nB.C. Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nS.  V. SHAYLER. P.C., BOX 252\nKimberley. Phone 54.\nB.C Land Surveyor, Engineer\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JULY 27,1955 \u20149\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nMACHINISTS\n200,000 BOARD FEET TIMBER\nstanding, Toad in. Some logs on\nskid ready to haul. Apply Fred\nKazakoff, Winlaw, B.C.\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop,   Acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding   Phone 593, 324 Vernon St.\nSMALL FRIDGE, EXCELLENT\ncondition, $50.00; metal couch\nbed, $5.00. Post Office, Queen's\nBay,\nBOMBER HOISTS, 1500 LBS. CA-\npacity, $45, while they last. Active Trading Co., 935 E. Cordova,\nVancouver.\nTIMBER CRUISER\nEUGENE H. HIRD\nSlocan City, B.C. Timber cruising,\nmineral claim inspection.\nAnywhere in B.C.\nFURNITURE AND HOUSEHOLD\neffects and dishes; Kelvinator\nfridge. 817 Victoria St., Suite A.\n1 HORSE HAY BAILER GOOD\ncondition. Box 10351 Nelson\nDaily News.\nESTEY REED ORGAN. PLAIN,\nsmall, cheap. Box 10444, Daily\nNews.\nFOR SALE \u2014 ELECTROLUX\nattachment floor polisher. Phone\n1282-L or call 518 Sixth Street.\nUSED COAL AND WOOD:\nrange. Good condition. Phonej\n1421-X after 5 p.m.\nWHITE ENAMEL COAL STOVE.\nWalnut dinette suite; both for\n$80.00. Phone 62.\nFIVE TONS BALED HAY FOR\nsale. $30.00 ton f.o.b. Perry's. Apply Tim Rebalkin, Perry's. B. C.\nGOOD   COAL   AND  WOOD\nrange with  reservoir. Ph.  1752.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nBOAT, 16' LONG SITS 6 AND 5\nh.p. motor. Next to new condition. Apply 2024 Topping Street.\nTrail, B.C.\nNdaott laily News\nClassified Advertising Rates\nPer line, 1 time .20\n2 consecutive times    . .        .35\n3 consecutive times       .       .45\n4, 5 and 6 consecutive\ntimes .60\n26 consecutive times $1.82\nNon-consecutive insertions     .20\na line per time.\nBox numbers .11 extra.\nPUBLIC    (LEGAL)    NOTICES\nTENDERS,   etc.\u201420c   per   line\nfirst insertion 16c per line each\nsubsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\n'       Subscription Rates:\n(Not More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance .._ .30\nBy carrier per year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month $ 1.25\nThree months _    . $ 2.75\nSix months . $ 5.00\nOne year $15.00\nMail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month ._ $ 1.00\nThree months $ 3 75\nSix months $ 7.50\nOne year $10.00\nKRAFT'S EXCAVATING\nDITCHING, LOADING\nAND ERECTING\nBy Contract or Hour.\nBox 354 or Phone 1291-Y.\nDividends\nBy The Canadian Press\nGreat   Lakes   Paper   Co.,   Ltd,\ncom.   40   cents   Sept.   30,   record\nSept. 15.\nWestern    Canadian    Breweries\nLtd., 25 cents Sept, 1, record Aug.\n2.\nWirni\u00ab*ii Grain\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Cash grain\nprices:\nOats. No. 1 feed, 74.\nBarley, >Jo. 1 feed, 1.03%.\nButler Hints of :\n^old-Dollar Gaps\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Stocks gata-\ned t lost ground on the Lomion\nstock exchange Tuesday as trailers\nshook off their nervousnesi owr\nBritain's newly-announced at^ps\nto curb inflation. , *,\nButler's denial of rumors on tho\nvalue of pound sterling and his\nassurances that the British economy was fundamentally Bound\nwere credited with restoring confidence in ifiarjtet values.\nAt a cabinet meeting Tuesday\nButler was reported to havt pr** .\npared the ministers for something\nof a shock when the July dollar\nand gold reserves are announced\nwithin two weeks. Butler said\nMonday the gap between impart*\nand exports had, widened.\nWANTED - 12 TO- 18 FOOT\noutboard runabout with engine,\nMust be strong and stable. Half\ncabin preferred. Phone 1627-L-3.\n5*'HP.' JOHNSON   OUTBOARD\nmotor, new condition and guar-;\nan tee. $173, and terms, Coleman\nElectric.\nFOR SALE\u201414-FT. RUNABOUT.\n5^' beam, for outboard motor.\nT   Allan, phone 58-W, Nakusp.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n.jelson\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR TWO\n-   Phone 1494--T.\"*'    *\nConcrete Ltd.\n$13.50 cu. yd.\nPHONE 871\nDelivered  in  Nelson\nSAVE IIME.\u201e-  SAVE MONEY\n\"Do It the Easy Way\"\n10,500\n$3500 Down\nPHONE fi62 bus. hrs. or apply\nSuite  1 \u2014 373 Baker Street.\nNelson.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY1     (Continued in Next Column)\nA t>: v .3 fc.U steeple is hoisted to the tO|j of historic old North\nChurch in Bosta.i. Mass., less than a year after It was wrecked by\nhurricane Carol. It was the second restoration In-tho landmark's\n215*year history. The windows from which the arnlng laterns\nflashed their signals to Paul Revere to announce the coming of the\nBritish in 1773 were saved, and with other ancient woodwork, are\nbelm built bsck  into the restored steeple.\u2014AP Wlrephoto,\nLOWER FAIRVIEW. A LOVELY\n3 bedroom family horn* in excellent condition. 2 bedrooms\ndown, one up. 15x20 living room\nwith brick fireplace. Wired for\nrange, full basement with garage doors. Coal furnace, lovely\ngarden. Half block to bus, near\nschools and park. $8000. Phone\n133S-R.\nFOR SALE \u2014 SUVEYED LOTS\n60x120 Vz mile north of Salmo,\nalso acre lots and acreage Vz\nmile south of Salmo. Apply E.\nNystrom. Salmo.\nFOR SALE - 20 ACRE FARM\nrunning water, electricity, large\nbuildings. 10 miles west of Nelson. M. Aben. General Delivery,\nNelson.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking. Buyers of\nscrap iron, batteries, brass,\naluminum, copper. Used parts\nfor cars and trucks for sale\nWestern Auto Wrecking, Box\n132. Granite Rd.. Nelson, B.C.\nCOW HIDES, SHEEP PELTS,\nhorse hair (mane and tail) old\nbatteries, copper, brass, aluminum, radiators, beer and pop\nbottles. Phone 882-Y. Warehouse\n4I5'\/4 Latimer St., City. Independent Trader.\n10 ACRES OF FARM LAND FOR\nsale. Apply Pete Rezansoff,\nTarrys, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 BUILDING LOTS.\nIn Rosemont. apply 1418 Vancouver Street. Phone 313-L-l.\nTWO HOUSES ON 2 ACRES\nYmir Road. G. Posnekoff; Gen.\nDel., Nelson B.C..\nBuying\u2014Selling\u2014Rentinj\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\nFOR SALE\u20143-BEDROOM HOME\nFairview. Box 10490 Nelson\nDaily News.\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH  LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\nTWO HOUSES ON 2 ACRES\nYmir Rd. Gen. Delivery, Nelson.\nLOT FOR SALE, VIEW ST, 60'x\n120'.  Phone  1020-Y.\n3  BEDROOM  HOUSE ON  TWO\nlots uphill. $4500. Phone 245-Y.\nWANTED TO BUY - SAW LOGS\nand cedar poles on Kootenay\nLake or rail. Kootenay Products. Box 450. Nelson.\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand bush land in vicinity of\nKootenay Lake. Apply Box 2738\nNelson Daily News\nBUSINESS OPORTUNITIES\nA L C O H O LICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 3fiR   Ph. 161-L3 or 366-R.\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nFOR RENT OR \u00a7ALE \u2014 MOD-\nern full equipped College Cafe,\nCreston, B.C., together with\n\"Drive In\" and eight rooms\nrented hotel style. Can be purchased with very low down payment or will rent to responsible\ntenant. Phone or call at cafe or\nwrite Mr S. Cooper, Creston,\nBritish Columbia.\nWANTED - 2 GAS PUMPS. AP-\nply Box 10181'Daily News.\nLOST AND FOUND\nREWARD FOR RETURN OF A\nfemale Welsh Terrier. Phone\nTrail 1234-L' collect. Resembles\na small\" Airedale in color and\nstyle.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS TN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C. Ph\nPAcific 6357.\nBUILDERS SPECIAL LUMBER\nliquidation sale. 2x4, 2x8, 2x8,\n1x6, 1x8, 1x10 boards. All dressed stock. $30 thousand B.M.\nOver 4000 board feet free delivery. Write S. Kudra, Pass-\nmore, B.C. for appointments to\nsee lumber. Phone 1702-R city\nLOST - RED SCHOOL BLAZER\nwith crest and lape? pins. Phone\n230-R. Reward.\nLOST - LADY'S BLUE PURSE\nbetween Salmo and Apex. Ph.\n510-X.\nFOR SALE - CULL LUMBER.\nThis is all reject lumber. Makes\napproximately four cords of\nwood. Good for small. repairs\nPhone 1702-R. Immediate delivery. \t\nPIANO FOR SALE - SCHIED-\nmayer it Soehne, Germany\nGood tone and condition. Apply\nto Sandon Community Club,\n!    Sandon.\n(ContinuecTin Next Column I\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word )\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\nPer Line\n1   Insertion\n2 Consecutivo  Insertions\n3 Consecutive Iniertiom .\n6 Consecutive Iniertiom .\n26 Comecutive  Iniertiom\n$ .20\n.33\n.45\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge is two linei\n\u2022 Add 11c for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rates If payment\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low six time rate\na\nA\nN\nY\n3\nP.\nis\nNon Comecutive Iniertiom 20* o Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo ot Days Ad Is To Run  .\t\n :  Bill Me  J\t\nYOUR   MAME\nADDRESS\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department!, Nelson, B.C.\n '. .\u25a0 \u25a0\u2022\u2022' \u2022\u2014-\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' \">'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ; ~~:\u2014: ' ;\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-.. ,r\\yy\n\u2022   \u25a0 :   ~~\t\n10 L NELSbN7bi4jLY NEWS\/WBD., JULY 27,1955\nYou Can Take It With You\nIf you are tripping, check this list ot essentials which might not\nbe convenient to \"Get when you get there.\"\nCamera\nInsect Repellent\nComb\nPlaying Cards\nCreams\nStationery\nDeodorants\nFaco Cloths\nFaoo Tissues\nSun Tan Cream\nSun Glattes\nFllmi\nSwim Cap\nFirst Aid Kit\nTooth Brush\nHair Brush\nTooth Paste\nHand Lotion\nThermos Bottle\nHeadecho Romedy\nTravel Kit\nAnd if you ere driving juit leave tho flask, al.homo.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nBandit Sends\nPolice to\nRelease Couple\nVANCOUVER   (CP)   \u2014 A jit-'\ntery but \"considerate\" gunman is\nbeing sought by police here following a holdup of a city drugf-\nj store in which a bandit escaped\n! with $150 in cash and a quantity\nof pills he thought were narcotics.\n'    Police said Tuesday the masked\nbandit who held   up   drugstore\nowner David Brail and his wife\nat gunpoint, later telephoned to\nsay he had locked the couple in\nthe storeroom of the premises.\nThe bandit, a white cloth pierced with eyeholes covering his\nface, entered the drugstore as Mr.\nand Mrs. Brail were counting up\nthe day's receipts.\nNERVOUS GUNMAN\nWaving a gun nervously in their\nfaces, the gunman demanded:\n\"Let's have the money.\"\nAfter taking the store's receipts,\nBrail's wallet and some cash from\ntrTe post office department, the jittery bandit ordered Brail to give\nhim narcotics.\nThe druggist told police he\nopened a drawer containing only\nantibiotics and sulfa pills and the\nTrans-Canada highway, Big\nBend section, ferry at Three Valleys in operation 24 hours a day.\nNorth Thompson fair, grading,\nsome soft  sections %above Avola.\nOther B.C. highways mainly unchanged.\nMassey Invested\nWith High Honor\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Canada's Governor-General Massey Tuesday\nwas Invested with the insignia of\na Bailiff grand cross of the Order\nof St. John of Jerusalem, becoming\nthe first Canadian to receive the\nhonor.\nThe Duke of Gloucester, grand\nPrior of the Order, conferred the\ninsignia at a ceremony in St.\nJame's Palace.\nMassey is Prior of the order in\nCanada, The insignia, deemed the\nOrder's highest honor, has been\nreceived by only 14 persons now\nliving,\" including the Queen\nMother.\nbandit eagerly sotooped up Us contents.\nThe man then force dthe couple\ninto a storeroom in the building\nbut before leaving, told them he\nwould notify police to free them.\nHe did.\nNehru Aims to\nRegain Goa by\nPeaceful Means\nNEW DELHI (AP) \u2014 Prime\nMinister Nehru rejected demands\njn Parliament Tuesday that India\ntry .to acquire Portugal's Indian\ncolonies by a limited war or police\naction.\nNehru said his government will\nstrive to attain a merger with the\ncolonies through peaceful means.\nIn ,.a three-hour debate the determination, of some members of\nParliament to have India win Goa\nand the other Portuguese holdings\nclashed with traditional Indian\nideas of satyagrah \u2014 non-violent\ndemonstration.\nIGNORES   REQUEST8\nNehru ignored requests that he\nwithdraw statements that he does\nnot favor mass demonstrations\nagainst Goa, the principal colony,\nbut approves marches of small\ngroups.\nPolitical parties opposing Nehru's government are planning to\nmarch by thousands against Goa\nAug. 1 and Aug. 16. Nehru's statements are vague and organizers\nwonder whether the government\nwill restrain Indian marchers, as\nit did last year.\nHave you driven a Ford...lately?\nTake 10 minutes at the wheel...\nlose your heart to\nPut yourself in this picture for 10 minutes and you'll find you're\nenjoying a totally new experience in driving. First of al! you'll get a really\ngood look at those wonderful fashion-first interiors that go along with\nFord's Thunderbird-inspired styling. And you'll feel the deep-down,\nrelaxing comfort of Ford's sofa-wide seats.\nThe instant you start moving you'll know that you're driving a great\nV-8 engine\u2014an overhead-valve V-8 (162-Hp. or 182-Hp.) with\nTrigger-Torque power that responds like magic to every command.\nWhen you get on the road\u2014be it rough Or smooth\u2014you'll feel a new\nkind of riding smoothness, a new kind of steadiness and steering control.\nThat's Ford's famous Angle-Poised ride, with ball-joint front suspension.\nWhen you finally add up all the things you've discovered about Ford that\nput it 'way out front in its field, you'll know why Canadians coast to\ncoast agree that there's no value like Ford VS value!\n%\nleader\nwith an advanced\noverhead-valve V-8 engine\nin every model\nat no extra cost\nTHIS   IS  YOUR   INVITATION ...VISIT  YOUR   FORD-MONARCH   DEALER   AND   TAKE   A   DRIVE\nMEL BUERGE MOTORS Ltd.\n608 Vernon St. Phono 1744\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Late selling\ntroubles of a relatively minor nature set the stock market back\nmoderately Tuesday.\nCanadian issues were mixed. International Nickel added 2%, Hiram Walker was up 1 and Distillers Seagram gained Va. Canadian\nPacific lost %, pome Mines fell ft\nand Mclntyre was unchanged.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket kept ahead by a narrow\nmargin in moderately active trading Tuesday,\nGains and losses in industrials\nseldom went as far as two poinds,\nalthough Aluminium dropped four\nat 103.\nUraniums moved ahead from\nthe start and chalked up Substantial gains before the advance\nslowed up in mid-afternoon. Best\nof the gainers was Can-Met, which\nadvanced 20 to $2.95.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014After a hes-\nitant opening Tuesday, industrials\nfeatured an uphill climb to move\nirregularly higher at the close of\nmoderately active trading on' the\nstock market.\nBanks, utilities and base metals\nwere mainly firmer, though a few\nsetbacks were suffered in all three\nsections. Senior oils advanced\nwhile papers eased. Beverages and\nsteels were steady.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The recovery in after-hours dealings following the chancellor of the exchequer's statement Monday was\ncontinued in the markets at the\nopening Tuesday, but expected\nbuying did not materialize.\nThe dollar stocks reflected the\nstrength of Wall Street overnight.\nCoppers improved slightly.\nDelay Report On\nPatents, Copyright\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The royal\ncommission on patents and copyright won't make Us report for at\nleast another year, State Secretary\nPinard Tuesday informed the\nCommons.\nHe said the commission still has\na lot of work to do and' will resume hearings in the fall to consider submissions on trade marks.\nThe three - man commission,\nheaded by Chief Justice J. L. Us-\nley of Nova Scotia, started work\nlast fall.\nFather Keeps\n8-Year-0ld\nBoy on Chain\nDRUMHELLER, Alta. (CP) \u2014 A\nfather who kept his eight-year-old\nson chained by the nec(k for a\nweek in a filthy stable was sentenced to a year's hard labor.\nWilliam Robert Ferguson, 68, a\ndistrict farmer, was sent to jail\nand his wife Eva was given a suspended sentence.\nRCMP constable Bruce Sutherland told magistrate B.C. Hendricks that the boy, Harry Harold\nFerguson, was not released until\npolice arrived at the Ferguson\nfa^m.\nHe said the boy slept on three\nbags of hay thrown on the floor.\nLOCKED IN AT NIGHT\nThe chain was about 20 feet\nlong, allowing the boy to move\njust outside the door. The stable\nwas locked from the outside\" at\nnight.\nSutherland also told the court\nthe stable was filthy and the odor\nalmost unbearable. He said there\nwere no bathroom facilities.\nHe said Ferguson told him that\nhe thought the chain would make\nhis boy good because it made his\ndog good. The farmer admitted he\nchained the boy when he was five\nyears   old.\nMr. and Mrs. Ferguson were\ncharged under the Child Welfare\nAct.   Both   pleaded   guilty.\nThere are five children in the\nfamily.\nButter Stocks Up\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Butter stocks\nin nine Canadian cities rose 22\nper. cent July 21 to 67,322.000\npounds from 54,997,000 in the\ncorresponding period last year,\nthe bureau of statistics reported\nTuesday.\nStocks by cities with last year's\nfigures in brackets: Quebec 4,751,-\n000 (3,844,000); Montreal 32,248,000\n(26,331,000); Toronto 9,610,000 (8,-\n912,000); Winnipeg 15.665,000 (10.-\n978,000); Regina 1,262,000 (937,-\n000); Saskatoon 627,000 (337.000);\nEdmonton 1.932,000 (2,115,000);\nCalgary 454.000 (521.000); Vancouver 773,000  (1,022,000).\nEx-Husband to\nPay Alimony\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A city\nbusinessman was ordered to pay\nj alimony or go to jail.\nI     Mr. Justice Manson in Supreme\n1 Court said Victor Matthew David,\n\u2022 sign company owner, must pay the\ni $300 monthly alimony which he\n| had failed to do since the begln-\n, ning of the year. He set Aug. 8 as\ni the date the court would deal with\nMrs. Pearl David's application to\nhave  her   former  husband   committed to jail.\nMr. Justice Manson said: \"The\nfirst wife is not to suffer by reason\nof his second matrimonial venture. That is well established by\nlaw.\"\nDavid is remarried  and has\nfamily of four children.\nT\nSHIRTS\nfor\nSummer Comfort\nRelax in one of these T-\nshirts made with collars or\nround neck style.\n\u2022 Terry Cloth\n\u2022 String Knit\n\u2022 Interlock   Stitch\n\u2022 Cool Rayons\nAlso in plain white with\n, the non-sag neckband.\nEmory's\nLimited\nDeserted Husband\nDies On Gallows\nGIRMINGHAM, England (Reuters) \u2014 Frederick Cross, 33, who\nmurdered a complete stranger because he wanted to die himself,\nwas hanged this morning at Birmingham jail.\nCross thumbed a ride in a car\npassing through Uttoxeter, Staffordshire, and stabbed the driver,\nDonald Lainton, 28.\nHe told police his wife had gont\noff with another man taking their\ntwo children and he wanted to\ncommit suicide but had not th\u00ab\ncourage.\nSays Rates Killed\nH.B. Freight Route\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 A government\ntrade official said Tuesday it Is\nunlikely that northern Saskatchewan timber will be exported this\nyear through the Hudson Bay\nport of Churchill.\nFollowing the Second World\nWar, two cargoes of timber \u2014 one\ncontaining 2,500,000 board feet and\nthe other 5.000,000 \u2014 were shipped\nfrom Saskatchewan through\nChurchill. The last shipment was\nin 1948.\n\"But the high freight rate killed\nany further movement,\" said W. J.\nHansen, director of trade and business information for the provincial government.\nTackle \"Staph\" Infection by\nReducing Use of Penicillin\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The staphylococcus germ which can cause\nserious post-operative complications, is being battled by one Vancouver hospital by reducing the\nuse of penicillin.\nA spokesman for the 12-man infection   committee   of   St.   Paul's\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black faco type; larger type rates on\nrequest.  Minimum two lines.  10% discount for prompt payment\nFuller Brush Representative\nDon E. Sargent \u2014 Phone 1335\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL \u2014 8.00 P.M.\nTwilight Club will meet in the\nMemorial Hall at 3 p.m.\n4 room house for rent,\noffs, Slocan Park.\nMark-\nDon't risk a canning failure with\nits waste of sugar! Get a cooking\nthermomenter and be assured of\nperfect  canning  results.\nHIPPERSON'S\nSLABWOOD FOR SALE. LONG\nCORDS OR CUT TO STOVE\nLENGTH. \u2014 PHONE 330-L.\nFor hot weather cooking \u2014 the\nnew Force Electric Rangette. New.\nmodern styling, with automatic\noven control, and new low price,\nonly   $89.95.\nHIPPERSON'S\nKnitters\u2014For all yarn knitting\nneeds, we invite you to visit our\nwool department.\nEBERLE'S-on Baker Street.\n\"Do It Yourself\"\nCushion your home with\nPilofoam from\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nPlywood of all kinds.\nFull sheets or cut sizes.\nT. H- WATERS & CO-, LTD.\nPhone 156 \u2014 101 Hall St. \u2014 Nelson\nSlab Butcher linens. 44\" wide\nin shades of coral, red, navy, tan,\nwhite and lilac. Yd. $119.\nTAYLOR'S   DRY   GOOD8\nGuaranteed Radio and\nTelevision Service\n\u2022     McKay & Stretton Ltd.\n532 Baker St. Phone 1555\nATTENTION GOLFERS\nMixed two-ball foursome tonight.\nTeeing off at .5 p.m. Dinner will\nfollow.\nHot weather special \u2014 cotton\nmet T shirts in a}l sizes for ages\n2 to 18. White and assorted colors.\n69c. EBERLE'S on Baker St.\nChimneys cleaned and topped.\nFurnaces, stoves,\nCleaned by vacuum.\nPounder's Chimney Service,\nPhone 1541-L.\nPatients In Kootenay Lake General Hospital can have the Dally\nNews sent to them every morning.\nPhone 1844, Circulation Department, Dally News.\nFor your summer camp purchase\none of our used fridges, two large\nand 3 Astrals, all in good condition. Also 4 used chests of drawers.\nWe Buy and Sell New and Used\nFurniture\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nFUNERAL   NOTICE\nBOURCHIER \u2014 Prayers will\nbe recited Thursday evening at\n8 p.m. from the Sacred Heart\nParish Hall, Rossland, for the late\nEric Brian Ormsby Bourchier.\nRequiem mass will be celebrated\nby Rt. Rev. Msgr. A. K. Maclntyre\nThursday, July 28, 1955, at 9 a.m.,\nfrom Sacred Heart Church; Interment will be in Mountain View\nCemetei'y. In lieu of flowers, donations to St. Vincent de Paul\nSociety. Clark's Funeral Chapel in\ncharge.\nHospital said it had been found\nthat cases given penicillin pre-\noperatively seemed more, prone\nto the \"staph\" infection.\n\"It seemed to encourage it,\" he\nsaid. \"For the last six months we\nHave not been using it nearly so\nmuch pre-operatively.\" ,\nThe germ has a tendency to affect surgical wounds or any skin\nabrasion and dust in the air can\ncarry the infection.\nIN FLOOR WAX\nCalgary bacteriologists found lt\nmultiplied in common floor wax.\nTwo hospitals there had to curtail operating schedules for two\nweeks due to the infections.\nThe St. Paul's spokesman said\nlarge sale of common antibiotics\nis a contributing factor in the\ngerm's buildup of resistance to\nantibiotics. Staph is more prominent now because development, of\nantibiotics killed off other bugs in\nrecent years leaving staph in sole\ncontrol of the field.\n\"Probably it was always resistant to antibiotics\" he said.\nIncidence has been cut greatly\nhere by new techniques and cleaning procedures.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nPhone 327\n576  Baker Street\nCAMPBELL,  SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\n576 Baker St. Phone 235\nAuditors\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front St. Phone 63\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nI. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical  Arti  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nMakes Delicious Bread the Easy\nand Quick Way,\nTry a Package Today\nELLISON MILLING\na. ELEVATOR CO. LTD,\nFront Street\nPICNIC SUPPLIES\nPaper Plates, assorted size*\nPaper Cups\nNapkins \u2014 Straws\nTHERMOS BOTTLES\n$1.35 \u2014 $3.95\nCity Prug\n\"Your Rexall Pharmacy\"\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_27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0429101","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"}]}}