{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0429111":{"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":"1955-08-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429111\/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":" Living Costs\nUp in June\nFood, Shelter Costs Boost Index by\nTenth of a Point After May Drop\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Food and shelter costs increased\nduring June, -boosting the consumer index by one-tenth of\na point to 116 from 115.9, the bureau of statistics reported\nThursday.\nThe small increase followed a\n. decline of one-half point during\nMay, the biggest drop in 19\nmonths.\nDuring June prices rose for eggs,\nfresh fruits and vegetables and\nmeats, along with rents and home-\nownership costs, coal, haircuts,\nsome drugs.\nThese offset declines for potatoes, tea, coffee, household appliances   and   furniture,   electricity,\nradios and toilet soaps.\nClothing prices remained virtually unchanged.\nThe consumer price index, based\non 1949 prices equalling 100, had\nbeen generally declining earlier in\n1955 but made two consectuive\nrises in March and April, dropping\nin-May. The one-tenth of a point\nrise in June is the smallest that\ncan be registered on the cost-of\nliving yardstick.\nProminent B. C.\nMen Aboard\nMissing Plane\n' VANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Low\nhanging cloud is hampering the\nsearch for a twin-engined plane\nmissing in British Columbia's rugged central interior with five men\naboard.\nA spokesman for Pacific Western Airlines announced Thursday\nthat dense clouds at the 1000-foot\nlevel had prevented six search\nplanes from flying over the area\nwhere the missing PWA plane disappeared Wednesday while on a\nflight from Kemano to Kitimat,\nsome 400 miles north of Vancouver,\nAboard the plane were three\nprominent British Columbians and\ntwo pilots.\nMissing are: Lt.-Col. MacGregor\nMacintosh, 58, Vancouver Industrial consultant and a former Conservative whip in the B.C. legislature.\nDavid Milton Owen, 42, deputy\nchairman of the Vancouver school\nboard and partner in the law firm\nheaded by Defence Minister\nCampney.\nAlbert Patrick Gorman, 43, assistant manager of theSaguenay-\nKitimat Company, a subsidiary of\nthe Aluminum Company of Can-\nnada.\nEdward Bell, pilot of the missing\nGrumann Mallard amphibiaii ahd\nwinner of a ROyal Humane Society\naward for heroism., in..IBtesirviJig\nfive months ago. He rescued an\nunconscious RCAF fighter pilot\nwho had crashed in the Fraser\nriver off the Sea island base here.\nKendall R. King, 23, co-pilot\nwho joined PWA only two weeks\nago after flying out of Montreal's\nDorval airport for TCA for more\nthan a year.\nHonor Grad Gets\n15-Year Sentence\nSPOKANE <AP) \u2014 Donald R.\nColvin, 30, Seattle, an honor graduate 'of the University of Washington law school and onetime\nclerk to Justice William A. Douglas of the U.S. Supreme Court,\nwas sentenced to 15 years, in prison Thursday.\nColvin had pleaded guilty last\nJune to four counts of grand larceny.\nThe brilliant young lawyer was\n_ accused of passing bad checks in\nthe city during a stay at the Spokane Club earlier this year. He\nsaid he had been drinking heavily\nat the time following domestic difficulties and the loss of a job in\nNew York as counsel for a railroad. He took a $9,000 a year job\nwith the railroad'last winter.\nFederal-Provincial\nCo-operation\nNeeded On Pipeline\nOTTAWA (CP)-Federal auth\norities are hopeful that both fed\neral and Ontario government financial aid will be provided to\nstart the proposed all-Canadian\nnatural gas pipeline in  1956.\nThey said Thursday that under\na new scheme now gaining increasing federal support, the Ontario government would be asked\nto step in by providing a subsidy\nor* putting up a crown company\nto lower the commercial price of\nthe gas shipped from Winnipeg to\nToronto.\nIf Ootario were willing to provide such aid, they said, the federal government would do its\nshare by eliminating duties and\nother federal charges on pipeline\nand other equipment used ln constructing the . Winnipeg-Toronto\nleg of the Alberta-eastern Canada\nline.\nCanadian Farm\nGroup Welcome\nTo Visit Soviet\nWASHINGTON (CP) \u2014 Vladimir Matskevich, acting Soviet\nminister of agriculture, said on\nThursday he would be \"very glad\"\nto see a Canadian farm delegation visit the Soviet Union.\nMatskevich, who heads the Soviet farm group now touring the\nUnited States, said he and his 12-\nman delegation are looking forward with \"great interest\" to\ntHeir.-vtsIt to Canada -Jat8F*tBiS\nmonth. Present plans call, for the\nRussians to fly to Ottawa from\nNew York Aug. 25.\nTwo Ontario Deaths\nBlamed On Heat\n* TORONTO (CP) \u2014 For a few\nwonderful minutes Thursday, the\nrain splashed down. People stood\nunder awnings and in doorways to\nwatch it fall and thought perhaps\nthe heat wave was over.\nBut In a few minutes the skies\ncleared again (and thermometers,\nwhich-had plummeted during the\ndownpour, started their relentless\nclimb.' \u25a0\nToday, say weather forecasters,\nthey'll be back again in the 90s\nwhere they've been off and on for\na month.\nOntario's second hottest summer on record has already cost\nfarmers uncounted millions in\nparched crops and pasture lands.\nThursday medical authorities expressed concern about its effect on\nhuman health, particularly among\nthe elderly.\nTwo deaths in Toronto, those of\na 71-year-old woman and a 76-\nyear-old man, were attributed directly to the 92-degree heat.\nmmiCITY   FROM   THE   \u00bbT0M\nIKE'S PUN    '\nSays Proposal\nUnworkable, Own\nPlan Realistic\nMOSCOW (AP) - Premier Nik\nolai Bulganin has dismissed as un\nworkable President Eisenhower's\nproposal for mutual air inspection\nof military establishments and exchange of,military blueprints.\nHe said Soviet proposals for disarmament and nuclear weapon\ncontrol, were more realistic.\nThe 1,500 deputies of the USSR's\nSupreme Soviet parliament laughed Thursday when Bulganin said\nEisenhower's proposal would be\nineffective because both countries\nhad vast areas in which anything\ncould be hidden. Bulganin spoke\nin the great hall of the Kremlin\nPalace, reporting to a special Sup\nreme Soviet session on the Geneva\n\"summitt\" conference.\nHe said all four powers\u2014Britain, the Soviet, Union and the\nUnited States \u2014 displayed at Geneva a desire to put an end to the\ncold war. But he said the arms\nrace still was going on, \"espeC'\nlally that of atomic weapons.\"\nAs Bulganin spoke, the Atomic\ngnergy Commission in Washington announced- the Russians had\nresumed testing nuclear weapons.\nBEFORE BEING 8HIPPED to the United Nations-sponsored\nInternational Conference on Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy In\nGeneva, a last-mlnute check Is given this model of a power station\nthe atomic products division of General Electric In the U.8. will\nbuild near Chicago. The proposed plant, largest all-nuolear station\nyet scheduled Is expected to be completed by 1960. Eileen Witt-\nmann, of Elmhurst, N.Y., who handles shipments of models to\nSwitzerland, Is making check,\nNew Reactor Five\nTimes as Strong\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canada's new\nexperimental atomic energy reactor at Chalk River, Ont., will be\nfive times as powerful as the\nfamed NRX atomic pile, it was\ndisclosed Thursday.\nThe $40,000,000 reactor, known\nby the code name NRU, will have\na power of 200,000 kilowatts when\nit goes into operation in June,\n1956, NRX, built in 1947 and now\nshut down for repairs after its\nsecond most serious, accident,\ndevelops 40,000 kilowatts.\nThe power at which NRU1 will\noperate was discloseitln a booUet\npublished- by Atbmie Energy of\nCanada Ltd., crown company in\ncharge of atomic research at\nChalk River.\nStrikes Highlight\nU.S. Labor Scene\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Strike\nactivity in the United States increasing and the trend may continue through the rest of the year.\nThe reason is this: Labor unions\nsay their members rate a bigger\nshare in the country's prosperity,\nwhile many employers say they\ncan't afford to meet the union's\ndemands.\nGovernment experts expressed\nbelief Thursday that this haggling\nover the fruits of the industria.1\nboom is likely to grow more intense in the remaining months of\n1955.\nThey feel that unions all' over\nthe country will be trying to\nmatch the early summer settlements in the auto and steel industries and that smaller and perhaps\nless prosperous employers may\nput up more resistance.\nSTRIKE AVERTED\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Last\nminute negotiations Thursday\naverted a strike by 400 employees\nof McLennan, McFeeley and Prior\nLtd., a retail, wholesale hardware\nfirm. Settlement terms were not\ndisclosed.\nWINTER  FAIR TEAMS\nCAMROSE, Alta. (CP) \u2014 Nine\ngirls and five boys make up the\nseven teams that will represent\nAlberta in 4-H Club competitions\nat the 1955 Toronto Royal Winter\nFair. They were chosen after pro'\nvincial elimination contests at the\nOlds School of Agriculture earlier\nthis week. The two-man teams are\nfor clothing, food, beef, dairy,\ngarden, swine, and grain.\nFIREMAN STARTS  FIRES\nZWEIBRUECKEN, Germany\n(Reuters) \u2014 Otto Palm, a 27-\nyear-old fireman . who started\nseven fires in the Rhineland-\nPalatinate area because he \"liked\nto ride on the new fire engine,\"\nwas sent to a mental asylum\nThursday.\nTO  RESUME 8EARCH\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The .RCAF\nsaid here Wednesday they will resume the search for a T-33 jet\ntrainer' that crashed into the\nmountains 120 miles north of here\nseven months ago.\nPETER K. BABMINDRA (rhjhtV-'director of a'l15,000-acre\nstate-owned Soviet collective farm, is shown husking corn with a\nspecial hook In Jefferson, Iowa, under the direction of former\nchampioti corn husker, Elmer Carlson. The Russians said that they\nwould try to adapt this special husking device for their own\nworkers at home. Bottom. Alexander Tutupnlkov, a member of\nthe visiting Russian farm delegation, gets off a real 'knee-slapped'\nto the delight of his audience of 4-H girls at Grand Junction, Iowa,\nHe laughingly requested that this photo be hidden from his wife,\nsince Soviet wives, like those elsewhere, do not always like to\nsee their husbands surrounded by pretty girls.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nReview of Columbia\nDevelopment Planned\nPORTLAND (AP) \u2014 Army Engineers said Thursday that Congress has authorized a complete\nreview of plans for development\nof power and wate? resources in\nthe Columbia Basin?\nExisting - development .plans,\ncalled-,.the Columbia River f'308\"\nteview Report, will, b,e, jreytewj\u00bb4\nwith the <aiift\"or determining what\nplans and projects with regard to\nflood control, navigation, hydroelectric power, and related water\nuses.\nThe review study Vgs authorized\nJuly.2.8 by the Senate public works\ncommittee.\nBrig.-Gen.  L.  H.  Foote,  North\nExpect Protest Over 3-\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014The Fed-\neral Power Commission Thursday\ngranted the Idaho Power Co.'s application to build three power\ndams which would flood the site\nof the proposed federal Hell's\nCanyon dam in the Snake River\nbetween Idaho and Oregon.\nThe commission unanimously\ngranted a 50-year licence to Jdaho\nPower for its three projects.\nThe announcement said construction of the Brownlee, Oxbow and low Hell's Canyon dams\nwill preclude a federally-constructed single high dam\" at the\nHell's Canyon site.\n^.The commission said that while\nthe federal Hell's Canyon dam\nwould produce a greater amount\nof pdwer than the three-dam plan,\nthe additional power would have\nPacific division engineer, said\nprojects now under construction\nor on which construction planning\nis under way will not be' delayed\nby the study.\nTh.e study is necessary in order\nto keep pace with the continued\nrapid growth of the;*^qrtnVest,\nFb'o^'safaV . . \u2022\"-\u25a0 \/\u2022 :.-;>V-'i.:''1\n\u25a0 Tlie Senate resolution will permit consideration of the part that\nsteam generation is expected to\nplay in supplementing- hydroelec\ntrie power in the* basin. The resolution also permits \"a review of\ndownstream effects of Canadian\nstorage potential, recently under\ninvestigation   by   the   Canadians.\nDam Project-\na benefit-cost ratio of about one-\nto-one and \"consequently the\npower 'features of the one-dam\nplan have no clear economics advantage over those of the three-\ndam plan.\"\nAt Portland, Ore., James T.\nMarr said thev Hell's Canyon Association \"undoubtedly\" will start\ncourt action to stop the Idaho\nPower Company from building\nthe three dams.\nMarr is chairman of theassocia-\ntion, which has ied the fight in\nfavor of a high federal dam in\nHell's Canyon.\nNelson: Thursday 6:18; Wednesday 6.30.\nIIIMHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nBallad of\nCecil Bennett\nSung at Party   \\\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Whatever Davy: Crobkett.did to the\nbears vmd the Indians was\nnothing to what Cecil Bennett\ndid to the Liberals and Conservative! \u2014 or so the ballad\n. went.\nSocial Creditors In British\nColumbia celebrated three\nyears In power Tuesday night,\nand In the Hotel Georgia they\nsang the praises of Premier\nBennett .to the tune of Davy\nCrockett.\nAnd after each of five\nrousing verses, they chorused:\n\"Ce-cll \u2014 Cecil Bennett,\n\"Carving out a new B.C.\"\nlllllllllll'llllllllllHIMIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllll\nOn Watch for\nInflation Signs\nBy HAROLD  MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The Canadian\neconomy is expanding at such a\npace that some federal officials\nnow are becoming concerned over\nthe possibility of another round\nof inflation gripping the country.\nAt the moment the situation ls\nnot considered serious. Federal\nauthorities said Thursday that although Britain, the United States\nand a number of other countries\nhave taken steps to curb inflationary trends, no similar action\nis being contemplated in Canada\nat the present time.\nHowever, Canadian policy-makers are watching the situation\nclosely. The economy has been\nexpanding;,at. an ever-increasing\npace-.fpliowing ^its recovery from\nthe 1954 recession.\nTo Honor\nEdith Covell\nJASPER, Alta. (CP)\u2014Returning\nto the practice of former years,\nthe annual memorial service for\nnurse Edith Cavell will be held\nSunday- near the foot of Angel\nglacier on the mountain which\nbears her name.\nSpecial buses will take participants from Jasper to the service\nwhich will be conducted by Rev.\nDonald Moore, vicar of St. Mary\nand St. George Anglican church\nin Jasper.\nPACKERS VOTE FOR\nSTRIKE ACTION\nKELOWNA (CP) \u2014 Packinghouse workers in the Okanagan\nvalley Thursday \u25a0 voted in favor\nof strike action to back up demands for a 10-cent-an-hour wage\nincrease. The demand was rejected earlier by a conciliation\nboard. Of 622 voting, 428 favored\nstrike action. Present wage scale\nis $1.05 an hour for men and 80\ncents for women.\nTupper Says Commission Held\nIn Contempt by Flash, Munro\nBy DAVID ROWNTREE\nCanadian   Press  Staff  Writer\nVANCOUVER   (CP) \u2014Reginald   H.  Tupper  said   Thursday\nhis royal commission into Vancouver's police force had  been\nheld  In contempt by the Toronto tabloid Flash and Its local\nreporter, Ray Munro.\n\"Although if may not do me or\nmy   commission   any   particular\ngood it is my responsibility to consider a fine or imprisonment\"\nMr. Tupper said he did not want\nto consider the matter lightly.\n\"I cannot promise an early decision.\"\nMT, Tupper earlier refused a\nsubmission -by T. G. Norris and\nG. S. Cummings, counsel ior police\nchief Walter Mulligan, tb make an\norder for committal against Munro, Louis Ruby and John Blunt\nPublications and editor Howard\nSomerville, alias Peter Dunsmuir.\n8TAND BY PRINCIPLES\nNell Fleischman, lawyer for\nMunro, said his client was prepared to accept any penalty and\nstand by his principles.\nHe said Munro resigned from\nFlash, effective next Monday,\npartly   because   of   an   editorial\nwhich \u25a0 appeared in the July 23\nissue after the commission hearings had started. It was following\nthe publication of this article that\nMr. Norris last week made the\ncontempt motion.\nMr. Fleischman said Munro had\nnot written articles for Flash since\nthe hearings began July 13.\nG. L. Murray, appearing for\nVancouver Magazine Service Ltd.,\ndistributors of Flash here, submitted Mr. Tupper had no jurisdiction to rule, on contempt other\nthan breaches committed in the\ncourtroom. He said an aj,ternative\nsubmission was that the Public\nInquiries Act was ultra vires of\nthe provincial, legislature.\nMr. Cummings said Mr. Norris\nhad \"done . nothing more than\ndraw the'contempt to your attention.\"\nHe said the commissioner had\nthe powers of a Supreme Court\njudge and could take steps \"on\nyour own discretion.\"\nBY-LINED 8TORY\nFlinging down a July 23 issue of\nFlash, Mr. Cummings said it contained a by-lined story by. Munro.\nThe commissioner, ih refusing\nMr. Norris's motion, upheld Mr.\nFleischman's submission that no\nwritten notice had been served to\nthe persons concerned, that it had\nnot been proved they were involved and that no charges were\nstated.\nWillis Chltty, Toronto lawyer\nfor ^ Flash, apologized by telegram and telephone to Mr. Tupper last week. Mr. Chltty promised that no other comment on\nthe hearings would appear In\nthe tabloid and Mr. Tupper said\nThursday his wdrd \"l\u00bb better\nthan any fine.\"\nEarlier Thursday, Det.-Sgt. Len\nCuthbert ended six days' of evidence and cross-examination and\nleft the witness box with this\nwarning from Mr. Tupper:\n\"I can't help feeling you do know\nand could tell me the names bf\nmen on your squad to whom you\ngave money. I want you to think\nIt over, and if I am correct in my\nassumption, I hope you will communicate with your counsel.\"\nMr. Tupper told the 54-year-old\nofficer who claimed he had shared\nbribes from bookmakers with\nMulligan his refusal to give the\nnames of other officers to whom\nhe gave money \"causes me some\nconcern.\"    .\nin Flames\nburning Wreckage, Underbrush Delay\nSearch For Bodies in Rugged Terrain\nFORT LEONARD WOOD, Mo. (AP) \u2014 An American\nAirlines plane, one wing sheared by fire and desperately-\ntrying for an emergency landing, carried 30 persons to a\nflaming death on this military reservation Thursday. There\nwere no survivors.\nDonald D. Carr-Harris, 37-year-old Canadian-Born in-'\ndustrial engineer, was among the dead. His wife, Ruth and\ntwo daughters, Lynn, 5, and Dale, 1, were vacationing with\nhis parents at London, Ont., \"\nwhere he-was bom.\nIntense heat from the burning\nwreckage and underbrush hampered . rescue workers in their\nsearch (or bodies hours after the\ncrash in woods not far from the\nreservation's housing area where\nsome 5,000 persons live.\nTwenty-six bodies were recovered. Rescue workers expressed\ndoubt that some of the remaining\nbodies of the smouldering two-\nashes of the smouldering two-\nengine plane.\nTWO CHILDREN\nThe 27 passengers and three\ncrew members included three\nwomen, two children and a Roman\nCatholic priest.\nWitnesses said veteran pilot\nCapt. Hugh Barron of Tulsa,\nOkla., fought desperately to\nglide his crippled plane onto\nthe military airstrip for an em-\nemergency landing even as one\nof the wings dropped off In\nflames.\nThe plane plummetted in flames\na   quarter-mile   from' where   the\nwing burned off.\nOver Lebanon,  30 miles away,\nsmoke   had   been   seen   pouring\nfrom one of the engines.\nThe heavily-wooded area where\nthe plane crashed was only one-\nhalf mile short of the post landing\nfield. But the terrain was so\nrugged it took bulldozers two\nhours to slash a temporary roa4\nto the scene.\nFIGHT FIRE\nBetween 150 and 200 soldiers\njoined in fighting the forest fire\nwhich spread over a one-third\nsquare mile after the crash.\nOnly minutes before the crash\nBarron had radioed the St. Louis\nmunicipal airport that one engine\nwas on fire. He would, he said,\ntry for an emergency landing at\nthe Ynilitary airstrip.\nEight- bodies were strewn in the'\nflaming wake of the plane. Many\nof the other bodies were so badly\ncharred that army officers said\nidentification would  be difficult.\nThe priest aboard was Rev.\nGeorge L. Krock, 47, a missionary\nand member of the Maryknoll order who recently returned from\nGuatemala where he was assigned\nin 1950.\nMAN CHARGED IN\nBANK HOLDUP\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Three\ncharges of armed robbery ' were\nlaid Thursday against a 38-year-\nold Winnipeg man when he was\narrested eight minutes after a gunman }>e^d. jip .a;.<|o\u00bb_nJwn; branch\nof the Canadiaip'iBanR,M 'ffljmi\nmei'ce and' fled with $4,776 in \u00ab'\nshopping bag.\nHe is Michael Mudray who j\/tas\narrested by two city constable^ not\nfar from the scene of the holdup,\nMudray was also charged with\nrobbing the Starland Theatre of\n$75 April 1' and $70 last Monday,.\nHe will appear in city magistrate's court Friday #to fate the\ncharges.\nPolice said they recovered alt\nthe stolen money. l\nTot Dies as\nTrailer Burns\nCRESTON (CP)\u2014Ten-month-\nold David Allan Berg died here\nWednesday when the trailer In\nwhich he was sleeping caught\nflrj. The child, son of Mr, and\nMrs. George Berg, Is believed to\nhave died of fumes. He was\nnot burned.\nSees Space Ships\nFaster Than Light\nBy   FRANK   CAREY\nCOPENHAGEN (AP) - Scientists'   were   told   Thursday   they  .\nmust not rule out the possibility\nof space ships someday whizzing\nMttoni tlie,\u00ab*talto *t -s^eed-i. tfioiiH;\nsands  of  times .faster than the,\nspeed of light.\nSince light travels about 186,000\nmiles a second, this concept would\nmean space ships speeding many\nmillions of miles a second.\nIn, an address dealing chiefly\nwith artificial satellites that would\nmaintain orgits around the earth.\nH. E. Canney Jr., of the American Bell Aircraft Co., told the\nInternational Astronautical Federation's sixth annual congress:\nJ; \"If space flight is really to mature, we must plan for it and not\nentirely rule out the possibility of\nspeed thousands of times faster\nthan light at some time in the\nvery distant, unforseeable future.\"\nBig 4 Meet Oct. 4\nBERLIN (AP) \u2014 Sovitet sources\nsaid Thursday the Big Four foreign ministers conference will\nopen Oct. 3 in Geneva. Officials\nhere said their superiors advised\nthem the first Monday in October\nhad been selected as 'the starting\ntime for the meeting agreed upon\nat the \"summit\" conference in\nJuly.\nDOLLAR   UNCHANGED\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 The Canadian dollar closed Thursday unchanged at a premium of 1 21-32\nper cent in terms of U.S. funds.\nPound stealing 5-32 lower at\n$2.78 13-16.\nRAILROAD EXPERT TO\nBE BURIED TODAY\nVERNON (CSP) \u2014 Funeral will\nbe held today for Williams Robert\nCarnac Morris, 92, former British\nrailroad expert who died In hospital Wednesday. Born in Madras,\nIndia, Mr. Morris helped plan the\nBritish tube transportation system.\nHe also served on the city council\nof London. He moved to Vernon\n42 years ago.\nMILLMAN LOSES HAND\nPENTICTON, B.C. (CP)-Mill-\nworker Harold Mohs lost his right\nband Thursday when a saw\nsevered his wrist at the Pine Fir\nLumber Co. mill.\nEyewitnesses said a piece of\nlumber became lodged in the saw\nand when Mohs attempted to clear\nit away his arm was drawn into\nthe whirling blade. He had been\nemployed at the mill a short\ntime.\nAnd In This Corner ...\nNEW BURN, England (AP) \u2014 Old-age pensioners living In a\nbungalow estate couldn't stand the noise of children at play nearby and had them birred. Then the silence bore down and the pensioners admitted their loneliness. Now the children are back.\nEASTON, Pa. (AP) \u2014 The Avona fire department had to close\nits carnival for the day Wednesday after fire destroyed six stands\nand damaged two others on the carnival grounds \u2014 just across the\nstreet from the Avona fire house.\nSANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) \u2014 Miss Ethel Wheeler, a forestry service lookout, swept her binoculars over Santa Ynez peak\nWednesday looking for a fire. Suddenly she froze.    -\nThe glasses focuased on a young couple dancing In the nude\naround a campfire. The man was playing a violin, Miss Wheeler\nsaid, while his companion made ballet-like leaps.\nMiss Wheeler telephoned a forest service patrolman, who hlk-,.\ned up and arrested the couple \u2014 for having an open fire In a prohibited area.\nNEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE, England (Reuters) \u2014 Twelve families\nliving in a new housing area near here want the name of their street\nchanged.\nThe name: Loveless gardens.\nOne woman said: \"The number of children about is proof that\nthe place is wrongly named.\"\n'But the name is likely to stay, because,-a local government\nspokesman said, every street on the estate was named after a famous\nman in the British Labor government. \"George Loveless was one of\nthe greatest of them all,\" the spokesman added.\n ;..'\u25a0\u25a0-.. ' . ... . ;.'   \\ ' \u25a0'\u25a0\"y \u25a0' \\ \"\n'\u2022.ytr\\<pj<%\n\u25a0^i)y \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0t>m*t-' \u25a0 \"        ~   \u25a0 y'm^gffap\n4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUGUST, 5, 1955\nTONIGHT-SATURDAY \u2014 Compleffe Shows 7:00-9:05\nThis Is The Conquest Ol Africa In UNIMaSCOPE\nIn Ih. Won... al STEREOPHONIC SOUND\n\u2022k\u00bb kj Df 1UXI in. 20lh CENrURV-FOX .,_\u201e!_,\nTYRONE SUSAN       RICHARD\nPOWER- HAYWARDEGAN\nc\/m\ni funis\nrtiTEis\nwmii\nI\nSTARLIGHT\nDrive-In Theatre\nTONIGHT  and  SATURDAY\nI Cartoon \u2014 8:45 p.m.\nFeature \u2014 8:32 p.m,\nj \"WHITE\n\\       FEATHER\"\n\\\\ CINEMASCOPE\nI   Robert Wagner, John  Lund,\nj Debra Paaet\n'      DOOR PRIZES TONIGHT      J\nAUTO VUE\nl DRIVE-IN\n'] TRAIL, B.C.\nTONIGHT\n\\ and  SATURDAY\nJ    8how Time Approx. 8:40 p.m.\n(\"Three Coins in a Fountain\"\n' IN  CINEMASCOPE\n3JMfton Webb, Dorothy Magulre,\nJeane Peters, Louise Jordan.\n2  Cartoons,  Travelogue\nCalgary Lawn\nBowling Team\nHere for Game\nThe Army, Navy and Air Force\nVeterans Lawn Bowling Club of\n> Calgary arrived in Nelson Thursday and wiH play Nelson  teams\n,: at Lakeside \u00a3ark Bowling greens\n: Sunday.\nThe   teams   comprised   of   two\nj men's and one women's team will\nplay exhibition games with mem-\n; bers of the Nelson  club  Sunday\nevening.\n\u2022; j Dan Underwood has selected\n; the Nelson teams with the follow-\nj ing being selected to participate-\n? Gordon Strong, Bob Pickering,\nj Jake Penwell, Norman Bradley,\nj Charlie Rushby, Frank Holt and\n\u25a0 = Dan Underwood. It was expected\n; Aid. Stan Smith would be on\nj. hand, but to fill his\" position\n' Underwood haa selected Walter\ni Wait.\nPlaying on the women's team\n\u00ab will be Mrs. Rushby, Mrs. Priest-\n\u25a0 ley, Mrs. Kelly Ozelle and A. N\n:_0ther.\nAccommodations have been\nmade for the visiting teams and it\nfs hoped the weather man will\nsmile on the first occasion of this\nkind at Lakeside Park.\nThe greens have had a grooming of fertilizer, mowing and\nrolling this past week by greens-\nkeeper Frank Holt. They are'\npublic greens andj the people of\nNelson young and old are getting\na great deal of entertainment from\ntheir use.\nMECHANICAL  MANIAC .\nIPSWICH. England (CP) \u2014\nCharlie, a six-foot magnetic robot,\nwent berserk at an exhibition in\nthis Suffolk town. The Robot began winking and talking gibberish\nafter a wire had short-circuited\nthe maze of leads in his \"brain.\"\nPlanning\na\nWedding,?\nIt will be as sirhple as\nABC if you can refer to\nthe latest issue of\n\"MODERN BRIDE\"\n\"Brides to Be\" can obtain\na free copy of this magazine\n\u25a0 at our studio without obligation.\nWe would also be pleased to discuss a complete\nportrait and candid coverage of your wedding.\n460 Ward St.        Nelson\nPhone 1552\nCASTLEGAR. B.C\nTONIGHT\nAND   SATURDAY\nGates Open 8:30 p.m.\nLast Complete Show 9 p.m.\nJames Stewart, Jean Hagen\nin\n\"Carbine Williams\"\nA gun got him into prison\u2014\nA gab got him out.\nPLUS\n\"Hurricane Smith\"\nTechnicolor\nYvonne De Carlo, John Ireland\nMan against shark! Battling the\ntigers of the deep to save the\nbeautiful princess.\nJ. Ranetta of\nTrail Courtenay's\nNew Postmaster\nTRAIL. B.C. (CP) \u2014 Joe Ranetta, assistant postmaster at Trail\nsince 1935, has been named postmaster at Courtenay on Vancouver island. He will take over his\nnew post Aug. 15.\nA native of Rossland, B.C.. Mr.\nRanetta joined the Trail post office in 1930.\nAn active community leader, he\nserved Ss an alderman on Trail's\ncity council from 1948 to 1951.-A\ncharter member of the Kiwanis\nClub, he was president in 1954. He\nhas served as a director of the\nTrail District Welfare Society and\nTrail District Recreational Projects Society.\nFormerly Here,\nW. C. Griffin Dies\nWilliam C. Griffin, former office employee of trucking firms\nhere, has died in Medicine Hat at\nthe age of about 47 years. He lived\nNelson for eight years.\nAfter working for the Hudson's\nBay Company he joined the staff\nof Williams Transfer and after\nabout'a year moved to Arrow Van\nLines.\nA trip to England, his native\ncountry, came during Mr. Griffin's years in Nelson.\nUpon his return, *he rejoined\nArrow Van Lines, but a year\nlater was engaged by Truck Terminus as book-keeper and office\nmanager. He was with them for\nabout two years.\nLast Fall he moved to Medicine\nHat to work for Robertson's Storage and Warehousing.\n, Besides his wife, he is survived\nby a son, Michael in Medicine Hat\nand his mother in England.\nMore Togrists Seek More Information ...\nTourist Business Is Year-Round\nMelting Pot of Nationalities\nScholarships To\nNelson Students\nNelson High School students,\nI Mary McRae and Shawn Harold\ni received word Thursday that they\n\\ were winners of the $4f)0 Pacific\nBrewers' Agents scholarships presented annually to 10 junior and\nsenior matriculation students\nthroughout the province.\nBoth grade 12 students at Nelson\nHigh School last year, the girls\nwere active in extra-curricular\nactivities. Miss McRae with an 84.4\nper cent average, was a member of\nthe school cabinet and Miss\nHarold, with an 82 per cent average, editor of the school paper and\npresident of House B.\nDaughter of Mr. and Mrs. K. D\nMcRae, Mary was born in Revelstoke and came to Nelson in grade\n10. Shawn is the daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. W. G. Harold and attended Hume, Junior High and Senior\nHigh schools in Nelson.\nBoth girls intend to continue\nat UBC in the fall where Mary\nwill enter the university school of\nnursing and Shawn will study for\na bachelor of arts degree, and a\nteacher's training degree.\nThe Summer months have turned Nelson Chamber .of\nCommerce into a bee hive of information.\nIn their tiny Ward Street office, officials are passing\n'dozens of maps and pamphlets over the counter, summarizing road conditions, listing scenic Nelson views and dropping hints on the Kootenay's best fishing holes to as many\nas six and eight tourists at a time in a manner that tends\nto remind one of the hum in a bee hive when the honey's\nbrought in.\nBut it's an indication that the tourist business is up\nthis year, Chamber of Commerce Secretary J. A. Barcken\ndeclares.\nPORTRAIT IN OILS of the late Right\nReverend Frederick Patrick Clark, third Bishop\nof Kootenay, Is admired by Mrs. Clark'to whom\nthe painting was presented by a group of friends.\nThe artist,  Alec J. Garner of  Procter, from a\nsmalt color photograph recreated almost life-\nsize on glowing canvas the splendid picture of\nHis Lordship In his robes. The portrait, 29 by 36\nInches framed, hangs In the Clark home at 814\nHendryx Street\u2014Vogue photo.\nFour Emerald Scouts Received\nQueen Scout Badges at Kelson\nMRS. A. E. KEFFER\nBURIED AT NELSON\nFuneral services for Mrs. Sarah\nLouise Keffer, a Nelson resident\nfor the past five years, were held\nfrom St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral\nThursday. Very Rev. T. L. Leadbeater officiated.\nTwo hymns, \"For Ever With the\nLord\" and \"Abide With Me,\" were\nsung\nPallbearers were Mrs. Keffer's\nfour sons. Roy, Cecil. Allan and\nAlfred. Interment was in Nelson\nMemorial Park.\nMrs. Keffer was born at Maple,\nOntario. September 4, 1871. With\nber husband, the late Alfred Ed-\nmond, she moved to the Arrow\nLakes in 1908.\nThe Weather\nNELSON    ,     40 83\nMontreal       60 84\nToronto          78 87\nWinnipeg       59 78\nRegina    45 72\nCalgary            43 70\nPenticton        47 80\nVancouver      52 71\nVictoria     51 66\nF\nRIENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\n\"You are now prepared as good\ncitizens and scouts with the foundation you have received from your\nparents and leaders, to take your\nplace in the world as young men,*'\nDistrict Boy Scout commissioner,\nDon Ure told four members of the\nfirst Emerald Scout troop as they\nreceived queen scout badges at\nthe Nelson Scout Hall Thursday\nnight.\nThe highest insignia of the Boy\nScout organization, the badges*\nwere presented to the.boys by\nthe commissioner, president of the\nNelson Boy Scout Association, J.\nJ. McEwen; scout leader, Bob Per-\ncival and Emerald leader, John\nLangley.\nThe boys, Bob Cheneweth,\nCharles (Buddy) MacDonald,'\nMichael Ekins and Terry Gordon\nstood before their leaders as they\nwere individually presented with\nqueen scout scrolls from Governor\nGeneral Vincent Massey, Chief\nScout of Canada.\nIn adressing the boys, Mr.\nMcEwen paid tribute to their\nleaders and spoke on the forthcoming world scout jamboree\nwhich the boys will attend soon.\n\"The queen scout badge is the\ngoal of every scout.\" he said, \"And\nwe are all more than proud of\nyou.\"\n\"Your chief reason for joining\nscouts was that you believed in\nthe foundation on which it is\nbuil't.\" commissioner Ure said, as\nthe boys stood before the three\ncandles which represent the\nparts of the scouts promise. It\nwas a serious step because it initialed the pattern which you were\nto follow to carry you to success.\"\nTRAIL BAND\nHERE TONIGHT\nFire Marshal Sees\nProprietors of\nOld City Buildings\nProvincial  Fire Marshal W\nWalker and his assistant were in\nNelson   Wednesday   to   interview\nproprietors   of    buildings   which\nhave    been   condemned   as   fire.\nhazards  and  ordered demolished, j\nlor\nSupermarket\nA band that has participated int\nmany   Nelso*    events   over   the |\nyears   will   give   a   concert  here' the Madden Hotel, M. J. Major of\ntonight. Nelson   Auto   Wrecking   premises\nTrail Maple Leaf Band, which I at 613 Vernon Street and trustees\nannually appears at the West | of the IOOF.Hall at the corner of\nKootenay Exhibition and- lasti Kootenay and Baker Streets. He\nmonth was one of several bands .also discussed City hall demolition\nin    the    Mid-Summer    Bonspiel! orders with Mayor Joseph Kary.\nFirst step toward construction\nof Canadian Safeway Ltd, supermarket in Fairview is under way.\nTop soil ls being stripped from\nthe building site and stockpiled\nfor the city at the gravel pit in\nupper Fairview.\nGravel fill will be taken from\nHe met with James Madden ofjthe Pjt to the site as jt is clear'\ned. Contractors for the clearing\njob are W. J. Grant    and   Louis\nparade, will present a musical i\nprogram at the Civic Arena, A\ndance will  follow.\nA wide variety of selections will\ninclude marches, popular music.\novertures and so on.\nNelson -Fire Department and\nproprietors of buildings would\nmake no comment. Fire Chief E.\nS. Owens is out of town.\nBaseball Standings\nBy The  Canadian   Press\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nChicago\nCleveland\nNew York\nBoston\nDetroit\nKansas City\nWashington\nBaltimore\nW L Pet.\nR3 41 .606\n64 42 .604\n63 43 .594\n62 44 .585\n57 4R .543\n44 63 .411\n36 69 .343\n33 72 .314\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nW    L Pet.\n74   33 .692\n58   48 .547\n57   51 .528\n54   58 .482\n53   58 .477\n50   57 .467\n46   57 .447\n40   70 .364\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nW     L     Pet.\n73\n72\nBrooklyn\nMilwaukee\nNew York '.\nPhiladelphia\nChicago\nCincinnati\nSt. Louis\nPittsburrh\nPersonal Loans\nFor Bill*, Fuel,  Repairs, Cars,\nor any good  reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. Ltd.\nSuite 212, Medical Arts Bldg.\nPHONE   1786\nSeattle\nSan  Diego\nHollywood\nPortland\nL. Angeles\nSacramento\nOakland\nSan Fr'isco\n52\n55\n57\n59\n64\n70\n71\n71\n.584\n.567\n.544\n.508\n.402\n.440\n.432\n.432\n1\n2\n6'-.\n20 M.\n27 >A\n30'A\nGbl\n1514\n17Vi\n2214\n23\n24\n26\n35 VJ\nGB\n2\n5\n9'A.\n'11V4\n1.8\n19\n19\nRichardson\nGoes To Yanks\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Bobby\nRichardson. 19. second-baseman\nwith Denver of the American Association, has been purchased by\nNew York Yankees and will report. Ipntj^JI\nto the club immediately. I\nPrior to his purchase he was\nhitting .302 for Denver and leading j\nthe association in tripples with 10.\nand runs with 90.\nChurches Have\nJoint Services\nMaglio,   who   recently   formed\npartnership. Bulldozer anc? trucks\nare under hire for the clearing and\nthe soil goes to the city    in\nchange for gravel.\nActual construction is expected\nto get under way in the Fall, although tenders for construction\nare still to be called.\nThe building on Anderson\nStreet, between First and Pine\nStreets, formerly owned by John\nE. Marqiiis, will cover an area 100\nby 125 feet on a 20-lot area. A\nblacktopped parking lot will accommodate more than 140 cars.\nNew Street Lioht\nCables Being Laid\nCity Electrical Department Is\nlaying underground cable for\nnew modern street Unfits In - the\n600 block of Vernon Street.\nThe cable Is being laid In the\nboulevards In the centre of the\nstreet.\nHowever Electrical Superintendent A. C. VanSacker said\nThursday night actual Installation of the street lights Is being\nheld up as some equipment has\nnot yet arrived.\nDuring the month of August\nthe joint worship service of the\nPresbyterians and ' Baptists will\nwith Rev. C. Bray in\ncharge. Mr. Bray has taken an extended trip to England and the\nContinent this Summer and he\nwill bring this wealth of experience with his sermons.\nSunday will see Rev. Mr. McBride, Director of Home Missions\nof the Presbyterian Churches of\nB. C, as guest minister.\nThe services will alternate be-\ntwesn the Presbyterian church\nand the Baptist church, with the\nmorning congregation meeting in\nthe Presbyterian church and the\nevening in the Baptist.\nBIG  BUMP\nDUNGANNON,   Northern    Ireland (CP- \u2014 The bottom fell out\nH.W.Brooks\n91 Slocan Dies\nHenry William Brooks, a Slocan\nValley resident for many years,\ndied at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital Wednesday night. He was\n82.\nMr. Brooks was born in Endon,\nStaffordshire, England March 15.\n1873. and came to Canada in 1912.\nHe has lived in B.C. since 1915.\nHe was living at Passmore at the\ntime of his death.\nHe is survived by a brother.\nArthur, in Calgary.\nAT HOME ABROAD\nLONDON    (CP)   \u2014\nLondon\nof the market at an auction sale I newspaper    reported    a    Canada\nhere. \"Going, going . . .\" chanted I gooSe had been bred in Regent's\nthe auctioneer \u2014 and his assistant j Park zoo for the first time. Zoo\nCable Is being laid so all will land 50 bidders plunged eight feet | officials corrected the report. \"It\nbe  ready for Installation when , into  the  cellar as the floor col-j has happened before, and it will\nthe equipment arrives. | lapsed. | happen   again,\"   they   said.\nThis season,, up to the end of\nJuly, 4700 tourists have sought\ninformation at the Chamber. Last\nyear for the same period 4251 had\npassed through. Already in the\nfirst four days of August at least\n268 have stopped.\n\"At times it gets so busy they\nget away without signing,\" assistant secretary, Mrs. Elsie Christiansen, who hands out the information from nine to six each day,\nsaid Friday. At least one member\nof each party is asked to sign the\nregister which lies open on the\ncounter with an ink-filled pen\nhandy.\nSome sort of record was set one\nafternoon in June after floodS\nwashed out highway bridges, Mr.\nBracken feels. He recalled that 79\ntourists packed the office seeking\nhighway information.\nIf the Chamber Is an informa.\ntion  bureau, It Is also a  ye.f\nround melting pot of different\nnationalities. There's no end to\nthe variety of tourists who wan\nder In Its doors.\nTwo professors  from the Uni\nversity of Netherlands left their\nsignatures    when    they    passed\nthrough   in  June,   and  a  couple\nfrom   Saudi  Arabia  also  signed\nThere   was   another   from   South\nAfrica, another couple from Switzerland. Norway and many from\nEngland.\nMingled with their names were\nthose of prairie neighbors, Alberta\nand Saskatchewan, a couple from\nNewfoundland, and many Ameri\ncan and  B.C.  signatures. .\n\".,. and some of the questions\nthey ask,\" Mrs. Christiansen\nlaughed. \"One couple wanted to\nknow where the museum was.\nThey thought Nelson was old\nenough  for one.\"\nThey have a wealth of compliments for the Kootenay and Nelson too, she added. In the remark\ncolumn beside their signatures,\nmost Jot down \"thank you\" or\n\"wonderful   scenery.\"\nWithin 15 minutes Friday afternoon live different parties, about\n15 tourists, filled the office, waiting their turn to enquire about\nroad conditions, accommodation,\nwhere, they could buy souvenirs\nand  fish.\nOFFER   TOURS ... ,\nDewayne Russel and hljptamlly\nof Dayton, Ohio, 'spoke io Mrs.\nChristiansen and she bro^ht but\na city map and circled thftCham-\nber Of Commerce buildfjfg, saying, \"This is where you ar^\" Then\nshe went on circling taints ol\ninterest in Nelson: the Cottonwood Falls fish hatchery. Civic\nCentre, City tourist park, Gyro\nPark, Lakeside Park, Kootenay\nForest Produces that offers tour-|\nists an hour's tour of its plants,\nPowell match block factory and\nthe CPE diesel shops which also\nofier tours.\n\"Your children will like Lakeside Park,\" she added.\nFor A. G. Bumpton of Seattle,\nMrs. Christiansen drew out a map\nof B. C. and outlined the best\nhighway route as he cheerfully\nadmitted \"I blew out two tires\non the prairies.\"\nRAVE AT SCENERY\nThe two professors from Nni-\nversity of the Netherlands raved\nabout the scenic Kootenays and\nreceived pamphlets on every Canadian    province    and    American\nstate.\n\"Many tourist comment on the\nextent of our travel informatioii,\"\nMrs. Christiansen said. \"They often suggest that more Canadian\ncentres should have one.\"\nMrs. Christiansen recalled some\nof the comments about the Kootenays. \"One couple from the\nStates commented, 'We've been to\nBanff to see the much publicised\nscenery there, but we can see lt\nall right here in the Kootenays.' '\"\nOFTEN HEARD\n\"I just wanted to thank you 'for\nyour help in accommodating me,\"\nis an often heard refrain at the\nbureau as tourists who have been '\ndirected to Nelson Tourist Park or\nhotels and auto courts return to\nexpress their pleasure. \"I've been\nin many tourist parks, among\nthem the Jasper National Park,\nbut I've never been more comfortable than I was in the Nelson\nTourist Park,\" one tourist from\nthe southern States commented.\nAssisting Mr. Bracken and Mrs.\nChristiansen during the tourist\nseason is C. H. Stark, who keeps\nthe information handy for the\ntourists from 6 p.m. to 9:30 each\nnight.\nIt Tugged But to No Avail\nPARK SERVICE\nBOAT SECURED\nA seaworthy rowboat is moored\nat the float at Lakeside Park, and\nthe other, one that had seen many\nreasons and better days was\nhauled away Wednesday. The\nlatest craft is doing temporary\nduty prior to the city's purchasing\nan aluminum boat.\nPHONE\n593\nFor\nExpert\nElectrical\nand\nMechanical\nInstallations\nIndustrial Wiring\nMines and Sawmills\nMotor Rewinding\nNew and Used\nSEE\nBennetts\nLtd.\n324 Vernon St.\nPhone 593\nKleenburn . \u2022 .\nWestern Monarch\nGait \u2014 Greenhlll\nCanmore Briquettes\nPHONE 889\nCoal\nTowleR\nFuel & Transfer\nTHOUGH IT TUGGED and It strained and\niti old steam engines wheezed like a pro-historic\nmonitsr blowing ifeam from Its nostrils, the\nsternwheeler 8.8. Moyie couldn't pull the hull of\nthe old Nasookin off the fecks three miles East of\nNelson. It made a special trip from Procter to\ntry, but had to cast off Its tow ropes and return\nwithout success. The old hull Is firmly lodged\nand It is believed only high water will move It.\nOwner Earl Cutler of Nelson felt It would be of\nmore value and more accessible floating.\n\u2014Dally News photo.\nSPECIALS THIS WEEK\nat Collinson's\nElectric KITCHEN CLOCKS\nHere's your chance to get an attractive electric clock for\nyour kitchen at these $$ saving prices.\nReg. $7.45. (3 only) Special $5.50\nReg. $10.95. (7 only).      Special $7.25\nIN OUR DISPLAY WINDOW\nA   lovely   selection   of   Summer   Jewellery which we are\nclearing to make room for our Fall selection.\nThis Jewellery Is Available at\nLOW CLEARANCE PRICES\nCollinson's Jewellery\nNELSON'S DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\nPhone 120 561 Baker St.\n ^mwmw .    ifffpi\n..'.''\u25a0'. I' ;.     ..\n'\u2022        -,, '  .-1.   \u25a0,-\u25a0\u25a0\n<3o53;\nFate of CPR's line\nInto Kaslo Unsettled\nNo decision 'has yet been made\non the fate of the Canadian Pacific Railway's .line between New\nDenver and Kaslo, extensively\nbattered by swollen creek waters\nFriday and Saturday\nStephen McNally In Tech. Western\n\"THE MAN FROM\nBITTER RIDGE\"\nSnd Hit \u2014 Marlon Brando\n\"THE MEN\"\nCOMING   AUG.   10-13\nClark Gatile\n\"SOLDIER OF FORTUNE\"\nTrail\nNEW  ADDRESS\nTrail Machine Works\n2045 Columbia  Ave.        Phone  13\nMotor Rebuilding\nTruck Repairs, Welding\nStandard Oil Products\nTIT,\n_a_____&\n1\n\"DAVY   UriOCKETT\"\nFess Parker \u2014 Buddy Ebsen\nIn Color\nHillcrest Motors Ltd.\nTrail's Car Accessory House\nFirestone Home and Auto Supply\nRadiator Specialists\n2795 Highway Drive \u2014Glenmerry\nPHONE 1555\nin late June following a severe\nlightning storm general in Southeastern B .(_.\u25a0\n\"The damage was very' great,\"\nsaid G. L. Phillips, CPR divisional\nengineer at Nelson Thursday.\n\"Miles and miles of track were\nwashed out\u2014they're hanging in\nthe air.\"\nEver since the washouts a work\ntrain has been engaged in repairing tracks,'but a great deal remains to be done.\nMr. Phillips was commenting on\nan editorial statement in the Arrow Lakes NewSj weekly paper\npublished'at Nakusp, which stated\nThursday that there exists a threat\nof the CPR pulling out its damaged line between Rosebery and\nKaslo.\n\"It must not be allowed to happen,\" the Arrow Lakes News editorial asserted. \"There are already too many discouraging features industry has , to face. This\nblow would no doubt spell the\ndoom of many of our industries,\nwhich today depend on the railway for their existence.\"\nTwo freight trains per week\ntravelled over the line, Mr. Phillips said.\nAlf's Auto Body Clinic\nTrail's Auto Body Service\n1917 Fourth  Ave.    -    Phone  1721\nTRAIL, B.C,\nTRAIL CYCLE ond\nHARDWARE LTD.\n1703 Second Ave. Phone 828\nTRAIL, B.C.\nBUYING A CAR?\nCee us about low cost auto finance\nCURRIER'S\nALL-RISK INSURANCE\nAGENCIES\nTrail, B.C. Phone 1589\nIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllll\nHAZLEWOOD DRUGS LTD.\nPrescriptions,\nStationery, Toiletries,   Books\n943 Spokane St.   Phone 11\nTrail, B.C.\nniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiimiiiii\nOIL HEAT\nC J. MILES\n.Jmblng,   Heating,   Sheet   Metal\nWork\n1274 Bay Ave.      Phone 30\nTrail, B.C.\nKAREN MOLLER\nMARION  SCHEWE\nROSE FURNISHING CO.\n1319 BAY AVE.      TRAIL, B.C,\nDealers in Draperies, Slip Covers,\nUpholstering,  Awnings,  Venetian\nBlinds and Furniture.\nAll-Custom Work or Factory Job\nPARSLOW'S\nGUNSMITHING\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING  SUPPLIES\n1561 .Bay Ave. Phone 1998\nTRAIL, B.C.\nMITCHELL\nTRANSFER AND FUEL LTD.\nBooker Furnaces Sales and Service\nTrail, 1252 Bay Ave. Phone 52, 1321\nCastlegar, Box 568, Phone 3551\nFAY MILLER\nCOMPETING for title of\nqueen of the Fruitvale Fall Fair,\nto be held September 5, are the\nthree lovely girls above, Karen\nMoller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nNiels Moller; Marlon Schewe,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto\nSchewe, and Fay Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Miller.\nWinner will succeed 1954 queen'\nLois Anderson,\nMAPLE LEAF BAND\nCONCERT\nTONIGHT\nCIVIC CENTRE ARENA \u2014 8 P.M.\nDANCE\nTRAIL SERENADERS\n10:00 p.m. to 1 a.m.\nADMISSION\nCONCERT \u2014 Adults 60c; Children 25e\nDANCE \u2014 75c Pe'r Person\nCombination Ticket \u2014 Dance and Concert 76c\nFREE PARKING IN BALL GROUNDS\nTickets May Be Purchased at ,the Back Doors\nLast-Minute Rush ..\nBest Tax Receipt Year\nIn Kimberley History\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Kimberley taxpayers, proverbially slow ln paying their yearly Indemnity, came\nthrough in the last week before\nthe penalty deadline to make 1955\nthe best fax receipt year in the\ncity's history. A total of $199,363\nor 84 per cent of the total due was\npaid before the deadline.\nTrades licence payments for the\nsecond quarter of the year were\n163, for $3824, bringing the total\nto date for the year to $9890. Dog\nlicences have brought in $1800\ncompared with $2000 last year.\nApproved for payment were\nwarrants for $11,911, of which\n$8600 was payroll, and for $45,490,\nmain items on which were $25,000\nto the school district, $7000 to\ncivic parks commission, $8000 to\nlocal improvement account, and\n52000 to the Bank of Montreal.\nBRIDGE  DELAY\nDelay by the Department of\nPublic Works in sending material\nfor construction of a wider bridge\nover the Mark Creek at Wallinger\nAvenue has led to postponement\nof the work until the tourist\ntraffic lessens in September. All\nmaterials have now arrived and\nhave been stored.\nThere was only one fire in July,\n3) Million Sign\nA-Bomb Petition\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014More than 31,-\n000,000 signatures have been obtained in Japan to petitions to ban\natomic and hydrogen bombs. The\ndrive was launched soon after\nJapanese fishermen were burned\nby fall-out from a hydrogen bomb\ntest at Bikini in March, 1954. The\ncampaign ends Friday, 10th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima.\nMenon Home to\nSee Nehru\nNEW DELHI (Reuters)\u2014V. K.\nKrTshnan Menon, India's roving\ndiplomat, returned home Thursday to report to- Prime Minister\nNehru on the improving atmosphere in East-West relations.\nMenon flew in from Geneva,\nwhere this week he met the chief\ndelegates in the ambassadorial\ntalks between the United States\nand Communist China.\nCanada Protests\nTo Bulgaria\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Canada has associated herself with the British\nprotest to Communist Bulgaria\nover the shooting down of an Israeli airliner by Bulgarian planes.\nFifty-eight passengers and crew\nmembers, including four Canadians, were killed in the crash.\nThe external affairs department\nsaid Thursday Canada made no\nseparate protest to Bulgaria but\nassociated herself with Britain's\nNo claim for compensation was\nregistered but a spokesman said\nassessing compensation would take\nsome time.\nRot, Mould Spoil\nFraser Raspberries\nABBOTSFORD (CP) \u2014 Fraser\nValleys raspberry tonnage may be\noff as much as 25 per cent as a\nresult of rot and mould damage\ncaused by wet weather, fruit men\nreport following a disastrous\nweekend for growers.\nPacker estimates of loss in the\nvalley crop, estimated earlier at\na 6,000 ton figure for this year,\nrange from 15 to 26 per cent. Packers are reporting poor quality\nfruit received to date.\na i'. bush,, fire which paused ip\ndamage. Six applications for membership, in the volunteer'fire department have been accepted.\nbringing membership to 40 volunteers, one-paid driver and the tire\nchief. Fire Chief Dicken will\nattend the annual college at\nPowell River in* August.\nHOUSING COMPLAINT\nComplaint of poor service given\nby Central Mortgage and Housing to persons wishing to buy lots\non the new city subdivision will\nbe made by the City of Kimberley. Although up for sale, lots\nhave never been advertised, and\nto purchase them, it is necessary\nto go to the Cranbrook office of\nCentral Mortgage.\nTraffic conditions In city are\ngreatly improved, only one minor\naccident being recorded for July\nThere were 21 court convictions\nunder municipal bylaws, and four\nothers. Fines collected totalled\n$109, One case was dismissed.\nFines payable to the municipality\ntotalled $204, and $24 costs.\nA letter from the Labor Relation! Board'stated reasons for\nrefusal of certification for Local\n935, ai bargaining agent for\nMunicipal  Employees, were:\n1. Application wat made after\na set date.\n2. Less than a majority of em\nployces are members of the\napplying union.\nB.C. Telephone Company re\nported reclassification of Kimberley area had been approved\nand increased rates \"will go into\neffect in August.\nA $50 grant was made to the\nKimberley Ski Club.\nRefusal of property owners on\nThird and Seventh Avenues, McDougall Townsite, to permit boulevard trees to be cut has forced the\ncity to seek other means of aiding the traffic flow, especially\ncrowded In winter. Suggested are\nre-routing of the city service bus\nand the establishment of one-way\nstreets.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5,19SS \u2014 3.\nNEPAL COMING\nTOURIST SPOT,\nVISITOR SAYS\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Mrs. MacLeod Wylie, 73-year-old globetrotting grandmothef, broke both\nankles in Africa, dined with Ne-\npalese rulers and visited Gurkha\ntroop garrisons In Malaya.\nMother of Charles G. Wylie. organizing secretary of the first successful ascent of Mt. Everest, she\npaid a brief visit here before continuing on to Ontario en route to\nher London, England, home.\n\"I don't think some people have\nquite the right idea of the 1952\nEverest expedition,\" she said. \"It\nwas different from others. Col.\nHunt, the leader, is a deeply religious man, and for his climb he\nselected climbers who were efficient and selfless men. They carried Bibles and held their Sunday\nservices.\"\nIN DEBT AT FIRST\nThe expedition was in debt\nwhen it left England, but the film\nalone yielded enough to pay the\ndebt and provide a fund for other\nclimbers of the Himalayas.\nWhile on her world tour Mrs\nWylie visited Kenya, India, Malaya and Hong Kong. In Kenya she\nbroke both ankles in a sidewalk\naccident.\nIn  Bombay,   with   Its  4.000.000\npopulation, there are 400,000 dis\nplaced    persons    sleeping on the'\npavement every night, she said.\nShe dined with the late king of\nNepal and his sister and her hus\nbanw, exiled ln Bangalore. She\nforsees Nepal as the tourist spot\nof the future.\nCatncel Kelowna,\nCoast Marathon\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Conflicting dates have forced the cancel-\nlennell Predicts End Of Ferry\nService When Cutoff Finished\nWEST SUMMERLAND, B. C\u2014\n(CP)\u2014More than 450 persons attended a Social* Credit birthday\n; party in West Summerland at\nwhich Premier Bennett was guest\nspeaker.\nPremier Bennett promised the\nbridge across Okanagan Lake at\nKelowna would be built as one of\nsix bridges, \"which will cost more\nand be larger than all bridges\nbuilt by provincial governments\nsince Confederation.\"\nHe predicted five east and west\nhighways through B. C. and a\ncutoff between Creston and Salmo\nwould be constructed, making the\npresent ferry unnecessary.\nMr. Bennett said that \"not one\ndollar of the $40,000,000 which has\ngone into roads has been borrowed.\"\n\"Big money is coming to B. C.\nfrom all over the world,\" he said\nciting the new German steel mill\nat Port Moody.\nTHIS IS LIVING ...\nA Modern Bathroom\nMakes life more pleasant and housework easier.\nYour family will appreciate it . . . your guests\nwill admire it. Visit our showrooms and see the\nlatest styles.\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating Co. Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Phone 666\nKootenay Interest    ..\nIn Kelowna City\nHall Pleases Council;\nKELOWNA, B.C. (CP) \u2014Thi\ncities of Nelson arid Kimberley\nhaye asked Kelowna for plant of\nthe city hall. , ,\nMayor J. J. Ladd told council\nthat the Kootenay mayon were\nImpressed with  Kelowna'i city\nhall, one of them rating It \"thi\n-  finest In the jnterior of B.C.\"   j\nPlans have already been sent\nto Nelson, and when they are re.\nturned, will b,o forwarded to\nKimberley.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLAS8IFIE\nDEVELOPMENT OF Champion Lake near\nFruitvale at a recreation spot Ii going ahead at a\nbooming pace. Building of a good road to the\nlake, work on which Is pictured above, Is 'first\nstep In the'provincial government project which\nwill open the lake to the public as a picnic\nplayground. B.C, Forest Service at Victoria Is In\ncharge,\u2014A. L. Fryllng photo.\nKoolaree Echoes\nIndividual cabin picnic suppers\nhighlighted the day for the campers at Camp Koolaree Wednesday.\nTanls Foxall, chief first mate,\nled the girls in the campfire sing\nsong while the leaders and staff\nhastily donned their costumes for\ntheir major production. Cabin five\ngirls kept, the campers amused\nwhile they presented two skits.\n\"Why Fathers Go Gray\" arid \"The\nBig Shot.\"\nMistress of ceremonies, Marilyn\nKary, announced that the leaders\nand staff were about to present\n\"Madame Souffle's French Salon,\"\ndirected by \"Cample.\" The cast included \"Campie\" as Madame\nSouffle (with Parisienne ensemble\nand accent to match). She was assisted by two cute French maids.\nMimi (Jim) and Fifi (Davey).\nThe salon was visited by Madame Money Bags and her two\n\"spou>d brats,\" Abigail (Willie)\nand Amanda (Jane) who demanded Madame's exclusive attention\nbut comoensated for it by singing\nbeautifully.\nMile. Richie displayed an all\nweather sports olitfit in which\none could do anything from gardening to sun bathing. Mile. Cookie's costume stressed not so much\nthe dress as the ingenious accessories. Mile. Bonnie showed how a\ngolfer should dress to, have the\ncourse to herself. Mile. Margaret\nwas a cute little package in a\ncardboard carton. The show closed on a climactic note as Mile,\nJosephine (Joey) made her curv*\nacious entrance and stole the\nshow.\nAfter friendship circle and taps,\nthe campers retired early to prepare for the final busy day of\ntheir session at camp.\nGaglardi To Travel\nTo Nelson With\nRevelstoke Board\n' REVELSTOKE, B. C. (CP)\nHighways Minister Gaglardi haa\naccepted an Invitation of Revel-\nstoke Board of Trade to travel\nfrom thii city to Nelson to get\na first hand knowledge of the\nroute.\nThe Revelstoke board has for\nmany yean advocated a direct\nroad link between Revelstoke,\nNelson and Spokane.\nBeaver Too Busy\nFor Orchardists\nPENTICTON, B. C. (CP) ^The\ncity of Penticton will seek government aid in battling Canada's\nemblem-animal, the beaver.\nThe industrious little animal has\nbecome too industrious for the\ntaste of Penticton orchardists.\nThe beaver have settled them\nselves on the new channel of the\nOkanagan river and have started\ntaking down trees in the Skaha\nlake area orchards.\nThe beavers are showing partiality to pear trees, although a\nfew apricot trees have also gone\ninto the home-making program\nH. B. Simpson Buys\nPeachland Sawmill\nPEACHLAND (CP)\u2014Purchase\nof the Peachland sawmill has been\nannounced by H. B. Simpson Lunv\nber Co. Purchase price has no-\nbeen disclosed. The mill was\nowned jointly by Neil G. Witt and\nS. G. Dell.\nMill Accident\nClaims Life of\nGrand Forks Man\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 Pete Kufti-\nnoff, age 28. of Grand Forks, an\nemployee of Boundary Falls Lumber Company at Boundary Falls,\ndied in Grand Forks Community\nHospital Thursday at 1 p.m., two [\nhours after accidentally falling into a moving saw at the sawmills.\nThe accident occurred about 11\na.m. near Greenwood.\nThe jury will be sworn in this\nmorning for the Inquest to be held\nlater.\nHe is survived by his wife, Elizabeth, and two young children.\nThere's\nEverything       \u00ab\nFor The\nCAMERA FAN   ,\nRAMSAY'S\nCAMERA STORE\n\"Photography Is Our Business\"\n497 BAKER 8T,      PHONE 106\nPaper Fellowship\nAwarded 'Peg Man\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014The Pulp\nand Paper Research Institute of\nCanada Thursday announced award of the 1955-56 Anglo Paper\nResearch Fellowship to Ross M.\nScreaton of Winnipeg.\nWith its assistance Mr. Screaton will continue his PhD research at McGill University.\nThe fellowship was established\nat the institute in 1951 by the development department of Anglo-\nCanadian Pulp and Paper Mills,\nAnglo - Newfoundland Development Co., Gaspesia Sulphite Co.,\nand Dryden Paper Co. to stimulate fundamental research.\nMr. Screaton obtained his bach'\nglor of science and master of science degrees at the University of\nManitoba.\nLOCAL AND\nLONG DISTANCE\nMOVING\n\u2022 PADDED VAN8\n\u2022 CAREFUL  PACKING\n\u2022 EXPERT CRATING\n\u2022 LARGE STORAGE\nFACILITIES\nTwice Doily\nFreight Service To\nCastlegar, Trail\nRossland\nLocal Pickup and Delivery\nService\nUnited Trucking\n& Storage Ltd.\nAgents for Allied Van Lines\n\"Canada's Master Movers\"  .\u25a0\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 1106 OR 1471\nFaure and Pinay\nTo Visit Moscow\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014Premier Ed\ngar Faure and  Foreign  Minister I\nAntoine Pinay will accept Russia's\ninvitation to visit Moscow, it was\nannounced   here   Thursday.\nThe two statesmen were invited\nby Soviet ambassador Serge Vinogradov in Paris in separate notes\nMonday and Tuesday. The acceptance was approved at a cabinet\nmeeting.\nPARKING REVENUE UP\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014New York\ncity's 28,213 parking meters registered a total revenue of $4,388,363\nin 1954, traffic commissioner T. T.\nWiley announced in his report\nWednesday to Mayor Robert F.\nWagner, Wiley said 12,000 more\nmeters will be installed on city\nstreets this year.\nlation of the annual Kelowna-to-\nVancouver international bicycle\nmarathon, scheduled Aug. 28 and\n30.\nThe proposed dates will conflict\nwith the U.S. national championships, which will attract many top\ncyclists in Canada.\nslilipil||;|||lill;llii::l|ll 1\nlllll\nItiiifiliii\n:<\" \u25a0mmmf\n;:o:;x;:;:;:;::::;::;:: :;i;\nmmm\/imM\nlip\nIll\nill\n1 lil:\nm - \/A1--*,\n1ISI\nill\nI A*-\u25a0''*\/'\n!\nIll 1\n1111.1\n:'\n_____fe^\u201e(_i . \\ \\*M\n\u25a0n__**'*\\. v\n_________L*.3Hn\/ \/       ^yJUMIMIMIII \u25a0 \"\ni ill\n*(W f*?i\\\nSNAPPY  TOPPER-\nBernard IH. Baruch, adviser to\npresidents, wears multi-colored\nsummer hat as he leaves the\nWhite House after a talk with\nPresident Eisenhower.    ,\nOur Radio Service\nDepartment\nIt Equipped to Do\nTV SERVICE\nAll makes of TV set* repaired\u2014All work guaranteed\nPHONE 1555\nMcKAY and STRETTON\n532 Baker St.\nNelson's Oldest Radio and Appliance Firm\n_     \\\nAU,\nVi __\u25a0__\"__\u00bb a ti*ion ,.\nr ur a ii iciiu^j\nGreeting\nYou can offer your guests no friendlier\nwelcome than \"Black & White\".\nBlended  in  a  special way from\nthe pick of all Scotland's whiskies,\n\"Black & White\" is the outstanding   -\nexample of just how good Scotch\nWhisky can be.\nBUCHANAN'S\nBLACK&WHITE\nSCOTCH  WHISKY\nOne Said Is in the tUnelmq\nBy appointment\nto Ih* lot* King Goorgo VI\nScotch Whisky Distillers\nJem**. Buchanan & Co. Ltd.\nDistilled, blende;] and bottled in Scotland\nAvailable In 26'\/.  oz. and 13'\/. oz. bottles\ntlii\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the tfv\ncjuor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\n . \u2014 \u2014\u2014\u2014- -\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u2014 ! \u2014  !\u25a0:.;,.. .,,..    ....     ...     -I-.,...     .   ; ...,      ,..,.,     .      .,... I     . , ...       .. \u201e.,.,.,.     .,\n \u2014\n\u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0yyy>%\nJfelaon latlg Hems\nEstablished April 22, 1803\ninterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING. COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall Post Offico Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\n,   THE  AUDIT  BUREAU   OF  CIRCULATIONS,\t\nThursday, August 4,1955\nEmergency Rescue Provisions\nNeeded for Our Resort Areas\nLast Sunday's tragic double\ndrowning at Balfour points up\nsharply the need for adequate emergency rescue and first aid provisions\nfor the fast-growing and popular resort area from Queen's Bay to Willow\nRoint.\nReference is made to this area in\nparticular, but there are many more\nsuch rural areas to which it can be\napplied.\nAll available resources in the resort area were rushed\" to the scene\nby persons in and near Balfour. A\nplea for help to the Royal Canadian\nMounted Police in Nelson was made.\nA plea for help in such an emergency\nmeans a plea for a resuscitator and\ndragging equipment. The fact that it\nwas more than 75 minutes after the\naccident occurred before a resuscitator arrived is cause enough for\nthinking persons to be concerned\nabout what must be done to assure\nthat assistance arrives more quickly.\nHelp from Nelson can be obtained\nin a matter'of minutes IF the co-ordinating factors all function at top performance. Top performance requires\nadvance planning and thinking.\nNo one \/an say whether the eventual outcome would have been any\ndifferent had there been no delay,\nand it is not the intention of this\neditorial to imply this. Its intention is\nto have something done now about\nan obviously unsatisfactory situation.\nNelson City firemen are prepared\nfor emergencies at any time of the\nday or night. We suggest that a similar state of preparedness should exist\n' within the RCMP which is the\nonly agency to which rural dwellers\nappeal to in times of emergency and\ndistress. The need of such preparedness is all the greater on holidays and\nweekends when travel and recreational a'ctivities are at their peak.\nThis newspaper suggests also that\n\u25a0 the time is past due when some local\norganization should be established to\nrender aid to residents and visitors\nih the Kootenay Lake area. Such an\norganization based at Balfour might\nconsist of a corps of trained first-\naiders with equipment such as a\nrespirator, and, eventually, an ambulance.\nA start to acquire a respirator\ncould be made by appealing to the\npublic for\u25a0 funds for purchase of\nsuitable equipment. Residents at strategic spots in (he area could be\ntrained quickly and willingly by\nqualified personnel from Nelson.\nIt might be tomorrow, it might be\n10 years from now, when this preparation is needed again, but today is\nnone too soon to get ready for the\neventuality.\nSpain May\nA&ain Get Kin&\nGeneral Franco has now apparently\nmade up his mind about the vexed problem\nof succession.\nThe possibility that Don Juan, the pretender of the Spanish throne, would send his\nson, the Infante Juan Carlos', to {fnish his\neducation at Louvain, has brought the Cau-\ndillo into the open. He has insisted that Juan\nCarlos\u2014whom he has long been thought to\nconsider his successor as head of the state-\nbe educated in Spain within a strictly military, clerical and official framework.\nAfter a brief period of hesitation Don\nJuan has agreed, and it would appear that\nhe is resigned to relinquishing the right of\nsuccession to his son. The latter would\nmount a throne left vacant since the deposition of Alfonso XIII in 1931.\nGeneral Franco's internal strength has\ngrown considerably with the recent diplomatic successes in the Middle fiast, Latin\nAmerica and Washington.\nThe Falange still contains men who are\nopposed to any restoration of the monarchy,\nbut they are dying out. The army, with\nwhom the main power lies, is certain to approve of the Caudillo's policies; it will itself\nhave a big hand in the education of the future king. Those- factions in the Church that\nhave steadily refused to see in General\nFranco a completely legitimate ruler will\nwelcome every symptom of a reconciliation\nwith the crown.\nParadoxically, there will be some opposition from diehard royalists, who cannot\naccept the removal from succession of Don\nJuan, the Count of Barcelona.\nThese various attitudes are not immediately involved. There is no indication that\nthe Caudillo is thinking of retiring, and the\nInfante's formal education will still take\nseveral years to complete.\u2014The Economist,\nLondon.\nPress Comments\nThe parliamentary inquiry acted wisely\nin turning down the proposal of a law\nagainst loss leaders, thinks the Ottawa Jour-\nnaL \"Our statute books are'already cluttered up with laws, prohibitions, restraints;\nso much so that many of us don't know what\nall the laws are about and a great many\nothers disregard them, which is bad. And\nwe doubt very much whether, the trend of\nthe world being what it is. business should\nbe crying out for j^vernment to police it.\nFar better surely for free enterprise to make\nthe most of its penalties and weaknesses and\ntry sensibly to police itself.\"\nMr. St. Laurent offered quite a convincing explanation about the dropping of \"Royal\" from the CPR's new crack train, says the\nPeterborough Examiner, \"but we still think\nthat there is something ever so slightly fishy\nabout the affair, and that some body of\npeople at Ottawa are temperamentally opposed to such indications of our status as a\ncountry with a monarchical government.\"\nA Social Credit government that approved of its financial adviser becoming a\nbank director, remarks the Vancouver Province, \"has come a long way from the days\nwhen the late Premier Aberhart wiped his\nfeet on theCanadian bankers every Sunday\n\u25a0 evening.\"\nMr. Lawson's New York project will\nnot be the first. Canada House on external\nsoil, points out the Victoria Colonist, \"but it\nwill assuredly be the only one that cost the\nnational treasury nothing. That alone puts\nit in a category by itself.\"\nYour Horoscope\nRefuse all needless risks and over-optimism and your business and financial affairs\nare likely to flourish. A child born under\nthese vibrations should be kind, sympathetic\nand hospitable if a tendency to over-optimism is controlled.\n?Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Namei of *.\npermni 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 neoesslty for privacy,\nAspiring, Trail\u2014Would you please print as\nsoon as possible a list of Canadian and\nAmerican magazines In the age group,\nof 3 to 11, approximately? Or perhaps\nyou could give me the name of a literary\nmagazine which lists the names of children's magazines arid other magazines\nwhich would be interested In literary\ncompositions. Please also give me the\ncorrect name of an eastern weekly paper\n\u2014it is something like \"Toronto Herald\nand Weekly Star\"\u2014but I am not sure\nif it is \"Toronto\" or some other town.\nIt caters to farmers and has a large\nchildren's section.\nThere are no children's magazines published in Canada, but English magazines for\nchildren are on sale all across the Dominion,\nas are also U.S. publications for children.\nHere is a list of those obtainable through\nany news agent or news stand: Boy's Own\nPaper (English); Collins Young Elizabeth\n(English); Eagle (English); Heiress (English); Mickey Mouse (English); American\nChildhood (U.S.)'; America^ Girl (U.S.);\nBoy's Life (U.S.); Child's Life (U.S.); Children's Digest (U.S.); Humpty Dumpty (U.S.);\nJack and Jill (U.S.); Little Dots' Playways\n(U.S.)-i Walt Disney (U.S.); Wee Wisdom\n(U.S.). If we have missed any children's\npublications, will other readers let us know?\nThere are, of course, many \"crime comics\"\nIssued for young readers, but we gather you\nare not interested in them. Some syndicates\nwhich supply leading newspapers are also\ninterested in children's stories: King Features Syndicate, 235 45th Street, New York;\nKelleher Newspaper Feature Brokers, Dallas, Texas; Keystone Pictures, Inc., 219 East\n44th Street, New York. There is The Toronto\nStar Weekly; the Montreal Herald has a\nspecial Saturday editjon, as does the Montreal Star. There is also the Family Herald\nand Weekly Star, published at 245 St. James\nStreet, Montreal; possibly this is the publication you mention? All these papers can\nbe bought through news stands and book\nstalls.\nE. L., Nelson\u2014Would it be possible to* find\nout by way of your paper the population\nof Wainwright, Alberta, and its chief\nindustry?\nWainwright, Alberta: Population at last\ncensus, 1996. Chief industries: Mixed farming and Dominion Government buffalo park.\nDuring the war there was a large military\ntraining centre there.\nThe Coach\nTalks Back\nArthur Daley, sports columnist of the\nNew York Times, thinks Coach Warner\nWoodson of the University of Arizona deserves a spot in football's HaU of Fame\nalongside Knute Rockne, Pop Warner, Alon-\nzo Stagg and other greats of the gridiron\nbench. Rockne won renown for Notre Daine\nwith the forward pass, the Four Horsemen\nand soul-stirring pre-game oratory. Warner\nput Pittsburgh on a pinnacle with a single-\nwing attack and other tricks of a tricky\ntrade. Stagg startled the football world and\n.delighted University of Chicago fans with\nthe spiral pass from centre, a point-winning\nmanoeuvre unknown before his time.\nWodHson, a present practitioner of a\nnerve-wracking profession In which the penalty for lack of success is half-baked criticism and ultimately ulcers, merits immortality in Mr. Daley's opinion for a few words\nto grandstand quarterbacks. Addressing a\nuniversity boosters' meeting, he said: \"I\nknow more about football than anyone here\nand I'm smarter about football than you.\nStay out of my business so I can do better.\"\nThat's the stuff to give the troops. The\n\u2022blabbermouths\u2014Mr. Daley's term\u2014had not'\nbeen riding the coach himself but had yelped\nat his quarterbacks until the youngsters were\nalmost afraid to call the plays. It's to their\ncredit that they cheered the coach for putting them in thejr place. It will be a happy\nresult if they keep their big mouths shut.\nAnd Mr. Woodson's terse statement of fact\nmay go down to history along with Mr.\nRockne's fanciest flights of speech,\nTheyll Do It.Every Time\nbitMMjd I MwOla\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\n\u2022VERy 64L SHOPPER BRlMSS\nAL0H6 TUB FRIEND WHO IS A\nSELF-4PPOIKTED STYLE\nEXPERT\u2014\n' NICE FOR DRAPES-IT'S\nVERV S0OTW6-IT WOULD\nv. 60 WELL WW MSETTEE-]\nWU4TDOVOU\n!)TH...K,lNERT_4?,\nIt's Been Said\nI knew a wise man who had for a byword, when he saw men hasten to a conclusion, \"Stay a little, that we may come to the\nend sooner.\"\u2014Francis Bacon.\nToday's Bible\nThought\nAnd the Lord said unto Moses,\nI will give thee a law.\u2014Exodui\n24:12.\nGod is constantly inspiring our\nlegislators with laws that have\ndtvine sanction. Eternal vigilance\nis needed to enforce righteous\nlaws. God wants the humblest of\nHis children- to be treated justly\nand generously.\ndunt dist\nThe trouble with these modern\nbrides Is, they know seven ways to\nmake candy and only one way to\nfix eggs.\nFrom an\nOldtimert\nNotebook\n\u2014BY R. G. JOY-\u2014\nHistorian, Nelson and District\nOldtimers' Association\nGeorge Truscott made himself\nheard at my door the other day. It\nwas st.ange that I had been thinking of him. Why?*I found a note\non my door two years ago informing me that he was sorry George\nJoy was not home. Last year he\nagain called and could not get in\ntouch .with me.\nLeonard Truscott, son of George,\nwas .a student of Nelson High\nSchool at one time, and is now\na Cranbrook school principal. He\nwas a violinist, performing in the\nsymphony orchestra. George, his\nfather, was no mean performer\nwith a 'cello. The Truscotts were\nmusical. George is 80 years young,\nand when we get together we talk\nof many things.\nHis great grandfather was a\nmember of a village orchestra in\nCornwall, England, that supplied\nmusic for the church. Perhaps it\nwas in a Cornish immunity that\na church orchestra asked for higher pay. They did not get lt, and\nsomebody Invented the organ in\norder to settle the argument This\nI read in an article telling how\nthe church committee broke up a\nstrike by muscisians.\nMy friend Ross Fleming conducted an orchestra at the Trinity\nChurch, and Ross spent a lot of\ntime with us, especially the amateurs. George Truscott was always\ncheerful. Joy was usually the\nsame. Al Tregillus was a past\nmaster with the flute. I remember\nhim performing at the old Opera\nHouse when in oldtime days the\nOpera House echoed with many\nstage plays which were always\nwell attended. '\nGeorge Truscott had experience\nin the British Navy in days gone\nby. Later he was a ship builder,\nhaving had experience in ironclad\nbattleship construction.\nGeorge got an itchy foot and\ncame to Canada. 'He speaks of\nBattleford, also the Bar Colony\nand the Indians. He spoke of their\nresourcefulness and their knowledge of nature's remedies.\nHe told me about his young\ndaughter who became ill. The\nwhite man's doctor did his best,\nbut said it was only a matter of\ntime until the girl would succumb.\nSoon after a friendly squaw, a\nCree, passed by the window and\nheard the child moaning. The\nsquaw asked, \"The little girl\nsick?\" \"Yes,\" answered the mother. \"I am afraid I lose her.\" The\nsquaw answered, \"No, she no die.\nYou tell your man to tyring axe\nand come with me.\"\nGeorge told me that he went\nwith her and they came to a group\nof young poplar trees. She then\ninstructed George to cut a band\nof bark around the tree, about 18\ninches. She carefully removed the\ninner lining of the bark, which\nwas as thin as tissue paper. She\nvery carefully carried this back\nto the hou.se, and, getting a clean\nsaucepan, she placed the inner\nbark on the Inside and then\npoured boiling water on it and\ntold the mother that when it was\ncool enough to give the child a\nfew drops to begin with and gard\nually increase them and the child\nwould improve. The little girl improved, and. in a short time was\na well child. The doctor later\nmoved to a growing town.\nGeorge's daughter and her husband lived on a farm near the\ntown. George's wife went to visit\nhis daughter a few years later on\ntheir farm, and there was a sick\nneighbor when Mr. Truscott's\ndaughter and two children were\nvisiting. Mrs. Truscott, thinking\nshe could help, went also. The\ndoctor arrived, and Mrs. Truscott\nrecognized him as their doctor\nwhen their young daughter was\nill. The doctor also recognized the\nKing Penguin\nLays Egg in\n(oast Park Zoo\nVANCOUVER (CP)-First King\nPenguin egg to be laid in North\nAmerica has arrived at Stanley\nPark Zoo. 4\nZoo keeper Allan Best discovered the rare egg, which he believes is the third ever produced\nin captivity, as he made a final\nround of the zoo with the watchman at 10 p.m.\n\"A courtship had been going on\nfor quite a while,\" said Mr. Best.\n\"I had rubber mats put on the\nconcrete floors of the penguins'\nshelter so that an egg would not\nbreak  when Jaid.\"\nPenguins do not make nests of\nany kind, said Mr. Best. And the\nmale does most of the work during the 64 days of incubation.\nThe egg itself is about four\ninches long and is nearly round,\nreports the jubilant zookeeper.\nTh_e penguins incubate it by placing it between their feet and lowering a fringe of feathers around\nit  \"like  a   candle-snuffer.\"\nThere are seven King penguins\nin Stanley Parlt, each valued at\n$500.\n\"It's going to be a long 64 days,\"\nsighed Allan Best, who has been\nhoping for such an event for many\nyears.\nJust One Day's\nHoneymoon for\nSkating Queen\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Barbara Ann\nScott is to be married in the first\nweek of September In Toronto,\nThe Citizen says.\nThe paper says the wedding will\nbe followed by a one-day honeymoon, after which rehearsals will\nbegin for her new Canadian ice\nshow.\nDATE KEPT SECRET\nThe story says Miss Scott would\nnot reveal the actual wedding\ndate, adding that \"from other\nsources it was learned the wedding was all but set for early September.\"\nThe skating star told The Citizen by telephone from Toronto\nwedding arrangements are not\ncomplete.\nShe said her husband-to-be.\npublicity man Tom King, will\ntravel with her and manage the\nshow.\n\"I have always felt in the old-\nfashioned Idea that a wife should\nbe at her husband's side.\" Barbara\nAnn said. \"So we are going to\nhave, both marriage and a show at\nthe same time.\"\nNeed International\nLaw Says Philpott\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Canadian parliamentarian Elmore Philpott called for universal membership in\nthe United Nations, including \"the\nreal government of China.\"\nDelegates attending the conference of the World Association\nof Parliamentarians for World\nGovernmerlt\u2014including some Russian scientists \u2014- applauded the\nLiberal MP for Vancouver South.\nPhilpott suggested four methods for gaining peace\u2014relaxation\nof international tension, stopping\nthe arms race, making UN membership universal and the \"righting\" of the basis of world law\nwith the tools thus provided.\nHe said the basic cause of war\nis not weapons but lack of international law.\nolder Truscotts, and asked about\nthe sick girl he attended. She then\nintroduced the grown woman,\nwith two daughters, saying, \"She\nwas the little girl, doctor. A Cree\nsquaw cured her.\"\n(^te&&\nU.S. A-Energy Commrssion ...\nSays Russians Resuming\nNuclear Weapons* Tests\nQ&wnad &&6imd &&\u00a3^ &fa\nAMHEF\u00bb8TBU\u00ab0,ONT.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014The U.S.\nAtomic Energy Commission announced Thursday the Russians\nhave resumed testing of \"nuclear\nweapons\".\nThe brief announcement said:\n\"Within the past few days the\nSoviets have resumed, testing of\nnuclear weapons.\n\"This may mean the beginning\nof a new test series.\"\nThe most recent previous  announcement  of Soviet  tests was\nmade last Oct. 26.\nTYPE NOT STATED\nThursday's announcement did\nnot specify whether the new explosion was of the fission type involving the splitting of some material' such as uranium-235, or the\nfusion type involving the combining of extremely light-weight\natoms, such as forms of hydrogen.\nAs late as June 24 the AEC indicated it had had no evidence of\na nuclear blast by Russia in almost\na year.\nThere has been no public disclosure of the means by which\nthe U.S. monitors nuclear tests in\nthe Soviet Union, but widespread\nreports say the main reliance Is on\nradioactivity tests of the air downwind from test sites.\nSalmon Catch\nBreaks Records\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014Japan's salmon\ncatch this year has broken all\npost-war records, but fisheries authorities are far from happy. \u25a0\nTheir biggest headache is where\nand how to sell the record catch,\nexpected to top 60,000,000 salmon\nby the end of the season this\nmonth.\nThis is far from Japan's prewar record of 220,000,000 caught\nln 1939, but well over last year's\nhaul of 20,000,000.\nThe gloom arises from deadlock ln Anglo-Japanese trade talk*\n\u2014Britain' had traditionally been\nJapan's best buyer of canned salmon.\nFisheries officials have denied\nrumors that Japan will \"dump\"\ncanned salmon abroad.\nSales Representative\nLeading flour milling company requires a. sales\nrepresentative in South Eastern British Columbia,\nto sell their full line of flour, cereals, commercial\nfeeds, etc. Knowledge of feeds and feeding would\nbe helpful.\nSuccessful applicant will be paid salary, commission\nand full expenses when away from headquarters.\nHe will receive benefits of group insurance, hospitalization and medical plan, and be eligible for\npension plan.,\nApply in own handwriting and give salary expected,\nsales experience and post employment record, with\nthree references to Box 2T, Nelson Daily News.\nThli advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe liquor Control Board or by tho Government of British Columbia\n    4__  __ ._ 1\nNOW! For the\nFIRST TIME\nIN NELSON\nCAMPBELL'S FRESH FROZEN SOUP\nCream of Potatoes With Bacon\nOr pea and Ham\n10 oz. tin 32C\nCream of Oyster or\n0 Cream of Shrimp\n10 oz. tin 53c\nFrom General Mills For the First Time in Nelson .. *\nCHERRIO'S 10 oz. 27c\nThe Doughnut Oat Cereal.\nFree Freshie in Each Package\nWHEATIES pkg. 27c\nBreakfast of Champions. Free freshie in each pkg.\n29*\nSUGAR JETS:\nModel jet on each pkg    Pkg.\nBISQUICK: CV\nBetty Crocker    2V4 lb. pkg.    \u2022\" ^\nANGEL FOOD CAKE MIX: CC*\nBetty Crocker Pkg.    \u00ab\u2022\" \u00ab\u2022'\nBROWNIE MIX CHOC. FUDGE: 3Q*\nBetty Crocker, 15 oz       J^\nWATERMELON Ib. 5c\nMaximum Price On Each Watermelon Will Be 49e.\nCome and Take Your Pick Early.\nSOLO MARGARINE\n2 lbs. 57c\nGOOD LUCK MARGARINE\n2 lbs. 71c\nFRESH TOMATOES\nOKANAGAN LB. 21C\nSelling FRIDAY and SATURDAY Only\n ^^w^^^^^\"\"\"\"-^-\n\u25a0 \u25a0:...'\u25a0\n\u25a0     v    \u25a0 .\u2022\u25a0'     \u25a0   \u2022'       ','      .-      .'\u25a0     \u25a0\u25a0'\n'. We've Got\nBARGAINS\nFor All The Family\nAt Our\n53rd Birthday\nSALE\nR. ANDREW\n& GO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nI\nDo You Wish \u25a0\n[|    You Were a DUCK?     I\nWe Can Help by Waterproofing\nQ Your Clothesll\nEMPIRE\nDry Cleaners '!\n321 Baker St. Ph. 288 ||\nI\nI\n| Highest Quality \u2014\nLowest Prices \u25a0\nSEWING\nNEWS\nBy MARGARET PYE\nWhen making a new blouse or\ndress for yourself why not give\nan exclusive look to the garment by using as a trim, seed\npearls, sequins or shell beads,\nnow on the market for this\npurpose. I have noticed some\nof the higher priced bathing\nsuits, this year, have this added\ntouch of glamour \u2014 say \u2014 a\nscattering of rhlnestoties on the\npocket or a beaded-motif at the\nbusline. With very little imagination or extra work, you can\ndress up your own wardrobe\nby using this type of trim. The\nnext time you are in the Custom Sewing Centre ask to see\nour assortment of rhinestones,\nact.'For 25c you can add dollars\nto the appearance of any sweater, blouse, dress, scarf or hat.\nAlthough we are more than half\nway through the cotton season\nyou still have lots of time to\nwhip up the odd dress or two.\nWe are offering you a special\non \"Criskays*' and \"Pebble\"\nCottons. This week these are\ntop quality and regularly priced at 98c per yard. Get yours\nwhile they last, at only 69c\nper yd.\nBe sure and make the Custom\nSewing Centre headquarters\nfor all your sewing requirements.\nFloral Setting for\nJones-McLeod Rites\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 5,19S5 \u2014 S\nHONEYMOON IN ALASKA followed marriage In St. Paul's\nUnited ChUrch of the former Mary Ann Bodnaruk and W. G.\n(Glen) Macintosh, pictured above at the reception. The bride Is\nthe daughter of Mrs. A. Bodnaruk and the late Mr. Bodnaruk. The\ngroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Palethorpe.\nPhoto by Vogue Studio.\nBaskets of shaded delphiniums\nand bridal wreath, arranged by\nfriends of the bride, made a pretty\nsetting for the wedding of Catherine A. McLeod, daughter of\nMrs. McLeod and the late Captain\nAngus McLeod, and Francis B.\nJones, son of Mrs. Jones and the\nlate Mr. H. A. Jones, in- Trinity\nUnited Church. Rev. A. R. T. Dixon officiated, at the double-ring\nceremony.\nGiven in marriage by her mother, the bride'was charming in\na ballerina-length gown of Chantilly lace with satin trim, featur\ning a strapless bodice and match\ning Chantilly lace jacket. Her\nifinger-tip veil was held in place\nby a coronet of seed pearls., She\ncarried a cascading bouquet of\nwhite Shasta daisies and red roses.\nThe groom's gift to the bride of a\ngold cross and earrings were her\nonly ornaments.\nMiss Wilma Holden of Trail,\nbridesmaid, wore a delicate pink\nballerina-length gown and Miss\nChristine Hearn, flower girl and\nniece of the bride, wore a white\nnylon frock with pink trim. Both\nattendants carried bouquets of\nwhite daisies and rosebuds.\nDuring the signing of the register, Miss May McDonald of Trail\nsang  \"Through  The  Years,\"  ac-\ncompanned by Mrs. C. W. Tyler\nat the organ.\nMrs. Walter Craft of Trail was\nbest man and the ushers were Mr.\nStan Morris and Mr. Gordon Olson of Nelson.\nDuring the reception heid in\nthe church hall, the couple were\nassisted in receiving, their guests\nby their mothers. Mrs. McLeod\nchose a navy and white redingote\nwith pink accessories, while Mrs.\nJones chose a silk print with\ncorsages.\nmatching navy duster and  pink\naccessories.    Both    wore    orchid\nToast to the bride was proposed\nby Mr. S. K. Metcalf of Trail.\nPresiding at the tea and coffee\nurns were the bride's twin sisters,\nMrs. E. Aldred and Mrs. E. Hearn\nof Salmo. Serviteurs included Mrs\nIsa MacKinnon of Procter, and\nMiss Fame Close, Miss Rose Frost\nMiss Margulrete Dickey ahd Miss\nBetty MacCormick, all of Trail.\nFor 'a wedding trip to Banff\nCalgary and United States points\nthe bride chose a copper-toned\ncardigan suit with white trim,\ncomplimented by white accessories and a corsage of yellow carnations.\nMr. and Mrs. Jones will reside\nin Salmo.\nNelson Social\nColor Psychology\nMoving Into Horn\nMoving fo Homes\nBy The Canadian  Press\nTORONTO (CP) - Home decorators have figured a new, inexpensive hobby for do-it-yourself\naddicts \u2014 called \"color conditioning.\"\nIt consists of planning ihe color\nscheme of a home according tn\nfindings of color psychologists\nworking in the industrial field.\nFor years color exeprts have\nbeen trying to find out the answer\nto -factory worker fatigue and\nwhy people in well-heated offices\ncomplain of cold.\nThe expert may recommend\nthat stark white walls of a factory\nbe painted restful green with a\nresulting' decrease in the number\nof fatigue cases. He may change\nthe color of an office from light\nblue to a warmer yellow to\neliminate \"cold\" complaints.\nCOLORS HAVE USES\nMaking color work for efficiency rfnd comfort in schools\nand offiqes is a specialized field.\nBut the same rules can be applied in the home \u2014 adding personal touches in line with.' in-\ndividuar'tastes. Start with a can\nof paint and a few basic facts\nabout color and illusions -it\ncreates.,\nSmall rooms seem crowded and\noppressive if the walls are dark or\ntoo bright. Pale blues or greens\ngive a feeling of spaciousness, and\na ceiling the same color increases\nthe roomy effect,\nThe principle can be applied in\nreverse. If you are rattling around\nin a big?'1* high-ceilinged living-\nroom, paint the walls in a bright,\nrosy shade and the ceiling in a\ndeeper color. This gives the illusion of res\u00a3' height and a cosier\natmosphere.\nPainting one wall a pale shade\nin a different color from the rest\nwill add length to a room that is\nboxy.\nIf the kitchen isn't on the\nbrightest side of the house, a\ngenerous application of yellow\npaint will give it a sunny outlook.\n\u25a0 But if the kitchen is bathed in\nsunlight all day long go easy on\nthe yellow. Red should be used\nsparingly in the kitchen since it ts\na \"hot\" color and tends to emphasize the heat of cooking.\nA-Specialist To\nHead Delegation\nBONN (AP) \u2014 Prof. Otto Jlahn,\nthe first man to split the atom,\nwill head the West German delegation to the Geneva atoms-for-\npeace conference. Hahn, a Nobel\nPrize winner, is president of a\nresearch society at Goettingen,\nThe international conference opens Monday.\nhif HauJia. WhstsdsA\n12-INCH SQUARES,;\nPrize Winning filet crochet!\nGreat big rose squares. 12 inches\nin string. You'll make a magnificent bedspread or tablecloth and\nscarf in no time at all.\nONE of these stunning big\nsquares makes place mat! Pattern 769; crochet charts, directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St. W., Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\ni NUMBER your NAME and ADDRESS.\nLOOK FOR smartest ideas in\nNeedlecraft in our Laura Wheeler\nCatalog for 1955. Crochet, knitting,\nembroidery and lovely things to\nwear. Iron-ons, quilts, aprons, nov\nelties \u2014 easy, fun to make! Send\n25 cents for your copy of this book\nNOW! You will want to order\nevery new design in it.\nMr. and Mrs. W. M. Wallace and\nchildren Brian and Rosalie have\nreturned to their home at Revelstoke after spending their holidays with Mrs. Wallace's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. H.  B. Fleury, 224\nRobson Street..'\n* *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Ted Swendson returned from Victoria, where they\nattended the wedding of the daughter of Hon. Robert Sommers,\nminister of lands and forests.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. K. J. Iipsack and\nfamily have arrived from 'Salmo\nto take up residence at 1107 Robertson Avenue.\n\u2022 \u2022\u25a0  \u2022\nMr. 'and Mrs. T. Stewart have\narrived from Vancouver to take\nup residence at 416 Silica Street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWilliam 'Stiles of Nelson is holidaying at Christina Lake.\n.   .   .\nMr. and Mrs. James Ryley and\nfamily. Marney and Bryan of Fernie, formerly of Nelson, are holidaying here as guests of Mr. Ry-\nley's brother and sister-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. Bryan K. Ryley, 424\nHouston Street\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. S. N. Fawcett and children\nAnn and Jane, 411 Fourth Street,\nwill'leave today to join Mr. Fawcett in Vancouver where they will\ntake up residence.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nA surprise miscellaneous shower\nwas held for Miss Iris Reid at thej.\nhome of Mrs. W. Ogden, 1013 Stanley Street. Many games were played by the 20 guests and refreshments were served by co-hostesses, Miss Carla' Magee and Miss\nPhyllis Smith.\n\u2022 #   *\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Burns, 823:\nSixth Street, have returned from\nVancouver where Mr. Burns received medical attention.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. J. S. Edwards, 413\nGore Street, have returned from\na holiday trip to Atlantic City,\nNew York, Pittsburgh and Tor-'\nonto, where they visited their son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nWarren Edwards.\n...\nMrs. Laura Kirby, Allan Hotel\nhas returned from a six-month\nholiday in Corine, Sask., where,\nshe visited her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Renwick. She also visited relatives\nin other Saskatchewan points.\n...\nMiss Sally Butling, 611 Eighth\nStreet, is holidaying at the Coast\nas guests of Miss Joan Mawer of\nVancouver, and of her brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. R.\nFinnimore of Concrete, Wash.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. A. L, Gustafson,\n54 Douglas Road, have as their\nguests Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Tupper\nPHONE 1844\nand family of Vancouver, formerly of Nelson.\n* *   *\nMrs. A. C. VanSacker, 624 Sixth\nStreet, has returned from a short\nholiday at Fernie where she visited relatives.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. Ray E. Wallace and son\nBryan of Haney are guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. R. E. Wallace on thej\nNorth Shore.\nEngagements\nMrs. M. MacKinnon of Procter\nannounces the engagement of\nher daughter, Isa Bella, to Donald, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. Cameron of Sydney, Australia. The\nwedding will take place on Augus!\n13 in Procter United Church.\n0mal lAp, Wiik\nWe Have a Variety of\nCRAFTKITS\nFor Handcrafters\nOf All Ages\nHOBBY SHOP\ni 577 Ward St.\nPhone 224 i\nUp to $5Q TRADE IN\n\"tfie\nFor Your Old Suite\nJLSA\/JFJ9 convertible \/fO.lO\nA patented design, that give* you a hand\u00bbome chesterfield, and In one\neasy movement converts Into a smooth continental bed. Ask for the\nv|V i\/A\/ra by name and see how the magic arms glide away for\nperfect sleepina comfort. '\nPrices Vary According To Cover Grade\nFull i' foam rubbar seat and foam\nrubbar back.\nRavarilbl, foam nibbar awtltam.\nIN STOCK FROM\n$239.50\nLESS YOUR TRADE IN.\nup\nFreeman's\n\u25bc\nSIZES UP TO 50\nSee hsw flattering your fashions\nwill look \u2014 with this wonderful\nnew foundation beneath! It gives\na perfect fit, comfortable firm support to the larger figure\u2014 the perfect bra for sizes 36 to 50! Easy\nsewing; make it in regular and\nlong lengths too.\nPattern 9094: Womens' Sizes 36,\n38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50. Stze 36\ntakes 1 yard 35-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use    pattern gives\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Borden Cam-\neron and his brother-in-law Jameson of Vancouver were visiting\nfriends in New Denver,\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Tibbitt and\ntwo children left for their holidays in Calgary and on their return will take up residence in\nAinsworth,\nSho Inose, who was the guest\nfor two weeks of Mrs. F. Ujiye\nand daughter Mrs. Polly Baba, left\nfor Toronto.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Doney returned\nfrom two weeks holiday in Kamloops, Banff and Lake Louise and\nin Cranbrook with their son, E.\nDoney and family.\nM. Kosaka and his daughter,\nMiss Y.Kosaka of Toronto, came\nto attend the funeral of the former's father, H. Honda. They are\ntHe guests of his son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. S. Matsushita.\nMrs. John Stokes, who visited\nher mother Mrs. E. A. Reynolds\nand sister Miss Gladys Reynolds,\nreturned to her home in Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs. Bernard Crook and\ntwo daughters of Toronto are the\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.\nguests of Mr. Crook's sister, Mrs.\nNorman F, Brookes and family.\nJack Cornwall and nephew, Mr.\nTrevor Parker who were visiting\nH. Crellin and two sisters Mrs. D.\nPearson and Mrs. Belle Penday,\nreturned to Ashcroft Manor, Ashcroft\nMr. and Mrs. L. R. Campbell and\nson-in-law and daughter Mr. and\nMrs. W. G. Thring and two children returned from three weeks\nholidays. They visited their son\nJohn Campbell at Port Arthur and\nMurdie Campbell at Barrie, Ont,\nand camped at Demidji Lodge,\nMin., where they were joined by\ntheir son, Donald Campbell.\nMr. and Mrs, William Martin\nand family returned to their home\nafter spending their holidays at\nPowell River and coast points.\nDr. and Mrs. William Chorno-\nbay have as their guests the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Steve\nChornobay and his sister, Miss\nCarrie Chornobay of Endeavour,\nSask.\nCrawford Clarke and son Clay\nton    and    Tommy    Teacock    of\nNanaimo are the guests of Mr.\nClarke's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T.\nW. Clarke for several days. Clayton Clarke will stay with his\ngrandparents for a longer holiday '\nGeorge Fopp left for his home\nin Switzerland owing to the\ndeath of his father.\nMiss Velma J. George of Vancouver Is spending a month's\nholidays with her parents, Mr\nand Mrs. W. H. Clever.\nPeter Scherk of Saskatoon has\narrived to join his family who are\nthe guests of Mrs. A. L. Levy\nuntil the end of August.\nMr. atid Mrs. William Clever\nand daughter Miss Velma J.\nGeorge left for to spend their\nholidays in Spokane.\nrf>HONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nHow   Christian   Science   Heals\n\"GOD CAN HELP YOU\nIN EVERY\nEMERGENCY\"\nCKLN \u2014 1240 kc. Friday 6:15 p.m.\nSEASONABLE SAVINGS\nANTIZYME\nGiant Size Tooth Paste\nWith 14-Day Free Trial Tube.\nFRUIT-SAVER\nProtects Flavor and Color of Fruit.\n(Use when Freezing or Canning)\n98<\nAIR-WICK DEAL\n(Formerly $2.69 Value)\n*1.69\nDUBARRY PINK SUDS and\nFOUNDATION LOTION\nRegular $3.00 Value\n*2.00\nSHOWER and SHAMPOO SPRAY\nIdeal for Summer\n98<   $1.39   $1.98\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH\"\n433 Josephine St. Nelson Phone 1203\n v':'.'.':'i-'.v'-.-'--y:  \u25a0'\u25a0    \u25a0,'  -,.\u25a0:\u25a0'   ,\u25a0!\u25a0;_,\".'\u25a0'      \u25a0     '\n  : . '\u25a0'\u25a0:'\u25a0 ...\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1953\nReleased Fliers Turn Backs on\nRed China jo Face Free Lives\nBy FORREST EDWARDS ,\n; HONG KONG (AP) \u2014 Eleven\n.American fliers, happily crossing\n;the Hong Kong border to freedom\nThursday,  refused   to   look  back\ninto Red China where they were\nheld captive 2Vt years.\n'   \"I can't, I won't look back,\" one\nFAIRBANKS\nMORSE\nWATER\nSYSTEMS\nKJDR 250 MM SHALLOW WHL SYSTEM\ncoMfurraY assembled, beady to instau\nIOOK AT THESE FEATURES:\n\u2022 Solf-prlmlng\noSolf-oillng\n\u2022 Delivers   fuD   capacity   at   maximum\npressure\n\u2022 Double-actino for conttnuoaj water flow\n\u2022 Kxtknlv*    two-bearing    crank    ihaft,\nhardened and machined\n\u2022 My assembled for easy Installation\n\u2022 Al part* precision machined for long\nwear\n\u2022 Easy to service\n\u2022 Built by a company with over 120 years'\nexperience. Parts always available.\nFalrbanlts-Morso tyttemi are available\nIn fixes and capacities far all needs, Id\nShallow Well and Deep Well models.\nWILSON &\n' STENSON\nSalmo\nsaid when photographers asked\nthem to face west on the border\nriver bridge.\nTheir leader, Col. John Knox\nArnold, 41, quickly glanced over\nhis shoulder and said, \"That is all.\nI don't want to look back any\nmore.\"\nA quick medfcal check showed\nall in \"fairly good condition\". One,\nMaj. William H. Bauer, 32, was on\ncrutches. He said his left leg was\nwounded when their B-29 was shot\ndown Jan. 12, 1953, in the Korean\nWar. He later suffered frostbite.\nThey will be flown to Manila,\nthen to Tokyo, en route to the\nUnited States for reunions with\ntheir families.\nEmotion so choked Arnold when\nhe was called before television\nand newsreel cameras at Hong\nKong's plush Jockey Cluh that he\ncouldn't speak. He turned away\nand mumbled: \"1 simply can't say\nhow I feel.\"\n\"All of the men appeared to be\nin excellent mental health,\" Lt.-\nCol. James M. Davis, the chief\nmedical officer, told reporters\nafter completing a second examination of each man,\nAirman Daniel C. Schmidt,\nwhose wife had remarried in the\nbelief that he was dead, heard no\nmention of it. Correspondents\nwere under strict orders not to let\nslip any hint, as doctors warned\nagainst possible shock.\nIn a formal greeting, U.S. Consul-general Everett Drumright expressed an official view, declaring: \"You were only doing your\nduty as part of the United Nations\neffort to repel aggression in Korea\nwhen you were captured.\"\nHe added:\n\"Our joy in welcoming you is\ntempered by anxious thoughts that\nan unknown number of Americans\nare arbitrarily detained in Communist China against their will\nand desire. ...\"\nHens Die of Heat*\nDASHWOOD, Ont. (CPT\u2014Neighbors hosed water on poultry\nhoui.es in an effort to save the\nremainder of a flock of laying\nhens after 500 birds died because\nof the intense heat. The birds, part\nof a flock of 1,200 hens, died as\nthe mercury soared to a record 96\ndegrees here.\nS.      ,ms   V.O.\n0T Seagrams\nSeagram's \"83\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nBRIEFS INVITED\nTHE ROYAL COMMISSION\nON\nCANADA'S\nECONOMIC PROSPECTS    \u2022\nwill fommonco public hearings in\nVictoria, 21st of November\nand\nVancouver, 23rd of November\nBrlefa are invited from organizations and aaaoclatlom\nwishing to'expren vlewa on the probable economic devel-\nopment of Canada ,nt\\ on the problemt to which It appeart\nlikely to give rise.\nSpecifically Included among the subjects to be considered by the Commission are the following:\na) anticipated developments In the supply of raw\nmaterials and energy sources;\nb) The growth to be expected In the population\nof Canada and changes In Its distribution;\nc) prospects for growth and change In domestic\nand external markets for Canadian production;\nel)    trends    in    productivity    and    standards    of\nliving; and\ne) prospective requirements for Industrial and\nsocial capital,\nBriefs must be In writing. At least ten copies, or more\nIf possible, should be fonwarded, and should reach the\nSecretary of the Commission Room 400, Daly Building,\nOttawa, Ontario, by the 24th of October.\nIt would be helpful If organizations and associations\nIntending to submit briefs could so Inform the Commission's Secretary without delay.\nW. L. Gordon\nChairman\nD. V. LePan\nSecretary\nPsychiatrist Says Many Parents\nGive Teenager Too Much Freedom\nTHIEVES BEWARE! _ Demonstrator In Frankfurt.\nGermany, lets off moneybag device which releases thick dye\nfumes turning both would-be thief ind contents of case, red.\nIndian Church\nWorker Takes\nHoly Orders\nCHURCHILL, Man (CP)\u2014A 54-\nyear-old Chipewyan Indian has\nbecome the first member of his\ntribe to bejadvanced to the priest- j\nhood in the Anglican Church.\nRev. Sandy Clipping, untiring\nchurch worker among Indians in\nnorthern Manitoba and deacon to\nhis people at the small trading\npost of Duck Lake, 135 miles north\nwest of here, since 1947, was raised tb the order in a quiet ceremony at St Paul's Church.\nThe church was crowded with\nabout 100 Chipewyans, many from\nthe Duck Lake congregation who\nseveral months ago travelled six\ndays by dog- team to get here.\nThey had to leave their home in\nthe early weeks of spring to take\nadvantage of the hard freeze and\nhave been camped around this\nport. 610 miles north of Winnipeg,\nawaiting the day their spiritual\nleader would be ordained.\nRt. Rev. H. E. Hives, bishop of\nKeewatin, Rev. C. W. Mixer of\nKitchener, Ont. Rev. H. H. Marsh\nof Toronto, the Rev, Hughes-Cpl-\ney,' archdeacon of Gillam, Man-.,\nand the Rev. L. R. Willis, .host\nminister, participated in the Anglican rite of laying on of hands.\nPRESENTS CANDIDATES\nMr. Clipping attended morning\nprayer before the ordination. In\nthe evenflg he presented several\nChipewyan candidates for confirmation.\nThe Indians from the Duck Lake\nsettlement had to travel by dog\nteam because rapids in the Cari-\nUnable lo Be\nIn Contest\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014Cory Archer, 21-year-old beauty from Victoria, says she is unable to enter\nthe Miss Exquisite Form contest\nbecause of \"unforeseen circumstances\".\nIn a letter to United Artists\nCorp., sponsor of the pageant here\nAug. 7 to 15, Cory said she is unable to come to New York at the\nspecified time.\nThe letter was sent from Vancouver July 28. ,\nCory's mother, Mrs. Mary Archer, said in Victoria earlier this\nweek the girl left home 2 monthi\nago for Vancouver and had not\nbeen heard from since. Mrs. Archer apparently did not know where\nher daughter was.\nMiss Archer's withdrawal leaves\nthree Canadians still In the contest's finals. They are Catharine\nCave, 21, of Wilton Grove, Ont.;\nDonna Warneck, 23, Vancouver;\nand Giselle Zinkgraf, 18, Hamilton.\nOnt\nNEW YORK FOR FINALS\nThey will come to New York\nfor the finals. Miss Cave was\nchosen to take Cory Archer's vacated spot. The finalists, lnclud-\n! Ing Miss Archer, will share in\n$75,000 of prize money.\nA contest official estimated Miss\nArcher's take at $500. The' others'\nshare will depend upon their\nshowing in the finals.\n\"Miss Exquisite Form\" will get\na $10,000, one-year television and\nmodelling contract and a studio\naudition in Hollywood.\nNot Good Excuse\nERINDALE, Ont. (CP)^-Police\nagreed it was & hot, humid day\nbut they wouldn't take the temperature as an excuse when they\ncame across a nude man walking\ndown the main street. They took\nDmytic Kohutiak off to the cells\nto cool off and charged him with\nvagrancy. He told police he lost\nhis clothes while cooling off in a\npool at a park in this town\" about\n15  miles  southwest of Toronto.\nbou river made canoe travel impossible. They will not be able to\nreturn home until the hard freeze\nof winter again makes movement\nby dog team possible.\nANN ARBOR, Mich. (Ap) \u2014\nTeen-agers are not crsiy, mixed-\nup kids\u2014but the world they live\nin ii.\nSo says a University of Mich!-,\ngan child psychiatrist.\nDr. Ralph D. Rablnovitch says:\n\"With all his problems, the adolescent has priceless assets which,\ngiven proper nurture, far outweigh\nthe negatives \u2014 but some things\ncontinually get in his way.\"\nDr. Rablnovitch says many par- |\nents, In trying to give their child\nindependence, go too far and deprive them of needed family security and guidance.\nAs a result, he says, they are\nforced to stand on legs too wobbly\nto hold them.\n\"In some families,\" he says, \"it\nis as though parents no longer\ndare direct a child after he has\nreached the magic age of 16. . . .\nIt Is certainly nice to grow up\nwith one's children, but lt Is also\nwise to be more mature than one's\nchildren.\"\nAdolescents, he says, need more\nthan a school course In tne physiology of sexual functions. He says:\n\"The'primary elements of sex\neducation are found In family re-\nI latlons, between parents and be\ntween parents and child.\"\nTo Spend $1 Million\nPORT MELLON (CP) \u2014 Mors\nthan $1,300,000 will be spent on\nthe Canadian Forest Products pulp\nmill In the next few months, plant\nmanager Dan Williamson has announced, Major expenditure will\nwith \u2022 \u2022.\nBLACK BALI\n10 Fast Trips Eath Way Every Day\nVANC0UVER-NANAIM0\nFastest Across the Strait\nDEPARTURES EVERY TWO HOURS ON THE\nEVEN HOUR, 6 A.M.-MIDNIQHT\nFROM BOTH HORSESHOE BAY AND NAN&IMO\nIV. af (Sam, 0, 10, 12 noon, 2 pm, 4, 6, 0, 10,12 mid.     ,\n(Daylight Saving Time)\nBlack Ball Vancouver City fern, terminal 1) at Horseshoe\nBay, West Vancouver, 14 miles from downtown Vancouver\nvia Georgia St., Lions Gate Bridge and West Shore Drive.\nNO  RESERVATIONS REQUIRED\nPassengen-Automobiles\u2014Trutks\n\u00a9 ROOM fORALL-RIM\nBLACK BALL\nOn Forest Pulp Mill\nbe a $1,250,000 boiler shop aijd\nblack liquor recovery furnace.-\nBring the\nChildren \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nOn your visits to,\nSpokane, stop at the\nFriendly Hotel Spokane.\nTo better serve our\nguests, children under 14\nstay free with their\nparents.\nBring the children to\nsee the heart of\nthe Inland Empire . . ,\nthey're welcome, too!\n\u2022 Parting; at our Front\nDoor\/\n\u2022 Air Conditioned\nSiiver Grill\ni\nSmootK..\nLight...\nPleasing... Satisfying\ni* tlends wi\nPHILIP MORRIS\nthe Light Smoke with the Pleasing Taste\nI ou'll like Philip Morris because they're a light smoke with a most\npleasing taste. And you'll like them from the first puff of your first\npack.\n\u2022Jtart the day with Philip Morris \u2014by sundown you'll agree you\nhave enjoyed many pleasant moments from the cigarette that is\nso light smoking, so pleasant tasting \u2014 and remember Philip\nMorris are made from the world's finest tobaccos.\nVA^^^Ws finest tobacco\n \u2014I     \u25a0  ,A            ........ \u25a0 \u25a0\n- ,\u25a0:. -,\u25a0 \u25a0       \u25a0 \u25a0     \u25a0     . . - \u25a0     \u25a0      \u25a0  \u25a0 . .      \u25a0 I        \u2014WWWP\n<^C3~\nSPORTS\n3urdirh(?ampfire\n\u00bb   - n. IAOC SORBS ' \"\nBy JACK SOItDS-\nA.AKES SMALL\nPAP\u00a3R COMB\nNEsSTANDI-rjtoT\nAVERSE TD\nR.Y1.JG1MT0\nTHE CA6l\/t\nRoyals Take 1-Game Lead\nTo Down Salmo Girls 10-8\nNelson Royals opened their best\nof five semi-final series with the\nSalmo girls Thursday with a 10-8\nvictory at the Civic Recreation\nGrounds before a fair crowd.\nLittle Pat Ozey pa^pd the way\nfor the Royals' victory. In the last\nof the ninth, trailing by two runs,\nshe hit a hard ball to shortstop\nMadaski who failed to field the\nball cleanly. Marie Stangherlin,\nwho in the third blasted a long\nhomer over the left fielder's head,\nfollowed Ozey and was safe on an\nerror. Myrna Cain then blasted a\ntriple into right field, scoring the\ntying runs. She later scored on\nOlive Swihart's single.\nThe game was a thriller from\nthe start with players from both\nsides taking every play seriously\nand arguing the umpires' decisions on occasions.\nA rhubarb came up In tha\nninth when Helen Doddi circled\nthe base paths after ilammlng a\nhard drive over Marie Stangher-\nlln'\u00bb head In right field. tWhen\nthe shouting had died down the\numpires called her out for falling to touch second base, Although players from troth tides\nargued    the    point,    umplre-in-\nchlef Wright ruled her out\nRoyals started early, collecting\ntwo runs in each of the first two\nframes and one in the third. Salmo\ncame up with two runs in the\nfifth.\nThe Royals, after scoring two\nmore in the eighth, apparently\nfigured the game was on ice but\nthey were handed a scare.\nPlaying like beginners in the\ntop of the ninth, the Royals suddenly saw the bases loaded with\nSalmo runners with nobody out.\nBefore the frame came to a close\nSalmo had scored six runs and\nhad taken the lead.\nHowever, the excitement of the\nbig inning unnerved the youthful,\nbut hard-hitting Salmo team and\nthey errored in the ninth to allow\nthe Royals to cart ott the first\nwin.\nVerda Pratt went the distance\nfor the Royals and allowed 13 hits.\nShe struck out none and walked\ntwo. Csepe on ' the mounjj for\nSalmo gave up a total of 15 hits\nstruck out one and walked two.\nThe second game of the series\nfor the West Kootenay Championship's will be held in Salmo\nSunday.\nKokanees Edge Up\nTo Beat Bears 13-11\nTRAIL \u2014 Sparked by Harold\nMayo's seven-goal splurge, Nelson kokanees came from behind\nto defeat Trail Golden Bears 13-11\nin a Western International Lacrosse League game here Thursday night.\nMayo galloped at a three-goal-\na-period clip in the second and\nthird quarters to spearhead his\nmates; attack, and his third-quarter dashes in which he scored all\nNelson's goals brought the team\nback into the running.\nThe Bears had taken a 7-4 lead\nin the second stanza, but Kokanees\nhad cut it to 9-7 by the end of the\nthird, and went ahead in the third\nwith six goals to Bears' pair.\nMoffatt led Trail scorers with\nthree, Torresan and Klit picking\nup two apiece. Bruce McLean\nscored a trio for Nelson.\nThe summary:\nFirst Period \u2014 1. Trail. Moffatt\n(Kendall) 12.35; 2, Nelson, Mayo\n13.45.\nPenalties \u2014 Kosiancic, Swanson,\nHunter.\nSecond period \u2014 3, Trail, Torresan .53; 4. Trail, Secco (Torre-\nsarp 1.50; 5, Nelson, McLean 3.25;\n6, Nelson, Mason 5.25; 7, Trail,\nTanner 10.45; 8, Nelson, McLean\n(Graves) 13.32: 9, Trail, McNeill\n(Alegreta) 13.47; 10, Trail, Moffatt (Kendall) 14.16; 11, Trail,\nMoffatt (Kendall) 14.33.\nPenalties \u2014 Tanner, McLean.\nThird period \u2014 12, Nelson, Mayo\n(Gilker( 4:16; 13, Nelson, Mayo\n6:48; 14, Trail, Kosiancic (Exner)\n10:40; 15. Nelson, Mayo 12.25; 16,\nTrail, Torresan 12.53.\nPenalties \u2014 Secco   (2).  Mayo.\nCrawford, Norman Oust\nAmericans From Quarter Finals\nBy PETER  MURRAY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCALGARY  (CP)  \u2014 A pair of\nNELSON\nCivic Centre Grounds\nONE DAY ONLY\nTHUR.\nAUG.\n11\nir^^s*.^\niukwSm%\nBEATTY\nGIGANTIC *\n3RINGiRRUROOD\nW\nCLYDE BEATTY \"W f\"'\"\" *\"\" \u00ab\u25a0\"\u2022\n1 \"\"\u2022\u00bb\"\u2022\" ' am T.al\u00bb-t I. Pin...\nHANNSTORD FAMILY \u2014 IACChTnT\n\u2014 HANELTROUPt \u2014 OR I AT\nLINARES - TRUZZI \u2014 IAMEJ\nMIUETTE-THE W^VS-Sup\"\nBRILLIANT ARRAY OS THRILLING\"\nNEW FEATURES. DAZZLING DIS.\n_PLAYS    and    EXOTIC   SPECTACLES.\nTWICE DAILY 2;3018 P.M. I POPULAR\n_D00RS0PEH !;30 * 7 P.M. IPRICES_\n2000  UNRESERVED SEAT8\nEACH PERFORMANCE\nChildren 75c, Adults $1.35\nIncludes Provincial Tax\nCity Tax Extra \u2014 If Any\nExtra  Added Attraction\nDOUG AUTRY \"Singing Cowboy\"\nand His Riders and Ropers\nGeneral Admission and Reserved\nChair Tickets on Sale Circus Day\nOnly at City Drug (Rexall) Store,\n456 Baker Street.'\ndramatic 20th'-hole victories by\nLyle Crawford and Moe Norman\nThursday assured the first all-\nCanadian final in the Canadian\namateur golf championships since\n1951.\nCrawford. 22-year-old Vancouver car salesman, edged Don Bisplinghoff, Orlando, Fla., and the\ncarefree Norman, from Kitchener,\nOnt. ousted long-hitting Hobart\nManley, Jr., of Savannah, Ga., in\nquarter-final matches.\nBisplinghoff and Manley were\nthe last surviving Americans in\nthe gruelling, week-long match\nplay test.\nCrawford and Norman were\njoined in the semi-finals by two\nVancouver amateurs, Doug Bajus\nand Bob Kidd.\nSaint Genevieve, patron saint of\nParis, was famous in the fifth century for benevolence and predictions of the future.\n\u2022 TELEVISION\n\u2022 RADIO\n\u2022 ELECTRONICS\nI am here to interview men\nwho would like to train for\na real job with a real\nfuture. Those showing aptitude will get full facts\nabout remarkable training\nopportunity. Men taken\ninto program from this area\ncan earn good money before long. No need to quit\npresent job while training\nAlso ideal for high school\ngrads. Write at once for\nappointment.\nJ. P. COLLINS,\nDe-Vry Technical  Initltute,\nc\/o General Delivery,\nNelson, B. C.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nKansas City    001 000 000\u20141   8   0\nBaltimore  ..   201 500 OOx\u20148   9   0\nHarrington, Boyer (4), Fricano\n(4) and Astroth; Lopat and Triandos. L \u2014 Harrington. HR: Key \u2014\nAstroth.\nChicago   020 000 100\u20143   7   0\nBoston   \u2022 .... 102 211 OOx\u20147 14   0\nPierce, Consuegra (4), Fornieles\n(6) and Lollard, Moss (7); Nixon,\nKinder (8) and White. W - Nixon.\nL \u2014 Pierce. HHs: Bos \u2014 Zauchin,\nPiersall.\nCleveland   ...  101 000 301\u20146 17   J\nNew York ...  000 002 001\u20143   8   0\nScore, Narleski (6) and Hegan;\nFord, Kucks (7), Sturdivant (9)\nand Berra. W \u2014 Narleski. L \u2014\nKucks. HHs: Cle \u2014 Wertz. NY \u2014\nMantle.\nDetroit     002 100 030\u20146   7   3\nWashington    040 001 13x\u20149 15   1\nGarver, Cristane (3), Coleman\n(7), Birrer (8)\"and House; Abernathy, Stobbs (8) and Courtney.\nW \u2014 Stobbs. L \u2014 Coleman.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPhiladelphia 000 200 100\u20143 9 1\nCincinnati .... 000 101 llx\u20144   8   0\nWehmeier, Meyer (7) and Seminick; Gross, Minarcin (8), Nuxhall (9) and Burgess. W \u2014 Minarcin. L \u2014 Meyer. HRs: Phila. \u2014\nEnnis, Greengrass. Cin. \u2014 Post\nPittsburgh .. 200 052 010\u201410 15 2\nChicago   .      212 400 02x\u201411 15   1\nDonoso, Surkont '31, Littlefield\n(5), Face (8) and Shepard, Atwell (6); Pollet,' Hillman (5),\nTremel (6). Davis (9) and Chiti.\nW \u2014 Tremel. L \u2014 Littlefield.\nHRs: Pgh. \u2014 Long, Groat, Thomas,\nFreese. Chi. \u2014 Banks (3), Miksis.\nBrooklyn ... 020 002 205\u201411 13 2\nMilwaukee .. 040 010 401\u201410 11   0\nNewcombe, Spooner (5), Erskine\n(7), Labine (9) and Campanella;\nBurdette, Paine (0), Johnson (if,\nNichols (9) and Crandall. W \u2014\nErskine; L \u2014 Johnson. HRs: Bkn.\n\u2014Zimmer, Furillo, Campanella;\nMil. \u2014 Thomson, Logan, Pafko.\nNew York .... 000 000 000\u20140 4 2\nSt. Louis 100 002 OOx\u20143   5   1\nMonzant. Grissom (8) and Katt:\nPoljolsky and Sarni. L\u2014Monzant.\nFreno, Waters.\nFourth period \u2014 17, Nelson,\nHunter 4.17; 18, Nelson, Mayo 1.40;\n19, Nelson, Mayo 6.48; 20, Trail,\nKlit 6.57; 21, Nelson, Kubin 7.05;\n22, Trail, Klit (Ford) 9.12; 23, Nelson, Mayo 9.41; 24, McLean (Choquette) 10.21.\nPenalties \u2014 Alegreto, Torresan,\nFord. Hunter.\nStan Grill Gels\n12 Strikeouts\nIn Outlaw Win\nThe Nelson' Outlaws baseball\nclub added another game to their\nwin column when they journeyed\nto Metaline and eked out a close\n4-3 victory over the American\nclub Wednesday.\nStan Grill went the distance for\nthe Outlaws, racking up 12 strike\nouts and giving up only four hits.\nThe Outlaws collected five hits\noff Mandish, who struck out seven and walked five.\nTom Marshall led the Outlaw\nattack with two hits, with singletons going to Ron Nash, Don Porteous and Ken White. Pope Scan-\nIon was carried along as a pinch\nhitter, but much to his regret the\noccasion never arose for him to\nshow his stuff at the plate.\nThe game was by far the best\nof the three games played against\nMetaline this season. The game\nwas a warmup for the Outlaws,\nwho play a doubleheader at the\nRecreation Grounds Sunday against Kellogg, Idaho. \u00bb\nThe Kellogg team with a 16-4\nrecord this season is by far the\nheaviest hitting club the Outlaws\nhave met in three years. \"They\ndropped two games to Kellogg\nthree weeks ago at Sandpolnt by\nscores of 4-2 and 4-1.\nLions vs. Arqos\nOn Wednesday\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Toronto\nArgonauts of the Big Four will\narrive here Sunday for an exhibition game next Wednesday with\nthe B.C. Lions of -the Western\nInter-provincial Football Union,\nGeneral manager Phil Webb of\nthe Lions said the Argos, with a\nroster of 42 players, will work out\nin the\" afternoon Monday through\nWednesday.\nIt will be Lions' only exhibition before the league opener\nagainst Calgary Stampeders on\nAug. 22.\nFirst Canadian woman lawyer,\nClara Brett Martin of Toronto,\nwhe died in 1923, was called to\nthe bar in 1897.\nThis advertise ment ii not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Omtfol Board\nor by the. Government of Bnush\nColumbia.\nMarlene Takes\nEarly Lead\nBy STEPHEN SCOTT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Youngsters\nshowed the way \u2014 one of them\nspectacularly \u2014 at the opening of\nthe 54-hole Canadian women's\nclose golf championships here\nThursday.\nThe mighty Marlene Stewart,\ndefending champion from Font-\nhill, Ont., was leading at the end\nof the first round after recoveripg\nfrom an early bad start and ending V\/ith a two-under-par 7.5\u2014lowest score ever shot by a woman\non. the Royal Colwood. Had it not\nbeen for two unfortunate strokes\nin the uphill 18th hole, Miss Stewart might have pruned off another\nstroke to match the 74 she shot\nin a  practice round Wednesday.\nIn the 36-hole inter-provincial\nteam matches, defending Ontario,\nplaying without Miss Stewart, was\nleading after the first round with\n340, one better than Quebec.\nIn the 36-hole junior team\nmatches, based on net scores of\nthe two-women team Manitoba\nwas leading with 157, followed by\nOntario with \u25a017C, Quebec, 171; Alberta and Saskatchewan, 174 each\nand B.C. 175.\n.There were few scores that\ncame near Miss Stewart. Rae\nMilligan, Jasper Park swinger\nwho won the Ontario and Alberta\nchampionships this year, followed\nwith a two-over-par 79.\nMARKSMEN IN\nSHOOT FRIDAY\nSOUTH MARCH, Ont. (CP) \u2014\nThe cream of Canada's rifle and\npistol marksmen converge today\non this army summer camp for\nthe country's two major annual\nshooting competitions.\nThey are the 12th rtational small\nbore rifle and handgun matches\nAug 5-7, which have attracted 270\nentries, and the 73rd Dominion of\nCanada Rifle Association prize\nshoot Aug. 8-13, which will have\nmore than 600 entries.\nA 450-tent village has been set\nup at the ranges, 11 miles west of\nOttawa, for the competitors.\nRoughly one-third of them in the\nsmall bore and handgun matches\nwill be Americans, who have\ndominated the meet in recent\nyears. Only a handful of U.S.\nmarksmen are entered in the\nDCRA shoot. About 50 women\nwill compete in the two events.\nSWAPS SHOWS WELL\nCHICAGO (AP) - Swaps, in\nhis first workout on the Washington Park grass course, ran five\nfurlongs Thursday in near-record\ntime.\nThe west coast swiftly whisked\nfive eighths of a mile in :59 2-5\nseconds; one frth of a second more,\nthan the American turf course record set June 20, J952 at Monmouth\nPark.\nSwaps, owned by Rex Ellsworth,\nis preparing for the American\nDerby Aug. 20 and his big match\nrace Aug. 31 against Nashua.\nHOADBtNCHED,\nHARTWIG IN\nOPENING SINGLES\nGLEN COVEs N. Y. (AP) -\nAustralian captain Harry Hopman\nbenched Lew Hoad again Thurs-\nday and named Rex Hartwig to\nface the Japanese today in opening singles of the lnter-zone Davis\nCup match.\nHoad, reported to be sulking\nbecause of his bride of a few\nweeks wasn't permitted to accompany him to America, was given\nthe brushoff in Montreal last\nweek, playing only after the series\nhad been clinched.\nIn the draw made Thursday,\nAustralian champion Ken Rosewall was sent against Atsushi\nMiyagi, the 23-year-old Japanese\ntltleholder in the first match at\n3:30 p.m. MDT. Hartwig was\ndrawn against Kosei Kamo in the\nsecond.\nHoad and Hartwig were named\nfor Saturday's doubles against Miyagi and Kamo.\nCRICKET RESULT8\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Results of\nCanadian cricket championships\nhere Thursday:\nAlberta 84 for 5 wickets, B.C. 79.\nOntario 238 for 7 wickets declared, Manitoba 111\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Cricket\nclose-of-play' scores Thursday:\nWarwickshire 188 and 21 for 0,\nSouth Africans 382 tor 9 declared.\nEssex 188 and 34 for 1, Sussex\nS73 for 8 declared.\nLeicestershire 301 and 45 for 1,\nYorkshire 317.\nLancashire 248 and. 119 for 7,\nSurrey 220.\nWorcestershire 107 and 134, Glamorgan 264, Glamorgan won by\nan Innings and 23 runs.\nScotland 289 and 94 for 8, Derbyshire 290. , i\nGloucestershire 144 and 125 for\n1, Kent 360 for 9 declared.\nSomerset 156 and 173 for 6,\nNorthamptonshire 321.\nMiddlesex 374 for 6 declared\nand 50 for 3, Nottinghamshire 317.\nTrio Takes Lead In\nTarn O'Shanter Golf\nCHICAGO (CP)\u2014Wally Ulrlch\nArnold Palmer and Ted Kroll shot\nfour-under par 68s to take the\nlead Thursday in the first round\nof the $25,000 Tarn O'Shanter ail-\nAmerican golf tournament.\nStan Leonard of Vancouver was\ntwo strokes behind the leaders\nwith a 70 and Rudy Horvath of\nWindsor, Ont., finished with a\npar 72.\nTribe Ties White\nSox for League Lead\nBy The Associated Press\nCleveland Indians climbed into\na virtual tie with Chicago White\nSox for first place in the American League Thursday when Vic\nWertz hammered a three-run homer to give the Redskins a 6-3 victory over the Yankees at New\nYork.\nOnly two games separated\nfourth-place Boston and' the leading White Sox after some slugging by Jackie Jensen and Jimmy\nPiersall \"provided a 7-3 Red Sox\ntriumph'over Chicago.\nThe Chicago defeat sliced the\nWhite Sox' league lead to only\ntwo percentage points over Cleveland, and dropped the Yankees\ninto third place, a game behind\nthe pace-setters.  \u25a0\nWashington bats rang out for 15\nhits and the Senators slowed down\nDetroit Tigers' pennant hopes 9-6.\nAnd former' Yankee Ed Lopat\nmade his Baltimore debut, beating Kansas City Athletics 8-1 on\nan eight-hitter.\nBRAVE8 FALL APART\nAt Milwaukee the Braves blew\na 9-6 lead in the top of the ninth\ninning to Brooklyn Dodgers, who\npoured five tallies across the plate\nand won out in an 11-10 slugfest.\nThe big blow of the Dodger rally\nwas Roy Campanula's three-run\nhomer, his 24th. There were six\nhomers in the game, Don Zimmer\nand Carl Furillo also getting\nround trippers for the Dodgers,\nwhile Bobby Thomson, Johnny\nLogan and Andy Pafko countered\nfor Milwaukee.\nThe victory boosted the Dodgers\n15% games in front of the second-\nplace Braves for their largest lead\nin the National League season.\nAarnie Banks walloped his 34th,\n35th and 36th homers at Chicago\nand the Cubs edged Pittsburgh\n11-10 in another adding machine\naffair. Banks also had a single in\nfive trips and accounted for seven\nruns.\nBob Thurman's eighth-inning\nsingle scored Wally Post from second base at Cincinnati and the\nRedlegs took a 4-3 decision from\nPhiladelphia Phillies. It was the\neighth Cincinnati victory in their\nWORK\nBOOTS\nMade of brown full-grain\nleather uppers. Plain toe, heavy\ngauge neolite soles and rubber\nheels.       '\nA very popular and practical\nboot. Medium weight \u2014 hard\nwearing \u2014 comfortable.\nSixes 6-11\n9.95\nA PAIR\n411 Baker St.   Phone 1114\nlast nine games.\nWERTZ HIT8 AWAY\nWertz smashed his 13th homer\nin the seventh off Johnny Kucks\nwith the score 2-2 after a single\nby Gene Woodling and a walk to\nAl Rosen, who had four singles in\nfour trips for the afternoon. Mickey Mantle hit his 24th homer in\nthe 9th inning when'a Yankee rally fizzled out. The Yankees, who\nled the league by 6V4 games July\n2, have lost 19 of their last 20\ngames.\nJensen and Piersall drove In\nsix Red Sox runs, and Ellis Kinder came on in relief at Boston to\nretire the last five batters and\npreserve Willard Nixon's 11th victory. It was Boston's 42nd victory\nin the last 56 games.\nThe only Kansas City run off\nEd Lopat was Joe Astroth's circuit blow.\nChuck Stobbs hurled two. innings of hitless ball when starter\nTed Abernathy ran Into tfouble\nin the eighth inning, and Detroit\nknotted the score at Washington,\nWith the teams tied at 6-6 the Senators reached Joe Coleman for\nthree runs in the eighth.\nIn the only night game, Tom\nPoholsky pitched a four-hitter to\nsnap a six-game St. Louis Cardinal losing streak and hand New\nYork Giants the first defeat In\ntheir last five games 3-0 in a contest that took only one hour and\n47 minutes.\nPoholsky threw only 88 pitches,\nall but 28 of them over the plate.\nMl SON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1953\u20147\nLast 2 Miles Foil Girl's ~[~\nBid To Swim Lake Ontario\nTORONTO (CP) - \"I just\ncouldn't swim against those\nwaves,\" 19-yeaj.-old Shirley Campbell of Toronto and Fergus said\nThursday a few hours after her\nattempt to swim Lake Ontario\nended ln failure and heartbreak.\nThe end came in early-morning\ndarkness less than two miles from\nthe Toronto shoreline and 21 hours\nand 27 minutes after she had\nstruck out frqm the mouth of the\nNiagara river in a surprise bid\nto beat Marilyn Bell's lake swim\nrecord of 20 hours and 56 minutes.\nThe 119-pound typist was pulled\nfrom the water at 2:15 a.m. while\n50,000 persons stood waiting for\nher to' land near the Canadian\nNational Exhibition grounds on\nToronto's western waterfront. Her\nstrength failed as she struggled\nwith a vicious ground swell after\ncoming within sight of her goal.\nShirley, who twice won three-\nmile CNE swims and was a possible entrant ln a CNE cross-lake\nmarathon next month, said Thursday she will never tackle the lake\nagain.\nHer coach, Max Hurley, vowed\nthat he, too, will have nothing to\ndo with any future swims across\nthe lake.\n\"It's not a sport,\" he said, \"It's\ninhuman torture. I'm only sorry\nthat a girl with such raw courage\nshould lose with the Jackpot so\nclose.\"\nTERMED \"BARBARIC\"\nToronto alderman William Allen\nsaid Thursday he will.press for\ncancellation of the CNE's scheduled swim across the lake, calling\nmarathon swims \"barbaric and\ncriminal.\" CNE officials said,\nhowever, the proposed swim is not\ninhuman and is \"a great sporting\nattraction.\"\nThe distance straight across tha\nlake is 32 miles. However, observers estimated that Shirley swam\nbetween 48 and 40 niile^ about the\nsame distance as Marilyn covered\nin her conquest of the lake last\nSept. 9.\nThey   blaced   capricious   winds! \u25a0\nand inexpert pilotage for causing\nShirley   to   zigzag   interminably,\nthus adding  wearisome  miles tO'\nthe swim and wearing her down.\n1; i. i' <: I' 111 \u25a0 111111111111 s \u2022 111111 \u25a0 \u25a0\u00bb! I\nAINSWORTH HOt SPRINGS\nOPEN DAILY\n10 a.m. ro 10 p.m.\nCLOSED  MONDAYS\nIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIimilllMIIIIIIM\nExhibition Game\nHUME FASTBALL TEAM\nVi\nDUNCAN FASTBALL TEAM       '\n, Vancouver Island\nSATURDAY-^- 6:15\nADMISSION 36 CENT8\nSENIOR\nLacrosse\nTONIGHT\n8 paltl*\nCIVIC ARENA\nRossland\nvs.\nNelson\nADULTS 50c\nStudents and\n.Children 2St>\nHarvey Mason\nNelson  Forward\nWAJU...\nCaptain Morgan\n'&e&* RUM\nCaptain Morgan De Luxe Rum has the touch of true greatness\n, ... a careful selection of the world's choicest rums\n\u2022brought together by master blenders\nin a liqueur rum of rare and remarkable worth.\nCaptain Morgan De Luxe Rum is available in limited supply, at a premium price,\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia\n .\nmm^m'^^^^\ns\nE.\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\n.8\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nTV foretft tied\nsiandft horrified\nafter acclderrtelli)\nshooting\nProfessor\nKrindle\nrun takes aavaniaju vr me momentanj\nl\u00bbl_50 and flin()s-Wm\u00abelf atthea|}ent \u2014\nJoe Otterfoot -taNes his cue and slums ihe\n(jun from ths other ageni'J hand with a well-\nplaced shot ~\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally  Newt does-not hold  Itself responsible In the event\not an'error In the following Hits.   -\u25a0,.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\ni ear in EARLy so none of\nMY EMPLOYEES WILL SEE ME\nIWEARIN' SHORTS.' I'LL STAY\nBEHIND ME DESK ALL DAY\/ .\n(Closing  Prices)\nMINE8\nAcadia Uranium  ....\nAlgom Uranium \t\nAnacon Lead \t\nAnglo Rouen\t\nAtlin Ruff   \t\nAubelle \t\nAunor   \t\nBarnat\nBaska Uranium \t\nBase Metals\t\nBobjo\t\nBrilund \t\nBroulan    \t\nBrunswick\t\nBuffalo Ank   \t\nBuff Can\t\nBuff Red 'Lake \t\nCallinan\nCampbell C \t\nChimo     \t\nCons Denison \t\nCons M & S\t\nCons Orlac\t\nCons Ran \t\nConwest   \t\nCon Sub \t\nCons Discovery \t\nCons Howe \t\nDetta M\t\nDonalda   \t\nDyno       \t\nEast Malartic \t\nEast Sullivan \t\nElder Gold\t\nFalconbridge\t\nFaraday   \t\nFrobisher \t\nGeco \t\nGiant Yel\t\nGod's Lake \t\nGoldale      \t\nGoldcrest      \t\nGolden Manitou \t\nGold Hawk  ..\t\nGoldora \t\nGunnar Gold \t\nHeadway       \t\nHollinger        _\t\nHomer Y K \t\nHudson Bay \t\nInspiration\t\nInt Nickel\t\nJaculet\t\nJoliet Que \t\nJonsmith \t\nKenville        \t\nKerr Addison \t\nKeyboycon    ;.\t\nKristina '\t\nLabrador\t\nLake Lingman \t\nXakeshore    \t\nLeitch   \t\nLexindin \t\nLittle Long Lac\t\nLorado \t\nMacassa \t\n' .12.4\n20.85\n4.55\n1.65\n.25\n.10\n2.10\n1.12\n.44\n.68\n.58\n2.00\n1.54\n14.00\n.78\n.17\n.16Vi\n.31\n12.85\n1.65\n12.50\n37.50\n.14\n.73\n6.30\n4.85\n4.95\n4.90\n.29\n.48\n1.30\n2.30\n0.65\n.59\n28.50\n2.50\n4.80\n18.25\n6.60\n.75\n.42\n.25\n3.95\n.34\n.10\n15.75\n1.15\n24.00\n.20\n67.00\n1.65\n76.75\n.45\n.90\n.63\n.12\n17.85\n.1214\n.21\n17.50\n,17y4\n5.75\n.68\n.42\n1.45\n2.45\n1.95\nPlay Safe\non the highway\nthis week-end\nKeep alert while\nyou drive-chew gum!\nMacDonald     __...\t\nMacfie Explor\t\nMackeno \u25a0    \t\nMadsen R L ,'\t\nMalartic G,F \t\nManeast \t\nMart McNeely \u201e\t\nMcKenzie R L  -.\nMcMarmac\t\nMining Corp \t\nNew Alger  \t\nNew Bidlamaque \t\nNew Harrlcana \t\nNew Jason       \t\nNew Thurbois \t\nNorgold    \t\nNorth Can \t\nOsisko\t\nPardee ..\nPickle   Crow   \t\nPlacer Develop \t\nPurdy M \t\nPreston E D \t\nQuebec Copper \t\nQuebec Nickel \t\nQuemont\t\nRadiore\t\nRayrock\t\nSan Antonio   \t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nStadacona\t\nSteep Rock   \t\nSilver Miller \t\nSullivan Con \t\nSylvanite       \t\nTeck Hughes\t\nTombill   \t\nTorbrit   \t\n.Thomp-Lund \t\nUnited Keno  \t\nUpper Canada \t\nViolamac       \t\nWright Hargreaves \t\nYankee Canuck \t\nYakeno  \t\nYale   \t\nOILS\nAnglo Can \t\nB A Oil     \t\nCal & Ed\t\nCan Collieries \t\nCan Decalta    \t\nCentral Leduc \t\nChemical Research \t\nGreat Sweetgrass \t\nHome  ,\t\nH Wood Senr\t\nImperial Oil \t\nInter Pete ...:\t\nKroy   \t\nLiberal Pete \t\nMid Cont \t\nNat Pete       \t\nPacific Pete \t\nPounder   \t\nRoyalite\t\nTriad   ...    \t\nUnited Oils \t\nYank C \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\n| Algoma Steel \t\nAJuminum \t\nAmerican Tel St Tel\t\nI Argus   \t\nI Atlas St    \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian\t\nI B C Electric 4s \t\n! B C Forest       \t\nI B C Packers B \t\nB C Power A \t\nI Burrard A     \t\nCan   Cement   \t\nCan Breweries \t\n'Can Canners  \t\nCan Chem Co   \t\nCanadian Dredge  r\nCan Oil .     ..\nCanadian Pacific Rly\n1.00\n.20\n.65\n2.15\n1.65\n.53\n.11\n.45\n.27   -\n23.85\n.35\n.29\n.33\n.13%\n.40\n.47\n.60\n.55\n1.85\n1.26\n33.25\n.46\n8.50\n8.85\n2.75\n26.50\n2.20\n'2.65\n1.65\n9.00\n.30\n14.35\n1.04 \u2022\n6.90\n1.44\n3.10\n.31\n\u20221.25\n1.68\n8.20\n1.06\n3.40\n2.07\n.23\n.1414\n.52\n5.95\n32.00\n.15%\n'.11\n.68\n1.95\n1.00\n3.20\n10.75\n.12\n38.50\n26.00\n1.26\n3.10\n.80\n1.81\n11..00\n1.10\n14.75\n(..80\n1.53\n.23\n36W\n74\n100\n184\n24%\n18%\n51\n7 V.\n95%\n13%\n15%\n35%\n9'A\n38\n29%\n36%\n12\n26%\n24 V<.\n33%\nCocksljutt    _ Wi\nCons Mining St Smelt  37%\nDist Seagram  38%\nDom Foundries  .'.... 27%\nDom Magnesium  __,\u2022 i 24\nDom Stores .             ^ 40\nDom Tar St Chemical ...... , 12%\nDom  Textiles     7\nEddy Paper        70%\nFamous Players  23%\nFanny Farmer  .'.. 27\nFleet Air     2.05\nGatineau      \u2022   ' 31%\nGypsum Lime   61\nHiram Walker   75\nImperial Oil     33%\nImp Tobacco    12%\nInt Pete           26%\nLaura Secord   21\nLoblaw A    44%\nLoblaw B         84\nMassey Harris        11%\nMcColl Frontenae   44%\nMont Loco        18%\nMoore  Corn    41\nNat Steel Car   33%\nPage Hershey   69%\nPowell River      51%\nRuss Industries   16%\nShawinigan     74\nSicks Brew     82V,\nSimpsons A        18%\nStandard  Paving    36%\nSteel of Canada      52\nUnion Gas of Can   49V.\nUnited Steel     16%\nWestern Grocers A  43\nWeston George     I'M\nWinnipeg Gas  ' 12\nAlert drivers are safe\ndrivers. Avoid drowsiness and driving jitters.\nChew gum while you're\nbehind the wheel.\nChewing helps relieve\nstrain and tension-\nhelps keep you feeling\nfresh and alert.\nChew any brand you\nlike, but chew while you\ndrive. Naturally we\nrecommend refreshing,\ndelicious Wrigley's\nSpearmint Gum\u2014for\nlively, full-bodied flavor\nand real, smooth chewing enjoyment!\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY TV   -   Channel  4\n11:00\u2014Sign On\n11:15\u2014Secret Storm\n11:30\u2014Houseparty\n11:45\u2014Armchair Adventure\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff '\n12:30\u2014Bob Crosby\n12:45\u2014Bob Crosby\n1:00\u2014\"Welcome Traveller\n1:30\u2014TBA\n1:45\u2014Musical Interlude <\n2:00\u2014On Your Account\n2:30\u2014Valiant Lady\n2:45\u2014Brighter   Day\n3:00\u2014Variety Hour\n3:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n3:45\u2014Guiding Light\n4:00\u2014 Love of Life\n4:15-TBA\n4:30\u2014Garry Moore  .\n4:45\u2014Garry Moore\n5:00\u2014What's Cookin'\n5:30\u2014 Strike It Rich\n6:00\u2014Bob Andrews' Show\n6:30\u2014Doug Edwards\n6:45\u2014Sports on  Parade\n7:00\u2014Green  Thumb\n7:15\u2014News\n7;25\u2014Weather Vane\n7:30\u2014Smilin' Ed\n8:00\u2014The Birth of a New World\n8:30\u2014Topper\n9:00\u2014Lucky Sport Time\n9:30\u2014Ray   Milland   Show\n10:00\u2014Undercurrent\n10:30\u2014Science Fiction Theatre\n11:00\u2014Patti Page\n11:15\u2014Painting Tips of Russ and\nBob\n11:30\u2014Ttory Theatre\n12:00\u2014Safeco News\n12:05\u2014Texas Rasslin'\nKHQ-TV - Channel S\n9:20\u2014Test Pattern\n9:40\u2014Color Test  Program\n9:55\u2014Bible   Reading\n10:00\u2014Dig  Dong  School\n10:30\u2014Parents Time\n10:45\u2014Sheilah Graham\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:00\u2014Tenn. Ernie Ford\n12:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n1:00\u2014The Last Crooked Mile\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n3:00\u2014Ted Mack's Matinee\n3:30\u2014It Pays' To Be Married\n4:00\u2014Q's Kaleidoscope\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n4:45\u2014Modern  Romances\n5:00\u2014Pinky   Lee\n5:30\u2014Bar 6  Roundup\n8:00\u2014Howdy  Doody\n6:30\u2014Superman \u00b0\n7:00\u2014Sports Reel\n7:30\u2014Front Page\n7:40\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014Midwestern  Hayride\n8:30\u2014Life of Riley\n9:00\u2014Best in Mystery\n9:30\u2014Dear Phoebe\n10:00\u2014The .Star and the Story\n10:30\u2014Make the Connection\n11:00\u2014 Life   With   Elizabeth\n11:30\u2014Millionaire  for  Christy\n11:00\u2014News Headlines\nKREMTV - Channel 2\n3:45\u2014Test Pattern\n4:00\u2014False Pretenses\n5:10\u2014Health and Happiness Club\n5:15\u2014Black Memory\n6:30\u2014Shadow stumpers\n6:55\u2014Newsbeat Spokane\n7:00\u2014Western Movietime\n7:55\u2014 What's the  Weather?\n8:00\u2014Bill Corum\n8:15\u2014Find  a Hobby\n8:30\u2014TBA\n9:00\u2014\"Square   Dance   Party\"\n9:30\u2014China Smith\n10:00\u2014Orient Express\n10:30\u2014The Vise\n11:00\u2014Jungle Book\n12:45\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Wav\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nCanada's Savings\nDeposits Increase\nOTTAWA (CP) -(Savlngs on\ndeposits ln Canada's chartered\nbanks at June 30 last amounted\nto $5,573,000,000 against $5,505,000,-\n000 at May 31 and $5,109,000,000 at\nJune 30, 1954, the chartered bank\nstatement for June showed Thursday.\nCall and short loans in Canada\namounted to $244,000,000 at June\n30, as against $250,000,000 at May\n31 and $239,000,000 at June 3, 1954.\nHigher Dividends\nFrom Chrysler\nNEW YORK (AP) - Directors\nof Chrysler Corp.. Thursday declared a dividend of 75 cents on\nthe capital stock and, reported\nfirst-half earnings of $70,010,642,\nequal to $8.04 a share.\nThe dividend ls payable Sept.\n13 to holders of record Aug. 15.\nThe company paid 75 cents in the\nlast four quarters.\nv*'.~~;---. <\".rajri\nWINNIPEG   (CP)  - Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats. No. 1 feed, 73%.\nBarley, No.' 1 feed, 1.02%.\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n1:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.\u2014Phone 1300\nEvening^\u2014Phone 1033-R\nDally Except Sundays\nand  Holidays\nMc & Me\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nON THE AIR\nCK.LN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n(Pacific Daylight Time)\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1955\n:630\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Wake-Up Time    '\n7:10\u2014Farm  Fare\n7*15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:35\u2014March   of  Truth\n7:40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News,\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Women Today\n9:00\u2014Homemaker  Harmonies\n10:00\u2014CKLN Entertains\n10:10\u2014News\nld\":15\u2014Melodic  Sketches\n10:44\u2014Story Parade\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Call  One-Nine\n12:00\u2014Bonspiel News\n12:05\u2014Sportsman's  Corner\n12:10\u2014Shoppers'   Guide\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Here's Our Story\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Radio Features\n1:45\u2014Matinee\n2:00\u2014Pacific News\n2:15\u2014Classic Corner\n2:30\u2014Burns Bonspiel Broadcast\n3:45\u2014B.C.. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Smuggler's Run\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Tops ali Pops\n5:30\u2014Sports News\n5:35\u2014Spotlight on a Star\n5:45\u2014Bowling News\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Musicale\n6:15\u2014Christian Science Program\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade  of Melody\n7:00\u2014News  and  Roundup\n7:30\u2014London Prom Concert! '\n8:'30\u2014Point-Counterpoint\n9:00\u2014Queen Crowning\n9:30\u2014Sports Page\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014By Invitation\n10:30\u2014Curtain  Melodies\n11:00\u2014NEWS Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nSATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1955\n:00\u2014News and Weather\n15\u2014Musical Miputes \u2022\n30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Musical   Minutes\n:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n:55\u2014Musical March Past\nOO-^News\n10\u2014Bill Good\n:15\u2014Stu   Davis\n:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n:00\u2014BBC News\n:15\u2014Maxine  Ware  Show\n:30\u2014Stamp Club\n45\u2014Calling All Children\n00\u2014Post Mark U.K.\n30\u2014World Church News\n:45\u2014News and Weather\n:00\u2014Opera With  Boyd Neel\n30\u2014A Touch of Grease Paint\n:00\u2014Music  Diary\n:30\u2014International  Stakes\n:00\u2014Ballet Club\n3:00\u2014News\n3:10\u2014Weekend Listening\n3:15\u2014Canada's New North\n3:30\u2014Sports College\n3:45\u2014This   Week\n4:00\u2014Bill McAuley Sextet\n4:15\u2014Roving  Reporter\n4:30\u2014Sons of the Saddli\n5:00\u2014Now I Ask You\n5:30\u2014darl Tapscott Chonii\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014Western Sports Review\n6:30t\u2014Prairie  Schooner\n7:00\u2014Meet 'Lorraine\n7:30\u2014Music From Montreal\n8:00\u2014Serenade tor Strings\n8:30\u2014One the Scene\n8:35\u2014 Focus\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Invitation\n10:30\u2014Dixieland Jazz\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1- Sound of\nhorse's hoof\n3. At a\ndistance\n9. Elm ploy\n10. Forearm\nbone\n11 Pet name\nfor a dog\n<*Z. a ratchet\n14 Piece out\n15. Suitable\n16. Cobalt\n(sym.)\n17 Extermination\n21 Audience\n22. A cry of\nbacchanals\n23. Rascal\n26. Across\n(prefix)\n17 Musical\ninstrument\n18. American\npoet and\nauthor\n29. Protest\n34 Personal\npronoun\n35 Rootstock of\nedible fern\n(N Z.)\n36 Cut, a$\ngrass\n37 Babies\n(India)\n39 Walk slowly\n41 Infrequent\n42 Christmas\nsong\n43. Speaks\n44. High craggy\nhills\nDOWN\n1 Strangle\n2. Dwells\n3. Metallic\nrock \"\n4. Through\n5. Containing\ngold\n(Chem.)\n6. One wh#\nflatters\n7.Insect\n8. An animal\nhunted in\nthe south\n11. Riv\u00abr\n(Tex;)\n13. Sharpens,\nas a razor\n15. Pelt\n18. Not\npermanent\nHEEL\n ,\u00a3|S!\n19. Knock\n20. ^he herb\neve\n13 A fruit\ndrink\n24. Conqueror\nof Gaul\n(poss.)\n25. Fortify\n26. Little \"'\nchl^d           YeatenUy't Ananoa-\n28. Greek letter    33. Female\nHUBS flE__iHP.Q\nED   HHHUli\nheshshh Hnasi\naBBQO amniDK\nbhhh nuaiayfc.\ni=_HIIS_M=_   1=111\nHHHHIiWJ   HGI*\nbanuiHW  aiiann\niiardHIS   HBiaEE\nSBBB   KJHfflH\n30. Prows of\nships\n31. A shade\nof brown\n32. Taxes, as\non bridges\n>sheep\n38. Cry of\na sheep\n39. A social\ninsect\n40. Cry of a coi*\nI\n3T\nir\nI\n1\n1\n1\nTSK\n1\nlb\n33\n1\n85\nDAILY CRVWOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXB\na   LONOFEL L.O W\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single lettera, apo*\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hint*\n\u00a3ach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nKYZJ  PMJUX   LYZ  XKSEQ  SW\nGAXLMTZ WMEXL RDI QSKJ. LYZI\nDEZ JS PMJUX \u2014Q.ZWSZ.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote:   SOME SOULS WE SEE GROW\nHARD. AND STIFFEN WITH ADVERSITY\u2014DRYDEN.\n_ Distributed by King Features Syndicate\n -\u2122\n;.-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u2022>:=\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0-' ~ \u25a0 ',',   \u2122 ..-\u25a0.\u25a0:\u25a0-\u25a0     \u25a0\u25a0-.\u25a0'-\u25a0 --\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0.; \u25a0;'\">.  -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\"\u25a0\"'\u25a0,       \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 \\.''.' :;i  j;*    ''    ):'\u25a0>\"?\u25a0)\n\u00a7kvh      \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \"\u25a0     \u25a0    \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 !\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'>'\u25a0'\n\u2022\u2022\u2022r-'yyyyyyyy^yi\n\u2022     \u25a0  \u25a0   \u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0,..' \"^\n5\u00ab^:\nSMALL INVESTMENT -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story - PHONE 1844\n BIRTHS\t\nVERIGIN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn J. Verigin of Grand Forks,\nat the Grand Forks Community\nHospital, August 2, a son, John J.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY FIRST\nClass Automobile Mechanic and\nTune-Up man. Excellent opportunity for experienced man.\nChrysler - Plymouth Agency.\nSteady employment, top wages.\nWrite, giving qualifications \u2014\nPeerless Motors Ltd., Kimber-\nley, B. C.\t\nWANTED - MAN WITH CAR TO\ntake over established sales opportunity above average earnings year round, no previous\nsales experience necessary. Box\n6151  Nelson  Daily News.\nLIGHT TRUCK DRIVER FOR\ntown deliveries. Steady employment, MSA coverage. Apply\nNational' Employment Office.\nWANTED\u2014THREE BLASTHOLE\ndiamond drillers. Apply at once:\nNational    Employment    Office,\nNelson.\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 w\u00abs want men or\nwomen from the ages of 17\nto 60. We teach Hairdressing\nand all lines of Beauty Culture. Write, wire or phone\ntor Information to the O.K.\nValley Hairdressing School,\n453   Lawrence   Ave..   Kelowna\nQUALIFIED STENOGRAPHER\nshorthand essential, also good\nknowledge bookkeeping. Apply\nNational Emnloyment Service.\nEXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER\nfor full time work. Apply Box\n5690, Nelson Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nFOR ALL ODD JOBS PHONE\n256-R.\t\nRENTALS\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, dishes, linens and maid\nservice. Day, week, or month-\nly. Allen Hotel. 171 Baker St.\nTOR RENT - TWO FLOORS 50'\nby 100' each; suitable for storage,   warehouse,   or   cars    Apply\nMcDonald Jam Co., 301 Vernon\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM. LARGE\nfurnished, with fridge and chesterfield; self - contained. Suit\ncouole, 171 Baker.\nFOR  RENT:  NEWLY  MODERN^\n- ized large office space, convenient entrance, good parking\nfacilities. Call 77 for details.\nAPARTMENT 2 BED\u00a5OOMS,\nliving room and kitchen with\nbath and 2 entrances. Phone\n1886-R.\t\nCOMPLETELY FURNISHED\nmodern three rOom apartment.\nCall at 410F Richards Street, or\nPhone 139-X-2.\nFURNISHED 3-ROOM APART-\nment vacant Aug 20th. Phone\n653-R.\t\nCENTRALLY LOCATED. WIRED\nfor electric range. 4-roomed\nhouse 311 Observatory St.\n\"JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL TEACH-\ner requires 3 bedroom home by\nSept. 1st or earlier. Ph.. 738-Y-l.\nJ_,ARGE BEDROOM, CENTRAL.\nGentleman preferred. 410 Victoria Street.\nFOR SALE OR RENT ON LEASE\nvery nice three-bedroom home.\n207 High Street. Phone 338-Y.\nS - ROOM APARTMENT A ND\nbath block from Baker. Reasonable.  Call  306  Victoria.\nFOR RENT - HOUSE. APPLY\nMcHardy Agency Ltd.\n5 ROOM UNFURNISHED APT.\nPhone  89  or J25-R-1.\t\nFor rent - housekeeping\nroom   Phone 405-L.\nSMALL    FURNISHED    2SROOM\napartment. Phone 337-Y.\t\n3 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT.\n131 Chatham Street.\nFARM, GARDEN AND\nNURSERY\nBING CHERRIES FOR SALE.\nPick your own 10c a lb. G. A.\nWest, Shutty Bench, Kaslo. B.C.\nJfalamt Sally $>mb\nClassified Advertliing 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\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance _  .30\nBy carrier per year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month          $ 1.25\nThree months    $ 2'.75\nSix months    ___     % 5.00\nOne  year $15.00\nMail  in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month         _     $ 1.00\nThree months      $ 3.75\nS'X months        $ 7.50.\nOne  year       $10.00\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nOFFERS\n' Plainly marked oh the envelope \"Offer for House No. 3\"\nwill be received by the undersigned up to 12 o'clock noon\n16th, of August 1955 for:\nHouse ^No. 3 (inclusive of garage) being situated on Lots 11,\n12 Block 46, Nelson City plan 266\nBlock 46, Nelson City, Plan 266\nand known as 824 Nelson Avenue., Nelson, B.C.\nThe dwelling may be inspect,\ned between the hours of 10 a.m.\nto 4 p.m. on the 5th, 6th,,8th,\nand 9th of August 1955 inclusive\nand further information obtainable upon application to the\noffice of the government agent,\nCourt House, Nelson, B.C.\nThe structure is to be sold on\nan \"as is and where is\" basis\nand it is a conditioh of sale that\nn is to be removed from site\nwithin 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 certitied deposit cheque\nor money order, made payable\nto the Minister of Finance for\n10% of the amount offered.\nThe   successful  offer  will  be\nsubject  to  Social  Services Tax\nand the highest or any offer will\nnot  necessarily   be   accepted.\nCHAIRMAN,\nPURCHASING  COMMISSION,\nPARLIAMENT  BUILDINGS.\nVICTORIA, B.C.\nAugust 3. 1955.\nNOTICE OF APPOINTMENT\nOF   ADMINISTRATOR   AND\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nTAKE NOTICE that by Order\nof His Honor Eric P. Dawson.\nLocal Judge of the Supreme\nCourt of British Columbia,\nmade on the 25th day of July.\n1955, Thomas G. C. Fox, official\nadministrator for the Nelson-\nCreston Electoral District, was\nappointed, administrator with\nthe will annexed of the Estate of\nOscar Herbert Burden, late of\nCrawford Bay, B.C.. who died\non the 21th dav of Anril. 1954.\nAND TAKE NOTICE that all\npersons having claims a'ainst\nthe said deceased are reqiured\nlo file particulars thereof with\nthe undersigned solicitors for\nthe administrator on or before\nthe 26th day of August. 1935,\nafter which dale the Administrator will proceed to distribute\nthe assets of the said deceased\namong the persons entitled\nthereto having regard only to\nthe claims which shall then have\nbeen filed as above required.\nDATED   at  Nelson.  B.C.  this\n3rd dav of Aueust, 1955.\nGARLAND.     GANSNER\nSt  ARLIDGE,\nP.O. Box  490,\nNelson. B.C.,\nSolicitors for the\nAdministrator.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 161)     ,\nIN THE MATTER OF an undivided 8-24th interest in and to:\nAU minerals precious and base\n(save coal and petroleum) under\nLot 4525 \"Dewery\" Mineral Claim\n\u2014and\u2014An undivided 7-24th interest in and to: All minerals precious and base (save coal and petroleum) under Lots 4523 \"Turns\".\n4524 \"Wallace\" 4526 \"Sligo Fractional\" and 4527 \"Capello\" Mineral\nClaims Kootenay District.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificates of\nTitle Nos. 2671-A and 2672-A to\nthe above mentioned lands in the\nname of Noah F McNaught and\nbearing date the 19th August, 1903.\nI HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my\nintention at the expiration of one\ncalendar month from the first\npublication hereof lo issue Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu of\nsuch lost certificates. Any person\nhaving anv information with reference to such lost Certificates of\nTitle is requested to communicate\nwith the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON. B.C., this\n19th day of July. 1955.\nL. A. McPhail.\nDeputy   Registrar\nDATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION July 22, 1955.\t\nSEE\nREUBEN 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    \u2022\n1955 Buick Special Hardtop\nFully equipped.\n1955  Buick Century 4 Door\n1955  Ford Fairlane 4 Door\n1955 Pontjac 4 Door\n1955 Chevrolet 4 Door\n<954 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 GM.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 Bandwag^i\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\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ECT. FOR SALE\n1\u201410 ACRES AND TWO OLD\nCOTTAGES South Slocan\n(Humphrey ppty.)\n$2500\nMight Take It.\n2\u2014R O O MIN G HOUSE ON\nSTANLEY ST. Yields about\n10%. If you would like to get\nInto something like this and\nhave a house to sell \u2014 see us\nat once.\n3\u20143 BEDROOM HOUSE. Close\n'Term,    $5500\n4\u2014MOST ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOM HOME. Hall,' dining\nroom and living room, oak\nfloors. Bright kitchen; Immaculate wash room downstairs and beautifully tiled\nbathroom upstairs. Good\nstone foundation. A really\nbeautiful garden, Front and\nback lawns, fruit trees and\nsmall fruits, 800 block Silica\n%g . $8900\nSome terms.\nLISTINGS WANTED\nOur Mortgage Facilities get the\ndeals through quickly.\nSPECIALLY REQUIRED\nHOMES\n$5500 to $8500\nBUYERS WAITING!\nDONT FORGET!\nA  PACKAGE POLICY SAVES\n20%.\nc.\ne\n& Co., Ltd.\nT C. LAMBERT. Office Manager\n392 Baker St. Phone 269\nEstablished 1912\nReal Estate and  Insurance\nAgents\nP O   Box 26 Nelson, B C.\nBUERGE\nMotors\nNelson, B C\nPhone 1 135     803 Baker\nSt\nAUCTION  SALE\nTimber   Sale   X-66807\nThere will be offered for sale\nat Public Auction, at 10:30 a.m.,\nlocal time on September 19th.\n1955 in the office of the Forest\nRanger. Golden. B.C., the licence\nX-66807, to cut 898,000 cubic feet\nof spruce, fir. balsam, cedar and\nwhile pine trees and 47.000 lineal\nfeet of cedar poles and piling on\nan area situated on part of Sections 19 and 30. Township 32,\nRange 26, west of the 5th meridian, part of section 24 township\n32. range 27, west of the 5th\nmeridian. Surprise Rapids on\nColumbia River, Kootenay Land\nDistrict, four (4) years will be\nallowed for removal of timber.\nProvided anyone unable to\nattend the auction in person may\nsubmit a sealed tender to be\nopened at the hour of auction\nand treated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be\nobtained from the Deputy Minister of Forests, Victoria. B.C..\nor the District Forester. Ne^on,\nB.C., or the Forest Ranger. Golden, B.C.\nGazette August 4th. 1955.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nFOR SALE - 1940 INDIAN 74\nmotorcycle, excellent condition,\ncheap. Apply Room 15, Vernon\nRooms 523 Vernon St., Nelson.\nB.C.\nFOR SALE - 23-FT. FACTORY-\nbuilt house trailer complete. Apply Oscar Hansen Shell Station,\nSalmo.Rd.\nFOR SALE '51 MORRIS PICKUP.\nLow mileage, one owner, good\nmechanical condition. Reasonable   for   cash.   Phone   253-X-l.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1949 PONTIAC\nsedan, new tires, good condition.\n$800. Alex Maitland, Blueberry\nCreek.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1942 PLYMOUTH\nsedan. Price reasonable, Phone\n326-X-2.\n1949   CHEVROLET   SEDAN   A-l\ncondition. Phone 894-X.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n14 FT. HYDRAPLANE; 5 FOOT\nbeam, also 9.5 h.p. Johnson K40\nmotor, new oars. $175.00. J. H.\nAllen. Box. 51. Proctor, B. C.\nFOR~SALE - 17 FT. 6 INCH\ncabin cruiser. New last year. 25\nh.p. speed 24. Phone 1365-Y between  4  and  8.\n10 - FOOT PLYWOOD HYDRO-\nplane. A little dandy. What\noffers? Ph. 544-L 623 Latimer St\nFOR SALE-M-FT RUNABOUT\n5tV beam, for outboard motor.\nT   Allan,  phone 58-W.  Nakusp.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n2 GOOD MILKING COWS FOR\nsale Phone 1-J, Appledale, or\nMr. W. Stoopnikoff. Slocan City\nSECOND CALF, GOOD COW\nfor sale. Wm. Evin, Slocan Park.\nB.C.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS\nBox 368. Ph. 161-L3 or 366-R.    '\u25a0\nLOWER FAIRVIEW\nSix roomed home with L.R.\u2014\nLarge Family Kitchen and'\ngood sized Den with fireplace,\non main floor. Three B: Rooms\nand Bath upstairs. Full basement and H. Air      S>7ftf)ft\nfurnace.\nTerms\nALSO\nLiving room, Large Kitchen.\nOne B: Room and bath on\nmain floor, with two B. Rooms\nand another kitchen upstairs.\nFullbasement and a real vegetable\ngarden\n$6500\nwith $1500 Down\nMcHardy\nAGENCIES  LTD.\nPhone 135 or Eve.: 1065-X\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nLOW.ER FAIRVIEW. A LOVELY\n3 bedroom family home in excellent condition. 2 bedrooms\ndown, one up: 15x20 living room\nwith brick fireplace. Wired for\nrange, full basement with garage doors. Coal furnace, lovely\ngarden. Half block to bus, near\nschools and park. $8000. Phone\n1338-R.\nFARM. 37 ACRES. RUNNING\nwater, and 4-roomed house\nHorse and chickens. Complete:\n$3600 cash. O. Nichols, Slocan\nCity.\nIN FAIRVIEW 2 AND 3 BED-\nroom houses $7000-$10,500.\nTerms 5% discount for cash.\nBuy from woner and save. Ph.\n914-L.\nCLEARANCE\nNew and Used\nFURNITURE\nand APPLIANCES\nWASHERS\nl-USED CLIMAX Washing\nmachine in good S4Q\nworking condition. ..   *P,i'\nCOAL AND WOOD\nSTOVES\n\u2022 1\u2014M c C L A R Y CHARM all\nwhite enamel. Used approx.\n3 months. <t I I C\nLike new    \u00abpl l\u00abJ\n\u2022 1\u2014M c C L A R Y CHARM all\nwhite enamel in good condition with 40^\nwater-jacket      \"P\"*'\n\u2022 1\u2014GURNEY, all white enamel\n\u2022 1\u2014McCLARY, all white enamel\nwith water-jacket, also low\nwarming 4950\nshelf.\n. 1-ENTERPRISE, white enam-\nel fdt v.      69.50\nwater-jacket      w\u00ab\u00ab\u00bbw\n\u2022 1\u2014ACME, all white enamel in\nexcellent S7^\ncondition     *^\nCOAL AND WOOD\nRANGES\n\u2022 1\u2014GURNEY, all white enamel\nwith water- Sifi'l\njacket        *P\n\u2022 1\u2014B EACH,    cream    enamel\nwith water-jacket       $QQ\nand water reservoir.   **\n' 1\u2014GOOD  CHEER,  cream  enamel. A good stove for that\nsummer ^2*1\ncamp. *^\nELECTRIC RANGES\n\u2022 1\u2014GURNEY, 3-burner electric\nrange in clean condition\nthroughout. SIQ^\n(Apt. Size) \u2022*>JO\n\u2022 1-HOTPOINT. High oven type\nelectric range. Sa^O\nPriced to Clear 4''t\"\n\u2022 1\u2014ACME,    rangette    in    good\nworking \u00ab^Q\ncondition **^\n' 1\u2014FAWCETT OIL RANGE.\nCream enamel in C| O^\nexcellent condition.\n\u2022 1-McCLARY  COMBINATION\ncoal and wood with 2-b\"rner\n110  volt electric SiQS\nplates on one end       *^\nCOMBINATION RADIOS\n' l-Used ADDISON 3-Speed\nCombination Radio. Walnut\nfinish.   Good $175\ncondition.\n\u2022 1\u2014Used VIKING 3-Soerd Com\nbination Radio. Walnut fin-\n'sh-e\u00b0od $175\ncondition.\n\u2022 l-Used VIKING 3-Speed Com\nbination  Radio.    Mahogany\nfinish. Good $1 75\nLike new. **\n\u2022 l-Used DE   FOREST   CROS-\nI..EY 3-Sneed Combination\nWalnut finished. J I 49\nGood condition.\nREFRIGERATORS\n\u2022 1\u2014Used  FRIGIDAIRE   Refrig\nerator in good condition\nthroughout. 95>5Q\nPrice\n1\u2014Used   NORGF,    Refrigpra.or\nin good working <t7^\ncondition.\nLow Down Payment and\nEasy Terms.\nHUDSON'S BAY\nCOMPANY\nTrail B.C.\n10 ACRES OF LAND, 4 ROOM\nhouse, barn, chicken coop, woodshed. 30 fruit trees, grape vines.\nBox 8108 Nelson  Daily  News.\n10 ACRES OF FARM LAND FOR\nsale. Apply Pete Rezansoff\nTarrys. B.C.\nFULLY MODERN HOME. LOW\ndown payment. Apply 920 Hoover St.\n3-B.R. FAMILY HOME IN FAIR-\nview. Terms. Discount for cash\nPhone 914-L.\nSUMMER CAMP WITH SANDY\nbeach 13 miles North Shore\nBox 6107 Nelson Daily News.\nFOR SALE - HOUSE, 2 LOTS,\ngarden, fruit trees, cash or\nterms. Apply 908 Latimer.\nFOR SALE - 3 LOTS WITH A\n4-Room house and bathroom.\nAnply  508 Richards  Street.\n1 OR 2 LOTS FOR SALE WITH\nbuilding 14 x 20. Phone 1320-Y.\nBUSINESS OPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE^CAFE IN DISTRICT\ncentre. Must sell because of ill\nhealth. Revenue from rooms will\ncover payments. Price reasonable; Interest 4 per cent. Additional lot for expansion; only\nvacant lot in business section\nAPplv 1615 Ward Street\nFOR SALE - MY TWO 'THIRD\ninterest In Interior Truck Line\n(77) from Nelson to Salmo. Ap\nto F. Mills. Silverton.\nGARAGE BUSINESS. STOCK\nand equipment. Also house and\nnronerty Annlv Box 138. Salmo\nBUSINESS FOR SALE-APPLY\nPetite Dress Shop, Box 308.\nSalmo, B.C.\nSacrifice\n1 Only Automatic Washer\n1 Only Electric\nSinger Sewing  Machine\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\nCONTACT FRED\nAT MADDEN HOTEL\n \/\u2022\u2022-\nFOR SALE - 1 FR1GIDAIRES\nalmost new, also 1 Beatty washing machine, very good. See J.\nBrashera at Stewart Apartment,\nGranite Road or Western Auto\nWrecking Co.\nDISK AND TRAILER, CAN BE\nused with any garden tractor.\nI oak extension dining room\ntable, 1 dressing table, 1 Electric rangette, 1 combination\ndesk and bookcase. Ph. 894-X.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP MET-\nals, copper, brass, lead, aluminum. Highest prices, prompt payment. Active Trading. 935 .E.\nCordova. Vancouver.\nFOR SALE - BERKEL HAND\nmeat slicer. Excellent condition,\nIdeal for cafe, dining room,'\nboarding house or any camp.\nWill sell cheap. P. O. Box 370,\nCastlegar.\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture, basement 301 Baker\nSt. Phone 47. \"We buy used fur-\nhlture.\"\nOAK 'BELL' PIANO, BENCH\nperfect condition. Lovely tone.\nLike new. $350. Tom Heise,\nProcter.\nBOMBER HOISTS, 1500 LBS. CA-\npacity, $45, while they last. Active Trading Co., 935 E. Cordova,\nVancouver.\nMcCLARY CHARM WOOD AND\ncoal range with oil burner separate. Like new;  Phone 544-L.\n1ST GRADE TOPSOIL, WHILE\nit lasts. Delivered in city, $16.00\nper load. Call 1454 days.\nCOLLAPSIBLE WHEELCHAIR,\nlike new. $75.00 or what offers.\nPhone 1742-R.\nWATER TANK; HOLDS 900\ngals., and walking plow. \u2014 O.\nNichols, Slocan City.\nBLACK CURRANTS FOR SALE\n20 cents per lb. W. H. Bainbridge. R.R.  1, Phone 1655-Y-l.\nFOR SALE \u2014 SMALL FRIDGE\nand china cabinet. Call after 6:00\np.m. 723 Silica. Suite 5.\t\nMASON PRESERVING JARS 80c\na dozen. Columbia Trading 902\nFront Street.\nONE COAL AND WOOD RANGE.\nGood condition. $60 cash. Phone\n1385-L.\nSMALL  FRIDGE  $60.  IN   GOOD\ncondition. Phone  1882.\nFOR   SALE   -   BABEE   TEND A\nPhone 469-L.\nMACHINERY\n2\n2\nT\nWith Angle Dozers and\nHyster Winches.\nBEST BUYS\nOF THE SEASON\nSee H \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nC Ross or Alex McDonald\nAC'S\nWELDING &  EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n614 Railway St. Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain steel plate and shapes.\n'\u25a0 as Iron St Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B.C. Ph\nPAcific, 6357.\nBUILDERS SPECIAL LUMBER\nliquidation sale 2x4, 2x6, 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\nFOR SALE - APPROX. 3,000.000\nyards of gravel next to CPR\ntrack and close to highway, halfway between Trail and Castle\ngar. What offer. Box 6115 Nelson\n. fjally News.\nFOR SALE . - CULL LUMBER\nThis is all reject lumber Makes\napproximately four cords of\nwood. Good for small repairs.\nPhone 1702-R. Immediate delivery. .\n(Continued In Next Column)\nUsed Trucks\n49 INTERNATIONAL KBS-7\n197\"   wheelbase   with   all   steel\ncab   guard   and   lumber   deck\nwith rollers.\n53 FORD 3 TON\n177\" wheel base.\n51 MACK A-30\nLogging unit with Columbia V.\nTon dual axle trailer, self loader.\nFreuhauf stake bunks. Very\ngood condition.\n48 MACK EH\nwith 6 Ton logging trailer, reach,\nbunks, ready to work.\nCENTRAL\n\u25a0 TRUCK\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 Front St.\nPhone 1400    Nelson, B.C.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5,19SS \u2014 |j\nMACHINERY\n(Continued\nLOGGING\nSUPPLIES\nWright's Wire Rope\nOP Link Hickory Handles\nBlocks \u2014 Chokers\nHooks \u2014 Clevises\nFire Pumps \u2014 Forestry Hose\nWE  INVITE DEALER\nINQUIRIES\nTHE\nEquipment & Supply\nCo., Ltd.\nPhone 1590\n520 Lake St.\nP.O. Box 61\nNelson, B.C.\nDIESEL\nMine Locomotives\nAny size, any capacity, Ideal\nfor mine operation. Designed\nprimarily for underground in\nnaked flame mines.\nMACHINE SHOPs\nPhone 593      Nelson, B.C.\n(Continued in Next Column)\nNylon fabrics dry with unusual\nrapidity because of their low moisture absorption.\nSAWMILL\nMachinery Repairs\nMachinery Sales\nand Service\nElectric and Acetylene\nWelding\nSTEVENSON'S\nMACHINE SHOP LTD.\n708  Vernon  St.\nPhone 98\nNelson\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nREADY-MIX\nConcrete Ltd.\n$13.50 cu. yd.\nPHONE 871\nDelivered In Nelson\nSAVE .TIME - SAVE MONEY\n\"Da It the Easy Way\"\nKRAFT'S EXCAVATING\nDITCHING, LOADING\nAND ERECTING\nBy Contract or Hour.\nBox 354 or Phone 1291-Y.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWE BUY COW HIDES. SHEBf\npelts, horse hair (mane and tail\nold batteries, copper, brass, aitj\nminum, radiators, beer and pop\nbottles. Phone 1807 days, 882VY\nevenings. Warehouse 415tt LaV\u00bb\nImer St., City. Independent\nTrader.\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS aM}\ntrucks tor wrecking. Buyers :jgt\nscrap iron, batteries, braaa,\n' aluminum, copper. Used parls\nfor cars and trucks for salt.\nWestern Auto Wrecking, Bo*\n132, Granite Rd., Nelson, B.C,\nWANTED TO BUY \u2014 SAW LOO*\nand cedar poles on Kootenay\nLake or rail, Kootenay Pro-\nducts, Box 450, Nelson.\nWANTED TO BUY \u2014 TTMBBl\nand bush land ln vicinity el\nKootenay Lake. Apply Box 2738\nNelson Dally News.\nWANTED - $10,00(1 AT 8ft TM\ntwo or three years. Fully secured. Box 6116, Nelson Dally Nflfi.\nWANTED -BABY CA&SAffl!\nin good condition. Phona Mr.\nHayles, 133. -       PT\nWANTED - ONJt LAME CMS.\nPhone 461-Xt3.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W. WIDDOWSON St CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St, Nelson\nH.   S.   ELMES, ROSSLAND, 'b.S.\nAssayer. Chemist, Mine Rep(\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYOR*)'\nG. W. BAERG' 3\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St.     Nelson     Ph. 1118\nand Box 34,, Frutvale, B.CJ.\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 1S38\nS. V. SHAYLER, P.C., BOXi 252\nKimberley, Phoner54.\nB.C. Land) Surveyor, Engineer\n3-\nMACMINI8TS\nBENNETTS LIMITED    j\nMachine  Shop,  Acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone-593, 324 Vernon St\nTIMBER CRUISER\nEUGENE H. HIRD\nSlocan City, B.C. Timber cruising,\nmineral claim inspection.\nAnywhere in B.C.\nMetal Prices\nNEW    YORK    (CP)    \u2014    Spot\nprices: V\"\nLead,   N.Y.,   15.\nZinc. East St. Louis, 12H.     '\nSilver, N.Y., 90%.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nAUTOMOTIVE\nSQUARE DEAL'\nUSED CARS :\n* 1952 STUDEBAKER SEDAN\n^ 1951 STUDEBAKER SEDAN\nir  1950 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n* 1941   PLYMOUTH SEDAN\nENGLISH '\nir  1953 AUSTIN  SEDAN\nif  1952 AUSTIN SEDAN\nif  1950 HILLMAN   SEDAN\nif 1950 AUSTIN  SEDAN\nTRUCKS\nif 1950' STUDEBAKER \/2 TON PICKUP     \u2022\nSTUDEBAKER-HILLMAN DEALER\nGood Selection in New Units.\nDEFOE SERVICE\nLTD.\n213 BAKER ST.\nPHONE l:\n\u00a5\nB\nACON'S\n\u00a3TTER\nJYS\nMl 0U\u00bb IISSO CUB (.THICKS UmWIEEt\n,m\nTHSOR\n6.o^\nmiis\nlin fi mixo Viirr iim oiro st) wss-jmr\nduiii \u00ab nu iramo suiauam i iiua*\n\u25a0___. |[, \u00ab__\u25a0_>,\u201e[_ ((*,\u00ab, C\u00abt\u00ab_i IRttS;--,\n* MERCURY      if LINCOLN    \u25a0 * METEOR ;\nTOP QUALITY \u2014 SAFE BUY     ,\nUSED CAKS\nRAIL SHIPPED \u2014 NEW CARS\nALL MODELS IN STOCK '\nA Fine Selection of LOW PRICED USED CARS\n1954  Pontiac Laurentian      1951   Dodge Regent\n1953  Monarch Sedan 1951   Plymouth   Cambridge\n1952 Meteor Fordor 1950 Ford Fordor\n1952 Chevrolet Tudor 1949  Ford Tudor\n'     .     1950 Hillman Sedan\nALL CARS GUARANTEED CLEAN CONDITION   ;-\nHalf Tons From $495 and Up.\nBeacon Motors a\n701 Baker St.' Nelson, B.C.\nPhones 578-579\nEVENINGS 1039-X For Sales Appointments\n '*;,\u2022-:,\n^^^\u2014\n:\u25a0\u25a0;'\u25a0 ;\n-.'.\u2022\"..    , \u25a0 ,   -.   k--1!,:\n \u201e\nmmmm^mwi^\nIP \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5,1953\n\u00ab\nIT IS GETTING SO THAT LIFE HAS\nMORE LOOSE ENDS THAN A HAYSTACK.\nThe average adult ryshes and worries, gets flustered\nabout little things, attempts to do too much, forgets\nhow to eat properly, sleeps badly and is always tired.\nLearn To Relax With\n;  NEURO\nTonic Tablets\nA well-balanced formula that acts as nerve food\n\u2022\" and tissue builder.\nA 50-Cent Trial Package Will Convince You\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD,\nGrant Tunisia\nHome Rule\nPARIS (AP)\u2014The Upper House\nof the French parliament early\nThursday gave final legislative approval to a plan giving a large\nmeasure of home rule to Tunisia.\nThe vote ln the Council of the\nRepublic was 254 to 25. The National Assembly, lower and more\npowerful house,>had already approved the plan worked out,jointly by the French and Tunisian\nnationalist leaders. Under the new\nsetup, Tunisians will have considerable control over their home affairs, but France still will' direct\ndefence and foreign relations for\nthe North  African  protectorate.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nPhone 327\n676 Baker Street\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChattered Accountants\n6T6 Baker St        \" Phone 235\nAuditors\n%\nYOU\nGET\nA\nPERSONALIZED\nPRESCRIPTION\nSERVICE\nat\nFleury's\nPhone 25     \u2014     Free Delivery\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nMelbourne, Australia \u2014 Henry\nArthur Pitt, 83, president of the\nVictoria Tennis Administration for\nmany years and vice-president of\nthe Lawn Tennis Association of\nAustralia for 25 years,\nSondrio, Italy\u2014Silvio Pedrotti,\n48, alpine guide who once went\non a north pole rescue expedition.\nToronto \u2014 Richard C, Seagrave,\n51, administrative assistant to general manager J. R. White of Canadian National Telegraphs.\nMiddlebury, Conn. \u2014 James\nRemington McCarthy, 55, author\nand screen writer.\nWinnipeg \u2014 R. Wray Youmans,\n65, athletic adviser to 33 classes of\nUniversity of Manitoba students.\nDHiiCE\nWith the Popular\nKOOTENAIRES\nPlaymor Saturday\nsfimgowfim\nDUNLQ\nMARSHALL-WELLS STORE\nHIPPERSON\nHardware Co. Ltd.\n395 Baker St.\nPhone 497\nNelson\n.\u00bb.\"\u2022- ^\nYou'll be surprised how quickly and\ninexpensively- you can upholster a chair\nwith Pillofoam*\u2014first and finest in\nFoam Rubber.   Give your home years\nof luxurious comfort with Pillofoam seats\nand cushions.  Our free, instructional\nbooklet tells you how.\nWhat could be simpler or more\npractical than a playpen pad of soft,\ndurable Foam Rubber ?  We'll cut it\nto size... you cover it.  Just one of\ndozens of practical suggestions on\nhow to \"cushion your home\" with\nPillofoam\u2014first and finest in\nFoam Rubber.\nWE CAN SUPPLY PILLOFOAM IN A VARIETY OF PRE-CUT SIZES\nPACKAGED FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE\niaw   OR WE CAN CUSTOM-CUT IT TO YOUR EXACT REQUIREMENTS.\nTension Hangs\nOver Gagelown\nCAPE GAGETOWN, N.B. (CP)\n\u2014 Diplomatic relations were at\nthe breaking point between Philis-\ntia and Blueland Thursday in the\nmake-believe tension preceding\nCanada's biggest peacetime mill\ntary manoeuvres.\nExercise Rising Star, a tactical\nexercise in which 15,000 men will\ntake part, kicks off this weekend.\nRising Star will be directed by\nMaj.-Gen. E. C. Plow, general officer commanding Eastern Command. In it Maj.-Gen. John M.\nRockingham's 1st Canadian Infan-\nsembled from throughout the\nseven-day period in an operational\nrole.\nDELAYING TACTICS\nEditions of a newspaper called\n\"The Blueland Star\" have been\ndistributed among troops, emphasizing the grave and deteriorating\nsituation between the two countries. And Thursday the Blueland\nStar's headline proclaim: \"Ultimatum Received.\"\nBlueland has its military resources rallied to stem an initial\nattack and hold on until Allied\npowers arrive to help.\nNo live ammunition will be\nfired but blanks will be supplied\nfor all arms. Ammunition-supply\nvehicles will carry ammunition\nboxes filled with sand approximating the weight of actual ammunition.\nParticipating in umpire and control duties will be the 1955 class\nfrom the Canadian Army Staff\nCollege in Kingston. Chief umpire\nis Brig. M. P. Bogert, its commandant.\nVancouver Stocks\nM1NE8\nBeayer Lodge    67\nBeta Gamma        \u2022'\u00bb\nBralorne       2\u2122\nCariboo Gold  \u00bb3\nGiant Mascot        \u25a0\u2022\u2022\nGranduc       \u2022\u2022     6;j\nGrandvlew       \u2022\u00ab>\nHighland Bell  .' 58\nJackson Basin        \u2022\u00ab\nNational Ex      1-32\nPac Eastern Gold  13\nPioneer Gold       \u00bb,,\nQuatslno-  -\u2022\u25a0\u2022     ,-JJ\u2122\nReeves 'MacDonald .-      Lva\nRexapar'-..,..  \/   -\u2122\nRix-Athabaska Uran      l.\u00ab\nSheep  Creek            1-41\nSherritt Gordon       8.90\nSilback Premier l\u00bbw\nSilver  Ridge'    26\nSilver Standard        ;f\u00b0\nSunshine  Lardeau       . ,M\u00ab\nTaylor      2i\nVan Roi          \u25a0'\nWestern Exploration        \u2022<\"\nYale   47\nOILS\nAltex               26\nAnglo Canadian     . 5.8\u00b0\nA P Consolidated       31\nCalgary St Edmonton ..v....   15.50\nCanadian Anaconda  -. ,    .18\nCharter              IBS\nChamberlain 32\nCommonwealth        55\u00b0\nDel Rio    \u25a0..     H5\nGas Exp  \u2122\nHome          ln'<\u00bb\nOkalta Com       l-\u00ab\nPacific Pete            10.75\nPeace River Gas       8.15\nRoyalite       H.00\nSnarmac 35\nUnited          1-50\nVanalta  v    -22%\nVantor  '3\nVulcan  45\nYankee Princss  \"2\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers           2.45\nAlberta Distillers Vt      1.80\nB C Forests     13.75\nB C Power           35.75\nB C Telephone     48.50\nInland Nat Gas       2.85\nLucky Lager       5.15\nMacM St Bloedel B     43.00\nMid  Western        4.40\nPowell River     56.25\nTrans Mtn        39.50\nWestern Plywoods     21.2?\nWestminster Paper      28.00\nOlder People\nFavor Victoria\nVICTORIA (CP> \u2014 Thp average\nVictorian is older than the average\ncitizen of any other principal Canadian city, say Provincial government officials.\nThere are more residents over\nthe -age of 65 here than in any\nother major city in Canada.\nVictoria, with 17.75 per cent of\nits citizens older than 65, leads\nVancouver, with 12.81. per .cent;\nToronto, 10.51 per cent; London,\n10.49 per cent; and Winnipeg, 9.8\nper- cent.\nQuebec, Canada's oldest city has\nonly 5.92 per cent of Its population\nover 65.\nBy provinces, B.C. has the highest ratio of persons over 65 with\n10.8 per cent, while Quebec is the\nyoungest\" with 5.7 per cent.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Press\nCanadian Western Natural Gas\nCo.,  Ltd.,  pfd.  20   cents  Sept.   1,\nrecord   Aug.   15.\nPowell River Co.. Ltd.. 30 cents\nSept.  15, record Aug.  15.\nInterprovincial Pipe Line Co. 40\ncents Sept. 1, record Aug. 17.   '\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Standard\nOil Co. (NJ) Thursday declared\na dividend of $1.25 a share on\ncapital stock, payable Sept. 10 to\nstock of record Aug. 15.\nRefuse Talks\nWith Red China\nTAIPEI, Formosa CAP) \u2014 Nationalist China Thursday slammed\nthe door against any possible parleys with the Chinese Reds and\nvoiced confidence that the. United\nStates will not let Formosa down\nat Geneva.\nForeign Minister George Yeh, at\na press conference, spoke scornfully of a New Delhi report saying\nthat Krishna Menon, chief adviser\non foreign affairs to Indian Premier Nehru, was thinking-of visiting Formosa to see President\nChiang Kai-shek.\n\"I attach no importance to anything relating to Mr. Menon,\" he\nsaid.\nCnloarv Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 On offer\nThursday at Calgary livestock\nmarket: 730 cattle; 23 calves. Wednesday's sales: 881 cattle; 54 calves\nand 461 hogs.\nTrade Thursday was moderately\nactive. Good to choice butcher\nsteers under 1,150 pounds met\ngood demand at steady prices,\nstrictly choice steers fetching up\nto 20.80\nGood to choice butcher steers\n1,200 points or over sold mostly\nat 19-19.50. Fair to medium kinds\nwere steady. Good to choice dry\nfed butcher heifers sold steady.\nFair to medium grass heifers were\nsteady. All classes of cows were\n$1 or more lower for the week.\nBulls were lower,\n\u25a0 Choice dry fed steers 19.75-20.50;\ngood 18.50-19.50; medium 16.50-18;\ncommon 14-16. Choice dry fed heifers 18-18.75; good 17-17.75; med-\nium 15-16.50; common 10-14.50\nGood cows 11-12; medium 10-10.75;\ncommon 8.50-9.50; canners and\ncutters 4-8. Good bulls 11.50-12;\ncommon to medium 9-11,\nIn replacement trading all claS'\nses of stocker feeder cattle sold\nreadily at firm prices. Good feed'\ner steers 16.50-17; good stock steers\n16-17.50; common to medium 12-\n15.50.\nVeal calves were $3 or more\nlower for the week and slow sel\nlers at lower levels. Good to\nchoice veal 18-21; common to\nmedium 10-17.\nHogs sold 25 cents higher Wed\nnesday at 23.75 for grade A. Sows\n\u25a0 were 25 cents lower at 12.75 live\nweight.\nGood lambs sold 18.75-19.25.\nInterprovincial\nPioe Line Lower\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Interprovincial Pipe Line Company's consolidated net income for the six\nmonths ended June 20. 1955, totalled $2,902,711, or 58 cents a share,\nit said Thursday.\nDuring the corresponding period\nin 1954 net income amounted to\n$3,123,598, or 62 cents a share.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest.   Minimum two lines.  10% discount for prompt payment.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) - Banks\ntightened the reins on credit to\ncheck , inflation, and the stock\nmarket was jostled Bharply lower\nfrom its near-record peaks Thursday.\nThe action raised a great symbol\noi caution before Wall street eyes.\nIt means \"go slow.\" That's what\nthe market did.\nLosses were posted by Canadian\nstocks. Mclntyre dropped two\npoints to 86 and was followed by\nHiram Walker, off 1%, International Nickel, off 1%, Canadian\nPacific, down \"\/,, Distillers Seagram,' off 1%, Canadian Pacific,\ndown Vt, Distillers Seagram, off Vt\nand Dome Mines, down Vt.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket went into a decline Thursday with all sections participating.\nIndustrial issues reflected the softer position at New York where\nthe effect of dearer bank loans\nwas felt.\nUraniums were depressed.\nIndustrial stocks traded lightly\nand price changes seldom went to\nmore than a point. The steels and\nfoods gave the group its best sup-\n'port, showing a narrow majority\nof gains.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Industrials\nwere easier in moderate trade\non the stock market.\nAluminum fell two points to 100\nwhile MacMillan B at 44 and\nCrown-Zellerbach at 79, each lost\n1V4, Weston dropped a point to 109\nand Royalite Oil, 'A to 15.\nQuebec Power .gained a point\nto 35 while Ogilvie and Dominion\ntar each firmed Vt to 46V4 and 13%\nrespectively.\nBase metals and papers slumped\nwhile utilities were mixed.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The credit\nsqueeze was again the dominating\ninfluence on the stock market\nas prices suffered anether severe\nsetback, especially in industrials.\nHeavy engineerings and electrical equipments were vulnerable\nafter their big advance in recent\nmonths. Dollar stocks were mostly\nlower. Coppers were dull but tins\nheld steady. Leading oils (suffered\nanother sharp setback.\nBulganin Says\nGeneva Opened\nNew Relations\nMOSCOW CAP) \u2014 Prime Minister Bulganin told an extraordinary session of the Supreme\nSoviet Thursday all four powers at\nGeneva displayed a desire to end\nthe cold war.\nBulganin said the Geneva conference was \"a definite success for\nthe peace-loving forces.\"\nHe told the 1500 deputies as-\ntry Division will function for. a\nSoviet Union the Geneva parley\n\"ranks as an important historical\nevent since it opens a new page\nin relations between the U.S.S.R.\nthe United States, Grpat Britain\nand France.\"\nEtna Active Again\nCATANIA, Sicily (Reuters) \u2014\nExplosive activity inside the nor\ntheastern crater of Mount Etna,\n'Europe's biggest active volcano,\nhas intensified. This crater of the\n10,700-foot mountain spewed forth\nlava last month, rbut the flow\nceased after a few (lays.\nSays Canadians\nToo Reticent\n^KAMLOOPS, B. C. (CP)\u2014 Ca\nnadians fail to grasp the golden\nopportunity offered in the tourist\nmarket and \"thus are the ones to\nblame for not making the best\npractical use of the ever-growing\ntourist potential,\" Alex Bowie of\nKelowna, Canadian president of\nthe Okanagan-Cariboo Trail Association, said.\nHe told a gathering of some 100\npersons that travel was a wonderful medium of education and understanding, \"but few people realize that last year $70,000,000 was\nspent in B. C. by tourists.\"\nPLAN MONSTER CARAVAN\nThe meeting was held to finalize\nplans for the monster caravan\nwhich will be going through Kamloops Sept. 2.\nThe caravan will include boost-\n*ers from many points In the United States, who will travel the interior route over Highway 97 to\nPrince George.\nCanadians, said Mr. Bowie, were\napt to be too reticent about the\nwonders of their own country\nwhen they go abroad. He said a\nlot of tourists do not come to\nCanada because of this deprecating attitude.\nSwim\nTrunks\nBy JANTZEN\nand CATALINA\n(f you swim or just sun\nbathe we have the proper\nattire. Boxer style in plain\nand fancy patterns. Knitted trunks designed for\nfreedom in swimming-\n$3,95 to $5.95\nEmory's\nLimited\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nSpring Chicken, 4 to 5 lbs.\nPhone Bealby, 328-X-l.\nWhist Tonight Sacred Heart Hall,\nHall Mines Road at 8 p.m.\nMason preserving jars, 80c a doz.\nColumbia  Trading,  902 Front St.\nTop-flight shoe  repairs,  at\nTONY'S REPAIR SHOP\nEAGLES SOCIAL MEMBERSHIP\nCLUE^  MEETS TONIGHT\nFuller Brush Representative\nDon E. Sargent - Phone 1335\nChimneys, cleaned and  topped.\nFurnaces, stoves vacuum cleaned.\nPounder's Chimney Service.\nPhone 1541-L.\nOffice    supplies, '\"bond    paper,\nsynoptic   sheets,   Columnar   pads.\nKOOTENAY   STATIONERS\nAND SPORT SHOP\nYoung  budgie  birds  and  gold-\nFor   Watkins   quality   products j fisn always in stock-\n\"hone 1215 Y MAC'S FLOWER SHOP\n' PHONE   910\nPottery   \u2014   20%   Discount  this\n\u25a0\u2022eek only at\nCOVENTRY'S  FLOWER   SHOP\nTerry towel rompers, bibs, and\ntoys.\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP\nHot weather special \u2014 cotton\nmet T shirLs in all sizes for ages\n2 lo 18. White and assorted colors.\n69c. EBERLE'S on Baker St.\nClearance sale continues on all\nhats and handbags.\nADRIAN  MILLINERY\nGlass Shelves  and  Brackets.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 101 Hall St., Nelson\nRusian Film \"Last Hill' Marlane\nHotel, Castlegar, Sunday, Aug. 7\n8 p.m.\nEtna Sewing Machines are really\n5 sewing machines in one. See\nthem at Jeffery Radio and Appliances, 446 Ward St., Nelson, B.C.\nTHRIFTY HOUSEWIVES\nstock up now for their Winter\nfuel supply. Stove .length slab,\nwood delivered, $10 a cord. Phone\nKnitters\u2014For all yarn knitting\nneeds, we invite you to visit our\nwoo] department.\nEBERLE'S on Baker Street.\nFor Sale \u2014 23 fl factory-built\nhouse trailer, complete. Apply\nOscar Hansen. Shell Station, Salmo road.\nNew fall corduroys in all wanted shades. Guaranteed fast and\nwashable. Yd: $1.79.\nTAYLOR'S   DRYGO0D8\nGuaranteed  Radio and\nf        Television Service.\nMcKay St Stretton Ltd.\n532 Baker St. Phone 1555\nWashable    rayon    marquisette\ncurtains 42\"x81,, ready-to-hang\n$3.49 a pair.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nBeautiful, solid walnut dining\nroom suite by Gibbard, $175.00\nalso one dining room table with\nfour chairs, $25.00.\nWE   BUY   AND   SELL   NEW\nAND  U8ED  FURNl.TUhE\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nGOT  A  8PARE7\nKeys duplicated while you wait.\n35c each.\nCustom keys for your car. Excellent gift items. 14K plate, dream\ncar, St. Christopher, etc.\n$1.50  to $2.50  cut.\nNELSON  HARDWARE CO.\nNELSON. B.C.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBROOKS \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late Henry.William Brooks\nwill be held from the Thompson\nFuneral Home Monday at 1:30\np.m. Lieut. H. P. Thornhill will\nofficiate and Interment will be ln\nNelson Manorial Park.\nHave the Job Dons Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nFarm women account for more\nthan 40 per cent of Japan's total\nfemale population.\nI, A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical  Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 Front St.\nPhone 63\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Bake Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or White\nIt Makei Excellent\nHome-Mado  Bread.\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nPHONE 238\nLET   US   DI8PEN8E   YOUR\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\n8ave With .Safety at Your\nREXALL STORE\n\"Try Us for Lower Prices\"\nRELIABLE   SERVICE\nCity Drug\n\"Your Rexall pharmacy\"\nPhone 34 Box 460\nDAVID CROLL T. D'ARCY LEONARD\n. ;\"',:. .;\u25a0 * y'A\nJOHN T. HACKETT\nC. G. POWER\nIn naming 12 men and one woman to the Senate In Ottawa,\nPrime Minister Louie St. Laurent shattered precedents In many\nwayi. Two of them saw David Croll (Lib., Toronto Spadlna), become the first person of the Jewish faith ever to be named to the\nSenate and John T. Hackett of Montreal became the first Conservative named by a Liberal prime minister. There are still 10\nvacancies left to be filled In the 102-seat senate which now houses\n84 Liberals, and eight Conservatives. Some others named were\nJean-Francois Poullot (Temiscouata), C. G. Power (Quebec\nSouth), Thomas D'Arcy Leonard (Toronto),, and Donald Smith\n(Liverpool, N.S,).\n\u25a0 J \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0! I \u25a0 \u25a0 B \u25a0\nFOR FINE QUALITY\n1953\n1953\n1952\n1952\n1951\n1950\n1949\n1948\n1948\nCHEVROLET BEL AIR SEDAN\nTwo tone, conditionaire.\nFORD SEDAN\nConditionaire, seat covers, two tone.\nCHEVROLET DELUXE SEDAN\nConditionaire. Dark blue.\nCHEVROLET SEDAN\nConditionaire, seat covers.\nCHEVROLET DELUXE SEDAN\nSeat covers. Conditionaire.\nMETEOR COACH .   ,\nHeater, good tires.\nDODGE SEDAN\nHeater. Nice shape.\nCHEVROLET TWO DOOR\nPONTIAC SEDAN\nEnglish Cars\n1953 AUSTIN SEDAN\n1950 M.G. CONVERTIBLE ROADSTER\n1950 AUSTIN SEDAN\n1949 AUSTIN SEDAN\nTRUCKS\n1952 CHEVROLET Vi TON  PICKUP\n1951  FARGO Vi TON PICKUP\n1950 G.M.C. Vi TON PICKUP\n1949 MERCURY '\/\u00bb TON PICKUP\n1949 DODGE Vt TON PANEL\nx   NELSON TRANSftl\nCOMPANY  LIMITED\nLOCATED AT 323 VERNON STREET\nJ\ni i\n_____ _-\n_________________________M_________________________________________I\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_08_05","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0429111","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"}]}}