 —
	
lait $1000,000
'ulpwood Blaze
lefore Hull Mill
■
•NULL, Qua., Maroh 4» (CP>-
ire tonight raged through tower.
tig pulpwood piles on tna North
tank of tha Ottawa River direct-
V aoron from thl Parliament
Bulldlngi  In  Ottawa  and  for
mally entered and left Ottawa
way of the Intel-provincial Bridge
had been rerouted and wu continuing without Interruption.
A itrong wind fanned tha flaihei
westward up the shore of the river
lima   threitened   the   •priwllna tow4rd the mill A ihort dUtince
piper mill of the E. B. Eddy Co. down the river, were oil Storage
%'_*'-
_   !__. 4   k
by | .\      .-    .*#■. A.
i** ■        sk *
 wmtwm^mmm
Troll Smokt Eaten ^*J^U
I.C. Hockay Chompi.—Page 4
Nelion Lions Club Mm
Fall Fair Revival.—Page 4
Adopt Plan to Eliminate
German Wir toM-lol.—Ptfi #     '■■'->'
Wrecks bridqi
[tanks but they wera not regarded
Three houri after the flra I*.. ]***_** ^J__V\ „.
led It had twlitad the Hull end'   The fire itarted at the end of the
if the Interprovlnclal Bridge be- bridge  Which   U  touched  by   the
■tween  Ottiwi and   Hull   Into a Eddy property. It ipread tint to
man  of wreckage  and   left  in •  huge  pulp  pile  and  than  ran
latlmated    $t,0_0,000    worth    ot "long a luperitructure and jumped
pulpwood a flaming man. ,by flying emben to a emaller pUa
l     _, , .    .     ..   .. ,    ,  which wai cloier to tha milL   I
fire   Chief  Bond  laid   that  el-       _ ,»,,.«
push flames were within 100 lu-t NO WORD ON CAUSE
.the Eddy plant at tha closest    There wai no official itatement
Int he wai utlifled the mill could aa to the cause of the fire and
laved. I where lt itarted. Opinion waa dlvi-
At 1 a.m. C.S.T. the tire teemed ded  as  to  whether the  fire  had
(finitely confined to the mount- started on the bridge or in the big
nous wood piles: and while these stockpile of woodpulp—long a fami-
Aied like infernos there teemed liar  landmark  to  anyone  vlaltlng
Itle danger that the tire would Parliament HIU and looking over
iread to the plant. Damage to the to Hull where a population of
ridge cut oft rail, road and tram 32,000 sprawls along the river.
alflc, which usually use the route. | One report wai that a ihower
section of Hull was left without of sparks from either an electric
lephone service when a cable on tram or a train had dropped'on
ie bridge burned. I the woodpile—tinder dry by reaion
Canadian Pacific Railway offlcl- of the unusual long .period of warm
ll laid railway traffic which nor- Spring weather.
Zut Qermans to
1275 Calories;
Vear Rioting
STUTTGART, March 29 (AP)-
at-Gen. Lucius D. City announced
oday a reduction ln the civilian
tally food ration from 1530 to 1273
:alorics ln the United Statea occu-
lation tone for next month, and
idvlied Germin officials to Increaie
lollce protection for food reserves
n cities where danger of. looting
Kilted.
The Amerlcin figure will remain
lightly higher than the ration ln
he Britlih zoni, which wu reduced
rom 1300 to 1014 calorlei effective
Kerch 4, then railed to 1042 for
text month. Looting of food itorei
Ud several suicides attributed to
lunger occurred In Himburg In the
»ake -jf the British reduction.
The ration both ln the American
uid Britiih zones il lower than the
itandard let by food specialists to
teep worken at full capacity.
CHARGE POLICI
Meanwhile one Jew wai killed and
two Injured earlier ln a two-hour
riot breaking out after a police
black market raid jsn a displaced
persons camp, and r United Natloni
Relief and Rehabilitation Admlnlitratlon official charged the police
wilh thootlng down "defenceless'
Jewi.
The diih between 1800 Polei ind
220 German police ln the camp juit
outside Stuttgart wai the wont in
the United Statei zone. Several German policemen were hurt
pie United Statei Army had au
thorlzed the raid, and eight American military police accompanied the
German police. The riot ended only
when American armored can ejected the police and patrolled the
camp area.   .
[CESSOR TO
i«iuisr~
PROVIDES POSER
Carson, Anscomb   N
Likely for
Party Leadership
IAY NAME LIBERAL
I VICTORIA, March 29 (CP)-Sel-
ttlon of a successor or successors
the lite R. L. Maltland as co-
• of the B.C. Coalition govem-
Bt, attorney-geniral of the prov-
and provincial leader of the
ogreiilve Conservative Party will
i a difficult task.
there  is  no   Conservative
•mber of the Legiilature ready to
> Into the attorney-general's port-
in the cabinet. Premier Hart
es a difficult problem.
UNO to
Ask Russia, Iran
to Reveal
Negotiations
By CLYDI BLACKBURN    *
Canadian Pren Staff Writer
NEW YORK, March 29 (CP)—Russia and Iran today
were asked to submit exact information on the status of
their negotiations by 10 a.m. C.S.T. Wednesday, April 3, when
the United Nations Security Council is scheduled to hold its
next meeting.
Decision to seek this Information, through the representatives of the two countries, was taken at a harmonious
Council session on motion of*— ■	
State Secretary Byi-nes, United AQry III IU TAI)
RATIFYING
BRITISH LOAN
Budget Date Still
Unknown; Ease Ocean
Travel Curbs
WAR BRIDES WELCOMED: Pining through Nelion, two war
brldei from tha Old Country are here greeted by Mra. W. H. Cox, 412
Mill Street, of the Welcome Home Service. Neareat to Mra. Cox li
Mra. R. E. McDowell (nae Mill Edna Blrka of Fenton, Stoke-on-
Trent, England) and at right Is Mrt. A. Desireau (nee Mlit Helen
Bremner of Edinburgh, Scotland). Tho former wai en route td Penticton and the latter to Trail. They told the Dally Newa photographer
that thiy thought Canada a lovely oountry,
 '       ......	
States delegate. Secretary Gen
eral Trygvc Lie was instructed
to communicate the request at
once.
Mr. Byrnei uld he wu particularly anxious to know if the re-
Ctried evacuation of troopi trom
an waa conditioned to Iranian
igreement on other Ruulan Pro
poials, presumably thou relating lo
Iranian oil and tha autonomy of
Azerbaijan.
Sir Alexander Cadogan, Britlih
delegate, supported thii attitude.
Tha deciilon wai reiched after
Huaaeln Ala, Iranian ambauador
and obterver at the Council meeting, reiterated hli claim that hla
Instruction! were te purtue hla
plea for tha Counoll te take ae
OPEN BIDS FOR
KOOTENAY BAY
ftOAlMroWti
VICTORIA, March M (CP) -
Tenden for comtructlon of light
mllea ef new read between Kootenay Bay end Gray Creek ware
opened thla afternoon by Worki
Miniiter Anicomb.
Loweit bid lubmltted wm by
Dawion Wage 4 Co., who tendered to do tha work for $262,649-
Other Vancouver flrmi bidding
fer the work were General Con-
itruetlon Co., $253,867; Fred Man-
nix A Co, $280,16.; Campbell
Comtructlon , Ce, $283,426, and
Northern Comtructlon Co. and
J. W. Stewart, $299,872.
Drew Charges Ei
_
Tehran
None Admit Part
in Spy Network;
May Detain Others
Second Phase Said to Involve Other
Than Gov't. Workers in 5th Column
Uncover Secret Police Activity
By DOUGLAS HOW
Canadian Press Staff Writer
OTTAWA, March 29 (CP) —After six spectacular
weeks, the. first major phase in Canada's espionage probe
became one complete picture today with official disclosure
of the last five persons—all men—so far detained as suspects
in a Russian network of agents.
Even as the third interim report of the Investigating
Royal Commission named those five the case was shaded
with implications that a sec-*-
By D'ARCY O'DONNELL
Canadian Pren Staff Writer
OTTAWA.   March   29   (CP)-A
wide variety of topics wai discussed
tlon en opntlnuad occupation of today m y,, Commoni as members
1 Haw     ku     Diiall _H     *_». Irt I Ar ■     mu.lt     lm. ,     ',         . _—_     a    — ait
voted lupplementary expenditurei
Incurred during the fiscal year ending Sunday nnd voted Interim aup
Iran by Ruulan aoldieri and In
terferenoe In domutle affalri by
Soviet offlclali,
GROMYKO "-TILL ABSENT
The chain of the Ruulan delego-
»n remained empty. Lait Wednei-
iy Ambauador Andrei Gromyko,
oviet delegate, led hU group from
» Council chamber when only the
Redln Freedom
Restricted
PORTLAND, Ore., March 29 (AP)
—LieuL Nicolai Gregorovlch Redin,
Russian nival officer charged with
tl poulble a Liberal may be.wpion,gei wal releaied on $10,000
,ed to fhe attorney-general'i port' bond today and on the recogniiance
another Coniervative taken In- of the Ruulan Consul-General.
ne cabinet, since leveral min- ^ 29-year-old member of the
I at the preient hold two or Soviet Purchasing Commlulon it
ire portfolios Creation of iep- Seattle w„ or__Tei to lUnd ready
depirtmenti of health and to return lor „ preliminary hearing
are, schedules for thii session hcr(,
te Legislature   will alio addla     U(ut Red,n wa> {oMi_tn
position on the provincial exe-lj wUhin ^ ,„, __ ,ny _£
ive council. g>blc valtt and ordered l0 remain
HSR LIKELY within Oregon or the Weitern dis
mid Premier Hart  decide to trlct of .Waihlngton.
1 • Liberal as succeuor to Mr.     The   conditions   of   hil   releue,
and  on   the   cabinet,   he   has which  Included  lowering' the bail
al lawyers to chose from. Gor-jfrom the original $25,000, were let
S.  Wilmer,  former   attorney-! by U.S. Commluloner Robert Leedy
..-al, would seem the most rea-1 upon the requeit of Redin, Ruuian
jble lelectlon but it is reported. Consul   General   Michael   Vavilov,
would not be willing to accept and the U.S. District Attorney.
again.
Liberal   memben   of   the' _ _   ,
ature who  have legal back-   IO  DOOSt  PtlCC
da  include  Speaker  Norman _.     .
titer. W. T.  Stralth,  and OIt Pork
', Morrow, the only one of these
idered to be in the running Is     OTTAWA.  March  29   (CP)-Do-
Whlttaker. meitlc wholesale price ceilings on
pork carcasses ind sides will be in-
The Progreulvi Coniirvatlve creaied 2 Va cents a pound beginning
'arty la eonildind likely to, April 1 In order to maintain the re-
a leader from the ranki of, utlonshlp between domestic ind ex-
e cabinet. There are two choleei, port pricei of pork, the Pricei Board
'arka Miniiter Herbert Ana-announced tonight.
mb, who reprnanta Oak Bay,
id Mlnea Miniiter E. C. Carton, QUICKIES
ho la alao Mlnlatar of Trade and
Directed Propaganda
Termi Communications "Subversive";
L.P.P. Memberi See No News in Cable
TORONTO, March 29 (CP)—Premier Drew charged
in the Ontario Legislature today thbt the "contact is still
direct" between Moscow and Communists in Canada and
tabled a communication which he said shows Communist propaganda is being directed at Canada through the Soviet Embassy in Ottawa despite last month's espionage disclosures.
"A month after the whole ol Canada knew
that the Soviet Embassy had been tne centre pf spy activities,
the Soviet Embassy is still sending out to Canadians subversive
propaganda emanating from'
Moscow," the Premier said in
tabling an "original Marconi
message" from Moscow to the
Soviet Embassy.
He uld the meaaage was sent by
thl Embassy to an unidentified
"loyal citizen" ot Canada and had
been communicated to the Premier
by a Canadian publication, also unidentified, which the Soviet Embassy "quite wrongly" thought sympathetic to iti cause.
The Moscow-directed propaganda,
the Premier said, was being channelled to Commilnist publicltions
and agencies, and through them to
the people, by the Soviet Embasiy.
He quoted the 3000-word Marconi-
gram, retaining the original abbreviated "cablese" form, ai saying
"whoever haa tried to make show
of force to Russian people has Invariably lost the game."
ATTACK  ON  CHURCHILL
Speaking on what he termed a
question of personal privilege and
public importance, Premier Drew
said the Marconigram constitute!
tha "Communist design" of attack
on the Fulton, Mo., speech of Win
ston Churchill.
"The content! of this telegram are
in part a most offensive attack on
Winston Churchill himself."
The Marconigram, which contained side references to Russian history   and   culture,   contrasted   the
ilea to postpone hear
g tbe Iranian problem until April Mllltla Act would be amended
t     '■ -.,- reipove the restrictions limiting the
The Polish delegate, who hai peacetime force to 10,000 and to
consistently lupported the Russian allow, the payment of pay and al
stand, and Australia's delegate, Col.llowaneee to memberi of the forcei
W. R. Hodgion, who prevlouily;not technically on active service
sought to compromise the crisis by under the AcL
a propoul ilmllar tojhat adopted | riamt_ Miniiter Ilsley nld he
today, argued tor more time and na__\ M, ygt ,tate when the bud-
suggested April 4.
Mr.  Byrnei  bad  aiked  for  ah
April 2 deadline but Chairman Dr.
Quo Tai-Chl ot China, compromised
by letting Wedneiday.
Ambusador Ala told the Council:
1. "I have no information, official
or otherwise, that any Soviet troopi
have crowed the border from Iran
Into Ruuia."
ond phase would open soon and
it would involve more detentions than the 15 to date.
The first phaie Involved government employeei except in one cue.
The iecond, Informed lourcei laid,
would Involve perioni outilde government employment who acted as
linki ln whit wis compared to "1
viit, fifth column."
The third Interim report by Mr.
Jmticei R- L. Kellock and Robert
Taichereau was tabled in the Commoni by Prime Miniiter Mackenzie
King.
NO ADMISSIONS
Th* five men it named were detained Feb. 15—the day the lnveitl-
gation wai innounced—aU were ln
itriteglc government  positions  to
i      je recent $U5O0O(   1   ma- obtain vital information and none
an. lean. to Britain: T_V.~./T-> ifjbei. -"h-Mrepo-t eeld, admitted
Defence Mlniile. Abbott said the iwcipatlon to «•« network.-   ,
But iti meat lematlonal dli
eloiurV.ami In the itatement that
"wi have evldenoa that the
N.K.V.D., the Ruulan tecret polloe, had an organiutlon under
Iti direction working In Canidi
long before ... July, 1943."
Poulbly, It uld, It wu headed
by the min now lilted u iecond
lecretary at the Soviet Embauy
—Vltall Q. Pavlov who, thi Embauy uid, itlll li In Ottawi.
Named in the report and their
Ely of $273,197,945 to cover expens .1
1 the next two monthi. .
Memberi paved the way for the
introduction ot resolution! to bills
amending tbe Militia Act and rati-
Prof. Israel Halperin, II, Queeni
Unlvenlty profeuor ind wirtime
army ballistic! expert who "bad
acceu to all the fllei and documenti
concerning explosives and weaponi
and all the new dlicoverlei made
available to the artillery."
PROJECTILE SECRET
The commissions report uld Halperln gave Information on a new
"electro-projector," one of the moat
devastating projectiles uied ln thl
Japanese war and itlll 10 secret
militiry authoritiei aiked the commlulon to mention it only ikimp-
ily.
Durnford Smith, SS, Hull, Que,
a member of the radio branch of
the National Reiearch Councii who,
according to Ruulan documenti,
give "17 absolutely secret and 1
ret document. (BrltU^*
and Canadian) on magnet,
locators for field artillery and three
lecret iclentlfic research Journal!
of IMS,"
Tbe aame documenti ihowed that
Col. Nicolai Zabotln, former military attache at the Ruuian Embassy and alleged head of the network, "considered lt neceuary to
examine the whole" of the council'!
lecret library.
James Scotland Bennlng, 38, Ottawa, former Munition! Department
executive who wai credited on the
Embauy's mailing Hit for one dey
with being the source of 70 docu-
pduttry.
Cirton is considered by some
la mott  logical  choice.  If he
selected   he   would   become
Uty to Premier Hart.
I there are two vacanclea In the
liliture, both ln the three-mem-
llng of Vancouver-Point Grey.
Conservative! ire slated for
I Coalition nominations, there it
[ another possibility fnr the at-
hiy-generalihlp.   Reg  MacDoug-
I If elected, could alao be ln line
Ithe cabinet pott.
hNNIPEC, March 3» (CP) -
Won Lane, 50, of Winnipeg, died
toepltal today from burnt auffer-
V-lii 11 the vat In which he wu
kinii flih it the Winnipeg Ren-
Compiny, St. Boniface, ex-
led.
"Pardon me, Sir, oould you tell
me where 1771 Loeui Street !._—
they're offering a houu for aale
In tha Niwi Want Adil"
Andrew, who uid the lubitance
of tha document hat appeared "In
the world preu."
BRAND8 "C.C.F. NEWS' "
WORDS FALSE
The Preraler'i addreu-also contained referencei to an editorial he
said appeared In the March 14 Iuue
of the official C.C.F. publication,
"C.C.F. Newi." He read three paragraph! from the publication into the
records, including a reference which
quoted the Premier ai having iaid
in the Leglilature that future
strikes would be considered as Com-
mUnlst-inspired.
"Every member of this Legislature knows that the statement, contained ln this editorial are dellber-
aetly untrue," said the Premier. "I
expreued my admiration tor organised labor and my faith In organized
labor. But I did point out that Communlits In the ranks of organized
labor have no purpoie but disruption. At no time did I say or even
hint that all strikes were Commun-
iit-impired."
get wlll be brought down.
Mr. King uld that restrictions on
travel to Britain were being eased
day by day and that the problem
wu mainly one of tramportatlon.
He nld  the inter-Governmental __
Committee  on  refugees  will  con-J were:
tinue its iifork until the economic j   Eric Adams, 41, Ottawi ind Mon-
and Security Council of the United; treaJ, described by another accuied
1 "The Soviet Government ha«;N,t,!0,u C-rganlutlon can "take over:„ »hMd of a roup in Ottawa,"
aiked for delay 10 that negotlatloni,m!™r» *a_ilI?J __**?'- ,_,    „ IgridueU of  McGill  and  Harvard
may  be  reiumed.  However  thereU5« w," .,Jk<? by M;JJ- ,CoJdw!"u-1Univenltles, md wirtime employee
can'be no negotiation! in the true h**-*f;   n fi-Ik ~ii        !i      Pu'.0!!' °' the Foreign Exchange Control
sense while foreign troopi are ln «JPJ Jrl™ P0'1?-* T       whlch I Board, Bank of Canada, Industrial
any part of Iran." SS£!^„P!2^Liiti^^P«J_.!f! Development Bank - which gives'answer questions or make explan-
_nZIM cona. on   ta Br""'n government .Id to fledgling mil's .Uon." l7o*ow, lt wu dl*dott£«£
VeterSeW-SSn-Ibekenxle   »' lnduitriei that need It-end lecre- vised igalnst turning-a "Pollen!"
Bounder  SS ffito V k °' «■*» ma,n «'mS!n« com- " "f N£VJ3' %."**_*
'might develop Into 1 good worker.
usilan document credited him
iving " a map of the training
luipected contribution! to Ruula menti. Two documenti hid to do
with reporti of the North Amerlcin
Coordinating Committee of the
Joint Gun Ammunition Production
Committee-
Sqdn. Ldr. Fred W. Poland, M,
Ottawa and Montreal, wartime Intelligence officer at R.C.A.F. Headquarters who "refuied to be iworn,
GUIDED FROM ABOVE
MOSCOW, March 29  (AP)-The
Ruuian Preu todiy quoted Andrei, jn, ln IM5 j_om mention! under I mittee of the Invention! Boerd. ; might
Gromyko a. saving he left the q,, provlilonal fur leal agreement' Russian documents credited him,A Hua
Security   Council  seislon  Wednu- b,tween   Canada   and   the   United, with  giving  "detailed  information with g:
_ j, _ -   .        UM J        ill.'l        V     ii-    >ii   .       luuiioonu        rti-
By Ken Heyneim RuJ(lan virw on Sovlet poliry wilh
that expressed by Mr. Churchill,
criticized British policies In Greece
and Indonesia and, using what appeared to be the editorial "we,*
summed up Soviet aims as follows
"We know full well: firstly that
the Soviet Union Isn't striving for
world domination of which we are
accused by Churchill. ... We alio
know that the Soviet Union la firmly determined to eniure, lecurity
of all iti frontier! and ... In effort to achieve thia legitimate and
neceuiry aim the Soviet will noi
mbmit to any threat, to any cunning or lo brandishing ot any new
weaponi..." \
The Pnmlir tabled thi unsigned communication amid Interjections from the Leg allture'i two
Lahor-Progretilve memben, A. A.
MicLeod of Toronto Bellwooda
•nd J. B. 81 libera of Toronto St
PLAGUE TAKES
HEAVY TOLL
8HANGHAI, Mirch 29 (API-
Cholera, bubonic plague and fam
Ine apread through vast areaa of
China thla week, taking ■ heavy
toll of lives. United Nations Relief
and Rehabilitation Admlnlitratlon
officlili here aaid cholera raging
through South China, where more
than I.COO.OOO perioni are threat
ened, waa exacting a 60-pir-cent
mortality of thoie affected.
FREE PLASTERER
HALIFAX, March 20 (CP) - A
Supreme Court Jury today acquitted
Frank J. Lima, 53-year-old Italian-
born platterer, of the murder of
hli neighbor, Ervln Boutlller of
Boutlller'a Point, N.S., last November.
WINNIPEG, March 20 (CP) -
Stanley H. Knowles, C.C.F. Member
of Parliament for Winnipeg North
Centre, said today that during his
recent visit to Moscow he found In
the Soviet Union a fear ot the Weat
ern world equal to the fear that
"many of our people have (or Rui
tl."
day "due to reuoni placed upon
him from higher up."
There hu been no editorial or
radio comment on M. Gromyko'i
action on the Iranian Iuue before
the Council, preiented to the Rus-
ilan people for the tint time todiy
in, 1 250-word Tu. dlipatch from
New York, which wu dlipliy-d
prominently In ill newspapers and
broidcut by the radio.
Meanwhile, an informed nurce
told The Associated Preu that one
element ln RuiiIi'i duire for an
oil agreement with Iran wai lhat
exploitation of Northern Iran fieldi
could iffeCt Russia'! prime lource
of oil supply it Biku.
Swim Suits to
Have No Visible
Means of Support
TORONTO. Mirch 29 (CP) -
The Canadian girl will iport ■
bare midriff lun lult with itnp-
leu bri top when ihe* gimboli on
the beachu thli Summer, deilgneri predict.
The top doei not require id-
heilve tape, thumb tacki or Iron
glue to hold It In place. A little
strip of elaitlc does the trick, reported deiigner Tula Snldermin.
Moit of the iwlm lullt deilgned
by Rose Mirle Reld of Vancouver
are two-piece affalri. Her 1M«
feature, matching terry-cloth fingertip length coals, alto is found
In the ivelte creations of Mon-
treil'i Betty and Maxlne.
Mr. Snlderman uw the bara
midriff itylei 11 • poit-war trend.
"The wtfi over, the boyi are
home and the glrli have been
lonesome for • long time," he
uld. "Do I hive to find ■ word
for It?"
Stites were $153,000.
about ill kinds of lnduitriei."
The Weather
Temperaturei: Min. 37.1, Max
47 S. Rain: .30 ot an Inch.
Forecait Kootenay: Cloudy, clear-
Ing during morning, except locally cloudy with scattered ihoweri
on mountains. Light wlndi.
Fer ever ona hour John Tonama, 67, wu burled up to hi) nick
In a ditch In Detroit, and thi faster hit partner dug, the futir the
damp, cold dirt cavid In from the ttdu covirlng hla beei it timet.
Saved at laat, he alta at the edge of the ditch before being ruahed to
hoipital.
ichooli," telephone numberi of others named were found ln Poland'!
telephone directory.
All five appeared In Polloe
Court and bill wu ut Charged
undar the Official Secreti Act of
1.33. they wen reminded until
next  Thundiy.
Meanwhile, thi commlulon uld
It had mora wltnenea to hair but
evidence of lit those detained
under a ipeclal order-ln-councll
of llat Oct. 8 hid bien completed.
Expected ioon It another report by the two Judget recommending a further courta of action.
Thi third report wai oenflnad
almoit entirely to the five men
It  named.
2 MYSTERY MEN
OTTAWA, Much 2« (CP)-Two
myitery men received mention in
today'i Interim report of the Royil
Commiuion on espionage, without
any inkling of their identity.
One was "in Intermediary not ln
\he government service" and the
other a member of the naval Intelligence who had the code name
"Surenien."
The commlulon uld It hid received evidence thit Jimu S Bennlng, ■ former Munitions Depirtment official named in'today'i report as involved In eipionage, had
been in communication with the Intermediary "who wai engiged In
lupplying Information to the Rui-
ilin Embassy."
Reference to "Surenun" waa
made In a section of the report dealing with Sqdn. Ldr. Fred Poland
who wu detained and appeared before the commiiiion, although there
wai no suggestion of any connection
between Polind ind Surenien.
An entry In • notebook of CoL
Nicolai Zabotl, Soviet military at-
tache and alleged head of the espionage ring, had thli reference to
"SurenMn":
"Hi worki In thi Naval Miniitry.
He worki in Intelligence, give materlali about comtructlon of shlpa
Left for overieu.
"Both (Surenun ind Tolland")
worked up to April."
	
 t - NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1946, Appointed
Interior Manager
' Capital Closeups. ..
Little Chicago "Quack, Quack"
Hushes Long-Winded Speakers
By  JACK   BRAYLEY
Canadian Praia ttaff Wrltir
OTTAWA, March 19 (CP)-There
were some Interesting historical
sidelights and much good humor
at the farewell banquet for Rt. Hon.
Malcolm MacDonald, retiring British High Commissioner, here the
other night.
Mr. MacDonald disclosed he hadn't wanted to come to Canadi ln
wartime and had told Winston
Churchill he wanted to Join the
army,
Mr. Churchill replied that he
would'have to join as a private and
Mr. MacDonald said that's what he
wanted to do. Mr. Churchill then
told him he could only go into the
army as a general and as he wouldn't make a good general he'd have
to go to Canada.
Tmsi4u
Premier Health
and Accident Ass'n.
Writing of the Royal Cana-
dian Mounted Police in Harper's, Richard L. Neuberger says:
"Pride of unit, pride in a uniform, and glory in a military
tradition may not be desirable
goals to the social scientist, but
they have helped shape the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
A column of Mounties participated in the formal opening of
the Alcan Highway at Burwash
Landing near the Alaska-Yukon
line. It was twenty-two bolow
lero and General O'Connor suggested that they keep on their
parkas throughout the ceremony. 'Wouldn't think of lt, sir,'
said the lean, ascetic-looking officer who commanded the column. While everyone else shivered ln parkas and great coats,
the Mounties stood at attention
In their scarlet tunics. 'I thought
only the U.S. Marines felt that
way about their uniforms,' Delegate Bob Bartlett of Alaska
whispered to me."
ClIKRHAM/WSllTI
Limited
TORONTO, ONTARIO
Another disclosure came from
Prime Minister Mackenzie King
wbo recalled he had suggested Sir
John A. MacDonald's old homi,
Earnscllffe, aa tha rasidence of thl
British High Commliiloner. Hi
made the suggestion to thl late
Ramsay MacDonald—Malcolm's father—when MacDonald senior was
British Prime Minister.
Edgar Tarr, K.C., of Winnipeg, I
member of the executive on the In
stitution of International RelaUona
who were hosts of tha evening, rC'
terred to Mr. MacDonald's well-
known passion for the study of bird
life. He once crossed the Atlantic
with the High Commissioner.
"if a bird came within any rea
sonable distance of the ship," Mr,
Tarr recounted with a wide grin,
"Malcolm would get out his binoculars and if the unsuspecting person
happened to express a curiosity
about hil actions, he would not only
tell them the species but the sex,
likely destination and color ot eyes
but also a reasonably accurate estimate of the bird's state of health."
Breezy Corner: The all-party
agreement to complete tha Throne
Speech debate last Tuesday fell
through and oratory continued
apace with Little Chicago providing a bright spot in an otherwise
rather dull program.
Little Chicago, named by Iti
own memberi, li the noliy section
of back bench Government supporters to the extreme right hand
corner from Mr. 8peakar.
Their battle cry agalnit long-
winded oppoiltlon ipeaken hai
become the call of the duck—Don
aid Duck. And during division!
thli week they Introduced an old
French-Canadian folk aong that
lncludei the line "Quand done fin-
Iront noi toumenti '(when will
our misery end) quack, quack,
quack, quack, quack."
Ask far eur Saturday   Specials
Wrlght'i Grocery. Ph. 48.
mm1 t itmmmm.<»■
For Insurance, see Ren Semen,
tOt Baker St Ph. lilt.   '
NEW OF THEDAY|$H.5O0 In Building Authorized
in March; Total lo Dale $102,1110
Boy'i ihoei end icampen. Juit
ln. Dave Wade.   ,
Board Companiu pay your clalmi
"*—■--oj *■-—
promptly. Blackwooc! Ag'ency.
PORTRAITS BY McQRSQOR
Phone 214 tor appointment
ti TAXI, PHONrtl
Anytime of tha day or night
THE FAIRWAY MIAT
PHONE IS 1177 AND 1171
Nine Wm permlti were li-l  John fflostfoifcNelien Avenue, to
lued for building valued at MM? at1 build a houie, $3000.
the Nllson City Engineer1! office |   Mri. E. Will, Hoover and FaU
during the lait half of March, tu Streets, to excavate basement,  lo
' ring the total for the month to construct a concreta_*oundetlon end
cond Street
The month's total is well overl {r»fe,"*ftl'. Pert  Street,  to
the Mareh. 1941 figure of 13187 and |buUd ^ehtajey, J7S.
and for Uie year te date to build § chimney, iajo.
a.oo.mr.. Two of the permlti were   P. Howard. 1007 lec
tor houses, thl reit for repairs.     |lo fix veranda, tM,
Rotary Luncheon, Monday, April
let 12:18 p.m. Hume Hotel.
All the Latest Sheet Music Hits
It Valentine's.
total for the iame period last year
of $15,711.
Permlti were luued to:
W. G. Walford, 711 Elwyn, to
raise garage, put ln cement foundation and shingle walls, 040.
R. J.' Rapley, (per I. McCandliih)
Third .Street, to build a houie,
$1900.
FRANK A. STUART
Mr. C. M. Munro, B. C. Sales Manager for the Premier Health Association with Head Office in Vancouver, B. C, ls pleased to announce
the appointment of Mr. Frank A.
Stuart, Medical and Hospital Contract Specialist, as Interior Manager of the Association in order to
facilitate speedy service to their
many Interior contract holders.   '*•
80,000 Spinsters
Want British
Pensions at 55
Trades School
Attracts Girls
_#
Out of Uniform
Remember the Rebekah Sale of
Work. April llth.
Come te the Eagles panel, Qood
floor, good music. Prise given every
Saturday night
DEVHLOPING AND PRINTING
COPYINO, FRAMING, COLORING
WM.  RAM8AY-VOOUI STUDIO,
Kill the clatter of your typewriter with a Kil-Klatter pad.
Kootenay Stationers and Sport
Shop.
ANNOUNCEMENT
See the new Parker 91 pens released today at the Bay.
Nelion Figure Skating Club
Children's Party at Civic Centre
Sunday 2 p.m. Silver collection.
On the Road
There la a large army of outdoor
men who hare learned to depend on
Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. Riding on trains or trucks causes a
Jarring which is hard on the kidneys
aa ia alao the exposure to ail kinds of
vind and weather.
This medicine goes to stimulate the
action of the kidneys and relieve the
backaches which ao often result.
For over hill a century they hare
been popular with railway men,
truckers and fanners.
Dr. Chase's
Kicfneii-LiveR Pills
By NORMAN ALT8TS0TER
Canadian Press Staff Writer '
TORONTO, (CP)-Most girls are
Interested in the careers of their
future husbands, but .few are as
methodical about It as Mlsi A. E.
Burrell of Winnipeg who is taking
a watchmaker's course here
A student In the course ln horology—that's watchmaking — at the
Toronto Traihlng and Re-Establlsh.
ment Institute, Miss Burrell has an
i rsursrsK       ..„_>_,.„ •!_   i„,j™ ! other nine months to put in on the
LONDON -Twenty-sxL-ndon:0 (     *  fl ,
members of the National Spinsters   ';      u6   „     , brfor, Joln
Pension   Assocation.here   carried; ■     her fiance who u als0 , walch
a box containing 80,000 signatures (-j,,,^
to  a  petition,  to  the  Ministry  of I    _ .    ,   ,,.   _       .   .   .,
National Insurance lo ask for pen-'    Commandant of the Toronto Inrtl
sions for spinsters at the age of J5. !,utf' "hlc^ °"er5T J3'0,urtses„bV,ld"
Miss F. White, the Association 11 watchmaking,is Lt-Col .J. M.Muir
orcanizer  told a rtDorter that thev' (orm«1J' head of the army eduea-
organizer, torn a reporter inal u>«y ■ tional centre at North Bayi 0nL
infended to tell the minister that ln|
"There's nothing like this course
W, H. Elmes,' fourth Street, to
add five or ilx (eet to garage, and
fiut ln fixture! with sewer conn, c-
ion, {TO.   .
A. P. Hanson, 1314 Front Street,
to repair bouse, S250.
D. 5. McLean, 115 Vlctorle, to Install partitions, new flooring, and
a bathroom extending In exiitlng
concrete building, fldw.
CIVIC EMPLOYEES
General    meeting,    City
Tuesday 8 p.m.
HaU,
Children's dresses. Ph. 331. Christine's Baby Shop. Opposite Palm
Dairies on Hall Street
SHRAM  LODGE
AND BOAT BUILDERS
BALFOUR, B.C.
Morgenthau Plan
Goes to Truman
WASHINGTON, March M (API-
Reporting he ''got nowhere" with
Agriculture Secretary Anderson,
Henry Morgenthau, Jr., took to
President Trumin today a plan designed to boost wheat and flour
shipments to hungry areu abroad.
Aa outlined to reporters by the
former treasury secretary, thi Mor
genthau plan would have the Oov.
ernment direct mUli to let aside for
export 39 per cent ot Uie flour
milled.
Mr. Truman, Mr. Morgenthau
said, received the program "sympathetically."
He recommended:
1. Reducing the between-scason
carryover of wheat next July 1 from
150,000,000 to 100,000,000 bushels.
Thli would provide, he said, 1,.
300,00 tons of wheat.
2. Giving farmers, during April
and May, non-interest-bearing loan
certificates tor their wheat which
they could caih whenever they de
RADIO  REPAIRS
Electrical Work of All Klndi
Walker'! Radio Service—Phone 407
STAR TAXI
24-Hour Service
Phone 1154 Day or Night
Don't forget to have your washer
oil changed. Ph. 01 for Beatty
Service.
Wheelbarrows now ln slock'.
Wood or metal trays—hardwood
frames. Ideal site for garden or
farm. Hlpperson's.
Poultrymen;    Ellison's^   Chick
the new social insurance scheme too i even ,h     „ ,he j0WWMnt ,Uow.      __ 	
great a premium was being put on, ance iom_, cov„ ,u my „penHJi» SUrt|r and Dr. Rusk's Chick Focd
'.Miss Burrell said. She served in the|are the best for your baby chicks.
The national Insurance bill newsmen's' Division "of" the RCAF "as
before Parliament provides for pensions for spinsters at the age of 60.
Aussies Start
Housing Loan
SYDNEY, Australia (CP) -The
Commonwealth Bank of Australia is
now making housing and industrial
loans available Ho individuals, firms
and building societies.
an   Instrument   maker,   and   spent
most of her service career ln Ot-
Phone 233.
 _,             _       Liberal  allowance  for  your  old
tawa.   The   government   allowance'typewriter in exchinge for new one.
she receives as a veteran in train
ing Is $60 a month.
Miss Burrell was the only girl
seated at the rows of benches which
till the horology department, although the lathes whleh are essential equipment in the trade appeared as shiny as the instruments of
a super-housekeeper.
The  Course Is overflowing with
Cariboo Gold Quarts	
CasUe-Trethewey 	
Central Patricia 	
C Porcupine	
Citralam,	
Coin Lake	
Chestervllle	
Cochenour      4.43
Now  In  stock!  14 and 16 Inch! Conaiurum Mines .        2.20
lawn mowers. Ball bearing,'4 and Consolidated M & S     89.00
' 'Conwest      1.52
D.  W. McDerby "The Typewriter
Man" 536 Ward Street
From this date I shall not be
responsible for any unauthorized
debts Incurred ln my name.
P. O. Latondresi.
sire at the market price prevailing
at the time. He laid thli would "get
the wheat ott the farms promptly
•nd Into the starving mouths ot
thl world."
3. An all-out Oovernment drive
to Increase tha Spring planting of
wheat %
Calgary Livtltock
CALGARY, March 29 <CP>-
Very light recelpta being cleaned
up at fully steady prices.
Thursday's receipts: 340 cattle, 11
calvei, 634 hogs ind 17 Iheep.
Hogs sold Thursday at 316.80 for
A's. Sows »11.86-12.00.
Good to choice butcher iteen
11.78-12.40. Good to choice butcher
helfen 11.00-11.75.
Good to choice fed calvea 11.50-
12.23. Good cows 9.00-9.60.
Canneri and Cutteri 8.00-7.23.
Good bulls 9.0O-9.6J. Oood to
choice -real calvei 11.50-13.00.
Good stocker end feeder iteen
10.00-10.75.
Good Iambi 11.50. Oood ewes 7.00.
DOW JONIS AVIRAOIS
30 lnduitrlala  189.36 up 1.J8
JO rilli _   64.32 up   .22
IJ utUltln ..   41.60 up   .16
Toronto Stock Quotations
«*
mkt****99ttt****mtm*ts*maa*____\
■
The Print Shop
Roil or blue plaid FLANNELITTE SHUTS.
72xM. Pair ...,_ : .!»	
Pacific, extra muslin itrength COTTON SHEETS.
81x108. Piir	
Silver Prince WOOL BLANKETS
60x80, about 6 lbs. $1,2.95      12*M, about 8 lbs. Cl ft IA
Satin covered, wool-tilled COMFORTER, 1 only,
gold and green reversible	
$5.80
$10.18
3 only, floral, downproof, cambric covered with rayon panel trim
1 wool filled COMFORTERS, green or blue. $13.75
y««»««e«a«»«»««««a»»»»««»o««»««>«»««««««a»«-t__«^
tm>orrrO*nl','t!rllllst»l»lt»m
ti-V
MINIS
Aquarius  .
Armistice .
Aitorli 	
Atlu 	
Aubelle ....
Aunor
.63
1.10
.59
.43
.67
360
10.00
1.18
.36
Anglo-Huronian	
Aumiqua	
Bagamac  	
Bue Metals Mining        .22
Bear ExploraUon     l.M
BeatUe Gold Mines     1.40
Bevcourt  —      .70
Bldgood Kirkland  -      Jl
Bobjo Mines       .224
Bonetal  31
Bralorne    17.30
Broulan   39
Buffalo Ankerlte      7.40
Buffalo Canadian 30
Campbell R L      2.30
Canad an Mai 7.     1.03
3 50
1.68
2.36
.30
.20
.67
1.60
.,..,-,       ..      ,      ,    , , i,,c   <-"".<"-   ..   -.-...--»•.»    ■■'-.j«wn   muwers.   Dili   sisc.itun,   -   an.
Authority lor the bank to make indents so classes have to be run 5   blade,   metal  and  rubber   tires.
the new ventures was contained in ,n a Mll __  One starts at 8 a.m.lumlted  lupply. Hipperson's.
the Commonwealth Bank Act pass- an(j continues till 3 pm. and 20 min-'
ed by the Federal Parliament last, ates later the second shift comes
year. The act provides for nation- to class,
alizatlcn of the bank. 8TUDENT8 WITH HU8BAND8
Maximum housing loan Is  £1250
Mrs. Winnlfred Callas of Edmonton was on thc second shift and is
the only other women arpong the
(345001 or 85 per cent of the bank's
valuation   of   the   security,   which
*T..a .'J.™..''„""""" J*" '',69'stud.nts studying watchmaking.
£3.17:6 ($13.95). Repayments will A form,r Wren M„. Callas Is tak-
bc  mad''   •-    '   -—'--  ■--•-' '
in equal reqular instalments covering principal and interest. The governor of the bank, H, T.
Armitage says that the r.cw ventures
will fill useful places In thf national economy.
Extra gas— You now have lt Protect yourself against Law Suits and
Collision, etc. We write Auto Insurance, and can savs you money.
Robertson Realty.
ARMSON'S
Breaded veal tenderloin and
roast sirloin of beef, and pineapple
ing the course beside her husband
C   E: Callas who was hi  the air j cream pie	
force. I
Some   _nn   ex-servlcewomen   arei   Something   new
studying at the Institute which haslPu-'>- *>" no' «hrjnk- Dr'M ln-1
total enrolment of 3700. Former hour Can be sawed, planed, sand-
Goldex   Wood
1
apered'etc." 15c par pkg, at Wood
f*     u " iasiis CWACs." Wlds and Wrens sre also fWr"; "u,,i°„e
C.   H.   JONC enrolled In the course fn halrdress- v»'lan<;e Hardware
Croinor     1.43
Delnite  2.26
Dome Mines   26.50
Donalda  1.17
Duquesne  1.30
East Amphi  49
East Malartie  2.50
East Sullivan  3.85
Elder  1.03
Eldona  1.14
Falconbridge Nickel   ' 3.40
25 years' exoerlence
Herbs for Ulcerated
Stomach. Gall. Bladder and Prostate
Gland Troubles
81 fa 1st Street East.      Calgary
TODAY   WE   8AY  -   A8K   THE Gold Eagle
To Those Convalescing
After Severe Illness
AlVr many revere illnr.-wn or frriouj operfttiona
#M pfttittt if Tery dft-rn left in an cttrrmrly wetk,
MCTo-m,  run-.]nwn condition.
To til those cohv»Jp«c«iU wbo need aoma land
_\ a tooi-o t-o stimulate iuid build up ibe we&luened
■vf-em, we would recommend Milbum's Health ind Nerve PiIU to tinst
uwn lnvk. to health—htppincm t-g&in.
Ttitm pill* help mjpply elcmente nn firy to uaiit tht oonnlaioaQl
Ib bringing btck bodily etrenjth and vigour,
Ynr*a oOr. a box, 55 pills, at all dnm counters.
Look [or our regiit-sred trade mark a "Hed Heart" on the packafc
Tb* T. Milburo Co., Umitod, Toroato, Oit
TRANSPORTATION - PASSENGER
AND FREIGHT
ing, restaurant cooking, matrlcula
'inn and stenography.
The hairdressing course, where
there are as many men as women,
is unique in Canada, says P. R.
Huta   of   Reglna.   chief   instructor..
The course is run like a slaon with: Tor sale — International heavy
the general public as the assign-1 duty dual wheel two-ton, 1930
ments. Cosmetology, chemistry and truck. Serial No. 42224, m
-   ■■ ...   !_.___■   .nescs   rss-nno irsot.V   f.
Fed Kirkland
Francoeur 	
Froblsher 	
Giant Yellowknife
Gillies Lake
God's Lake Gold ...:
Gold Crest	
LADY  WHO TRIED   IT.
LIN-SOL
THE WONDER CLEANER
m2».uT«e"»mY'orto^
good rub-
MV,
.53
4 85
7.50
.UVi
.62
.71
.13
33
.27
Quemont
Regcourt
18.19
.30
.15
.48
taught.
Five girls amonu 70 men have the
run of a modern kitchen in the
chefs and bakers course. Using the
most up-to-date equipment they
study their trade as well as help
feed the students ln the adjourning
ichool cafeteria.
Besides being  fed  right on .the
Robson St.
WOMIN'S PUMPS
A,  AA and  AAA FITTINQ8 _
THI BOOTERY
Special meeting—To discuss and
school grounds Ihe sx-servicewo-|«ct <"• «'«■«* ^JSPI^"!,.".'!
man can get her Spring outfit there, fc'0' "'<"**., tufnl^fc
The products of the needle trade "'l* ^tt °[i__*, °?iCr?i
■ourie are for sale at cost price lo'**}1", _"' Nel,on' Mon•',,' A*r11
the students at the Institute. !1,V' *• 8	
Hf?X.'.M_o!Co«0.m|eJLM..  __   r'V ««■« -.010 LICENCE* EXPIRE
Uie 'is not organized at the ichool, ■ NlARCH 31  1M6
^«™7nn«fi,.nvth,.ih,.«,|_Si,._.     New  lkt™1 m*>~ **  obtainediKirk-Hudson       1.83
.olive in as they had been led to,,rom s   Bentley, Supervisor, who JKlrkund Lske     2.25
Gold Dale
Golden Gate
Golden Manltou       2.25
Grandoro         18
Gunnar Gold 47
Ha« Rock Gold  90
Harker Oold  23
Dletrichl Harricana       .231*
Hasaga   ....       2.10
Heva Cadillac  47
Holllnger     15.83
Homer       .30
Hosco   33
Howey   _      .32
Hudson Bsy M Sc S    42.00
Inspiration      1.20
International Nickel     42.23
Int Uranium     1.50
Jacknile  _. 29
Jack Waite  , -      .30
Jason  48
Jollet Quebec      1.30
Kayrand     20
Kerr-Addison       18.00
believe.
Procter & Nelson-Express Freight
A. OQDIN
COMMENCING ht APRIL
LEAVE PROCTER 7:30 e.m.
LEAVE NELSON 2:00 p.m.
DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY
PHONE: NELSON-77 »OX 7, PROCTER
WESTERN GAINS
DISAPPEAR, CATTLE
OTTAWA, March  29   (CPl-
The
...11 conduct a house to-house can-!Kirk Townsite
vas of Nelson and District. Phono'"
605-L1. Residence 816 Fifth SL
28
Labrador      B.OO
Lake Shore Mines    21.23
Lsmaque Gold     8 00
Leitch Gold      1.43
Lexindan 28
Llngman Lake       1.20
Little Long Lac
KOrFEE KOUNTER
_ .    ,  .„       „ ,    Owned and operated by ex-ser-
K'^eTL^tocWe^
said today that there was a mixed if'   ,nd( WSLrLS    °,—- —■
trend  during the lait week. wlthi,"k**  m,t  Phon, UM «>'«■•«  lr',Louvcourt 	
Eastern markets steady to slightly "dvance. ■ ,Lynx   	
lower, while Western  markets re- ~   ' Macassa   	
corded slight gains which in some     Quiet Hour of Music, sponsored MacLeod Cockshutt
esses were wiped out Islar. |by Martha and Mary Circle. tomor-lM,rcu,
 , — 'row. St. Saviour's Church. 3 to 4'm_iH»-.-.
Mary   Jarvis,
G
Artists:
WINNIPEG GRAIN
WINNIPEG.   March    20    (CP)- siivVr""c'o!l_ctiVn
Grain quotations: __________
Open   High   Low   Close
Rye-
May 247      247
.July 227 u,    229H
T    E.
2 SO
145
net
4.23
2 00
1.11
'Madsen Red Lake       4.28
-(-heeler. W. Penman, Boy's Choir. | Mcintyr-a-Porcuplii.
:.l„_»r  _-rtll-._-T.rt_. - - -- J  .    -   - r  .
CARD OF THANKS
242
22714
241
227 V,
Nelson - Trail
Rossland Freight
J. C. MUIR
Phones: Nelson 77; Rossland 171; Trail 1180
Connections for:
SALMO   -   KASLO   —   CRISTON   -   NAKUSP
Mr.   and   Mrs.   J.   .-.        __
-Ish   tn   take  this  opportunity   to|Moneta
Osu: /all futurea at celling prices ,hink  their many frlenda for thei Negus
_~i._tCSl.ii'._   ' beautiful    flowers,   messages   and!New Bldlamaque
CASH PRICES: gliti which contributed so much to I Nib .     .
Oati- 2 C.W. 81H: 3 C.   W. 31H: *he hanplneas of their Golden Wed-
ex  3 C.W. B1V4: ex. 1 lead 314; 1 ding Anniversary.
feed 3IH: 2 feed 314; 3 feed 81H:    ■ f "if
Malartlc Gold T      2.93
8350
4 23
31
11
10 25
.87
222
.41
31
McKenzIe Red Lake
Mcmarmac   	
McWatters
H.   Chapman.Mining Corporation
Roche L L	
Rouyn Merger	
San Antonio Oold     500
Sen Rouyn     1.10
SHeep Creek -   1.80
Sherritt Oordon     2.00
Sigma Rouyn    14.80
Slscoe Oold      100
Sladen Malartlc 70
Steep Rook-     J.40
Sturgeon R 12
Sullivan Cons      2.78
Sylvanlte     3.33
T C Reaoureea     1.30
T Lundmark  87
Teck-Hughes Oold      4.70
Toburn Oold Mines      1.83
Towgamac  284
Upper Canada     2.87
Ventures     14.00
Vlcour       .48
Waite Amulet     4.80
Wasa Uke     UO
W Malartie        48
Wlltsey  21
Wright Hargreaves _~     5.30
Yeilorex         .80
OILS
Anglo-Can    ....____    1.18
British American -    16.00
British Dom      . , , .       .38
C & I Corp      „ 1.35
Calmont  ' .35
Chemical Research _______      .80
Dalhousle              .42
Davies Petroleum  154
East Crest  - _-. OO'A
Foothills    —     1.89
Home Oil       3.70
Imperial    _    13.75
Inter Petroleum    23.00
Mid Continent  -      .13
National Pete  13
Okalta    30
Pacalta 10
Padtlc PeU        95
Royallte     19.50
South Ind Pete  11
United   . .  -— 00
INDUSTRIALS
Abltlbl Power    7.33
Abltlbl Power pfd     99.00
Algoma  Steel    21.75
Balhurst A    22.00
Beattv     44.25
Bell Telephone   197.00
Braiillan Traction     28.75
iB A Oil           28.00
'B C Packera    50.00
B C Power "AV    30.50
B C Pewer "B"      3.50
Building Products     31.28
Canada Bread      8.50
Can Brew  _.   2118
Canada Canners  —   22.00
Csn Csr Sc Foundry    -.   18.00
Csnada Car Ss fdy pfd    22.00
Can Dredging  _   24.50
Can  Malting     84.50
Can Marconi   —    4.13
Can Pacific Rly  -   11.85
Can Tnd Alcohol "A"    18.83
Cockshutt Plow    _   18.15
Cons Bakeries  -   1850
Cons Paper  -   17.50
Distillers Sesgrsms       99.00
l Dom Steel 4-Coal B    18.33
Dominion Bridge     41.00
Dom Fundrles     .-   S3.80
Dom Tsr St Chem    21.80
Fanny Farmer     57.00
iFord ot Canada "A"    29.23
Gatineau        1850
JGatlneau 5% pfd   110.00
IGen Steelwarea     18.50
George Weston    2B00
Goodyeer Tire     107.00
Gt Lakes Paper     18.00
Gypsum Lime        14.73
Hamilton Bridge      9.75
Hirsm Walker  123.00
Hiram Walker pfd     2150
Imperial Oil     13.61
Imperlsl Tobacco     13.00
Int Metals    SO 00
Inter Nickel    42.00
Kelvlnator           37 00
Lake of the Woods    13.00
Laura  Secord          22.83
Loblaw A     31.00
Loblaw B    28.50
Maple  Leaf   -   14.50
Massey Harris -   17.35
Massey Harts pfd    M.SS
track 514
Rve: 1 CW, 243: 2 CW  111: J _____
CW. lie: reiLI C.W. 211; 4 C.W. r0R  gALt
track 2.41
2 23
TOO LAT! TO CLASSIFY
rNTTONAlTONAL
heavy duty dual wheel two-ton
1930 truck. Serial No. 41224, good
rubber. WOO. Phone 1048-X; F,
Dietrich, Robson St.
Nlpisaing Mining   4.00
Norsnda  -. 88.15
Normetal   1.71
North Canada   1.05
O'Leary    	
Omega Gold 	
Orenada 44
Pamour Porcupine  I.M
Paymaster
Pend Oreille	
Perron Oold 	
Pickle Crow Gold
Pioneer
WANTED   IMMEDIATELY.   RELI-
able help for hoarding house. Pre.
fer woman 19 to 18 vears of age.
No cooking. Phone 1085 or call at Po'well Rouyn Gold
711 Carbonate SI. Premier Gold
FOR    SALE-18    INCH    LAWN Preston East Dome
mower, grass catcher, tt Ph. 581LI Queeniton 	
McCofl Front'       10.00
McCoil Front pfd  108.00
i Montreal Ppwar    14.00
Moore Corp    7f85
Net Bteel ter -  M.M
254 Page Hershey  M.75
jt   IPowell River  MJO
Power Corp      11.00
Pressed Metals _. 1T.M
Shawinigan    _.... M.M
Sicks Brew       45 sn
Simpsons pfd   -. 1WM
Southam  MOO
Sleel of Canada  MM
.83
3 35
130
4 13
8 85
1.20
248
2 BO
105
Steal of Can pfd	
Union Oaa      	
.United 8t«el 	
United  Corp    . .    .
I Winnipeg Elec pfd
M00
0.88
11.18
23.50
100.50
mttttmtttttmiittttm
ft. §anUmr'0 $w--$a%&ral
VERY REVEREND FRED P. CLARK, MA
Frank E. Wheeler, Organist—Cecil H. Burgess, Choir Matter
LENT IV
8:00 a.m.   Holy Communion
9:48 a.m.   Sunday School 10 a.m., Bible Class
11:00 a.m.   Morning Prayer—the Dean.
"A GOOD MAN'S BLUNDER"
3:00 p.m.   A Quiet Hour of Musle
7:30 p.m.   Evening Prayer—the Dean.
"THE ANGLICAN CHURCH IN CANADA"
Wednesday, 7:15 and 10:30 a.m. Holy Communion
7:30 p.m. Litany and Addreaa
atrfottjj inttrt atyttrri!
Josephine and Silica
REV. OORDON O. McL. BOOTHROYD. B.A, B.D., Minister
Music by the Senior Choir
9:45 a.m.—SUNDAY SCHOOL
11:00 a.m.—THE WAY OF SALVATION
Children's story, "The Bugle Boy"
7:30 p.m.—"A PLAIN MAN LOOKS AT THE CROSS"
First In series on the book by Leslie S. Weetherbeed.
Tueeday, 1 p.m. Meeting of Friendly Club et the tome
of Mrs. O. J. Stuart, 410 Nelson Avenue, 4:30 p.m.
Communicants' class in tke Vestry.
ft. ftmV* Snitri (Wpirdj
Minister
RIV. H. STIWART FORBES, B.A, B.D.
Organist and Choir. Leader: Mre. T. J. a Ferguson, B.A., A.T.C.M.
9:45 s.m.   Sunday Schools
11:00 am.   THE CAUSE AND THE HOUR
The Wohela Club will attend thlt service.
7:30 p.m.   SAYEST THOU THIS OF THYS__t_FT
Tbe third sermon on "The Questions of Jesus"
The Music at both servicei by the St Paul's Choir.
Monday, 3 pjn.    The W. A meeta In the Vestry.
Sunday, April 7   Tha Sacrament of the Lord's Supper.
JfTlrst QHjurrl) of
(Eijrtirt fcrvnitet
109 Baker St
A Branch of The Mother Church
The   First   Church   of   Christ
Scientist ln Boston, Mass.
Sunday School—9:43 s.m
Sunday Service—11 a.m.
Subject Lesson Sermon
RIALITY
Wedneiday Testimonial Masting
8 p.m.
Reading Room apen dally 3-8
Ixcapt Wsdnssday
All Cordially Walcome.
Q.1}? §ahmtnui
Army
Capt and Mrs. F. H. Pierce
Sunday, II a.m.—Holiness
Meeting
2:30 pm.—Sunday School
7:30 p.m.—Salvation Meeting.
Wad. Youth Group, 8 pm.
CHoupnant
Corner Baker and Hendryx Sts.
REV. D. N. ERICSON, Psstor
10 a.m.  Sunday School and Bible
Class.
11 s.m.   Morning Worship.
3 pm.   Shirley Hall.
7:30 p.m.   Evening Worship
Psitor's 25th Preaching
Anniversary
WEEK SERVICES
Tuesday, Y P. Service, 8 n.m.
'   Prayer Meeting, 7:80 pm.
Wed
All Welcome
tftrat lapttat
(tfipirrij
O. ORONDAHL, Pastor
Sunday School 9:48 an
Worship    11 i.n
Evening:
Song Service  7:15 p.rt§
Worship     7J0 pj
Wedneadsy: Bible Study and |
Prayer
tM. Inline #
Eirtljpran
Stanley and Silica Sts.
REV. H 1. KRITSCH, Pastor
10 a.m Sunday School
11 am. Morning Service
7:30 pm. Evening Servict
WEDNESDAY
7:30 pm.   Unten Service
(Eljurrlj of
ll|r &6pptttPr
(Anglican)
FAIRVIEW
Rev. W. J. Silverwood,
AKC, B.Se, Vicar.
9:45 am       Sunday Sehcafl
11:00 a.m  Holy CommunlcT
7:30 pm.  Evening PrayaJ
BAN8TEAD, Surrey, England
d'l'i Bomber-out families housed
In a requisitioned block of fists havai
protested to tha councii sgslnst
rent Increases amounting In -nnfe
cases to 300 per cent I
jrtfit
ilrri-luitrriau
(Eljitrrlf
Victoria and Kootenay
Rev. A. Stewart, Minister
11 am.     "Good for Evil"
11:15 p.m.   Sunday School
7:30 p m. "The Foundations of I
"Life"
 r
Defence Counsel Says...
Harvey Was Disliked Because He Was
a Strict Disciplinarian; Asks lo
Distinguish Facts and Prejudices
By I
nd lar
, L.WILLIAMS
Canadian  Preu Staff Writer
WINNIPEO, March 29 (CP)-The
■general court martial, hearing
(charges against Cpl. (Acting Sgt.)
John Hugh Harvey of the Royal
Medical Corps today waa uked by
Defence Couniel J. J. Kelley of
Winnipeg to distinguish between
"facts and prejudices.'
CHARGED WITH ASSAULT
Sgt. Harvey ll charged with assault of Allied prlioneri and coll-b-
oratlon  with tne Japanese in the
Ramp   at   Oeyama,   Japan,   where
fihere were some 600 prisjiners, in-
kluding Canadians,
TT "Harvey   wu   disliked   becauie,
Is the evidence showed, he was a
{trlct disciplinarian," said Mr. Kelly. "In short, he continued to be
British soldier."
Mr. Kelley said the Japanese
Vere the detaining power, and Harvey could not defy them.
"It Is all very well for us to say
Harvey shotild have snapped his
lingers at them."
lot evidence that Harvey's association with the .laps wai to get benefits—to "iweeten them"—tor the
men In the camp.
Witnesses had said that the accused had often resorted to rutn-
lessness to keep sick men from
going to work.
"It the accused was a collaborator would he not hava got u many
„ien to worn for the Japi u possible?" aiked Defence Couniel.
In hli two houn and 10 minutei addreu Mr. Kelley uld in
j   "the hell that wai Oeyama' then
exl .ted • iltuatlon that had to be
;   met on the ipot, a iltuatlon that
I   oould not be handled "according
j   to    the    book"    or    regulatloni
drawn up in the ufety of Winnipeg or Aldershot. Officeri Imprisoned there recognized the necei-
slty of corporal punishment
TO HAVE WATERS
FREE OF MINES
BY SUMMER, '47
LONDON, March 29 (CP Cable)-
The waten trt Northweit Europe
will be safe for lurface ihlpping by
the Summer of 1947 and the waten
around the coasts ot Britain by next
June or July, Cap! C. H. F. Crom-
ble, director of mlne'sweepihg tor
the Admiralty, aaid todty.
Tbe rugged Royal Navy veteran
soon will retire from lhe directorship after ilx yeara during which
'Britlih mtnetweeperi swept more
J thm 211,400 enemy minei. In addi-
I tlon the Royal Canadian Navy'i
minesweepers did valuable work in
'keeping the ihlpping channels free.
Capt. Crombte laid the Canadian
veueli made a "worthy contribution" to tbe talk.
1 If there wai a greater good
achieved than harm then there was
I no conOuct on Harvey's part to the
prejudice of good order and military discipline as charged. He urged the court to return a verdict uf
not guilty on all counts and ln particular to find an honorable acquittal on the charge of collaboration
He iaid there wu an abundance with the enemy.
ASSOCIATION WITH JAPS, TO
SWEETEN THEM
B.C. fo Pay Final
Tribute Today
to R.L Maitland
. VANCOUVER, March 29 (CP)-
British Columbia will pay iti final
tribute. Saturday, to Hon. II. L.
"Pat" Maitland, K.C, attorney-gen-
| eral, and one of its most distinguished sons.
B. Provincial and civic leaden and
repreientatives of the bench and
bar will take an official part in the
funeral ceremony which will be
held ln St. Andrew's Wesley United
Church at 2:30 p.m.
Rev. O. W. S. McCall will officiate.
The body will lie ln state from 11
a.m. to 2:25 p.m.
Premier Hart and cabinet mln-
liters, Herbert Anscomb, S. E. Car-
ion, E. T. Kenney, George Pearson
and Frank Putnam, will be among
the honorary pallbearen.
■ Hon. W. C. Woodward, Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia,
accompanied by his aide, Col. T. S.
Leslie, will also attend as an honorary pallbearer, as will Mayor
Cornett.  representing  the  City  of
' Vancouver.
.   Other honorary pallbearers will
I Include Chief Justice Sloan, Justice
Manson, Judge Lennox, Senator J.
W. Deb. Farris, C. H. Locke; representing the Bar Association; Commissioner T. W. S. Parsons and Assistant Commissioner John Shirras
of the B.C. Provincial Police; Brigadier Sherwood Lett, presenting the
Bar Association; W. II S. Haldane,
president Victoria Bar Association;
and Frank Burd, W. C. Ditmars and
H. H. Watson, representing the Masonic Order.
The man who was the leader of
the Conservative Party in Britiih
Columbia will alio have among hii
honorary pallbearers W. A. Jones.
Agassis, president ol the B.C. Conservative Auociation; Percy Payne,
president of the Victoria Conservative Association; the presidents of
the Vancouver Conservative Associations; and E. E. MacKay, president
of the New Westminster Conservative Association.
Active pallbearen will be Douglas Maitland, Dr. G. E. Gillies, Dr.
H. A. Desbrisay, A. C. Deibrlsay, C.
M. O'Brian and George Derby.
Interment will be in the family
plot, Mountain View Cemetery.
LONDON, (CP)-A check for £24
($108) made out by Charles Dickens,
the novelist, in 1808 ln payment of
i domestic account is being auctioned at Seymour Hall in aid of
the Marylebone Services' Fund for
needy exservicemen. Also being
auctioned are grandfather clocks,
antiques, a Persian rug and wines
and spirits donated by Marylebone
residents.
Stibbs Invites
Mayors to
Visit Koolenay
A picture of Nelson and a message written by Mayor N. C. Stlbbs
was published on the first page of
the March 16th edition of "Listening
Post," ln announcing preparation
for the Ninth Annual Conference
of Canadian Mayors at Vancouver
on June 24-27.
The Listening Post ls "a .digest
of municipal news published in the
intereit of local government ln Canada" for the Canadian Federation
of Mayors and Municipalities.
Mayor Stlbbs Invited the dele-
gales to the conference to plan their
trip so that they could return by
way of the Kootenay. It would not
only be a "real pleasure from this
trip via thii route," but it would
enable them to visit Nelion. He
drew particular attention to the
Civic Centre and briefly deicribed
it
He suggested that the mayors
making the trip by way Kootenay
might like to enjoy the "almost
unique experience of curling during     _
[,' V/t'Jl,.^mAm">talA iUly •1'*:"|War""s«"r.ta.y"'j."j. Lim told
Mayor Stibbi described the public U, H„Use of Commons today that
utilities of the city and ended with'the government had decided to take
the statement, "Nelson Is, we be- j.tepsto ceneelor modify paragraphi I
Heve, for Ita population, one of the ln King.s Regulatlona, bible of the I
most  truly  metropolitan   citiei   in .British Army,  providing for com-
Hard Job
Polish Women lo
Be Well Dressed
By LARRY ALLEN
Thi well-dreued Polleh woman
muit spend nearly $100 Canadian
to dreu In a teinlon comparable
to that of a North American girl,
but getting clothes on her baok
li only half the problem—lt'i
olten difficult to keep them
then.
Holdupi In the itreeti of Pollih
cities and large town during the
night an frequent and glrli who
•art out fairly will drilled oftsn
havi arrived at their destination
clad only In their tcantlei.
Thoie who ride trains during
the diy, too, often find themielvei
hiring more than they wUh. lt'i
• rather common occurence for
bandits to board trains, go from
coach to coach, stripping off
coats, itocklnki, ihoes, dreuei,
Jewelry md any object that iulti
their fancy. One Pollih girl, travelling from Cracow to waruw to
be married, arrived um trousseau, weiring only • cotton und-
erdress and barefooted.
Here's how pricei run (about
100 Pollih xloytyi equal a Canadian dollar) :
A pair of chiffon itocklngi, 1100
ilotyi; two plecei of silk under-
wear, 3600; one pair of ihou 5000;
woolen dreu, 10,000; leather
glovei, NO; illk scarf, 1000; velour hit, 2500; handbag, 4000 to
7000; nightgown, 3500; a secondhand Persian fur, 80,000; a new
fur, 120,000.
'
m LLO)
NILSON DAILY NIWS, SATURD/ft, MARCH 30, 1946 — 3
Church Parades
No Longer
Compulsory
By JAMES McCOOK
LONDON, March 28 (CP Cgble)-
Canada if we apply as a yardstick
the modern services which lt renders to Iti resident!. . ."
Soys B.C.'s Liquor
Lows Hurting
Tourist Business
pulsory attendance at church par-;
ades.
PHONES:
Ready-to-Wear  	
Hoiiery     	
Drygoodi   	
Groceriei	
Men'i Wear 	
tt
82
49
183
fyfowtfjf TSij <fdmjwtt£
His announcement was made after!
a Commons debate on the subject
and  a   general   agreement   among
members    that    the    serviceman's
spiritual welfare was little benefitted by compulsory  attendance.  T.I
E. N. Driberg, Independent member ]
from Maldon,  raised  the  queition
VANCOUVER, March 29 (CP)— when he said 200 memberi favored
Leo Sweeney, preiident of the Van- abolition of compulsory church par-1
couver Tourist Association and re-'ades.
tiring chairman of the city'! Dia-I Mr. Driberg said his motion was;
mond Jubilee Committee, declared: not an attack on religion, as any i
last night B.C.'s liquor laws areiworthy chaplain would rather!
hurting the tourist business and J preach to 20 or 30 men attending!
ihould be "modified" te allow legal voluntarily than to a church filled 1
drinking with meali. with men conscripted to attend.
He spoke on "advertising Van-! Maj. D. W. T. Bruce, Labor mem-
couver" at the last of the 12 weekly ber for Portsmouth North, said that
"know-your-city" meetingi held un- if compulsion were carried to its'
der auspices of Vancouver's night logical conclusion, the chief of the
schools. Imperial general staff would march
Mr. Sweeney iaid the tourlit trade,the War Office staff to church or
is worth $15,000,000 a year to Van- chapel every Sunday. He added that
couver alone. This could be doubled men now virtually were compelled
"In 1845 or 1947" if vlrgorous, long-j to worship God "by numbers."
range efforti were made to culti-: Brig. C H. M. Peto, Conservatl
vate it, "realising that it'l one of!member for Barnstaple, iaid he
Our biggeit Industries, right up with liked the idea of a battalion going
lumber,   agriculture,   fishing   and to church as a group in a family
mining." 'party, but the same people should-    D_.n_.in, marcn _» inrs—ji P'"'| synthetic rubber, synthetic ammor.
The perennial No. 1 Vancouver-'not be sent forcibly to church every to   eliminate  Germany's  industrial j»   ^u ^ ^per, roller bearings,
booster  streued  hii  oppoiition   to Sunday. ,war    potential    while    retaining h_iyy machine tools of war-making
"♦_*_
,!•••   I
SPRING FASHIONS
Tweed Suit With Topper
New on the Spring fashion horizon—The jacket trim fitting
with slim waist and slit pockets—the skirt has pleat back
and front. The coat is a shortee In plain beige tweed.
}_<_". '29.50
•29.50
Tweed Shortee.
Eoch  	
Ladies' Blouses
You'll look so pretty In your beruffled blouse; high rolled
necklines and neat buttons down the bock; fashioned in
sheers and crepes in dainty pastel shades.
Sizes 12 to 20. Each  	
Otheri $3.95 and $4.95
'2.95
Ladies' Dresses
Ladies' spun rayon dresses button to the waist and down thl
front. Short sleeves, toilored collars, flowered $A QC
or plain. Sizes 14 to 20. Each _       laeWj
Dressmaker Suits for
Teenagers
The suit you'll love through Spring.—The |aeket Is one
or three button style with cardigan neckline. The skirt
has kick pleot bock and front.
Sizes 12 to 20. Each	
'15.95
Girls' Coats
Girls Spring Coots in herringbone and Harris tweed
types. Boxy and princess lines.
Sizes 6 to 14. Eoch  	
•12.95
INCOftPOftATID   ll* HAY 1670.
NELSON, B. C.
STORE HOURSt
t a.m.-S pjn.
Mon.-Tues.-Thun.-rri.
Wedneaday: t a.m.-U noon
Saturday: I a.m.-l p.m.
Allied Control Council Adopts Plan
to Eliminate German War Potential
By THOMAS A. REEDY ■   Industries   to  be  prohibited
BERLIN. March 29 (AP)-A plan '■*><_•   '*Da*-*   «■»-."»•   •»■»
wide-open liquor laws" and "Sun
day drinking." But he said Ameri-I
ilege of moderate drinking within wheth
the law are taken aback when they sory or  not   Men  on joining
come to Vancouver and encounter army state whether they are Roman
the stringency of B.C.'s "blue law",Catholic, Protestant or Hebrew
liquor regulations.
enough of the beaten country'i ec
momy to make it reasonably self-! -■- -■   ,-
ustainlng by 1949 has been adopted magnesium,   beryllium,   vanadium
church parade is comDul- by the Allied Control Council.      irad'_   active   materials   (including
,hci    The program outlined in detail oy uranium)   hydrogen  peroxide   The
,,„ the Councii last night, slashed Ger- Ust expands from five to I* the in
In the Canadian Army, It Is up to ononfy" to make"it reasonably <_-\^JZ^be1m£l   vaTadlum
f,"l-tou.n,_-'-5ccu.5lon?.d.to th«f?rlv-;ihe commanding officer of the unit sustaining by 1949 hai be« adopted "^"TtTve   mTterlSS   (inc.uding
Roman
Safety Committee
at Michel
Elects Members
,, man  economy  In "half  and  places t™1™*   barred   by   the   Potsdam i
r_th_.ii. (uturc  emphasis on  producUon   -n Meeting o( lhl! Bl« Thrce-
0"c 'he  fields  of  griculture,  coal  and!   Those to be restricted to certain
- '—'- "■ can be used to
"Remember, Joe, 'X' ls Juat a hand-out—but a 'double-check'
means a cup of Fort Garry Coffeei"
compulsory
onlv'S & &___   U *1?,\7 "-"HE" tor "thi"'SbulidEl "of llev'eirso «," «Msi
only to those listed as Roman Cath-1 w_r.torn cllleJ *        pay  off Germany's war debts in
ollc and the same principle holds Every industry which could be elude steel, limited to 5,800,000, wsr
good for Protestant and Hebrew diverted to the manufacture of war output: and machine tools, with
Church parades. A man terming materials is to be eliminated and^nly 11.4 per cent of pre-war pro-
himself an atheist ran be ordered other industries considered on lhe ductlon allowed.
on parade by the commanding of- (rlnge of the war potential are toI A senior officer said economic ex
NATAL,    B.C. — The    following fleer but does not have lo enter the be cut back. Only  enough export porta would tour the Reich to com.
namei   have   been   choien  on   thei church.
safety committee at the Michel Col- 	
leriei. who  will act for the       -'BELIEVES   GUNMAN
It Is False
to believe that tomorrow will never
come. It will come inevitably,
and with it all the.uncertainties
and problems of a new world.
You prepare for tomorrow when
you become a policyholder of the
SUN LIFE
OF CANADA
three months when another change!
ol  both  surface  and  underground  FEARED BEATING
employees  will  be chosen  by  the
coal company to act on this ipeclal     EDMONTON   March 29 (CPl  - ttfd , h, her lUndar(i of Hv-jUrfnalized or separated from Cer-
safety committee group. , Detective Inspector Bert Petheram. f      .      r_0_ I  i» —. ...__
Preparation plant, L. Bisaro; By-: directing i search for the unknown    * 1
product Plant, E. Roievear; Sawmill gunman who wounded Julian Sur-
trade Is provided to pay for the pile a list of industries which can be
(ood Germans must import to main- used to pay German war debts,
tain their reduced living scale. | A itatement bv the council aaid
Allied officers said the target is the heavily-inaustrialized Runr
tn establish by 1949 a standard of,would remain as part of Germany,
living for Germany approximating at least temporarily: The French
lhat of 1932. Germans would not be have demanded that it be Interna-
many in some way.
and Bush. Charlie Podraiky. Ma.1 villa, 2S. early yesterday after an!
chine Shop, Carl Zak; Electric and i argument over the purchase of
surface, Louis DeLuca: Under- liquor, iaid today police believed,
ground, Albert Poreo, Fred Appon- the wanted man feared being beaten
en. Robert Manh, Charlie Rosier. ■ by Survilla after the argument.
Guy Venii. J. Periello. "From statements received from
This eleven-member safety com-| witnesiei to  the  shooting, it now
Rossland Social ♦ ♦
ROSSLAND,   B.    C.
By  MRS.  F. G. BRAY
March   29 Dainty   refreshments   were   served
Announcement
See The New
PARKER SI Pens
Released Today at the 'Bay'
INCORPORATED   22' MAY 1670.
Fraternal Order of
Eagles, Natal
Initiate Candidates
NATAL, B. C—A speclsl meet-
Coast Prepared for
Mass Innoculations
Against Smallpox
VANCOUVER, March 29 (CP)—
mlttee chosen by the coal company!'' our °elief that the gunman was Mn. Alfred Albo entertained withjby the hostess assisted by her three ing' waVTirotKer" William" Bridge-jtities of' vaccine
s for the benefit of the employees ln ,t3T ?' receiving a physical beat- a    charmingly   arranged ^birthday daughters.  the^Mtsses Zlsle, Viola wood.   Provincial   President   from {available   to   physicians
party on Thursday when she honor- and~ Louise.
' said ed her son, Alfred, on hii elgth bir- Mrs. W. Blackwell.
Those   present   were
C. A. Han- visited   the_ Michel   Aerie  for   the
ie   pre
, Mrs.
Victoria. B. C, who with his wife
in an effort to try and cut down ac- 'nl »' ,he hands of Survilla follow
cidenti in and around the mine to '"8 an argument about liquor _   _   ____    _ _	
a minimum. All employeei are ask- Inspector Petheram thday. !son. Mn. W. F. Lane, Mri. G. Mc- first time. The other expected vised to cooperate and hand in any "We 1<rlow ,hal Survilla got out The Invited guesti sat down to a Intyre, Mrs. G. Nash, Mrs. E. Sec- itor who was unable to make the
suggestions that may mean the safe-' o( ' laxicnb lo go after the stranger, birthday supper, each boy received combe. Mrs. H. Keffer, and the trip due to a last minute change wai
ty of a fellow worker. The ilogan threatening to 'clip him one' ". . paper hat ai a favor. The nicely .hostess^ Articles for the Mission that of Brother George Gcodenough
around Ihe Michel Collerles li "—"—-
Make Every Day as Safely Day.'
t speclsl
ing of the Fraternal Order of Eagles Vancouver   health   authorltlei   are
Michel Aerie No.  1864, took place;     „ .  , , ,
at the St. Paul's church hall at Mi-We11 Prepared  for  mass  lnnocula-
chel during which time the initia-; tiona against smallpox in case the
tion of new candidates took place malady spreads from Seattle,
along with other important matters.!    Dr. Stewart Murray, City Health
The guest speaker at this meet-1 Officer, reported today large quan-
-  '"      "           "*  are at all  tlmea
and   the
Deaths
VANCOUVER-William B. Pitman. 57, well-known city optician
and president of the Pitman Optical
Houie
Meantime, officer! continued their appointed table waa centered with Hospital   project   were   turned   ln the   Provincial   Secretary,   alio   of
search with no arrests being made, a birthday cake prettily decorated and on display. Victoria, B. C.
  In pink and green and topped with'   The regular monthly meeting of     Immediately   after   the   meeting
reignt lighted candles. After supper,the Ladles' Hospital Auxiliary wai wai over the Brother Eaglet and
the bovi enjoyed conteits and bin- held on Monday night In the Solar-Ithe memberi of the Ladiei' Auxll-
go. Bobby Bowen won the "Ball 'um of the Mater Mliericordlea isry enjoyed a locial evening which
Bouncing Conteit." Kent Nixon and ;Hoipltal with the preildem Mrs H.jwas well enjoyed. The guesta of
Alfie Albo Jr., the bingo. A flih .Christian presiding. Officeri re-;honor at thla locial evening were
pond wai also greatly enjoyed by,Pcrts were read ""* approved. Dur-;the visitors from Victoria, B. C. and
Regular Work
Suspended for
Month, Cranbrook
Regular
Id Creek I-oggi
The director of P"^ ']?"-' --   ,  :  -    -     ,- „,.„,.
I physical  fllneis for the Saskatche- SawmllK companiei separately op- Hugh
REGINA.   (CPl-The
CRANBROOK.   B.   C. - Regi
work at Gold Creek lagging Com-
■rations  and  at Cnnbrook
! wan  government,   Dr   J   B   Kirk
eraled by  the  Don   Burn? and  Al- Larry
the gueiti. Tbe Invited guesti were: "ng 'he evening the .adie!
Bobby Bowen. George and Kent lurgical bagi. Those pre»ent
Nixon, Bern Berglund. Lylle Oliver.'Slster  Paichal.  Mn.  H.  Chr
t	
diei  madelMr. and Mrt.~William Bridgewood.
—' were:
city'i varioui health units.
glund Lylle Oliver sister   Paschal,  Mrs.  H.  Christian,
Lawley.    Clark    Windfleld! Mn. E. E. Topllff, Mrs. J. R. Cor-
LaFace.   Gordon   Johnstone, n«r, Mrs. J.  R. Bryan, Mrs. J.  L.
the Nicholson, and Mn. W. G. Mara.
I Patrick, uy."h«',d«.n'. ___f_ tttmlfi_7^w7ttm^& Jim' «dJn«0rr°™   Albo   'nd
Playtime occupation of children at a •uapmdjd  lor  about  a month  he- guest of honor
!-chool he visited Is socially accept- ^V' sn"   muddy  roads on  the     The Past Chief Association of the, Wirtnrin  \lnrr'.np
able   Ht said he was at a school M m,l,s om whlcn loS' •" h''1'- Pythian Sisters met at the home of   VILIUtlU   VUCUne
where the chief occupation of  the ed ,rom ,h« C"™P '° ,hc •■••i™">- Mrs.   Basil   Llttley.  on   Wednesday , n       J     I        All
boys wa. marlng gophers and then."■'i',,..,'." . "_?'""_. _._._... .„....a \ht ._J'.mb!"   X?'i?_JHL££'£.!_ "
chasing the glrli with Ihem.
AOINTI.
ROSS FLEMING —
PHIL ROBINSON
6U Ward St.
NEI SON
, BC.                        Phona
7t7
BACKACHE
MaybeWarninq
kmAsvtmumyUtittalrmukmmtr, \
sit lifcg te Hhe mean kU- tad wltm
am vastas h__a Dm qatam.   MTs
K__H7 Nb h* ratm ___ _•___-_•_
aim Um earn. *t kmkstku, ______h_.
rlii.iiiHuiwar tsmmktinel, Ouktt
VICTORIA. March 29 (CPl-The
City Health Department ii prepared to vaccinate everyone who pre-
lenti hlmielf either at the City
Hall health office or the health centre. Dr. J. L. Murray Andenon, Ai-
About 45 men have been effected [or their sale. Dainty refreihmenti
by the shutdown. 2*i of lhe . have were served by the hosten anlit-
been laid off at the mill, and about ed by her diughter Mlu Margaret
20 at Ihe logging camp. Eight men Llttley. Thoie preient were Mn.
are continuing work at th« mill'on q Kay. Sr.. Mn. H. Thompson,
loading and maintenance work, and Mr>  p' c  Palmer, Mri. John Cox.
.the sawdust and fuel slabs depart- Mn. Bray. Mrs. B. Llttley and Miss   , ,    , ,,  ..   , „   -„.   -„, , .
!ment md the office are continuing Margaret Llttley. iilatsnt Medical Health Officer, aaid
their work. At Ihe camp ilx or eight     Mrs.   F.   M.   Ersklne   of   NeUon. ] J™'"''' '» ** strongly urged sli who
men are al'o continuing on malnt- formerly   of- Rossland.   arrived   In h,(' not bMn <lon« within the last
enance   work    No   logs   are  being t_ city on Wednesday to visit h«r i *iv* mil to be vaccinated,
hauled ion Fred (Jraham. "There li no need for panic ln
During   late   winter   hauling   of     Mn   D.  Martin   entertained   the' Victoria." he declared.
logi was accelerated and a reserve members of the Dorcas  Circle  nf 	
piled up beilde the artificial pond. St. Andrew's United Church on] HASTINGS, England. (CPl -
_^ but Ihe entire supply was used up Tuesday evening. Mn. W. Black-'Halting! Caitle. originaly built a
e»_-H tm_ act auuety m t* Hfcifi lest weekend and the mill closed well preiident. preilded over a few yeari after the Norman Con-
■nd Ua tkats i-fi_i —al artl-a. Saturday II is expected holh ramp -hort buslnfis meeting, which was'nuesl. Is lo he rented by the oorp-
C* naif, Kafcwy Pin.te-4ty. di land mill will rwwn lite In Jan- followed by a social hour. Gamei,oration of Hasllngi for Cl (J4.50I
 luary or early In May. and gueising conteiti were enjoyed, a year.
HRPPIJ HOUSEWIVES
use SHANO _ver9 Dfly
SHANO restores ths
sparkling buuty of all painted
waBs, woodwtrk, linoleum,
ind tiled sufaces.
ler., nn
th*h*ndi
A Quality Hint Ctoaatar At An Attractive Mt*
,-om,.^ ^.^.,  ._.,_ ,i\m**mklt-^ail--dlit-m-----M-s-^km
t__uk_ma_^mmmaa)
*___■__- miH-M
	
 4 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, rflARCH 30, 1946
Revival of Fall Fair Lions Club
Project; Plan Many Attractions
lr"    t
Revival of the Fall Fair ln Nelson,
with many trimmings added, is
planned by Nelson Lions Club, to
take place Sept. 18, 19, 30 and 21.
II ls to be known as the Nelson end
District Fall Fair and Inhibition.
Besides agricultural produce, lt
Is planned to exhibit products menu,
factured In thlt District. Various at.
tractions under consideration are
log sawing, wood chopping, diamond
ahd reck drilling demonstrations,
new oar and truck displays, and
Jalopy and greyhound racing. Possibility of obtaining rides such as
a ferris wheel and a merry-go-round
la being investigated. A poultry
Show may also be on the program.
Entertainment at dlfferifht periods
during the day or evening is also
planned. The Spokane Lions Club
Olee Club, which wined instant
popularity at the Nelson Club's
Charter Night September, 1944, ls
expected. It is also hoped to have
a gymnastic display by pro rec artists and other acts. Dances will
likely be nightly events. The program will utilize the badminton nail,
foe arena and curling rink,
TO AID PENSIONERS
Proceeds will go towards purchase of land on the West Arm
with a view to building a bungalow
community for old age pensioners.
Nelson's newest servloe dub, it
hu already undertaken several projects, Including the water gala lut
Summer, sale of holly for the cancer fund, assistance to the Senior
Hookey Booster Club tnd aid for
the Abbotslord Lions Club hospital
fund.
New projects include t banquet
for tho Coeur d'Alene High School
orchestra and band coming to Nelson ln April and sponsoring of a
Grand Forks dramatic group also
in April.
Fall Fair committees follow:
General Chairman—Frank Frlsby.
Advertising, publicity-**. P. Kg.
pak, Malcom Nelson and Fred Carmichael.
Finance — Rex Eaete, Frank
Southee, Glen Price and Frank
PhilliPt.
Feature attractions—A Malcelm.
M.Varaeveld, Fred Denyer and Bert
Bsrasden...
Building—H. Stevenson, J. Walt
den, Art Raid pnd 0. G. Boyes.
Parade—H. Stevenion, A. Mai.
colm and M. Varseveld.
Tickets—R. Somers, L. Browett
and A. Edwards.
Program—W. Valln, G, S. Cooper,
G. Klrby and F. Denyer.
Games—Guy Wells, M. Neiton,
Howard Thurman, Fred EH11I1 and
J. Morrison.
Dances—E. Shannon, Bert Ramsden and T. A. Crack.
DRAFTS WORKERS
INTO MILITIA TO
AVOID WALKOUT
Labor to Question
Legality of
Governor's Strategy
STAY ON JOBS
RICHMOND, Va, March 29 (AP)
—Acting under a 16-year-old section
Of the State military code, Governor
William M. Tuck today drafted Into
tha "unorganised militia" an estimated 1600 employees of the Virginia Electric and Power Company
in an effort to avoid service interruption by a threatened strike Monday.
Legality of tha move, which
places the workers under military
low subject to court martial if they
refuse to obey orders to work for
the state, immediately was questioned by labor leaders.
William Green, AFL, President
said his organization "will never acquiesce" In the Governor's action,
Which ha said Involved tha principle
of involuntary servitude.
J. J. Brown, President of the
Electric Workers Union (AFL), said
the union was "waiting legal advice
as to how to proceed from here."
Their commant was made In
Washington after a conference at
the White House, which Mr. Green
uld concerned other problems.
Orders, served on the power company employees by memberi of the
Virginia State Guard, placed the
workers on inactive status so they
can continue at their regular jobs,
but in event of the strike they immediately go on actvit duty subject
to further orders ol the Governor.
The strike threat arose from a
deadlock in negotiations between
the union and the company on retroactive pay. They agreed on a
lTVi-centt-an-hour wage increaie
but could not agree on retroactive
payments.
The company serves about two-
thirds of Virginia and small sections of West Virginia and North
Carolina which have a combined
population of about 1.670,000.
ALE BONUS FOR
B.C. IN APRIL
VICTORIA, March 29 (CP) - A
bonus of one dotin pints of ale on
the first purchsse wlll bt available
for liquor buyers in British Columbia next month, W. F. Kennedy,
chairman of the Liquor Control
Board, announced today.
Otherwise the April ration will
remain unchanged from one bottle
of whisky or mm, or one gallon ol
domestic wine or two bottlei of
imported wine or eight casts of
beer or ale.
Mr. Kennedy said the bonui will
be limited to one caae of ale for
the entire month and must be taken
on the initial purchase. The beer or
ale quota may bs taken in loll of
two dozen or more at a time.
The bonus has been made available of a lurplui built up by braw.
en, Mr. Kennedy said. Gin remalni
unratloned.
Fairview Baseball
Practice Sunday
Weather permitting, Fairview
baseball enthusiasts will hold another-practice fjown on the Fairview
Athletic groundi Sundsy.
Last Sunday over 30 boys, molt
of them in the Bantam classification,
were tossing the ball around for the
first time this season.
Fairview officials hope to have
the field put in better shspe as the
field Is used steadily during the
early Spring months by numeroui
boys and girls.
Nelson (agers
Take Two
Wins In Rossland
ROSSLAND, B.C., March 29-Nel-
son basketball teams chalked up
two victories tonight when the boys
defeated Rossland boys 3S-32 and
the girls won by a 29-22 score. Nelson teams play at Trill Saturday
night.
iyineups and scores were:
Nelson boys—McNabb, 5; Postlethwaite, 22; Catchcart, 2; Mclnnes,
Pitts, 6; Corbett, Elmore and Fish-
er-35.
Rossland boys—Smith, 8; Urquhart, 1; Berry, 2; Keffer, Atkinson
Osing, Miller, 1; Corrado, 22-3*.
Rossland girls—Densky, I; Topllli
Colenso, MeMartln, Petrie, 8; A
Davidson, 6) J. Davidson, 8; D
Davidson, I. Kootnlkoff, J. McKen-
na—22.
Nelion glrls-D. Ward, DelPuppo,
Sutcliffe, 2; Nelson, Wallace, 8;
Whimster, 11; Paterson, 6; Curlette.
2; Hunter, Crossley—29.
TheWealher
Across Canada
Weather acioss Canada to 9 pm.
P.S.T, March 29:
Min. Max.
Nelson  - -    27      48
Montreal     38      —
Toronto     39
North Bay     40
Port Arthur    JS
Kenora    S3
Winnipeg  	
Brandon  	
The pas 	
Rtglna 	
Saikatoon   	
Prince Albert 	
North Battleford ....
Swift Current 	
Medicine Hat 	
Lethbridge 	
Calgary 	
Edmonton   	
Kamloopt 	
Penticton       4S
Vancouver     42
Victoria    43
Cranbrook     12
TRAIL 5, NEW WESTMINSTER 3 ....
Smokies Take B.C. Title;
Dominion Headquarters ef the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police, tha Juttlce Building ee Wellington
Street, Ottawa, fetal point ef F-daral Investigation
Into  treaaon   chargei   Involving   Dominion   Oovtrnment employees.—National Film Board Photo.
BONANZA TOO
LATE TO
FREE ROSE
MONTREAL, March 29 (CP)-A
sudden flood of cash and negotiable Government Bonds was just 14
minutes too late today; and Fred
Rosa rode In the police van back to
Montreal jail to spend the second
successive night.
More than four hours earlier the
Labor-Progressive member of Parliament for Montreal-Cartier, charged with espionage activities, heard
Mr. Justice Wilfrid Lazure warn
him against public speeches or
meetings and then fix ball at $35,000.
That was $15,000 more than the
ball on which Rose wat free from
the time of his arraignment two
weeks ago today until he was committed for trial yesterdey and the
ball cancelled by Judge Rene Theberge.
At 3.88 p.m. Mr. Justice Lazure
left his chambers and announced
he WQuld be available tomorrow,
morning.
At 4:11 em. an automobile rolled up ana a thick-set, medium-
height stranger hopped out and
was met on the courthouse steps by
City Councillor Michael Buhay
waiting with $5000 in his pockets.
The two talked briefly and then
went inside and conferred with Albert Marcus, associated with Joseph Cohen, K.C, chief defence
counsel.
The stranger said hi had the $10.
000 needed to bring the total amount
to $25,000. He refused to give his
name. Buhay also declined ta reveal the Identity ot the man with
the money. Marcus wss busy tele
phoning.
Then tha stranger and Marcus laft
ln the car and Buhay walked toward
the City Hall.
The granting of bail proved no
mere formality. Crown and defence
argued at length before Mr. Juitice
Lazure gave his decision. He allow
ed btll so thst Rose may help pre
pare his defence tt the trial and bs
cause "I want you to feel lure that
in thli court it your tritl you will
get Justice."
Natal-Michel Wait
for Fishing
LONDON (CP) - Admiral Lord
Louli Mountbittan hu bean tlected
pretldent of the British Inititution
of Radio Engineers. Ha hai itudied
radio lince 1925.
Kaslo .    ..
Prince George .
Grand Forks .
Seattle  -
Portland 	
Spokane   	
Chicago	
San Francisco .
Los Angeles . .
New York
21
27
U
JO
37
J5
48
41
41
58
Seek Ouster
Alaska Governor
JUNIAU, Alasks, March 29 (AP)
—The Territorial Senate by a 9-8
vote passed a joint memorial today
asking the immediate removal of
Governor Ernest Gruening from office. The measure, sponsored by
Senator Norman Walker, Ketchikan, may reach the House floor tomorrow.
The Governor appeared before
the Senate yesterday and answered
questions on accusations that he had
attempted to wrest political power
from the people. He said most of
the charges were trivial or based
on opinion. Alaskans for years have
wanted an Alaska resident for Gov
ernor rather than one appointed by
the President.
Ocean-Travelling
Tot Coming
lo Nelson Home
Alexandria Jane (Alex) Hanna
tiny daughter of a Nelsonlte who
was born on New Yttr's Dty thret
yeart ago ln England, Is eomlng to
Nelson shortly. Daughter of George
Hanna, she will reside with her
grandmother, Mrs. Mtude Hanna
Cedar Street.
Mrt. Henna's daughter, Mrs. Elva
fXettlewell, left for Calgtry on the
early Saturdiy train to mttt the
little   girl,  who  came  acrou   the
URGEENDTO
BARRIER
FORTRUENEWS
Urge U.N.O. Unit to
Promote Free Flow
of Information
PROBE UNTRUTHS
NEW YORK, March 29 (AP)-An
International covenant Within the
framework of the Unlttd Nttlons
to remove btrritn to the flow of
world newi was urged today in
report issued by the United States
Commission for Freedom of tht
Press.
The report recommended ertatlon
oi an autonomous unit within tht
United Nations Economic and Social
Stcurlty Council "to promote the
free flow of true information tnd
the removal of artificial btrrieri,"
and to investigate areai "where distortion of facts and fomenting of
international discord are being car
ried on."
The 15,000-word report was pub
lished by Editor and Publisher msg-
azlne.
PIACE ESSINTIAL
The Commlulon, a private body,
operating under a grant by Time,
Incorporated, te tht Unlvenlty ol
Chicago, urged full use of improved
method! of mail communication ai
TRAIL, B.C, Mareh 89—Trail
8meke Saton oapturad tha British Columbia senior hockey champlonihlp here tonight, by out-
skating New Weitmlniter Reyalt
6-1 In a luetic hockey game, The
Smelter City team wen the lait
two gimoi In a tough series te
enter the Weitern Canada finali
agalnit Calgary Stampeden, itartlng htrt Tueiday. Tht teami thtn
move to Oalgary far gamei April
8 and 8 and play the fourth match
In Edmonton April 10.
PROTEST ROYALI WINS
Shortly before tonlght'i game got
under way, lt wai announced that
Ed Benson, Pretldent of the Trail
Club, had protested New Westmln
iter's two victories on the grounds
that the Coast club had failed to
pay tha British Columbia Amateur
Aisociatlon thrte per cent of 80 ptr
cent of their homa games, as required by teami participating in
Allan Cup playdowni.
Benion laid Royali tent a check
to Secretary-Treaiurer Pit Ait
ktn of Nilion, B.C. covering the
amount, but thtt It wu cancelled
btfort Altktn could caih It Tha
Trill offlolal tald he telegraphed
the prottit to Doug Grimiton,
Preiident of the B.C.A.H.A. at
Ntw Wntmlniter.
(Questioned at a meeting he was
atandlng ln Vancouver, Grlmston
said ht hid been away from his office during the day and had not received tha wire. He added that the
protest, on any account, would have
to bt filed with the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association).
Larry Kwong sank the winning
marker and Emil Kwasney clinched
the game at 19:07 of the final period.
Smokies had lots of support from a
record crewd and had a definite
er W.Canada Play
edge on tha play. The teams scored
a goal aplaca ln the first and iecond
ptriod, and then Trail surged ahead
by netting three to one by the viiitors in the third. The game was
the cleanest with only three penaltlei being meted out, and two of
then overlapped so the teams were
evenly balanced as far aa power
plays were concerned.
NICOL REPLACES BUCKNA
Stubby Mason wasn't up to par
and Smoklei took quick advantage
of this. Davit Nicol found the mark
after Ab Cronie steered the puck
from behind tht net. Nicol replaced
Buckna who wai out with a back
injury, Red Tilson tcored an unexpected goal from the side boards.
The puck Just caught the far cprntr
before Scodellaro had a chtnee to
see it.
After the start of tht second ctnto,
Don Menzies was called tor tripping. The Trailltes iced the puck
to thwart dangerous rushes Dutch
Evers was penalised for cross check
ing Ron Gardner. Dorohoy hit the
goal,post after streaking ln following an iced puck. Kwasney put one
in, but the whistle hid gone.
Dorohoy skated around lhe Trail
cage to pass to Blyth who was left
uncovered. The tall winger gave
Scodellaro little chance on his shot.
Mensles tied the score when he
lifted Nlcol's passout. Evers received a penalty for tripping Nicol
Scodellaro waited too long in lifting the puck as Dorohoy came in.
Kwasney nearly put it In in trying
to clear, hitting the gpal post. Mason
saved three ln a row off Gardner
and Kwasney.
MORRIS BREAKS TIE
In the last session Morris broke
tha tie on a breakaway with only
Tomson back. Tho defenceman went
Mrs. Morley who is going to Van- „ d f lmprovement a_ phyik,i
couver to Join her husband. They (ldIm „ml'oval _ poU,icVbar-
arrived a  Halifax Msrch 27 on the _,,„ ,„,} „lh, |mprPov£ment __ the
tl    "u-ij,   . .s.     e- u accuracy, repreientative character,
The child if. her, George Hanna,' nd ,m 0, words ,nd imajM
returned to Nelson last July after transmitted in international corn-
serving in the Battle of Britain, lmunication"
Sicily, Italy end Europe. He took I The report, with respect to th,
part In the Spring drive In IMS and propoied United Nitloni Orgmlii-
wai mentioned in diipatehat in May j tlon covenant, specifically reeom-
of thlt year. He was wounded in ] mendert
Italy.
The organiutlon ln all principal
At praitnt he li_worklng tor thei ntvlt ctntrts of the world of for
Holllnger Mining Compiny Explor
ation Deptrtmtnt it Timmini, Ont
HEADS P.-C.'i
«ign eorreipondinti' corps, with
strict, self-administered codes of
ethlci; the requirement thst sli
newspsper, mtgszina tnd ndlo reporter! tnd ill authors and photographers be mtmberi of theu corps
and bound by thalr codes: specific
authority for the corps to handle
OTTAWA, March 29 (CP)-J. M
Macdonntll, Progreisive Conserve
NATAL B. C—With the winter I live member of pirliamant for Mus-
iporti iuch a« hockty tnd bisket-ikoka-Ontarlo, todiy wn elected I all disputes among memberi or with
ball prictieilly forgotten about at prtaident of tha Dominion Progres- holt Governmenti. with right of
Natal-Michel, the majority of the E|ve Conservative Assoclstlon, Vice-1 appeal to a unit of the United Na
lummer iportimen art anxiously o- prnjdents elected include Miss Hil-.tions Economic snd Social Council
waiting the opening of the fuhlnn d, Hesson, Winnipeg. I    "Guvs"1!* th»l t10 country wl
seuon which is rapidly approaching
when a number of likei In the Eait
Kootenay district open on April 15
for tha fishing of Kimloppi trout
or iilmon ai thty art better known.
During May the rtmtindtr of the
likti tnd all tht rlvtrs tnd itreemt .     -
that are open for fiihing will be; |n tj,e treatment of high blood prei-J   Dr Conch uyi
       -  " of|_.__  ,. v., _i-.ii- —»...'non-to*l« nature of
BUCKWHEAT TO HELP KEEP BLOOD
PRESSURE DOWN; SUPPLIES RUTIN
expel a member of the foreign cor-
respondents' liorps or interfere with
hli normal activities pending final
recommendations in iuch cans by
the United Nationi Economic and
Social Council;
"Guaranty of equality of access to
the sources of information as between co-nationals tnd forilgntrt."
The report propoied immediate
creation of fe-Jsnted, non-profit,
cooperative newt export associations as ont means of this end.
Under this plw the report, iaid
theie ' associations would have
among their chief functions:
"Assurance of means'by whleh
the best domestic products are distributed In foreign countries at
prices and in amounts calculated to
assure wide sudienees.
"Discoursgement by self-regulatory igreement of the export of iub-
standard American products."
REAPS CRITICISM
Thli propoial, and that tuiieit-
lng eitabllihmant of the "foreign
eorreipondenti' eorpi" brought
critlciim from iome of thl Itld.
Ing niwi agtnty txtcutlvu,
"I cannot think ef a ipudlir
wiy fir tht prtu te gtt undtr
tht Bovtrnmint'i wing," aaid
Hugh Rtlllle, Prtildtnt of thi
United Prtu.
"It ltemi to me tht propoied
corrttpondenta' corps and a newi
• xport federation would tend to
rtglmtnt, control and devitalise
thl pren ind mikt It mora tai-
Ily lubject ta Government rtiult-
ll.tt, rtthtr than maka It frier
and Itrengir."
Kint Cooper, executive director of tht Auotltted Prtu, uld:
"I hope thtt nothing . . . will
develop , . , to prtvtnt effective
accomplishment of the goal sought
... dlHuiiltn and will-lnttntlon-
rd recommendatloni iuch as theie
undoubtedly are, continut te pre
vidi hope thtt a practical plin
wlll develop even if It li not
Utopltn,"
Seymour Berkion, Qinirll
Manager of thi Internitlonil
Newi Service, commented: "It
seemi te me the iptelfii progrim
luggeited by the Commlulon
net tnly Impractical but might
lead merely to . . . Intirnatlonal
regimentation."
(oast Moves lo
(heck Smallpox;
Five Deaths
Oil leaping from the ground wn
uitd by the Indians ii salve tnd
medicine.
TORONTO-Rutin, t  drug  used whleh cm bt retiiled tt $1 for 100.
'   -     - becauie of lhe JEST B.C.   BOAT
open for the fiihing of all special of I .   .  . '"   .      *'" -"non-toxic mture of rutin, lt etn be    •"",   . *.,   ..,_._
tfih   including   itlmon,   cutthrott su'«' " being economically attree-. Mfn wUhm], ,nJury ,„ , qui AJI ANJ C
tnd brook trout. ted from buckwhett ind will soon titlea ind leid ihow It can itftly
Since the fint of the yeir i num- b, available in quantity to doctors be taken with other drugi. No re-[ VANCOUVER, B. C-The experi-
ber of fishermen have bean keen- hj<j p^f j K w Ferguson, head search is being done with the drug ment of the Federal Fisheries Ruing their tackle in shape by catch- of th( pharmacological department.-in Toronto at preient. Inarch  Department with a British
'._! *uf, «Ti?" _ u* ,m"n| University of Toronto. No luppllesl Dr. O. E. May, of the U.S. buretu Columbia long - line, ocean-going
as Iht white'"" *J™■*** «L "";jot the drug ire tviilable at present.»ot agricultural and induitrlil chem- fishing bolt, on the Atlantic, has
!!. ii. MiJhii nr... .le) iei th. rik' Sxlsttnct of the drug has been lstry, uld thi U.S. government'i,now been earned on for a season,
river [known for i cintury or more but liboritory in Albtny, Cat, has dt- and the result hss been Indecisive
In the meintimt tht offlciri ofiunl" recently It wai expensively veloped s new dessert madt of [according to reports from Halifax,
the Natal-Michel Rod ind Gun Club produced by treating flue-cured pectin instead of gelatin or starch j The experiment, it is uid, got
art endttvoring to lurptsi lut imbiteo. Now, Dr. Jsmes F. Counch,' in powdered mixture. The Call-[iwiy to a bad start becauie It was
year'i membership record of 2J«|Wynhmoor, Pi, has discovered t fornli lelentiiti tlio developtd t.mide with i bott thst wss not of
members with ovtr twe hundred iway to txtrict Ihi drug froft buck- ready-lo-uu low-sugir Jelliia fruit 'true Britiih Columbii type, even
memberi tlready signtd up for tht whett 33 diyi after planting. Dr -'dessert or fruit ulid which ia' after ill the preliminary efforts.
1948 seuon. which Included mam- Counch   utlmitii   thtt   i   ton   of iterllized by hut md preserved in    Plsns of • West cotst 63-footer
Saturday CJAT- Trail—9.9;30 p.m., P.S.T.
buckwheat will yield 200,000 pilli,'-Un cms.
STUDENTS TURN HOUSEHOLD CHORES
INTO CASH THROUGH CLUB
were sent East, as foundation for
plans for a boat the Dominion Fisheries Department would build, to
try out the Pacific coast type on
thl Atlintle hanks.
benhlp uu of tht newly built
Onvtliki Bridgt md tht right
to enter any ipeclei of filh In the
tnnutl flih* dtrbr ipeniered by tht
Nittl-Mlehtl Rod tnd Gun Club.
It li txptcttd thtt • numbtr of
Alberti sportsmen tiptelilly from
throughout  the Crow'i  Ntit  Ptsi
will agpln become memberi of this In   North
Rod ind Gun Club which boiits Oi' {avoldsd
ltrgeit  men-h.rihlp  In   either  thai ....    " ,. ,. . emsnaun in ...sssi. up nm» nii«« "■ j .-..n.-, ....lit, niiahla with rrin
Crow', jNest Tin or In Ih, Eut <*eeffu.ly accepting odd Job., and c.-„uf( wh„, on , ,ob, ,H ,„„,«eeUent qu Ity P*«»
"   ;en)oying them   Orgsnlted by Mn. are   proud   then   have   betn   ftw|"t°"   A,„' h\„f'_ ,'„ "._?»' P
TORONTO—High ichool itudtnti<for tht purpoie ot diicuulng Im-
Toronto   who   formerly 'Provimenu or minor problems."
.■„ l_.„..v,_,u _.l«_... ...    The youthful memberi elded Mrt. u„ ,   .     .    ,.        ......
tny homehold chores in Sjm|on' ,„,„„„, up „,„, ,,,,„ 8|) ^.in--*«» .^..^■"••^i^^.i*1*:1:^'
LONDON (CP)-Advertisement
ippesring In The Teacher's World
publlihed here: "Punishment cinni.
Kootenay.
.Timei M. Samson, theie 17 teen- romplilnii 'Positively no snoop-
agers hivi earned |1S00 since their lng" i oni. Mri. Sim«on uld, for
Youth Servlre club wis formed tht Inqulslllvt boy or gjr). Another
one yur ago. rule it "no unnecuury teltphon-
"In tdditlon to helping pirents In Ing."   "Thit li lmportint for thlt
Ihi   district,"   uid   Mrs.   Simion, agt." she imlltd.
thli work hu givtn tht youngittri    "Wt   hive   no   Juvtnllt   dtlln-
•ory mIMtiry training for Cariadai* *P*».•*•** " money valutt. The,queney   problem   hert,"   dteltrtd
"li  tht  moit democutlc  wiy  of
Alio, birehd to order"
SEES COMPULSORY
TRAINING "DIMOCRATIC" j
MONTREAL, Mtrch 28 (CP) -
Lt.-Gen. Ouy Slmondi, C.B.. C.B.E,
give the opinion todsy thst compul-
im 7 ill OND
providing Ctnsdi with the itrmgfh
it muit neve" to pliy Iti roll In
the Unlttd Nitloni Organisation.
TRAINMIN  KILUD
TORONTO, Mtrch 2» (CF) -
Bodlta of Conductor Gtorgt F.
Douit, 8t, md Briktmtn Thomas
Beauvall. 83, killed initantly latt
night when t Southbound C.N.R.
freight triln ploughed Into t itindlng CNR. traniftr freight ntir thi
city llmlti. wire located today In
the wreckage of tht cabooie of tbt
standing train.
boyi who ipent two ifternooni re- Mrt-Simson. "Theie youngiten trt
modelling ■ ceil bin didn't spend shouldtrlng   responsibility   for  tha
thtlr wilei on mndiii." lint tlmt, ind thev appreciate It."
Club mimbiri do tverythlng Thi itudtnti huy their own clolhti
from minding babies to running and books, and pty for muilc lei-
emndi Thiy mikt contricti to ions with thilr timing!,
mew liwm In tht lummer tnd Thin tre ll glrli and ilx boyi
ihovtl mow In the wlntar, After'In the club. "The boys didn't like
school tht girls waih dlihei tnd the "liny" Idtl of minding Dlbltl
Iron, while tht boyi wax floors, n flnt," uld Mn. Simson, "but
takt cire of furnicei ind do minor thiy like It now," Thty dli-
painting Jobi. Icoverid thlt If tht biby ll illeap
"Their mothirs didn't know thty thty hivt Umt to ttudy "Thty
could do all thli," uld Mn. Stmion, hivt letrntd, too," sht added, "thtt
mothtr of two uti of Iwlni her- the more they put Into a Job, thl
t-lf. "Now we have • pirents' club better the results ln every wiy."
H_a
L/OlJ NIURAI
OINUINI AI'IRIN
M»«KID THIS WAV
■4ILJ4,
after   Kwamey   who   slipped   lha I
puck to Morris and tha latter drove I
In an eaiy ihot. Bentley neirly tied I
tht score with a dtadly thot hull
Scodellaro row to the occasion. The J
second line took over icorlng in the
period to collect seven points.
Kwong backhanded Kwatnty'i rebound to get hit team a two-gotl
edge. Dorohoy put the Royali back
In tha picture With an unassisted
goal. On mother break by Kwong,
Maion itopped hit thot. The Clipper pitted the rebound to Kwasney
who had little work in shoving the
disc into the empty net Maton want
off (or a brief ipell end then wag
put back on when * faceoff was
called in his zone, but the Royali
were unable to get a clear (hot en
Scodellaro.
At the gamt closed the playeri
gathered In a group to ihakt handi.
Llntups:
New Westminster—Mason; Tom. I
son, Schmidt; Tilson; Evers, Bentley, Subs-Watt, Dorohoy, Snider,
Blyth, Smitten, Koch.
Trail — Scodellaro; Luke, Chrlt-
tenien; Cronie; Nleol, Menzies. Subs
— Anderson, Morris, Gardner,
Kwong, Kwasney.
Referee—Owen Lennon, Vaneoq.
ven; Llnesmsn—G. W. Wheatley,
Trail.
SUMMARY
First period—1. Trail, Nicol (Cronie) 11:47; 2. New Westminater, Tilson (Koch) 13:23.
Peniltlei—None.
Second period—3. New Westmln. !
ster, Blyth (Dorohoy) 12:54; 4. Trail, J
Meniies (Nicol) 14:22.
Penalties—Mensles, Evers (2).
Third   period-5.   Trail,   Morrii _
(Kwasney)   8:20; 8. Trail, Kwon
(Gardner, Kwasney) 12:32; 7. Ne.
Westminster. Dorohoy 16:22; 8. Trail/
Kwasney (Kwong)  18:07.
Ptntltlti—None.    ■
County Hetlth Deptrtmtnt centra.
Police were called upon to ride
herd on the crowds and keep them
in  line.  Bussss rolled  In  ill  day
bringing school children from out-
lying districts to be immunized
against smallpox.
I
SEATTLE, Mareh 29 (AP)-Unlt.
ed States naval authoritiei here offered tonight to lorn Seattle ilx
nursei md 18 hospitil corpsmen tnd
pharmacists' mates to aid In thl
mtu vaccination by which the city
it attempting to check an outbreak
pf imallpox.
Vaccine was running low, said Dr.
Emil Palmquist, City Health Commissioner. He cancelled plans for
man viecinations in city playfield
houses and fire ststions Saturday
night and Mondiy and said other
plans were in the making.
8 DEATHS
Dr. Palmquist said the elty was
competing with other cities slong
the Pacific slope for viccini, but
Dr. Olenn N. ftotton, Preiident of
the King County Medicil Society,
reported enough viceine to cire for
210,000 people was on the wiy hire.
Thert have bean five deaths and
todsy there were a total of 21
known cases.
San Francisco has tight esses
tnd is ctrrylng on t protective pro
grim just like ours," uld Dr. Palm
qulst. Other Northweit cltiis Including Portland, Taeonja, Olympla
and Bremerton also were giving or
arranging for mass vicqinitions.
At Tseomt, thousand! of Tieom
ans and Pltrct County rtildtnti
were vaccintttd todey at tht City
WANT SAFEGUARDS FIRST
WASHINGTON, Mireh 20 (API-
Senators Warren Auitin (Rep.-Vt.)
and James Huffman (Detn-Ohlo)
today oppoied my diicloturai el
atomic energy Information to other
countries until ironclsd safeguard*
art established against ltt use fog
wsr.
BUENOS AIRES, Mareh 2» (AP)
—The Argentine Government cate.1
gorically dtnitd today ehargts of
helping the Nazis, levelled by the
United States, and auerted thlt the'
Stall Department publication ot lt*
Blue Book shortly before the Feb)
24 election constituted "lamentsble
Intervention in Intemtl political al_-.
fain" • .';
ASTHMA
D*»t(__u9 far ■read.]
sy _a
Hold os* Homei Btck
(eHmrmntmel
Breatheasy of Canadi Ltd.
738 Granville St    Vancouvar
Not "all"
asphalt rood'
are DuroiD.
Maty pioplt have Iht Impnaloa dut
ALL asphalt loofs ara DurolD rood, juit
bisiuu Ike tnda-nimt "DurolD" li 10
will -.mown.
That li nel ic Tktra II eely ONE Cimilne
DurolD roof, and it'i madt txcluilvily by
Sidney Roefi-t], Only Hit hlgheit quality
U9-l.lt foil Into Gtnulna DurolD nets
.,. that'i why DurolD rooh htvt iuch te
txctpllomlty lon| lift.
Don't bt MtitRfd with iny roof othtr than
t Qtnulna DurelD reel . . . icttpl ao
lubitltutt. Look For the Sidney Seil ol
Quality on tvtry bundle.
SOLE DISTRIBUTORS FOR
IIDNIY ROOFING PRODUCTS
IN NELSON
Wood, Vallance Hdwre Co.. Ltd.
Phone 24    —    Wholeiale - Retail
Neleon, I.C
_,' .   -<■ . n' i*i i arthfii
	
 ''':•
*
W^-WP_*Plvipi
rowers
[Research!
Shoes
For Women
A shoe thot is scientifically designed to allow free
foot action with proper
support, with that necessary well groomed appearance.
R. Andrew;
& Co.
Leaders In Footfoshlon
ues
Have Real Place
in Modern Home
..........
i ■,'•- ■.' ■ ■''■,■' ■-•
Mr., Mr St J.H. Chapimn Marie
Qolden Wedding; Childhood Peck
NEW YORK, (CP)—Becauie of
the tremendous interest ln antiques
today, decorators and collectors
have been discuulng the part that
antique! will play in the post-war
home that is flat-roofed, stream
lined and modern.
Designer Beryl S. Austrian Insists
that there is a place for antique!
on modern Interior!. They ihould,
I however, be uied sparingly In modern settings.
She believes an unusual secretary-bookcase; a pair of fine ber-
feres or a baroque letting can be
wed »nd absorbed Into a modern
a&eme and become an integral part
est it She does feel, however, that
dreary antiques are out and the
laded velvet, dull damask and sober, needlepoint can't enhance any
room.
Perhaps the most imoprtant thing
1 to remember ln combining modern
and antique furniture ls that you
can uae Granny's Chippendale, Empire and Baroque providing sou
balance it properly, she says. But it
•Would be ridiculous to have a dark
hand-carved table next to a blond
modern straight-legged chair.
But if the dark old woods are
stripped or bleached or pickled to
blend with the blond tones that are
3led in modern decoration the an-
que will lend grace and warmth to
ths modern. For Increased Interest
aome white or pdstel paint can be
rnbbed Into the bleached wood.
Since contemporary design has
borrowed freely from the Chinese
ia line and color. Mrs. Auitrjan believes it followl logically that Cbin-
tte antiquei iuch al lacquer chests
In clear primary shades of red,
or yellow, tables in crackled
or shiny ebony, brilliant
ns and figured rugs with mon-
omatic designs, are in perfect
ny    with    today's    modem
Antique accessories, as well as
urniture, can point up a modem in-
rrlor, she says. Lustre can be added
■ contemporary background with
j addition of a Venetian mirror,
hp bases of old porcelains In fine
' tea, or the exaggerated details
I Napoleonic Ink stand.
wn the curved and "curly"
Via XV and Baroque, lf suitably
yed as to scale and color, can
p dramatize a modern setting
La room that ls stripped of oma-
NEURALGIA
I NEURALGIA and the Hammering
laches It csnttt blinding you wittt
•y MRS. M. J. VIQNIUX
At tha reception given Tuesday
afternoon by Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Barrett at their home, "Peep 0
Day," on the North Shore honoring
Mrs. Barrett's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. H. Chapman, 611 the occasion
of their golden wedding, they were
assisted by Mrs. F. Hopklni and
Mrs. Herbert Phillips, wbo presided at the tea table centered by a
beautifully decorated wedding cake
embedded In a wide shell pink ribbon frilled tulle.
Servlteurs Included Mrs. Harold
Bradshaw, Mrs. J. Baldock, Mrs. T.
Jackson of Trail and Mrs. Grant
Hall of South Slocan. A profusion
ot gorgeoui cut flowers including
Spanish Iris, pink, red and white
carnations, roses, snapdragon and
many potted plants graced the attractive living room. During the
afternoon, Rev. H. Stewart Forbes
in toasting the bride and groom of
50 years ago read an appropriate
marriage passage, then bestowed his
blessing on the happy jubilarians.
This was followed by an Impressive
response from Mr. Chapman, who
brought tears to the eyes of his
many guests. He then presented
Mrs. Chapman with a golden sovereign and a gold ring that a lister
gave him when leaving England
some 40 years ago. In the evening
many of the surrounding neighbors
gathered at the Barrett home to
extend their hearty congratulations
to the popular Mr. and Mrs. Chapman.
CHILDHOOD 8WEETHEART8
Mr. and Mrs. Chapman were born
In the ancient minster town of
Beverley, Yorkshire, England, Mr.
Chapman in 1875, and MrB. Chapman in 1878. Childhood sweethearts,
they attended the same school.
Mr. Chspman was bound Indentured apprentice in the same town
to the craft of cabinet maker and
French polisher at the age of 14 for
seven years. He has always been
activa in iporti. especially rugby
football playing half-back for BeV'
erley Brlttania.
The couple were married March
28, 1896 in Beverley. They had two
children. Their son, an Imperial vet.
eran of the First Great War, died in
England in 1939, and their only
daughter, Mrs. C. Barrett, resides at
Peep-o-Day, North Shore.
They came to Winnipeg ln the
Spring of 1906, and Mr. Chapman
followed his trade until 1912 when
he commenced business for him
self. In 1914 he enlisted and went
overseas serving in Belgium and
France with the army.
MR. AND MRS. J. H. CHAPMAN
—Renwick Photo.
By ROBERT MAIN
Fifty years together, you've gone life's journey through
Fifty years of nappln.ess, to one another true;
And now you've gathered round you, all those that love you best
Be happy in their company, with story, mirth and jest
Recall the pleasant memories of days long, long ago
When you were boy and girl and watched each other grow.
Then in the Springtime of your lives, when courtship held its sway
You pledged your troth and! sealed it, in the good old-fashioned way.
And then yoa heard the wedding bells, the day that made you one,
Ah, John, that was a glorious day. You were a happy man.
That day you entered partnership, that's stood the test of time,
You've climbed the hill together, a partnership sublime,
You've done your duty truly, your offspring ls the proof.
May happiness and gaiety resound beneath her roof,
Rich harvests of devotion and respect you've truly won,
You've played the game In harmon yand it has been well done.
I wish you many happy years of happiness and health,
God bless you both, and may His many blessings, be your wealth.
Upon his return he was appointed
Vocational Instructor ln cabinet
\naking and French pollihlng in a
school In Winnipeg, and he held this
position until the school closed.
When they came to Nelson, he
started busineis ln the old building
where the Nelson Daily News Job
Printing plant now itandi. Mr. and
Mrs. Chapman have always been
active in Canadian Legion affairs.
Mr. Chapman hai served on the
Afraid 2nd Best
Bor Friend Will
Ask Her First
By JANE ATKINSON
Dear Miss Atkinson:
I've been going with two boys,
but consider one ot them my "beat
boy- friend.". Here's my problem:
There's going to be a big danca in
our community and, I'm afraid tha
wrong man ls going to ask; me first
I dont encourage him, but I feel that
he's on the point! ot asking me to
go. The other young man whom-1
like the best may ask me too; in
fact, I'm almost certain about It
How can I answer the wrong boy,
if he should ask me before the boy
I really want to take me?
Msiry.
My dear Mary, you're asking me
how to tell a fib for you, aren't you?
H the "wrong b?y" invites you first
and you haven't any alibi in tha
form of a previous invitation, what
can you say, if you want to stick lo
the truth, but yes or no?
Why not try to see the boy you
hope is going to ask' you, and lead
the conversation around to the subject of the dance? He may take a
hint. However, be careful not to
turn down the unpopular boy's bid,
unless you're sure the favored one
will ask you. He'd be better than no
escort at alL
'•;■•-       it'              '■"
,,.'-■
■ '.'..."       .        •        ■   ■   '■  ■   	
NIKON DAILY NIWS, SATUHDAY, MARCH M, 1944 - g
 1 ' """ "r__
1 llllIII 1111 llll ilIIIIIII[It 11 111 I till IgltIIIt a
FreemaN
FURNITURE CO.
Thl Houm ol Furniture Values
Phana IU ,   Nelson
BUY ON OUR
BUDGET PUN
Terms ln accordance with Wartime Prices and Trade Regulations.
HIIIHimillllllllHIIHIIIItmilllllllHIIII
Executive for many years and has
been president of the Bowling Club.
Mrs. Chapman wai an original lady
bowler 'in Nelson and holds the
hlgheit individual 10-pin score
made by a lady ln competition ln
the Kootenays. While taking part
ln.the 1936-37 season she rolled a
200 individual and an aggregate
score of 545 for three games. "Ma"
Chapman was always high among
the cup winners when the seasons
closed.
mental detail must be carefully
planned if a mixture of period furniture is going to be set against an
interior of glass, metal and plastics.
Mrs. Austrian says that though
there will be a great deal of antique and modern combined in this
post-war world, few people realize
that there always has been some
combination of antique and modern
In the average household.
Overstuffed, upholstered couches
ind chairs with Spring seats and
down cuihloni which were the
tomfortable contribution of the Mth
tentury to modern living were used
in most households no matter what
the period of the furnishings, she
says.
Jamaica Considers
$88 Million Plan
KINGSTON, Jamaica, B.W.I, -
(CP) — A plan calling for the expenditure over a 10-year period of
£19,585,000 (W8.132.5O0) on social
services, education, agricultural development and general economic
improvement of the country was
announced here recently.
The main objects are to increaSe
the productive capacity of the country to meet the urgent need for improvement of the social and economic condition of the people and
to prepare for further more ambitious advances in the future.
The plan will be financed from
four sources as follows: Allocations
from colonial development and welfare £6,100.000; estimated surplus on
basic islsnd budget £4,695,000; loan
NATAL
EAST JAFFREY, N. H.,  (CP)-
Mrs. Silas Blanchette recently re
gain? Get hit. mte relief >• othera : celved a letter from a Dutch sailor
with Templeton'i T-R-C's. Den'l I In the South Pacific. He thanked her
another day. Start now to relieve for stockings she krfitted for seamen
pain with T-R-C't—the remedy imore than three years ago.
NATAL, B.C.-The members of
Natal - Michel Catholic Women's
League and the Mount Carmel Society held a successful whist drive
in-the kindergarden at Natal as part
of the annual Spring bazaar which
took place the following day In the
Legion IJall at Michel Tbe bazaar
commenced at 2 p.m. and lasted
until 5 p.m. during which time the
sale of home cooking, aprons, em-
briodery, candy and tea took place.
The following ladies looked after
the different stalls: Apron stall, Mrs.
A. Fabro, Mrs. Joe Halko; linen
stall, Mrs. M. Martlnelll, Mrs. J.
Perchinsky, Jr.; home-cooking stall,
Mrs. A. Kublnec, Mrs. M. Borsato,
Mrs. K. MacFarlane; kitchen, Mrs.
K. Romano, Mn. E. MontegamI,
Mrs. D. D'Andrea; tea table!, Mri.
E. Reghinas, Mrs. J. Petovello, Mrs.
T. Cividin. Tea servers: Mrs. A.
Sadlislj and Misi Armedla Sereflnl.
Mrs. B. Doratty poured the tea. The
two winners announced in the draw
that took place after the bazaar
were fint, Tom Siska, Natal, who
won the pair of woollen blanket!
and second, Mrs. B. Cuzzettl of Natal who won the electric iron. The
following three winners were announced in the ladiei whist drive
when some eight tables participated.
First, Mrs. G. Fabro, Michel; second, Mrs. J, Myles, Natal; and third,
Mrs. A. Krall, Sr, Michel. The two
active Catholic ladies group! wlah
to thank the entire public of Natal-
Michel for their splendid cooperation and support in helping to make
huge luc-
£3,000.000; taxation £7,864,000. At a
. ,, . 1        1     -lull   anu   auuuun   in   tit.
Fi.re.M._;0n'.ren"' ■'   Wa' ™Ph,*slz<!--* these annual bazaars
that the plan as it now stands sets
out proposals and not decisions, and
that It is not intended that it should
be a rigid icheme.
•Ideally pralied by thouundi, At
UlsU-SOc. |1. f_
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'
IMALCOLM'S FURS
Storage
Repair! — Alteratlpna
' Bokcr St        Phono 960
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
LIVERPOOL, England, (CP)-After completing nearly 50 yeera at
iea, during which time he commanded Brltain'i largest liners, Including the Queen Elizabeth and
Queen Mary, Capt. E. N. Fall has Te-
tired.
illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Give the children
MILK
lots of it.
Kootenay Volley
Dairy
A
MLnhfoA
cKoUACIVWilA
By BETSY NIWMAN
iiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'i'i"
Food Is medicine, they say. It may When well browned on both aides
be poison If not properly cooked or|ltjci< „ j,w ci0vei Into meat (half
poorly   selected.    If   your   family
comei' home tired and hungry and
a dozen) add a small bay leaf to the
lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
SPENCER SUPPORTS
[For health garment! ond
figure control, see
MRS. THEA A. GIBSON
_ 110 Kerr Apts, Nelson.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllhllllllll
HeRshle Witch Repairs
leernult—
491 laker St.
Iliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin
NEW SPRING STRAW
■ AND FELT HATS
I Milady'i Faihlon Shoppe
UIIHIIIIIIIIIiyillllllllllllllllinilllli
you let before them an Inadequate pan, and about one-half cup hot wat-
meal, 10 that they go to bed hungry, er. Cover closely and cook very
but not realizing it, a restless, un- ilowly for two hrs. or until the
happy night may be the result, and!meat j, verJ. tender. Add a very llt-
the next day's work will suffer. [tie water lf what you put in the
A good nourishing meal is the first place evaporatei. Be lure It
beit poislble refresher for such aidoesnt scorch. Servei 4 or 6. Thick-
weary family, lends them to bed en gravy In pan If not thick enough
happy to sleep well and rise with and serve with meat.
New England Pandowdy
2 nips tart apples, pared and cored,
sugar, brown or white, 2 tableipoom
water, nutmeg or cinnamon, baking
powder biscuit cruit.
Fill a greeted baking dish half
full of the apples, sprinkle with sugar (you may use corn syrup or honey, or even molasses lf you hava no
sugar), cinnamon or nutmeg, add
the water to make a Uttle juice, and
cover with a crust made oi baking
powder biscuit dough. Bake in a
ot oven at first (400-450 deg  F)
renewed energy.
TODAY'S MENU
Swiis Steak
Muhed Potatoei with Pinley
Creamed Cabbage Celery
New   England   Pandowdy
Coffee
Swiu Steak
S poundi round iteak cut thick,  1
onion, flour, aalt pepper, bay leaf,
cloves
Have the iteak cut is  thick as
your butcher will cut it, an inch and
Hypertension,
in Middle Age
By HERMAN N. BUNDESEtf M.D.
Since the average life span ii increasing, more persons it would
seem, have a chance of developing
hypertension, because hypertension
is more common in the middle-aged
and elderly than in young persons.
When the blood pressure is taken
the doctor determines the pressure
when the heart contracts, which
is known ai the systolic, and the
pressure when the heart is relaxed
is known'as the diastolic preuure.
According to Dr. Reginald H.
Smithwick of Boston,, a - persistent
rise in the diastolic pressure is due
to Increased resistance to the flow
of the blood through the tiny arteries. This resistance to the flow
of the blood through the arteries ls
due to changes In the arteries them
selves ,as well as to some contrac
tion of the arteries brought about
by the muscles ln their walls.
These muiclei are controlled by
the nerves of the sympathetic or
Involuntary nervoui syitem. This
contraction of the muscles In the
blood vessel walls may be brought
about in the patient with high
blood pressure by pain, emotional
upsets, by changing the poiltlon of
the body, and by exposure to cold.
At the beginning of this type of
high blood pressure, the rise In
pressure msy appear only froA time
to time. However, sooner or later,
the blood pressure remains elevated
even though the patient is lying
down.
In an effort to relieve* hypertension, operations on the sympathetic
nervoui syitem have been carried
out. One hundred and fifty-six pa
tients with high blood preuure have
been operated on at the Massachusetts General Hospital and observed
for a period of from one to five
years following the operation. A
lowering in the diastolic blood pros
lure of from 10 to 30 millimeters of
mercury was noted in eight out of
every ten patients ln whom the
diastolic pressure before operation
was from 100 to 162.
It was found that women did bet
ter than men. There waa also some
improvement ln the condition of
the heart and In the action of the
WATFORD, England (CP) - The Ikldn*''"- ^e patients also seemed
to feel better following the oper
ation.
The operation conslited in removing certain icctiom of the Involuntary nervoui lyitem, namely,
ARMITAGE-PUTNAM
_ Of particular Interest ln Oovernment circles and In Nelson and
district was the quiet wedding
which wu solemnized, in Creston
United Church March 17 at 11 o'clock when the principals were Mlu
Yvonne Mildred, youngest daughter of Hon. Frank Putnam, Minister
of Agriculture, and Mrs. Putnam
and David Armitage, son of Mra
V. M. Baueur and the late David
Armltage.
• Mr. and Mra. E. G. Ware of
Taylorslde, Sask., who spent the
past couple of months at tne Coast,
were In' tha city yesterday en route
to Balfour .where ■ thiy plan on
spending a fortnight. They visited
Mrs. Ware's aunt, the Hon. Mrs. H.
Perry-Leake, in tha Kootenay Lake
General Hospital yesterday.
• St. Saviour's Mothers Club
members were guests in Memorial
Hall ot Mrs. W. G. C. Landskail and
Mrs. M. Lund as tea hostesses Thursday afternoon when those attending
were Mrs. F. B. Pearce, Mrs. Frank
Phillips, Mrs. E. J. Boyce, Mrs.
Thomas German, Mrs. J. Hamlet,
Mrs. F. Jasper,' Mrs. J. D. Allen,
Mrs. J. Dawney, Mrs. M. Jesty, Mrs.
G. R. Thompson, Mrs. F. W. Cartwright, Mrs. W. R. Perry, Mrs. C.
E. A. Simonds, Mrs. A. Williams and
Mrs. M. J. Derrlg and Miss Frsnces
Ward.
• Thursday afternoon at the
home of Mrs. W. F. Major, Sl*th
Street, a handkerchief shower was
given for Mrs. J. A. LaFohtaln, who
ls leaving Nelson to reside at Beaton. The hostess was auisted ln
serving by Mrs. W. Bennett. Friends
Invited were Mrs. H. H. Currie, Mrs.
PROCTER
PROCTER, B. C—Mr. and Mri.
P. Solecki were guests of Mr, and
Mrs. H. Solecki recently.
Ian MacLeod, who attends ichool
in Nelion ipent the weekend with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Mac-
Mr. and Mrs. J. GaUq were, rp-
cefif Visitors to Nelson.
Mrs. L. Jennings and children
Ruth and Ken of Nelson spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs,
Lou Jennings.
Johnny Renzle, Jr., who spent
sometime ln the hospital after an
appendix operation returned to his
home last Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Soleckl visited
Nelson on Saturday.
Miss Selma Smith of Nelson spent
the weekend at her home here.
J. Renzie visited Creston on Tuesday.
Mils Winnie Palmer Spent the
weekend with her father at Kaslo.
H. Stoochenoff and J. Mucha motored to Nelion on Saturday.
David Hale returned from the
Cbast where he obtained his discharge.
latest ratibn story comei from this
London suburb. A local laundry
will collect only 12 articles from
each cuitomer i-ntil its labor shortage Is ceased.
HONORED AT SOUTH SLOCAN
a half to two or more Inches Wipe until tbe emit Is brown, than lower
with dsmp cloth and pound flour ] the heat until you are sura the fruit
into both sides Season with pepper .it cooked,
end lait   Melt 2 tablespoons fat lnl    A thick crust like thii one U mo-*
a heavy frying pan with cover, or in
a wide, heavy laucepan, put meat
into hot fat and brown well. When
you turn lo brown on the other side
add an onion and brown that lightly
emlly baked If a imall opening ii
left In the middle. If the batter is
dropped onto the fruit from a spoon
■y MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX
Charfle fir engsgament announcsmanta on thli page la S1 JS
W, W. Anderaon, Mrs. T. Kail, Mrs.
S. Benedetti, Mrs. D. Mclnnes, Mrs.
H. Brown; Mra. J. Sutherland and
Mrs. Bennett     ,
• Colonel and Mrs. Cowan were
visitor trom Shutty Bench yesterday.
• Hirold Mayo of the C.A.M.C.
has left for the Coait to receive his
discharge after spending his leave
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
S. Mayo, 619 Mill Street
• Mr, ahd Mrs. J. Fisher of Hall
are city vlaltora.
• J. B. Oriy, Baker Street, hu
returned from a buslneu trip to
Grand Forka.
• William Wlnstanley and his
son Peter of Crescent Valley wera
among aboppera, ln town yesterday.
• Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Moore of
Willow Point visited town yesterday.
• Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Ball, Silica
Street, left yesterday-for Vancouver.
• Mrs. Galney, who haa been
a patient ln the Kootenay Lake General Hospital with an Infected eye,
has returned home.
• Miss Ann Bloom, Carbonate
Street left yesterday for Edmonton
where she has accepted a position.
• Shoppers in the city yesterday
included Mrs. D. Nelson of Crescent
Valley.
• 1 Mr. and Mrs. Powell of South
Slocsn were among visitors in town
yesterday.
• Dr. G. R. Barrett, Silica Street
left yesterday for the Coast where
he was called by the death of his
father.
• O. G. Maclntyre of Sheep
Creek spent yesterday ln Nelson.
• R. Harrod was a visitor from
J. Dawson, Mrs. A. Cathers, Mrs. I New Denver yesterday.
Hollywood Gossip
Lucille Signs Up for Benefit
of Studio Brains; Montgomery
Worried His Pool Will Get Wet
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, March 29 (AP1-
At a time when more and more
movie stars are free-lancing, Lucille Ball says she's getting tied up
to a studio contract again.
"Yes, I'm going back to a nice,
well-cushioned rut," ahe says. "I
ilgned with M.GM. again after a
few monthi of free lancing."
"More money," la one reason she's
returning to her haunt. "Besides, I
don't trust myself. How should I
know what's good for me?—I'm only
an actress. Many times I have
thought that a story is great and
then lt turns out to be a stinker. I
need to have some studio brsins to
witch out for me."
Singer Burl Ives" hobo days are
all over. He has bought a 400-acre
ranch up the coast. . . . Practical
George Montgomery took out rain
Insurance until his iwlmming pool
IS completed. ... Vers Zorina leavea
Monday for her New York wedding
to Goddard Llberson Betty Hutton ls hoping for twins ... and
after what happened to her in
"Miracle of Morgan's Creek!" . . .
Joan Crawford and John Garfield
were shivering through night bathing scenes at Mallbu for "Humoresque."
In the film palaces . , . "Young
Widow" (United Artiata—101 minutes) is an unfortunate vehicle for
Jane Russell. One of the most
besutlful women on the screen, she
exhibits qualities which could make
her a good actress. Unfortunately
she was given a long, tedious role
and poorly directed. She's no Gar
ion, but she'll do all right
Here's a real example of recon
version. Selznick Studio ls using
machine-gun turrets u the base
for motion picture cameras. The
camera, like the Superfortreu gun
ner, will be able to ihoot in any dl
rection.
the nerves known as the great
splanchnic nervea and the trunks of
the nerves along the spine.
Thus It would seem that In certain typei of high blood preuure
thli operation on the nervoui syi-
tem may be of iome value, when
other meaaurei fall to bring relict
SALMO
Monday for Trail where ihe Is now
employed-
Mr. and Mrs. Les Lindsay of
Sheep Creek were Salmo vlilton
enroute to Nelson.
Mr. and Mrs. O. Johnson Bakka
of Nelway were shoppen to Salmo.
Mlu Lois Browne of Nelson
visited at her home.
Mlsi Mary Feeny arrived at the
weekend and will visit h^r parenta,
Mr. and Mn. B. Feeny for three
weeks before returning to Vancouver where »he ls employed.
Teen-Age
Jealousy of
Younger Sisler
By Garry Cleveland Myers, Ph. D.
Several years ago, visiting In the
home of an old friend who had 1 .
daughter of high school age, I observed that this daughter had a
negative attitude toward us and
everything that seemed to be going
on in the home. She used to be a
lovely, lively little thing as we
knew her several years before; but
now she did not smile, she did not
talk, she did not get into things.
She remained silent and very
sullen. Her sufferings were so noticeable that lt distressed me to
observe her.
During the dinner hour at that
home I think I did not hear her
say half a dozen words. I did not
see her smile once nor did I see any
movement by her indicating happiness. She seemed to be a sufferer; and she was, for she was
jealous.
Now, Mrs. Myers had noticed the
aame thing which I had noticed and
had been quite u much puzzled
ai I had been. Thii one-time splendid sunny little girl had come to be
a sullen soul who seemed to shut
herself out wholly from the world.
It was not hard to diagnose her
case. She had a little sister who
at the time waa five years old, a
very cunning little girl, full of
life and activity, beautiful to look
upon. As soon as we entered that
home Little Sister brought her toys,
she hauled them around, and talked
to us ln glee about her playthings
and herself.
But all the while nothing was
said about that fine young girl.
Like the parents of that family,
I suppoie we did not lay much to
her nor attempt to make her feel
her own importance. She, once the
hub of that home, now was only
one of secondary interest. Of course, _
she suffered and, suffering ihe was
silent. Who would not lupe suffered
in her place?
Very often with the adolescent '
boy or girl jealousy expresses lt- -
self ln such sullen silence. Some-"
times lt ii manifest In irritability
or ln attempts at showing off. In.,
that event, I fancy the youngiter '
doei not suffer nearly so much as
when he Is lUllen. Any one who *
shuts himself out from tbe world
alwayi   must   lose   something;   no .
suffering can be quite so Intense
as pent-up suffering.
I have had a chance to observe
this girl over a period of yean-
During her last year in the high
school she developed self -confidence
and lelf-expression when she has
had some definite outside intereit,
with the reiult that ahe broke the
fettered feeling! of inferiority; and
when, on the following year ihe entered college, ihe became a very
itrong and charming penonality.
Who shall ever be able to describe the sufferings which ihe underwent throughout thoie long, sullen days of jealouiy? She ii now
a very happy wife and mother.
SALMO, B.C.—Mlu Joan Curwen
wu -Hoiteu recently at the home
of her parenta, Mr. and Mrs. S.
Curwen to a number of young
ladles. Dsnclng and Games were
enjoyed. The hoetesi'i mother
ierved dainty refreshments at 'he! WILLOW POINT, B. C.-Mrs. T. "■„„„»., CnUom
close of the eveping. Young ladlea R Nicholls wu hosteu for March'i wUlTltllurib -JUIiery
Invited were: Misses Pauline Hyru- Red Crou bridge held at her home
Willow Point
Slocks Okay in
Parliament
Ige
chuk, Anna Munck, Marceljlne Mc-,at Sltkum Creek. Four tablei were
Dearmld,    Thelma    Larien,    Joan j in play, Mrs. F. Hobion lecurlng the
Scrlbner, Joan Kraft, Bertha Boett- prize for highest icore and Mrl. N.
ar, Thyra Johnson, Mary Jean and Denny consolation.
Helen Dodda, Man; Konkln, Marie I   mint, refreshments were ierved
Brullote, Maudie Kleef, Olga Jma-:b. __, ^0ltMl __,_ , vtrj pletMnt
Ut and the hosteu..'
Salmo Pythian Siiten Pait Chief
afternoon wai ipent.
Mrs I. C. Campbell Is ipendlng
Club held a .ucceuful bridge, tilLS*1* £<*-**=£^.f^Ti:
and uie of work ln the KIT Hall. ^^ wlth h«r i*mllv ,l <h«
Bridge  prizei  were  won  by  Mra. ,'*°**,-
Smith Curwen and Mrs Carl1 Mr. ind Mn. Balmer are ln Cres-
Anderson. ,-0" 'or the weekend.
Salmo rinks curling In the Little. Mr. and Mrs. H. Mawdsley anil
Bonspiel at Nelson over the week- granddaughter Vlda are vliltlng
end were: C. Anderion, B. Gray, S., their daughter Mn. Joe Benoit at
Andenon and G. Moir, E. J. Avery. 1 Montrul.
5* ?lbS°c' Au Kr^t'DB,'_I^d,dl J* M1» B«ll|-'e Deno hu returned
Eiche, C. Scrlbner, B. Reld O. Lind- jrom Winnipeg where ihe went to
rtrom. Sheep Creek: R. Mitchell. H- .ttend the funeral of her brother
Doelle, B. Thompson, T. Hellbeur,Cir|yi,
" Hetai'w-rtl-?    "'' C Tr'"' "d|   ^rbsrt Roberta I. expected home     Birds csryjot iee blue! or violets
'Mr. snd Mrs. Bill Batten and fam-ij". week end having received his very well but they iee redi better
Ily were recent gueits of Mn. Bat- discharge fromJhejfavy.^
ten's parenti, Mr. and Mri. Boates,;
LONDON, March 29 (CP) -
House of Commons officials decided today that It li all right
for women to wear ilacks it, the
parliamentary vliltori' gallery.
A plan to ban them waa Incubated two dayi ago when a young
woman appeared in purple ilacks
and green shoes.
Among thoie objecting to the
Intended ban were three youthful
Labor member! who laid the government encouraged the wearing
of ilacki by women war workeri
and "the conitantly changing
model of attire" made It "un-
reaionable that women ihould be
compelled to conform to narrower itindardi of dren In order to
liiten to our debatei."
ithan do human beings.
NeUon
Mr.  and
Mn.   Alex  Yarchukoff
were ihoppen to Nelson
Mlu Normi
Irving wu a visitor
Waihlngton.
I1
to Metallne Falls,
Mr. and Mn. Fred Binning .and
daughter. Anita of Nelson visited
friends tn town.
Mri. C. Anderson and grandion,
Terry were city vislton.
Mlu Elsa Hemstra who attend!
High School here spent the week
end at her home at Meadowi.
L L. Roblnion wai a city visitor.
Mrs. A. MorrU wu a recent
•hopper to Nelson.
L. Fogle of Sheep Creek wai a
vliltor in town.
S Anderson and babr of
Salmo and Mn. O McDougall of
Erie ipent Thundiy In Nelson
r
-Vogue Photo.
MR. AND MRB. JUtlAN Q. YEATMAN
wvasa   kH-VV(ii'i   ___.••«        ■ itniimi    waus  a   "mi    i/muii   iihi   as   DU um
if Nelaon were Mr. and Mn. Julian G. Yeatman, who have laft for To
ronto where Mr. Yeatman It to finish his eouru st Toronto Technical
College. Many community friendi attended
Mr. Yeatman li the younger ion of Mr and Mn J D Yeatman of
South Slocan He joined the Provoit Corpi In 1M0 and six months liter
wai transferred to the Ordnance Corpi. ln IM] he went to England
where he joined the Infantry, then went to Italy where ha uw action at
Aprons, Rlmlnl. Ravenna and Comacchio, where he wm wounded. Re
ipent three months In hospital at Plrugla mtl while on convalescent
lesve visited Rome, Naples snd Florence, before going to Army Head-
it niav be placed around the edge of ] quarters In London.
the dish  10 that there U a imall Mr  Ysatman returned on the He de France, joining hit wife and
opening in the centre. Iipei\d_ng hli leave at South Slocan and Vancouver.
the weekend In Nelaon guut rf
her grandparenU, Mr. and Mn. A.
K. Olion. •»
Mm. Young of Trail who wu a
guest nf Mr. and Mrs. Imia Lund
has returned home.
Mlu Jean Avery wu a shopper
to Nelson.
Mite Sadie Hamberf who arrived
homa fmm Calgarr. Alta., to vltit
her mother, Mra. V. Hamberg left
■ HI IIMllMimwvi
CHENILLE HOUSI COATS
Slsu: Medium and Large
MM
FASHION FIRST LTD.
,aa**mA**u*tua**tsf%***m*»aA
OVA.. 0-WJLcL C* Cows/L
of Spokane
Brings to you doily
m    IWmmVtM
The mmical program of established and
ever-growing popularity.
CXJL71
Mondey ta Friday, 1:30 p.m.; Saturday, 3:30 p.m.;
Sunday 3 p.m.
I11BB
I^J.,1 ,_■.-_-■..■--_-.--.   ,...-.-..   ,.   .,..._■    -.mmS..Ao._-m.-m*-.A..*A-...:t
'      •-■ "- - ---• — '■ ■■-•■     -       ,	
 mm
t^
«,....„ ed April 22. 1902.
tirttwh Columbia'*
Mott Interettins Newspaper
Published every morning except Sunday by
i'   .tlio NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED. 288 Baker St.. Nelson. British Columbia.
'   Authorized as Second Clfss Mall,
Postoffice Department, Ottawa
MEMBER 6T THE CANADIAN PBESS AND
THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.
SATURDAY, MARCH 30,1946.
"Pat" Maitland—He Played
Within the Rules of
the Game
For more than thirty years R. L.
(Pat) Maitland was prominent in the
political life of British Columbia, for a
decade he was leader of the Conservative party, and for half of that time Attorney-General and a faithful member
of the Coalition Government. Before
that in the Tolmie administration he
held cabinet rank without portfolio as
President of the Council.
He entered politics in the days before radio had taken much of the life
and the color and the vigor out of political campaigning. Pat Maitland loved
that political era in which party supporters shouted themselves hoarse in
applause of a speaker who on the hustings would smite his opponents with
broadsword and cutlass, puncture them
with rapier and dagger and who was
not averse occasionally—but always of
course within the rules of the game as
it was then played—to hurling a dead
cat.
He was called, and affectionately,
"fighting Pat Maitland." He was an
able man and if his red hair fitted his
sobriquet his training as a lawyer and
his courtroom experience gave a polish
and finish to his political oratory that
naturally became more mellow as the
years went by.
As Attorney-General he served British Columbia well. In a Coalition
Government noted for its integrity and
honesty of purpose Premier Hart could
not have chosen a better man than Pat
Maitland as Attorney-General. Mr.
Maitland never swerved from his duty
as chief law advisor to the Crown. He
was an honest, faithful and hardworking administrator. Pat Maltland's death
at a comparatively early age takes from
the public life of British Columbia a
man of sterling character and ability
who rose by his own efforts to one of
the most responsible offices in the gift
of the people.
undertook to grant Greece a credit of
£10,000,000 sterling, (or currency reform, to waive repayment of tht Greek
wu debt of £40,000,000 Stirling, ind
to make available to Greece large
quantities of consumer goods and industrial material.
The Greek Government undertook
to carry out a drastic progrim of retrenchment, including, ipart from
currency reform, in increase oi taxes,
a reduction of unproductive expenditure, the readjustment an*} stabilization of wages, and price control.
Such a program could only be carried through by a Government formed
with the support of the majority of
the electorate. The present "Caretiker"
Government has not felt able to proceed far along the unriopular road of
economic stringency.
Competent authorities consider that
the prolongation of political uncertainty ih the absence of elections, and the
consequent delay in introducing the
necessary financial and economic reforms, would spell financial and economic disaster.
This is perhaps the most cogent of
all the reasons for holding the Greek
elections as soon as possible.
There are other reasons to which
the Foreign Office statement draws attention. Thus, there is the desire manifested by the Security Council, and
shared by the United Kingdom Government, that British troops should be
withdrawn from Greece with the least
possible delay. There are international
arrangements completed between the
Greek, United Kingdom, United States
and French Governments (in which the
Russian Government unfortunately decided not to join) for the elections, ensuring as far as possible that they are
free and fair.
The Greek Elections
Tomorrow
The Greek elections are to be held
Sunday, March 20 was the last day
on which names of candidates could
be registered. The Greek Government
did not allow itself to be deterred by
pressure from the Left Parties from adhering strictly to the timetable which it
has itself fixed. Any deflection on the
Greek Government's part would in
fact be inconsistent with the mandate
which the Greek Government assumed
on taking office last November.
London commentators point out
that the decision to hold elections on
the agreed upon date is the sole responsibility of the Greek Government.
The Greek Government has indeed consulted the United Kingdom Government on the subject on various occasions, and the United Kingdom Government has consistently advised the
Greek Government to stand firm,
The effects of postponement would
have beef, felt politically and economically. Politically, not only ls there, according to the United Kingdom Government's information, no ground fnr
anticipating that the state of security
of Greece wnuld improve if the elections wrre postponed for two months,
as the Left Parties demand, but it is
not to bo excluded that the present ten-
sion between the Right and Loft might
become aggravated.
Economically, as the Foreign Office
statement puts it, "tlio reconstruction
of the country would be hampered".
This, it is observed in London, is if anything, an under-statement.
The Greek financial nnd economic
position is recognized on all sides to bo
extremely grave. It was tho Greek Government's realization of this gravity
which led it to solicit urgent Hritish
assistance three months ago. Greek
Ministers ramc to London in the Now
Year, and an Anglo-Greek Financial
and Economic Agreement was reached.
The United Kingdom Government
Press Comment
ONWARD ANO UPWARD
Queen'i has elected "tha typical co-ed"
(being typical apparently ranking hljher than
being exceptional) and tha Unlvenlty of Toronto ha» elected "the co-ed whom I would
moit willingly ikip a lecture_ to keep a coke-
date with." In this upward iweep of education
lies the hope of the coming world—Peterborough Examiner.
Looking Backward
10 YIARI AQO
(From  Dally  Nawa,  March  30,  1938)
At IU recent maeting tha City Council
went on record ai opposed to further liiuance
of  beer  parlor  llcencei.  The deciilon  wn
unanimous.
Col. I. Mallandaine, on his wiy to the
Coist to repreient Creiton Valley Post Canadian Legion, ipent lome time in NeUon viiiting old friendi.
28 YEARS  AQO
(From Dilly Newi, Maroh 30, 1821)
S. S. Fowler brought from the Bluebell
Mine samplei of eoncentratei and oxydlied
tilver-lead orei that will be lent to Portland
to iwell the Kootenay Exhibit at the International Mining Convention to be held there.
C. P. Wllion, head of the firm of Llndiay
Brother!, cedar pola operator!, lj In the city
from Spokane.
40 YEARS  AGO
(From  Dally  Newi,  March 80, 1108)
J. S. Piper, of the Northweit Mounted
Police Force at Macleod, li in the city on duty
but li not prepared to state ltl nature.
C. H. M Cameron returned lait night from
a trip to his old home ln Colllngwood, Ont
Today's Horoscope
You are analytical and give a great deal
of thought and cartful comlderetlon to a
problem before doing anything Important, Be
leu skeptical ln your opinion of otheri. You
are loving and will have a happy heme life.
The moon enten Piicei at 1:33 thli morning.
Make a ichedule early today, and follow it.
Your vitality may ba low at 11:48 a.m., io
lake lt easy. This afternoon plan a quiet evening; social events are not sanctioned. Avoid
expensive entertainment!; conierve fundi.
HOROSCOPE FOR SUNDAY
A birthday today meani thlt you ara Intellectual, kind-hearted and loving. You enjoy
music and have quite an artistic temperament.
Women born on thla date are very devoted
wives, excellent motheri. and are the vary
nucleus of the home. New money projteti
are not favored by the aipects ruling vary
early thli morning, and later be cartful with
chemlcali and electricity. Speed up production
later In tbe morning, and takt the brakea
nff Early this aftarnoon further you ambitions by Injecting vitality. Piy all bllli before
the month is over.
Etiquette Hints
Tn boast of tht famoui or socially prominent penoni you may know li in poor taita.
? ? Questtons ? ?
ANSWERS
Open ta any reader Names of paraona
aiklng. queitlom wlll nat be published.
Thart la na charge for thla aarvlce. Quae-
tlona WIU NOT Bl ANSWERED BY
MAIL txcept whan there Is obvious necei-
alty for privacy.
Mrs. M., Ntlion—Will you pleue answer the
following queitlom? (A) what would ba
uied to remove white ipoti cauied by
heat on an oak table? (B) What can be
uied to clean a rag doll? ~(C) How can
you make a cloth coat waterproof?
Answers—(A) Spots caused by heat on an
oak table, cannot be removed except by land-
papering lt and then re-varnlshlng.  (B)  A
rag doll can be cleaned with lolvent, Rub it
on with a cloth or brush and then let lt hang
on an outside line. (C) Drax li used for waterproofing a cloth-coat.
Nelion Reeder—Could you pleaie tell me tht
addreu of the Logan Knit Compiny?
Can any Dally Newi reader lupply the
Nelion Reader with her answer?
S.W., Nelion—Would you pleue tell me where
the nearest city la ln which I ctn obtain
taxidermist's supplies? Could you please
itate name and address of named firm?
R. J. Pop, Ltd., Comer Granville ahd 15th
Street, Vancouver; D. C Tait, 1364 W. llth,
Vancouver,  B.C.;  T.   Wherry,   629  Pendori
Street, Victoria, B. C.
;
Letters to the
Editor
Letten may be publlihtd ovtr a nom dt
plume, but the actual name of the wrlttr
must be given to the Editor aa avldtnot of
good faith. Anonymous letten go In the
waste papir baiket
Expresses Appreciation
of Bylaw Publicity
To the Editor:
Sir—On behalf of the Board of School
Trustees, I have been Instructed to express
to you their thanks and appreciation for your
kind assistance ln connection with the poll
taken on March 19 on School Debenture Bylaw No. 896. The result of the poll was dut ln
a large measure to the wonderful tupport of
the ratepayers, brought about to a large extent
by the untiring efforts of those who assisted
In the matter of publicity, transportation, etc.
They especially appreciate the unselfish
iplrit which phompted you to give thli bylsw
such invaluable publicity, for which they desire you to iccept their sincere thinks.
fr. W. Burgess, Secretary.
Cranbrook, B.C., March 29, 1MB.
PACIFISM REVIVES
Saskatchewan school trustees, meeting ln
convention, passed a resolution liking that
cadet training ln schools be discontinued.
There, ladlea and gentlemen, you have the
itart of it—Windsor Star.
Deputy Head of Post
Office Writes of Postage,
Parcels
To the Editor:
Sir—From letters appearing in the presi and
otheri reaching this Depirtment it ls evident
thit there is a misunderstanding on tha part
of the Canadian public tn regard to parcel
post rates to other countries and resticttoni
on articles which can be ahlpped to the United
Kingdom and continental countries.
A chief criticism is that "exorbitant" postage rates ire levied on parceli of food md
comfort! to Europe. Ai you undoubtedly real-
lie, the problem _of relief to countriei ln distress ls not prlmirily one coming under the
Jurisdiction of the Poit Office Department.
Asiurance can readily be given however, that
this Depirtment Is both willing snd anxious
to do sli In Hi power to help.
It might be explained thit pireel poit
rites from Canidi to other countriei ire determined by the coit of land and iea conveyance, as well ai charges which must be paid
for tramlt lervicei provided by other postal
administrations.
For eximple, parcel poit to the continent
of Europe ll routed via the United Kingdom.
In the clrnimitancei, the British postal administration, aa well u the country of destination, must bc piid for their services ln
handling tht parcels. In the cue of parcels
addressed to the United Kingdom postage ls
shsred to meet the delivery expenses of tht
United Kingdom Postal Service. Then our
postal chsrges art designed to cover out-of-
pocket expensts.
If luthorltlts ln other countries ire ible
to mike reductions ln their charges for
handling our mall the Canadian Post Office
will promptly pus along such reductions for
the benefit of tht Cantdlan mailer.
The restriction placed on the contents of
piretl post, I.e., tht tevtn-pound limit for
food, ind of not more thin two poundi of
tny virlety to the United Kingdom did not
originate with the Cinidlan Post Office but
wis Imposed by British authorltlei ln the light
of their own domestic condltloni, one reason
being to protect thtlr rationing system. Also
It ll claimed thlt morile would be idvtnely
effected lf thtrt wtrt no reitrlctloni on food-
stuffs fom overseas end the privileged few
with frlenda ln Cinada wtrt tble to receive
unlimited quantities while their neighbors
were strictly ritloned.
The feelings ot Canadian! with frltnds
ovtrtaas can readily be understood, but they
can rest mured thlt the post office ls seeking Io sfford the belt possible sirvlct and it
tht lowttt poulble colt under current condition!.
W. J. Turnbull
Deputy Poirmiittr Generil.
Ottiwi, Ont. Mireh 12, 1848
Words of Wisdom
To mike no mistake! u net In tht powtr
of man; but from thtlr trroit ind mlitiku
tht wise ind good learn wisdom for tht
future—Plutarch
Test Yourself
1  Whit Is in earwig"'
2. Whit li • dilatory panon?
9. What li i ruie?
TIST ANSWERS
1. A hum leu insert or small centipede.
2 A pioeraitinetor.
I A trick, detour, in ertlilee.
STANDING  AND 8ITTINC,
Nowadtyi. when people wint to -.und up
for thtlr righti. they htvt • sit-down itrlke
--Hamilton Sptctttor.
in
Ribbentrop Tettifiet ...
Told Hitler Before War Britain
Black Market Raid Would Fight fo Last Han In the
Empire; Says He's Good Christian
Search Camp for Counterfeit Ration
Stamps; German Pol ice Carrying Out
Raid Get Shower of Bricks, Bottles
■y RICHARD KA8ISCHKI
ly DANIEL' DE IUCI
mm policemen \y«e Injured today »
 *\t
  timnrl
'two "'houri' 'of' "rioting "erupted I ot tnli city.
Hitler happier  than  I  have  evi
■een him.'
He testified thlt it ona time hi
efforts as German Ambauador __
London got lo far ai to arrange
Hitler to fly to England to I
loudipeakar announce. *{£&«£** * "" M «* ffiffi'S^wttao'Sj ■
f*J-ft.^"*_ «!__?•-!! *__.'.   H_M__S__HH.A«B.«ll,  that   he the IliYmpment and I believe I
NUERNBIRO, Mirth tt <AP>-
,'Joaehlm von Ribbentrop teitified
"ipolloe and 15 German In-Mutators,before  tha  International  MlUtanr
STUTTGART? Germany.  March J*;* «■«• **.***, « ■** *»\J_b$j,»^&_&&
29 (AP)-One diipliced Jew wai *■• m'
killed, five were wounded, and on    A
American loldler and leveral Oer- !°™«d
Black Market" raid was In pro
He  denied vehemently  that  he
uTrtoUM" which' hltowi"; bfa-Kfrei, and InitrucM them to .[low described Britain a. "degenerate
market rild on a dliplaced penom »• P°U« to enter homei which said just THE OPPOSITt
___._,      .„ r      .    •   ■     f «nm»tli_,    k_m    -.i-HF-n    ,\ oo     IV. ___.    nul_■!# I*11  I ....
thtd
w s becauie certain forcea In Engl
land oppoied an Anglo-German aa*
perioni lnc  pouce  io  omer  nuui-a  wmui gaiu .luoi  mi urruaiia deritlndtng." '
c»mp ln Stuttgart'i outiklrti.        |l!JrfEfl,e„"**1 c"mp 01* tht ouUlllrU|   "It has been alleged that I told!   Vonf Ribbentrop iaid that wh-H
Two   houra   of  rioting  erupted °" thli city. Hitler from London that England efforti .Jor the pact with Brltau
when German police, accompanied met BY SHOWER OF BRICKS was degenerate and would not tailed, Germany "decided to re-arrr
by a "token"force" of U. S. military Th. nam.tr nntin. h™«,„ fight," the former German foreign ai Hitler turned to the itrtngth a
police, moved Into the camp SLiKJrS^w-KffiS u_T,,_a miniiter iaid. "I want to state here hia own people tb lolve the proV
search for counterfeit ritltra lUmpiJrV,? ™" °^ I told him Juit the oppoilte. I lem of winning equality In arma.*
Fint reporti indicted the JOTSBTiW. il»ld hlm ,he ***** p,op'« *»"-.«,_, to .tma-riN .tou,
wai complicated when nearby Am
erlcan soldiers, who did not know
the raid had official sanction, rushed to th< aid ot the displaced personi.
RIOT INOS WHIN U. 8, CARS
ROll, IN
The riot ended only when Am
heroic and woulf«WAaTS! ,"*""» TO .HORTIN  STOM
|   The former foreign minister to
that dty   wa!   warned   repeatedly _ t(
They said they opened fire liter man ,or ^e Empire
they had been fired on by a mlper,    Von   RiMwM-op   declared   thm day   waa   warned   repeatedly   t<
military government officlili mer- ] "Certaln Britiih elements   notibly shorten his itory and to confw
ted, en-phe Jewlih dliplaced per-|Win,t(m ghurchUl," thwahed Hit- hlmielf to pertinent facta,
ion wu ililn. 'ler', efforts In 183.  to achieve a    An '»rller witness hu describe*
amp houses 1400 Jewi, moil
erlcan armored can rolled Into the ly of Pollih origin,
An Immediate Investigation wis broa(1 treity wlth England because von ( Klbbentrop  ai not^a  typlcs
"they   feired   upiettlng
ordered,
The ct
cimp.
About 133 German police, accom-jwere
pinled  by  United Statei militiry the raid.
- Oerman police had requeited md
traditional   policy   of
power In Europe."
Britain's Na,i'   b'jt
"balance   of testified:
"I alwa
today   von   Ribbentrop
nan pouce had requeited and
granted permlulon to make HI AND HITLER WORKED
made every effort ti
be a good National Sociallit and-
HARD
In Manhattan ...
"The Song of Bernadette" Too Much
Exposition and Offstage Action
By  MICHAEL  O'MARA
Canadian Preu Staff Writer
NEW YORK, March 30 (CP) -
When the Theatre Guild revived
"He Who Geti Slapped" recently,
drama itudenti got something worth
discussing but amusement-seekers
little over which to get excited,
Local erltlci split ihirply on the
meriti of the melodrama by the
late L. N. Andreyev, flrit seen here
nearly 23 seasons ago. The majority
found it self-conscious, pretentious
and lacking ln substance, but iome
insisted it had retained "poigntnee
. .. itrength . .. beauty."
Iti plot is a version of the familiar Pagllaccl theme, with a clown
ays made every
d National Social
waa proud to be one of a  small
group of Idealists who wanted: ta
Speaking In a low voice ln his bring prestige back to Germany."
own  defence, he asserted  that  he     He <_id he was unconcerned withl
and Hitler worked hard to gain thia the religious doctrines and denied
understanding ai a followup to the he was anti-semitic or anti-church.
EnslUh-German   Naval   Treity   of,   "I believe I am a good Chrlitlan,"
\ 1035. He iaid the naval pact "made he added.
moral aeemed to be "once a long- TWA  AAinn Trine
hair, always a long-hair." Though! ' wo  •"""■'•' "P» .
the celebrated Mr. Herman and his   KJnw Onnrnf inn
entourage blew their brains out on' r,ww **W*****m9
the acting ot tht reit of the cut Is the  concerto,.it  remained  a   dry.  qJ MJchd  Collc.ic5
reasonably good. staccato,   nervoui   piece   without
  i climactic force, and the houie, re-!   NATAL, B. C—A new lyitem ll
"The Song of Bernadette" based ceptlve at flnt, received iti repe- being   undertaken   at   the   Michel
dn  the  late  Frani Wertej'i best- "live final movement coldly. '■■•"■-'•■   ■■■'	
seller, has been transplanted to the
itige   by   Pliywrlghti   Jean   and i
stage   by   Playwright!   Jean   and I _    r        ,    . .
waiktr Kerr without notabit iuc- Defends .Surrender
Collcrlea whereby all the employeei
working Inside the. mine are not}
riding to and from the mine. Pre.
viouily the mlnen walked through
the return and Into their reipectlva
working places.
Two men-trips are being ooerated
in and out of the mine on both the
morning and afternoon ihifti, wttt
PARIS, March 29 (AP) — Gen. ;the coal cars which have been fix'
each  car
the mine by
air   locomotives   which   ire   now
ceil. Like "Rebecca," It suffers in i    ,  , - ,    ,-■
compariion to a previoui film ver-IOr rrenCrl rOTCeS
slon that was able to follow the!,     k. I __.,__- :,. 'APi
book more cloiely. Like the last play TO INOZIS ltl   4U
baud on Mr. Werfel'i work, "Em
bawled Heaven," it hasi too much; M^7'v»g_-ld,"app_a_li_i today IS" to~MiV "«li" rnirTto
expo.ltlon md too much off itage »-"™V" .yl  . ' *pp      ,«   HiJ:t.ktn ln ind out of th.
"tlon. it « clos" hearing betore the Hgn locomotlves   whlch 	
  .Court of Justice, defended hii mr- eoulpp,d w|th th, ,itMt ,potll,hl|
Igor (Firebird)  Stravinsky itep- render of Trench forrei to the Ger- which may be seen for a conilr3err
ped out of chiracter to compoie for1 mans in 1040. |able distance,
whose heart is broken by a falthltiiI Woody (Cildonla) Herman'i band Lawyers iaid the ailing, 79-year- The man-trlBi leive on ichedult
wife turning to a clrcui-rider for a seriei of dluonancei entitled iold general reiterated that the aur- n and out of the mine with, on*
lolice, only to find that ihe too hai "Ebony  Concerto,"  given  Iti  flrit,render preserved French troopi who trip heading for the East mine ind
w!^a^Utr°^|CIckr.no>1S,vehound. agreed the «-«JJ^ '5*^ ^'m.a^tn^i^l
him. other lectloni. •_ j
The High Court of Juitlce li con- j —
ducting a preliminary inquiry.Into    California   occuplea   more   thin
official reiponiibility for the fall of one-half_the Pacific coaitllne*of ths
Onth&CUji
United Statei.
SATURDAY, MARCH 30
CBC PROGRAMMES
CKLN AND
1340 OK THE DIAL
MORNING
7:30-0 Canida (CKLN)
7.31-Muiical Reveille (CKLN)
8:00—CBC Newi
8:1J—Pick of the Hit!
8:30—Morning Clasilci  (CKLN)
8:4+-C.P.R. Train Time
8:43—Hebrew Chrlitlan Hour
(CKLN)
9:0C—BBC Newi
9:13—Melodlei for Juniori
9:30—Fairy Tilei
9:59—Time Slgnil
10:00—Symphoniei for Youth
10:30—Sypiphoniei for Youth
10:43—CBC Newi
11:00—Metropolitan Opera
11:30—Metropolian Opera
AFTERNOON
12:00—Metropolitan Opera
1:00—Metropolitan Open
3:00—Muilcal Program
2:30—Tea and Crumpets,
2:43—The Schooli Sing
3:00-01d Fivorltei (CKLN)
3:30—Serenade
3:43—Swing Time (CKLN)
4:00—Tei Time Varietlai
4:13—The Gaelic Hour
4:30-Peerleia Newi (CKLN)    _
4:43—Thla Week
5:00—Sacred Heart Progrim
(CKLN)
5:15-Muiical Program CKLN)
(CKLN)
5:30-Peerlen Newi (CKLN)
8:4J-Muilcal Program (CKLN)
EVENING
8.00-CBC Newi
«:03-N.H.L. Hockey
«:30-N.H.U Hockey
7-,00-N.H.L. Hockey
7:15-N.H.L. Hockey
7:30—Orgin Muilc
7:45—Sporti College
8:00—The Workshop
8:15—The Workihop
8:30—Muilc    Well - Known    and
Loved  (CKLN) •
8:43—Muilc    Well - Known    and
Loved   (CKLN)
9:00—La Plan
9:15-La Plaza
9:30—Three Sum Trio
9:45—Lee Slmi
10:00-CBC Newi
10:15-Dance Request 'CKLN)
10:80—Dance Requeit (CKLNi
11:00-Dance Requeit  (CKLN)
lUS-God1 Save the King
Campbell loans
Htre'i iht better, lifer wiy to
get reidy cub. For your pro-
tectJoa. Cuopbtll I.011.1 include life Imiirinre to cover
tht oopaid loan btltnch-   In
CUI Of dttth TOUT fimily  j|
thai relieved o( til oblifltioa
for four lota. Tht complete
h»lii.ce il luiomiticilly paid
off by tht Inturtoct compiny.
Cuopbcll Fi nince Corporation /
it tht enh loin compiny to
provide thii vilmble protection. And there ii NO EXTRA
COST (or thli ouuttodinf
fttturt.
Cimpbell lou com tn now
tt tht lowttt level la our hiitory, Only t ftw eumplei trt
gi-rto hert, of how prtctietl
it ii'to borrow tt Ctrapbell
Flatncc. For dettilt oa my
imount from $20 to $1000
phone or vlilt our neireit
office. Remember, Lift laiar-
ince protection ii included
ia til quotation!. It coiti
rou nothing extra. Fri-iate
interview rooma art always
available to allow the greateit
freedom for diicuuion.
SUNDAY, MARCH 31
CKLN AND
CBC PROGRAMMES
1140 ON THI DIAL
MORNING
8:55—0 Canada
8:5»-C.P.R. Train Time
0:00—BBC Newi
9; IH—rrora Old Vienna
t:S0-Way of the Spirit
9:59—Time Signal
10:00—B.C. Gardener
10:15-CKLN NEWS
10:30—Canadian Party
11:00-CBC Newi
11:04—Capital Reporta
ll:15-Capital ReporU
11:30—Religioui Period
ll:4»-Hellglom Period
AFTERNOON
12:00—New York Philharmonic
Orch.
12:30—New York Philharmonic
Orch.
1:00—New York Philharmonic
Orch.
1:30—Church ot tha Air
2:00-CBC Newi
2:03—Reception   for   Cardinal
McGuigan
2:15-Muilc to Remember
2:30—Hebrew Chrlitlan Hour
(CKLN)
2:45—Gettln' Sentimental (CKLN)
3:_0-Old Favourltei (CKLN)
3:30—Muilcal Program (CKLN)
'3:4J-Muilcal Pregram (CKLN)
4 00— Sunday Serenade (CKLN)
(CKLN)
4:1»—Sunday Serenade (CKLN)
(CKLN)
4:30—Peerleii Newi (CKLN)
4:4J-Strange Ai It Seemi (CKLNi
VOO-Charlie McCirthy Show
.1:30—Weekend Review
5:45—David Evani (CKLN)
5:51—Mel-O-Dea Canarlei (CKLN)
EVENING
-:00-3tago 4«
8:30—Gideon Program
8:45—Gideon Prelum
8:J9—CP.R. Train Time
7:00-CBC Newi
T:l_-The Old Songi
7:10-3unday Night Show
7:45—Sundiy Night Shew
8:0O-BBC Nawireel
l:JO-Roy Lockjley Conduct!
9:00—eiailiei fer Tolly
9:15—Claulci for Today
9:30—Mother and Dad Requeit
(CKLN)
10:00—CBC Newi
10:15—Mother and Dad Requeit
(CKLN)
10:30—God Save the King
ffi
Alexander Pope laid:
"Wordi are like leaves;
and where they most
abound,
Much jruit oj sense beneath ti rarely found."
OUR PRINTING EXPERT
SAYS:
"There ire a hundred una
for SNIPPING TAGS but ai
Pepe aaid "Wordi ara Ilka
leavei" ao wa wlll ba vary
brief and Juit give you three
examplea:
FARMERS need tham ter
thalr produoe.
BUSINESSMEN need thim
for  thalr  merr.handlia.
MANUFACTURBRI need
tham fer ahlpplhg thalr goodi.
Wa oarry a eomplata stock of
Tata In all ilm.
PHONE 144
Nelten Doily Newt
PRINTING DJPARTMENT
Nelion. B. C
Pet yoor arattcr coarealeon,
Cimpbell Finioce allow tivty-
ment term* up to 20 end 21
inn nil, j,,, Oa loui 1300 aad
up 20 montha sts allowed,aad
24 monthi for loinl |)01 iod
up. Thii ffliaaa thu you can
repay ynur loao in nominal
monthly amount! on a soundly
limned bull. Vith the high
*vrl pf taxtl and increued
coit of liting, longer Cimpbell
tartni ara molt helpful in
■yittmitic debt reduction.
From ou many repayment
plini i quallied Cimpbell expert can help you to chooie
|mt tha right one to fit yttr
ipeciil needi.
Pe'
Cimpbell Fimnce pro-rldti t
wider choice for borrower!
wits four different typei of
Iftmi, Mtrrled couplet run
borrow money quick ir without
endortert. Loin, oo ynur
eigniture nnly (up to $100)
ire fui and simple to get, Alio
loini on rtrioui common typei
of itmrity require no enaor-
left, from our four ktodt of
lotni you eto euily lelect t
plin thit will fill every requirement. Of ill the people la
Ctntdt who borrow from
licensed lenders. 1 out of every
4 uiei Cimpbell l:inince—
ipedililtt in perinnil loini
for over 18 yetrt.
SUEC1 M0N1HU HlPAIMtNI HME
111
llii
It
11
M-mthi
M    |    M
Monthi Mtn tht
Itl.M |l   1.14
II
| a.M
I.M
M.M
IN
[ m.h
17.71
l.tt
I7.M
tea
! in.ei
U.Ik
ll.ll
11.M
IM
1U.JI
n.u
I7.M
U.ll
117.11
m
1
M.7I
41.11
Mil
M.M
1M.7I
tea
IM M
U.ll |   41.41
II.M
M.ll
ne
Itl.M
M.ll
M.M
U.ll
M.M
tie*
174. M
ll.ll
74.41
n.M
41.10
AboMtre nnly t few exiaplei of the mmr imimnii to ehooie
from. IVmfnii ihows will rtpty 10UI COmpltielr, ini Min*
Ide li-uurtice. Ae? lot* cjMi leu If ptJa tmer tne pltfaea.
All trirti relict Cimpbeirt rm re-dnctloai. Rttei on louu
1100 gr leu coatidirtbly below lift] -niiim-aa-
HOOtS t TO 1 '
OUT
IPraiNTMNT
«t-i
Uv\NWU\.
I IN 41 CANADIAN anu
j. A. BALLANTYNE, Mgr.
M0 IAKIR ITHIIT PHONE I0M
 — . 	
  "	
	
—
PORTS
ao3
(ton's Ice
Empire Champ
Whips W.lshman
HULL, Yorkihlrt, Englind,
March M (Reuten)—Bruce WooiJ-
cook, Britlih and Britiih Empire
heavyweight boxing chimplon who
meets Taml Mauriello In Naw York
May 13,. tonight eailly defeated
George JamM of Swansea, Welih
tltleholder, the referee itopplng the
fight ln the third round. Jamei wai
sent t« tin 'canvas four tlmei ln
that round.
Theirs In 5 or
$ Games S«
Conf idenl tanucks
link Season
day of ikating arid kid hoc- ( iin	
,t  the Clvid  Ciptr*  »W»
vena' haa  hid  III busiest
yean with aenlor welly
') full iwing and viewed
1,000 fans.
nn'i party Sundiy li
ileM of the fill*** Skat-
lb and waa plnnned wt*
to giving the youngiten in
mity to demonitrite their
II, Excepting for one adult,
pun li entirely In the handi
rmedlate memberi,
like Legion
Men
•ling ln the Colllnion Cup ll).
ompetillon at the Canadian
], starting Monday, will be a
skippered by A. Kraft. The
0 of the team includes J.
Mn, I. Newell, Con Cummini
Anderson. In Friday's paper,
four memben of the team
Itffitd.	
1 Tl il tba aecond oldest city
Unlttd Statea, Jt was settled
iniardi In IM.
iiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiii
California Dey
Delays Opening
Coast Baseball
By thl Canadian Praia
Threati of rain after a long
itretch of biln» weather during
ihi training period became a real.
Ity l» Southern California yelterday (Friday) and forced poitponi-
ment of two opening gamea In the
1940 Pacific Coait Bueball League.
In an afternoon game, Sacramento Solou, icored I M victory
over Loi Angeles- The game how-
aver, wai called in the ilxth Inning because ot rain and darkneii.
The Portjand.Hollywood game, In
the picture capital, and the Seattle-
San Franciico game in the former
.en's ond Ladiei'
HATS
:i«ne_ and  Blocked,
lartnteed Workmanihlp
Prompt' Strvict
inert Factory Mithod
City, were ppitponed.
Oicar Reichow, general man»_
of the Hollywood Stars, said the
Inaugural game between lait
yeari pennant winnen, Portland
Beavers, and the Stan Would be
played tonight, weather permitting,
In Wl game at Sacramento, Alex
Kampourii, Sacramento second
baseman, ilammed a home run In
the aecond inning with a man on
base to give hil team a 2-1 win.
Hera li thi ltneicon.
Lm Angelei     1    I
Sacramento      2    4
Oiboro ind WlUiims; Fletcher
and Marruerl.
Guy Fletcher, right - hander,
pitched thi win tot the Solow betore I crowd of approximately
MOO. Ha allowed three hits.
Thl gima wai halted ln the
fourth whin the ikies opened up
3-0. After
nimed but,
tn tha middle af the sixth, more
rain and darkness itopped the con-
teat
MONTWtAL, March 28 (Cf)-
Coach Dick Irvin and hu high-flying Montreal Canadleni were In the
but of spirits today and greatly
optimistic about the outcome of the
Stanley Cup final serlei itartlng
hen tomorrow night agalnit-Boiton
Brulm,
The Montreileri expect to take
the best-of-seven lerles ln five or,
at moit, tin gamei. Irvin wu happy
to ne Brylna beat Detroit to reach
thi flnils lut night and he eonildered it a lucky break for hil Canucks.
"The boyi have been travelling at
• torrid pace io for and are In that
victory mood. So the ioentr we
Itart the finals the hitter," thl Canadiens coieli iaid.
"Beildei, the Boiton aggregation
whleh we'll face tomorrow night
will be handicapped by the feet
they have Just finished a harder
■tries than we have and havi not
hid time to reit from heivy travelling while we had mora than two
dayi reit end are in the pink of
condition."
Manager Art Row of Beaton wai
eonieioul of that fact too and asked
that the series start here Sunday
instead of Saturday so as to allow
his team more time to rest, but
after long-distance telephone conversations between Roil, Preiident
Mervyn (Red) Dutton of the Na.
tional Hockey League and Maniger
Tommy Gorman of Cinadieni, it
wu decided to begin the serin to
morrow.
Armed Favored
MIAMI, 'TLA., Mireh 28 (AP)-
Tropiitl Park's turf intelligentsia
believes thlt next to death and
taxes the turiit thing around li I
victory for Armed In tomorrow'!
120,000-tdded double event
Warren Wrlghfi celebrated flve-
yur-old won last Saturday'* flnt
dlvlilon of the mill and a furlong
ipeclal ln handy fuhlon-settlng a
track record of 1:48 3-5-and thi
time weights will prevail tomorrow.
Last week the Ctlumet colprbttrtr
wu a 9-to-SO choice and the hack.
stretch boys feel that would be a
good, iquare price thla weekend.
Trainer Ben Jones uld todiy he
will give Jockey Doug Dodaon no
riding Inatruetlona except "Juit use
your own Judgment." .
i._v >'•
P.C.L Season
Opens Today
Hart Trophy
Goes lo
Max Bentley
Muii. » ten -
Bentley brought to
.cage Black Hawki tome miaiure
ot eo«je_etlon todiy for their itlng-
ing defeat In thl Stanley Cup playoffs by being awarded thl National
Hockey League's most prlnti indi
vldual honor, tha Hart Trophy.
Judged by a poll of two sports
writeri ln Uch N.H.L, city to the
player meit useful to hli cldb In
the enttri league, the dirk-hilred
Wutamir idded the till lllvir oup
, It Inch., ML He h.« had only four NILSON DAILY NIWS, SATURDAY, MARCH SO, 1946 -7
leuom In the N.H.L., all of them
Sacramento ww leidln* :
30 minutei. nlay wai rtn
ivy the Hatter
121  Hllllnga St Weit,
t   Vincouvir, B. O,
PLAYOFF
SCHEDULES
■y Tht Ctnadian Pren
Allan Cup playoffi tonight:
BAIT
Butem Canada leml-flnal—Pembroke Lumber Klngi va Hamilton
Tigeri it Toronto, flrit fame of
but-of-thru series
WEIT
None.
-SAN FRANCISCO, Mareh 29 (AP)
—The Pacific Cout League, sport-
1 ing iti new AAA Bueball claMifl-
6 catiort and with itrengthmed teimi,
openi Its Mth seaion today weather
permitting.
Opening games of the eight-club
circuit—an all-California opening is
usual—wire faced with threat* of
rain after a long stretch of balmy
weither.
With every 'dub boasting reinforcements, either through the return of players from military ier-
vlce or help from big leegue teams,
a rejl-hot race for the 1946 pennant
wu forecast.
Portland, 1945 pennant winner,
with what shapes up ai the strongest
Itching itaff in the leigue, and Loi
ngelu, backed by the parent .1-
Champ lo Sleep
WW YOWC Mwek » (AP)
Rocktbye Rocky Oratlano, boxing's
molt devastating right hind puncher In years, knocked out Welterweight Champion Marty Servo tonight In the second round ef a non-
title Hereunder that wis thi hottest
betting md biggest money bout between two little men in Madison
Square Garden hisory. Graziano
weighed 1)9; lerve 144V..
Levelling with hli "Sunday
punch" from the opening bell of
the tint round, the local Eait Side
■lugger caught up with baby-faced
Marty eirly in Uie second heat and
cruihed him to the unvu three
tlmu with Juit ibout eviry punch
in the book, before Referee Arthur
Donovan stepped in and halted lt at
1 minute, 52 seconds of the session.
Outweighed by 7.4 pounds and
without a real teat under his belt
since leaving the Coast Guard sev.
eral months ago—it only took him
four easy round! to Win the 147-
pound crown from ted Cochrane in
February — Servo nevir had •
chance to untraek himself tonight
against the explosivei Rocky pack
ed In his gloves.
to tbl league icorlng title.
Announcement of the award came
lite todiy and laft only tha Calder
Trophy and the Stanley Cup Itself
itill to be decided. Thl Colder
Trophy will go to thl ItMU l'l «M|t-
putsttndlng rooklt pt tht  1945.4-
tiuon,
Fuller thli week the Lady Byng
T«#W went to Hector (Toe) Blake
of Montreal Canadian! for fine
sportmanihlp coupled with • high
iWMUrd of playing ibllity. Another
Cantditn, till Durnan, won the
Vulm Trophy u thi leigm'i hist
goaltender.
ARMY  VETERAN
Bentley, who centrei the line
which hu his brother Doug and
Bill Motienko on tho wings, came
biek to professional hockey after
two years ln the army and picked
up where be left off. ,
With 70 icorlng points In 1942-43,
hi wu only three points behind
brother Doug who led the leigue
and this season, when pointi wire
harder to get all along the line, he
topped the leigue with tl, nine
more than second-place Gaye Stewart of Toronto Maple Leafs. He had
3fr|OI_ll ajd Jl HslsU.      .
Even when Bentley missed nine
gamei because of I l«g Injury his
feed wasn't threatened.
Born in Dellile, Suk., Max is 26,
weighs 155 pounds and is five feet
with Chicago. Incidentally, he la
ona af the letgut'i eltaneit playen
with only 16 minutei ln pemltiu
agalnit blm ln regular play during
^nSyiJttjW Chlptgo play-
er to win thi Hirt Trophy, donated
ln 1H0-I4 by the Ute Dr. David
Hart, father of Cecil Htrt who twlct
guldtd Cinidimi to Iht Stanley
Cup. Elmer Lich, Canadlem' centre,
won thf tropby hit uuon.
Exhibition Ball
Boston (N) 13, Cincinnati (N) I.
St. Louis (N) J, Boiton (A) J.
Philadelphia   (A)   11,  Louisville
(AA) I.
Baltimore (I) 0| Philadelphia (N)
' Cleveland (A) 11, Dtlroit (A) 11.
■ i.     mi ■-
Bantam All-Stan
to Meet F.A.C.
Falrvltw Athletic Club's Bantam
hockey iqutd, current Btntam
League chtmpi ind winners of the
Wood, Vallance Cup, mut an all-
star Bantam turn chosen from the
Curling News Features Nelson
Summer rSpiel Attractions;
.
mt of thl league teami In the an
nual League Champion vl All-Stan
game at the Civic Arena thli morn.
in'g at 1:30, Thl F.A'.C.'l will pre-
aent their uiual league lineup; while
th# playeri from the Aii-stan will
bo composed of Grundy ond Ackert
for goal, Ray Johnion, Jack Stringer, VI9 Bialkowski and George
Tralnor, defense; Laurence Ludlow,
Keith Coskey, Alvin Towriis, Fred
Anderson, Gene Nutter, Jack Wood-
all, Gene Mclnnes, Ray Poulln,
Louie DelPuppo, Leo Choquette and
Jim Reld, forwardi.
WANT DATE CHANGE
WINNIPEG, Mirch 29 (CP)-The
Manitoba Golf Association will aik
tht Royal Canidlin Golf Association to change the date of the Canadian amateur tournament to be
held In Jtdmonton Anguit B-6-7-I-9
10 becauie It conflicts with the
$12,900 open tournament icheduled
to begin hiri Aug. 9.
July lit 1| iome dlittnct off, but
•ontintntal eurlen ihould loia no
lime In miking plain to ittend the
iecond Annual Mld-Summer Bonipiel at Nelion, July 1-6, uld the
forth American Curling Newi In
Iti flnil iuue for the uuon. The
ptptr, printed to keep eurlen up
on the newi, wu published In Superior, Wisconsin.     '
"Curling drawl made In • rose
tini Wpi to pointi of Interut nearby, Including the world famoui
WiwwffiTHM Iprlnii. ilong with
other trials win offered al will
11 excellent lei and keen compli-
tlon to round out perfect curling
expedition," lut. year, thl paper
Ilm.
Kooteniy Ladlea Curling Alio.
elation took a prominent place
when the piper curled tho hiitory
Ot thl. Kooteniy Ladies Bonipiel
Aiioclitlon tnd in account of tht
Eighth Annuil Ladiei Bonipiel a'
Nilion. Both itories wire submit
ted by Mn. f. A. Wallace.
In 1136, the newly formed Nel
ton Ladles' Curling Club Invited
ladies front Trail to a friendly dayi
curling, tha piper aitd. Thirty-six
curleri arrived by bus in the early
morning, and pliy continued ell
diy, winding up with a banquet in
the evening. This led to a small
delegation of ladies getting together to form • Bonspiel Club,
which held tha first organized Bonspiel In Trail In 1939.
In 1040 lach club put up a cup
and. the retiring pruldent of the
Nelion club put up a trophy, the
Gansner Grind Aggregate' trophy,
which each host club, In their turn,
supports.
Cranbrook Coniolation cup wis
idded at Kimberley in 1941. The
fifth bonipiel wu at Trail with 16
rink! taking pirt ind thi nixt year,
at Nelion, thin wu » entry of
17 rlnki.
Grand Aggregate wlnneri of ill
prevloui yetri took pert In the 1940
spiel.
Cranbrook Ladiei1 Qub wu
formed in 1924, with Mri. Dr. J.
H. King, wife of tbe present Senator King, es honorary president.
This ytar the club had ■ membership ot 30.
The ladies alio gained front page
•pice, for twlct In tht hiitory of
the Kootenay Ladles Bonipiel, one
rink played nine eight end games
In ont day. In 1940, Mri. T. A. Wallace'! rink et Nelion, played eight
gamei in a row u did Mri. C. Norrli In 1946.
"Even the unillir figure adds
up to 64 endi in ona day, Are we
men or mice—or can It be thi eli-
rniti?" thi article laid.
Canadiens Knock
Out Sh Fall
OTTAWA, Mirch 29 (CP)-Mon-
treil Cinadieni tonight ellmlmted
Ottawe St. Patrick's College Juniors In an Eaitern .Canada Memorial
Cup semi-final playdown, defeating the Celts 9-4 to iweep their
best-of-three lerles In two itraight
gamei.
Montreal now wUJ advance
agalnit the winner of tht other
semi- final between Copper Clift
and Toronto St. Michael's College.
'
EM
BICYCLES
AND ACCESSORIES
SEE
SAM BROWN
Gun, Leek, life and Cyelt Worki
PHONI 1046 , BOX H7
'li
Ditching staff
Angelu, backed by the pa
cago Cubs, were general co-favor-
#«K>rili Qi».p_iyot_i • Ualght:
Ontirlo final—Copper Cliff Redmen
Vi Toronto SL Michael'i at Toronto
(afternoon), iecond game of best-of-
three series, St. Michael'i leads 14.
WIST
Wtitem Canada flnil—Winnipeg
Monirchs vs Edmonton Canadians
It Edmonton, third gtme of bett-of
)|pplllimillMH|llmilHIII|llllf "vm urlti, Ued 1-1
ites in the pre-seesop selections.
Hollywood, Sacramento, San
Fnnclsee and Seattle were expect,
ed to battle it out for the other two
first division spots with Oakland
and San Diego trailing.
Aside from many new playing
faces, the 1946 uuon wlll mark thl
COIlt league managerial debut ot
Cuey Stengel, who skippered Bolton Braves and Brooklyn Dodgers
' "ring 1 colorful major league car-
•: He will manage Oakland.
i
VM WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION
BOARD
NOTICE TO BUILDERS
Workmen employed on construction work In any lnduitry
IT tht Wtrkmtn't Compensation Act art tuttmatlMlly tntltled te
irotectlon whleh the Act provides.
it All /ther comtructlon week  (Including rieonstruetlon, rt-
iltiraflon or demolition of any building) ll nop deemed to bt
n tht icope of the Aet, provided:
MM. Gel Jump
3-2 on Dodgers
M.R.K. Mldgeti, who finiihed ln
third place In the Midget Leigue,
tad who eliminated F.A.C. Midgtti,
second rung finishers, eirly ln thl
wtek with two wlni, got the jump
on tht Dodgen, Leigue champlom,
Frldiy afternoon, with e 3-2 victory
ln the opener of a two-game total
goal seriei for the Midget Cup.
Except for the M.R.K.'i third period winning goal, icorlng wu confined to the tint period, when Irwin netted from Christmson's paw,
and Pottl netted unassisted, to glvt
the M.R.-C. a two-goal lead, which
WE'RE SPEARIM OF
1.  That tht construction, reconstruction, repair, filtration or demolition wai commenced in er tfter
April 1, 1941, md
_.   That tnt or mort workmtn ire employed, tnd
3.   Thlt thl construction, reconstruction, repilr, till thl
tr
mart.
teratlon, tl demolition hu, In the opinion tf IV
Board, an animated Vllut er coit tf 12,500.00 1
Any employtr hiving suoh workmin or workman li niw rite register with the Board ky submitting in estimate of thl
11 expendlturt and to piy thl aistumint dut 1(1 connection
&
ilth, Fermi fer thli purpose may bt obtained from tht under-
I, together with tueh othtr Information 11 miy bt required,
Fillure to eomply with the requirements ef thi Wtrkmin'l
nation Aet rendera tht tmpliyir Nolle fir tht statutory
Address   Inquiries tl:
,1946.
The Workman's Compensation
411  Dunimulr Street,
Vancouvtr, I, C.
Beard
I N»
wight 6:05 p. mi
IMPERIAL OIL
STANLEY CUP
lockey Broadcast
CKLN
I Montreal vi. Boiton
____t____*
tht Dodgers, however, quickly can
Stalnton icorlng unassisted,
ind Bachynikl converting Hyssop's
siss. The lecond period wu score-
ess, and Pickering near the clue
of the game geve the MRK. the
winning margin when he drew
Stedile out ot tht goal ind ihot Into
empty net. Ittdlla'i pity wai
outitandlng, however, and the icore
eould have been om-ilded.
The penalty box wei populated
ilmoit exclusively by Dodgers, who
received five penaltlei ln tha first
ptriod—two to Kennedy, two to
Stainton, and one to Hyssop. Kennedy --'aj also sent off ln the third.
Pickering and PitU Mrvtd tht only
M.R.K. penalties. •
Teams will meet again it 7 tm.
Saturday to finish tha series.
Teams were:
M.R.K.-Scott, goal; Pickering,
Anderson, Irwin, Pltti, Chrlitenion,
Wellbourn, Loewen, Robbini.
Dodgtri — Stedile. goil; Staples,
Ntlion, McLtin, Stalnton, Btrhyn-
ikl, Hyuop. Kennedy, Trlckett,
Malr.
Referees, Jot Longden, Danny
Kraft; Scorekeeper, Leroy Hyuop;
Timekeeper, Don Grundy.
Ilir-dod Vtt to      »
Assist Trainer
ITHACA, NY, Mtrch Jl (AP)-
Rlehtrd P. La France, . per.
nenlly blinded by 1 ihell bunt In
Oerminy, ll returning to hli belov.
ed football U uiiittnt athletic
trainer at Cornell University.
"Thin isn't a thing hi cin't do
In thli business," uld Trtlnir Fnnk
Kivinaugh, who, undintindlng Lt
Frinci'sTove of iporti, recommended the appointment. It becomes effective April 10.
Dick wu in tthltti at Ithict
Hlih School.
On hli return to the United Stttti
Li Prince ebtilned in Mttndtd
liave during which Kavanaugh de-
vottd leveral weeki to tetchlng him
Iht tricks of thl tride.
Rtcently tht town of Ithaca col-
ltettd »i3.ooo to build 1 homi for
Dick ind hli wlft.
Iiyi Lt Frinu: "I'm lucky."
FLKTWOOD. tngland (CP) -
Dslly rtlurn ittimir Itrvlct be-
twttn thli Ltnciihlrt town tnd
Douglu, lilt of Mm, luiptndtd
during the wtr, will be reiumed
ntxt July.
Thousands of Canadian boys-ions, brothers, husbands-
•re returning from the wars-Returning to what promises to be a happy
tomorrow ... a tomorrow that many gave their Hves to bring about.
A tomorrow that may be held back if immoderate or unessential
spending brings about inflation... if onr desires are not confined
to temperate limits... if the many strange ideas and
philosophies that are with us today are not carefully considered
and moderated to suit our needs and way of living.
The real enjoyments and full pleasures of gracious living are possible
only to the man who practices moderation—in everything he does.
The Houie of Seagram suggests that we think of tomorrow—
and be moderate in all we do.
THE HOUSE OF SEAGRAM
%JU«M9!U*4^
_^_.
' ti
--
 .,   . \ izm\-\}-mw*—mmm*»
a — NE150N DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MARCH 30, IW
TODAY'S News Pictures
pp,iVWW,..,.
KINDERGARTEN PICKETS TAKE OVER;
A kindergarten picket line took over at the Weil-
Inghouie plant, Chicago, III., where 600 worken
have been on strike for two months. Here tha
amall "plcketi", children of the itrlkeri, parade
Intrant of the plant Thay may not understand all
tha Isiuei of a labor dispute, but the signs they
carry prove they understand tho main Isiuei.
HERE FOR UNO; One of the
principal memben of the British
Military Staff Committee of the
United Nations Organization, Air
Chief Manhal Sir Guy Garrod,
arrived In New York for the opening of the UNO Security Council
meeting on March 26 at Hunter
College,
RUSSIAN DELEGATE! Looking
very forlorn Indeed, Carl Jareker,
Ruulan delegate to the United
Nationa Organization, Is ihown at
New York, after his arrival by bus
from Montreal, Canada. Jareker
flew from Moscow to Montreal by
RCAF plana.
DODGERS SOUTHPAW: Vic
Lombardi, Dodgen southpaw, told
newsmen he would win 16 or
more games thli yesr. He won
nine and loit tO lait year.
NOW ITS NYLON AT BOTH ENDS: Nylon, which did a
mighty bit to glamorize the legi of the ladiei, li now doing a ditto
act for her crowning glory. Neweat thing li the nylon comb, which
lovely Mary Healy, Hollywood starlet. U using here. The comb Is flexible, yet strong enough to withstand strain of grooming the heaviest
hair. It can be sterilized with boiling water, wlll not burn, even when
expoied to an open flame, and wlll not malt at extreme-timperaturei.
Teeth can be bent to the ultimate angle of 180 degreei without breaking and beat of all, It sella for 25 and 60 cenU, depending on the modal
choien.
i
J
JtyJamaWKulci
FOR UNUSUAL LINENS'. Zinnias mean color, Oo theu In applique or In plain stltohary with
daih of laay-dalsy flowen In a
contrasting color for zip. Fun!
Un odds and ends of material
for this antique. Pattern 886 hai
transfer of 8 motifs, 2_x3'/2 to 9x1
Inches; applique pieces.
Sand TWENTY CENTS (20c) In
for this pattern. Print plainly
coins (stamps cannot be accepted)
SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NUMBER.
Send your order to Dally Newi
Pattern Department, Nelion, B. C.
I SAT UP AU.
NIGHT CREATING ,
HORRIBLE   Vth&YTJ
FEMALE "*} BETTER
CHARACTER^),   BE
CHIEF tl* /GOOD,
H-HOPE. \OJ ) GOOCH.
LIKE 'HAT-
THATS'HAIRY YmWBEYOUUGO
HAZEi:-SHE ^roR-JJATETHt
S*tWWGLE5HDJl3K»Xre''HEK '
VICTIMS WITH HER) SKATES ARE
---X>--r-;/5HARPA*5
•MVaORS-SHE
SLICES tM INTO
.STEAKS.*"
GOOD FUTURE: Jack Oraham,
who lait played for Montreal In
1943, li making icntttlonal itridei
with tha Oodgen, at flnt baseman. .
Titian WaaILi
"SEW" EASY!: No aide seami In
skirt or  bodlcal What could  be
I simpler to sewf Pattern 9327  li
i  really the "imarteit-ever" wrap-
and-tle frick, Openi flat for very
eaiy ironing.
Pattern 9327 comes In tlzei 12.
14, 16, 18 and 20. Siie 16, dreu, 3'/-
yardi 36-Inch fabric.
Send -iWENTY CENTS (20c) In
coins (stamps csnnot be accepted)
for thii pattern. Print plainly
SIZE. NAM-E. ADDRESS. STYLE
NUMBER.
Send your order tp Dally Ntwi
Pattern Department. NeUon. B.C.
AUNT HET
They'll Do It Every Time
By Jimmy Hatlo
But let IHE
LITTLE WOMAN
BE 5 MINUTES
LATE-MUROER.
HE SAy§'
sHO-'VlS®:
WheCeTHE
f-A««*T»HAv'E
VOU BEEN? VOO
SAID lb MEET
oaocu>
TWlVi -Ot) WW Tttt WHOLE STOW, BUI. 1TURKD
TASK) LOOSE —JUST AS Ik PRM* TO
SCAR. TOT WINTER. I B»^/ninJ wuv OOMT
•mut she'd be nun.! /mKtKum
YOU'RE LEWI bi) WE'RE SCTH IN I JM*. INSTEAD Of MV Wit*
IH IN A JAM,      SAC/, WHY DON'T YDU COME WITH ME f
DISAPr-Utl T06ETHER... JU'.T YOU
MY DARUNS...T0 A FAR AY*. SOUTH-,
kMMMt.
"It may be true that smokln'
helps you. to reduce, but I tried a
puff once and Td rattier have a
good taste In my mouth and stay
fat"
SAarcSAWQ
"Send up that aawa ut front the
eluh. I don't oara how musical It
UThe boya here wtll Ilka IV
 a_
 .     ' I
FARM, GARDEN & NURIERY
PHONE 144
IIRTHS_
fI4NCH-To~ Mr.   and   Mrs.
Rl Rowling at Kelowna Qen-
ospital March IB a son, Har-
jrman  (a brother for Sylvia
PUBLIC NOTICES
WALNUT TREW, VIKING RASP,
berries, gooseberries, Black Barry
Canes, Blaok Currants, Grapes,
Rhubarb Roots, British Sovereign
Strawberries, Lily ot the Valley,
Bleeding Hearts, Peonies, Lilacs,
Snowball, Red Splrea, Pride ot
Roehastar. His Vanoouver SC,
Walnut, drove Nunarlei, Mn. C
Becker.
BTHUt—To Mr. and Mrs. I
Inter, 424 Nelson Avenue, at
Bay Lake General Hospital,
I 28, a daughter, Sandra
lain.
HELP WANTED
are commencing bpero-
i_Aprll 1st ond need a num-
pf men for underground
-former employees
se note.
[
Apply to
festern Exploration
Co. Ltd.
Silverton, B.C.
WANTED
YOUNG MAN
ireferably with experience
IR GROCERY BUSINESS
IN TRAIL
ply, stating experience with
erences to Box 1068, Daily
NTED —GIRL TO WORK
t furniture store. Receiving
Oods and packing furni-
jre. 19 to 25 years old.
tost be neat and accurate
•ith ability to learn selling.
ypplyBox 1441 Doily News.
Hfto - AT ONCE young
•pie market garden work,
parate house. Rent. Shares oi
Sea. Must drive Truck. E. C.
>«, Box 114, T__ B.C.
RED-B-fftRttlNCM. GlftL
-Woman for general household
ties. Mrs. A. D. Emory, 811
ftum Street
"GOVERNMENT   LIQUOR  ACT"
. (Section 28)
NOTICE OP APPLICATION FOR
A BIER LICENCE
NOTICE it hereby given that on
the 1711) day ot April next, the
undersigned Intends to apply to tbe
Liquor Control Board tor a licence
In respect ot premise* being part
ot a building known-si Plnehurst
Inn, situate at South Slocan, British
Columbia, upon tha lands described
as part ot 'Parcel No. Two (J), Explanatory Plan 718-1 of, Parcel No
1, ot sub-lot "B" of Lot SOS, accord,
ing to Map numbered 872, Oroup 1,
Kootenay District, Nelson Land
Registration District, In the Prov
lnca o( British Columbia, (or tha
sale of beer by tha glass or by tba
bottle for consumption on the premises.
DATED this 20th day of March
1046.
William James Gordon Oliver,
Grace Lillian Oliver.
 Arthur Douglas Oliver
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ESTATE or MARY AUGUSTA
TOWNSEND, DECEASED
NOTICE Is hereby given that Let
teti of Administration of the est'
tate of Mary Augusta Townsend,
who died at Nelson, B.C. on the
16th day of April, 1044, wera on
February 10th, 1048 granted to
Montague Edward Harper, Official
Administrator, and that all persons having claims against the said
estate are regulred to file particulars thereof with the undersigned
solicitors on or before the 15th day.
of April, 1048, after which date the
estate assets will be distributed
among the persons entitled having
regard only to the clalmi which
shall then have been (lied as above
required.
DATED at Nelson. B.C. this 18th
dav of March, 1048.
O'SHEA. GARLAND Ic OANSNER
P.O. Box 400, Nelson, B.C.
Solicitor! for tha Administrator
dHHVBA-THnMWMS:' BARfl?
early flowering varieties. Order
now for-early spring deliveries,
varieties iuch as yellow Utopia,
§oltou, primrose, suttcllffe, etc.
pecial prices tor commercial
growers, large stock available,
Catalogue on request. Bellevue
Nursery, 8200 Bellevue Rd.,
Victoria.
ammmw at
_ Bi5_m~m
1's, II named varieties, 8 bulbi
of ea., tor .Ot. Dehllai, perennials, raspberries, strawberries,
grapes, shrubs' and rose bushes.
Sand toi "
Nelson.
for list. Rosemont Gardens,
CiLADtftLUS.' KOin   AND
shrubs. Glad, special, nothing bet.
tar, No. 1 SJc dot, $4.25 per 100.
My roses ara tops, 75c each, $7.90
a dozen. Catalogue free. H.
Kitchener, Nelion.
um otowHTAi-ffi vuawfl
raspberry cinei, 78c per doien.
Cory Thornless Blackberries $1.00
par dozan. Gooseberries and black
curranti, large, 80o aach. T. Roy
non, View Street, Nelson.
WALNUT TttEE'S^rSEfc ClKW-
lars available. Write Jack Gellat
ly, Canada's leading producer of
new and better nut treea Box 10,
Westbank, B.C.
PLANT "MAGLIO" PLM TREKS,
preferably two for pollination,
$2.00 each. Write C. Magllo, 620
Robson St., Nelson, B.C. Ph. 841-L.
MACHINERY
FOR SALE-BLACK CURRANT
bushes, 4 yrs. old $1 each, Also
blackberries. R. C. McNown, RR1,
R.R.I.
RASttaSRArtS. LLdYD'ol-ftltse.
Tacoma, and Washington, 75e
doien. $5.50 per 100. Mac's Greenhouse.
RENTALS
WANTED TO RENT BY APRIL 1
Apartment or housekeeping
roomi furnished or unfurnished
Or unfurnished house by reliable
party. 1 child, 8 years old. Good
reference. Phone 030-X.
Wft) - STRONG BOY, 16
ars old for Dally News Press
om, nights. Apply 0 p.m. to
.Brown.
rrtsa
WOMAN FOR GEN-
tl housework, able to cook,
od wagea. Apply Tourist's
ltd, BWar, B.C.
I WAtffl-D FOR FRUIT AND
Ity farm. Apply Mrs. Gansner,
ghum. Phone 188-R2. 	
d - m_nmm high
teacher. Salary 17.00 a day.
School Board, Salmo.
[ABLE HELP IN
ie   until   2   p.m.   Box   1432
News.      '
IOOM AND INSTRUCTION
ivil Service
xaminations
rire NOW for Spring and
examinations—Letter Car-
, Postal Clerk, Clerk 1 & 2,
torns Clerk, etc. Full partic-
rs upon request to MC.C.
IJ Service School, 801 En-
Ion Bldg., Winnipeg, Man,
est ln  Canada. No Agents.
WANTED AT ONCE BY YOUNG
Scotch Canadian couple with 2
children 12 and 0 years, to rent
small ranch. P.O. Box 442, Kulo,
B.C.
WANTED—HOUSE OR SUITE BY
May 1. Returned man over 5
years service. Permanent resld'
dent. Phone 804-R2.
WANTED TO RENT-JULY AND
August. Summer cabin, N. Shore
Ph. 643-L or write Box 1370
Daily News.
WANTED TO RENT - SMALL
house or apart turn, or partly
furnished. Phone 884.      i
WANTED, MISCELUNEOUS
WANTED-SEVERAL CARLOADS
or planed lumber moitly 2x4'a,
shlplap and boards. Write Royal
Lumber Yardi Ltd, Calgary, Al
berta.
SHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS
or iron. Any quantity. Top pricei
paid. Active Trading Company,
916 Powell St.. Vancouver. B.C.
EARLV MUM CUTTINGS, NAMEB
varieties, ready any tlma. Les
Bealby, Box 87, Nelson.
AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES
To Give You Better Service
Our mechanics hava Just completed  another  course  at  the
Chrysler
Service
School
held In Nelson this week at
PEEBLES
Motors Ltd.
Direct Factory Representatives,
Chyrsler Corp.
"LITTLE GIANT"
PQKTABLE
SAWMILLS
Cut up to 20,000 feet per day.
Easy te set up, economical to
operate. No priorities required,
no sales tax.
TWO SIZE!
with 3-head block carriage, TO
ft. long, ln 2 sections.
$140.00 f.o.b. Nelson
With 2-haad blpck. carriage, 18
ft long, ln 1 section,
8740.00 f.o.b. Nelson
WrlU or call and see them at
NELSON
MACHINERY &
EQUIPMENT CO.
Phone 18    214 Hall St.    Nelson
"If  lt'i  machinery you  want,
consult us."
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND
FARM SUPPLIES, ETC-
THC  WHICH .... ...
chick; Give RMW
These famous chlcki In ever Increasing quality have been raised
by successful poultrymen tor ovar
23 yeara.
They ire again available la the
following breads-
White Leghorns, R. I. Reda, Barred
Rocks and Naw Hampshlrei,
A letter Will bring full particulari end ptlces by return.
Order early and remember
"ITS RESULTS THAT COUNT
Rbwp&Sendall
1 - LTD.J _WkWk_\
BOX N, LANGLEY PRAIRIE, B.C.
Bos N Vernon, EC
(Branch Hatchery)
CABLE-PIPE-STEEL PLATE
28,000 ft, Vi, new flexible galv.
cable, Sc per ft; 25,000 ft., 3-18, new
flexible galv. cable, 4c per ft.;
50,000 ft, 7-16, In 1800-ft lengths,
slightly used plow steel cable, 7ttc
per ft; 40,000 ft, 0-16, in 1500-ft
lengths slightly used plow steel
cable, 10c per ft; 4-inch semi-steel
vises, $8; large stock all sizes pipe
and fittings; large stock new jteel
plate remnants; new Gilchrist logging Jacks, $75; new hand winches,
fa.
ATLAS IRON Sc METALS LTD
250 Prior St. Vancouver
WANTED TO BUY-TWO COOK-
stoves ln first class condition.
Second hand. Box 1430 Daily
News.
2 TON INTERNATIONAL TRUCK
suitable for farm work or can be
converted into farm tractor, with
hydraulic hoist and body. Moynes
Motors, Trail, B.C.
WANTED NO. 35L6 RADIO TUBE
or small electric radio to rent.
Phone 908-L.
WANTED IN GOOD CONDITION
pocket camera and boy's tricycle.
Phone 572-Y.
SHIP YOUR HIDES TO J. P. MOR-
gan, Nelson. B.C.
TUATIONS WANTED
ites under this heading lie
line, 44c a line per week,
10%   for   cash.  Minimum
fUENCED    COMPTOMfeTER
iter   desires  position.   Good
ices. 3484-10 Ave. W. Vac-
.    g ft
TWS - witXstW ffl
home or mine. Ph. 584-R1.
CANARIES, BEES, ETC.
SALE   -   REGISTERED
; spaniel pups, black or gold.
J. Barlee, Mountain Gar-
' Okanagan Mission, B.C.
[SALE—COCKER SPANIEt
ottle pups. Glenwood Ken-
120 Trans-Canada West
rack.
(ESS OPPORTUNITIES
>-TAILORING OR DRY
Buslneu ln  Kootenay.
. Box 1271 Daily News.
ton Daily JJruw
[   TELEPHONE 144
kified Advertising Rote
I per Une per Insertion
| per line per week (6 con
pve insertions for cost of 4}
3 a line a month
I times)
taium 2 llnei per Insertion
: numberi 11c extra. This
I any number of times
UC (LEGAL) NOTICES,
TENDERS. ETC.
JT line first Insertion and
•eh subsequent insertion.
"   ABOVE RATES  LESS
OR PROMPT PAYMENT
RIPTION RATES
NEW AND USED PARTS FOR ALL
makes of cars. City Auto Wreck'
ers. Box 24, Granite Road.
WANTED tt TON TRUCK MUST
be   in   good   condition.   Box   1406
Daily News.
Up to the 16th century, Sweden
had an elective monarchy under
which the people had the right to
depose as well as elect thalr Kings.
DAILY CROSSWORD
Ukl ale
Body of
water
Warlike
S-ahaped
moldings
River (Sib.)
Street-car
(Brit)
Masurium
(sym.)
Conjunction
River
(Chin.)
Cigarette
(slang)
Awing
A weight
(Turk.)
29. Not many
27. Principal
aurface
20. Leader of a
religious
movement
31. Bird
(Hawaiian)
38. Air Corps
(abbr.)
84. Radium
liym.)
18. Flowering
herbs
87, Thick
88. Bristlelike
part
80. Birds, u I
claaa
I   .OS
I 13.00
_____..!   .78
„     too
    400
8.00
■we rales apply In Canada,
~ SUtes and United King-
J subscribers living out-
regular carrier area
Habere and to Canada
I extra postage is required:
jtlonth $1 50: three months
fllx ii."i.Hi'. $800: one year
»eppy _z-
■Tier, per week
dvenco  —
—tier, per year	
Ill outilde Nenon:
..■ii"iitli   	
• montha	
Months  	
vear
ACROSS 5.
1. Birthplace     8.
of
Mohammed 7,
8. Two-year-     8.
oldialmon
11. Per. to are*   0.
12. Anxloui.      10.
13. Uka tin
14. Sphere of     18.
action
IB. Comfort      11.
16. dang 20.
17. A kind of
diffusion      21.
(phyalca)
21. Distant    '   M.
23. Melody        14
24. From
26. Too
28. Body of wtter
80. Gallium
(sym.)
81. Wild pig
85. A bench ln
a church
t6. Pulpy, tr opl-
calfruit
18. Keep
40. Deicry
43. AU
48. Cavities
(Anat)
46. Taut
47. Religion of
the Moelemr
48. Donkeya
40. Suppoaae
DOWN
1. Offlcf r en t
merchant ahlp
3 Silkworm
3. Examlnens
of printed
matter
4. Walking
atlrka
rRVPTOQUOTT.—A cryptogram quotation
maw num
:-.21'-.i4  »>MI:1
mmsu ismm
lltls'li   It's,   Alf
um _-.a__i_.__ Ml!
9 .kii:*-| i ■_■ nasi
ia;iHiJ.'4kiu
nils. filflll'JUH
_ft i.w*:w -Oii
_..::■•> mm 'j.'-'_
-.•..SI.at  lii-i« .u
!:.<■)M  mm
.iu'.vi aitam
Vt.ltrliy', Ana,,
41. Child's
carriage
(ihortened)
42. Sweet
potato**
44. Affirmative
reply
46. Help
ISV   B*fO   OIFWD   AUDO,   DHLS    FLIDO
DRL   RID   OU   DIC —CUHSE.
Taaterteye Crypto-juotei    HZ RECONCILED Af BIST HU
OOULD OLD FAITH AND FANCIES NBW—WHITTIBR.
Distributee br Klai Faetune Hnclictli. lm
For Sale
1 U.S.A. Model A. D03 No.
13401 Chicago Pneumatic Diesel (semi) 2 cylinder—18Vi"
bore—21" stroke 200 horsepower—230 RPM Horizontal
Crosshead Type, including
starting air tanks and accessories. ,
1 U.S.A. Type ATB1 No.
304836 240 KW Genersl Electric Belted,Generstor 3 phsse,
80 cycle, 480 volts, 600 RPM
with instrument panel, and
voltage regulator.
1 U.S.A. No. 112770 General
Electric belted exciter 125
volt, 950 RPM.
All ln first-clan condition.
Writs to
422 GORE STREET
Nelson, B.C., or Phone 225R.
HAMBLEY ELECTRIC CHICKS
Immediate Delivery
Call, Write or Telephone
F.O.B. ABBOTSfORD, B.C.
R.OP. SIRED
W. Leg  16.00   8.50 4.23
W.L.  Pull.  32.00 16.50 8.25
W.L. Ckls    4.00   2.50 1.50
APPROVED.
W. Leg  14.00   7.80 3.75
W. L. PuU 20.00 15.00 7.50
W.L. Ckls    SOO   2.00 1.00
HAMBLEY  SPECIAL
MATING APPROVED
N. Hamps  17.00   0.00 4.80
N. H. PuU.   81.00 16.00 8.00
N.H. Ckls.  11.00   6.00 3.28
APPROVED  '
N. Hamps  15.00   8.00 4.00
N. H. Pull  28.00 14.50 7.25
N. H. Ckls    0.00   5.00 3.00
Guaranteed  100%  live arrival.
Pullets 96% accuracy.
Hambley  Special  Mating  Approved  from  Pedigreed  Sired
Matings.
J. J.   HAMBLEY
HATCHERIES
AbboUIord, B. C.
PROP|RTY, HOUto, FARMS
55535
FOR SALE
1. Stucco reildence, two bedrooms, and cement foundation.
S*!.k,  fWO
CASH PAYMENT . $2300.00
Balance arranged. Quick
occupancy.
ALSO
2. Attractive bungalow, 1 bedrooms etc. Oarden loti, one and
« fraction. Oood location. It will
this. Occupancy In CTTJUI
30 daysTlFSrprlee ..„ ?»«♦"»
ALSO
t. Tourlit Camp Site, approximately 48 acrei, good lake front-
8a, about 1 mile' from Gray
eek Ferry, lncludei t cabins
and service station and dwelling combined. Pumps, etc. Creek
runs through property. Suitable
lo garage mechanic CIUM)
and .wife. Wee i   *******
ALL'CASH REQUIRED
AND
4.   1 1-3 acres and house, dose
to  town.  A  few  fruit trees.
pT. nwo
ALSO
8. 6 acrei and imall cottage,
ona room, about 12x20. Good
cement and stone foundation,
about tt acre in nnr- €1200
den. AU cash     *?*e-_vv
C.W. Appleyard
& Co.
Established 38 yean
Real Estate and Iniurance
Phona 269 302 Baker St
Price
fci'iAU-* room mm
t6 ALL 6U¥__fts of UAH?
CHICKS IN 1948.
Your future profits from poultry will be determined by the quality of itock you buy. Our new
poultry farm, backed by thirty
yean poultry breeding experience, Is devoted exclusively te tha
production of strong, healthy,
production-bred stock. Only birds
on this farm are used to produce
our babv chicks ln White Rocks,
R.OJ.. Sired While Leghorns and
New Hampshires. Write for our
Illustrated 1946 price list
APPLEBY POULTRY FARM
Mission City, B.C.
EARLY CHICKS WILL flE'THT!
most profitable ln 1048. Order
now for January, February and
March. Ntw Hampshire, White
Leghorn, and First-Cross chicks.
We operate under R.O.P, and
hatchery approval aid Use (miy
eggs from our own flock. BOM-
FORD ORCHARDS, Penticton.
WYlARS TRODUCINO QUALrlY
7 breeds, also popular hybrids,
chicks, started chicks, 4 weeks
to laying pullets, cipons. Oet complete list now. Fruer Chlckeries,
118 Alderson Ave, New Westminster, B. C
ATTENTION ROCK DRIL1
We are the only custom shop in
Western Csnada specializing in the
hot milling of your detachable rock
bits. Precision work guaranteed We
are also distributors of Timken bits,
rods.
AIR EQUIPMENT SERVICE LTD,
1401 Hornby Vsncouver, B.C.
We aro B.C. distributors for Le Roi
air compreasors and engines; Tlm
ken bits and rods, power chain
taw repairs.
FINES* ■ QUALIfY R.O.P.-St-Wl)
Rhode Island Red and New Hampshire Chicks at my regular price
of $4 for 25, $8 for 50. $18 for 100
Book your 1048 Chicks now.
GEORGE GAME, RO.P. Breeder,
Armstrong. B.C.
FOR SALE - YOUNG BULL&,
registered polled Shorthorns.
Charles Fleck, Edgewood. BC
New HAMtSHfRE pUlCSts,
ready to lay. $2 each, Halleran's
Poultry Farm. Phone 305-R3.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
OF RELIABLE MINING
MACHINERY
Mancha Trams and Mucking Machines, Mine Rails,
Pipe, Compressor*, Rock-
Crushers, Ball Mills, Stop-
ers, Jack Hammers, Valves.
Vancouver Soles &
Appraisals Limited
846 Beach Avenue
Vancouver, B. C.
National Single and Double
Drum Gasoline Hoists
Idesl   for   Log  Loading.   Land
Clearing. Dragline and Building
Construction.
NATIONAL MACHINERY CO.
LTD.
Vancouver, B.C.
We hive a large stock of IEL
power saws and power saw parla,
tor Immediate delivery. Sand your
orders In snd they will be attended
lo promptly.
PURVES E RITCHIE Sc SON, LTD.
638 Hornby St. Mar. 4437
no.    sTTm   iNWRNatIGRaI
power unit, complete with starter
and generator, 10 Inch drive pulley and 46 ft. andless belt, this
motor Is as good as naw. S. C.
Watson. Castlegar   B.C
national   Portable   SAW
MILLS are itrongly built for economical production to suit Western Canadian timber. Manufactured by NATIONAL MACHflnSY
CO. LTD.. Vancouver, B.C.
■ i mm iii ", I'    —-
LOST ANO FOUND
LOST -"RATION BOOK ~ON
March 23rd., name Dorothy Ped-
enen, Bellevue, Finder plane return to_ 510 Vernon 8*.
LOST-CALIFORNIA REDWOOD
brooch, between Club Cafe and
Greenwtiod'i Store. Ph. 58. R3.
3UALITY .CHICKS. APPROVED
Leghorni and Hampshire!. Order
chicks now from our ipeclally selected breeders. 20 yearf experience with chicks and poultry. Full
particulars in our catalogue. A.
Balakshin, Now Siberia Farms,
RR. 2, ChUliwaek, B.C.
NILSON DAILY NIWS, SATURDAY, MARCH SO, 1946 - •
PROPERTY, HOUStS, FARMS
(Continued)
L ■  I I'I'll' I "      '..       I   LS'
■ --'■■'        ..1,,'s.mt
25 acre ranch on main highway,
IW miles from Nelson. 6 room,
modern house. Packing shed,
cement fruit houae, mllk homa.
Apple end cherry orchard, ap-
Inquire
lit Rogeri Bldg.
F. A. Whitfield
Real btate and Insurance
281 Baker St        Nelion, B. C.
UPRIGHT PIANO, STEEL FRAME.
Mahogany case. Good condition.
"Eatonia" washing machine, good
order. One office dent, one couch.
814 Hoover St, Nelson.
BE FOR SALS,
bathroom, white plumbing, 3
bedrooms, living room, dining
room, kitchen, built In cupboard-, basement, nlsstered and
painted iniide, clothei closets, 2
Ieti, truit treei, good garden, 1
block from car One, woodshed,
good location. Phone 688-Y.
CANADIAN PACIWC RAILWAY-
Unlmproved firm landi and a*****.-
Ing lendi In tha Provlncei of Alberta and Saskatchewan et rea.
sonable prlcea. For particulars, ap.
ply to Land Branch 108 Dept Ne
lural Reiourees, Calgary, Alberta.
FOR SALI, MISCELLANEOUS
ENCYCLOPEDIA
BRITANNICA
Standard ot tha World
Hew blue Juit Out
Vancouver
AYRSHtRU-JthtaV C6W fttESR.
2 calvei, Cream Separator, 1 acre
ot land, alio Nuriery itock. 1418
Vincouver St., Mrs. C. Becker,
STANDARD RECEIPT BOOKS, 4
recelpta to page with duplicate
iheeti, Nelion Daily News Prlnt-
Ing Dept	
RADIO $25, ALSO LIMOGES TEA
■et and easy chair. Thrift Shop,
Strathcona Hotel
Studio dc-Wctt YtSR SAKE -
Call  140 Baker
r
Phone 491-L.
(Goulding's Place) good cellar.
1 1-3 acre, (1600 cash. Alio adjoining property, 8 acrei, amall
house, good cellar, chick home,
good garden, $1200 cash, including furniture, tools, chicki. Leaving B.C. Sacrifice for quick sale.
Both immediate occupation. M.
Hufnagel below Golf Linhl.
FOR SALE-4 ROOM BUNGA'
low, fully furnlihed with iU new
furniture, Including chesterfield,
bedroom, dining room, and kitchen suites, radio, frig, stove, etc.
Three loti. Immediate possession.
Phone 878-1,
WhV Not imm V6t% ftiH
Insurance on Household Effects to
a FLOATER ALL RISK -*0__lCY.
Thli protects you against Fire and
Theft and many other hazards,
either at home ot travelling. Ask
us for particulan. C W, Apple-
yird _> Co.	
ACR88 NBAR WINLAW. SOTf
able' for imall fruits, poultry, 4
roomed houie end buildings
Fruit trees. Water. Box 1292
Dally Newi.
fOR SALti - 7 M HSTO. ON
Douglai Rd, almost completed.
All new plumbing being Installed
Phona t78-Y.
PIPI-Firai-as-WB-SS. Wl-
clal low prlcea Active Trading
Co, 016 PowellJ^Vwoouvw
condition. $65.00.
FOR   SALE-ONE   INCTOATCS.
150 egg site. Phone 188-L4.
BROODERS, tttt.. OIL. GRAND-
vlew Sheet Mtl Ltd.. Vancouver
f51TTO__=CI5S8I AN6 flANB-
er. Phone 1020-R. 	
PLAN TO BUILD
THAT SUMMER
COTTAGE, GARAGE,
OR OUTBUILDING
NOW
Sizes to suit your requirements.
SUMMER COTTAGES
K *3«
GARAGES
iruo. Oil
from   ▼****•
GARAGES
20'x20'. $320
from    mmmtm
UTILITY BUILDINO
__?: **"
Interchangeable sections for
outilde willi and interior
partions.
Prices F.O.B. Factory,
Vancouver
T. D. Rosling
568 Ward St. Phone 717
for"sale-io acre fAIrm five
miles from Truitvlle, all under
cultivation, very good soil, small
orchard of apples and mixed
fruit, good 6 roomed house, hot
and cold water, lights and bathroom. 40 ft Hay shed and other
outbuildings $3500 cash. Apply
Fred Andrews, Fruitvale, B.C.
WREN IN VANCOUVER STOPA.
Almer Hotel Opp. CJ.R Depot
ail -dims wwm WWW
and sold. See J. Chess, 524 Vernon
St Phone 1081.
LOOK VdW-flBRI -tlSTCft! NA-
tunl colour to piylng hair with
Angellque Orey Hair Restorer.
$1 at Mann-Rutherford and all
druggliti.	
■rl IOHS
MINES
Bayonne 	
Bralorne _	
B R Com .._	
B'R X	
Cariboo Oold ...._.
Congrese  __
Dentonia __
George Copper._
Golconda   _
Grandvlew 	
Grull Wihksne
PERSONAL
•_■
25c-r8 P^Sc
P.O. Box 434, Vanceu.er
"iny 8-exp. roll developed end print
Any
ed 2!
Itc. Reprints 3c. Free 5x7 co1
eMj6t. _Wm VkffC
trom indigestion, heartburn, sour
itomach, dyspepsia with pleasant,
soothing Wilder"! Stomach Powder. Alio ln tablet form. 80s and
$1 at all  '
GET ACtJU,
Hundredi of lady ind gentleman
memboli fas every Province. AU
aga, many with muni. Western
Social Club, Sub, 23, Edmonton,
Alta.
Let __ AMAOTB fttMUW
teller help you with your family
problems. Lucky days and tor
tunes told with six questions for
one dollar. Pleaie write wltb Ink
to Mdme. Alblna, 148 Rupert Ave,
Winnipeg. 	
FILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-
ed (6 or 8 exposure roll) 28c. Reprints tc each. For your mapehota
chooie Kryital Finish Guaranteed
non-fade prlnti. KryiUl Photos,
Wilkle, Saskatchewan. Established
over 80 yean.	
SPECIALISTS IN DRY CLEANING
and de-mothlng. Rugi, chesterfields, upholstered furniture
cleaned right tn your home. Work
done by experts. No harsh power
machines, chemical positively
contains no soap or lye AU work
guaranteed. Color-Back Cleaners.
Phone 1058
suite ln  good
Phone 952?Y,
walnut bb6R0(5m sums.
First class condition. Ph. 743-IA
VANCOUVER STOCKS
Bid
.18*4
17.50
.24
.16
1.40
13.H
JS
.23
Aik
.26
.17.75
MfA
.18
t.80
.14
.70
20
Hedley Maicot     1.7J
Int C * C
Island Mount
Jason ..: _.
Koot Belle ..-
McGlUlvray .
Mlnto ....
O'Leary «.
Pacific Nickel _*.
Pend Oreille	
Pioneer Gold..__
Premier Bord.™
Premier Oold  ,
Privateer _w.
Quatalno       _y
Red Hawk ,,,
Reevae Mae .—___.
Reno Gold __.
Balmon   	
Sheep Creek  _.
SUbak Premier w
Taylor Bridge _i
Wellington   .
OILS
Anaconda _
Anglo Can . , ,.,_,„
A P Con _____
Cal k Ed .
Calmont .., . ■...,.
Commoil _..__..___.
Commonweal*  ._»
Dalhousle  .._
Foothilli .- .
Home
.38
1.50
.47
.10-i
aVyk
M
.17
8.50
8.93
.09*
1.45
.71
.17Vt
.11*
141
.14
.33
1.57
1.23
.98
M-ei
JM
1.20
.15
1.25
.32
Jt
V
.48
1.70
1.70
.00
.03*
07 Vi
.om
.20
.13
.52
.94
.03 tt
10.00
.20
.09
.08 H
.00
.22
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
AS3AYER3   AND   MINE
WtPRtttNTATIVtt
£ W. wrbbdW§6N S td. AiSAV-
ers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson
.1 *,     till A     I'li.n jMiiiiv       k- -   ,      a. __*____*____
R S. ELMES. ROSSLAND. B. C,
Aisaver. Chemist. Mine Rprsntve.
THE WEST KOOTENAY ASSAV
Office, 410 Kootenay St. Nelson.
A J. BUIE, Independent Mine Representative, Box 84. Trail. B.C
CH|ROPRa6tOR8
J. COLIN McL/REN. D . CHIRO-
pracllc X ray Splnography. Strar.d
Theatre Bldi., Trail, B.C. Ph, __
m
DITBONP DhlLLERt
NATIONAL DIAMOND DRILLING
CO. LTD., DrllUng and Bit Service. Box 508, Rossland, B.C.
uengineer8"aSd SURVjVdfrl
ft.   W.   HAGGEN.   M1NINO   ANlJ
Civil  Engineer.  B.C. Land  Surveyor Rossland and Grand Forks.
BOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST,
Nelson. B.C. Surveyor, Engineer.
INgURANCI AND RIAL IITATI
CHAS F. McHARDY, INSURANCE.
Real Eitate. Phone 186.
MACHlNlKTf
BENNETTS LIMITED
Machine Shop, acetylene and
electric welding, motor rewinding,
Phone 593 324 Vernon St
TWO GOOD
BUYS
$6500
Seven rooms snd bathroom,
full sized basement, 2 good garden lots, garage etc. Hardwood
floors, hot water furnace, stone
foundation. Close to schools and
business section.
Price 	
Six-room bungalow, large living
room, dining room, 3 bedrooms,
etc. Hot air furnace, fireplace,
stone foundation. Garage. 3
romer Iota. Cloie C530O
to schooli. Price ....    ********
Both the above quick poisession
ROBERTSON REALTY
Company Limited
532 WARD ST.
(Continued In Next Column)
gTfiVf
HOT----
mom -DKBBJI
-clallits In mini and mill
ichlne work. Ught and
Electric and Acetylene wrldlng
708 Vernon St., Nelson
Ph. 08.
 h6biRM.H6VU.jm   .
Chartered Accountant
$15 Victoria St.. Trail Ph. 838
MONTREAL  STOCKS
INDUSTRIALS
Assoc Brew of Can   45.00
Can Car *. Fdy pfd  22.00
Can Steamship pfd,  81.00
Con Min it SmeltiHg   88.00
Dom Steel * Coal B  15.25
NaUonal Brew Ltd   44.00
Shawnlgaq W1P      25.25
St Lawrence Corp   8.15
BANKS
Commerce     22.50
Dominion    -  27.83
Imperial ,  #.50
Montreal      2215
Nova Scotia   88.25
Royal   ! -  24.25
Toronto  34.18
litduo A\wt> TroWr*"
Wt BUY SELL AND. EXCHANGE
What have you? Ph DM Ark fjtore.
OTHER MARKET NEWS
ON PAGE TWO
FOREIGN FXCHANGE   .
NEW YORK, March M (CPl-
The Canadian dollar was up 1-16
at a discount of 014 per cent In
terms of United States funds In
closing foreign exchange deellngs
today.   (Ottawa   Forign   "
HBP tfCHiNd MWWRBs <_t
eczema, psoriasis, ringworm, athlete's foot and other skin Irritations with Elik's Ointment No 3
prescription o( noted skin specialist. Itch relieved prompUy, skin
healed quickly or money refunded, $1.00, 12.00. Mail orders fiUed
promptly. Order today from EUk'i
Medicine Co.. Dipt 42, Saskatoon,
Sask
STOP SUFFERING FROM FOL-
lowlng itomach Disorders-. Acid
Slomsch, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Coated Tongue, Bad Breath. Sick
Headaches, etc. Uie Elik'i Stomach powder No. 2, prepared by
experienced Pharmacist It must
give immediste results or money
back. 11,12. Ellk's Medicine Company, Dept 42, Saskatoon, Sask.
ed, 11.00, 82.00. Mail orders filled
promptly Order today from Elik's
McDougal Beg ..._
McLeod — ^*s
Mercury ..... i,
MIU City __
Model    _„
National Pete	
Okalta com  __
Pacific Pate	
Royal Can 	
Royallte  ...._,	
Southwest Fete ....
Spooner	
Sunset  _
Vanalta ._ .._
Vulcan  	
INDUSTRIALS
B C Tele pfd  117.18
Capital Estatea     6.18
Coast Brew      2.07
Pacific Coyla 34tt
PdweU River    12.30
United DlstU     14.68
UNLISTID MINKS
Big Missouri        .03
Bluebird  _      JM
Brooklyn St  10
Central Zeb       —
Canty        .11
Cuyunl _.    1.80
Federal  _      .04%
Hedley Amal  _      .14
Home Gold  _      .0214
Marble Bay          —
Noble Five _      -
Olympic   _..      20
Pac East Gold _      .15tt
Campbell
Auto Loans
Are known by thousands who
rely on this quick, convenient
way to get extra cash. Any
amount from 120 to 11000 car-
rlea Ufe Insurance at no extra
cost. You alone sign. Phone or
call ln for details. Terms in sc-
cordance with Wartime Prices
and Trade Regulations.
CAMPBELL
FINANCE CORPORATION
LIMITED
860 Baker St. Phone 1093
Above Fink's Ready-to-Wear
Pilot
Prosperine	
Sally Mines  _
Sund Valley  _
Taylor Windfall ....
Vananda        	
Silver Ridge 	
Wesko
UNLISTED OILS
Command 	
Freehold 	
Granville   	
Hargall  	
South End Pete
United    ...
.05*
.27
_
.24
.07
.54
At
.03*
.14
.01*
.03 tt
.10
1.10
.50
.12
3
HI
1.75
T.00
.10*
1.50
.76
.18
.14
1.50
.15
24
1.60
1.28
1.00
.08*
m
1.21
.17
1.33
.36
.30
1.80
1.75
.09*
.07
.07 tt
.24
.16
.55
.97
.04
11.00
.30
.12
.00
.12
.27
13.50
15,30
.06
.07
.12,4
JO
.12
1.65
.05'4
.15
.03'4
.27
.02*
_21
.17
.06
30
.25
.25
.07 tt
.55
.04
.10(4
.12
NIW YORK STOCKS
American Can     87.50
Amer Telephone   100.00
Anaconda         40.85
Beth Steel  1"3.00
Canadian Pacific  -   1063
Dupont     1»7.75
Cen  Electric      46.79
Gen Motors          72.00
InternaUonal Nickel     37.75
Kenn Copper         84.50
Stan OII M N J    69 50
U S Rubber     70.00
U S Steel    82.75
Market Trends
NEW YORK, March 29 (AP) -
Oils led the stock market on a selective rally today although buying enthusiasm itill was larkin...
LONDON — Sustained strength
despite lack of activity featured tha
stock exchange with ceneral business indicating confidence ln the
outcome of the present Uniled Nation discussions.
MONTREAL — Selected papers,
Industrials and utllitlei made headway In trading on Ihe stock exchange and curb market and hanks
were Inclined tn be easier.
TORONTO-Prices lightened all
along the line- in Ihe afternoon
trading on the exchange, netting index gains for all four groups. Action was hesvlest in chesper golds.
Turnover   totalled   1.800.000  ihires
CHICAGO — Moderate demand
for oats and May rye was flattened
by profit cashing and other liquid-
atlon on Intermittent bulgei and
prices swung within narrow ranges
most of lhe time.
Early demand fnr oati were attributed to reports that Belgium
and Switzerland had purchased
about 250.000 buihels.
Wheat and corn hold it... u
ceilings of 11.834 and S121H. oati
CARLOADINGS 71.104
OTTAWA,  Merch  18   (CP)-Car finished ilnrhansed to tt cent low-
loadings for the week elided March er. rve unchanged to 1 cent down.
It  amounted  to  71,104  cars   com- «" ihowed galni nn th. stock ex-
Exchange pared with 7LS72 for Ihe previous ehmiin with h"me nil making tho
Board rates 9.00-0.51 per cent dls- week and 67.270 for the correspond- h'"""t lump 35 In 3.70 Industrials
count). The oound sterling was un- lna>week last year, the Dnmlni'in **r'' T1''' s"''*' '*- ,l"' forenoon
changed at 84.03* | 'Bureau of Statistics reported today. se:s!on were 130,000 iharn.      ,
.... -A_sa__o.
 	
-"
.:■■•■—'myoar..- _—r	
lo-NELSON DAILY NIWS, SATURDAY, MARCH SO, 1941
LAST DAY
Lateit World Nows
Muilcal—Frank Sinatra
Showi at 2:00-7.00-8:54
Civic
Mondoy-'XHINA SKY"-"SCAltlD JTIPF*
"THE VIRGINIAN"
HERO DIES
CALGARY, March 29 (CP)-One
of the most colorful characters of
the early days of the West and the
"hero" of Owen Wlster's novel of
ranch life "The Virginian" died In
Calgary Thursday. He was Everett
Cyril Johnson aged 87.
Mr. Johnson had a noted career
as a cowpuncher in the Western
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIII
HUDSON
Parts and Service
Brake Drums Machined
Repain to All Makei
of Can
Smedley Garage
Company
miiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniii
§jWULL
FOR
Spring and Easter
MILLINERY
We Specialize In Large
Head Sires
Full Line of Wedding
Veils and Halos
Print and Spun Silk
Dresses
Sizes 12 to 44
Flexees Brassieres
Irish Linen Handkerchiefs
Costume Jewellery
High School Hats
Teen Age, Special  $1.95
United Statu, and was a pioneer In
Alberta ln the Ws. Even after his
reti-ement, he lived an active life,
and only a few days before his death
had gone to Olelchen to vlalt an old
friend.
He was born ln Richmond, Virginia, and while a young man went
to Wyoming. With him on his trip
was Owen Wlster, and together they
were ranch hands in the Western
States.
In 1912 at the Calgary Stampede,
Mr. Wlster met Mr. Johnson and
told him, "Well, Ev, I've written a
book about you." Mr. Johnson replied, "That's going to be quite a
book, that's all I can say."
The book written ln 1904, portrays ranch life' in the early days.
The hero Is known only as The
Virginian. He had left hU home
state at an early age to "rough lt"
on Judge Henry's ranch ln Montana, and soon came to be his right
hand man.
Three Sentenced
for Burglary
INVERMERE, B. C. March mt-
Convicted on two charges of break,
ing and entering and a third charge
of escaping lawful custody, Abel
Caplllo, Kootenay Indian, was sentenced at a sitting of'the county
court presided over by Judge H. V.
Colgan of Fernle at Invermere today.
He will serve two years ln the
penitentiary on each of the first two
charges and one year on the third
charge, the sentences to run concurrently. Caplllo broke into the Invermere liquor store and Frank
Richardson's store at Athalmer.
Gabriel Alpine, Kootenay. Indian,
was lentenced to one year hard
labour at Oakalla on the charge of
breaking and entering the store of
Frank Richardson, general merchant at Athalmer.
Victor Cooper of Athalmer received suspended sentence of one
year on the liquor store break In
and Luke White, "Indian Juvenile
six months suspended sentence on
the same charge.
Charges Gangsters
fry Influence
Unlen Elections
ATLANTIC CITY, NJ, March M
(API—A charge that "gangsters and
hoodluma" ware trying to Influence
C.I.O. United Automobile Workers'
elections was msde today by former
President R. 1. Thomai.
An Investigation was authorised
after Mr. Thomai told tht Union's
convention that lives were "Jeopar-
dlted" In an effort ot outalde Interests to "pressure'' certain delegates.
The U.A.W.'s 10th convention will
and tomorrow.
Mr. Thomu said Local SOD of
Wright Aeronautical Corporation at
Paterson, NJ, had been subjected
to "preuure" by gangsters and
hoodluma trom Naw York."
Without going Into detail, ha also
laid a Negro delegate named Jonu
had bean threatened. A "Robert 1.
Jonas" from General Motors' Fisher
Aircraft Local at Memphis, Tenn,
il listed in the convention roll call
Mr. Thomas, who lost the U.A.W.
presidency to Walter P. Reuther In
a bitterly contested race Wednesday, said pressure was brought
against Local 069 ln an attempt to
swing its big bloc of votes. In receiving the convention's approval of
an Inquiry, he said "intimidation
Suit be stopped at U.A.W. conven-
ons."
QAIN EDGE
Mr. Thomas' statement marked a
day ln which the U.A.W.-C.I.O. finally completed the organization of
Its new high command and Mr.
Reulber rejected a proposal to Increase officers' salaries.
Richard T. Leonard, Detroit regional director and head of the
Union's Ford Department, was elected to the second of the vacant vice
presidencies, giving the Thomas
forces a 8-to-l edge In the top offices.
The U.A.W.-C.I.O.'s highest offices
thus are filled by Mr. Reuther as
Pruldent, Mr. Thomas and Mr.
Leonard, Vice Prealdents, and
George. F. Addes, a Thomas supporter, u Secretary-Treasurer.
Sold only at your Rexall Store
City Drug Co.
Phona 34 Box 4M
iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
FLEURY'S   Pharmacy
Preicriptiom
Comifounded
Accurately
Med. Arti Blk.
PHONI 25
1 '' i'»i.ii'fflllf)''"'"'""""»i"i'»"
Radio Service
McKAY&STRETTON
Limited
Phone 544 Nelson
TOPCOAT
TIME
Now li tht tlm* to
thinking of that rt**-. To
coat. See these new Alp
camas, Tweeds, Worst*
and West of England!.
$21.30 to $55.00
Emory's Ltd]
MEN'S WEAR
i_a»o««««»«a«_a«ggggaMM|
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCE  SERVICE
"Distinctive Funeral Service"
S15 Kootenay St Phone 361
illiiiiill.ililllllllllllllllllltllllllUtlllt.'
CALCUTTA  (CP)--A, fhr
plan for tha production ot I
sulphate hu itarted in Benfi
target of 100,000 poundi per
hu been set—enough to make 1
reasonably   self-sufficient   ln
vital drug.
SPECIAL
Bed, coble spring ond mottreii.
$25.50
HOME FURNITURE CO.
_________________________________________________________
TRY OUR FAMILY WET
WASH SERVICE
7 CENTS A  POUND
flat work ironed, balance dried
WEST KOOTENAY
STEAM LAUNDRY
PHONE 1175
182 Biker Street Nelson, B. (
NEWS OF THE DAY
SEE PAGE TWO
R. NADEAU
LICENSED PLUMBER
Phono 1157-615 Victoria St.
If It'l Electric
F. H. SMITH
Phone 666       351 Baker St.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll.nl
FLOOR MATS
Semi-Tailored, Felt and Plain
to fit all makes ef can
Cuthbert Motors Lt
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii
ROSCOE
'   AND
FOURNIER
GARAGEMEN
SKY CHIEF AUTO SERVICE
Phone 121 _ Nelson. B. C.
isrmtsta
_____d__j____^_djr_v_
RADIO
REPAIRS
NELSON ELECTRIC CO.
J. R. WATKINS
Quality. Producta
Spices, Extracts, Medlclnei, eta
SPENCER C. COLMAN
District Agent
MoveC to
1117 Front Street Ntlson
The New
Parker
\\
//
C. W. House N. A. House
KOOTENAY GIFT SHOP
436 Baker SL
GREETING CARDS FOR
EVERY OCCASION
One quart of mllk ls required fo;
a pound of evaporated mllk. 	
SHEET  METAL WORK
OF ALL KINDS
LES BROWETT'S
TIN8MITH and 8HEETMETAL
SHOP
510 Kootenay St.        Phone 1152
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR
HOOD'S
Supreme Milk Bread
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiii
Take Care of the
Car You Have!
Swing into Spring
with our
SPRING CHANGE-OVER
SERVICE PACKAGE
Drive In Today ond Let
Ui Explain How
You Can Save 	
$2*5
ON ALL MAKES OF CARS
Have the Job Done Right
SEE
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONE 815
iiiiiii.iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
JUST RECEIVED A FEW
RADIO TUBES
TYPES 48 and 47
WELLS'
Service Shop
Phone 1115 117 Vernon St.
Illlllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
rw
J. A.C. Laughton
Optometrist
Suite 205
MEDICAL ARTS BUILDINO
------ummuuauesaatitauuummi
• i
DELICIOUS
WAFFLES
at the
Melon Dew Cafe
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiii
For Reliable Watch Repain
PROMPT   SERVICE
HARVEY'S
SS4 Baker St
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI
PMONE 288
We Coll For and Deliver
Men's ladles' suits, ladles'      tkftj.
Dresses, plain           "y
Men's and Ladles' (« |C
Summer Coats ♦-_■__»
EMPIRE CLEANERS & DYERS
iimitsawwwwwwMi
Have Your Furniture Expertly
Recovered at the
NELSON UPHOLSTERY
413 Hall St Phone 140
SMALL BOY: "I'm not atrald of!
going to the hospital mother, I'll be
brava> and take my medicine, but
I ain't going te let tham palm oft a
baby on me like thay did on you.—
I want a pup." IF YOU WANT
BLANKET COVERAGE ON YOUR
HOSPITAL AND MEDICAL CONTRACT PHONE M0. STUART
AGENCIES,  677   BAKER   (TREE.
Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
MANHATTAN
SANDALS
at
The Bootery
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii.il
"ROSELAWN CHAPEL"
' Phone  25]
703 Baker SL Nelson
NELSON FUNERAL CHAPEL Ltd
Branch at Kaslo
L. R. Downing
9
Look   Your   Best
and you'll 'eel your
best with a lovely
permanent.
Haif^h Tru-Art
Beauty Salon?
Johnstone Block
Phone 327
KOKANEE
SERVICE STATION
and GARAGE
Export- Repair Work
Promptly Done.'
Gai,  Oil, Wsshlng,  Greasing.
Opposite Bank of Montreal
SMART
HEADWORK
When You Visit Us for
a Perm.
Clerihew's  Beauty
Lone
535 Josephine SL      Phone 1149
51
Pens
Are Here!
Priced at
•15.00
Tl-M
PER SET
COME IN AND TRY IT
W. G. VALIN
Jeweller
964 Baker SL
Mall orders promptly
attended to
lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!
ROYAL PATENT PASTRY
FLOUR
Is the answer to your baking
problems.
iniiiiiiiini)iiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiinimi
DODGE - DE SOTO DEALERS
Opposite Post Office and Hume Hotel
PHONE TS - NILSON, I.C
E. A. CAMPBELL & Co.
Chartered Accountants
Auditor!
M Baker SL Phona 222
nan -
T**_
If  you  ore  planning   to
build, we will bo pleased
to terve you.
Phone 632
W. L. JACKSON
CONTRACTING CO
Designing — Draughting
Estimating
538 Ward St.       Nelson, B. C.
Announcing
the Reopening of the
Dining Room
at the
King George Hotel
Kaslo, B. C.
BOATING—FISHING—SWIMMING
For Reservations for the Coming Seaion*
Phone No. S or Write Early
Touriit and Fiihermen'i Headquarters
INTERNATIONAL
Diesel Power Units
39 and S3 Horsepower
Now in Stock
The Ideal Power Plants for
f    SAWMILLS     f    BOATS
• MINES •    GENERATORS
• WINCHES        •    PUMPING
•    ROAD MACHINES
Central Truck
mk Equipment Co.
702 Front St.
Phone 100
Nelion, B. C.
Today, March 30
Boy
Scout
Apple
Day
Buy an Apple
Al the coot of Hie apples to tho Scouts hai
boon considerably increased—wo aik you
to make your contribution at generoui ai
poulble.
Your Car Will
LOOK Like New..
RUN Like New...
After an All-Round
POLISH TREATMENT
and
ENGINE TUNE-UP
By Our-Trained Technicians
NELSON TRANSFER!
Company, Ltd.
35 Phone 35
	
t
 -	
