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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" up\nM>(!i!>ll!!lll!!l!!!nill!!l!!l!!ll!lll!lll!ll!IMI!!l!!!!<!llll!ll!>!!lllllllll!!!l!!l>l!!ll!ti\nCP. Airlines Service for\nKootenay Starts Sept. 8\nEDMONTON, Aug. 26 (CP)\u2014Canadian Pacific Air-\nlines service between Calgary and Vancouver, designed\nprimarily to serve reiidenti of Interior British Columbia\nin the Kootenay and Okanagan area, will start Sept. 8,\nIt was announced today by Grant McConachie, C.P.A.\nPresident.\nA plane will leave Calgary daily except Sunday for\nVancouver, stopping en route at Cranbrook, Castlegar\nand Penticton. The Eastbound plane will leave Vancouver\ndally for Calgary and make the same three stops.\n1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nDoukhobor Appeal States . . .\nPolice Action Aoainst Fanatics Is\n\"Inadequate\"; Promise Cooperation\n\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\nWestminster Packing\nPlant Workers\nFirst Off the Job\nLOCKOUT DENIED\nVICTORIA,   Aug.   26   (CP)   -\nPremier John   Hart,  acting  Labor\nMinister    announced    tonight   tiie\nGovernment   had   instructed   Van*\nA complaint that the measure of to engage in violence in contradic- jcouver City Prosecutor Oscar Orr\npolice action  against   fanatics  In tion to  the principle of faith  they(to prunecute and lay charges under\n\"terroristic acts\"  In the Doukho- endeavor   to uphold?\" the    British    Columbia    Industrial\nbor settlements of West Kootenav \"We are accused of not coopera- Conciliation and Arbitration Act\nwat \"Inadequate\" wai contained ting with the authorities, of with- in connection with the five-day\nIn an appeal to the public from'holding evidence. Thii is not true|o1d strike of 350 steel-workers\nthe Union of Spiritual Communl* land only supposition. We are exiles of Christ. Compiled by pected to catch the culprits in the\nGeorge 8. Soukeroff, Chairman of act, know their identity, and lay a\nthe Executive Committee, and charge against them.\"\nJohn J. Verlgln, Secretary at It was impossible to identify\nheadquarter!    In     Brilliant,    the\n*f.1\n\u00abk\n\u00bb,\n\">A\n$0tt\n\t\nzA\\\nVOLUME 4\u00ab\nV\n>'*\nIjl BfotBs\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nNelson's\nJUBILEE\n1897 to 1947\n8 CENTS A COPY\nNELSON. BRITISH  COLUMBIA, CANADA-WEDNESDAY  MORNING. AUG. 27. 1947\nNUMBER  107\nGOV'T TO La .\nCHARGES IN\n.C. STEEL STRIKE\nraiders in the night who used fir\nitatement appealed to the people arms and had the advantage of sur-\nto \"do what you can In bringln-j prise attack and mob action it was\nto the attention of the proper au- emphasized. \"We try to cooperate\nthorltlei that this situation should  t{> the best of our ability \"\nRepresentative   meeting\northodox      communities\nhave  been  held* in  the  last  week\nto discuss the situation,\n\"What we need is the removal 'if\nfanatics from Shoreacres, and th'U\nthey be stopped from coming into\nour other settlements to burn us out.\nTo this end we will give our utmost cooperation,\"\n'The settlement of Shoreacres\nhas bee nvirtuaily burned out.\" the\nwritten appeal continued, \"and a\nmob of fanatics go from house '.a\nhouse proclaiming that the homes\nare doomed to destruction by fire.\nPolice were present and asked 'o\nget them out. We were told that\npolice would not interfere until\ncharges were laid. This has been\ndone, but the measure is inadequate.\"\nofthe     \"Citizens   of   Canada  enjoy   Pr^-  INJUNCTION   80UGHT\npeople tei:tion   from  lawlessness   as   their;\nfive Vancouver plants.\nHe refused to comment further,\n1 saying it was for Mr. Orr to de-\nicide who should be charged and\n'under   what   section   of   the   act\ncharges would be laid.\n!    It is believed that charges would\nrelate to striking without observing proper conciliation processes\n|but  Mr.  Orr  was  unavailable  f\u00b0r Comb.nq   UllderWOrld;\ncomment.\nCHILD FRIGHTENED\nTO DEATH\nBY AUTO HORN\nSAN DIEGO, Calif, Aug. 26\n(AP) \u2014 Margaret Ann Parker,\nseven, apparently was frightened to death today by an automobile horn, deputy coroner\nDavid Bone said.\nAn unidentified motorisi\nhonked his horn suddenly at\nMargaret Ann and a companion\nas they crossed a street.\nBone said the girl, normally\nhealthy, ran home In a nervous\nstate and complained of head\npains. She later developed convulsions and died while being\ntaken  to hospital.\n)DOUKHOBORS\nAWAIT ARSON\n(OUNT HEARINGS\nDeputy Commissioner\nCalls Conference\nOf Police Heads Here\n14 CASES\nFarm Buildings Razed\nIn New Terror Wave\n, Application by operators for an\nbirthright. Everyone in Canada is injunction to halt picketing and\nmUtled to it. We ask no benevol- ' top lhe United Steelworkers of\nence\u2014we seek only justice.\" (America  (C.I.O.-C.CL.)  strike was\nWorkers had been forced to leave slated   to   be   made   in   Supreme\ntheir jobs to protect  their families Court   tomorrow.\n:and industry was suffering, \"Our|\npeople pioneered in developing this\ni District from wilderness.  Local in- j\n'dustrics for years have been dependent on our labor. Local residents 1\nrely  on our farm \"produce.\"\nDOUKHOBOR\nCRIMINAL SAID\n(OAST SLAYER\n00-Man Police Squad (r\niombing Underwork\nOn Trail Says Chief\nVENGEANCE DEATH\nASK APPOINTMENT OF\nROYAL   COMMISSION\nExecutive Committee asked the\ngovernment Ior the appointment of\na Royal Commission to fully investigate the existing situation and affirmed a resolution-in-protocol\nmade by the Named Doukhobo-s\nin   1928  that  all   information   and\nThe men, memberi of the United   Packinghouie   Workeri   ot\nAmerica, charged they had  been\nlocked  out, a charge  denied   by\nthe  management.\nUnion   officials   said   the   action\nproof in regards to acts of criminal! followed   Company   demands   for\nTailure of police action  against .nature would be turned over to a'l-;increased production  The men had\nthem gives fanatics encouragement, thorities. jbeen  seeking  a  wage  boost of   15.\nAs a result their number in increas- ,    in a letter to Hon. G. S. Wlsmer, * cenis an hour,\nlng together with their spirit of ag-; Attorney-General of  B. C, the or-     \"It is not a lockout,\" said W. 0\nression   while  helpless   people are ganization  sought aid. Unaware of1 Pearson,  General   Manager  of  the\nsubjected to be at their mercy.        \"measures taken as a result of rep-1Sapperton Plant. \"The men refused\nClaimed disbelievers of war and , resentations made to put a stop -.0,10 work.\"\nviolence, the orthodox Doukhobors, criminal acts in question,\" the | Pickets were put around the\nsaid \"We are told to use force group asked that law and order be plant, and all truck delivers of*\n.gainst fanatics. We cherish the ide-I enforced. \"We had to leave our jobs New Westminster were suspend-\n\u25a0 1 of pacifism and non-violence for'due to the conditions ... we live meat to retail Ssors here and in\nwhich many of our forefathers sac,under terror and cannot continue \u00abd and loading of shipments for\nrificed theTr lives. Our pacifism is I to  work In Industries by day and|Br*Iam\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 26 (CPI -\nPolice reported tonight that Walter\nPavlukoff, a 33-year-old Doukho-\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 26 (CP) -bor \"with a long police record,\" has\nFirst work stoppage In the been charged in a warrant with the\nthreatened tie-up of Swift Can-,murder of Svdney S. Petrie, 55-\nadlan Planti In the Dominion year-old bank manager, fatally\noccurred it the Company'i Sap- wounded during an attempted\nperton Plant, near New Weit-> holdup at the Broadway Branch of\nminister today when 140 work*! the Canadian Bank of Commerce\ners failed to report after lunch Monday.\nhour.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 2\u00ab (CP)-\nThe Identity of the slayer of Sydney 8. Petrie, 55-year-old bank\nmanager, fatally wounded during\nan attempted holdup at the\nBroadway Branch of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, li\nknown to  police.\nPolice reported tonight that the\nman lought is a well-known\nDoukhobor  holdup-man.\n\"We ere on the trail of the\nkiller,\" tald Police Chief Walter\nMulligan, directing a 100 man\nforce detailed to make a block\u25a0\nby-block learch of ,Vancouver'i\nunderworld.\nPolice   now hold a  hat, vest and\nWhile Provincial Police tightened their vigilance over the\nWeit Kootenay Doukhobor area\nTuesday after new outbreaks of\nviolence, three Doukhobon in\nthe Provincial gaol at Nelson\nawait preliminary hearing.\nIt was reported by officials here\nTuesday that Alex Pancow. John\nSabinkoff and Fred Sampsonoff\ncharged with burning the No 3\nvillage at Shoreacres Aug. 23, were\nremanded untii Saturday for preliminary hearing The Doukhobor\nterm \"village\" designates a community  farm   house\nMeanwhile three men faced six*\nmonth terms at hard labor ot\n)akalla prison, near Vancouver,\nafler being convicted by Stipendiary Magistrate William Irvine\non charges of assault causing\nactual bodily harm in the course\nof 11 cases involving Doukhobors\nheard Monday. Seven others, including one woman, were ordered\nto keep peace for one year and\nto post bonus ranging from $10110\nto $2000 or go to jail.\nSentenced to Jail Monday were\nWilliam A. Kalmakoff, Fred\nNizaroff and Mike Rlbilklnoff,\neach lentenced to six monthi\nat hard labor In Oakalla Jail.\nThey were charged with aisault\noccasioning actually bodily harm.\nAnnie Koftlnoff and Nick\nBersoff were each bound over\nfor a period\n$1000 bond,\nJail  In default of the  bond\nS3 MILLION\nFIRE (RIPPLES\nPORT ALBERNI\nBurning of Wharf,\n\"Life of District\"\nTo Be Investigated\nMYSTERY FIRES\nTwo-Day Lull Shattered by Surprise\nPre-Dawn Fire Raids; $7000 Loss\nTo Thrums Farmers; Ask Protection\nIntensive investigations were under way Tuesday night as\nreinforced detachments of British Columbia Provincial Police\nsearched relentlessly for clues leading to the identity of fire\nraiders who swooped down on helpless farmers here earlier\nin the day.\n\"We are doing everything possible to apprehend the people responsible for this and other fires of similar origin,\" Inspector Robert Harvey of the Provincial Police said tonight.\n\"We will keep after them until we succeed.\"\nThe uneasy quiet that hung over West Kootenay's Doukhobor area for two days erupted early Tuesday morning when\nport alberni, B.C.. Aug. 26 fanatical raiders fired two farm buildings at Thrums in a pre-\nJSrlUd\"\" P\u2122 ^beVcen.:.' daW\" 0ttQCk' SU't^ W'th\u00b0Ut TT2' *** T* f\u00b0Hf,d in ?\"\nof the Vancouver liland lumber attempt to put the torch to a third barn in the small settle-\nindustry, today ai plans  for an ment 20 miles West of Nelson.\ninvestigation    of   the   $3,000,000 Complete loss of valuable farm equipment, more than 50\nwharf fire were  made. , ,   r ,   ,      ,      ,      , .,        \u201e . <\u25a0        \\s     , ,\nWhile   authorities   probed   the fons \u00b0' cay and death ot a tour-month coif, cost Sam Konkin\nblackened  mini of a $1,500,000 and William Soukeroff an estimated $7000   Both barns were\nGovernment wharf and warehouse burned to the ground. \u00ab r\u2014\t\nfor a clue  to the origin of   Mon- 3\nday night's fire, Federal Works' New *PPeals from orthodox I Increased among the settlers livin|\nMinister Fournie'r In Ottawa iaid Doukhobors, their nerves strained in makeshift homes. Raiders tactics\nthat \"fullest poulble Investlgi- t0 almost breaking point, followed thad been changed and they pounc-\ntlon\" will be launched Immedl- \">\u25a0\u00bb ne*\" wave of terror. Increased ;ed withlut warning. Previous to the\nately. protection from radicals who have |Tuesday   morning  firings,   vlctimi\nOffering the major loading facili-' burned more than a score of homes | were wa.ned of the pending bluei\nties in the port, the big wharf was1 and  schools ln a month of  torch\na twisted,   charred  mass ol wood, I raiding, was demanded,\nwhile   the   $1,000,000   freighter   SS.! FIRST THRUMS ATTACK\nof   12   monthi   on Sampep, severely  burned before it     It was the first attack on Thrums.\n'   nine   monthi   In could   be   towed   from   the    wharf Moving with well-organised  preci-\nnto open water, was the scene ofl sion, the raiders crept into the yard\nMike   Blnhenkoff   and   Zahar brief   outbreaks   during   the   day. o( Sam Konkin early Tuesday.'Aft-\n-uhoff were  alio  bound  over Crew members and firemen fought er setting  fire   to the  barn   they\n*' -mouldering fires in the ship's hold.lsllnked pajt two ,arm dwellings to\nconsiderable *the home of wiiliam Soukeroff. less\nThe   vessel   has\nbeing held against us. We came to'guard our homes by night. This ter-\nCanada from persecution in Tsarist j ror has continued for many years\nRussia and were told that we would and responsible parties have not\nnot bt forced to bear arms. We re-1 been apprehended. This leads us to\ngarded Canada as foremost In rac-1 believe that authorities deliberately\nUl and religious tolemwe- W^jr i\u00bb\u00abjtake oo .tction.\" ..\nVM! war between Doukhobors'' '\u00bb!-! \"Similar pleas were sent to Prime\nlowed to go on, and people forced' Minister Mackenzie King.\nfor 12 monthi, but bond wai set\nat $2000 each or 12 monthi In\nJail.\nThe   ten   men   and   one   woman\n\u25a0 re   said  to   be   memberi  of  the\nSons of Freedom group of Douk\nhobor*a     who     have     been     accused   by   orthodox   memben   of\nterrorizing      the      entire      Weit\nKootenay   Doukhobor   Diitrlct.\nSentenced     to     12     months     in\nOakalla prison after they each de-\n' lined    to    sign    two   sureties   'if\nS1000 v*re William Chernoff,  Wiiliam   Stoopnikoff.    Fred    Storjjcff nari*>i ,\ncoat tossecfaway by the gunman as .and   William   Olasoff.   They   were\nlist, but is in little danger of [inking. From the main deck up, the\nship is completely gutted. Many of\nher plates are buckled, but she is\ntaking little water.\nLUMBER LOST\nThe loss included a large amount\nof lumber, ready for overseas shipment, and mar.y tons of plywood.\nSome of the smaller lumber\noperators may be temporarily shut\ndown  and  exports  of  larger  com-\nInstalling 6000 H.P. Generator al\nCity Power Plant; To Extend Plant\n3000 TO 8TRIKE lhe fled late Monda->' from the bank charged   with   issuing  a   threat   U\nTORONTO, Aug. 26 (CP) \u2014 An;wIthout loot- burn the Shoracres home of Wil\nofficials of the United Packinhouse i    Chief Mulligan said that the man |\u00bbam Kalmakoff and of endanger\nWorkers (C.I.O.)  said tonight that J sought answers the  description of ing  the   Hvfji   of   Kalmakoff,\nsome 3,000 Union memberi In lix the elayer and that hia Initials cor-.,wl\u00a3 Igjl gl^drhlMrift.\nplants ofthe Swift-Canadian Com-jrespOnd with those in the band of     '\na steel-grey hat found near Kitsi-\nlano Beach.\nPREVIOUS RECORD\n\"The wanted man Is a  Doukhobor,\" said the Chief. \"He has a pre-\nthan a quarter-mile from the Konk\nin   farm.   While   flames  from   the!\nblazing Konkin barn shot hundreds,\nof feet into the air, they fired the\nSoukeroff stable.\nThen they moved another mile'\nWestward. There they kindled a\ngasoline fed blaze In a pile of woodi\nstacked against the William Hoodi-|\ncoff's big hay-shed and barn. It wasi\nextinguished by an alert night1\nwatchman before it could catch a\nfire hold. i\nSome    small    operators    cannot\noprrate   one   day   without   the   as- KONKIN  L088 $4000\nInstallation of the 6000 horsepower generator ordered for the\nCity Hydro-Electric Plant several\nmonths ago, has been started, City\nEngineer J R. Linton stated Tuesday.\nThe unit is expected to be ready\nfor operation In about a year.\nConsiderable building is also be-\nFIRES THREATEN\nVARIOUS PARTS\nOF CANADA\nDoukhobor Fires Here,\nIndustrial at Coast,\nForest in East\nB. C. DAMAGE HIGH\npany would strike \"probably tomorrow morning\" v a result of\nfailure to negotiate  a contract.\nJohn   Lenglet,   research   director\nfor the union, said the locals of the\nunion   already   had   authorized   a.   .\nstrike and this had been approved V!0U\u00bb PoIlce bolduP record\n| by   the   policy   committee.\nj He said the decision of the\npolicy   committee   to   strike   came\n! after what he charged was a\nPower \"'ock out' of employees at thc\nto the Company's New Westminster Plant\nand the layoff officers and stewards of the union at the Swift\nPlant   here\ning   carried   out   at   the\nPlant,    as    an    extension\npresent   power  house   is  necessary\nto  house  the  new  unit.  About  12\nmen   are   employed   in   installing\nthe equipment.\nA $290,000 money bylaw authorizing purchase of the unit was\napproved by City taxpayers early\nthis year.\n99-YEAR-OLD WEDS\nBRIDE, 39,\nFOR SECOND TIME\nLEITCHFIELD,     Ky.    Aug.    26\nIAVi  \u2014 The second marriage of A\nB    Farris,  99,  to  39-year-old   Miss1\nMaSgte Oiler was revealed here to- Ousted FrOm U. N.\n;dav by relatives, wbo said the last\nwedding took place Aug. 14, 1945 at     LAKE SUCCESS. Aug. 2fi fApi-\nHartford, Ky. Tun Egyptian spectators were oust\nFarris. a farmer, will he 100 years\nold on Oct 10 and has been married\nfour times, including thr two\nmarriages to his present wife. He\n:s the father of 10 children, ranging\n,r; age from 42 to \"between 70 and\nRO\"\nFatally Injured in\nFall From Bicycle\nST. PAUL, Aug. 26 (AP)-Lloyd\nBlondin Rellins. 42, was fatally injured last night when he fell 75\nfeet from a high rigging on which\nhe was riding a bicycle as a part of\nthe Minnesota State Fair grandstand\nprogram The accident was witnessed by 20,000 persons who crowded the grandstand.\nPossibility that the ihooting\nmay have been a vengeance slay-\nIng was hinted at by Investigators\ntoday. There was no verbal demand for money, apparently, and\nthe gunman headed straight for\nthe manager's desk when he\nentered the bank.\nOnly one shot was fired Petrie\na veteran banker, died in hospital,\nhalf an hour after the shooting. He\nwas shot in the abdomen.\nCh'erncff was sentenced to\nyear's hard labor at Oakalla in default of payment of the bonds.\nThe Investigation, one of the\nmost Intensive in the history of\nthe Weit Kootenay, wai ipurred\nTuesday night by the arrival of\nDeputy Commissioner John Shir,\nraa, second highest officer In\nthe Provincial Police Force. He\nImmediately scheduled confer\neneet with top police offlclali\nhere to review step* taken to\ncombat the outbreak of arson\nand   violence.\nCommissioner Shlrr*s will\nmake a sneclal report to At\ntorney-G\u00abrer(il Gordon Wither\non   the   situation.\ned from the Security Council Chamber by United Nations guards today\nfor making their second demonstra-,\ntion during a council session.\n$2 WHEAT PRICE\nRECOMMENDATION\nIS EXPECTED\nLONDON, Aug. 2fl (API-Canadian food experts who wlll discuss the 1948-49 wheat price with\nthe United Kingdom shortly, are\nexpected to recommend an Increase In Dominion wheat to\nmore than $2 a bushel compared\nwith the $1.55 rate for the first\ntwo years of the contract signed\nin  1946,   It  wai learned today,\n(See story on Page 3.1\nDISMISS MANSLAUGHTER\nCHARGE AT COAST.\nLADNER. HC,  Aug   2fi <CP*  -\nA charge of manslaughter   against\nTieorge S   Wood of Vane niver,\ndismissed in police  court h-^r-p\n.\".'as charged* following th*\u00b0 d\"a\nArthur   I>>* lin,   July   A\ndr'ver,     killed     when     his     tr\n''ruck   a parked car\nACCEPT BOOST OFFER\nVANCOUVER,   Aug    2*,   .rpi\nsembly   wharf,\"   said   A.   Fleming,\nsuperintendent of the burned dock.\n\"1S Scows could be used io; loading in;\n_'rr.fri-rtr^am but thef are in short-,\nsupply.\n\"The wharf was the very life cf\nthe district,\" said Mayor W. C.\nHamilton, who has called a special\nCouncil meeting to seek immediate\nreplacement of harbor facilities.\nMIRACLE   ESCAPES\nMany persons had miraculous\nescap*-5 as the flames swept the big\nwharf and the 10,000-ton British\nfreighter, hut only three were\ninjured\nThe BC Resident Engineer of\nthe Federal Department of Works\n\u25a0Ail] be sent from New Westminster,\n::s headquarters, tn npen the in-\n\u25a0\u25a0pit.gation\nIn recent months there were\nother mysterious fires in the dock\narea, but last night was the worst\nin  the history of the port.\n\"I wonder just what is the\ncause,\" commented Mayor Hamilton a.s he surveyed the fire-\nwrecked  scene\nw Goes Up Sunday\ntrue\nhour \u25a0\nbv  m\nbe $!\not*rr\nboost has befi'\nts  of  lhe   Ci:\nL ' hr;p. A v.\n:v Thr basic w*\ncents an hour\nLONDON, Aug :\u00ab 'Reuters^ -\nBritish coal, including supplies ship- found several beer bottles, some\nped as cargo or bunkers, will go up still containing gasoline, on a wood-\nfour shillings 'about 8^ cents) a ton pile where Ihe fire was set. In oth-\n:r. y-.rr from midnight next Sunday, er recent fires the raiders were re-\nth\" National Cm! Board announced ported to havt- carried gas-fiHed\nid'' night Further increases in coal bottles, in one case, a nude woman\nprirrj will he made when rail being the bottle bearer,\nfreight charges gn up in October RlI1 Hoodicoff, 30-vear-old son of\n:''\"ra*sp William,\nand hocsehold goods and personal\nbelongings moved to fields.\nIt was estimated Prlday that\nclose to 30 schools, homes and\ncommunal buildings have bean\nput to the torch since the beginning of the month. Majority of\nthe raids hava been confined ta\nShoreacres and the Krestova\nsettlement, some seven miles\nNortheast of here. Krestova Is tha\nheadquarters of the radical Soni\nof Freedom group, which orthodox members charge Is responsible for the depredations. However, Grand Forks, Christina Laka,\n8proule Creek, Erie, Outlook near\nGrand Forks, 8hlrley, Slocan\nValley centres and the Verlgln\ntomb near Brilliant have all bean\nscenes of bombings or burnlnga\nsince before July 27. Previously\nat Glade an attempt had been\nmade to blow up the rural school\nthere,\n*JO CONNECTION\nAT HILL1ER8\nVICTORIA, Auq. t6 (CP) \u2014\nThere was \"absolutely no connection\" between tho recently established Doukhobor colony at Hilliers on Vancouver Island end colonies In the Kootenay Valley responsible for current disorder*,\nJoseph Podvlnnlkov, spokesman\nfor Michael (The Archangel) Verlgln, leader of the Hilliers group,\nsaid  last night,\nMr. Podvinnikov added that \"thara\nwas absolutely no truth\" in a Trail\nreport indicating that the reign oi\nterrorism and arson on the mainland\nwas being directed from the Vin-\nWe have asked the government couver Island colony,\nagain and again for help.\" An or-1 \"One of the reasons why we broke\nthodox Doukhobor, he unhesitating- (away from the Mainland Doukhobor\nly blamed the attack on radicii body was its extremist attitude in\nmembers of the Sons of Freedom; fomenting these disorders and ax-\ngroup, son.,\" he explained.\nSoukeroff formerly of Prince Al- Originally, Mr. Podvinnikov con-\nbert, Sask., credited his slim attrac-' tinued, there had only been ona\ntive wife with \"saving the lives of\u25a0> Doukhobor body, but due to \"differ-\nboth of us.\" She was awakened by enc\u00ab in approaching the fulfillment\nlight from the burning barn and of 0l'r\" religious principles,\" the eld-\nroused the family as sparks threat- ers o! the Spiritual Community of\nened to set the frame house ablaze.'' Christ - the Hilliers colony - has\nPolice   were   reported    to   hav<.\nThe heaviest loss, more than\n$4000, was suffered by 72-year-\nold Sam Konkin, -one of the original band of Doukhobors who lm-1\nmigrated to Canada to escape'\nRussian persecution In 1898. His'\nlips quivered as he saw his\nsturdily constructed barn and entire Winter's hay supply burn to\na smouldering rubble. Beside'\nhim, his son Peter, 40, ground his\nfists In anger at the wanton destruction. The Konklns had lived\non the prosperous, farm, owned\nJointly by father and son, for 20\nyears.\n\"We must have more  protection,\nfrom  these   fanatics,\"  Peter   cried.\n,s thr hrgl!\n\u25a0\u25a0rs' five-\npk, thr H*iard said\nBy  The   Canadian   Press\nForsit   fires   raged    In    various\npirti   of   Eastern    Canada   today,  expe\nthreitening settlers at some points\nIn Quebec and  Nova Scotia while\nIn   British  Columbia   damage  was\ncounted   in  mllhoni   from  two  In\nduitnul   blazes  and   there   was  a\nnew   flare up   of    Ooukhohor-set\nflrei In   the  Kootenayi.\nReporti   from   Rouyn,   Que,   told\nof miners, wwdsrnen, farmers  and\nthe:: wives joining in a  continuous\nbattle   against    scores   of   fires    ir\nNorthwest Quebec's Abitibi District\nVancouver   Island\ned to  mount   to\ndamage was\nS3.000.000 in\na n..-i7e which destroy* d a $ 1.500,-\n(i'i() government assembly warehouse\nand wharf and gutted tiie 10,000-lor,\nBntish freighter SS. Sampet. It\nwas believed the freighter would be\na total loss.\natrial\n50 Tons Hay Lost in $7000 Incendiary Fire\nreported spotting a speeding grey automobile that roared\npast his parked car near the Soukeroff yard and disappeared down\nthe road, its license plate and tail\nlight covered with rags.\nbeen formed.\n\"As   I   have  stressed,\"  he  said,\nI \"we on Vancouver Island have no\naffiliation with the Mainland\ngroup, and are not aware In any\nrespect what they are doing at the\npresent. We only know what ap-\nr    peari In the press.\" *\nAs far as another report from the\nMainland stating that a delegation\nof \"Communist-minded\" members\nof the sect had left for Russia, Mr.\nPodvinnikov said he had no information in that respect.\n\"All I can say is that none of our\ngroup has any intention of return-\nShe'.b^\nNova\nirnr\nSent,\nthe\nJor\nSo\n;tli  shore   >f\nBuy    agfl'ti\nme until Ihi\n:,*    Ontario\nllv    Km   RrynoMi\nAnother  large   industrial   fire   m\nVancouver   destroyed    two   Fraser\nRiver   flats   wood   products   firms\nwith  damage  estimated  at  $300,000.\nUp    lo    the   British    Columbia\nKootenays where fanatical   Douk*\nhohon are   engaged   In   an  Intersect war,  more barns  went up In\nflamei set hy night raiders.\nOUT OF CONTROL  IN  EAST\nIn   Northwest   Quebec   scores   of\ni.mii-r  fires  \u25a0wrrt* out of control   in\na      l.vsqnare-niile     nrra     East    *>l\n}{\u25a0\u25a0 i\\ ii   Ttie   honu .'   of   miners  an I\n,*!,>; .^ts wi ic h--.ti \u25a0 threatened and\n: t* f.^i,!,: ^   btvume   thr-   pei sonal\n.... in:  nf M-ttlns   and  their f:mul-\n'-.    M.o;\\    have  gone   sleepless   for\ntr'.*,   fighting the flame'\nlit pot ts    from     Shelbourne    said\ncat    .1   Iiip    threatening   that   tiny\n:sh:ng   settlement   in   Nova   Scotia\nad   been   checked   after   the   wind\nird   during   the   night.   Additionil\nire  fighting   equipment arrived at\nhe  s-rne  frnm   Halifax\nim'arin had timber fires in Nor-\n!:,* i Township West of Kirkland\n\u201eiki\" whe;.* fnpfighters were moD-\n|,;r I f:*>ni ('\u25a0'' i: a:.*t\\ Matheson and\n.wjstika Operations uf all lumber\no-r,p,,nii ' wrre suspended because\nf mr f.u-s, i-Hiisnl li> the licking;\nH nf scvern; lightning-started\n11,' \/.'\nl-** e:a! i\"..A\\\\ bush firew were re-]\n--\u2022\u2022d  out  of  rontml   m  the North I\nIn  the surrounding   district fear, ing to Russia,\" he stressed.\n, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nABANDONS NORMAL LIFE FOR SONS\nOF FREEDOM WAY; HAS THREE HUBBIES\nSHOREACRES. B, C, Aug. 26\n(CPI \u2014 Marie 8hlakoff, a comely\n20 - year \u25a0 old former Calgary\nrune's aid, tald today she had\nabandoned the life of a normal\nCanadian girl to become a member of the radical Son of Freedom becauia ihe \"loved to be\ntrm.\"\nProudly admitting that she hid\nthree husbands, the slim, blonde\nyoung woman said she Joined\nthe Sons about two years ago,\nBrought up as an Independent\nDoukhobor, ihe worked In Nelion and Calgary hoipitali until\nlhe joined the Soni of Freedom,\ngenerally blamed 'or the wild\norgy of depredations that have\nterrorized the Weit Kootenay\nDoukhobor settlements for the\npait 20 years,\n\"I   admit   that   It   Is   hard   for\nanyone to understand our beliefs and Ideals,\" Marie said.\n\"My main reason for Joining la\nmy love of freedom. Now I cah\ndisrobe if 1 feel inclined without\nany feeling of shame or embarrassment. God Intended that we\nihould be free, and only here\nhave  I had that freedom,\n\"We do not lead an eaiy life\nhere, It Is hard, hut we enjoy\nIt, because we feel that it Is the\nright life. We do not want to\npossess anything ourselves. That\nii why we can never posieii a\nhusband In the normal sense. I\nhave three husbands, yet I\nwould never try, or want, to\nhold any on\u00bb of them against\ntheir  wishes.\n\"To me my life li more Chris-\ntlan--and much happier\u2014than\nwhen I lived ai a normal Canadian girl.\"\niii 11 ii iii inn iiiiimi minim miiiiimiimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMii\nA charred heap of rubble Is all that remains of a huge barn and iome 40 tons of hay followina \u25a0 sudden fire raid early Tuesday morning.\nWatching the flames die away are Sam Konkin. 72-year-old Thrums fa rme-\\ and hit ion Pets, 40. who |pintly ran the 'arm for rn ytari. in the,\nume raid. William S^ukerrffi barn was fired and 10 tons o1 hay lott, and an attempt made on a btm owned by WIIMtr\" Hood'cof wai foiled.\nTott1 di\u00ab'ig-t were estimated st $7000 -Daily Newt photo,\ni\nCheaper for London\nRotarians to\nBecome a Father\nLONDON. Ont, Au\u00ab 2(1 (CPi-\nFrom now on il's going to cost loss\nto hfcnm* a fattier In London itt\nl^flst for mfmben of thr London\nRotary Ciu!) In Ihr fast the Club\n'find\" etch member 25 cents on\nthe birth of a rhlld. This week,\nhowever, it derided to reverse the\nprocefeute ird preient a neu* father\nwtth 25 cintl u ,-iill tor tha child\nIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIII\nFIRE BREAKS OUT\nINSIDE VATICAN\nVATICAN    CITY,   Aug.   26-\ni.Reutersl \u2014 Fire broke out Inside the Vatican today when two\nmetal cases of rat destroying gat\nexploded 'com the heat Insida\nthe Chlaramonti Museum where\nseveral tont of food were ttored.\nThere were no casualties, but\ndamage wat serious.\nIMMIIIII Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n r\n\u25a0\n\u25a0\" m\n\u2014\u2014\u2014~^^^\n2 - NELSON DAILY NIWS, WEDNESDAY, AUO. V, W7 |u|       II   U*|(|itUii\nFormer Nelsonile,\nBig Double Feature Program\nFREDDIE BARTHOLOMEW \u2014 JAMES LYDON   In\nThe Town Went Wild\nWhen she aald yei, he thought he got \u25a0 break but It turnad out\nto be a fracture. It'i a tornado of hilarity,\nSECOND ACE HIT\nSong of Old Wyoming\nwith\nJENNIFER HOLT \u2014 IAN KEITH\nBluing action - glorloua aong - In thli all oolor draml.\nTonight\nOnly\nCivic\nShowi\n7-9:24\nDies al Kaslo\nTHIRD READING\nSCHOOL BYLAW\nLast Times Today\nCity Counrll Monday night gave\nthird and final reading to the\nmoney bylaw for th\u00bb propoacd\nSalmo Hlght School.\nThe bylaw will b\u00bb voted on by\na Nelson electorate early ln September. The Board of School Dlt-\ntrlct No. 7 haa tentatively set the\nKASLO, BC., Aug. 2fl - Real-;date as .Sept. 1.1, but In view of\ndent of several Kootenay centres;the Saturday half-holiday for civic\nduring thc last 12 years, Mrs. Lmpjnyeei, Council members or-\nHelen McKinley, wife of Allan H. Idorcd the date changed to Sept.\nMcKinley,   died   Tuesday    at   the')*).\nVictorian    Hospital   here   after   a| -\t\nlengthy  Illness.  She was  49 years\nof age.\nBorn at Ucluelet, BC, she lived\nthere for several years prior to\nattending Provincial Normal School\nIn Victoria. She later taught ln the\nCariboo at Ucluelet. a Norther\nCoast trading poet, and near Chase!\nB.C. In 1920 she married Allan\nMcKinley at Kamloops, and since\nthen had lived at Chase, Revelstoke, Nelson, Salmo, Lardo and\nKaslo.\nMrs. McKinley resided in Nelson among the unusual exhibits at the\nwith her family from 1935 to 1941, Canadian National Exhibition this\nand had lived at Kaslo for the year j, \u201e pageant of dolls repreient\nlast two months. ! ins famous characters of song and\nBesides her husband, she is iur-1 lepend\nvived by one son. Jack, in the | Their creator Is a litle grey-haired\nRoyal Canadian Navy and at pres- Toronto lady, Mrs. H. MacFarlane\nent home on leave; one daughter, wn\u201e j,,, spent all her leisure time\nMae at home; and a step-mother |,n the last eight years reading his\nMrs. J. H. Kvarno of Victoria. tories. biographies and current nov\nFuneral services will hc held * els sn(j making 100 dolls represent*\nfrom St. Andrew's United Church ing characters about whom she has\nat Kaslo, and Interment will be in' rea(^\nPageant of Dolls\nOf Famous\nCharacters\nTORONTO, Aug. 25 (C?P>\u2014Unique\nAtlsfZetAiJ\nAlexanders\nRagtime Band\nthe Kaslo cemetery.\nITAtMNO\nTYR8ME P1WEI - ALICE FAYE\nDON AMECHE - ETHEL HERMAN\n20\u00bbG\nSlorti Thundoy\u2014\"BREAKFAST IN HOLLYWOOD\"\n\"FOR THE LOVE OF RUSTY\"\nMeet on Pacific\nProblems Behind\nClosed Doors\nTWO JUVENILES     ifilanl Tafk Mav\nIN CUSTODY HERE    U,\u00ab\u00bb' \u2022\u00ab* nflT\nOverstrain\nTwo Juhenilti. believe to have\npsraped from B ys Industrial\nSchool at Vancouver, ai'e hound in\nlhe Provincial jail at Nelson. The\nyouths will face charges of\nstealing Mayor T. H, Water's car\non a previous stop In Neieon. They\nwere sent here from Ksslo where\nthey   had   been   taken   In   custody\nCrlT.\nNelson Students\nTo Answer School\nBells Tuesday\nCottonwood City\nDwelling Goes\nUp In Flames\nFire of undetermined origin late\nTueaday night completely destroyed for theft of\nthe three-room \"Cottonwood City\"\ndwelling ol Louie Masaloff of Nelson. The house, situated one mile\nfrom City limits, had been vacant\nfor two weeks.\nF. J. Rapley, Forest Ranger, living in the vicinity of the building,\nfirst noticed flames burning out of\nthe roof shortly after 10 pm., and\nnotified the B.C. Forest Service at\nNelion.\nFire   fighting    equipment   was\nrushed to the  scene and extension     sludpnt,   wlu   know   for   whom\nhoses were laid from Cottonwood the bcU tol|s Tucsday when a re.\nCreek to the burning house some*cord f*ock o( pupil, wi)1 converge'able to provide the $5,000,000,000 to\n50 yards distant. Little but charred on *ve|50n ,nd District schools. '$6 000,000,0(10 a year for four years\nframework was left when the hose In lh8 pasl }.ears an ever-grow-i about which the Paris Conference\nand water pump were put into ing attendance has been booked at'are talking It might even be pos-\noperation. The fire crew directed tht Jurlior anj senior High' ,ibl\u00ab to extend further help \"\nits efforts to prevent the flames schools at Nelson. With school lhat Rul the grave question ..\nfrom surrounding dried grass and t;me approaching and the Nelaon jb, entirely cut off from the fooc.\ntrees. enrollment still  swelling  with   an Uhather Weitern Europe is going to\nThe  frame house, covered   with'all  time record  influx  of student|SUpplieB of neighboring countriei in\ntar paper,   was apparently tinder- to   the   high   schools,   the   district [ne Ru\u201eian sphere,\ndry,   as   spectators,   many  clad   ln Schoni   Board   took   action   to   ac-     _ .   ,     ., ,.   ,   .   .      -\nnight clothes, stated that the main* commodate the overflow. A temp-    \/\u25a0\"\u2022\" \u00bbjf\u2122 \"'r\", could fill\"\"\"'   \"\"\"'\"i'i\"\"*  st\"**\"\"'-   \"\u00ab\u00ab'*\npart of the dwelling was enveloped ory   cottage-type   school   will   he,,d\u00ab \u00bb\u25a0>\u00ab S  itC     bv\u2122. I      ba\"es have b.Tn mpAA ,for A\nMarshal Plan\nBy J. M. ROBIRT8, JR.\nAuoclated Pron\nForeign Affairs Analyit\nPreliminary estimates of what 11\nwill take lo implement thr Mar-\nEhall plan indicate the gravity ot\neconomic decisions which the\nWestern world will have to make\nthis Fall.\nEven more serious than what it\nwill cost to do a minimum Job ls\nthe possibility thst, even then,\nWestern Europe cannot be made\nself-supporting.\nAlthough it would be a terrific\nstrain, the United   States might be\nBLOUSE\nSPECIAL'\nLong and short sleeve\nblouses in Jerseys, sheers\nand crepes. White and\ncolors. Sizes 12 to 20-38 to\n44. Regular to $6.50\u2014for\n'2.95 ,,'3,95\nFINK'S\nREADY-TO-WEAR\nRossland Readies\n: Road Surfacing\nROSSLAND,   B.C.,   Aug.   2fl   -\nRossland City Council has ordered\nmaterials obtained for a start ln a\nroad   black topping   program,   Road\nsurfacing, and gravel and chips will\nfrom Masaloff by Clarence Holmes\nCANBERRA, Aug. 26 (CP)-Aftei\nThe display Includes King Henry\nVIII's six wives, Queen Margaret\ncomplete in 13th century costume\nand  a  replica  of  the  fam\u00abd   King\nhimself   complete   to   medals,   rIb-;Personal belongings of the   tenant\nbons and sword. were   believed   to   have   been   re-\nThe model of Scarlet O'Hara of'moved, but household furnishings\n\"Gone With the Wind\" fame li,including bedsteads -\ndressed as she was when she said:\n\"I w:l lhave a dress\" and proceed!\nto make her drew from the nearby\ncurtain. The doll's dress is made\nof curtaining, ton.\nAmong  the  fine features  of the\nin flame soon after they were  at- erected  opposite the pr\u00abi\u00abn_t_ Jun-\ntracted\ndu\nw^th?'^ t0 ccntlnued  economicjthrLl^\ni lame soon auer uiey were  at- s-.^s-.s-u   s,F(J^^..v   ..,..  *..*..*,,.  .,\u201e..                         Aittmrmnnm  ,n  .hlnnino -\"\"-\"^\"'a, \u00bb,.,.*.\u25a0,.,,<,,,,. s.,,.^., \u201e.,,\n-arted  bv   the   Clare   It was   re- ior High School grounds on Hoover curtain, the difference in shipping b, brought ,rom   TRdona(. (or ,n\nuced to ruins wl hin an hour Street    Two   of   the   rooms   will costs and higher priceaduetto^con- lmme(ii,l(, ,tarl on the job.\nUnoccupied    Tor   more than   . serve to,relieve the overflow from J cen rated   demsnd   wtll   tend    to,   Th   Council also granted .500 to\nwill   be  used  to  accommodate  the. unbalance.\nextras from the Hiyh School,\nnd s stove I\nwere to be seen among the charred,\ndebris.\nProvincial   Police   were   on   the\nscene.\nIt was the  second home on Nel-,\nson's border* to be destroyed within|    Facilities    for    unloading    boats and a desire to keep her markets payment of the $60 fee. The other\na short formal opening session, the'display   are  flf)   different   types   ofisix   days.   Thursday   the   home   of and   boating   crjuipmont   mav   be open   cannot    overcome   the   harri ^J*1'0 n^ade by K. H. W allacc and A.\n.Commonwealth Conference on  Pa- dolls' shoes and the costume of a'Mike  M.  EvdokimoH  in  Rosemont j installed at the Nelsnn waterfront, fact that the United   StateB cannot; Vonness   on.  HpoKane  b tre et were\nciflc Problems settled down behind gaily-dressed   gypsy   woman   even'was completely destroyed in a $3000*    city     Council     Monday     nlght'rarry the European deficit forever, referred to the board of Works for\nSeek Unloading\nRamp for Boals\n| wan lo be paid immediately snd the\nThe Immediate problem thli Fall, balance at the close of the year.\nof course, Is to strike a balance,] The placing of a commercial ad\nEven a precarious one, between1 in the Jubilee Book, being compiled\nwhat Europe is going to ne>d and by the Rossland Miner was referred\nwhat North America can supply.to the Finance Committee,\nwithout threatening domestic econ-j Three application's fnr sewer con-\nomies and through it the entire nectloni were received. Tlie one\nstructure  of Western  democracy,    (made  by  S. A Wise, was granted\nFear   of  expanding   Communism and conectjona will be made on the\nSAYS BULLETS HIT PLANE OVER\nBRILLIANT; NO GUNFIRE REPORTED\nnr.ked doors today to the business includes her money purse hidden In;blaze,\nof   shaping   the   British   Common- the pleats of her full skirt,\nwealth's plans for the Pacific peace      As an adder! touch to her dlspliy\nAt the formal opening session, Ca- Mrs. MacFarlane has built \u25a0 minla-\nnsdlan    delegate   Brooke    Claxton lure dolls' house, with furniture in\ncalled for a \"positive and dynamic*' eluding   little   sliding   drawers   ln\npeace with equality between coun- dressers and tables.\ntries ss between individuals. '\nH. V. Evatt, Australian External .iFpsiAivip aa . x\nthin  I second bullet shattered my .Affairs Minister, was elected (\"fr:: M EDIV-I N \u00a3 MAT\nwindshield\" ms\"  \"' the  Conference,  st   which BATTCDICC I  AY\n\"The plane became \u2022 little hot to Pakistan and Burma were to be rep-' \"U I  I CM t J LA I\nhandle   Believe me I was worried \", resented for the first time as inde- pu ADi   CC\nThe condition   of the plane  pre- pendent units at a meeting of Brit- \u2022LnAKOti\nKELOWNA, BC. Aug 2fl (CP>-\nJUy Munro, Vancouver Sun flying\nphotographer, reported to polire\nhere today thst Doukhobor terrorists had fired on his plane as he ve'r',prt n'j, rEturn to frail, from ish Commonwealth members,\ncircled Brilliant where he started the morning sur-:    Claxton.   Canada's  Defence   Min-\n21-Day Term on\nDriving Charge\nheard an appeal from the Kootenav! There Is grave question whether,1 investigation.\nLaunch Club asking that a gravel even with Europe doing the beit it;, >\u00bb* applications were received\nramp for unloading purposes be tan, the Marshall plan will be iuf- 'or trades licenses. The one made\nincorporated  with  the  present  fill ficient *by E*  Hullem tnr   * truclt llcen\"\nat    the   old    City   wharf    Many,   The   first  hesitant  itepi  toward'0   haul   wood*   etc*   wa'   \"'\"\"\"\nboats   were   brought   into   Nelson development of Latin-American re*\nLicences   were   granted   to   E.   A\n***--'  ll^VI  JUUIIICIH    U1     Vw WIS' * Jill,** '  ty,&l'      41> . - ,\ntrailers during the Summer,0Urcei for a part in the fight ere Minnlng to carry on contracting\nmonths, it was explained, and the being taken. If the Western Integra-! \u00b0ullR,!\"* *f John i Kellogg to con-\nlack  of  suitable   unloading   facili- lion   o(   their   resources   into   an duct \u2022 tailoring shop in the base-\nties  was a   \"hindrance\"\ntion\neconomic system which, for pricti\nment of the Bank ot  Montreal, to\nMEDICINE HAT, Alts . Aug. 28-\nCP) \u2014 Medalta Potteries Limited\nster,  said  holding  the  Conference ,aid crJmJnFI* ch8rgM todiy\nA sentence of 21 days was hand\ned down to Marcel Van Ruysken\nsveld, Nelson man charged with'style of ramp\ndrunken driving following a car\naccident on Baker Street Saturday  night. The  term  will be ser-\nThe  request  was referred  back,cal purp0!eli operates ai a   single E*  p* A'in\" '\" ,c\u2122duct \u00ab\"c\"y\n,*...     ,  1,    r- ..v,    tn.    ,,    ,.!!.. r     \u2022 * *       itrir*    tnharen    rnnt.rl innerv     n   tn\u00ab\nto  the  Launch  Club for  an   esti- unlt\nmate  of  costs  and  plans  fnr   the\nAsk Conformance\nOne bullet shattered the wm.g of vey flight, and he headed for Kel- '\u25a0*\u2022\"\u25a0\u00bb- -= -.,,,,,r,,\u201e,r , jd crimlnB| charges today against'    j ,.-,,,. prnv|nriai ,,ni ,i Nel- U\/iil\nthe plane,  a secmd *ore   through nwn, airfield with its longer run- here \"fittingly recogmres the part lhrep   former   P   \"i\u201eves,   ci8imlng^'d '     h\" Provlnclal <*01 ,l Nel   With City DVIaWS\nthe pl-xi glass Sop of \"-\nsnding  without  mishap played by  Australia  in the Pacific\nKelowna is in the Okanagan war The attendance of the Canadian\nValley, about 100 milei Northweit ielegation is an indication of Can-\nof Brilliant. *da's interest in Pacific affairs\n  \"Canada's strategic po.sit'.on  as a\nNo report of gunfire at Brilliant Pacific power\u2014we have a long Pa-\nor of fires there had been received, clflc coastline\u2014and our interest in\nInspector R. Harvey of the BC Pro- foreign trade as the third largest\nuncial Polire said at Nelson, Tuei- nation In the world, make the estab-\ndav afternoon. lishment  of  political  and  economic\nWalter Lebedoff, editor of the stability in the Ear East vital to us\nDoukhobor paper at Brilliant, said\nhsd heard nothing of bullets be- \u00a3R\u00a3\u00a3   INDIAN\n*   tired   at   an   airplane   \"*\ncockpit\npunching an eight-Inch hole, Munro\nreported.\n\"How lt passed through the cockpit and missed me. I il never kr.ow\nThe shots were fired ai 1 circled\nburning buildings near Brilliant\nabout MX) feet up\"\nNIur.ro. en RC AT Spitfire piln'\nduring the war. laid as the firs'.\nbullet hit 'he plane he recalled his\nwar experiences\noe\n\"I   whirred   the   plane   through \u201e,  (,r(>d  \u201e   ln  .irplane   in  tha.\nseveral   loops   ar.d   firm   b      \"\" area There hid been no firu there. *^|-| | LDREN ENJOY\n\"Frog\" Masks Used\nFor Under Water\n.Fishing in Ontario\nEORT ERIE, Ont, Aug 29 fCP) \u2014!mended that the roadway Into the\nstore, tobacco, confectionery in the\nnew Wartime Housing District in\nthe South belt, to Mr. Griffiths to\nsell skiis and accessories.\nAlderman lefevre, Chairman of\nthe Improvement and Development\nCommittee, reported that the gravel\npit was showing a good grade of\ngravel and the Committee  recom-\nthey have violated an anti-picket-1   Van  Ruyskensveld appeared be-1   Application    for    a    licence\ning   and   anti-intimidation   in)unc-| [ore Magutrate William Brown in operate    an    upholsterv   buiineu,\nturn obtained by the company after:Clty  police  Court.                           made   bv   Oeorge   E   Lngelin   snd The \"frog masks\" used during the pit   be  fenced off and  locked.  In\nbetween 40 and 50 workers went on |   Saturday     night,     eyewitnesses Joseph   Logelin,   wis   rejected   by war by divert placing depth chirgei future   those   desiring   gravel   will\nstrike Aug. 12 following a wage dls-iwere reported to have told police. City  Council  Monday  night  pend- and mines ln enemy waters are be- apply to the caretaker, Scott.\nP'*'tc*                                                 I a car driven by Mr. Van Ruysken-' jng conformance with City bvlaws. ing uied this Summer hy  Buffalo Alderman H. Elmes, Chairman ol\nThe company laid charges In po- sveld struck Mis Kathaleen Massey;   The men planned tn set up bust- youths for spearing pickerel under Finance   Committee,  reported that\nlire court that Gottselig Weiss tried dragging   her   for   almost   a   full ness at 914 Josephine Street under water   and   retrieving   lost   fishing the Committee recommended   that\nto compel Peter Srherer to remain,block   she   suffered   bruisers   and the name \"Logelin Brothers\"          'tackle   Sold ai surplus war goodi, the  balance of the ichnol loan be\naway from his work and that Paul'abrasions,   while   her   companion,.    ]t was pointed out that business lhe masks enable divers to remain paid to the Bank of Montreal, also\nPasternak    and    John    Nozinlnsk E. Sjorst, also was hit by the caVhomes   must   conform   with    fire under for l'i minutes without dil- that the following special granti be\nwatched company premises with a but   suffered   only   slight   injurifts. regulations.                                      'comfort. paid: Roisland Band $50, Red Crosi\nview   to   preventing   Ered   Palmar;    Van  Ruyskensveld  was attempt-;- . . \u25a0\u2014\u2022 r'Societv J20   Rossland   Welfare  So\nand William Guenther from cross-1 ing to pass another car when the  HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIHIIhIIIII Mill MIM Mil II\nlooner   had   I   began    m\nTorst4ea\nar.ofwvrPB 'p-i^av   ^a* ^c\\\nTwo'early   morning   firei,   hou. B I CYC L E MOST\never, had destroyed farm buildings\nat    Glade,    four    milei    East    ol\nBrilliant.\nnc pirket lines.\nThe company claims picketing has\nbeen continued by memberi of the\nTHE PAS. Man, Aug  2d  (TP1 \u2014  Pottery and Glass Workers' Union\n\"1 and of the International\naccident   occurred\nAirplanes,   railwa\ntrains\nHighway Scales for\nBYI.V  MAM\u00bb\nRfpfir'.fe in ipeech is i grpat\nart. Politician! are usually\nfood at It, ir.d Soirhern ra:n-\npaijtneri for rffici nre pa:!:rii-\nlar'.y adept a', '.he n'r.arp corr.e-\nback. Whan Joe Bai'.ey nf Texas was at the zrr.;th of h:j rnvv*\ner he returned Ir^m Wash.r.g'on\nin hia home itate to make n\nipeech. In hii iddreu he d;a-\nciwe<l h:s pn;;!;rai r:.\".'*. r-r.p\nat a time, ar.d d.'p-vrd rf tr.rm\nas only the iharp \\-r.\u00a3 .ed .'\u25a0<\nBailey r^ .Id W'-.r- he f:-.:<hrd\nhe had rnt r;tr. r-.f. \u2022 .-\u25a0\u2022.'i A xr.t\nname of h.s nv y. o.-\u00abp km\ncr,':c, whn wn n ima^ ra!.nra\nman   rf  v-ry  IrrrAei  cn^nrz.n\nRed Army Said\nBacking Tribesmen\nAt Iran Border\nbiles, movies ar.d o'her wnnderg'nf Urinn   nf  Mine,  Mill   and   Smelter TrUCKS TKrOlighOUt\npivilizition  pale before the  b:ryr!e Workers    'ClO-CCD    despite    the\nTEHRAN\nIranian     p\nrpadv   to   ti\nSoviet    oil\nAug   28\nrhament\nto  up\nagreement\nthe estimation of 10 Crc India\nchildren who left thia Northern\nManitoba town tnday for a whitj\nman'* school farther Snath. '\nThe   children\u2014four boys and six\ngirls ranging in  a^e from ei^ht  to\n10 years\u2014are   In  the care  nf  Mri,\nthe  eontroveiial M'irJnr;e tfughes-Caley, wife  of an\nIranian Anglican Missionary in the   North\niurt   injunction.\nThf company also applied in Supreme Court in Alberta for commit-\n'.'sl tn jail nf Albert Pawlowiki and\nValentino  Stach for breach of thr\nProvince Urged\nNeius of the Day\nRATES: 22o Una, ?7c Mne black face typa. larger typa rates on\nrequait. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt paymint\nIIIMIIlflllllllllltlllllllllllltlllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIItlllllllllllllliiiiiiiilllll\nAPi   -\nfday\nThf\nwas\ninjunction a\nplication wc\nloday.\nr.d   ri;p!-matic   officials   reported Because he Ls known to the elder In\nthat \"in.OOO Barzani Kurdnh tribesmen,   hacked   by   the   Red  Army\"\nwere assembled  :n  Soviet  Aierba-\nl.n'ar.  on  the  Nort liw est  Frontier.\nMay Have Tacked\nDown Magnetic North\nVICTORIA, RC. Aug, 28 (CP1-\nJn a move to reduce damage tn highway! for overloading of commercial\nvehicles, the Provincial Public\nd argument on the ap- Workl DepBrlment haa placed ord-\nscheduled to be heard >r|   for   6everal   se;,   of   highway\n .icalea to be  located at Ytrategic\"\npoints throughout the Province.\nThu was disclosed here today by\nWorks Minister E, C. Carson in announcing the Government's intention to \"crack down\" on truck operator! who are consistently overloading their  vehicles  for haulage\nciety $.W for the C\/race Hospital,\nInstitute for the Blind -$23.\nAlderman Bacon wai aaktd to\nprocure information from tht Library Board in regards of tha grant\nfor   1947.\nThe report of the Tinanct Committee wai   adopted.\nlb. at $1.0!S at VALENTINE'S.\nMORE CAR PRICES\nMust Miss School\nFor Week After\nTrip to Vancouver\nVICTORIA, Aug\n-Chil-\nrrcm\nknAv\nGooderham & worts\nLIMITED\nToronto,   Canada\nBalfour Drivc-in-Theatre\nn t*s\u00ab BV'oijr School Groundi\nWednesday, Aug. 27 at 8:15 p.m.\nGreat Doublt Bill\n\"GINGER\"   (the story of a dog)\ndiam ns \"the Praying Ma\nknown to the children as \"the Praying Woman.\"\nShe met them at various stations\nalong the Hudson Bav Railway to VICTORIA,  Aug.  28   'CP^    .\nwh.ch   the:r   parents   had   brought drm of r\u00abea'er Victoria arhool dis-!0VfT public highway!.\nthem \u2014not without fears despite the trict who have visited the Mainland]    When the scales are installed\u2014at\ntraditional   stoici>m  of the  Indian, must remain nut of school for two points yet to be decided upon\u2014mo-\nA'.: four boys wept when thev stfp- weeks after their return as a guardibile  crews   will  be  used  to  make\n\\WA.  Aug   2ft   'CP'  \u2014  Re- ped off tnr  !ra;n   at The  Pas and against the possible- spread of polio-(\"spot\"   checki.   Scales   will   nnt   be\nreceived     fmm     Canadian ,\u2022,*,,,.  \u201e rrnwd  lt   tj,e  (tatmn.  Onlv my td it i.s, Dr. .1, L. Murray Andenon.'operated full time. Instead, a crew\n\\'t   attempting   to   discover wv,fn t^ey became f.sr.nwtcd at au- Medical  Health  Officer,  stated to-,will move in unexpectedly, and for\nut   bcation   rtt   the   North lnnioh;;e Windsh:e!d wipers in oper- '^v af,er a meeting of health offi- several days will check the loadi of\nir   p >   indicate   that   they a,;nn ^^   -^^ \\r_iri \\tQp  '\"       ' rc*.-<*                                                      all vehicles passing through,\nv>ve achieved  their object,\" pL^iNE. UNPOPULAR \"r ^ so informed  the Greater\nes department official! sa-d     Q(  lhp wnnder|   lhpv  h|ve  \u201een Victoria School Board   at the aam\n-\u2022re Thursday, tnr airpUne  draws ' ^p .;'dv.-;^  ,h;it  the  schooli  *\nention because most of thrn P\u00ab,rmitt\u00ab!d   to   nPen   at   ,he   regular T0 Work With  U.S.\ntime.\nThe polio situation in Greater ATHENS. Aug 2fl fAP) -\nVictoria remained unchanged to- Premier-designate C*:nstant:n Tsal-\ndav iwth four ou* of the five cases daria conferred tonight with Am-\ns'lll m ho.'pitnl and progressing sat- bassador Lincoln MacVeagh of th\u00b0\nisfiict-rily One case, the first, has.United States on the Greek (b*v*\nr.,,w beer, released from hospital as ernmental crisis and sources close\ncured. j lo  the  pouliit   leader   laid   he  of-\n\u2014 \u2014-   \u2014 tfered   to   pnmplv   with   \"whatever\nYOUNGSTERS   EMBARRASS     lhe American Gov ernment ssi.shes**\nJAP PREMIER ii   \u2022     ..     u   .\nnr.AWA VILLAGE, Japan, Aug   MOJOnty   Not\nPremier   Tetlu   K.I.   VetO tO   Rul\u00ab\nOld Chum Fine Cut Tobacco\u2014 H\\   Anyone still having coitumej or\napparel   borrowed   (or   the  Cavalcade, especially old fashioned white JOIN   CLIMB\nSee our full line of LiRht Decoyi     silk and lace blouses, please phone    w,,,  w ***\nJACK BOYCE MEN'S SHOP      Mrs,   Ilodard,   as   these   must   be     DETROIT, Aug. 2ff (AP)  \u2014 The\n  returned to owners round of increases in new automo-\nOut of town one week  Pounder's' -  ;  Me prices was completed tonight.\nChimrey Service THETA  RHO  GIRH I    Studebaker   announced   Increuei\n1 ]  ,m\u00ab.t  IOOE   Hill, Thur.-day Aug   which   followed  up   th\u00bb hikei  in-\nsrnn   uir     mil    \u00bb\\*n   wnon 28* 8 -1 m   Vr:-V \u2122portint meeting nounced earlier in the day by Tord,\n,' At       \u00ab*n r iAIl members plena attend if at all which only last Sunday had boosted\nrange. r..onc wi-n. | pols;h,e   R,\u201er((anizir.(( ind prepir- llitmgi   on  most  of   iti   can  ind\ning  for President's visit. .trucks.\n' The Studebaker increase! were:\nThe Principal nf the Hl**h School Champion model, $8.1; Commander,\nwill be it his office from 10:00 to $98; lind cruiser, $115, ind heivy\n12 0(1 Wed, Thurs ar.d Fri. Aug trucks, $50, and light trucki, $85\n27th, 2flth and 29th, to interview Ford advanced the pricei on its\nparents or pupils concerning courses Lincoln ar.d Mercury models ar.d\nA Personal Property r.-\u00abter g.vel ;or lhe con,in, lchm] year ,he rem,,,,dl,r ol lhe rord llI;, ,0.\nMIMEOGRAPHING\n568 Ward St Pnone\n717\nPORTRAITS BY  McQREGOR\nPhone 224 for appointment\ngreatest protection  Blackwood Ag'y\nEverything  for   wash-diy   Fold-\nd.\n\u201ev.\nIr.rre\nProgreu    -efvirts    earlier    from ,\nef ss   ir.rtirated  thlt   since   IBM *'\"*\n- ,    r men*, have moved North- *\u25a0'*\u25a0''   \"\u00ab,\"   'h\u2122   ;n   \"'\u00abhl   \"\"\"\"\u2022\u25a0\n..A  ,\u201em, 2W  mi'es   F.ndlrgs of :ha bicycle draws moit. Even  their\np  pi,tv  it  thit   time  tended  to '\u25a0-\"< n\"n:<  '\u00ab' ;\"gh! failed  to ir-\nppor*.   th,   np.nl >n   of   Dominion \"use in equivalent interest perhaps\noserva'ory  off.na'.s  '.nal   lhe  p\"le bera\nlora'ed on S mi let island. Lv- a few sso: !, of f,*\ng oe'ssren Pee'. Sound and T'r.es* *,*,,\/r ssir!\n r    Tir-e-.'     Uland.    Somerset silo's    lhc   f >*;r  h\nA Greek Chief Ready\nhe most fluent knows\n....\u25a0eases on  tha Lincoln  models\nVacuum cleaner! and floor polUh- :ng \\ton,nl  boirdi,  celling  dryerl. ranged   from  $U8  to $20(1   on  the\ners for rent Beatty Service   Ph 81   folding   clothei   horses,   galvanized Merrury line from $38 to $228 ind\ntuba,   clothespin!   and   bajkcU,   etc   on   the   Ford   nation   wagons   ind\nSPENCER   HEALTH   SUPPORTS HIPPERSON'S convc-t*!,les    not   l-r*uded   in    the\nMrs.  T.   A.  Gibson.  110   Kerr   Apia.* increases    earlier    to.j)    week,    the\n  Nex Royal Standard Office Type- advance ranged  (rum $198 to $229.\nOLD   PAPERS   FOR   SALE.   15e  writers in all widths for immediate\nBUNDLE  AT DAILY  NEWS. delivers'   Cnsh   or   ran   he  mid\n\u2014  terms  I)   W   McDerby. \"The Type-\nExpansion   Watch   Bracelets   for writer and Adding  Machine Man\"\nladies and gents in gold filled and 536 Ward Street. Nelson, B   C.\nThe Weather\nstainless ste\nHar\nJ (\nr.r II.i\nFrank\nnf    thr\nth,*\nt'i   Fr\nnl<   F isprtmr\nL er ILnv.ns\nRorbnra\nWh'te\nReed,\n\"RAIDERS OF THE SOUTH\"\nM-  Ro\nRTsm-r-sH  Hntt *n\nYm-n pu,r\nPLUS:     WORLD  NEWS\nTHIS PICT I  lit -All t   BE RHOWN IN PROCTER COMMUNITY\nHALL   THLRS,  \u00bb   P.M.   KAStO   DRIIL   HAIL   SAT.   I   P.M.\ni ef-b r.ihi'i's haioi'\na'.l down The Las strecls out l\nyc'.e astounds them. Mis Hughes-\niley said For one thing ihey can t\niders'.and why a bicycle s'ands\ningh* when a hov or g.rl is riding\nand why it wm\nited upon I*\nRegularly, one of the group calls\nstum iconie bsrk'\" w'nen ano'her\n\u2022 nturei too far ou' ;\u2022-. itreet to\nua after a bicycle which has sped\nPHONE  1177 AND  1178\nFAIRWAY FOR FRESH  MEATS\nIf you want a first class\nWatch Repairing bring voir *.s*s\"\nlo  COLLINSON'S  where  you   ss\nget satisfaction.\nHARVEST   DAYS   WILL   SOON\nBE HERE! GET YOUR FALL GARDEN     NEEDS      HERE.     POTATO\nFORKS,   SHOVELS,   HAY   RAKES,\ni *h   on   AND OTHER TOOLS.\nGREENWOODS\nWhy not give us a call to Incre.isr K< 'It SAI.F\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFINANCE PACT FOR N.S.\nPROGRESSES IN HOUSE\nHALIFAX. A ig ltt iCY: - A\nhill ratifying a fln (Win non Domin-\nlon-Provm-ial tax agreement passed through second reading the\nN va Scotia legislature today do\n-t the firs' dav of 'he spena1\n\u00bb*'ing called in considered lhe\nfo arc nl   pUn\nOTTAWA A ig ?t <CYi Yl'f-\ne i nroapecti indica'e a i-on'm.*\nlog tight feed grain sltua'lon is ,n\nH re for the 1947-\u00bb8 season. Ihe\nt ireau of itatistici reported tnd.iv\nn lti liiu.irlclls i, slew of llu\nise   giaois   situation\n'\u25a0ama   found   loday   that   children\n1 when no one is ran   ask   embarrassing   nueitlom.        CANBERRA,   Aug    28   (CP)\nHe ard Education Minister Tituo In  an  itmosphere  of security\nMorito   interviewed by i grotip of ceeding wartime, representative! of your  fire  insurance  protection   to\n10-    srd    12-year-old    reporteri   of the   Commonwealth   countries, met   day?~C   W    APPLEYARD\n\u25a0he    \"Norumt   Children!    Allorta- today   to   rllicun   Japinese   Peice\nhon     Newspapers.'     were     asked Treaty problem! and  w*ere report-\nss*hat  is 'he  socialist party  plan- ed to have  agreed  that when  the\nning   io   do   for   children?\" 11-posver    far    Eastern    Commls-\nKatavama sloffled nervomly ind lion begins talks on the treaty '!-\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nDAISY LIE, I.RSM\nTuition  in Violin\nStudio:  111  I'nion  Strut\nDAIRY FARM GOOD\nSt.,    arres     I.o's    of\n70   tons   hav   Sell   all   or\nTiire   Alex   Toth.   Pa\nBC.   or    wnia   B\nsaid\ni   are   loo   young   to   ask self    a    two-third    maloritv\nlike   that ' and not a veto should pres*ail\nFeels Nothinq Worse Con Happen to Her\nAfter Two Falls From Trapeze\nFLOOR FINISHING\nHardwood   flooring   iuppU*<X\nlaid md fintahed.\nA H RON MARK - PH. t\u00bb-V\u00bb\nmr*.- \u2014lifi'MT Temperatures   normal    High   We\nI RSE    -    HOME np!d        B,    v,,,rn,lv        \u201e.      ,\ns*  rails, trestmefs   Abboufnrd gl1, N,\u201ea;mn  \u201e\nTor fine jewaUerY, BrWlj Wleath\nDlimondi and gleifilni Sflverw.'i.\nTORONTO,    Aug.   M    (CPS \u2014 ict high In the lir she keeps crouds 'rv    COLLINSON'S   JTWELLERY\nM rkey   King,   featured   aerlallst gasping   while   she   throws   herself STORE. 56! Baker 81\nat If. crrm nn the Canadian Na- through   giant   \"half-fling.s\"   th   fo       \u25a0 \u25a0\t\ntlonal    Exhibition   Grounds,   has 100 timaa Sht his missed twice suf* CENTRAL SCHOOL\ntravel led all around the world but faring concussions, broken hor.es Receismg clau and beg'nrcs\nsays the most beautiful scenery and extenslse lacerations and 'hat regls'er ai 9 A M othera atttnd af\nanywhere   can   be   found   at   har has given her a fatalistic outlook on  1 20  I'M  Tueaday Sept  $.\nfarm near Sutton, Que. life --    \t\nMisi Kmc horn Gertrude Com-| \"I atlll get a thrill everv time I go Playmor - 1 Big Holiday Weak.nrt\n,i , .\u25a0 a native nf Sutton and she \u201e\u201e \u201e,, t|,r tr,,p,.,,. ** ,h,, ,ai,| \"Hut 1 Dances. Saturday nighl, Sunday\n\u2022\u25a0comes Ivi.nil when she describes |,avf had such serious injuries I feel Mldnlte Frolic and tha Labor Day\ns slu*  has seen   from   her ||,B|   nothing   worse  can  happen   to  Dance,   Monday,  Sept.  Irl.\noar'    I\nSiding.\nTrail\nrVRAnT-AT-r'ST\nnursing   ho*i\ndaily   car.   etc     Dav     weak    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   y,p.^\nmonthly   rates    R-*x    S7Ja   Daily  ^\u25a0,nn.pf|\nN'''1'' Rei'i'a\nK\"R TOT\" \"1\u00ab IT rtT-f^'XTsD Canary\nir 'nr   h* a'    In   good   condition Kamlon; s\nl'i,\"*.   ftOti-H-l    May   ha  ie**n   \u00ab\" Vancniiv.\nMerberg'l   Ym r Rd Virtona\nFOR SALE  --  WELL BlIlf.T TWO ''ra\nForecasts:\nOkanagan \u2014 Becoming cloudy\nWednesday mmn.r.g W.nds light\nTemperat'ires norma! H:eh Wed-\nr.osdav at I'er.tlct n 7R, Kamloops\nDC, Lytton S3\nKootenay:   Cloudy   Wedneeday.\nScattered   ihowen   In   afternoon.\nWinda     light.     Continuing    cool,\nHigh Wednssday at Cranbrook 67,\nCraicant Valley  70.\nVancouver:    Va-aole    cloudiness\nWednesday   mornr.g.   clearing   hy\n34   noun   Winds Nortiiwest   1.1 Coastal\nareai in afternoon otherw.ie llgh!\ned-\n3,\nCemer\n*,*\nic:   lr\nv.,\nKas\n5*1\nerr\n\u2014\nft\n76\nf\\\n41\n.Al\n04\n4.H\n51\n07\n59\n79\n511\n71\n\u2014\n52\n'17\n\u2014\n46\n6^\n\u2014\n17\n66\n0!\nso\nHi\n\u2014\n50\n76\n\u2014\nIOH t ftoMifD HfvSF t'ROFN'T\ni-il'   P*\nSM F\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 a.m. \u2014 Except Sunday\nT    \\ TJvery Co.\nM    H    MrlVOH,   Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135     Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nFOR PROMPT RELIEF\n\u25ba PIMPLES\nMASHES\n\u25ba ECZEMA\nf.jtmjri h*lpe duj\nap untifhtlr ikln\nbUmitliM   Contitni\n\u25a0..It.'*'*, ne'lmi.l\nliullSf   nil    lin\nThut    iwn.ni-\ni-\u2022**]] furnffl   t<*\ns  seen\nivrr  farm  wherf\nnnnthi   of   every\nKm;\nFfiR\n< TOO WfMfO\n! D0AMfTHIH6\nRAN AWAY  FROM  HOME LADIES* SUEDE BEDROOM  SLIP\nAs a girl of 1.1. Mickey r.n ass\u00bbs PER8:   \"Bastien   Brothers'* _ t! 70.\nIh   annual   real   n (roffl   h^m|   |f)  do  whi|   miij|   ^ 0IRLg, gLACI<  8UIDI  L0AFEPS\nin her iperticulir it(lm of doln|_,om , clrcu|   sh, \"The aturdy .chool loafer - U9S.\nitarttd it \u25a0 linger md th\u00bbr. becimi TMt IOOTSry\ni blllit ijir.cir iftir two months ot\t\n'wiving i red fin in front of in ale- Ni\" itudan'i to 'ha Junior Huh\nphtnt\"     - School, axeipt thoie promoted from\nWhgt   tht   contldin   htr   \"bH*\" 'ht   Iltmtnttry   Schooli   irt   -\nd hv his : ess O'ar\nne Rm 7 Saves* It-lr\nI1F1 l*XF 1*164 F.lHI\n':*.: 4 new tirei Wo\n,n   I'nk,   RC\nMNCFR  sfwini\n, ,, d   C.i,,Ilto*\nn.\nifl\n.Mum ('icrsi'icrf i'crlton\nPage .1\nCUTICURA !%;.'!*,\nV\nOn 'OIHTAIM OAY\u00bb' Of Mairthl\nT\\\\i\u00bb  fino \u00abi\u00ablh-in\u00bb li vtry efjecit** to\nmIU-vk i\u00abl\u00bbf\u00abl tWeUem end  tlnx), nee-\nTtm*, IrriUhU Wlnrt. \"I* \u00abuch div*\n\u00abh*n A\\f -\u00bb (wttln fuoclloo*! mimtlily\nbrtik, ctmt when Eddie Wird of quelled  to  register it  the Junior\nthe fimoui \"Flying Wards\" became High School mnrrlrga of this wee!\nInterested   In   tier  and  taught   her\ntrapeze work DDT     ILl-cIi dd    Spray       su:\nWhile nn  the road, Mickey  does death   to   flics,   mollis,   inoiuu1.'..***.'\nembroidery   nnd   crochet   work   and wasps, etc  N\" lieim oaricrs niourd\na cillrrlion of ber needle sso.ili   s-oui   l\u201e o*,*   ss',.      s,,*,   ,,.*,,    ss.io\nI   fills  Iwn   lalge diaweis  u.   liei   (liren   (*\u25a0\nler  cabin.       \u2022 lm   lo,\nRelieve RHEUMATIC Mn\nAre yosir |o*c.n and miiaclea Klfl and anal\nlions Rhroirailr Pain? f* o,'iick. ml,\nr.lirt with Templ.ton'e 7 H ( \u00ab I wet\nand rtsiinimcnd'd t'V thouianda. T R t \"i\nlie l|\u00bbsilllv masle lo trli.v. Rh.mnato.\nAtthiillr and Nflitllic [\u00bbm in,I .IIHnm.\nIi:ml\u00bbi\" *- ill* a Neuralgia. Oet . I\u00abii\nlo.l.y    SIX. tl .1 'lli.llii'*. 1   W\nllll\ni!   ll\nllll-l't Ii .\n^ GETTING UP\n(ftttiHtJ tf<M V<M\u00a5* 7\nI(naafnui|fa\u00bbdsrasi\nocJ. hill r.l Id .I'll\n9*.rj\u2014(I jes\u00ab ilea*\nIi hralan hr ful'd\ntnaaiai ui tunu*\n-\u2022eaur biiaTi aaar\n(.aalah-m W!n\u00bb\nT<H\u00bbkkrnaTi*Ha'J<\nt-t nrA*. yaur ileee\nuiuallr lufltrl Ta halt ysssir kl*Wr\u00bb\nreflin 1 Twm.1 rn-adtttssn. ul. IWd'd\nK\u00abk\u00bb, Wla. ISM; SJ\u00bb lh. klJn.il |.l\nrid af peiio.il ind .irMl icidl in r<>s>t\n\u25a0IltaOL TWl TSWJT un.llimll dililir.iia\n, ... rin \u00bbn*\u00ab> r.ithil iwih,^9S akaf\u2014\n.nd \u25a0\u00bb!. r.lt.iW .nd r..'ti I.l \u2022**! \u2022\u2022\n,*.,    i,.|'i .111 h.li.., I'.llil\"*!\".    !'\u2022\n1\n ,'    \u25a0  ' \t\n . \u2014\u2014 , , ; 1 1 !\nRecommend Boost\nIn Wheat Payment\nIncrease May Extend to as Much as\n30 Cents a Bushel; Expect Announcement\nOTTAWA, Aug 26 CP)\u2014The Federal Government will\nrecommend to Parliament at the next session that the initial\nwheat payment to Western producers of $1.55 a bushel be\ngiven another boost, the Canadian Press learned authoritatively today.\nICH1\nThe extent nf this increase, which\nwill apply to No. 1 Northern whtat\nbasis Fort William, Port Arthur or\nVancouver, was not immediately\nknown, but it may extend to as\nmuch as 30 cents a bushel.\nNor was it immediately known\nwhether the boost would apply to\nwheat sold for domestic consumption.\nAnnouncement of Ihis decision,\ntoken by the Cabinet within the last\nfew days, will be made shortly\nThe initiative in making the rec-\nLOW RAIL\nFARES FOR\nLABOR DAY\nMONDAY, SEPT. I\nBetween all Stations In Canada\nONE-WAY FARE\nAND ONE-THIRD\nFOR ROUND TRIP\n(Minimum Fan 30.1\nGOOD GOING:\nFrom 12 noon FRI. AUG. 29\nto\n2 p.m. MON. SEPT. 1\n(StanfUrd Time]\nIf no tnln ifternoon Aug, ??, ticket!\nwill be good on morning tntn.\nRETURNING:\nLeave deitlnation Sept. 2, except If no\ntrain, t leke ti will be valid until\nMidnight Sapt. 3.\nEle\u00abp)cc \"d ParlnT car privilcgre at\nUsualratei.\nFull information from any attnt,\nHH-ffW\nworlds DlfiTESI mem smiM\n! nmmrndatinn  to  Parliament  likely\n; will   be   taken   by   Trade   Minister\n'MacKinnon, the Mimstei  in charge\nof the  Canadian  Wheat   Board,  the\nLiovenimcnt-operated   body   which\nhandles   Canadian   wheat   sales   at\nhome and abroad.\nBOOSTS BRITISH\nPRICE\nAnother jump in  tlie $1 55 initial\nI pay men l   automatically   will   boost\nthat price above the turd $155 being received from Britain for wheat\npurchased fnr the first two years nf\nthe four-year Anglo-Canadian wheat\ncontract\nHigh Government Circes said\n'hat the Governmem was able to go\nbeyond the contract price :n its pay-\n! ment to Western producers because\n: ol the substantial profits piling up\ntn the Wheat Board coffers from\n1 sales of wheat made thus far to\nI Britain  and other countries.\nWhen the increase is approved by\nParliament, it likely will be made\nretroactive for the whole of the\n1947-48 crop year, which opened\n, Aug 1 this year This would mean\na substantial rebate fnr Western\nfarmers on wheat already delivered\nup tn the time Parliament gives it\n.sanction.\nThe original plan was to place\nthe Wheat Board profits on sales into a five-year pool and disburse the\nmoney to the producers at the end\nof that period, some time after 1950\nHowever, the profits were becoming so substantial, it was understood,\nthat the Government felt it could\nincrease the initial payment, thus\nspreading tbe profits over a longer\nperiod, and still make a final payment when the pooling period ends\nTHIRD IN .3 YEARS\nThis will be the third jump m ttie\ninitial wheat price in three years\nThe first raise in that period came\nin July, 1946, when a 10-cent boost\nfrom $1.25 to $1 35 was announced,\nretroactive for the whole of the\n1945-46 crop year The pr.ee later\nwas increased to $1 55.\nWELCOME   NEWS\nWINNIPEG, Aug 2<i -iT* An\nOttawa announcement tha! the Government plans to reeicn mend to\nParliament an increase in the initial\nY\nOUR executor, if he is to be successful,   must   know   a   great   deal\nI\nabout   investments,   taxation,   real   I\nestate,   and  current   business  pro-   i\ncedures.   The Toronto General Trust*-, v ith a\ni   national organization, is in touch uith all mat-\nI\ni ters in the field of modern estates admini-tra-\ntion; by appointing this ( orporation, you can\nbe sure of competent and experienced tare of\nyour estate interests.\nTORONTO GENERALTRUSTS\nCORPORATION\nW. S. WtJuar, W|.     r-.ndt. tt l.iinr,,. St.     loni'i-,,1\nHT'I)      !\u00ab\u00ab!;     F V T t IF D    TUF    J* F. ! T    1902\nRUSS REJECT\nREQUEST ON\nPETKOV TERM\nWould \"Interfere\nIn Internal\nBulgarian Affairs\"\nPETKOV APPEALS\nLONDON, Aug 2ft fAP.-Ruuli\nhas rejected a British-American request for consultation on the death\nsentence passed by a Bulgarian\ncourt on Nikola Petkov, Bulgarian\nAgrarian Party leader, the Foreign\nOffice announced today.\nAndrei Y. Vishinsky, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister, said in a note\ndelivered to the British Charge d'Af-\nfaire.s in Moscow that such a consultation would constitute \"interference in internal Bulgarian affairs.\" a  Foreign Office spokesman\nTins is th< samp contention advanced in Sofia last Friday by Soviet Lf --\"it\". Alexander Cherepanov\n\u25a0 I. rejecting a demand of the United\nStates tor <\u2022 review of the death\nsent0 nee\nP'-tkov, a top-ranking anti-Communist leader, was sentenced 10\ndays ago to be hanged on conviction\nnf conspiring against the Communist - dominated Fatherland Front\nGovernment He has signed an appeal\n$135 a bushel price paid Western\nfarmers for their wheat was hailed\ntonight on the Prairies as welcome\nnews\nAt Edmonton. President Carl .1\nStmipfle of ihr Alberta Farmers\nUnion .said the report would be\n\"good new;-, especially for the\nfarmers who have a  short  crop.\n\"What we tried to get them fthe|\nFederal Government) to do was to*\nincrease the payment by 25 cents'\nfor the 1946 crop and for the pre-1\nsent crop Because of the crops that\nwere hailed out and dried out, it\nwould save many farmers from going to thp bank and borrowing\nmoney   to carry on \"\niThe amount of the increase tn\nbe recommended has not been announced by Trade Minister MacKinnon hut he sa'd it would he\nretroactive to  tiie  194.1) crop i\nActing Premier C M Fines of\nSaskatchewan echoed Mr Stirnfle's\nwords \"Wr have been urging an\nincrease  for years,\" he   said.\nLast Riles for\nD. H. Brown\nAl Kimberley    j\nKIMBERLEY. B C. Aug 28 -\nFuneral servres ss'tsre hrld here or\nSa'.urrias* f-nm 'he funeral parlor;\n(01 David Harp\u00bbr R:n:s*i:. killed on\nAugust 19 in 'he Sullivan Mine\nThe Rev R C Henstork of All\nSaints Angliran rhurrh nffm-i'.ed a'\nlhe serw-e -fhrh *.'*is a'tended hs\n'he John Purhan Rover Cre-.i- o!\n\u25a0\u2022:i:rh the de'-eased  ssas a  popular\nllienl'ier\nPall hearers we**. Robert I.v\nAllied  Turner. Aloe:' M  i.sson.  A~-\n\u2022hur fhrif.'.!*'\"[:. I,mis Beduz and\nEarl Chambers   all close   friends   if\nAsk Removal of Sons of Freedom\nSOPHOULIS\nINSISTS ON\nBEING PREMIER\nEnds American\nEfforts to Mediate\nGreek Deadlock\nMAIN OBSTACLE\nATHENS, Aug. 2ft (AP)-Amer-\nlean efforti to mediate the deadlock In the Greek Governmental\ncrlili failed today when Themis-\ntoklei Sophoulis, leader of the\nmain hranch of the Liberal Party, imiited that he become Premier.\nConstantin Tsaldaris, Premier-designate, had been trying for three\ndays to form a new Government.\nSophoulis, 86, had been one of the\nmain obstacles to success because of\nhis steadfast refusal to enter a coalition Cabinet to solve the current\ncrisis.\nUnited States Ambassador Lincoln\nMcVeagh had conferred with Sophoulis during the morning\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 27, 1947 \u2014 1\nAn appeal to have radical 8om of Freedom, who they blamed\nfor a \"reign of terror-by-fire,\" removed from the District, ii handed\nProvincial Police Inspector A. Harvey at Shoreacrei. The two are\nrepresentatives   of   the   Union   of   Spiritual   Communities   of   Chrlit,\n\u2014Dally News  Photo.\nN. S. Legislature Urged lo Ratify\nAgreement With Dominion\nlle-nme.*' m,s m lhe Klmherle*.\n'.e'er*, ssberi* 'ne manv lovr.s\n111   'rllni'es   tes! fled   I\"   lhc   lo* .\nreiper'   'he rnirnv.in I's   fell   f .:\nvouiz mar*.\nGov't Inquiry\nInlo Mine Blast\nUnlikely\nVICTORIA   P   C    Aug   2ft TF'\nP.vsib'li'v *-f a C-.rrrn-rr' inrpirv\n\u25a0nt-.  'he  VAr:f:r  Fist.-\"   O.-ld   Mine\nd.-.i'V-   u!-   *h   r lured   th*   Vvrs  A\nBy JACK   BRAYLEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nHALIFAX,  Aug, 26  (CP) \u2014Pre\nmier   Angus   L.   Macdonald   asked\na special sitting of the  Nova Scotia   Legislature today   to  ratify   3\nfive-year      Dominion-Provincial\nfinancial agreement which he iaid\noffered   his   province   a   minimum\nnf roughly $10,900,000 annually.\nBut   still    not   satisfied   wi'h   the\nDominion's   approach,  he   repeated\nhis   previous   declaration    that   the\nagreement      was     temporary      and\n\"purely financial.\"\nANNUAL   CONFERENCES\nIlr also repeated his demand for\nannual Dominion-Provincial conferences and used this opening to s;r;-\ni;cst the provinces should b\"1 consulted in 'he cnrr^nt Canadian-Newfoundland Conft deration discussions*\nFinally   he   gave   iome   hint   of\nhow  the   province   was  going   to\nipend Its revenue which he  isid\nwould be  higher \"than   If we  did\nnot sign an agreement.\"\nHeslth     and     welfare     services\nwould   get   increased   grant;,   ad.i.-\ntmnal ' iar?e  turns'' would  be spent\nor-   high wavs,    teachers'   minimum\nsalaries   wrild   he   ;:;r*--<M    from\n$900 to $1200, departments <*'. Industry, Publicity, Lands Fore-t and A ;-\nr.culture would expand their F*~o;>e\nar.d activity ard snon  Municipal Affairs    Minister   .1    H     MarQuarr.e\nwould   confer   with   representatives\nnf     tiie     prnvir.ce'.s     mu r :c:pa;it les\nwho   have  been   seeking a  discussion of their pos.'.nr.\"\nLESS FOR  SOCIAL SECURITY\nH-iwevrr, the Di-mm: \u2022:: had indicated   ;*   would  nnt  be,.;-   a- 1 .*y r   a\nas :t   had fn -t   propo-ed\n' In o'hei v 'rd--\/' said the Premier, \"while the I).'.n|.:-..,v- ^ve.- \u25a0.:\u2022;\ntti* money wi'h n-e hand, :'\nplars to pay nu' >,;. w,'h the ,,\u00bbh\":\nand if 'he plans are m he res! ?r !\n'he p'-ovrcs must make -p the dif-\nferepre \"\nHe '.Ar'Anrri .v.r\u201e bills ...Hin\nXO;!d give efferf In tee agt*\">mem\nqnd   it   vn   take\"   f--   gran'H   his\n,vn*j'\/j assure  p.^.-sage ,.; the le^^la-\nHon :n tw*. or three d tvs.\nM'tM    lr^;>la\"ire   ryr>*.   eypeet    it\nwill   pr'i;..(:';e   either   * iTnirrnv   ot\nThur.-d nn\nHa' fic.V n- nf ,\u00bb,_. ^leeme-t A.\n'he Nn*.;, Si1 r.:i ;*,,\u2022 ;,,. v.,, ;!d !e;i\\e\nm!v Q ;p':in- and Or.'ar.n .\"ill \u25a0..\u25a0\u2022h-\nnu' fman'-ial ag.-ennen'; wi'h th-.-\nDnminmn\nAGREEMENTS\nReview,ng nis prnvi-e's Ar.r-\ndrawu n :* t.-i'Mr ^Ah ire Dominion,   'h.r   Piemie- sa.d   \"he   Federal\nI. To increase lh\" pe:- rapita gran'\n\u25a0previous to the termination of  the\ni pi uposed   agreement.\nSpeaking of legislation which\nwould give effect to the agreement,\nMr, MacDonald said the annual\nminimum payment of $10,870,140\nwa.s made up of $8,8R5,000, the total\nfor 591,000 Nova Scotians at $15 a\nhead,   and   $2,00').140   in   statutory\n'subsidies including interest ou debt\nallowance.\nN, S. PROMISES\nNova Scotia promises that during\nthe term of the agreement neither\nthe province nor municipalities will\nin,pose income taxes, corporation\ntaxes or succession duties.\nAn act which complements the\nmam art provides that a corporation\nincome tax of five per cent be imposed '\"] such part of the income of\n\u25a0 \"-\u25a0: porations as is attributable to\ntheir operations in Nova Scotia,\nSmeller Returns\n1119,816 al\nHighland Bell\nDuring the first six month; of\nTUT. Highland-Bell, Ltd, Reaver-\ndell district. R C, received net\nsmelter rt turns of $19H,8hfi from tlie\n-hipmo.it of 2081 tons of nre to the\nTrail snvdtrr Miscellaneous revenue was $1144, The Northern Miner\n;.'ate<; Grn*-s operating profit of\nAiAAi was reduced to $53,169 after\np: ..vivo*-; for depreriatinn, deple-\n':on, faxe^ and administration Net\nprof:' works out t'i ,1 \\ft cents per\n\u25a0-sued share\n:' (;. \u25a0\n' had\nA       \\\"\ni   V\niihsirtH <\n\u25a0X   fieH\nThe grade nf nre at 127 ounces of\nsilver to the t-m was mafpnallv he.\nArc the average fo*- 1046 of 170\n\"7'.r^, bu* is exprefed to improve\nas soon a-s ?. t-'ir^rf hand-sorting\np'ant )'\u25a0 mmmistoned to take the\nA'-irr of present hand sorting under-\nrr'A]t)(\\ The mine is being merhan-\n-Prj where pn^-hl.e and full use 1?\n''eirg made nf slusher scrapers and\nr.'her de vires which have proven\n'he;- worth at many other opera-\n\u2022\u25a0\"\"'*.\nR(rnVe-v   fr^m   the   20R4   *ors   of\ni'e shipped was 2fi4.fil3 ounces of\n-.live-. 94 ounres of gold, llfi.fi20\np*.unds of lead, and R1.465 pounds of\n7: n c\nKarl ,T Springer, President, states\n'hat a material reduction in operat-\nng cos* is expected tn result from\ntiie  improvements  in  mining meth-\nids In one s'ope a saving of one-\nrh ird has a'ready been effected\nWith the use of the new sorting\nplant, it is expected to raise the.\n-It \\'A of ore shipped to a minimum:\nnf  ]V) ounces  nf silver  to  the  ton\nThe !*>w-,'iade m> shipped during*\n'he \\-1-' vx months was due en- i\n':r*'l\\ to lack of snrfng facilities I\nMr Springer -Pates gnnd ore is!\n'iro-y opened in twn new slopes in!\n'he Highland I.;r.s section and in a |\nrue fr -m 'iv 0-le\\e! Two diamond!\ndrills   are   t-r.   exploration   work\nCost of Sask,\n(lay Likely\nTo Double\nMEDICINE HAT. Alta, Aug. 2fi-\nfCP)~Neil V. CtPrman. counsel for\nthree Medicine Hat clay processing\ncompanies, said in a statement today that cost of Saskatchewan clay\nis likely to be doubled or trebled\nunder proposed plans by the Saskatchewan CCF. Government to\nobtain greater revenue from that\nProvince's clay deposits,\nMr. German returned today from\na conference at Regina with Hon.\nI. L. Phelps, Saskatchewan Minister\nof Resources,\nMr. German said the Industry was\ngiven no indication as to the extent\nof the increase in cost, but it is\nknown that Saskatchewan proposes\nto take over the prospecting, mining, and marketing of clays, and in\naddition charge a depletion assessment,\nThe three Induitriei here processing clay producti absorb from\n15,000 to 16,000 toni of clay from\nSaskatchewan annually. Alberta\nClay Producti, Ltd,, owni clay\ndeposits In the Southwest corner\nof Saskatchewan, while Medicine\nHat Potteries. Ltd., a subsidiary,,\nand Medalta Potteries Ltd., have!\nleasehold mineral rights.\nSaskatchewan Government officials have claimed that Alberta clay\nindustries paid only $2 a ton for\nclay obtained in that Province as\nagainst $6 a ton for clay imported\nfrom the United States,\nJ. H. Yuill, President of Alberta\nClay Products Ltd. said that this\ncomparison does not take into account expenditures by the Alberta\ncompanies for stripping the land,\ntaking the clay as it comes.\nAMERICAN  CLAY\n\"The clay brought in from the\nUnited States is selected, sorted,\nwashed, shredded and packed in\nwax paper ready for use in the machines,\" said Mr Yuill \"If Saskatchewan proposes to go into the\nbusiness on such a scale, why wr\nwill be finite willing to pay them:\non a comparable basis with Ameri-1\ncan clay, depending on quality\"\nMr German said if the plan were\nto induce a potteries industry to set\nup in Saskatchewan, it would fail\n\"No private industry is going mtn\nSaskatchewan to open up an enterprise   under   surh   a   Government,\"\nINCORPORATED   1*\u00bb  MAV 187ft\nWednesday\nMorning Specials\nLadies' Farmerettes\nLadies' denim coveralls. Bib front, 2\npockets, ric-rac trim, cross over straps.\nNavy only. Size 14 to 20. Regular $2.50.\nWednesday Morning Special\n$1\n.95\nClearance - Men's Hose\nAll wool ankle sox. Wool and cotton H\nhose, in assorted shades of yellow, green,\ntan, wine, black and blue. Light or\nmedium weight, large or small sizes.\nLimited quantity only. Sizes 10 to 12.\nRegular 95c. Wednesday Morning Special\n79c\nPlayshoes\nBroken lines of better grade playshoes.\nReduced to clear. Wednesday Morning\nSpecial\u2014\n$j_.89\nSecurity Zone for Entire Western\nHemisphere Approved ol at Meet\nBy PHILIP CLARKE\nQUITANDINHA, Brazil, Aug. 26\n(AP) \u2014A 14-power lub-commlttee\nof the Inter-American conference\ntoday aprpoved the creation of a\n\"lecurlty zone\" of the entire hemisphere, Including Canada, Greenland, Alaska and Antarctica, to be\ndefended by all American countries.\nGreenland  Is the North Atlantic\ncolonial possession of Denmirk,\non which the United Statet obtained bases under a wartlnu\nagreement.\nThe measure had the approval\nof the United States and was drafted by a small sub-committee to\nwhich Senator Arthur Vandenberg [Rep, Mlch.l belonged. Representative of Mexico, Brazil,\nPeru, and Bolivia were the other\nmembers,\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 26 (CP) -\nErnest Frost didn't s**=e it, bo he\ncouldn't believe it\u2014until he was\ngiven first aid\nHe was walking along the street\nwhen he hear d'he hand strike up\nfor the mammoth parade opening\nthe Pacific National Exhibition.\nParades do something to people.\nFrost eagerly broke into a sprint\nto see the goings-on, dashing\nthrough a motor company showroom to the main street\nHe got 'here thr hard way-\nthrough 121 square feet of plate\n.:!ass window. The anxious spnn*-\n*?r suffered a cut finer and knee.\nP.  S.  Hr  missed the parade.\nsaid Mr. German, \"and certainly\npower costs would hr prohibitive\nLocal potteries' companies hi*\" jus*\ngetting by with present rosts. and\nthat is due m par* to rheap powr\nand heat made possible here through\nnatural gas.\"\nArrest Results\nIn Recovery of\nStolen Goods\nDUNCAN', B C, Aug 2 (CD-\nArrest of Gordon James Hewitt, 19-\nyear-old Duncan youth, has resulted\nin the recovery of a large amount\nof stolen property, Including valuable Army stores from the Duncan\nArmory,   according  to  British  Co-\numbia Police reports.\nThe youth was arrested Saturday\nafter an investigation by Provincial\nand RCMP officers. He subequent-\nly led police, they stated, to numerous caches of stolen goods, located\nnver a large area in the Duncan dil-\nnet,\nHewitt appeared before Magistrate\nG A Tisdall in Police Court here\n;oday, and was remanded for eight\nV\n0\n0\n6**\n*%\n$'\nTrade-in Your Old Power\nSaw on a New Titan\nTIMBER\/\nTEETH\nKV.'K\nFROM\n\u25a0\\K'rF\nHORNET DEALER\nNELSON MACHINERY & EQUIPMENT CO.\nNELSON, BC\nr   , ,e:'A-'\\\n.*..,.\n... ,.  ,.....,...,\n;r*s\n\u25a0    \u25a0  ;     -r- *:s!  '\ns-fl,'\n*,       i*|    '* ,    r\n.tr*\n1...    S-      . \u25a0       \u25a0 .\n1       * .           \"      .\n\u2022\"\u2022'*'*-\n',!,,,.    :\u25a0\n''.\/\"\nHEAVEN\nri   a k* ?\u00ab\nAl'\nr      ',.\ns     ','ir     l.r'h\nDl\nf rs,          vr*\n'hr\n'    ,*'.* ,.    *,*,|\nll    p\n,,**. .   \u2022\u2022;..\u00a3\n'!:\n,-.     .be    V,'ie.\nh \u2022\u2022\n- \u25a0 '.    , -----t   -, A\nUse\n-b  - rf    -,..   f.\nn-ri\n-,      t. r-      ,|.\n-,-e-i\n1..,.            V        ;   .,\n\u25a0 ' ,:\u2022\u25a0\n\u25a0\u2022   .... s'M   .\na':-:*-\nSt. John Ambulance Association\nTRAIL LOCAL CENTRE\nThr loll -.nur: r-\\  f ml Aid Ch'.-.r*  fnr mpn nnly\n*:T*i\"   (**\u25a0   Iirt'l   hv   Hip    1 r mi I   I. mal   ( mirr*   rl   tho\n.,,   A*\"1  * |l*\" ** r   A*.     . ,'iti  \u25a0\"    f **mit\" ' -f  nq\ns, r\\       I      ,, l,-mt r,   ) I.    I'M\/\n*q\n;>\n\u25a0 i  ,.,\u201e ..\u201e, i .,,'  m |\u201e 1.1 ,n th- l   ri r  m-ii. I'-i'i   In\n., I,*,   t *  n        \u201ei,,,-.,!-,lr   Ihr   t\u00bb|i\"b\"  r,(   .limVntS  p.pprt-\n,-\\   \u25a0 lm,.. *, mil h\" hoH n*. t* Ihw*;\nTupidny*): 7   P.M.  to 9   P.M.\nThur-Hoyi.   10 AM. to  12 Noon\n7 P.M. to 9 P.M.\nIhi* Irdurp', will hp qivrn hv Dnrtnr*; nf thp C\nS Williams Clinic ond will ho followed hy a period\nr.f practical inslMicficn under the supervision af Mr\nWilliamson\nFurther intormotion con be obtained from R. J.\nThompson, Cloti Secretory, c o Safety Department,\nCM. & S. Co Ltd. Wc urqc you to return thc Application ilipi received by you in tbe Poy Envelope- of Aug.\nB, 1947, oi toon oi poitible\nOFFERED FOR THE FIRST TIME \u2014 TRADE-IN VALUE ON YOUR POWER\nSAW. Make your old powcr-iaw give you good returni, Trade it in on a\nbrand new TITAN. Generoui ollowoncei made. You'll get greater cutting\nspeed with a TITAN power saw. It'i proven performance means leu work.\nThis trade-in is good on any type of used power saw. Take advantage now!\n.TITAN FEATURES: 10 horsepower engine\nwith twin-opposed cylinders firing simultaneously to cut vibration at all speeds; solid ly-\nbuilt centrifugal slip-type clutch (stall proof);\nmotor unit weighs only 72 lbs.; three to eight\nfoot blades available; easily carried and operated by two-man team.\nDEALER\n ^\n.T-T\u2014 1 , , , ,\n\u2014 * \u2014\n,        \u2014 _\t\n\t\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, WIDNISDAY, AUG, 27, 1947\nWE APPEAL TO THE PUBLIC\nIn th* loit few dayi you havt rood reporti of terroristic acti committed in\ntho Doukhobor lottieme'nti by penoni generally termed oi radical Som of\nFreedom.\nIt hai been itated\u2014\"each fire is being investigated by police and concerted\nefforti made to capture the firebugs; victimized Doakhobon refute to give\ndetails; Doukhobors give no cluei to authorities teeking to run down incen-\ndiariiti, preferring to teek out the Incendiarists themselves; cauie of the\nrecent outbreak remaini a closely guarded secret of the Doukhobon.\"\nWe wilh to acquaint you with certain facts on the existing situation,\nPerhaps many look upon these disturbances as something of a sensation qnd\nintereit to observe; to us for many years it has been a dreadful existence\nunder constant fear.\nFor yean burnings and bombingt of our property occurred during the night.\nOur guardi were ihot at and brutally beaten. No one wai apprehended, and\nit remained a myitery at to who was responsible. The fact that the murder\nof our leader, Peter (Lordly) Verigin, in a train bombing of 1924 remaini\nunsolved; that we continued to suffer from incendiariim throughout the\nyean and responsible parties were not apprehended, hai bred suspicion on\nthe part of our people as to whether necessary measures were ever taken by\nthe proper authorities to bring to justice the ones responsible for these crimei.\nIn June 1946 our Community Hall at Brilliant wai burned to the ground in\nbroad daylight by a group of fanatici. All the evidence we had wai turned\nover to the police. A iigned statement by one of our members to the effect\nthat he chanced to see a man pouring liquid on the floor inside at the start of\nthe fire, giving full description of this person whose name he did not happen\nto know, brought no results.\nUnaware of any maaiurei undertaken to prevent any further typical acts by\nthe fanatici, our organization in August of 1946 sent a delegation to the\nAttorney-General of B.C. with a detailed report ond the following Resolution\n\u2022ubicribcd to by the entire membenhip:\nOf an extraordinary meeting attended by members of the\nExecutive Committee, Communities' Trustees, members of\nthe Spiritual Communities of Christ in British Columbia,\nheld June 30th, 1946 at Ooteshenia, under chairmanship of\nWilliam G. Hoodicoff and Secretary John J. Verigin.\nUpon hearing a report by the Secretary of the Union, in\nregards to the criminal acts perpetrated by the fanatics, such\nas the burning of the Community Hall at Brilliant, the\nproperty of the Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ,\nIn the week of June 23rd to 30th, and whereas the existence\nof further threats of terror bv the said fanatics is clearly\nevident, we unanimously RESOLVE,\n1) That, the Executive Committee appeal to the Government\nfor the appointment of a Royal Commission to fully investigate the existing situation of these criminal acts\ncommitted in the course of several years, trusting that\nthe Commission will find a way to solver this problem\nto the welfare of the general public.\nJ) To have nothing ln common\u2014not to welcome, treat, collaborate or sympathize with whomsoever It may be that\nmanifest fanatical inclinations.\nI) We affirm the 1928 resolution-in-protocol of the Named\nDoukhobors, that all evidence, information and proof in\nregards to acts of criminal nature, such as incendiarism,\nbombing, etc. must be turned over to the authorities of\nthe State, without hesitation or constraint.\nWhereas, The concealment and protection of criminals is\nunjust and dangerous, therefore be it regarded that their\ndisclosure is not a treacherous act of betrayal.\n4) That the Executive Committee apply to the Government\nof B.C., legal owner of the former Communitv lands, for\neviction from our midst those persons who afford refuge\nto the fanatics and gene'rally collaborate with them.\nThe undersigned heads of families accept and pledge to fulfill the above provisions. If any member of the Union of\nSpiritual Communities of Christ violates hi.s obligation in\nregards thereto, he shall be automatically expelled from the\norganization.\nWe believe that a proper Investigation would lead to the apprehension of\nponons responsible for these criminal offences, and bring about a juit solution to this problem.\nThe delegatel were told that they would be advised in reiponse. Our organization is still waiting for some reply.\nIn December, 1946, the following correspondence was exchanged:\nDecember, 3rd,  1946.\nNelson, B.C.\nThe Hon. Mr. Gordon S. Wismer,\nAttorney-General,\nVICTORIA, British Columbia\nHonorable Sir:\nThe UNION of DOUKHOBORS of CANADA, as the\nname Implies, is an organization formed in December 1945\nto unite all tho Doukhobors in Canada, with a view to promote cultural and spiritual advancement of our people. At\npresent our membership consists of over 8000 people in the\ndifferent provinces of Canada.\nWe know that following a wave of incendiarism and\nterror in the West Kootenay District of British Columbia\nduring the past year, perpetrated by certain fanatics well\nknown to the authorities, an appeal was made to you in the\nearly part of September last to investigate the situation and\nenforce law ami order, so that law-abiding residents could\nlive in peace, free from the constant fear of terror. This\nappeal was marie by the UNION of SPIRITUAL COMMUNITIES of CHRIST, wlto directly suffered more than any\nothers because of these criminal aets.\nThe UNION of SPIRITUAL COMMUNITIES nf\nCHRIST are members of the UNION of DOUKHOBORS of\nCANADA. Our executive has brought tlu* general situation\nbefore the entire membership nf our organization, and on\ntlie basis of replies received we hereby officially advise you\nthat wc join in the appeal already made to vou bv representatives of the UNION of SPIRITUAL COMMUNITIES of\nCHRIST, -to investigate and prevent recurrence of terroristic nets of the past many years.\nIn our opinion it would lie wrong and most nn-\nfiittuna'r In ciiiisirict* the relative quiet of thr past few\nmonths an itnliratiuii tlmt such criminal acts will nnt terrorize the people of Wert Kootenay in the future.\nThc populate ui fails to see a satisfactory reason whv\nthe authontti s cannot solve the problem. We are verv sorry\nto say, that in our opinion it. is mostlv due to neglect, indifference and lack of a proper and definite policy.\nThis matter should nol lie put off. It demands attention now. We hope that you will be able to give this matter\nthe attention it requires.\nOur people continue to live in a slate of unrest. They\ndemand from us some action and assurance that steps are\nbeing taken tn solve this problem. Please let us hear from\nyou in reply.\nYours sincerely,\nTHE UNION OF DOUKHOBORS OF CANADA,\nper J, J. ZOOBKOFF\nChairman, Executive Committer\nP. K. REIRIN,\nSerretarv-Tresamer\n,1 .1. VEfilGIN,\nSet letary .\nNelson, B.C.\nDecember 3rd,  1946.\nThe Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, Esq.\nPrime Minister,\nOTTAWA, Canada,\nRight Honorable Sir:\nEnclosed is a copy of a letter sent by us to the Attorney-General of British Columbia, which speaks for itself.\nFor many years now* our people have had the misfortune to\nsuffer not only property loss and damage of several hundred\nthousands of dollars through incendiarism, but also the\nBtigma of accusations at the hands of people who do not\nbother to discriminate between an industrious, peaceful\nmajority of Doukhobors, and a minority of fanatics who have\nbrought disgrace to our name.\nDuring the past year (1946) our people ln this district have lived under unbelievable conditions of terror, in\nfear for their lives, not to speak of property. It seems quite\napparent, that in'the past, government authorities sidestepped the issue, being undecided as to whether the problem was of Provincial or Dominion concern. No appropriate\naction was undertaken, and consequently the problem remained unsolved. Peaceful, law-abiding residents continued\nto suffer.\nMay we be so bold to assert our opinion that such\na state of affairs should not be allowed to exist. We address\nthis appeal to you in the hope that you will bring it to the\nattention of proper authorities.\nThanking you sincerely,\nYours truly,\nTHE UNION OF DOUKHOBORS OF CANADA,\nPer J. J. ZOOBKOFF,\nChairman, Executive Committee\nP. K, REIBIN,\nSecretary-Treasurer\nJ. J. VERIGIN,\nSecretary.\nATTORNEY-GENERAL\nProvince of\nBritish Columbia\nVICTORIA\nDecember   10th,\n1946.\nP 291-17\nJ. J. Verlgln, Esq.,\nSecretary,\nThe Union of Doukhobors of Canada,\nNelson, B.C.\nDear Sir:\nYour Association's letter of December 3rd, with\nreference tn the Doukhobor situation, came duly to hand and\nI have noted contents.\nYours verv trulv,\nG. S. WISMER, \"\nAttorney-General.\nDEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE\nCANADA\nOTTAWA\nDecember 16th, 1946.\nDear Sir:\nY'our letter addressed to the Prime Minister dated\nDecember 3rd has been referred to this Department.\nMay I say to you that under the Constitution of\nCanada the administration of justice is assigned to the Provincial governments rather than to the Federal Government. Consequently, any complaints to the effect that criminal offences are permitted to go unpunished or complaints\nto a like offence should be addressed to the provincial attorney general.\nYours trulv,\nF. P. VARCOE,\nDeputy Minister.\nJ. J. Zoobkoff, Esq ,\nChairman, Executive Committee,\nThe Union of Doukhobors of Canada,\nNELSON, British Columbia.\nShortly thereafter we began to hear reports that fanatici were making many\nincriminating admissions directly to the police.\nWe have a copy of a statement given to the police In Moy, 1947, incriminating a certain individual with responsibility for directing a leries of burnings\nand dynamitings.\nIn our opinion, correctness of such admissions ihould have bean established.\nIf proven to be false, the responsible party be madt to take the proper consequences. To our knowledge no one was brought to aniwer.\nWith the coming of Summtr, the annual activity by the fanatici was resumed.\nSubsequent events during the past two months prompted ui to send the following telegrams:\nCANADIAN PACIFIC TELEGRAPHS\nBrilliant. BC\nJuly 25th,  1947.\nThe Honourable Mr. Gordon Wismer,\nAttornev-General,\nVictoria, B.C.\nHonourable Sir Further to report and resolution submitted\nIn ynu hv our delegation last September and subsequent\nletter frnm Central Executive Committee Union of Doukhobors dated last December third we bring the following tn\nvour attention (stop) We are unaware of measures taken\nns a result of representations made to put a stop to criminal\nads in question (stop) Since that time twn of our community\nhalls have been burned (stop) This week Peter Verigin's\ntomb has been blasted and contrary tn press reports verv\nconsiderable damage done (stop) Band of fanatics are marching through our villages and terrorizing population by their\npresence Istop) At present thev are st.tt: 'tied by one of our\nietnaming minnuinilv halls and refuse ti leave notwithstanding our demand thnt thry do sn (stop) We appealed\nto police to move them off so as tn avoid breach of peace\nand serious trouble hy engaging them ourselves (stop) Police refused anv such action (stop) Todav some thousand\nworking men have gathered to discuss this problem (stop)\nWe had trt leave nur jobs due tn this condition we live under\nterror and rannot continue to work in industries by dav and\nguard our homes by night (itop) Tins terror has continued\n[nr many years and responsible parties not apprehended\n(itop) This leads us to believe that luthoritlei deliberately\ntake n*i action (stop) As Christian law-abiding residents\nand worken we appeal to you to enforce law and order\n(stop) We anxiously await your immediate reply by wire as\nIn what measures will be taken to eniure law and order\n(stop) Immediate police action is urgently required.\nGeorge S. Soukorfff,\nChairman  Mass  Meet::,);\nJohn .1, Verigin,\nSecretary <\nCANADIAN PACIFIC TELEGRAPHS\nBrilliant, B.C.\nJuly   26th,   1847,\nThe Hon. Gordon S. Wlsmer.\nAttorney-General,\nVictoria, B.C.\nLast night Brilliant Irrigation pipe dynamited (stop) Fanatics remain\nby our hall (stop) Police advise we lay trespassing charges or wait till\nthey break in and then we still have to lay charges against leadersfor\nbreaking and entering (stop) Last year by police suggestion we laid\ncharges for breaking and entering our hall at Brilliant which later was\nburned (stop) We were summoned three times to appear in court tn\ntestify (stop) Four persons charged were sentenced to time spent in\ncustody awaiting trial (stop) Jail is tonic to fanatics and martyrdom\nin their eyes (stopl We do not refuse to lay charges but the fact that\nwe have to lay charges is used hy fanatics as propaganda to discredit\nus as religious idealists (stop) It is evident they are anxious we usa\nforce against them and thev are prepared to strongly resist us by violence (stop) It is also ssell known they are very meek when police\nhandle* them (stop) In our opinion it is useless to jail them for short\nsentences and spend Jmt of taxpayers money in legal process also fool-\nhardy for us to tangle with them and cause serious riot ss result (stop)\nIt would appear to be best fur all concerned if thev he returned home by\npolice nnd in future prevented from parading through our settlements\nbeyond any doubt for purnnses of causing trouble which has now reached\nproportions of terror (stop) At same time complete investigation be made\nand this problem settled once and for all.\nG  S, SOUKOREFF.\nJ, J. VERIGIN.\nTELEGRAM\nBrilliant, BC\nAugust 19th, 1047.\nThe Hon  O  S Wismer,\nAttornev-General,\nVictoria, DC.\nWe have no reply or acknowledgement to our telegrams dated twenty\nfifth and twenty sixth ultimo re fanatics (stop) Two days ago they\nmoved into our settlement at Shoreacres after burning their buildings\nat Krestova (stop) They openly threaten to burn our homes at Shore-\nacres and then move along to the other villages with same purpose (stop)\nYoftcrrlay our people at Shoreacres were told that their homes are to be\nfired this morning and to remove their belongings from them if they\nwanted anything saved (stop) Under this threat our people are removing\nwhat they can out of the buildings (stop) We asked for police assistance\nand were advised that they will not interfere until law is broken (stop)\nWhen asked whether the law has not already been broken by forcing\nthe peaceful residents to vacate their homes in the middle of the night\nso as to save themselves from being set afire we got the reply that the\npolice wont protect our homes and that it is our duty to do so (stop)\nIn first place this property is owned by the government of B.C. Secondly when fanatics bunch up on our villages they outnumber our\npeople therein: thirdly as previously pointed out it is apparent they\nwould welcome the idea of us using force against them which would\nlead to serious trouble (stop) Why are our appeals for law enforcement\nby proper authorities Ignored (stop) No interference by police allows\nculprits to terrorize peaceful residents (stop) It Is disgraceful that hard\nworking pioneers who developed this district out of wilderness are now\nleft at the mercy of fanatics gone berserk (stop) We demand to know\nthe reason for this indifference and lack of law enforced protection\n(stopl We must know what policy the government directs toward us in\nihe light of which as peaceful law abiding residents we could decide our\nfuture.\nO. S. SOUKEROFF.\nJ. J. VERIGIN.\nRecently we have received the following letter In reply:\nATTORNEY-GENERAL\nProvince of British Columbia\nVictoria,\n20th August, 194T.\nGeorge S Soukeroff, Isq ,\nBrilliant, B.C.\nDear Sir:\nYour three wires daled July 25th, July 26th and August 19th c\u00abm\u00bb\nduly to hand and have been referred to the Commissioner ot the Provincial Police.\nYoun vary truly,\nO. S. WISMBR,\nAttorney General.\nIn the meantime the settlement of Shoreocrei hai been virtually burned out,\nand a mob of fanatici go from houie to houie proclaiming that the homei\nare doomed to deitruction by fire. Police were preient and diked to get them\nout. We were told thot police would not interfere until chargei were laid. Thil\nhai been done, but the measure it inadequate. Fanatici remain free to gather\nai they please, and terroriie our settlements by their pretence.\nFailure of police action against them gives fanatici encouragement. Ai a\nreiult their number is increasing together with their ipirit of aggressiveness,\nwhile helplen people are lubjected to be at their mercy. The attitude \"thii\nii a Doukhobor feud\" prevails. The policy of \"let them fight it out\" is apparent, and we believe very much responsible for the present situation, that act*\nof violence have reached proportions of terror.\nWe are told to use force against the fanatici. Our people regard iuch action\nai taking the law Into your own hands. We cherish the Ideal of pacifism and\nnon-violence for which many of our forefathers sacrificed their lives. Our\npacifism is being held against ui. We came to Canada from persecution in\nTsarist Russia and were told that we would not be forced to bear arms. We\nregarded Canada as foremost in racial and religious tolerance. Why is \"a\ncivil war between Doukhobors\" allowed to go on, and people forced to engage\nin violence in contradiction to the principle of faith they endeavor to uphold?\nWe are accused of not cooperating with the authorities, of withholding evidence. This is not true and only supposition. We are expected to catch the\nculprits in tho act, know their identity, and lay a charge against them. Then\nthe police step in for a conviction. The bandits use firearms, dynamite and\ntypical means against people with bare hands, not to mention the advantage\nof a surprise attack and-or mob action. Under the circumstances it is practically impossible to give the authorities the cooperation they apparently\nexpect. We try to cooperate to the best of our ability- What we know we\nare willing to disclose. We are sorry that we can't oblige when more is expected from ui.\nThe fact that many citiicns, government official*, and particularly police\nauthorities look upon Doukhobors as a whole and fail to see any difference\nbetween them is deplorable. There is a definite and great difference between\npeaceful and industrious residents and the fanatics under whatever name\nthey choose to call themselves or bc called by others. The general practice\nhai been to attach thc name \"Doukhobor\" to any discreditable act of tome\nfanatic, and give it prominence in the papen. Thil docs not make it any\neasier for people to tell us apart. It only builds up prejudice. We have sufficient cause to bc more than anyone else against nude parades and incendiarism, for wc hove suffered more than anyone else from these acts.\nCitizens of Canada enjoy protection from lawlessness as their birthright.\nEveryone in Canada is entitled to it. We ask for no benevolence; we only seek\njustice. Our people pioneered in developing this district from wilderness.\nLocal industries have been for years dependent on our labour. Local residents\nrely on our farm produce.\nThe recent outbreak of burnings, and threats to burn us all out, have forced\nour workers to leave their jobs, to be with their families, to give what protection they can from attacks in thc day or night. They luffer sleepiest nights,\nmany not in homes but in thc open air. These worken depend on their doily\nwages for a livelihood. Industry is suffering from their absence.\nWe appeal to all to do what you can in bringing to tho attention of proper\nauthorities that this situation should not bo allowed to exist.\nConviction of a few individuals on whatever chargei, is no solution. A mob\nis left at full liberty and new agitators develop in their midst.\nWo believe that a proper solution of this problem requires careful consideration. It cannot be reached without an unbiased and complcto investigation.\nPress reports indicate on all out police drive to curb thc recent disturbances.\nWe were advised that beginning with last Saturday night a police guard will\nbe maintained at Shoreacres.\nWhat we need is thc removal of fanatics from Shoreacros, and thot they be\nitopped from coming into our other settlements to burn us out. To this end\nwe will give our utmost cooperation.\nGeorge S. Soukoref f,\nChairman, Executive Committee,\nUnion   of  Spiritual  Communities  of   Christ.\nJohn J. Verigin,\nSecretory.\nft\nBrilliant, B.C , Aug. 26, 1947\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u2014*\u2014*\u25a0\n\t\nOA%\nBOYS'\nHI-CUT\nBOOTS\n10 inch top, sturdy elk\nuppers, leather sole,\nleather heel. Sizes:\nU-U>k   $8.98\n1-5%   $6.95\n6-8  ,... $7.2$\nR. ANDREW\n& Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C. Mr. and\nMrs. W. Thompson have a.s guests,\nMrs. Crowell and daughter Lily of\nCalifornia.\nMrs. F. Garrett has left for Greenwood where she will be the guest of\nMr, and Mrs. J. McKay.\nMr. and Mrs, W. 1'. Rogers have\nhad as guest, Mrs, Horigan, Mr.\nRoger's sister, of Coleman, Alta.\nThree parts baking soda and one\npart, salt makes an excellent homemade tooth paste. Dentists say that\nf^eth should be cleansed five times\ndaily.\nSILVERTON\nSILVERTON, B. C. - Mri. M.\nLeuderi of Yaktma, and Mr. and\nMrs, John Elder of Olympia, Wash.,\nwho have been the guests of Mrs. M.\nWallace, for the past week, left for\ntheir homes on Sunday.\nElmer Bergman of Trail spent\nseveral days at his home here.\nMr. and Mrs. J. L. WiLson, and\nsons Harvey and Lloyd, Mrs. L\nWrightson and Jacqueline Senning\nwere motorists to Edgewood on\nSunday,\nMr. nnd Mrs. G. Percival, Joan\nand Roy, of Grand Forks are spending a vacation with relatives in\ntown.\nMr. and Mrs W. Boiling and family of Eight Mile have taken up\nresidence in their recently purchased home,\ni Lance Emerson was a visitor from\nTrail. On hi.s return hc wa.s accom-\nInanied bv hi.s nephews, Wayne and\nBarry Morrison, who will spend a\n! week's holiday Willi Mr .and Mrs,\nEmerson in Penticton.\nJ, Steele was a visitor to Apple-\ndale on Sunday. He wa.s accompanied hack by his son Johnny, who\nhas spent tha past two weeks visiting there.\nMrs. M. Wallace is spending a few\ndays in Nelson.\nMrs. I). MacDiamid has returned\nfrom two weeks visit with relatives\nin Salmo.\nMr and Mrs. E, Derosa of New\nDenver were guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nJ, Harding on Saturdav\nMr. anrl Mrs. .1 L. Wilson entertain.d a few friends at bridge on\nThursday evening when the prize\nfor the highest .'-core was awarded\nto John Elder. After Ihe game delirious refreshments were served by\nIhe hostess. Those present included\nMrs. L. Wriphtson, Mrs, M. Emerson\nMrs. M, Wallace, Mrs. M, Morrison,\nMrs. M, Lenders. Mr. and Mrs. J, Elder and Mr. and Mrs, J. L. Wilson.\nW. Henderson of the Lucky Jim\nMine, Zincton, spent the weekend\nin town.\nNELSON SOCIAL Tasty Recipes\nBy MRS. M. J. VIONEUX\nt Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Suther-\nland, Front Street, have as guests\nMrs. W, P. Sutherland and son\nJohn of Vernon.\n\u2022 Mrs. John Baird and daughter Linda of Galveston, Texas, visited friends in Nelson Monday.\nThey arc holidaying at South Slocan at the home of her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Creed Johnston\nand will be joined later by Mr,\nBaird.\n\u2022 Miss F. DeGiroIamo, Carbon-\nt\nGive your meils new flivor\ngoodnesj \u2014 malte them more\ndigestible! Add i duh of HP,\nthe thick uuce with the real,\nfruity flavor, to cold cuts or\ntingy lalidi. Uk i little H P\nwhile coolting clear loups;\nmeats; fish, egg diihes; or spaghetti\u2014H P adds lively, tempting flavor!\n\\Wi-tr\nSAUCE\nTHf WOULO'S\nAPPETIZER\nCAMP LISTER\nJack Blower and Jack Wittaker\nnf Port Alberni were weekend visitors of the lathers uncle and aunt.\nMr  and   Mrs.  J.   A.   Holden.\nMrs. Garfield Gorril was a patient in the Creston Valley  Hospit-\nJenelfe    Pendry    of    Kimberley;\nis   spending   two   weeks   holidays:\nwith   her   grandfather   Joe   WockniU and family.\nMr.   and   Mrs    Rob   Holder   and1\n'son  of  Trail,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   T   ('.j\ni Montgomery.    Mr.     and     Mrs.    T !\n! Baker and daughter Patsy all of,\nCreston were visitors of Mrs. Irei.p\n. Wellspring.\n1 Miss Betty Ross, P. N. arrived,\nhome from Vancouver and is visiting her mother Mrs.  Maud Ross.\nMary Martin of Erickson was a\nguest of Mr. and Mrs, Joe Galar-\nneau.\nLena Ragsdale was a weekend\nvisitor   of   Mr,   and   Mrs,    Harold\n* Edgar   at   Creston.\nMrs, Irene Sinclair and snn\nStuart returned home. The forme-\nhad been attending summer school\nat the mast. While there they also\nvisited  with relatives.\n1 Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Sinclair returned home after visiting for the\npast   three    weeks    at    Campbell\ni River New Westminister and Vancouver.\n! Mr, and Mrs Charles Montgomery ar.d daughter Shirley left\nfnr Edmonton after visiting for\nthe past month with relatives in,\nLister. Creston and' with friends\nin Trail.\nMr, and Mrs. Douglas Clements'\nwere visitors with relatives in\nSeattle\nMr. and Mrs Albert kiss and;\nson Robert of Regina, Sask. were:\nvisitors nf Mr. and Mrs. Alex'\nIvanv and Mr. and Mrs, James;\nSikora\nale Street,  left to visit friends\nChristina Lake.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. I. G. Nelson.\nHume Hotel, have recently returned from a few days in Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Bailey, Rose-\nmont, have as guests their son\nand hir- family from Regina.\n\u2022 Captain and Mrs. Hartrldge\nof Balfour were recent guests of\ntheir .son and daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs, Geoffery Hartridge, Houston Street.\ni \u2022 Miss Sigrid Holmgren, who\nI has spent her three weeks' vacation\n!at the home' of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. William Holmgren, Carbonate Street, has returned to New\nWestminster where she will resume\nher curse at the Royal Columbian\nHospital.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Gray,\nBaker Street, spent the weekend In\nTrail at the home of their son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. E.\nH. Gautschi, They were accompanied home by their little granddaughter,   Mary  Ann  Gautschi.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. J. O'Regan and\nI daughter Margaret, who attended\n.the Speakman-Nicholson wedding\ni a week Monday and were guests\n\u25a0 of Mrs. O'Regan's brother-in-law\n,and,sister, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Nich-\nlolsnn, Carbonate Street, have returned  to  Long  Beach, Calif., vis\niting\nland ;\nand San Francisco. Cal,\n\u2022 A Gledden Santer and his\nson, Dr. D. Q. Santer, who were\nguests of the former's mother and\nsister, Mrs. E. Santer and Mrs.\nWilliam Holmgren, have returned\nto their home in Milwaukee, Wise\n\u2022 J. J. Zubick of Calgary, accompanied by his mother, were\nvisitors in Nelson of the latter's\nson, P. H. Zubick, 624 Innes Street.\nThey were accompanied by a cousin, Miss Lillian Kaiser of Luse-\nland, Sask., who will accompany\nthem to Seattle.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Evan Brown\nand their children, Garth and Gail,\nhave returned to Kimberley after\nvisiting Mr. Brown's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. George A. Brown. Silica\nStreet.\n\u2022 Miss Rosa Stewart, Silica\nStreet, has returned from Vancouver, where ghc attended a Summer School course at U.B.C. She\nwas   accompanied   bv   Miss   Agnes\nIWalters, teacher of Salmo, who attended the same course and is now\nher house guest.\n\u2022 The home of Mr. and Mrs. J,\nH. Ringrose, 703 Third Street, was\nthe scenp of a triple christening\nwhen Joseph Henry, William James\nand   Robert John  were  christened\nI by the Rev. Mr. Anderson of S'.\nPaul's   United   Church.   The   baby\nj Robert. John wore the family\nchristening robes in which bis father and paternal grandmother wore\nchristened. Among those present\nwere Mrs. A, V. Rowley, Miss Maureen Rowley, Mrs, Ken Guthrie,\nMis Charlotte Ringrose, William\nLewis, James and Alec Ringrose\nand Mrs. Ed Langill.\n\u2022 Miss Charlotte Ringrose whn\nattended the Golden Jubilee a.s\nguest of her brother, J. II. Ring-\nrose, has returned to her home in\nHawaii.\nA fruit that we have at this time\nof the year is the melon\u2014cantaloupe, watermelon, etc.\nThere are two schools of watermelon thought\u2014one that loves it\nand would rather have a watermelon for dessert than anything else\nAnd the other that is convinced\nthat watermelons arc a total loss at\nany time. They don't care to eat\nthem at any time in any form, and\nare insulted if they are offered\nthem for dessert.\nI feel a keen sense of disappointment when I am offered a large,\njuicy piece for dessert when I have\nset my mind on huckleberry or blueberry pie. However, I do think they\nare good eating, especially in hot\nweather and when they are served\nvery cold, Watermelon pickles are\ngood, too.\nOil tim. dix.\nWEDNESDAY,\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n00-O Canada\n02\u2014Press Newi\n07\u2014Sunrise Serenafl,\n30\u2014Music (or Wednesday\n00\u2014CHC  News\nlust For You\n45\u2014Hebrew Christian Hour\n59\u2014Weather  Forecast\n00\u2014RBC News\n15-Breakfast Club\n45\u2014Morning Concert\n50-Time Sienal\n00-Train   Time\n01\u2014Women's Corner\n15\u2014Music For Everyon.\n45-They Tell Me\n00\u2014 Keyboard and Console\n1,5\u2014Music in the Morjan Manner\nHO\u2014Easy Listening\n00\u2014B. C. Farm Broadcast\n25\u2014The Notice Board\n30\u2014Press News\n45\u2014Ethel and Albert\n00\u2014Old Favorites\n29-Weather Forecait\n30-Recital\n45\u2014Commentary and Talk\nIM-Feature Concert\n15\u2014Family Favourites\nAUG. 27, 1947\n2:30\u2014Men and Music\n2:45\u2014Rural Route No. 9\n3:00\u2014Cowboy Trouhador\n3:15\u2014Serenade t< Americi\n3:30\u2014Little  Concert\n3:45\u2014Jimmy Dorsev\n4:00\u2014Edmund  Hockrldg.\n4:15\u2014Sport News\n4:30\u2014Especially for You\n4:45\u2014Just Imagine\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n5:14\u2014Tra*in Time\n5:15\u2014Old Chisholm Trail\n5:30\u2014Peerleu News\n5:45\u2014Organ  Reveries\nfliOO\u2014Newstand Novelties\n6:15\u2014Concert in Miniature\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade nf Melody\n5:15\u2014Old Chisholm Trail\n7:0O-CBC News\n7:15\u2014A. E. Corbett\n7:30\u2014Ross Pratt, Pianist\n8:00\u2014Nation's Business\n8:15\u2014Talk\n8:30\u2014Press News\n8:45\u2014Presenting Harry Horlick\n9:00\u2014Song Recital\n9:15\u2014Midweek Review\n9:30\u2014Comedy Theatre\n10:00\u2014CBC News\n10:15\u2014Just For You\n10:30\u2014Showcase Blue Book\n11:00\u2014God Sive Ths King\nTODAY'S MENU\nCanlaloupe Supreme or\nMelon Melange\nRoast Pork ss*ith Baked Peaches\nBaked   Potatoes\nWax Beans 01i\\*cs\nApricot, Peach, Pear, or Quince\nIce  Cream\nCoffee Cake\nCANTALOUPE  SUPREME\nWipe cantaloupes, cut in halves,\ndiscard sred.s and stringy portions\nand shape into ball with French\nball culler Arrange in double\ngrapefruit glasses, having crushed\nice in outn* glass, sprinkle with\nsugar, and pour over each '4 teaspoon maraschino.\nMELONS  MELANGE\nCombine balls or cubes of melon\nof twn or more  varieties.  Sprinkle\nThe Doctor\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nlightly with sugar and chill. If desired, sprinkle with lime juice or\nserve with wedges of lime. A\nsprinkling of chopped mint may be\nliked if you do not care for the lime\njuire.\nBAKED  PEACHES\nPeel, cut in halves and remove\nstone frnm peaches. Place in a shat\nlow baking pan. Fill each cavity\nuith choprd nuts, fruits, macaroon\ncrumbs or 1 teaspoon sugar, Mi teaspoon butter, few drops of lemon\njuice and a slight grating of nutmeg.\nBake 20 minutes in a moderate oven\n(350 F.i You can bake them plain,\nwith a little sugar, butter and nutmeg, and serve wilh the roast pork,\nas suggested here, or baked as above\nwilh filling and serve with Hard\nSauce nr chilled with Whipped\nCream for dessert,\nAPRICOT, PEACH, PEAR OR\nQUINCE   ICE  CREAM\n4 pounds ripp fruit, Mi teaspoon\nsalt. 1 cup sugar for more), 4 cups\ncream, 1 teaspoon vanilla.  '\nPair, slice and crush fruit,\nsprinkle with salt and --i cup sugar,\nand set aside. Mix cream with remaining sugar and vanilla and\nfreeze, either in crank freezer or refrigerator, until slightly firm. Stir\nin fruit, sweeten to taste and finish\nfreezing. Makes 2 rjuartF.\nIre cream.1; served in canlaloupe\nshells are also an easily-prepared\n:dessert. Have the cantaloupes thor-\nloughly chilled, cut in halves across,\nscop nut seeds and stringly portions, anrl put a scoopful of any desired ice cream into each. Fresh\n! fruit may take the place of the ire\ncream, too,  for a refreshing dessert\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 27, 1947 \u2014 5\nBy HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D.\n'Path to Dangerous Curves Paved\nWith Good Intentions, Calories\n\\?AM \\\\=\nAlexander to\nAddress American\nLegion Convention\nOTTAWA. Aug. 26 (CP'* Government House announced today\nViscount Alexander, the Governor-\nGeneral, ss*:]] address Ihe 29th annual national ri'ns*ent:on of Ihe American Lcgim, at New York this\nThursday\nGeorge Washington ssas the own-\nCJAT\n810 ON THE DIAL\n00-Hebrew Christian Hour\n15\u2014Press News\n30-Mclndy Ranch\n45\u2014Fountain of Faith\n00-CBC News\n15\u2014Holiday Time\n45\u2014Laura Limited\n00-Musical Programma\n15-Hreakfast Club\n45\u2014Lucy  Linton\n00\u2014Musical Programme\n15\u2014NBC   Concert  Orchestra\n30-Merv Griffin\n45-They Tell Me\n00\u2014Keyboard   and   Console\n15\u2014Gospel Singer\n30- Tune  Shop\n00- Luncheon  Concert\n30- Press News\n45-Luncheon  Concert\nOO\u2014Tourist Parade\n30\u2014Rental\n45- Commentary and Talk\nDO   Come tn the Fair\n15   F,mills*  Favorites\n30-For Women Onlv\n\/\/\n***y, Oarlincj!\"\n, .w\u00ab^'i\u00bb,;Sr.v\n\\ .sV\"'^\"1 V*r'.\",,\u00ab\"rr  \"n    WO\"\"\n\"' t^\"H  A ' '\n,|\u201enS ' , ,\"\"rr i i\n..A-- \u2022;,'\"- \"    * \u201e *^Vr\n\u25a0   *-i '-**\"v s *N\"i^r' .;, t,i, '\n\\ ,\\i'*'w *\n...ti*\"\"1\n,,:M *\u25a0*\n,,   111   'tr*\"\"\"     '   .nisl.S'll*   \"\"\n' .loss'\"'** ,    ,,    .,,1111   ' .\nA\"^ ::\u201e..v^\u00ab'\\ i.,i \u2022\u2022,\"n:,.\n,n \";\u201e*, \"\"'V'\n\u201e,.!*\" \u25a0   .\u201e*\n.llolll\"\nlo \u00bb\u2022\"\u25a0'\t\nPosti\num\n.*.\"\u201e\u2022> iii\n3:00\u2014Cowboy Troubador\n3:15\u2014 Serenade to America\n3:30\u2014Serenade\n3:45\u2014BBC News and Commenlary\n4:00\u2014Edmund Hockridtte\n4:15\u2014Jack Smith Sho\\v\n4:30\u2014Western Show\n5:00\u2014Symphony in Melody\n5:30\u2014Meyere Musical Quiz\n6:00\u2014 Freeman Singers\n6:30\u2014Svmphon.v for Strings\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:15-A. E. Corbett\n7:30-Rnss Pratt, Pianist\n8:00\u2014Political Talk\n8:15\u2014Labor and Business\n8:30\u2014Wavne King Show\n8:00-Song Recital\n11:15\u2014Midweek Review\n9:30\u2014 Piano and Song Stylings\n9:45\u2014Mercer McLeod\n10:00\u2014CBC News\n10:10\u2014 Morrison Talks\n10:20\u2014 Bridge to Dreamland\n10:30\u2014Showcase Blue Book\n11:00\u2014 Announcer's Choice\n11:15\u2014 Ballroom Orchestra\n11:30\u2014 Peerless News\n11:40\u2014Sign Off . . . The King . . .\nWYNNDEL       ! Bonnington\nWYNNDEL. BC, - Mrs. ,T. Kit- BONNINGTON. BC - Colonel S\nI High.   Emilv   and   Jamie   returned ,-,     ,        .                   ,     .     ,...\nto    Castlegar    after    vimting    the ' ?00^ * fo!\u2122r 71.dent.nf Victoria\nf-.rnmr-s  parents   Mr. and   Mrs   L. I ^5 been viMtmg friends in thc di,-\nA     I)..vi5    On    their   return    thev '\niv. rr   'Acmwp-Aowci   ! >   Nelson   bv Mr\u00ab- VaWemar Ifoidt haa relurned\nMrs  I.    A    Davi-=   Mrs.   H   Mclnnis from spending a few days at Willow\nrA   Mi-,-   lla\/rl   Davis, rnint   whri'r   ^<\"   was   the   g::..-t   ol\nVs   W    F    Prune.   Phyllis  and Mr\u00ab- Irenp Drnn>\nMir;,   imp ho!idav,ng  A   Nelson. Mr. and Mrs  W  C  Motley have ns\nMis-,     I>.ris     Husrmft    has    re- guest*, their snn-m-law and daugh-\nliirnrrl   t-i   KfMowpa   after   visiting ter. Mr   and Mrs   FiM Rucklev ard\ntier  p.iimts.  Mi    and  Mrs. G.  Hui- granddaughter, Sandra of Trail\n1 '\"(' Mrs. Eric Ljucnhv and vnurg s\"n\nMrs    F.   Mr;;s   has   returned   home Rnc, who have hem  visiting 'lij*i\nrr*'m   the   Cruton   Hospital ;uld   $>\u201e   Turner   Ur,   Mr.s    \\,\u2022.;\u2022>;:\u25a0\nMn    (i    Ward   left   last   Mnnrtav > hy> parents   fnr a few weeks   hav.\nf v   England   where   she   will   via t r(_turned   lo   Vancouver    Mrs    Let\n\u25a0'\u25a0''''  P*iiei*ts accompanied them as far as Pentic*\nM\"     Ard    Mrs     A     SrneUr    and ton ,,n \u201e VIM, ,\u201e hrr vnp -,,ld r]?Ui.h\n-A.irA'''-*    Fr-.*   rrtumrd   tn   NVa! W-m-'aw,   M-    ard    Mrs    Wilfred\n\u25a0\"ng   Mr     and    Mri.    W, \\,Pf. m Ohvrr\nThe primrose path to dangerous\ncurves is paved with good intentions\nand a wide variety of sugar coated\ncalories. Remember the childhood\njingle , . , strawberry shortcake,\nhuckleberry pie, how many . , .and\nchange it to . . . how many peach\ncobblers before I buy a larger size\ndress!\nSure you can have some desserts\nand keep your trim figure , , . hut\nlife can't be all whipped cream, And\nif you think you ran cure that .sweet\nIooth by indulging in plenty of\nsweets, you're headed for a round\nup of calories, for overeating of\nsweets just leads to an appetite for\nmnre sweets,\nSo. here's a plan, and honestly It\ndoesn't strain the \\fill power. Have\nseasonal desserts twice a week,\nWhen a particular fruit is 111 season\nsuch as raspberries or strawberries,\nhave .shortcake, a luscious, juicy\nserving. Have some peach cobbler\nand huckleberry pie, and fresh berries , . . sure with cream. I agree\nwhole heartedly that having these\ngood foods in season Ls part nf the\njoy nf planning meals ard rating\nthem.\nBut if you will make a game of It,\nand plan tn have desserts twice a\nweek, you won't wan', them twice a\nday; On alternate nights have cantaloupe, or honeydew melon, or fresh\nripe black  cherries. There are  any\nnumber of fruits that are a real treat\nand low in calories , . . berries, grapes, cherries, peaches, pineapple,\nplums, apricots and watermelon.\nCount a serving of any fruit, with a\nsounded teaspoon of sugar, from 100\nto ISO ralnries. Canned and frozen1\nfruits count lhe same. It's a good\nplan t*) sugar fruits ahead of time\nand allow the sugar to melt into\nsyrup . , . then ynu don't, want\ncream.\nIf ynu like In prepare desserts,\nhere are some the readers have suggested; Vanilla pudding, made with\n.skim milk; whips made with egg\nwhite and fruit and sugar . . . the\ntip hern is ;n u.se lesssugar and learn '\nto like the flavor of the fruit. Gelatine desserts are flavorful and low\nin calories. Low calorie cakes are\nangel food ar.d sponge, without icing. Thry taste wonderful without\nicing.\nNow to answer the question about:\nwhat is wrong with having a rich:\ndessert every day and trimming calorics some place else in tlie menu\n. . . a diet tha: is top heavy with\ncarbohydrates robs the menu of\nprotective nutrients. With the cal-\nor.e.s below your requirements,\nyou'd '.n.-r weight, but you would\n\u25a0iFo lose your pep and that wonderful feeling of well being. So take\n1200 calorics a day, with nnt over\n200 in a rich dessert and ymi can bc\nhappy,   healthy   and   reducing,\nRescue of\nWinnipeg Couple\nMost Spectacular\nWINNIPEG. Aug. 2fl (CD-Technical Sgt. J. H. Nelles, 30, of the\nUnited Slates Army Engineers, and\nhis wife rested in Winnipeg today\nafter one of the most spectacular\u2014\nand \"darn lucky\"\u2014air rescues in\nthe annals of Western Canadian\nflying.\nThe light plane in which the\nGary, Ind., serviceman and Mm.\nNelles took off from Chicago for his\nstation at Churchill, Man., was forced down Friday at Water Hen\nLake, 192 miles North of Winnipeg,\nwhen it ran into a storm.\nMISERABLE  LIVING\nFrom then until late Sunday whe'i\na R.C.A.F. search craft sighted the\nupside-down plane and summoned\na Dakota which dropped supplies,\nthe Nelles. neither of whom was injured, lived a \"pcetty miserable existence.\" They had only a blanket\nand their Airdale to keep them\nwarm.\n\"I think if it hadn't been for that\ndog. we'd have frozen to death,\"\nNelles said.\nA short time later, another plane\nbrought three Canadian Army officers, Capt. Ross Willoughby, a medical officer, Capt. L. G. D'Artois,\nJand Lieut. R. O. Henry and the two\nj latter parachuted to the Nelles' aid\nCapt. Willoughby remained on Ihe\nplane when il was discovered the\ntwo Americans did not require\nmedical aid.\n\"I Juit can't iay enough for\nthoie paratrooper!,\" Nellei iaid\nIn Winnipeg. \"They moved ui to\nhigher ground about 1500 yards\n\u25a0 way from the iwamp In which\nwe cracked up. They had ileeplng\nbagi and built ihelteri out of the\nparachutei and they cooked ui a\nhot meal. And furthermore, they\nitayed awake and kept the fire\ngoing \u00abnd let u\u00bb ileep all (Sun\nday) night,.\"\nA R. C. A. F. Norseman landed\non the lake yesterday, took off th\u00bb\nfour and the dog and transferred\nthem to a Dakota which brought\nthem  to Winnipeg la.st night.\nR.C.A. officers said it was \"darn\nlucky\" they had spotted Nelles'\nplane. They were making a last\nsweep of the Water Hen Lake area\nbefore searching elsewhere when\nLac. J. E. Cook of Winnipeg saw\nwhat looked like a \"yellow pencil\"\nto the rear of the search craft. When\nIhe pilot circled back it proved tn\nbe   the missing plane.\nIIM Ml I If 111 ritu III111 r 11J Ml II11 It I llll unit\nFreeman Furniture Co,\nThe House of Furniture Valuei\nPHONE 115 - NEL80Nr B.C.\nTrade In your old furniture on\nBUY ON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN PAYMENT\nStore open till 9 p.m. Saturday!\niiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimnii\nLocust plagues ln Persia are juc-\ncessfully combatted by aerial dusting.\n\u00bbt'HT'\u00bbmtf\u201e,MtM,t|M\nWOOL   DRESSES\n8lzei 11 to 20\n$14.95-$19.50\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\nKootenay Valley Uaii\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\nttiw\u00bbiHMmntwww\nMID-SEASON\nCLEARANCE SALE\nof our\nENTIRE STOCK\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOP\nIMAMMMAMMM ___,>_, _*^a\u00bb\u00bb\"\".\nWatch for Our\nWeekend Specials\n\u20acmm3mH>\nMEAT  MARKET-Phone _3Z\ntssmmm-**^^***mi^^m\ni\u25a0j\u25a0\u25a011\u25a0\u25a0Ir\u25a0 \u25a0 r11 iliiiiiiiiiiilllliiiiiiiii\nBUILD  B.C.   PAYROLLS\n64,578 Nazis\nDismissed From\nPublic Positions\nBERLIN, Aug. 26 fAP' The official Soviet Army newspaper Taeg-\nliche Rundschau said today lhat f>4..\n578 active Nazis were dismissed from\nimporlant public positions in the Soviet occupation zone in the first six\nmonths of this year. ,\nYou Need\n| Pacific's\nGoodness!\nThere are about 624,000 types of\ninsects in the world.\nSee Our Windowi for\nMid-Week Specials\nButcherteria\nPacific's superior milk is ons\nfood that wc all require in\nnur daily diet. Try some today. You'll agree, as have\nthousands, that irradiated\nPacific Milk, in the vacuum\npacked can, is tops in goodness1\nPacific Milk\nIRRADIATED AND VACUUM\nPACKED #*\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nTour Will Have Heating Problem\nFar-Reaching Effect     Solved\nOn B. C. Timber\nROCHESTER, Ir.fl, Aug. 16  'AP\nOpened . w.r.dnss i,    eleo'nc    Iai:.-\nKELOWNA, R C, Aug :6 (CI'\nnd dr\nshni,-s   f.'nled  lo reduce\ntemperature   m   the\nW   A   MrAdam.   British  Columbia 'hl*   ,in*'\nAgent-General   in   London,  arrnm- f h;1rlr<  '.\"ekridge   home  here  In,*\npanvmg 40 United Kingdom l.inner- '--is'- three dims.\nmen on n   lour of H   C. .sud here     When a h.. isehnlrl employee   \u00ab-.\nvesterdnv   that   \"this   bringing   to- ridentally   \u2022\u25a0\u25a0uched   a   radiator   an 1\ngether   of   producer   ar.d   impoitei   '.sa.s  hum.*d sligh'ly, three-year-old\nis g.*:ng i\" *ta:.d us :n g --b. s*. .id in  Dm**:s   I.    k  .'.*,*   snivel   the   pu,*-\nll'.e   days to c une  sshen  tr.e .sellers *.-!.'   He simstd  hs pirents hn*.,,* he\nmarket   has    disappeared   and   west*...*!   on a  di*.e:.p*it   ard   pushed\nshall  again   be  facing stem r* itipo up a therp   stat  (\u25a0'\"''Milling the au*\ni,lion    from   Scandinavia   and    thf  torpiru* ':\u2022 r -r  s-.'-rn*\nBaltic\"\nporta\"*   body   ,-(   imp* i'e-s   of   nu:        [. \u201e,,*' ..  , ....*,. ,,,,*..\u201e..r(, ,*..r pnp.\nwoods   \"ial    has   ever   vi.si'ed    th' ,1a**'*.   of   .,;\u2022\u25a0  woods   in   'he  1'   K\nProsur.rr,\" tie said 'I* forms  a 'Cir- n-arket   b ,1  >*r.e a f m: e ,\u25a0--\u2022,- el-\n\u25a0*,,\u25a0:',n  completely  represen'a'ive  of (\u201e,., ,,\u201e  .,.\u201e-.. _, .,,;,,.,..;,   ,,,  the (*:\u25a0\nthe    importing    sid\"    of    ti*e    1*K \u2022*i:ei**M:    M,*,V! .m .\" *l\nDelega'es   '.sere   to  ,er  for   them-      Mllk  r\nselves tlie  whole   technique  of   pro-  !\u2022\"\u25a0!   -on\nPu*   s,us null   a*   I   (iron   * i\". mill   I*'  hai' a  |*'\niorksidc  i   ,-\u25a0\u201e i\nA   (I'P    * f   !' '    I *'l-   ','   II   be   C; -.,;\u2022   !\"\" seen\n'\" It*.  I*    K   mur on \"a puis , ;r- a  das\nI d   is  the\n*   .rd  -A  \u25a0-,.\np,,r,\nM*.\nN*'rthpv    is   s*islt]nj\nR\",|   Peer,   Ml-erla\nTs    (1    (lames   msn*\n.,**:*pi      IK*    were   re\n'   Mr   and   Mrs    W   *\"i    ]r<*    '\nWestmlrstci\nP,.kmi.   has ,r-,.,-en  m*    'ol]l'\"\n'   \u25a0'*,*   .be   *, ill   ,*,\u201e:-        M*      a**rl\nCaplam W Y H ,-,-,.\u25a0- nt (>,*\nwater is Ihe cues' of M, a, ,* M,\nC,   Noel n:*.\".p a' C *i,a I,\"I**\nI,\n(\nY      'ff     I la*    .\n*S\"f  Ml   and   M\nA  I l.i\nBoys Wanted\nTo toke n\u00bber Doily N\u00abwi paper muten In Folr-\nirw ond Uphill icrioni of fhe ciry.\nApply lo\nNclinnt flatlij Niuuk\nURCULAIION DEPARTMENT\nNew Soapless VEL\nSpeeds Baby's Laundry\nhy Frances Thompson\nnoted homnnakiiiR authority\n||e,e*, K,,,*,| \u201ee*,,. for ,.,,,* |,\"r'.' T'l\u201e, ,\u201e-v\nl'i,'ipl\"-*i \\l I. helps spo.',] lh\" daily ,\u201e|* ,,(\nU.'l.lung    I'll'V    rlntllfe        Why','     I\"*, ni-e    ,1\nqiii'klv lift- ..ill dul and if nm don't n*.   !.\u00abi\nn.'i'h   'r\u00bbtl,er le.. ll..\"  s,.u \u00ab...|'|\n\"'    \"\"*'\"    ''    '\"*\"*'*'       :\"*;   \"\u25a0\"*'     \"SpklP. .-' s-l\"'-   -M sn't.  S'.'l.l..\n'\u2022-''\u25a0 '\"'        '*      I\"    \"'' *'***      \u25a0   *''**.l|   A-   I   'I     \"*      I   I*   *>\",T   t   ,   '*<    I\nMIN  Mllli   WH i.l Mil \"\"I I I'l ''I' 1 \u00bb\"M SHU'\nM 1    .a ... r. *1 I  .* I  emil\" \"   ,,        '\u00bb\"\u25a0' I   **'l\"   '    \\ I I*   I\"   '\u2022<   tk\"\n.\u201e'\" lo in\" I.\"  sll '\"'*i\"' jir.i.rnl*. '\"-I*    *'   <*   \"\"'   \u2022\u25a0\"!\u25a0   ( 'I1   'l'*\"<   \u00bb\"\nloipkur.   U'*lud\"l       I pl'l\"  \u2022\u25a0*.p, \"PkI'v     B I     '\"    !*'**'     J *'\u2022    \u2022*'\n\\ | I   ,,.,,1*,,,,* no -dk.li .oil  i.  ki\"*l ' '\"'\" l\"\u00a3       v:*' *'*\"  I\"\"'   ^ I I* \"\"'\nIn ,,\u201e\u201e |,\u201e,,.|,      [|. s-rs  sli.l'l  |\u00bb1 l*<   il*.   I'd'   '*'*\u2022,I,    '**,*'     llie\u201e,i|n\n(Ul\"\"  i\"\"p\u00ab  l-el'V  r|\"ll|\",. (\u25a0\"..!,   >|\u201e| \"\"\u2022'*'  \"\"*   \"       'l  '  |\"\"''.I'K   I'\"*I\n,\u201e,\u201e, |l,,l   ll\u201e*  I \u201el*l,   I,,.,,,,   t.,.|.  a,l|  ,\u201e,|\nr^....,,, I,\n,,.,.(  ,\nVI 1, fl iR HUH S \"l \u00ab>! r\\*<4    Ml  '\"' r I'\" \u2022\"\"\u2022'\"S 'Vsemo\nrti-oit I-- ih\" .i.-t ms- mi ZAr'i,,yri'A'n, AAA,','-.'\"el\nf\".     hs'.S   B      IS.\u00bb,I\"I\"* ^o.|ll      hr-[\"-\"S]-'  r s   r.r-  ,n    \u201e   ..!,.,\u201e  \u201ei\nilelichted h.m ml'  .nd 6*l6s   (hev I   Jy,'   AA A* An Hhii\"le\nkeep (1..I*.    jsash    \u00ab\u201e*i     ti',.'   'AA'i.AlAA  ,..,l,,\\ll,   \u201e7,l.\n<s,,olrris   ii,    mU'lls*   sssm,    m\u2014\n,'l,\"r   \u00ab,,rk    ,.  I*\",t,\u00ab   done    ,,,,'n\ni\u00bb.|,u,( mill \\ I l.,*,r\u201e *|u*  k.-mn.|\nI'olit rub nr lis 1st. pis! .-pi\"\"\/\"\n\\ nurse ss ll\" '.'>c, >al,;,*.. In lti\" ..,\"\n\"Iilllanl,. ,.,,!\",, ' 1 fii\u201e| \\ I |   ,. lhe\nfmnd\"st    tliuut   rver   for   ssftslntiH   \u201eur,.. , ,,      ,,    ,        .    , ,.\nstu ri.uiie.    ii .,,\", \u201e, \u201e,,, i    \"EL  Is I n|lslifid In.iiiHili ol Ihi\n\u25a0s.sliun ,\u201e.| rinsing nme   li i-,se,, COLGATE PALMOLIVE PEET CO. LTD.\n\u25a0 \u25a0mm\nWARNING!\nIndications still point to a shortage of\ncoal next Winter.\nThc better grades, especially, arc not\nbeing produced in sufficient volume to\nmeet the ever increasing demand.\nPHONE 33, and place your order now,\nwc can make delivciy of the following\nimmediately\nGait Lump and Stove, Newcastle Lump,\nCrow'i. Nest Cobble and Stoker, Three\nHills Lump, Canmore Briquettes.\nWest Transfer Co.\nNekon :, I url Mciclv.inl*, l,*i \u2022!\/ Vents\"\nPhone 33 719 Baker St.\n *^^^pw\n\u2014\u00ab\u25a0\"-\u2014\u2014\nN?lamt Batlij Noma\nEstablished April 2i   1902\nBritish Columbia'i\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every  morning except  Sunday  by\nthe   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY.   LIMITED 286 Baker Sl   Nelson. British Columbia\nAuthorized ns Second Class Mull,\nPostoflice Department, Ottawa\nMEMBKH OF   I'lll*. CANADIAN  I'RKSS AND\nTHE  AUDI*!   RIJRF.AI'  OF  CHU Tl.ATK l\"JS\nWEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27, 19*17\nCommoowealth and\nEmpire\nThe ch,inrrinfi of tht* title of the Dominions Office in London to \"Commonwealth Relations Office\" underlines\nthe relationship of the members of the\nBritish Commonwealth of Nations. Announcing the chance, Prime Minister\nAttlee stated that the former name\nWets likely to convey a misleading impression of the relations between the\nUnited Kingdom and the other members, while the Marquis of Salisbury\nin the House nf Lords said that the\nterm \"Dominions Office\" was open to\nobjection because it mu'ht be interpreted tn imply that other members\nof.the Commonwealth were of Inferior\nstatus. \"The real position, under the\nStatute of Westminster,\" he continued,\n\"is that they are oversea Dominions\nof the King, ln exactly the same position as Great Britain, which Is the\nmetropolitan Dominion of His Majesty.\"\nThe change of name will make clear\nthe nature of the work of the former\nDominions Office. The work of the Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs\nwas diplomatic, not administrative, a\nfact Implicit in the proposed change of\ntitle to \"Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations\"\nWith the use of these new titles, a\nstricter meaning of tlie two elements\nin the phrase \"British Commonwealth\nand Empire\" emerges. The term \"Empire\" in its narrow sense applies to\nthose communities which are still under tutelage, a croup of diminishing\nproportions as thee communities advance toward and achieve s'lf-i'nvrrn-\nment, and, in a sense, graduate into the\nCommonwealth. In fact, with the eventual transfer of the countries of the.\ndependent Empire to the class nf sovereign independent slates in free association, the final disappearance of the\nword \"Empire\" in relation to Britain\nis within the realm of possibility.\nOther changes in nomenclature will\nfollow the establishment of the twn\nnew Dominions in In lia The King\nwill nn longer be Err.pi mr of India; but\nhe will be King of India and of Pakistan, as he now is King of Cana la, S .uth\nAfrica. Australia, Nev.* '\/.\u25a0 aland, and\nthe United Kingdom All lie men.hers\nof the 0 mmonwoaph -.i.--.l] he consulted on the problem, as thev must\nbe. if anv changes are to he made in\nthe King's title.\nSterling Convertibility\nBritain recent lv 1 * k a sicnif.car.t\nstep required hv t: \u2022\u25a0 An.;'. i-Am* rican\nloan agreement Sm ma !e her currency fs'erimgl f: elv \"r r.ve; t:h!\"\"\nfor all current Is.iim.r*; -*r. Ji ,; js,\nanvore abr iad in sc'.hr*. * :* > !*, or services t*i Ill-Ham. I' av r, .'.* \u25a0* *ie * p.*:*,*.\nment :*: eu: ia \u2022 **.* ;': -A ; :<\u25a0.*!'>\nanywhere As a :* :',', mm an i: i;-\nvidual is enable.! t me 'he i,-.- , ,-r ]\u25a0<\nto   hiiv   r,* 1   '.:-\u25a0\u25a0 'r   :--.     ',:'.,-.\u25a0   ,,\u25a0 r*a\nwar  and   p< .p,var  per I. ;'    if  hr\nwishes,   in  other  c  'in':  * -   win re  1; e\njurrencv mav iw d -7.,-.: -'.\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 \\:,:::;,],\u2022\nIt  has hem d:ff ,-ii:   i -   ',':.' ,.-\u2022<-,\nprepare f *r *'\"\u2022\u25a0 ; im* *.', - : * ' \", -::\nvertibiii\".*\", i::rr ';-, r a i*.** : \u2022 *i i \u2022*.*\nbalance mean*, t*  il  c  nvei',:   h'v  :. a\nstrain on ler i'.'u 1 (**:: re:** *,- r - **;: ***\u25a0\nThai she ii r.r i \u25a0-,-,-\u25a0 - \u2022'\u25a0::\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-. -'\u25a0-, m ,v\ncordanm v:*h  he;   * id:    H    n  i, '.\"'.*\nah* ii'   a  hi A'.'''-'.-  i   \"- - \u25a0-.   :\u2022:   \u2022} \u25a0   j; ',--,\nwhere parts of these balances have\nbeen released, the sums released are\nalso convertible into any currency.\nThe visible change was not startling\ninasmuch as payments to Britain's\nlargest suppliers, such as Canada, the\nUnited States, and Argentina, have\nbeen in hard currency for some time,\nfollowing agreements signed with these\ncountries. The loans from Canada and\nthe United States have enabled Britain\nto pay for supplies from these countries, and have made possible, also, the\npresent convertibility program. The\nloans were calculated to relieve Britain\nof the dollar pressure for a few years\nso that she could build up her exports\non a large scale, and thus make sterling\na currency necessary for other countries in order to buy from Britain.\nWithin a reasonable time, it was hoped\n\u2014perhaps five-years\u2014Britain's exports\nwnuld be high enough to enable her tn\nmaintain her economic position without further dollar support.\nWhen that time comes, world trade\nshould be on a much freer basis than\nit is at present. When Britain raises\nher exports to the ultimate levels set\n(175% of 1938 exports), she will also\nbe able to expand her Imports, which\nwill mean much tn the countries who\ndepend nn Britain as a market for their\nexports.\nP?\nst* :i  :*.\n.*.,,,,                        \u2022',,;\nn<*  *'* 1\n*.'   * *      * * *     ' '      *\nthat  i\nmi'*,    .*l     *  **\u25a0\u25a0\u2022    *\nsin *.* t\n'I'l\nYin\nJulv   1\naction:\n.,:-! ! *     '   *'.\nma !'   * n \"i   .,['\u25a0 :   '*   **\ndoes in\n.1 aff, , 1  llv ' .1' :!,',.*  !\nhn i 11 u\np in  ll: ;'.i**i du: ii*,.* lie\nman*.' i\n>titi11 a  , *,', 1   , h  ,u|*\"!:\nWilli    'A\nai    -,--\u00ab   1     - :     \u25a0    ii 1\",\nBiiluin\nTm* .* i .:,..!*,   .,'!  *.*.'\nltll'    fl!\nim .al . ! ,!\"   .  ' .   m    *\nSClllen\ni l >  afl, i   :\u2022 *   *.',,*    ,i\"  i  '\nrun.:]!.\nill* 1    La! i   us    ,,|,      '   ,    1\nWilli   1*\n*    l'i ,' *'.i*i a      ':-.-.-\u25a0-\nand tin\nmurine, mm   im .1   II\nlance H.\nWhittaker\nTHI   UNINDINO. WAR\nIn i rtcent editorial this Chriitlsn Iclenct\nMonitor iaid:\n\"The world'i \u00abconom!c plight\u2014of which\nBritain'! crl_.ii ii ft part\u2014muit be recognized\n\u25a0ai the yet ur.won phas-t of World War II.\"\nThis is \u00ab thing that many people \u00bbre laying,  and  fully beginning to realize, today.\nThe thought fthould be extended much\nfurther Brl'am'i economic plight, Wnrld War\nI and World War II, the starving Armenian!\nof tha 1920s, the Japanese earthquake of 1823,\nthp Chinese famines of yesterday and today\u2014\na'.', are part of the war which Involve! al! mankind, the war against greed, selfishness, politico 1 nnd economic circumstance, and natural\ncatastrophe of every desorlptlon.\nErnest Hemingway hai made a little of\nJohn Donne familiar to us; the flrit lint of\nHemingway's quotation rings like the bell of\ntruth thn.ugh our minds and hearts:\n\"No man Is an ijlar.de, lntire of himselfe;\nbut a p,ii t of the maine ...\"\nNeither is any nation an Island, entire of\nItself. Never in the history of our civilization\nId thnt be:r.g brought home more closely than\nnnw. Britain's present misfortune is our mis-\nf'Ttur.e, nnt only ir. the sense that ahe is our\nMotherland, and her people our people, but in\nth*p practical economic tense. The same Idea is\ngrad inlly permeating to the heart of America.\nHu' :t rr.'.r' nrt be forgotten that the effect\nof a Br'ish ecrnomic collapse on world forces\nand f-'rt'ir.os would be exactlv the *;>rr.r as the\n(c i:\/'\"\",:c coll ipse of any other country, Tht\n:i ffprer.ee in world effect would be only In degree o:  :n'en\u00ab:ty, r.ot in  kind\nWe Ml'ST be concerned in future with the\npc r.t mic fortunes of ANY nntior.; and we must\n:-r-A collectively, as a sister nation, n\n< Is the way to victory, real victory,\nie needs of (-.ther nationa ai they\nstymie economic crises before they\n\u25a0\u25a0 stnrtrd; t'1 prove a friendship that\no b\"f>r rm. of the burden\u2014this il\nh-\nrace\nroad to winr.ir\n1 W-*rld War II\",\nte *h\"*\u00abe who <*.(\u25a0\u2022\nr hrnA* bv ]\u25a0:>\u25a0\u25a0',\n::;,: 'v At a Wnrl\nthe \"as Tft\n-,d it ii also\nthe suprem-\n\u25a0ng y \u25a0 '. an\n1 War III\nToday's Horoscope\nT* da> s   ]>\u25a0:\"'' Any   crbhrh-X   Is   studious,\n. ,, -: ,,.\u25a0... <, \u25a0 _ ..-, ,,*.'. .!,,\u2022 }:ii: \u201e ke-o, ln-\n'.'\u25a0.'\u25a0 i \u25a0:,'\u25a0\u25a0 ,*\u25a0 \u2022 n' ! a t'-Ui '\u25a0 ff s (';: .cal h I-\n\u25a0-    \u25a0,  *.' h < h   A   \"yh  l <\":er \\-r\\- -t ,  yiw*  frn '.dl\n\u25a0'.'*, : <\u25a0* r.ire to have dnec'ed at them, Vou are\nk \u25a0 ' s- d 1   v,' g, nl'.'.-.T. s genemu'! to your ere-\n- v   Y  u   '.'  '.]  A:   -i-r- f, r**:-.i:*-\".l,'ii  mate ar.d be\n* \u201e  v   r   ..., . .   ,|    tj \u201e   ,*';,,.   i,   \u201e.!..*..-,.   f,,;*   ynM\n!'*     :\u25a0   .\".a: 1   ;n  >i,:  \u25a0Ao'a'Z.-z*-   Ird:nt<nni\nire     '   r     ;* = V    nr- a, \u25a0 \u00bb\u201e,     f.*, ; :     Br.d     chr-rri\n;   \u2022''\u25a0   p'-'bl'v: s  of   othrrs    Provided   all\n,   ..- -a.r-.r-yp e<. is--.- rmpV'yrd toward voca'ior,.\n;*'   \u2022 \\: \u25a0*    n* d   -!  ;;!**f:l   friendships   are\nh* i   ;.-;\u2022   ' '\u25a0 \\r \u25a0.. \u25a0']}*'\u25a0 y--A*]'\":vp nf iri'irh\n\u25a0 'I   \u25a0 1 is'.,   rh ! |    v 'il   bm   vrrv\n\u25a0        .     '   \u25a0     ',-\u25a0<,\u25a0'. v*   ]   :r   rf   pleasure   n-A\nt.*s    ',-> : \u25a0    \u2022 ,'i .-   i   * .* *i=    Much   a--\n;\u25a0*\u2022\u2022\"-   n-A   (iinnlrin'ive  cren', in   Is  p'**-\n1 est  Yourself\n'*!\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 1. in* \"in lr,  M-ireln*!\n'   '.','     '   >     ' \u25a0 \u25a0    \u25a0   \u25a0be    M  ris*T.nalh  ml-\n\u25a0*.,'\" i-    :- <   ~,ii   I\"   ri,   his\n\"   b.        *'  ,s  ,. !     ',,!',.    ot  C.r: .'mi   I:i-\n\u25a0       *    *.   n* \u25a0!  ,   !''**!  * lh*-  II.-isti,\"\nii *,r ANSwrns\n*     '1   - b        I   r,| ,* ,!     ,**, ,..\u25a0'.,   I ' \u25a0\u25a0\ni,. * ,\u25a0\u25a0 ','   1,  . ;,' ,,   |,,i,    \u201e I- ,   ., * !   .!..'*,\"\n*      I        .* ,' .   M ;'l  I *\n'    ',   *\u25a0 II, ;   '   \u25a0\nWords of Wisdom\nQuestions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to iny reader, Names of peraona\naik I ng quest lone will not be publlihed.\nThere li no charge for thle aervice. Queitloni WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL except when there la obvious necei-\n\u2022 Ity for privacy.\nT. W., Fauquier\u2014Will you kindly tell me in\nyour Questions and Answers where I could\nbuy new bee equipment In B. C.7\nA bee equipment supplier at the Coast la\nS  P. Hodgson & Son1;, 551 13th Avenue, New\nWestminster,\nK. C, Nelson\u2014Could you please give me information on where I could find out ln\ndetail of work with aome construction or\noil company ln a foreign country?\npany in which you seek employment, if skilled,\nor to the Executive and Professional Division,\nNational Unemployment Service, Vancouver.\nReader, Creaton\u2014Please give me what information you can on casual and permanent\nlabor,   or  give   me  an   address   where   I\nmight write for the information?\nWrlta  National   Employment   Service,   at\nCranbrook, B. C.\n(J. H., Slocan\u2014What ii the teat for acid or\n\u2022our aoll?\nA rough teit for soil acidity is to place blut\nlitmus paper between two layers of the soil.\nIf the litmuj paper turns red the aoll is acid.\nLooking Backward\n10 YSARS AOO\nProm Tht Dally Newt ef August ES, 1937\n(|uali^inf roundi for the annual September golf tournament at the Nelson Golf and\nCountry Club are now under way,\nOpen seasons for ducks, geese and cooti\nIn the Eastern part of British Columbia are\nSept, 15 to Nov. 15, except in the Provincial\nElectoral Districts of Skeena, Atlin, Ominrca,\nFort George, Peace River, Salmon Arm, Slmil-\nkameen and North and South Okanagan,\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Daily Ntwt of August t8, 1922\nTtmptrahirti hert yesterday wtre 51 and\n00 degree*.\nA, J. Dunnett leavei this morning for Toronto, accompanied by hii daughter, Misi\nDoreen Dunnett,\nKimberley defeated Wycllffe 11-8 ln an\nF.ast Kootenay Leagut game at Fernie last\nSunday to win tht right to play Fernle, the\nEastern Section champion,\nLingle-Johnion, Slocan City, have Just\ncompleted the shipment of 400,000 feet of white\npint to Montreal.\n40 YEARS AGO\nFrom Tht Dally News of Auguit ti, 1907\nUnder tht namt of tht Hewitt Mining\nCompany, with a capitalization of $800,000, a\nparty of Americana have taken over the Hewitt\nMint.\nF. W. Guernsey of the Trail SmtlUr passed\nthrough Nelson yesterday on his way East.\nRalph Smith, M P.P., and Mrs. Smith left\nyeiterday for Fernie.\nBARCLAY ON BRIDGE\nBy  Shepard  Barclay\n\"Thu Authority on Authorities.\"\nNo Argument\nFIGHT RESULTS\nBy The Aiiociated Preu\nBrooklyn\u2014Phil   Terranova,    129,\nNew York, outpointed Tommy Mc-\n(10).\nWHETHER & certain flncse\nwiU work or not La the crucial\nquestton whose answer points to\nthe soundest play for some contracts. If the bidding or early\nplay iliowa the vital honor to be\nprobably In one defender's hand,\nthen you may stake all on the\nfinesse. If it Li marked by preceding developments to bc with\nthe other defender, then you have\nto play differently at the decisive\nstage. Sometimes the opening\nlead locates the card for you. If\nthe suit opened proves to be one\nIn which the leader had nothing\nto develop, It is at least an indication that hc 'may have chosen\nit to avoid leading from V-- ' \"ior\nIn the other suit      (\n+ A J6\nVAK4\n4 A 10\n^AKQJI)\n4 10 9 8 7\n2\nf J 10 9 6\n82\ntt\nN\nW  E\nE\n\u2666 K-\n\u2666 .I  -\n3\n48 7\n8   .\n5 3\n\u2666 Q5 3\ns\u00bbQ85\nAKQ75Z\n\u00bb\u00ab.\n<\u00a3X>_-_r:   North.   Neither  side\nr\\_rner\u00ab_le)\nNorth      Hut     South      Woit\n4NT       Pau      7NT\nThat's the briefest bidding we\newr h-Md of \u00bb No Trump grand\n\u2022lun. In (act, It oould never be\nmore than one bid briefer, with a\ndealer*! T-No Trumpa and then\nthree passes. South waa plenty\nventuresome to accept the unusually extended Invitation ln North's\nopening bid. By ao doing he gave\nhia partner a gingery problem at\nlht finish of the play.\nlaat led the heart 7 to the A,\nwhereupon North began to feel\nh*le way. When the cluh 10 fell on\nthe first trick ot that ault, be\nknew he had five tricka certain\nthere. That assured 12 tricks, but\nif diamonds wouldn't break he\nwould have to depend on tho\nspade finesse or a squeeze. To\nhelp decide which, he took ln a\nsecond heart with the Q on the\nsecond trick. East's discard of the\ndiamond 4. showing he had led tr\nsingleton, made North tentatively\nrecl<on lhat hearts were opened\nto avoid leading from spades, In\nwhich East might have the K.\nNext came the remaining four\ncluba on which dummy *pat &'\nheart, the spade Q and a diamond. Now the diamond A wa*.\nscored and the heart K, on which.\nNorth carefully noted that East\ndiscarded a spade. ThU left the\ndummy three diamonds and tho\nspade 5, and North the spade A-J\nand diamond 10. Eaat waa marked\nwith Just one spade left and three\ndiamonds. The diamond K and Q\nwere now taken, showing East\nwith a diamond and a spade left.\nNorth decided the spade waa the\nK, so refused the fineaw, dropping It with thc A and nwWng\nthe J good for the final trick.\nCOUNCIL BLUFFS. Ia., Aug 28\n'AF)*-City purchasing agent Ken j\nGardiner has no Tear that anyone\nwill argue that the city can't afford its four new police carj. Govern.   135,   London\nThe new cars cost the city $5248 - Washington-\u2014Aaron Perry, 16fl,\n72. Gardiner sold the old ones for jWashinglon, outpointed Bobby C.\n$5249, malting a  profit of 28 cents. Cummmgj, 160, Philadelphia  (8).\nSan Francisco\u2014Freddie Apo6toll,\nThe first night airmail flight was 160, San Francisco, outpointed Unmade in 1921. hen Shank, 157, Denver (10).\nTomorrow's Problem\nfA8754\ne A 10 6\n\u25a0) A     ,.    V\n109 75\n?2\n48 4 S\n4\u00bb8\n(Dealer:\nN\nW E\n5\n\u2022f .: .*m .*\nf QJ\n\u2666 Kt. J 7\n4J82    '\n\u2022iNone\nIK 10 9(5 3\n\u25ba 9 6 2\nUK107I\nCast Both sides vul-\nJffl<&temfaa\/ft\nnerable.)\nAfter South bids 1-Heart, West\nS-Spodcs. North 4-HeartaJi and\nEast 4-Spades, what ts South*.,\nmoet Informative action If tha\npair ata the Blackwood \u00ab0Mv*\u00ab.\ntlon!\nMascot a Lonely\nMule From Now on\nWants to Know If\nLaw Still Holds\nPress Comment\nHE'S ADVISER TO  KINQ  OF IKERRH\nIn i iprawllnif, ieyen-acre palacn In Britiih Nigeria, ths Ogogn of Iktrre (400 iquare\nmllM; 14,000 Inhabitants) awaits the return\nof hii prewar adviser.\nAnd In Sydney, Australia, the adviser-\nclever M-year-old artist Donald Fri*nd\u2014li\nmaking preparations to go back to Ikerre after\nfive yean in the army,\nRecent letters from the Ogoga assured\nhim that his rtturn would be weclom*.\nFriend's original rise to Royal favor was\nludden.\nIn 1938, ai an art itudent In London and\nParis. Friend had become fascinated with\nWest African art, decided to see it in its natural mwoundlngi.\nKnowing no more of Africa than what he\nhad seen In London night cluba and museums,\nhe caught a boat to Lagos, an island off the\nroast ln Nigeria, In 1938; there he encountered\n5am, a pidgin-English-speaking Negro from\nIkerrr, whn recommended \"Massa Friprd \u00a3n\nlonga Sam. In Ikrrre- much work of art.\"\nSam and Donald set off hy caravan, and\nrtachtd the ettatei of the Ogoga's palace at 2\na rr\nAfter half an hour's standardized pr^llm-\nInarv greetings, Don explained through Sim\nwhat hp wnr;'rd, wan set up in n hed In th\"\ncourtyard.\nNext day the greetings were recited\nagain, and Donald wa.s Invited to irt ay. He\nionk up lodging* In a section of thr pnlnrr,\nwai provided with three servants and a farm\noutside the city,\nAfter a month the Ognga proposed that\nFriend ahould become his adviser; Friend\nnrrrpted, and stayed on 'unpaid) for twn\ny p a r %\nHe managed the Ogoga's relations with\nIhe British Government, per Minded the Ognga\nto abnhsh Illegal taxes, raised fundi for the\nDgoga through the Issue of pardona of exiled\npriires -some paid money and some gave\nnew r.iM f, r th<* privilege \u25a0-\u25a0' reentering Tkerre\npppei'de*.! on Interpreters A shrt with\nF\": o-rci si-fin lrarr.rd r';< 'ith nf tiie native ':ng\nto 'ii.scuss simple subjects and get off by heart\nthe half-hour ceremony of grretmg\n'Die setup in Ikerre uns traditionally den:\nnrratir; the Ognga was chosen by tllC people\nfrnm tlie M0 members of the Royal Family,\nwas drpnsrd if tlie ppnplo went tn thi* palace\nqnd sl;'jted for the King by his \"civilian\"\nnn ive     Svdrev,   Ah'tra I in,  Telegraph\nEtiquette Hints\nIt ifc sm ally rnncrl f<*r a mnn to makt\nii i nl p.n.ri'tly iip-Mi h hostess who has rnter-\nh.i'fr!  hi mi  nt  dinner    utiles1-, of course, he  is\nim   ..:,'   nf  lm- \u2022\u25a0.*,\u25a0     ull |    wnuld    he    mip.ml\nI V   A   i \u00abit-  * '.   Ih,i\"ks  in  that  ca.su  takes  the\nyZu-f   nf    the   \u25a0 ,AA.\nWEST POINT, N. Y\u201e Aug. 26 j OMAHA, Aug. 26 fAP) - R. G.\n(AP)\u2014 Skippy, the United States Linehan of Australia wants to know\nArmy'i mascot, will be a lonely lit- if Nebra*ska itill requires motorist3\ntie mult from now on. j to throw  a  icenic tarpaulin  over\nFor West Point lurrendered com-|thelr automobile* when horsei ip-\npletely yesterday to the  encroach- Proac\"-\nments of mechanization and auc-l Tht latest Nebraska law he can\ntloned off the remaining cavalry find\u20141908\u2014also lays the motorist\nhorses stabled on the grounds of the i should take his machine apart and\nUnited States Military Academy\u2014 | hide the parts in the grass lf the\nleaving the school without horses tarpaulin doesn't soothe the horse,\nfnr training, polo and show purpos-iAt night he must send up warning\nes for the first time since 1802.        red rockets and Roman candles.\nAVAILABLE   FOR   IMMEDIATE   DELIVERY\n. Exactly as illustrated this magnificent American made\n\"Bathmaster\" Recesi Bathtub, made of everlasting cast\nIron heavily porcelain enamelled with popular rim seat.\nComplete with chrome fixtures, waste, overflow. Weight\napp. 390 lbs.4|\/i or 5 ft. ilze, complete $99.00\nBath   only $79.95\nNote: Specify riph* or Wt oulet,\n'arid $in, If slower needed!\nB. Cut Comer Cest Iron Enamel\nBailn, 17' xlfl\". WgM app P0\nlbs Complete $33.50\nL\u00abu Fitting! $24.00\nC. Cloiet 8et, china, compact\nmodern two piece. Weight\napp. 100 lbs. $55.00\nD. Range Boiler, hot water.\nHeavily galvanized 30 gallon\nsize $15.75\nE. Toilet Set -- gleaming white,\nstreamlined, App. shipping wt\n100 lbs $47,50\nF. Dralnboard Sink, cast Iron,\narid resistant enamel, chrome\nplated swing faucets, dual\ns'rain and trap Wt. app 200\nlbs Size 20\"x42\" $57.00\nSink tnd Strainer only $45,00\n(Specify right or left hand\n dralnboard'\t\nNEW FLAT\nALUMINUM 8HEET8\n30\"x72\",   018 gauge       $2.35 each\nweight i]i lbs, each.\n38\"x72\", 028 gauge        $3.25 each\nweight IM lbs, each,\nRuit  Proof \u2014 Wlll   Lait t  Lift\nTime.\nAll  Pricei F.67a Winnipeg. For\nprompt shipment  Include  money\norder.  2hr'r  depoilt  required   for\nC.O.D. orden,\nINTERNATIONAL HEATING \u00ab\u00bbSUPPLY LTD.\n-Z.-23I JARVIS AVE WINNIPEG\nTested and Proved for British Columbia\nCsr.kea Httlw, SiiirfCreei\nSHELL GASOLINES\nare specially blended\nto meet B.C. conditions\nYou hear down on (he g\u00ab.\u00ab for the\nlong uphill climh . . . nnd the motor\nre*.ponds with n deeper note of extra\npower \u2014smooth, steady, knocklcss!\nShell Gasolines arc made right here\nin B.C. at the new Shellhurn Refinery.\nThey arc specially blended to meet\nBritish Columbia's driving conditions . . . with quicker starting in\nB.C \u2014powerful   pickup  in  11.C \u2014\nrxtra miles in R.C \u2014 \"mountain goat\"\nhill climbing in B.C.\nAs you know, gasoline is one of the\nmost sensitise oi products \u2014m is\nsensitise to temperature, humidity,\naltitude. Shell Gasolines from ihr\nShellhurn Refinery arc road-tested\nhere from sea to mountain top \u2014our\n[inning groundi\nYour car performs hat in H.( . ss uh\ngasoline made ipecialh fnr III .\nOVi\u00ab ON! AND ONI-HAIP Mill ION\nDOLLARS TO MAKI tltttll OASOLINI\nI hr nr. \u25a0.hrlll-iirn Krlinrit I'si\nI i Inn,' il lh. lr. !mi,il lsn.,\u00ab '\u201e.\u00ab\u25a0*'\nnl'tlin.il hs  Mull In,it, npc'i'mK  li\nlt n\nllll\nlh\nth\n'I\n,h\n\u25a0il.l\n' In\n\"\u00ab    |'l,\nI   rl,   ,*\ns r.|'r,\nline,\nYOU CAN BE SURE OF SHELL\n \u2014^\u2014^\u2122-\nm^^^^^mfm-m\n\"\u25a0.HPH\n^\t\niCMfl\n*\nSPORTS\nirales' Big Guns Ruin Negro's\nrst Stand; Mize Poles Und Homer\nBy STEVE  ROBERTSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nBt,   Louis  Cardinals  lost   a   royal\npuce lu knock a aumc from   thc\n.tional League lead of the Brook-\nDod^crs   as   thi1   ('aids   willed\nday nitfht before the three-hit\n(rllng of Hill Vniselle and Boston\npves   walked   off    uith    a   5-1\nision.\nJrooklyn dropped a lfi-3 en-\ninter to Pittsburgh earlier in thc\nf and for a few hours St, Louis\niked up a half-game mi the lend-\nonly In drop back to six Raines\n&hi after their loss to the Braves.\nBig Johnny Mlze's home run bat\nhared headlines Tuesday with\nhe pulverizing power unleashed\n|>y Pittsburgh bats as the Pirates\nulned the debut of Negro right-\nhinder Dan Bankhead with the\nBrooklyn  Doders.\nMize poled his 41st and 4?nd\nHome runs into the stands at the\nPolo Grounds, drove in five runs\nM the Giants came from behind\nthree times to edge Chicago Cubs\nf-6 In the first game of a twin\nMil.  Rain  cancelled  the  nightcap.\nPittsburgh leaped on starter Hal\nSregg, and relievers Bankhead\nind Rex Barney for 20 hits as the\niucs halted a Brooklyn five-game\nwinning streak with a 16 3 vie-\nOry.\n.fize collrctrd two sinclfs alnnc\n;h his two round-tripper.s and It\n8 his infield single in thf lust of\nj ninth that drove in the winning\nmt run.\n!\"he New Ynrk first hr^rmnn ml-\ntert his circuit blows in bis 121st\nlie. Babe Ruth, in hi.s record-\n\u25baakinp 1027 season when he smote\nout nf lhe park, C-*i his 42nd in\n(ask H.P.) panic twn davs later\n,n Mi7.e-en Ant;. 2H, 1927.\n!*he Pirates jumped on Gregg fnr\nir runs in thc first inning, and\n.en two more Bucs found the\nks in thc second, Bankhead \u2014\n'chased a few d ivs ago from the\n\u25a0mphis Negro Amen ran League\nb\u2014wa.s waved to Ihe Dodger\nUnd, He was reached for 10 hits\nI eight runs in his .1  1-3  Inning\n'ILLIAMS MOVES\nP FRONT IN\nWERICAN LEAGUE\nJEW YORK,   Aug.   28   CAP)   -\niding fnr his third   hatting title\nI his first since 1942, Tod Wil-\nns, slugging Boston Red Snx out-\nIder, moved in front in the Amrr-\n\u25a0n Leag;;e hitting parade last\nek with a mark nf .VA.\nMttiam.1 joined Ibrry Walker\n\u25ba National League's leading swat-\n', whn maintained his terrific seal-long hit';:.,; hy increasing hi?\nsragc; to A,A2.\niVilliams. who won the crown in\nII and '4:', 'Ar: mi d nine hits tn\ntrips to the plate to take a sev-\n-point lead over Cleveland's Dale\ntchell. wh climbed eight poinds\na ruimc r-up X',-\\ through games\nSunday, A;;g, 21.\nManager Lou Boudreau rf the Ir.-\nins dropprd s:x points to a fnurtn\ntee t;e with Luke Appling of Ch;-\nJO While S \\- A .327, a point be-\nI stint, but gave the 8000 or so Negroes among the crowd something\nto cheer about when he slammed a\nline drive homer off Fitz Ostermueller in his fir.st time at bat.\nSOX,  TIGERS  SQUARE\nIn the American League, Boston\n1 Red Sox and Detroit Tigers took\n1 turns clouting each other lustily,\nbut when their doubleheader was\nover the standoff left them unchanged  in  the slandings.\nTlfe Tigers poured across seven\nruns in the eighth to rout the Sox\nin the opener, 12-1, with young Art\nHoutteman twirling hi;; third victory with no defeats. He allowed\nfive hits.\nThe Sox came back in the afterpiece behind Tex Hughsnn's four-\nhit hurling and the slugging of\nWally Moses and Ted Williams tn\nj jump back into the second place\nthey'd temporarily relinquished,\nIThe score was 9-1.\nMoses laced four straight hits and\nscored four runs, while Williams\ndrove in five runs with Ids 2fith\n'homer, a double and an outfield fly.\nWalter Masterson racked up hi.s\ninth triumph as Washington Senators trimmed Chicago White Sox\n14-3, despite the stickwork of losing\n(pitcher Eddie Lopnt. Lopat got two\ni singles and a double and hutted in\n'two runs but he didn't have enough\nhelp.\nThe American League leading\nNew York Yankees rame from behind to tie the lowly St. Louis\n1 Browns in the ninth with two runs,\nI but the Brownies came right back\nwith I'.ui I Lehner's third hit, a\nsingle, driving Rob Dillinger across\nthe plate for a 4-3  victory.\nNelson Potter came in in the\n| ninth to gain credit for the St. Louis\nvictory.\nAt Cleveland the Philadelphia\nAthletics kept their hold on fourth\nplace behind the stellar chucking\nof Phil Marchildon as they took a\n12-inning, 2-1 victory over thr\nIndians. Marchildon pitched perfect\nhall for seven innings, hut tho Red-\nskm.s tied it in the ninth. Marchildon doubled to drive home the winning counter in tr.e 12th, ,\n'Modelling Dream\nComes True, but\nDon't Like It\n9 1 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-*-\u25a0\u25a0\u2022- -\u25a0-^\u2014\nDISGRUNTLED   ELEPHANT- Chorl, Africin elephant newly arrived at a Sydney.\nN, 8. W., iqo, doesn't like her new home and charges an attendant brlnflnr food.\nNelson, Rossland Baseball Scores\nMatched (or Labor\nDay Baseball\nNelson    Senior    baseball    s^uad,\nflush with its showing against the\nTrail Cardin,ds here Jubilee Week,\npromise lng things in a double-\nheader engagement here on Labor\nDay. They will he matched opposite the baseball talent from Rossland.\nSince the gears of the local base-\nhall machine were put into high\nthis Spring, the b am has won a\n<-*,\/! able fnHuwmg of diamond enthusiasts. The Nelsonites ousted\nKimberley and went nn to give the\nCards a close call in the Kootenay\ntourney  in Jubilee week.\nThe V O E, Seniors turned down\nir'-.'ita t Kins frun Grand Forks and\nFernie to bring the Labor Day game\nto Nelson.\nThey\nid   third-place   I\na no v   .'\u25a0\ncC\nsky\nthe Philadelphia\nAthletic*.\nffalkor ad-'**! !.\n\u25a0p points\n'0\nli!'\nn 33 poio'.s   alu,\n\u25a0p   P, ter\nR(\niser\nBrooklyn,    c :r\n. -it    r.n\nner\n-up\niscr. .'*, ;.*:h   :i v\n(Pk   aite\nr.\n.si*d\nma: k  to .'.-.'.'.,. A\n:*..*:,* (la!\nn\nsot-\nIt Cincinnati  o ;\npod\nm seooroi to f.i;\ni '.'.*.l:i .3\nn\n['hti\nfarrt'a   nf   (':::;*,\nbf.   a'  .3\nlfi.\na or!\nlkcr  C---*., r   rf\ni'op   NV,\nS\n, rk\nint.s, at .3!3 ss-tr,\nfo\nr-.'.s\npectivelv.\n.\t\n-\njsiness Fa\nlures\nD 135 Per\nCent\n)TTAWA,   A:,,*\nn ict\nDp-\nI TORONTO, Aug 2ft fCPi -\nMost teen-age girls would be\ndelirious with delight at the opportunity of becoming a m<>de!\nHut the six fortunate girls chosen\nto model at thc \"Teen-Age Fashion\nSh* w\" at the Canadian National\nExhibition have had iheir fill of\nthe glamorous pastime and none\nhas any intention of continuing\na  modelling career,\n\"Modelling is fun for the first\nrlay,\" said Dons Blark, f**urth-\n(year student of pay chain fflr ftl thi\n'University of Toronto. \"After that\nlit becomes boring. I'd much ra(her\nI write an exam than stand in fr Tit\nof nil those people\"\n: The baby of the group, Ifi-year-\njold J*'an Hitch ings, said she wan\n(\"scared silly'' at the preview given\nfor the press last week Hut in\nfront of thp teen-agers who fh fri\nto tho *,]-. w she is unconcerned\n\"Afler all.\" she said, \"th^y renliv\ndon't know anything about fashions\nlike   the   press.\"\n1 Veil Rivers, a photographer's as.\nsistant, shirts n new career ns a\ncommercial fashion artist \u2022.'.her. ti e\n;\u25a0 irrer.t show is over. She wa\nselected for the mori-dl ng tas-\nselected f-*r the rr,n<j'*i:;r g hs'-:\nagencv saw a ph t'i of :>.* r m hr:\nboss' office\nIn 'he o'hrr 'A fashion A. ws '\nthe ' Fx\" the ]y,-r <-. druses ;-\u25a0 A\nha's aro being sh*~wn by vevrar'\nof   the   craft\nZAK, JOHNSTON IN\nPITCHERS' DUEL\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. Aug. 2ft-\nThe first gime of the local softball\nplayoff? saw Legion defeat the\nCA Ar Warn 1-0, when \"Butch\" ZaK\nand Ibii John-ton tangled In a real\npitcher's duel. Both received errorless and almost spectacular support\nfrom their teams.\nLegion threatened first in the\nthird when Shaw walked, went ti\nsecond on a pass bail and then wa\u00ab\ncaught between third and home,\nwhen   he   shppi d   when   trying   t :\nMrii ir tripled for the Giebt ln\nhe fourth w.'h two away but was\n\u25a0*{'. \"-. hue '.'.iion Ca'.les hit '. i rrn-\ni    wren    : r   ;    .. -i    .    te:;,f-\n'* a:'.: g   f )r   It   v. h\u00ab n   it   came\nAussies Have Little\nHone for Davis Cup\nNm',* YORK,  A :c   2H  'A!' - T:\n*.*.:       \u2022: *.:**\u2022 Davis (*;;, ,'\u2022  :-r-7,\nrt.r.s  ' '   \u25a0 r   ; laved   \u201e;   fi rf   H\n)TTAWA,   A\ntt    til\nI*:,\nlures\n\"I Ca*\ntin*   i\nit in\ntin   fo\ned   *\nir.\n*he   13\nre*! :   *\ntoda*\n\u25a0ir.it t\ne  '.\nir   as\nKid   0\nnm\n'iK'.ir*\ni \u25a0:\u25a0 *.:*\n7 refl\netril :\nil!:o,*;\n14*; ,-.\n1   q*.l,\n*'( r\ned *.'\nil 31\nr year\nRemove Restrictions\nOn Air Service\nDe. To Jnoan\nSF*\\TTI K A-.e :t \u25a0 *\\p [lr\n.r Har.s.-ori* Is \u2022*: \u2022*: ... r-' A;-*.'\nWca'.ern   Tra\"     V * ,r, -   .*, \u2022!\nM *\u2022*    R   *.*   r  -.*..: I    rr-\u25a0;'. iv:-;\n\u2022\u201e: *.i \u25a0*.   * '   \u25a0' n   A ..-. rs.   a,d j.,* t\nC* \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'. -*-i   f'r .' thr*.* a*e :;*nk.i -f a\n*:*'\u2022  *\u25a0 .:*,     '  \u2022.*.,.  .... .-k.-s   ..(  th**\nA* ,:. *; ir.: -   ;ii*. s (' :;. * avs-\n\u25a0\u25a0 .   I'     '\u25a0   !  so   *. s   *...   *     a**.      \u25a0 r-   '.: :\u25a0\nred of Everything\nHarried Killer\nAnnlnqizos\nVAN'cnfVFR     A   r\n\"Many\" Montreal\nDoctors\nUnder Suspicion\nBy The Canadian Preaa\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nPittsburRh 44(1 070 Ofll-lfi 20 1\nBrooklyn 020 010 000- 3   7 2\nOstermueller .-ind  Kluttz;  Grefd\u00bb.\nBankhead    I2i,    Barney    15)    and\nEdwards, Bra^an  iol.\nChicago 202 100 010-(I 14   2\nNess* York 013 100 002-7 10    1\nChipman, Kush i\u00bbi and ScheffinR\nKoslo, Beitgs I4i and Cooper.\nSt.  Louil 1100 1100 100-1    3    1\nBoston 010 103 00x-S 10   0\nBrazle, Hearn (Bi, Wilka (Ri and\nGaragiola, Rice (fl*; Voiselle and\nCamelli\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nBo,.ton 100 0011 000- 1    f  1\nDetroit 021 1)20 07x-12  14 0\nGalehouse. Murphy ifii  anrl Par-\nlee;  Houtteman  and  Swift.\nRrwtnn 201 032 001\u20149 10    1\nDetroit 100 000 000\u20141    4    1\nHujjhsnn ar.d Tebbetts; White,\nCor.siea (at, Benton (R\u00bb and Wagner\nWashington 301 000 000-4 10    0\nChioago noo 010 200- 3   0    1\nMasterson    ar.d   Maneuso;   I.npat\nand  Tresh,  Dickev  ISO\nN'r'.*.*  York 010 000 002-3 10   0\nSt    I\/Hlis 000 003 001-4 10    1\nRaschi, Rage s7'. Ro\\*ens \u2022*'9> and\nRnliir.snn; Muncrief. Potter (O* and\nMoss.\nPhiladelphia     000\nPhil'phia        000 010 ooo 001-2 9 0\nClevelind       000 000 001 000-1 5 0\nM2 mningsl\nMarchildon    ar.d    Rosar;    Black\nKlieman     U0),    Gettel    112)     and\nHegan, I\/ipez  U0'.\nINTERNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nMontreal   1, Rochester 4.\nMontreal  1, Rochester 2\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nLouisvillr* 4, Kansas City 9\nToledo S, Minneapolis 6\nInd.ana; ohs 1. M*!waukee 2\nColumbus 4   St.  Paul fl.\nToronto Football\nTeam to Tour\nWestern Canada\nTORONTO. Aug 71 (CP'-Coach\nRoi.hv Couit-r amouivd todav he\nwould take his Un.vrrsi'.y of T.lro*i-\nto football team on a \u2022.*\u25a0*;r of Western Canada next month. The team\n:s scheduled fo !p,i'.*e here Sept. 23\nf.rst game for the Rl'Je and\nWhite Var.sits* Sq iad i.s schedule ]\naga*.r*t *i*c T-.iversitv of Saskatch-\nl*.s io in. Sask.ab r.n, S'*| *.. 27 and a\n*' * *\u2022 i gime '.soil be played there\n().' 4 I' the meant.n.e the Toronto\n!ea*o *,'*.'l s.s * F.dmmtm for a coo.\nThe '\u25a0\u25a0re--rbn exhibition trip\ni r' -\u25a0 - - i \u25a0\u201e*\u25a0 a warnvip for Va:-..**.\n\u25a0*.   ; -epn* s*. \u25a0*   b-r  th\"  opening  of\nBACKS CAR OVER\nPOLICE OFFICER\nri iRT ORCHARD, Wish . A .1\ni'l < AI' A n o -est who in pity\nSher.fi Ralph M.les said, rirl.i rrat**-\ns* on. k\" 1 h i fAf over 'he officer\nearlv Sa* .; lis*, was being s* :gh!\n*,.,*.\u25a0 by K Isap Co .* *.* author.*ies\n'.: o*s sa t h- I'rt.-i   i \";e t, *t rist\n!i .so -fe (*, o Ha-bor htgl .sav\n'.'. \u25a0 \u25a0 be ,',-; | \u25a0 1 * , toe rear , '. the\nll   ' > , lie* .   :',,.  '.    r* se j late.   M.>S\n.-.',    \u25a0    ;\u25a0      ,,\u25a0 .1 '*.:o d***,sn a* *1 -a*\nTourists Praise\nScenery,\nCondemn Roads\nRegistrations at thp Nelson Tourist Park have reached 193 parties\nId date. Although the figure does\nnot represent n new high in tourist\ntraffic it Is nt par with other years\nwhich offered more ideal weather\nj for travelling.\n| Most nf the tourists travelled\nI with the car-trailer combination,\nibut tents on the park greens have\ni not been uncommon.\nLicence plates are of many hues\n:and carry names of provinces and\n[states from the four corners of the\ni continent.\nHeaviest flow of tourists was\n1 from the Canadian mid-West. After\ndriving through the Kootenays the\nmajority of Prairie rcsidrnts fired\na standing question at the caretaker:\n\"Is there any land for sale here0''\nMeanwhile American visitors acknowledged the beauty of the Nelson\nDistrict, hut voiced uncomplimentary opinions relating to Kootenay\nhighways.\nGIANTS BUY\nORIOLES FLINGER\nNEW YORK. Aug. 26 (AP) -\nNew York Giants tonight announced the purchase of Ray Poat, 29-\nyear-old right-hander pitcher, from\nBaltimore Orioles of the International League.\nThe -ilx-foot, two-inch, 210-\npounder will report to Manager Mel\nOtt tomorrow and may see action\nsoon, since Clint Hartung is nursing\na sore arm, Mort Cooper is re-\ncovering from an operation ar.d\nMonte Kennedy is out with a\nbroken finger.\nPoat has won 12 games and lost\n\u25a0?evpn with the last-place Orioles\nA cluh spokesman declined to\nname the tot.il Involved in the\nstraight cash deal\nReturn After Arctic\nIce Pack Manoeuvres\nJUNEAU, Alaska. Aug. 2ft 'AP)~\nA United States submarine ta.sk\nforce was en route todav to Victoria\nand Seattle after weeks of manoeuvres near and at one lime below\u2014\nthe Arctic lee pack al r.g thc\nNorthern rim of Alaska,\nThe Navy kr; t <*cTf' result of\nthe cruise, which f->ok the suhmar-\nir.es R.Mrfish, Caiman, Chub and\nSaher^n and the tender Nereun\n'.i'.r .ugh Prr.ng Strait to Poirt Bar-\nRedmen, Leafs\nMeet in First\nPlayoff Tonight\nWith league gamea behind them,\nthe four teams of the West Kootenay Lacrosse League swing Into\ntheir aemi-final^ this week. The\nLeafs, occupants of the fourth\nberth, will tangle with the first spot\nRossland Redmen at Trail tonight\nwhile the .second rung Spokane Dynamos and the Trail Bears have\ntheir first engagement Friday night,\nthe game to be played at Trail.\nThe second game of the best-of-\nthree series between the Redmen\nand the Leafs ia slated for Nelson\nSaturday night. Trail's Golden\nBears and the Dynamos will play\ntheir second encounter at Trail September 2. If a third game becomes\nnecessary In either of the fixtures,\nthe venue of the match will be decided by the league president, it was\nannounced after a meeting of lacrosse heads at Rossland Sunday.\nLeague officials have yet to announce the set-up for the finals.\nSharp Gains for\nJuniors Gold\nTORONTO, Aug. 26 (CP) -\nNearly 4,000,000 shares were traded\non the Toronto Btock exchange today, the greater part of it In\njunior golds, and observers wondered whether a speculative boom\nwas  underway.\nSenior golds were quiet and\ntended downwards, but the juniors\nwere out in force, a number for\nsharp gains and most of them up\nin moderate degree.\nInterest centred In the Rouyn\narea of Northern' Quebec, but some\nisues from Northern Ontario Hnd\nthe Northwest Territories' Yellowknife joined thc activity.\nSix  Issues alone accounted for\nmore    than    half    the    trading.\nEldona,    Pen-Rey,   Donalda   and\nE'der In the Rouyn area, Aihley\nwith    Interests   In   the   Sudbury\nDiitrlct    and    Discovery    In   the\nYellowknlfe.   Many   others   alio\ntraded   heavily.\nEldona lead off the present activity more than a week ago and\ntoday traded the rare total of\n1,129,000 shares to finish 88 cents\nup at $1.66. It reached a high of\n$1.73 and twice resisted profit-\ntaking to keep near ita top level.\nInterest in the Issuse has followed\ndrill showings which arc reported\nso far to be favorable ln gold,\ndiver,  7,inc  and  copper.\nEldon a's companions ln leading\nactivity  also showed gains.\nFt six days the market had\naveraged above 1,500,000 shares,\nbut today's trading was more than\ndouble that of any recent day and\nthe heaviest since las Feb. 3 at\nthe close the ticker was seven\nminutes behind in recording sales.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUO. 27, 1*47 \u2014 7\nBall Standings\nNATIONAL\nW L Pet.\nBrooklyn      77 48 61\u00ab\nSt. Louis      70 M .569\nBoston             C8 56 .548\nNew York      62 59 .912\nCincinnati       60 67 .472\nChicago            55 69 .444\nPitlsburRh                  5*1 71 .427\nPhiladelphia                50 72 .410\nAMERICAN\nW L Pet.\nNew York       7\u00ab 45 .634\nBoston         64 55 .538\nDetroit               65 57 .533\nPhiladelphia      65 58 .528\nCleveland         62 58 .517\nChicago         57 66 .463\nWashington       51 70 .421\nSt. Louis         . ...        45 78 .366\nLabor Day Golf\nTournament Here\nOn Weekend\n(Contributed)\nThis weekend will sec the annual\nLabor Day tournament played over the Nelson course. Men will bc\ncompeting for the Ken McBride\nMemorial Trophy which has been\nwon the past two years by Roy\nStone of Trail. Ladies will be playing for the Kootenay Breweries\nTrophy, The ladies plan to stag:\nnine hole matches until the finals\nwhich will be over the regulation\n18 holi disUnc*.\nBoth of these events are open to\nany and all comers, Men will have\nto complete 18 holes qualifying before 6:00 p.m. Friday, August 29.\nWomen will also have to turn ln a\n9 hole qualifying round by the same\ntime on Friday to enable the match\ncommittee to prepare the  draw.\nThe first rounds will be played\nSunday morning ln both the men's\nand ladies' competitions with, thc\nfinals set for Monday afternoon.\nThe Match Commitlee have bpen\nadvised that there will be a good\nrepresentation from Trail and the\nlatest word from New Denver and\nKaslo points to a good representation from those two points.\nAll outside players will have th\nprivilege of qualifying on the:r\nhome course and the necessary\njustmenls for the difference In par\nwill then be made. The low 16 men\nwill qualify Into the Championship\nFlight. According to a late report\na carload of players from Kimberley will be corning over for the\ntournament.\nWomen's Swim\nDraws Canada,\nU.S. Entrants\nTORONTO, Aug, 26 (CP)-Added\ninternational flavor hai been given\nlhe featured women's sports event\nat the Canadian National Exhibition\nwith tbe entry of a Netherlands\nswimmer in the Wednesday afternoon five-mile swim for $15000.\nShe is Mrs. Reina Adcock, a war\nbride, who is an unknown quantity\nin local circles, but who learned to\nswim long distance in her native\ncountry's famed canals.\nThe lure of prlzea in the professional championships meet has\ndrawn some 20 entries to date from\nCanada and the United States. The\nmoney-wise are pinning their hopes\non the name of Looney\u2014which\nmight mean either of both of two\nentries from Warren, Ohio.\nB.C. ENTRANT\nThe experts figure that one of\nthe Looneys will lead the swimmers\nhome and both probably will finish\nin the money. Aunt May Looney\nIs a veteran ln the Canadian National Exhibition swims and her\nniece, 20-year-old Berniece Looney\nhas been doing serious training in\nthe cold waters of Lake Ontario.\nOne of the late entries was Ann\nMlndigal of Vancouver.\nFirst prize for the event ls $2500,\n.second is $1000 while the remaining\n$1500 Is split between third, fourth,\nfifth and sixth place finishers.\nTbe 10-mile men's swim for $10-\n000 in pri7.es will be heW Friday.\nEven Cranbrook\nSoflball Finals\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Aug. 26-In\ntho season's top pitching feat Art\nTank of Zenkeys blanked Mitchells\n3i-0 at softball and allowed only two\nhits, both by Bobby Mitchell. The\nwin evens the best-of-five league\nplayoffs at a game each, third game\nset for Wednesday.\nTank had nine strikei with fen-\nkeys field supporting him.\nZenkeys \u2014 Malcolm, Whitehead,\n'Atkinson, Youwee, Belt SulllckiOn,\nBalin, Tank, Chlopan .Lambert.\nI Mitchells-Bobby Mitchell, Hughes, Stevely, R, B. Mitchell, JVi(u-\n.son, Jones, Hart, Mitchell, Carver,\nRed Moore.\nUmpires-A, Reekie, A. William*,\nA. Kay.\n, W.ttrhing tr.e manoeuvres was\nRear Adnrrnl A R. MrCnnn. head of\n'ho submarine f'irrr of the Pacific\nFleet, wh i j* med the unit at Adik\n,r ;'\u25a0'.*\" Alrvi'iT-s af'er preliminary\npr.;\\tr<. Bl.ir.g the island chain arid\nN  rthw.ird to the Pr;h>f*\nFrom there the task force nvved\n::.t ) the Bering Strait, kn.f:ng\nthrough the icy wa'crs near thr\nInternational Line and within sight\nf the S: tier i.m shoreline He vend\nthe nsrr *w parage the un.t fanned\nout int i \\hr Arctic Oc ao. te5t.n1;\nr<\\ lipmrr.t spcci.iliy desig: - d f-.r\nN  rthrrn \"p* rati. :.*,.\nNavy officials in (barge sa.d on\n'hr\\r arrival here that 1 ne of the\nuhmnrinej   had   submerged   below\n\\   .'   ^\n'Hir.ADFI.l'MlA, A ..*   V,  \u2022 M'*\nMJKIS   1'     l.i* : *..   Hi  *,'* ,-   , 1 1    !<\u25a0\ni'll'S    S.ll' .-\"    1'                     '\u25a0      .'.-'.    (I'll\ntho slips* !\u25a0\u2022 'i ** l'i. in!. *.| !   1 A-l\nBenin .sl***: :!\u25a0.* nfm *, i      s *  ! i.**\nIrd   .1   Ill's:   '      1   fi .1  ..!   *.s ffff\nS  in  1  1.\"    ' 1 111   1 .**  1\"  l*r,**i  ' '.\nitatln; ,     nt. 1     1 m --..,- r:s     .,-, 1\nVint:    \"\u25a0.*'    I   \u25a0: r    -    I    ! ,   ,-    i-s, :*.\n'. Til.  i .,' ,1    : ,: '.,  k * .   ,\u2022*, ph ;\nrythi. .*\u25a0*\n'^\"\"'\"'lOMosTO^*'\nUTHOFU\/Fli                           ,tt\n^W.\nka,\nD r a I rn        ^T]  1\n3\nSTOP        fit\nr\n,*.  \u2022\u25a0' -   \u25a0    : **' >\nHAYMAKFR TO RADIO,\nBLOW AT MARRIAGE\nli I: i i   I\nrUOUBLfS\nRALEIGH  WITH  FLYERS\n' .'. t       \u25a0\u25a0    '\n\u2022        I\nAdditional\nStock Markets\nVANCOUVIR STOCKS\nMINES\nBavonne   OSV, (Kl\nHralnrre       11-M 11.71)\nHR Cons  05'i .05'1\nRRX  li'i\nCanusa              1.1 .1,1\nCariboo  GoM       2 15 MO\nCongreai            ft\", ,05\nDentonin             194 .20\nCleorgs  Copper OR\nGrull WlWtar.e .   .       06 01\nHedlev Masr.it    .     1 On 1 10\nHiclnnd   Hell                5*1 ,60\nInt C Ji C                    JT\nIsland Mountain   .     145 1 50\nKenvllle                        ,03\nKontennv  Belle     . 10\nMinto                , ,.      ,0,1\nPacific   Nii-kln       .       .1.1\nPioneer   Gold      .    .195 4 15\nPremier Gold  or,'i nflii,\nPrivateer           M Alt\nQiiatlnn              12 .14\nHrd   Hiwk           .04i-j\nKern   Gnld 10 .12\nSalmon              191, ,20\nSheep Creek                1 01 1 0.'\nS.lliak   Premier   ...        (17\nSilver Ridce         .. .1.1\nS.nf   Ir.l***.             ... 25\nWitew.'tcr             ... .02'j\nTavlor  Bridce .flu\nWellington                   .02-4 .01\nOILS\nAi'.ar T.da                         OB 10\nAnnie  Canadian         1 lfl 1 40\nAP CotU'ilideted            HI 111\nCalgary  Kdmnnton     \"If 5 *\",n\nC.lltlMI*.' XI\nCammoil 11\nCommonwealth             42 45\nDaviei 24\nFoothills                        2*10 5 fin\nHome                            4(1*1 4 IH\nMrlMas Sequr F.x       *,n 11\nMcLeod   .                        .Of,'4 ,07\nMercury 20\nModel                                21 25\nK.ill 'nal  Pe'e                 21 In\nOkal'.l   Com                   HI 9*1\nP.irlfu* Ye'.,-                    llf, fl'.l\nIt  val  Car, id,an              ',2 lir,\nSoulh*.'.** at Pi te            .20 11\nSpooner                          in 2,1\nSiif.sc                               (17\nanalta                                ':> 11\nVu'o.,1,                              21 7\u00ab\nINDUSTRIALS\nI\" ,11 I'al   Fsl.i',*s           1171 (irm\ni'us'   rttesseil' a         mi a ]-,\nWILL CONTINUE\nCEILING PRICES \u2022\nON LAMB\nOTTAWA. Aug. 2fi (CP)-Cana-\ndian housewives will continue in\npay present ceiling price? for lamo\nuntil Oct. 15 the Prices Board announced today.\nThin postpones a drop In pric--!\nof r couple of crnt.? which wouli\nhave occurred next Monday, Sept, 1.\nThis action has been taken due \u2022*.<.\nthe shortage of other types of meat\nar.d will have tiie effect of forestalling a wldescale slaughter 'of\nlambs, an official said\nU. K. SOCCER\nLONDON\", Aug. 26 (Reuttrt) -\nResults of soccer garr.es played today in the Unitrd Kingdom;\nEnglish  League\nFirst   Division\nBurnley 0 Derby County 2\nThird Division, Northern\nOldham    Athletic    1,    Rotherham\nUnited 5\nSouthport 1  Lincoln City 1\nScottish Division\nSt. Mirren 3 Aberdeen 0\nIrish  Golf   Cup.   first  round\nDistillery 3 Bangnr 2\nOVERSEAS CRICKET\nLONDON', Ana; 26 (Reuters! -\nMiddlesex by defeating Surrey today became virtually certain nf the\nCounty Championship. Nearest\nrivals, Gloucestershire, could only\nforce a feeble draw with Hampshire at Bournemouth and gained\nno points from  the  match.\nResults of today's matches:\nMiddlesex vs. Surrey. Middlesex won by eight wickets. First\ninnings: Middlesex 402 for seven\nSurrey 202. Second innings* Middlesex 51 for two, Surrey 100.\nHampshire vs Gloucestershire\nMatch drawn. Firs', innings: Clou-\nrester 424 for six declared, Hampshire 472 Second innings: Clou-\ncoster 20H f *r five.\nvs    Warwickshire\nbv   120   runs.   War-\nI.eicest\nLeicester\nwuk 217\nw ,n bv\nSecond i:\nwick  112\nNiit'.iiu:\nMatch rl:\ngin  111\nSonu\n*,1    S*\nSol*\n120\nLeict\nWai w i\nlamslure   vs\nGlair, org:;\n.184 for f,\\\ncinqs:   Ci\nio::\n24R\nSussex   HB   fi.r\nLocke, Dutra\nWin Match\np*\n--',\nI' |,   '   *   C* v>\nP   **    'I    Rise:\nUNLISTED   MINES\n111 irhird\nFir ..klyn   St\nCan's*\nCliibil*,,    Coins', \u201e*k\nCuvuri\nFederil\nHi'dlc*\nHome\nAmal\nl.  Id\nFive\nKi\niXi\nPa\nRe] ll\nVananda\nW.'sk*.\nuNt.uTrn\nC -mrnand\n01\nOl\n0|\nOl\n2.1\n0|\",\n15\n0.1\n07\nI\nRI7L! CHAMPIONS-Mri. Adelaide MeC\u00abrd. \u00bbe-\nsslrkler. Ta : Audrej Mm liniun Rldfeflald. N J . and O. Warne\n51.\"ire. Hashlnllnn, Ta . ll lo r.) wftn tlllfa In lhe national rifle\nrniileit al (amp Terrr. O. Mrs. MrCord la fonrllme winner of\nUi. women I Htlr Mlaa Rnckmann \u00bbnn (he Junior small hore and\nMoore lhe men a amall hore lltle.\niOND   MARKET  DULL\nMONTREAL, Air  2(1 n'Pi    Ruv-\n:*,,: and selling wioi again dull on\nlhe bor,I market hrn* l.xl.av Few\nsiEi'ifieant    chatiges   if    ,v:v    *,s*ere\niKsrrsed *n lhe 11 \"n:\"***:* I'lm \u25a0\"\ni lal. iii'.ii.i' ip.il oi  i*'M|.oralr *,:, aps\nSAN* niFCO. C f .', A ..* 7*1 \\;*\nRr.bbv Locke. So**\"i \\'- \u25a0 .- f'\nfi ace, teamed w,;':i I i' \u25a0 II it: a , '\nhi Ar.-ol.-s. fnrme* V- - i S' '\u25a0\"\npen il'.airi'i.-n. to ilef.a; F :\ntherm:,!' ai ! Tet lln- ..- So*. Ii . \u2022\n\u25a0 ,f, s, una!'. 4 ami 7, a' \".,- M\nui V.illes G\"lf <*] lb c -:;rse s.-i\ncrdav.\nWHIZZER MOTOR BIKES\nL'fjHtwe'ghl  Motor  Cyclri\nSAM  BROWN\nGun, Lock, Sate 1 Cycla Worki\nPhone 1015 ,*37 Baker St.\nEXPERT BODY AND\nFENDER REPAIRS\nDuio Rf(itu.'\"\"9\nUTHBER\nMOTORS\nMIt'i funny,\" ttid thc Old Timer,\nii bc pau\u00abd in hn morning wilit,\n\"how si libel or a slogan can make\npa*p\\t iwallow thingi without\nthinking, when if they itupped to\nthink, tiicir cwn common i\u00abyc\nft'o^iIJ tell them it wis phony.\n\"Tnke i ilopn lie pknned\nfCi-nymv. h sounds gnod, an J a lot\np: pe: pie j'ist nod their hexds and\nthir.lc it mint !\u25a0* x K^xxl iJea. But\nit they just did a little real thinking\nand icmcmSenr.fi, they'd no more\nu'int planned eam^-my than they'd\n\".'.'ant a d< \u00abe ot irirnic.\n\"I'Unned economy cm\nwork, ill ru-J.t, Kit there\nn ]tut one w*y it cin\nwork, r.uh it.dividual\nLas t'i give up h;i pt1!;1\nmil\nIre\nan 1 dii p.nt m hr is t.i' !,\nlhe ]<*b he cm wtk at, the wapa\nhe can pe*, what h<* muit ptr\\l\\ice,\n\u25a0^h ,t I;:'* ''.t'vl.i: lot ';;\u25a0. mp inunt lr,\nyr 1 s.i : -::i, 'I i.v's th* wav it\nwr-.Vt ;\u25a0) Rsi'vj ir 1 thf only wav\n\"ThiCi Vt them tlu'nk, tnn, iKmt\ntnt -qu.--: r \u25a0 \u00bb;. -'\u00ab (f>i:iR t.> di\nthr pi it:\"\",;' Fvrry '\u25a0.me tl'Ky heu\ni :ie it ihr crator*- ip^itinj; iS'nit\nplanncl r, Minmv. let them -i'-i them\nt-cbr* i! he u to 1^ nfw* ot tiie\nplanters to >.\u00ab, I, \"i .ill mti ntitv n\nh***ini;. V u',1 cr: a r.'tfy .-nick\nir^wrr \"i ?*\"*\u2022'. cue*\n\"I^ut a1; a ti. mui ;'. tA'-urnU fn;!,\nind it f''li a L'I ri rv.*Vf \"\nLimilcd\n _____\n\t\n\t\n .\t\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 27, 1947\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nBoth Out To Break Records\nHer. li iometMna In the way of contrast In\nautomobiles. The big car l\u00ab John Cobb's Railton\nSpecial, In which the British ipeed king wlll\nattempt to better his own  record of M9.7 miles\nan hour over Bonneville Salt Flats. The smaller\near Is Ab Jenkins' Mobil Special, In which the\nveteran race driver plans to set a new endurance\nrecord.\n100 Men for Every Job\nMore than two yean after the ihooting itopped\nNaples, and many other of Italy'* great cltiei, are\nstill deep In the economic rut. Work and production are the Ingredients. Naples has neither. Here\nIs a scene on the once-prosperous Naples waterfront  For every Job available there are at least\n100 men. The lucky ones work and the unlucky sit\nand watch and envy. The poverty of war-torn Italy\nIs typical of many European countries. Today no\none Is prosperous except the black market operators, who fatten on the want of others.\nDefence Minister Scores Bull's Eye\nNot content with being a spectator during hit\nvisit to Connaught Rifle Ranges, near Ottawa,\nwhere the Dominion of Canada Rifle Association\nmeet li In progress, Defence Minister Claxton borrowed a  rifle frorrt  MaJ. G.  A. Henderson of  Ham\nilton, flopped down on the ground, drew a head and\nfired. The signal came back: \"Bull's-eye.\" Mr, Claxton grinned and as he handed hack the rifle, Lieut -\nGen. Charles Foulkes. Chief of the General Staff,\nquipped:  \"That  must  bfi   a   good  rifle.\"\nWlwda\/L Wlwdhi\nTHE NEW YOU **\nJust the way you want lo look- Q\nslimmer, younger, smarter! Pattern 2\n9271 trims your figure, stars you in Q\na new neckline. Do lhe easy em- -J\nbroidery for a final smart touch!       *>\nThis pattern gives perfect fit, is\npasy to use. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you everv stsep,\nPattern 9271 mzes 34, 36, 38, 4(1. 42,\n44, 46 Size 36, 3^ yards 39-inch. Embroidery transfer included.\nXft.vvh.uVV Ivid-U*.\nLULLABYE   N'OTIF\nEmbrn;d\u00abr 'Ar*- A. rA ':A*A R\ncharming  f'lh  \u25a0 r\n\u25a0Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins ('stamps cannot be accepted!\nfor each pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept.. 2f*ft B-iker\nStreet. Nelion, B.C. Print plilnly\nPATTERN NUMBER, your NAME\nand   ADDRESS.\nSAINT JOHN. NB. fCPt-A vet-\nwan member of the Saint John pn-\nl.ce department won't live this nne\nDURHAM.   NS.   (CP)   -   When    MONTREAL, 'CT.  - Montreal'\nMrs    Charles   Clark   lost   her   rmt- wrst  advertisement\nring\nuf Citv  Coune;   nr  Cam:   e  CA*p\nwhile picKing ferns n^ar this Pirtou   . ,\u201e  j    ,      , , ....\n' * its   ragged   str* rt   sweepers      V,)\nriown in a hurry. Notified that a County community she never px- tourists see our Vreet r!caret\ndeer had been spotted in aMrsh pected to see it again, especially af-jCounnllor Cote remarked, \"rr\nCreek, he decided it was lifeless and ter IH years Then Steward Mac-,must think that we're a very p<\ncalled   a   game   warden,   who   found  Lellan,  working  nn   the   same  spot.fhunrh \"\nlhe animal stiff and glassy-eyed  in- noticed a gim! in the sunlight, found \u2014\u2014*\t\n'I ed It proved a gn^d sample nf the the ring and re'urned it to Mrs' The (v*an li nr'y 3 44 p*r re\nt ixniriniisf's work. Clark I-;*.1'\nSALLY'S SALLIES\nK-, .',-.. I I     fl   Til\nLIKE\nyou\nAmp\n\"' A OS'S1\/ JOINT\n\"m,s, Thev7 keep\nU'AiTiNo All pav'-\nsSTiLL MO SALE\n\/ER-UH-DOVOUTMINK'\nI  MR. MCCHISEL WILL\n(BE tied up much\nLONGER ?\nPURCHASIM4\nAGENT\ny HMMPH\nI \\*,OULP**J\nHE A Hit\n;jrprisep--\n-A\n*PHANVlOTHf*U*rt\\'.,.N,\nnt\\A E M-VNES lib,\nl'itCM\\NT,**,sN\nP.HAhElPHi.V, P.v\n\"^rTyyyZ'\n*W\ny^TZrjryryyTr^TZfTsy*\nv V.i. J, V9 uf  i     i-\nw\nA'i-.\n\u25a0 A,\nVisj^l\"\n.\u00bb\u2014.HI\nt\n1\nCjsbi_  0\nI.AP IT UP, DAISV MAE.'.''   ) ^e*i\nKICKAPOO JCrY-uUICE.\nEERAGE IS TH' ONLY 1H1NGZ IF YOU SAVE HER WORTHLESS\nstop ir, you pools.'\nIN CREE-ffCSHUN\nMORE POWTULN,\nPOISON.\"\nLlFE,-rtX)'LL DESTR\nW*\u00bblcfc_ESS   . i\n-I'LL KICK\nYOUR TONGUEJ\nIT HAIN'T\nGENNULNANLY J\nT'KICK NO   \/C\nLADY IN\nTH* FACE.'.';\n^'^A\nA GENNULMAN ALLUS DEF\nA LADY WIF WHUTEVER\nWEAPON IS HANDIEST.1!'\nte:\nSPREAD\nCLEAN\nWITH\nl]|l  VOU   KNOW\n1 ' I WOULDN'T '\n* DO A THING\n, LIKE THAT, \"j\nDEAB ,\n1    I'M   COMING\n>   UP AND SEE\n(     FC*? MYSELF\nA\njAy\n--\u25a0yr**'- i\"*\"\":\n'M\nCHC\"\n*S(OW&\u2014b\nTHAT'S THE SIXTH TIME\nTHAT MEW BUTLEC* SA\/.f,\nFALLEM DO.'tll nt\nTH* LAST MOJO \u2022\nrasCDOt-J-SiQ-BUT WHEOS\nIS THE GLASS'-SJAPE THAT\nMG-6 JIGGS WANTS l\/E ID\nTAKE UPSTAIR'\t\nmmt\nAAA\nAA,\nt\nY3\npTWTKTET\n'SAY.P\/DYOC \"gill.\nOJYS Sf\u00a3 THAT,\n\/HCUATIt,..-',\nI guess I keep FouorrriNU\nTHAT YOU BE JUST Ml***\nNICE TO ME , THAT YOU\nMEN I Tbi MAN  [  WAS\n60ina TO KUBRV. WELL\u2014'\nI'VE MEN JILTED TWICE IN\nONE MY,  HAVENt   I **\nCHAMAlNEjI-I KILLED\nA \u25a0bPiOtl 46ENT! THE f.B-i\nwill BE B\u00bbE\/ITU\"*J6 On mV\nNK<! VWAT CAH I DO*?\nMi'.'Asi'r   '\n' TT-IL HI* Tt*f\ni.    \"JPSClAL\nL    \/tfiENT\n(      D'ON'T\n\"S-n're   ntrhl.   I'\"* l,.i    IC\nmils   \u25a0skin ,|,*. i.\n1 K\u00bbr\" T -  ANO\nr'-t, TU?0*J6M *T\"4 TH\nCT.ICC1 blt you SPOK\nft a \u00bbai on tyt-\nMl 1UCU9LE\t\n \"\n ; \u25a0afwpyuwmmri'rmefemQrwFi-\nWflB\"\u2014 T* UW\"\nlosd\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nHELP WANTED\nPERSONAL\nHELP WANTED, MAI.E-COUN-;\ntry district newspaper supervisor\n\u2014 for Easl and West Kootenay\narea. Experience preferred, but\nwill train inexperienced man whn\ncan ihow outstanding sales promotion, managerial and attention\nto details ability, age limit 4(1, attractive salary, expense and car\nallowance. Write Emerson Stevens, Country Circulation Manager, Spokesman-Review, Spokane, Washington\nWAWANESA  MUTUAL EIRE IN-\nsurance Co D L Kerr, Agent.\nWhen M VAfocotMiS SW AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp   CPR   Depot.\nSpot cash for used goods\nof all  kindi   Phom 1081   Cheu\n524 Vernon.\nFOR SALE - 500 METAL SMITH\nMining shares. Non-aeseaaable\nshares, what otters? R. D. Cook,\nSilverton, B.C.\nAPPLICATIONS WANTED FOR\nPosition of Manager of Nelson\nCivic Centre, Must have thorough\nknowledge of bookkeeping, administration, and be capable of\nenlarging scope and use of building* and grounds. State salary\n\u2022wanted   Applications to be In\n' hands of Nelson Civic Centre\nCommission, Nelson, B.C., by Sept,\nOth next.\t\n\u2022jfANTED YOUNG MAN - WITH\naome business experience (or City\nfirm. Must be between 19 and 22\nyears of age. Must be capable\nwith figures and some tvping\nexperience Starting rate $80 per\nmonth with annual raises until i\nmaximum ot $150 Is reached..\nSingle preferred. Apply owni\nhandwriting. Box 5715 Daily News\nAPPLICATIONS WAMTED FOR\nPosition of Athletic Director for\nNelson Civic Centre and Recreation Grounds. Must be capable nl\norganizing and instructing in all\n, Pro Rec sports State salary expected. Applications to be ln Ihe\nhands of the Nelson Civic Centre\nCommission, Nelson, B.C., by Sept.\n6th next\t\nfEACHlRS WANTEfi FOR THE\nfollowing positions: Greenwood\nHigh School, 1 teacher. Midway\nSuperior, 1, Midway Elementary.\n1. For ungraded schools: Anarchist Mtn., 1. Rock Mtn , 1. Rhone,\n1. Salaries as per B C.T.F. schedule\nln operation. Apply tn Sec-Treasurer School District No. 13, Greenwood, B. C.\nSEND YOUR OLD MATTRESS IN\nto be renovated or spring-filled.\nOne day service. Nelson Bedding\nCo. 301 Baker St., Phone 1314.\nMEN! WANT NORMAL PEP, VIM?\nGet Ostrex Tonic Tablets. Stimulants, tonics, aids to normal pep,\nvim, vigor. Results with first package\u2014or maker refundi low price.\nAll druggists\nATTENTION SCHOOL 55__-_5\nsecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order immediately Daily News Printing\nDept., NeUon, Brltlah Columbia _\nMEN'S PERSONAL DRUO SUN-\ndries: 24 samples, $1.00, or 19 Deluxe assorted, $1,00 mailed In plain\nsealed wrapper. Finest quality,\ntested, guaranteed Bargain Catalogue free. Western Distributor!,\nDept.   RN,  85   Ray   Bldg,   Van-\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n\"GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\n(Section 281\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION  TOR\nCONSENT   TO   TRANSFER    OE\nBEER LICENCE\nNOTICI Ij hereby given that\non the 5th day of September next,\nthe,undersigned Intends to apply to\nthe Liquor Control Board for consent to transfer ol Beer Licence No.\n7691, Issued in respect of premises\nbeing part of a building known as\nSalmo Hotel, situate at Salmo, British Columbia, upon the lands described ss Lots Eleven (11) and\nTwelve (12) in Block Four (4), of\nLot Two Hundred and Six A\n(208-A), Map Six Hundred and\nTwenty-two (822), Nelson Land\nRegistration District, In the Province of British Columbia, from\nLeon Celestin Cremers and Bert\nCarlson, to Ida Gray, of Salmo*,\nBritish Columbia, the transferee.\nDATED at Salmo, B.C., this 31st\nday of July, 1947.\nApplicant and Transferee.\nIDA GRAY,\n29tf\nLION3   pHOTO\n29tf\nP O Box 434, Vancouver, B.C\nAny 8 exposure roll developed\nand   primed   29c.   Reprinti\u20144.0\neach   Giant  alze\u20147c   each.\n8x7 Enlargement Coupon with\neach order.\nPostal   clerks,   $1644-52280.\nNelaon. Full particulars on posters\nln Post Office or Civil Service\nCommission, Vancouver. Application forms, obtainable thrre.it,\nahould be filed not later than September 11, 1947, with the Civil\nService Commission, Ottawa.\nfoVS - GOOD DAILY NEWS\npaper routes are coming open\ngoon. Now Is the time to place\nyour name on the list to get one\nof these routes. Apply to the\nNelson Daily News.\t\nfoTFliAkERTWAOTEn. coon\ntimber and good ground. Apply\neither bv mail or phone Al Mr-\ngjnley. Phone 17-R Kaslo, BC*\nWanted - young  boy  nn\nelderly rhan to work on small\nfarm. Good home and wages. Ap-\nply Box 5582 Daily News.\t\nEOTOND DRILLER fff OPER*\nate light Mitchell No. 10 underground. Apply Box 829. Nelson,\nB.C., or eall Euphrates Mine.\nWanted - chef or TTrst\nCook. Gond wages Apply, Zenith\nCafe, Cranbronk, B.C.\nWanted - girl t6~ Work\npart time each day. Blue Top\nBungalow Auto Court Ph  285  _\nWanted - woman \"for six\nhours. 1 day a week housework.\nPhone 107B-X.\n\u25a0Cashier wanted - alscTery\ncook. Applv Golden Gate Cafe_\nLADIES! DELAYED MENSTRUA\"-\ntion Why worry? Smart women\nsay new, Improved, triple-strength\nDelaye Pills give prompt effective\nrelief for overdue, painful or irregular periods (Regularly $5 00.)\nOur price, $3.00, postpaid via Air\nmail in plain, sealed wrapper (C.\nO D. if you prefer) Woman ahould\nkeep a box on hand at all times\nOrder yours right now! Western\nDistributor Dept ACN. 85 Ray\nBldg., Vancouver.\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 160)\nTHE MATTER OF Lota 5, 8. I,\nand 11 in Block 1 and Lots 5 and\nln Block 4 of Lot 206-A, Kootenay Diatrict, Plan 1998.\nProof having been filed ln my office nf the loss of Certificate of Title\nNo. 47709-1 to tlie above mentioned\nlands in the name of Lewis L. Robinson and bearing date the 7\/2\/40.\nI HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my intention at the expiratinn of one calendar month from the fir.st publication hereof to issue Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu of such lost\nCertificate. Any person having any\ninformation wilh reference to such\nlost Certificate of Title is requested\nto communicate with the undersigned.\nDATED at Nelson, B.C., this 5th\nday of July, 1947.\nA. W, IDIENS,\nRegistrar.\nDate of first publication, July 80,\n1947.\nOne-Trip\nAUTO   LOANS\nWhtn you phone flret, a iingle\ntrip will put the cash in your\nhands. Niagara Finance accent\nspeed and friendliness in all\ndealing... An Auto Loan is the\nfastest nf Niagara's 4 kinds of\n]nans On owner's signature you\ncan get from $30 to $1000.\nN I AGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY LTD.\nEst'd  1930\nSuite 1, 860 Baker St., Kelson\nPhone 1098\nLAND ACT\nNotice of Intention to apply\nto purchase land.\nIn Land Recording District of Nelson, and situate near Glade, B. C, on\nDurham Creek.\nTake notice that S. A. Lazareff, of\nShoreacres, B C, occupation Farmer, Intends to apply Ior permission\nto purchase the following described\nlands:\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe N.W. corner Block BL302A (Plan\n1816), thence due West to the West\nBoundary of Lot 302A, thence due\nSouth along boundary 26 170 chains,\nthence due East to S W. corner\nBlock B, thence due North to point\nof commencement, and containing\n45 acres more or less\nS, A. LAZAREFF.\nDated August 27. 1947.\nMACHINERY\nSpear & Jackson\nSAWS\nThe world's oldest makers\nof Saws.\nChallenger Gasoline\nPower Saws.\nInserted Tooth Lumber ond\nEdger Saws.\nSaw-teeth - Shanks.\n\"The Saw Without a Flaw\"\nMade In B   C.\nDistributed by\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\nP.O. Drawer M0    Nelson, B. C.\n\"If It's Machinery You Want\nConsult UN\nPRICED FOR QUICK SALE, OR\ntrade for car: Portable 3 head-\nblock tie mill, complete with 32\"\ninserted tooth saw and 95 h.p.\npower unit. One good skid horse,\n1900 lbs., with harness. All in very\ngood shape, and ready to go to\nwork. Nakusp Marine, Box 98,\nNakusp.\n1.0NDON  DEEP\nCONCRETE WHEELBARROWS\nComplete with pneumatic rubber\ntired wheel. Available for immediate\ndelivery from stock.\nPURVES E, RITCHIE k SON LTD.\n658 Hornby St. Vancouver, B.C.\nMA 4557-8-9.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nWATER WELL CASING\nPipe, pipe fittings and tubing\nHECTOR MACHINE CO. LTD.\nPipe Line Contractors\n9th Ave and 19th St. East, Calgary.\nCUSTOM MACHINE WORK AND\nWelding. Cordwood Sawi and\nmandrels. STEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP, 708 Vernon SU\nNelson, B C.\nSAWMILL, WOODWORKING AND\nContractors equipment of all\nkinds. National Machinery Co,\nLtd, Vancouver. B  C.\nFOR SALE - HORNET CHAIN\nsaw; 3 It. blade, 5 H.P. Slightly\nused. Phone 585-H-2 after 5:30 p.m.\nFOT^If--6\"Tr.PriMPiRE GAR-\nden Tractor with attachments. Almost  new.   Box   169   Cranbrook\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nRENTALS\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nlIARRIFl) COUPLE, 5 CHILDREN\nt tnn J Can take charge either\nbusiness nr farm. Box 10132 Daily\nNews\t\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nTOR SALE -I! Jl M MOVIE\ncamera snd projector $65. films\navailable. Write A Maltland 1717\nini Ave . Trail. Phone_1071-X._\nJToIKTEAUTOMATIC TABLE TOP\ngas range, four Jets. Excellent\ncondition, ! r immediate sale. Mrs\nBishop, 710 Stanley St\nfOR SALE-1 PRE-WAR BLACK\nand white Fawcett Pacific Cos*,\nend Wood Range Thone S33-R\n5. W. Guv. View St.   \t\nPiPe - YirtiNos-Tiffits.  spe-\nclal losv prices Active Trading\nCo. Dili rowell St. Vanrouver\nffflrSATF~' - MASSEY-1 IA li It IS\npotato d*c?rr $100 00. Box 51.3\nDaily News\ntassirirn Brick layfI\nJack    Cieshrerht.    Phone    Sevos\nHotel,  12 \u00bb m.  lo 2 pm. or eve-\nfoir Sam! --~ ^sirfiNliTTAW\nkitchen    ra-ge.    Gm rl    condition\nrb.nr.e sea h*i\n\u25a0ffV* VbYH (\"ulf, SPRING AND\nInner it rl: g mattress. Fink's\nPrint SVp\nfoTT SAf.F-7WfllW*   ft.witc,\nMichlne;  also  Radio,  elertric  S\"ri\nbal'ery   Ph\"-e HI X 2\nfciToiifN -i-A-i'C.Y.'fn'n   sal!\nAp; Is* t'A Or! onate Si\nCliu'fird Advertlllnj Hiteil\nVr ,-- '.-. IT li-i** '*, 44c\niw: I \u25a0 e ;*.r wi ek it\", rr ser I'.VS\n]**.r\" \u25a0 i $'. It per '.'.re p\"t\nnv \"*. At r*-,.r :\u2022*\u25a0.*.' Mti-\nroutt*. : m s ;.**.* sm. n II I\nrum' r*. 11,* , *,': .i. {* \\*eri ny\nr,*:*rl <-* * '. ' nri\nrnu.il*   il KH\\l i   NOTICES,\nTf Nl't IIS Mr i'\",* prr lire,\nfirst Insertion, lie per 1ms eirh\niul*se.| ;,'*t    ,: <cr!:. \u25a0*,\nFOR PRI'MIT PAYMENT\nALL ABi'VE RATES LESS 10%\nWhen You Want a\nMattress\nCcmt to the Right Place\nOLD MATTRESSES\nMADE LIKE NEW\nor Spring-Filled\nNelson\nBedding Co.\nJ01 Baker St. Phone 1114\nSMALL EAMILY URGENTLY RE-\nqulre furnished house or cottage\non North Shore for Septemher\nWill take house In town. Good\nreference* Phone 465-R.\nFURNISHED M 0 D'ERN Pot-\nages available at low Winter rates,\nSeptember to May (?) Westlake\nCottages, st Balfour Beach. Tel\nBalfour, 3-W,\nFOR    PERFECT   SOIL SERVICE\nfor garden, ranch and farm. Mc-\nDougall's Earthworms. 1781 Third\nSt., Trail. B.C.\nOUR FALL BULB, AND SHRUB\nprice list Is now ready. Call or\nwrite for your copy. Coventry's\nFlower Shop and Greenhouses.\nNelson, BC.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC,\nWANTED-- TO RENT HOUSE\nfor married couple. Phone 884-H\nor 126.\t\nFOR RENT-CABIN'S, BALFOUR\nBeach. Apply J  Peachy.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR QUICK SALE - SHOE RE-\npair business in Salmo. No competition. Established agent at\nYmir, Sheep Creek, Emerald Mine\nHouse available for buyer. Write\nJ. ,1. Swityk. Salmo. B.C.\nFOR SALE-SliT-SUITE APART-\nment house   711   Vernon St\nEOR SALE-COLLIE PUPS. MRS.\nA. H. Noakes, Balfour.\nRABBmTEOR   SALE-1150   EA\nMrs. N. Bayoff. Terry's. B C.\nFor Sale\n1. Small house, cottafe type. 1\nbedrooms, ilttlng room and dining room Stone foundation,\nwhite 3-piece plumbing. Needi\nsome decorating and a few re-\n,P*r\"_enCl0\"ln,n\u00b0    $2350\nImmediate occupancy.\nJ. Excellent cottage at Queen's\nBay, all modern conveniences,\nfireplace. Laka *9**\\7*\nfrontage. Terma   *^*\"J' \u00b0\nI. New home, requlrei some finish. Full cement foundation.\nThli houie can be lived ln now\nand completed at your conven-\nJX1^ $4700\n4. Home with S bedroomi, sleeping porch, good white numbing.\np^0'10'; $3750\n8. 7 acres at Criwford Bay, with\n4-roomed good log house, wa-\n:r A'm     $1200\n8. Alio at Criwford Bay\u201420-\naere residential farm. A lovely\nhome, etc. Small t(-.7^ii\norchard. Pric.    WI OV\n7. And at Gray Creek \u2014 A\nbeautiful ranch home. Main\nresidence and excellent cottage,\ncherry and apple orchard,\nstream, garage CIO Ten\nand barns, etc    \u2022J\"*.' *\u2022\u00bb\"\nC.W.Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nGENERAL INSURANCE\nSM Baker St. Phone 269\nNelson, B C,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SAI.E - 1 INTERNATIONAL\nDiesel   Engine,   PD-40,   50   II P.\nSerial No. PPC2147. What offers?\nApply   to   Glacier   Lumber   Co.,\nNelson.\nFOR SAT7F.-16\" ROWnOAT WITH\ninboard motor. Apply Fink's Print\nShop.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top prices,\npaid.   Active   Trading   Company\n916 Powrll  St.,  Vancouver,  BC.|\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags, buttons removed 7c lb\nBring to Dally News.\nSHIP YOUR HIDES TO J. P MOR-\npun   Nelson   B  C\nSUMMER RESORTS\nFISHERS* PARADISE LODGE,\nQueen'i Bay, boats, motors, cab-\nIns and meals. Complete vacation\nfacilities Telephone Balfour 2-X\nSOME VACANCIES STILL AVAIL-\nable late Aug , Sept & Ort, bookings for lurmshed, modern cot-\nLines. Boats Iur rent. Westlake\nCottages, at Balfour Beach. B. C\nPh'.ne Balfour, 3-W.\nFor Sale\nI. Well kept Rooming Houst\nand S itore*. 31 roomi and\nsuites, furniihed. Excellent\nlocation. Good revenue.\n$26,000\nSomt Termi.\nAND\n1. Boat Livery and Lakt\nFrontage* Approx Eleven\nmiles from Nelson. 1 1-10\nacre, aome fruit trees ar.d\ngarden, water. Residence\nneeds some finishing Bna*5,\nand   equipment,   outboard.v\n$5350\nALSO\nS Duplex Render.rt .1 lide\nquick occupancy. Other side\nrented $20 r>0 a month. Guod\nclose In location\n$4200\nC.W.Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nGeneral Iniuranee\n302 Baker SI Phor.e 259\nNELSON, B C.\nCranbrook Air\nField Work\nProgresses\nCRANBROOK. B.C. Aug. 26-In\npreparation for the start of schedule\nairmail and pasaenper service September 8 by Canadian Pacific Airlines from Vancouver to Calgary by\nway of Penticton, Castlegar and\nCranbrook the new CPA administration building flanking the city\nairport runway haa reached the roof\nstage. Installations are also underway of a link tn company teletype\nservice along Its route.\nThe charter wai granted by Dominion Air Transport Board July\n22, subject to approval of the Minister of Transport and Oovernor-ln-\nCouncil. In Its approved application\nCPA estimates annual operating\ncosts at $29.1,000, annual revenue it.\nMM.OOO and ii prepared for a first'\nvear deficit of $28,000 on the theory;\nthat increased ground and ilr equipment and increased territory Mrvie-i\ned will make the operation self-sup-[\nporting within a short period\nFLIGHTS LIMITED\nInitial operations covered In the\ncharter limit flights in the section'\nbetween Cranbronk and Penticton I\nto contact flying because of lack'\nof radio range facilities at the mid-1\nway point at Castlegar, Flying Ini\nthis section will be restricted to day- j\nlight, andthe aircraft must be man-|\noeuvrcable and of low landing]\nspeed,\nThe company plans In Hs Initial i\nvear to use Douglas DC3 craft from I\nVancouver to Penticton for Instrument flying, Anso V aircraft from,\nPenticton to Castlegar to Cranbrook\nfor contact flying, and Lorkheed\nLodestars from Cranbrook to Calgarv, over thr Rnckle*.\nThe Department of Transport radio range station and meteorological\nbureau are ndjacent to the new CPA\nbuilding at the airport here. Specific\ncompany plans have not been an-:\nnounced, but It Is llkelv an agent;\nand a field dispatcher will he necessary ai staff appointments to the\nnew CPA station.\nStart of service has been announced for Labor Day, but io far no\nschedules, tariffs or timetables have\nbeen released in this area. Charter\nlimitations with regard to the contact flving in the mid-section of the\nairline's route make daylight schedules in thli area foregone conclusion.\nMarket Trends\n!    NEW   YORK,   Aug,   26   (AP).\nSelling tapered and assorted leaders sh.ftecf to the recovery lide but\nmany issuei were ur.abL* to ihake\n; off minus signs.\n: TORONTO <CP1-Toronto Stock\nExchange had its biggest day in six\nmonths nn a wave of trading in\njunior golds whirh carried most of\n'he heavy traderi up, iome ln strep\nrlimbs. Industrials were mixed anrl\nrelatively quiet, baie metals had an\nrdge un strength and western oils\nwere off.\nMONTREAL 'CP)-Tht mints,\ntrading briskly and posting t number of significant gains, were the\nfeature of an otherwise dull lilt\nif dealings The industrial groupi\nwere generally eaner. Mints were\nlivelier than they havt been for\nseveral monthi,\nCHICAGO fAP)-Gnln futuru\ndeveloped a g-md rally, most dellv-\ner;ri nf wheat and nati moving up\ntn the day'i hejt levels, and r^rn\nadvancing sharply from its low\npoint. '\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, WEDNESDAY, AUG. J7, 1947\nTORONTO STOCKS\nASSAYERS   AND   MIM\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE-W   \"WlffDOWSON   i~CO   AS'\nia>rrs   301 Josephine St, N^lioa\nit S .ELMES. ROSSLAND, B. C,\ntStsstyet  Chemist, Mini* R.prrsnt.\nA. J BUIE, Ir.dcpcndfr.l Mine Hop*\nri'.spr.tativc  llnx M. Trail, B. C\nW G^fllOMSON it CO - AS-\nMyers At Metillurgistj All work\nK sen prompt attcn'.inn 1155 Pen-\nrier Sl, W    Vineouver, B.C.\nCHARTERED   ACCOUNTANT-\nROGEl) M.  HO\\ I .WE\nChartered  Acenur.'.not\nBli Viclorn St.     Trail     I'hone 896\nCHIROPRACTORS\nFnTTTN* \"MCLAREN* li c \"curacy\npr.irtir       X-rav,       Sp.nography,\nSlnr.d theatre Bdc   rr.nl 1'h .128\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nDIAMOND   DRILLERS\nSTaTToNAL DIAMOND DH1LMMO\nCn,   Ltd,   Drilling  nr.d   Hit  Ser*,\ns re    II  x   tm   Il.vs.sl.lrd    III' I\nI    UJ\nluhirrlpl'en    lljt.i:\nfir.jl-   r -fi\nBt  ri\"1*',   P^r   wels*\n'ln > Is i-.m 2..\nsp... r,\u201e ..  ,\u201e. ,,,. itnn\nMail n Csr.ads. c.'udi Nej**n\nO-.i --.*** I iff\nThre.  :  rw\n(t;x   n ffh, S tf,\nIS    .   \u25a0 \u25a0   , * It   *fl\n(I.   .... ..--,,    |*..  ., !  K \"g I\nIV!    '** ! m\"1\nJ**   y     -\u25a0     \"\u25a0>\u25a0, II IH\n'll\n)\nENGINEERS AND  SURVEYORS*\nIt W HAdCFN, MININO AND\nC *.*,! 1'* p.i err. H (' I..T d S ir*\ns*'s* r   [\"Vsj'ard ird I,r.r:'! Y rk*.\nU- iVll C   AlU.UCK. 2IS CORF, ST\n*.'\u25a0**   \u2022    11  C . S'irvev it   EitKin.fr\nTIMBFR   PROPERTIES\nt\"a CLARKE. FOREST FNOI-\n-.-. ,-\u25a0 :,- I F 'li-ster Si'*, Il.ikrr St , I\nNi. :., I'linne 1308 Timber j\nt'rv.tr,I, Appraised aril On rral\n].!i,l,i*i   M,.i,\u00bbci'ir,.*i,I ai.il  A l:i,,n\nINSURANCE   AND  REAL   l.STATfc\nITHS\" E'\"MrllAR!lVllN'Sl*RA>s*i;*K\nHesl Ei's'\" -   Fh-re l.l's\nMACHINISTS\nBFnT? ffts\" ti miTeT)\nMachine Shop   acetylene, and\nele,*lr,c ss r d rg. m^tnr rewinding\nIV  \u2022 e   MIU .124   Vernon   Sl\n*'.\"i ,*vTrv.<7V'T ^ATifiNE SHiTp\"\nSpenalilts :r, m nr ard ,i 11 ss*.*rk\nM i, \u25a0. \u2022 e ss,,ik I Khl and tl'.ivy\nTHII   Vermn  Sl    Nelson   I'h   SH\n'II <* UNCI    HAND   ST OlirS\nIV    ,*.,*.*   \u25a0\u25a0.    I\"'   Ml   Sik   '.vrr\nss r  111 \"i   : I I, I   ANI> tM HANI.I.\nl Fi*\nn Youn^ innu\n11 L-aveoft,\nM a syllable\nU ConclK\n13 Directs, aa\none's steps\n14 Ceaae to\nBleep\n15 Unhappy\n16. Little      *\nchildren\n18. Chief\ngarment\n(Hindu)\n19 Glrla\nnickname\n!2 Commanded\n25 Encloaure\nfor cattle\n27 Variety of   >\ncorundum\n86 Rope with\nrunning\nknot\nan An old man\nS2 Fmii of\nthe palm\nM Timid\n84 Waite\n86 Soared\n37 risflgure\n40 Capital\nI Egypt 1\n43 Semblance\n45 Permit\n40 Undershot\nssatersshevl\n47 Mild\n4K Lively\ndaii'v\nDOWN\n1 Stitchea\n2 Entreaty\n3 Skla\n4 AnAx\n6 External\nseed os>*4*nf\n\u00ab I'oat\na-saigned\nT Chops\n8 Anglo-\nSaxon-\nnvoeiey\nfl Q-uratirm\n10 Utter T\n3 7 Crampua\nIS Peaaant\n18 Malayan\nboat\n20 The Orient\n21 Merriment\n22 Bcwechea\n23 Nurse\n(Indial\n24 Challenge\n26 Poles\nHt Yellowish\nSl Spawn\nof fish\nS5 Oscill.iU\n36* Out of\n37 Kind of\nfertilizer\n18 Exohangi\npremium\n8(1 Harvest\n40 Fart of a\nlocomotives\npss ip\naaga aasif-i\nono-i jw.ih\nBonn  jumpa-a\nCSS) -.cir,    BB\nanils jr-iR-ann\nBCmi   ll'JOQ\naau._- awsai\njoo _ij:*_\nV,.l*ra.s'.  \\.,am\n41 Awing\n42 Sick\n44 Extinct bird\n(N.\u00bb*Z\u00ab_.)\nEOR SALE - 18 ACRES nr NICE\ntamarark wood lot. Thick stand\nar.d tall timber. Several 100 cords\nof Nn 1 wood and poles. 1 ani\ngoing to sell fnr the hrs*. offer 1\nget, lava between 49 Creek to\nBird Creek. A road right In to it\nBlock **C\" of Lot B257 Kooter.as\nDistrict Plan 936 A clear tit'e .t\"\nthis Block R m.ie.s trr.-r. Nrl.sor.\nBC   A   Henry, Cnln-;-:,, BC\nEOR SALE - 21 ACRES 3*,\nacres cleared, rest in limiier\nhouse and nutbu.'.dingi 10 fru,'\ntreei. water all piped in $230i\ncash Wm. Bor.deroff, Siocar\nfark, BC.\nCRESTON     INSIDE    AND    OCT-\nI    aide property. Lowest i:,*f\u00ab   11 is\nI    now,   before   the   Simmit-Cre\/k\nTrail   road   ll  hm'.t   Applv   tn   H\nl.-lb-nr-   Bram.sv.lle   (V-tar \"\nWHY NOT REFINANCE\" YOVH\nmortgage on *i*e Ycrks**, re S.,s \u25a0\nings ard Loan M-m'ti's* Re,! if \u2022\nplan al 6 per cert C W Apples'ard\nfifiCSTTTLL \"SIZE HASEMENT\nIhree hedr\"*in's, \u2022\u2022\u2022 tw * 'evel '.-\u25a0\u2022,\nwill sell nr exchange fnr hit*gal *.*\nof espial vilue rl se In Phn**.'\n374-1, I   afe-roo-s\nSMALT,    RANCH\"   FOR    SAI F\"7\nCheap   for   (ji.-k   sale    Alt\"   r-e\nhorse,   or*e   mi'.x i |   row    Ap; '\nI     ii-x  tttt;   I) I '*,   Ne ',\nWILL TRADE 100 ACRES, DWEI\nlinga    e'e ,   ' r   i\u2014.'f   r'\".   rear\nri'v   H -x  Mill,  Di. 'v  Ne . s\nf fTS'E' Cuts\" run\" ^v1 f   in\nFi.is.ew,   Oood   I'-.i'.oi     ',':\u25a0  \u25a0 e\n1149\n(ViME'iRTAlil V     !IIU**F      ElVt\nrooms and f,--   T-i - s *'.\u00ab, (F\"\"*>r\nM'*s   T'f'   M   ! ske\nLOTS EORSM,'   APPI Y D  V-V,\nlo,  1010 I.atime- S*   P'*'* \u2022 n \"11\n\u25a0STiAVL 'HoL'SE   FOR   S*\\* I     IV\nmedla'e  nenipa: ,-v   tit  r-- sr\nflTlNlSTIEli   lloffl,    <60in     AP\np'.v  llnx 401  Kaslo, PC\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED MIDDAY MFA1. FUR i\nI rniral St.'mn! p i* Is * *i ,.!*,*..\nd\u00abss ni*.',v W B Mm.'g mien* p'*\n1RC-R1\nLOST AND FOUND\nCalgary Livestock\nCAI.GAR. Aug 26 (CPL\u2014Cattle\nmarket active at steady pricei\nCows sir ng to 28 cents higher\nMnndav's receip's 89 cattle, 73\ncalves. 153 hoes, 14,3 sheep. This\nmorr,.ng 314 cf'le, 12 calves, 217\nn gs.\n!!o,*s sold Monday st \u00bb2! 75 for\nAs i' yards nnd planti. Sows 111.75\nIn   SI2 50   live   weight\n(',*'\u25a0*\u25a0! 'o choice butcher a'essrs\n13 21-14 10 c mm.onto lo medium\ninnn.'.inn f;,, rt hu'eher heifers\nII \"3-12 10; common tn medium\nnnn-li so\nC, id er-.i: \u00bb7S-P25: cemmo- tc\nmedium fl 150.fi 50 Cinnen and\nr*;\"r*s  4HO.6O0\n0 I to rl: -re veal ralves 11 50.\n'2 M'1 r nur, :*. 'o medium 500-'.] 00\nSm Ver    B-*d    feeder    s'eers    10 2.1-\n11 no  r.-^\u201e-,,,,, .a .,,,, p so.*n no\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nNEWAND rSEDPARTS EOR ALL\nmakes of cars C tv Au'.o Wreck*\ne-s   Rnx ft   C-s-;'e Roid\nFOR Vme\" 31 NASI! SEOXV\"\n** .'* *\u2022* - -hr h'-s'i - a'*e- fl p m\n:\u25a0-1  Y \u25a0 :\"\"  S'   P\",**e  731-R\nFHI SMI* - \"142 PLYMOlTfl\nI'- ri-f :\u2022\u25a0 l nd share C.r he seen\n,*   NV  , ,-   A .*\"   W-e-k  -I\nF'dl   HD 1*13 1   STANIURfl\n'\"\u25a0*'\".* ('* rh ('in be neer. \u00ab'\nW '    .*'*'   T-S*    'e-\nyi'-i; *.Ai f -   :J4\"i \",ifoNr f*oR!5\nS'i, :  dump  Ii* x  i**d   h ust   O  r,\\\n\u25a0  ' \u25a0 Y-  -e   *gg Y-2\nFi  II    *s*\\! F 'I   HI IiS',j7Tnn F\n,,.,!,.     ,,,i;s   i.,H*p-   a**d  defro.'\nFi ill SA! F ONT '044 3 tt**N f*lVRD\nT- :  k   -e.v-'d ',   *:ed    Ap; *y  Will\ntr, ,s\\  <; \\- v,       :i\\- ribyy   ftnOD\n\u25a0   *   '  *    *     A;      .   K-1   Das   -.   S*\nFi  :\u2022   SA' F MAN' s   ftlOVcl V\n1 \u00bb   i-   e i *     \u25a0     !'*     13    X  I\nLIVESTOCK   POULTRY AND\nFARMSUPPLIE5. ETC\nWF     iir\"R     RA'srn     NEW\n\"v.irsHinr  pci i yt-.  put\nh- lr, .-.rr Al, j* fin., ; ,,,rd\nf* \u25a0: '(*-\u2022* H nl' \u2022 ted i ,1\n,s   A*; I   \u25a0 Is   irr r .*** ;* g\nAmal Larder\t\n.73\n.04\n.56\n.17\n.15*.\n.32\nAunor\t\n435\nBagamac    \u25a0-\t\n.2.3\nBase Metala Mining \t\n.12\nBear Exploration       \t\n.61\nBeattie Gold  MlnM    _.\n.71\nBeaulieu   YellowkniJa   \t\n46\nBelleterre   \t\n6 80\nBevcourt               \t\n.an\nBldgood Klrkland\t\n26\n.18\nBoycon  -\t\n.01\n1165\nBtifadlaon   \t\n124\nBuffalo   Red   Laka   \t\n.26\nCalln Flln Flon           \t\nnm.\nCariboo Gold Quarti \t\n2 30\nCastle-Trethewey   \t\n126\nCentral Patricia \t\n151\nS.40\nCitralam    \t\n.05%\nCoin Lak*            \t\n.34\nColomac Yellowknlfe, \t\n.15\nConsolidated M te 8 \t\n85 25\nConweat         \t\n.63\n.27\n.90\nDelnlta .                   _..\n171\n1.05\n.80\nDome Mines  \t\nts on\n120\nEast Amphl  \t\n.37\nEast  Malartie  \t\n180\nS 40\nElder\n105\nEldona            \u2022\u2022     \t\n1.7,1\nEalconbrldge  Nickel  \t\n4,03\n2 55\nGiant  Yellowknlfe  \t\n615\nGnd's Lake Gold   ...\n1 34\nGnld   Crest\n,32\nGold   Dale   \t\n,17\nGold  Eagle\t\n,064\n.18\nGolden  Gate        _.\n.30\n! 18\ndinar Gold     \t\n,35\n4 nn\nHard Rock Gold\t\n.44\nHarker Gold ....\n.12\nHeath               - -\n.12\nHeva   Cadillac   \t\n,40\n.07\nHosco    t. _\t\n.84 %\nHowey\n32\nHudson Bay M _- S \t\n43 75\nIndian Lake             \t\n.12\nInspiration\n55\nInternational  Nickel   \t\n32 65\nInt Uranium    \t\n.49\nJacknife            - _\n.11\nJason          \t\n20\nJelllroe           \u201e _    _\n0,1\nToilet  Quebec,  ^ __\n.73\nKayrand            - _\nOR u,\nKenvllle Oold\t\n32\nKerr-Addison      \t\n1! 75\nKirk-Hudson       \t\n5n\nKirkland   Lake\t\n2 10\nLabrador             _.\n6 in\nLske  Dufault          \t\n50\nLake   Shore  Minea    ...\n1515\nLamaque Gold  \t\n6 30\nLeitch Gold       \u2014\t\n1 26\n.11\nLineman Lake       \t\n81\nLittle   Long   Lao   \t\n1 52\nI-ouvriurt    \t\n175\n8 20\nMarlon Roum     - \t\n42\nMadsen Red Lake \t\n3 '1\nMalartie Gold F   \t\n1 -3\nMarcus                  \u2014..\n.58\nMcMarmae                _..\n,37\nMining Corporation  _   .\n1 30\nMoneta                  _...\n.43\nMoaher                  - \u201e\n12\nNegua                    \u201e\t\n! 10\n064\n44 71\nN'nrbenlt*             - \t\n.42\nNorseman             \t\n,12\n86\nO'Brien Gold  Mlnei    \t\n125\nOT.eary\n.13\nOmega  Gold                 \u2014\n.07\nOmnltrane Exploration  \t\n174\nOrenada                 ,\n10\nOsisko Lake                  \t\n133\nParamaque                -..\n13\nPioneer\n371\nPreslnn East Dome \t\n2 in\nQueens'nn                  \t\n1 '0\nQuem.nnt                  \t\n1 s vi\n27\nRnuvn  Merger     _ \t\n.37\nSar.nnrm             \t\n244\nSen   Rouvn             \t\n19\nShawkey                    \t\n1,34\nShern't    Gordon    \t\n3 10\nSigma   Rouvn          \t\n8*10\nSisroe Gold\n10\nSlader.   Malartie       _\n33\nSpringer                 \t\n1 33\nS'eep   Rock\n,  ,,n\nSvlvanl'.e\n3 20\nT C Rcsm-res               ,   .\n7|\nT Lundmark\n41\nTaku   River  G Id   Minea\n0,3\nTnburn Gold  Mlr.es\nr-i\nTowgamac\nA\nVenturea\n7 ic\nV rn*,ir                 _          \t\n12\nWste  Am.'ilet\n4 10\nWr'g*-*   Harfreavei\nR'l '\nYelVrex\n:>\nY\"**- Yankee Girl      -\nOILS\nAnglo Tin\ni f-\nFoothl ',\n:\u00bb;i\n1- pe-   ,1\nii ni\nHiram  Walker    M.00\nImperial  Oll  14.00\nImperial  Tobacco     19.00\nInt  Metala            _  83.00\nInter  Nickel _  82.25\nKelvlnator          ae.OO\nLaura  Secord    16,00\nLoblaw   A       29.80\nI\/iblaw  B               88.00\nMassey   Harris         15.7J\nMassey Harria pfd     -  29.00\nMcColl   Front             25 00\nMcColl   Front  pfd     102,50\nMoore   Corp        _  7100\nNat  Steel  Car    22 50\nPage   Hershey     20.00\nPowell  River  J8.50\nPower Corp   12.00\nShawlnlgan     1250\nSicks  Brew      1050\nSimpsons  pfd     103.50\nSoutham  1675\nSleel  of Canada         17.15\nSteel of Canada pfd     78.00\nUnion  Gaa                 9.50\nUnited   Corp               18.00\nUnited  Steel  7.73\nWinnipeg Elec com      ,   .. 16 25\nN_W YORK STOCKS\nAmerican  Can  89 50\nAm Smelt A Ket   Jl 25\nAmer Telephone   155.85\nAmer Tobacco   73.00\nAnaconda              86.35\nArmstrong  Cork         45.85\nAssociated  Drygooda   16 25\nBeth   Steel              86 65\nCanadian   Pacific    - 1125\nCellotex    27 35\nCrane                34.15\nDupont  170 00\nCen   Electric    _  3600\nGen  Motors         88 28\nGen   Foods     39.13\nHowe Sounr  55.50\nInternational  Nlcke!  28 50\nInter Tel k T.I       10 63\nSchenlev                    . .\u201e, Jfl 75\nSlan Oil of N J    76 50\nUnion  Oil of Cal  25.10\nUnion  Pacific            1.37 50\nU 8  Rubber   44 50\nU  S  Steel                     .... 70.50\nMONTREAL RANKS\nBANKS\nCommerce    \t\nDominion    ..,.-,.*__,..\nImperial    ,A,\nMontreal         ,.\u00ab*....*\nNnva Scotia       m\nRoyal   .\t\nToronto    \t\n82.1!\nJ..50\n27 no\n27 00\nS6?5\n2,3 00\n3650\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nJO Industrial*\u20141T7.TS up .19,\n20 ralla\u201448.04 off .06.\n18 utilities\u201435 47 up .0J.\nI*\nNDUITniALJ\nA'**'.* rs--.se-\n\\'. *:b'   pe.,.,-   r\n\\   -rmS     S'eel\nIO\"\"i-.l    A\nReal'v\nNick Pavlch Dies\nAl Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B O., Aug. I. -,\njNick Pavlch, age 73, died at th\u00bb\nhospital here after a few daya (K\nnest. He came to East Kootenay tt\nvears ago and worked at vartoua\n1 lumber camp jobs ln the Crobln vlc-\nlinity until he came to Cranbroolr. te\n193.1. He and his wife lived on V^p\nHome Street, and recently on Dur-\nIck Avenue.\nHe was born ln Auatrlt. Hll wlfl\nU the only surviving relative) h\u00bbre.\nFuneral services were rVom _H.\nMary's Church Monday morning.\nPROCTER\nPROCTER, B C.-Mra. I. Rich.\nkard has relurned to Reglna. Wttt\nwas accompanied by her elater?, Mr*.\nJ. Riley svhn will remain there for\na few weeks\nMr. and Mrs. L. Bonacci and\ndaughters Louise, Gall and Marflya\nhave relurned to Nelson after spending  a week'i vacation hare.\nMrs. J. Ga'.Io has u her guest for\ns few davs, her granddaughter, Evelyn  Pratt of Thrumi.\nMr. and Mrs. S Bonacci had i#\ntheir gnosis over the weekend, their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMr.s, E, Spicar.nli and their grandson  Laurie of  Trail\nMr. and Mrs, Hclschak and\ndaughters of Ardlll were guelta of\nMr   and Mrs  C  A. Brady.\nMr, and Mrs, T. T. Griffiths have\n- id as their c lest for a few weeki,\n*.(-   T\"Kg of Vancouver.\nMi*. a**d Mrs Neil MacLeod and\nso- from 'he Coa\u00abt h.ss'e taken up\n-,*,' denee here where  Mr, MacLeod\nII Clift has returned from a twn\n*eek s-ac.r.n;* spent In Cranbrook\na**d   K mherh y.\nM-, and Mri, Sa'.way ind family\n'\u25a0 ,- Mi*.;:'--. Hat are spending\n* ,s 0 -a neks va'stion here\nMr and M-> N, Shkwarok had al\n.:\u25a0 ., s* ever 'he weekend Mri Sh-\nk.sa*-k s mn'her. Mrs. P. Antonulk\nsf N'e'.on\nC. ,-:-.,-- McMullin whn Is em-\n;.' -set In Wc, r. apent the weekend\n, >:*, '*, -. psre-'s Mr, snd Mis. J\n*.* Mi.'.l,**,\n'.'. -.' Mi-cla D'll of Cas'legar li\ns if \u2022 \"I her grandmother Mrs P,\nlie\nV ... R:', Je-e'rgs and Miss Helen S'kssa-ssk sperl ihe weekend st\n(*,,\nge\n' 11\nCHYPTCKjrOTF\u2014A cryptogram qlloUUnn\nW   UP      K  P  F  N   \u2022  X T T   M   W   I.  HUD      21 W K  V\n& 7, W E P     V P X M K      W S I C. 1* B D 7, l< - T W T P\nYr-tenlas*.  ( rspto.iniil.'i     Nn MOTHERS CARE  SIIIELDKD\nM',   IN I- Afl   IS'NliOEN' U WITH PRAYEV    SAVAGE\nLOST - IN SATITtDAY NIGHTS\naccident, corner of Bsker ind\nWard, mr ssallet cntsinirg a'si\npurse containing small clia-^e\nO'sn.r's name 11 s '* *.s ','.*'\nWnuld lilldei pleas.* rel nn .\u00bb\u2022\u2022,*\nt , 3'lfl T'i,! I SI*,*,*! , : 1 I*. \u25a0 ,*\n1\"4'1  Y    S ..-it. r   *, .1.,:\nTar   b-r,\nllll   at   ima'l\n*,i'il   SlltfRIA  FMtMS\n*.'    li*    .*.'        II t! .'   I''* '    * .-k\nH'll    ** \\* F HF IVY    WORK\n\u25a0 i' 1 ..'anla (* I ij; \u25a0 \u25a0 *pers\n'.'\" cr (i*m *'.*( Q ,,e* es, is\n'11- U> I bs* ri*, \"-- roa'ic R W\n0,1*1,ner F Y-   l  -\u2022 Ph.*sri 4\u00bb2 L-3\nfoJi >ai T.~-'7*1*a*:c, sltsPAfy\np ips S'u'sbli for miliar hunting\nReads (nt .-'p.-ert Sept 11 G\nKiskei*    fl',4   M 11   S' .   Nel,.-,\nFull    SALE    ;    YR     mill    RFC.\niie-ef \u25a0 1  i*.,i;.*.'  11,;;   I,   itou:\n,-A -, :    lies. '*\u25a0 *   Yale*.     11 I*\nI. 'It       V s i'l II' Mill- I'   11 IN\n>  m, .-    m -.   ll.--     .'\u25a0\n\u00bbl   . ' , 1   \u25a0\u25a0\nIVvl\nII-,.,-\nII   A\n11   '\n|l   r\n('*-   r,-   s   r*   -d-r\nr,r,j ,\u201e   r.'.r...\nr*.i-  r'*** \u2022\u25a0 \u2022  -ia\\\nr.n    n,e'.***f\n*,.,     |..,l      y-r-'-r-      A\nI'.-.   M.i** * .*\n\",   Ma-    \u25a0 I\nI'm To ' '**\u25a0\nI',,*   I'..* '. \u25a0   R'v\n1    ai'   C ;*i -*\nl' *rkr\"i*'   C'.sss*\nI  e-|   Pipe-\nI* *d*i>.|   S-irami\nI'sm-ninn   t*:f,t.\nI'-r-   r-.-d-ils\nD--  *\u25a0'..'  *.- Cn,'. B\nEsm-H     P'svets\n\"a'-i     F--m\u00ab-\nf.i    ,.'    Ci-iM,    A\nr   k*\nnwhon  hid\n.  '. \\\n--   Kt*\n>u''..in:i'.*(   si|-\nW   M\"\nifVFR\n1 s.  (II\niCI'l\n1 ivn Adfimi\n-   A   ^hlp\n-11 V.c   \u00abd-\n'h.r   f^nrnm\n.A.s     H iVll*\n1   Pii-tln  an\ns'**-*. b\n:-l   *i\n'a'\nvessel\n*r;-p.ilW\nT  \u25a0\n',.,.. f\nnrrr nflval\nfn'     unt    in\n\u25a0uc    proved\nin '1\nhe    \u2022'.:\np   w.is   *Ad\n*:'..!\n,   n-   .1\nFiiii\nri   ml\nsh    u' 'inun\n1   n   yacht.\n.t'<!     in     r\nr..tired   thr\nivA   l\\roA-\nA'     '-\n,,,n-\n\u25a0 '\u25a0 \u25a0 s    tuAe-i\n\u00bb. -,\u00ab,\nL-l'\n:*    m   Van-\n'lind\n,   ...\n\u2022\u25a0*-,b'c*   thf\n'.'-.,   ,\n1.   1.\nn      \u25a0)..      I    |fiy\n'Ii     d'\n-A-V.'r\na* A    5i nk\nVine-\n.     s*\nand\n\u25a0a-    *hr   Ut\n1     1\n.'. *' *::\niillv     Cipt\n- \u25a0    .it!  \u00ab\u25a0  n\n-'r   V.U'1 '\n1    thr    ho,t\n,1    f -h.i..\nIs'.m\n mmm\n*-*---\u2014-*-'*-\u2014*-\u2014*******\u2014*****-*\n\u2014\n\u2014-\u2014-------\u2014\n\u2014\n\u00bb\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 27, 1947\nH      THAI       '\"\u00bb 'FUNDUS FOH .\n(Hi\"\"     ACID\nUll'l50 INDIGESTION\nIjlla   PFUNOERS TABLET5\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\nSamuel   Johnson   published   the\n[irst English dictionary in 1755,\nalmost in a lady's hand-bag. All the\npreliminaries of an apple harvest\n.\u25a0an be carried out by a B. C. or-\nrhardist without an apple box being\nseen until picking actually starts.\nRut it's not that way down ln\nNova Scotia, where the famed Annapolis Valley, comprising two\ncounties and strips ol two others,\nand shipping an appreciable part of\nthb continent's export apples, still\nswears by the apple barrel.\nIn the Annapolis Valley the most\nunobservant person, even if a total\nstranger to Canada, could not miss\nseeing the towering, sky-scraping\nloads of newly coopered empty apple barrels, moving about the coun-\n\u25a0\u2014 \"_ .\"_.\" \" \"\u2014'try, in the old days in hay-wagons,\n\u25a0lliiiiiiillililliiliiililllNMiiiiiiiii \" l.\u201e\u25a0...   in   motor   trucks. Other ve-\nRADIATOR REPAIRS   hicles respectfully drew up on the\nsides of the dirt roads, in my young\nr\\nnrsoA find  Rprnred   days, to let the mountainous white,\nueonea ana Kecorea \\'nwly whltei load, be drawn by\nat a walk.   Today   of course, with\nI paved roads and good grades\u2014easy\n...for a small province with a large\n_-!\u25a0    \"f Ipopulation to   finance\u2014the pace is\naster, but the loads, built out to the\nBy the Starting Qate\n. . . Apple Barrels Roll in Nova Scotia\n. . . The Days of the Wind-Jammers\nYou can hide an apple box under j finally the Nova Scotia School  of\nyour   arm,   if  its  component  parts (Horticulture   was  founded there.\nhave not  been nailed together; al-     Refrigeration  for the ocean   trip\n4 TAXI\nLicensed to Go\nAnywhere.\nDay or Night Service\nLOUIS  CHOQUETTE\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\n801 Ward SL Phone 63\nllliiiini 111111111111111 \u25a0 11\ntZZTZ zzc=A.\nFor all your floral requirements\nleave your order at\nOVERWAITEA\nPhone 707 or\nWalkden's Florists, Phone 1122.\n\"ELLISON'S BEST\" FLOUR\nFor All Yout Baking Needi\nGuaranteed to Satisfy\nYout Grocer Hal It\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nwas advocated, and some of the\nsailing ships of those days Installed\nit\u2014 using natural Ice. It was pretty\nnearly the last round for the oceangoing wind-jammers, which were\nbeing shoved to the wall by steam.\nFIGHT FOR 8TANDARD8\nApart from development of scientific methods of fruit growing,\nwhich in those days certainly had\nits apex there, the Nova Scotia experts being in request all over the\ncontinent for convention programs,\none of the perpetual fights was for\nmaintenance of standards.\nIn early times, while the barrel\nwas required to be 2\\4 bushels in\ncapacity, the law named no dimensions, and the shipper, in ordering\nhis barrels made by the saw-mill or\nthe cooperage, named dimensions of\nhis own choice, The door was thus\nwide open for those who wanted to\ngive short measure. It is about 47 or\n48 years'ago that the N.S.F.G.A.\nwon its fight of years, to get Parlia\nment to legislate for a standard bar\nrel, with named dimensions.\nIf there was a Dominion inspec\nsides and built up tier upon tier, of; tion service, such as we have seen\nto\nbarrelled air\", must   still\nwieldy, and exert air pressure,\nhold down excessive  speed.\nA report by the  domestic grape\nvine, that the local grocers are ex\npecting to see   mure Hour   barrels | jnion  inspection service\nbecause  nf a shortage In mtton for\nflour sacks, is what  has turned my\nthoughts to  barrels.\nKODAK TIME\nii here again\nLtt   ut   supply   you   with\nKODAK FILM\nAll   slici   now  available\nAt  Your  Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nPHONE 34 BOX 4\u00ab0\nHope for One\nVoyage Before\nArctic Freezeup\nEDMONTON, Aug. 26 (CP.-Arc-\ntic ship crews battling unusual bad\nice and weather conditions in the\nice-strewn Arctic Seaway North of\nthe Canadian Mainland have onlv\none thing in mind these days\u2014they\nhope to make at least one epic voyage before the early freeze sets in\nfor another season.\nNorthern Transportation Offlc\nKenwood\nCoats\nfor Fall and\nWinter\nOur stock of Kenwood's\nis now complete. Let us\nput one of these popular\ncoats away for you. All\nsizes, colors and styles.\n$55.00\nEmory's Ltd.\nThe Man's Store\nOptc\ntometrist\nSuite 205\nMEDICAL ARTS BUILDING\nUAUUU-_-U*_*__-_-U\n\u2022MNIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nLogging Truck  Insurance\nFOR  INSURANCE  WITH   DEPENDABILITY  CALL-\nSTUART SALES AGENCIES\n577    Baker    St.    Ntlion,    B C.\nPHONE 980\nIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nHave the Job Done Right\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE   815\nPETER PAN\nKINDERGARTEN\nOPENING SEPTEMBER 2nd\nA   ichool   for   little   toti   Dre .chool\n\u25a0get\nDANCING\nMUSIC (pinno)\nRYTHM BAND\nHANDWORK\nELOCUTION\nPhon* 1224 (or Reiervotion\n418 Gore St.,  Nelion\nIn B. C. for 35 years or more, I do\nnot recall any evidence of it. In fact,\nI think it was the strong representations of the N.S.F.G.A. over a period\nof years that resulted in the Dom-\nbeing set\nup.\nThe dishonest \u00bbnd short-sighted\npractices of a percentage of grow-\nActually I was in my 20's and'ers, mainly though not entirely\n\"out West\" before I ever knew of|sma!l ones, including that of putting\nflour being sold in sacks. Naturally j large apples at the ends of the bar-\nin frontier regions sacked'flour was rel and small apples and culls in\nan old institution. Bul \"the  trade\" | the   middle,   injured  the  name  of\nprovided    Nova    Scotia    with    its Nova Scotia in the Liverpool ma\"\" i famous    war    correspondent,    Ross\nground wheat in barrels. ket for   years. The large   shippers, Munr0| addressed  the largest aud-\nBrown sugar even w\u00abi avail-, who maintained high standards, and !jence of ^is cross-country speaking\nable In barrel., although probably the exporting firms, which inspect- mur when an e5\u201emated 900 heard\nonly the occailorval housewife ed their purchases carefully, suffer-1 j,ls n^our talk on Russia, given\nbought her sugar In bulk. But an ed with the guilty. jn  thj  Tra\naunt of mine did. I im not lure\nwhether the lr\\tldent happened In\nB I C   SCALE   CLEANUP \u2014 Reproductions of prehistoric monsters In St. George's park.\nCaljary, Alberta, let their annual cleanup at the hands of willing |lrl scrubbers.\nRussia Not       Believes Aid lor China in Oiling\nWorkers Paradise II Country Cleans Itself Up\nMunro Finds\nTRAIL. B. C, Aug. 28-Canada'f\nlanywayl  and although  it travelled\nThe mechanism of Big Ben, gianti\nLondon  clock  includes  a   13 Vi-foot 1\npendulum, numerals two feet high,T\nminute hands 14 feet long and hour|\nhere say that the situation has left,handi nine feet long\nthe   Arctic  supply   condition   in   a,\n\"poor state\" and that while Arctic!\nseamen are working against ice and'\nstorm   to beat thi freeze-up   witn\ntheir freight hauls, the Eskimos along the  Coast  already are talking\nof an early freeze.\nLUCKY   CREW\nRegardless of conditions and pre\ndictions    the    crews    an\nthey'll be as lucky as thi\none  vessel   which   recently  saw   a\nhappy  ending  to  a dangerous ait-\nMi II III II It IIII 111 IM I ltll 1111II11 lllllllllllll |\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL   HOME\nAMBULANCE   8ERVIC_\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nMS Kootenay Sl. Phone 381\nhoping; iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim,,*iiiiiiiiihh|\ncrew of *\nWidely it did not enter Communist\nuation.\nTruro, where she lived, or In my\nhome town, where she and her\nfamily vlilted my grandmother.\nBut she was reported to have\nfound her oldest hopeful, then\nperhaps seven, who aged me by a\nyear or so, playing hide and seek\nIn the nude, In the sugar barrel.\n8he had him at a disadvantage.\nI imagine my cousin, who now lives In Pennsylvania, itlll remem*\nben the active leulon they had\nwhile he lought unsuccessfully,\nto evade her advances.\nMolasses came in hogsheads, ker-\nosene oil in hardwood puncheons.\nI never savs* or heard of a metal\ndrum m ihn.se days.\nDoubtless   the flour nulling com-  i\npanes  had   their   barrels   made  by  ,\ncontract.\nA LOCAL INDUSTRY\nBut the apple barrel Industry\nwas strictly local. Any man who\nhad a saw-mill, whether operated\nby water-power o: by steam. ss*ould\nturn it to stave making for the ap-\npie harvest Bv investment of a few\ndollars, any man who had working\nspace, even lf only a room, could\nbecome a cooper- oil he require]\nwere two .steel rings it*, which to fit\nstaves to the barrel siiape, the bar-\n'\u2022\u20221 hea-tr in sectinns to be pressel\n,. -n-rerl into their grooves at the\ntwo ends, ar.d h\"oi*s of birch, to be\nfitted around the barre! and nailed\nmtn -lane. Bitrrr 1 heads were of\nwh'.'e pine but 'he 'laves were if\nsome  '.n.ipher  bu'   light   wind\nIntended to   be the   bottom con- 5everat piaces, he pictured the shab-\ntalned a varied collection of old ibily-dressed    Russian    people,    thc\nmeagre diet, thc fear and distru.1\nBy JAMES D, WHITE\nAssociated   Press\nForeign Affairs Analyst |hrld territory, which includes most.    Several   weeki   ago   the   Roman\nWhen Lt.-Gen. A. C. Wedemeyer of   Manchuria,   a   good   portion   of Catholic  Oblate  Mission   schooner,\nwound up his fact-finding mission,China and perhaps a quarter of the Lady of the Lourdes. left Tuktoyak-\nto China for President Truman  he Chinese population. |tuk.    Northeast    of   Aklavik,    for\nleft behind a public statement that     As Nanking constantly refers to Coppermine    ln    Coronation   Gulf,\ncontains    this    significant    para-.the Communists ns rebels and band-,about a 700-mile voyage East. Like\ngraph: I its and has set a price on the head the  Hudson's Bay  Company's Fort\n\"To regain and maintain the con-.0' Party Chairman Mao Tje-Tung.JRoss    and    the    Royal    Canadian\nTadanac  High  School, fldence 0f the Chinese people   the lhe Communists could hardly be ex- Mounted    Police   Patrol   ship    St\nCentral  Government  will  have   to Pec*t<\"*d to enter Nationalist territory Roch,  the \"Lady\" ran into ice ab-'\nto talk to Wedemeyer. out halfway to Coppermine.\nFurther, although Wedemeyer j The heavier Fort Ross and St.\nflayed government corruption and;Roch plowed their respective ways\ninefficiency, he did not directly stolidly through the ice, but the\nquestion the leadership and policy little \"Lady\"\u2014she weighs onlv ab-\nof that government which has been out 35 tons-found herself forced to\nwaging civil war against the Com- *ake another route Eastward be-\npointed rewrite'\u2122,'l'A,r,\u201e ,\u201e,... jcause ice took command of the sit-\nQUESTION ARISES uation and inserted itself under the\nIf the Wedemeyer statement thus'Lady's hull,\npoints the general direction of Am- SOON GROUNDED\nerican policy in  China  along lines     At first it was only 1 small  floe\nllel lo those be;ng pursued  in but large  floes slid under the first\nimportant     question ort    and   soon   she   wa,   Kcureiy\nrounded\" on   ice.\nKeep   youth   and!\nloveliness  with ||\npermanent\nHaigh  Tru Art\nBeauty  Salon\nPhone 327\nJohnstone  Block\nThat action wat neceitary I may Auditorium.\nIllustrate with the experience of He said that he had addressed]effect immediately drastic, far\nmy uncle, whole reasons for Hli- many luncheon and club meetings, reaching political and economic re-\ntruitlng iharki I gave In this col- acr0\u00a3s Canada, but this was the first I forms Promises will no longer suf-\numn recently. A buiy coal mer- t|hie tnat he had had to (ace such 'fire. Performance is absolutely nec-\nchant, and hli own apple crop dli- a large au(jjence. Irssary  It should  be  accepted  that\nposed of to an exporter, he filled     He waJ flown *,\u201e,, ;rom Vancou- military force in itself will not elim-\nan order from hli brother-in-law,'ver  under  i^e  sponsorship  of  the inate Communism.\"\na   Baptlit paitor   In Saint   John, CanadiaI1    pless    Trail    Board   of     This is mostly 1\nfor   a  barrel  of   choice  Graven- Trgd^ mA Trai, Daj,y Tjme5 nf wha( 0pn   (n[)W S(at(, Spcrelarv,\nitelni, by ordering a ipecial bar-,    His stimulating talk on European George C. Marshall said earlv this\nrel from a local itone maion who* mat|ers was wen  received. year   when   hr   abandoned   his   ef-\nhad one prolific tree. j    Describing his visit six weeks ago1 forts  to  mediate  the Chinese  civil\nI don't know which end  of the ,0 Moscow  where ho  wa.s allowed war.\nRELIABLE   SERVICE\nAt    Reasonable    Colt   at   tht\nSMEDLEY\nGARAGE CO.\nNext to Poit Offlct\nbarrel the brother-in-law opened j lo tour tt)e ntv  Without  interior-     It is important, however, beciuie Greer\nflnt, but the  end that had beenf,nce although refused admission to an American official now is telling arises\nFor the Beit Dreued\nYoungiten in Town\u2014\nThe back to  ichool  movement\nstarts at\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP\nihoei and old rubber booti.\nThis town resident, with a family 'chaotic housing and slum conditions.\ntheir teens, was willing to de\n\u25a0tld   boots   for   apples   to   his\nneighbor!\nOLD HOSS\n;e atmosphere o.f\nrowing, packing,\n\u25a0rchandismg Al!\ncis-a Scetia Fruit\n\u2022inn thf oldest\nin America,  wi'h\nThere   was  a  sprinkling  of  bo\nown varcj5 ar*ici first rate apartment houses for the privileged.\nHe said that it was definitely not\nthe workers paradise painted by\nCommunist propaganda. He talked\nto workers and watched them at\ntheir labors and, though the youngtr people were strong Communists,\nthe older ones were becoming disillusioned after 30 years of Communism, The unbelievably fist\ntempo required of the workers wa.-\nbeginning to tell nn them.\nOut of some 190 million Russians\nonly five or six million were party\nmembers, but he said that there was\npractically no chance of a revolution tn that country, because of thr\nstrict control practised bv the partv\nbe PRIVILEGED CLASS\nA  notable  development   was  the\nexistence   of   a   definite   privileged\nHe   described   how   they   u'.j-\nthe Canadian-born   rep- tained better rations, living accom-\nwho  helped   draft   the modation and even had their chil-\nGreece May Be\n\"Power Keg ol\nWorld War III\"\nthe Chinese Government to cle.jn fan the two countries be treated The boat got on top of the ice\nitself   up   in   even   stronger   terms ftp same? . about  200   miles  West  of  Copper-.\nthan Washington has been using to Greece is unalterably a small mjne The ice drift earned he- 18i)\ntell thr Greek Government to \"=nap p nver, with about 50,000 square mHe5 Eastward in three days.'And\n'>''\u00bb nf it iriles   of    territory    and    fi.00O.0OO\nThe fact that China and Grpe-e people,\nrepresent critical focal points of China's vast hulk stretches over\nSoviet-American tension in A-ia rt .000.000 square miles and her half-\nsnd Europe further suggests a simi- billion citizens constitute, for all\nlanty in treatment from the Amer- their internal differences, the oldest\nican standpoint. and  largest segment  nf  the  human\nThe Wedemeyer statement makes race\nThe eight-year  war  with  Japan.\nWASHINGTON, Aug 2B <APi-\nChairman Charles A. Eaton 'Rep\nN .1 i of the House of Representa\nlives Foreign Affairs Committee de\nclared today that Greece may\n'the powder keg that explodes into\nworld war III \"\nTaking  a   gloomy  view  of  world cla\ncondition\nrrsentati\nno promises of aid to China such as\n1 the Truman doctrine has produced through which the Chinese\nfor   Greece    However,   that   some 1\nkind of aid for China i.s in the offing c\ncan scarcely be doubted\u2014assuming,\n\u25a0if course, that the Chinese Government cleans itself up as demanded\nDIRECTED   AGAINST  REDS\nThat  this  aid  would  be directed\nn the  end  partly against  the  Chi -\nwhen she was in Coronation Gulf\nNorth of Coppermine, the Fort Ross\nwas able to get close enough to pass\na hawser and haul her off the Ice\ninto water again.\nUndamaged, the \"Lady\" completed her voyage to Coppermine in the\nnormal  fashion, following  the leai\nof the Fort Ross.\nfought, died, starved, collaborated'    The Ud? supplies t network ofj\n^r loafed-  but never surrendered as Arc-:c missions that serves Eskimos,1\na government or a people-is a mea- Indians and white people with com-\n? ire nf their  insistence upon  run- fort for spirit and body alike.\nr.ing    'heir    own    show,    however: \t\nbadly. |    TEDDINGTON, Eng, (CPi  - A\nThf government nf such a coun- luxurious motor launch lay idle in\ntry must weight  its need for help the Thames for nearly an hour be-\nROSCOE\nAND\nFOURNIER\nQARAGEMEN\nSKY CHIEF  AUTO SERVICE\nPhon\u00ab 123 Nekon. B C\niiii ilillill imiiiiiimiiiiiiiillll!\nELECTRIC\nLAUNDRY\nPhone 1170 \u2014 180 Baker St.\niiimmiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiMiiiiiiiMiillt\nnese Communists cannot be doubted frnm outside against the loss of face fore its owner found the ca'\nither\nilted\nWedemeyer's   mission   con\nno    Communists    'publicly.\nlived at home if it should accept the trouble\u2014a dead mosqu\nhelp   on   the   indicated   terms   carburettor.\nse   of\nn the\nUnited    Nations   Charter\nporters the United State:\nlimoueines.\npulicii s  tht1\n\u25a0\u25a0re   frequ\ntold   re- dren driven to school i\ncannot af-      Dealing   with   Soviet\nu^  ford\" to permit Russia to dominate youthful   looking reporter said tha\n.... Greece, the basis of Soviet policy was, fir.-\nnd      Such   a   Russian   conquest   would defence, second, political agressive\nbe the beginning of a drive on Tur- , ess_\nThe  U.S.S.R, was absolutely vor,\nExpect Early End lo Canadian,\nNewfoundland Confederation Talks\nUTHBER\nMOTORS\nLimited\nOpen   [vcningi  tor   Your  Convenience\nDODGE- DESOTO DEALERS\nOppoiilc Poit OHicc -  Nrlion. B.C.        Phone 75\nkrs* .ir.rt nther countries bordfring\nthp Mediterranean and \"frnm there\n\u2022hey rn-iirl pn on tn an attempt tn\nnmjuer the world \"\nF.i'\"ii ss-a.s ,i lending prnnonent nl\n-.be administration's WOO.OOO.Oon\n(',*'*ek-T*irki'h aid program design-\nrd in ktrp those two countries frr in\nfalling   prey   to   Communist   pres\ns-in\nd   that   the   Wr\nwi:\nI*\"\nIn\nblockade  and  fn\nThc   K'.i.s.sians\nmisunderitandm*\nis'a v\nof life\nthe   must\nAT BEDROCK\n* We are right\nGreece.\"   F.aton\nhas*\"   rers-ed   '\"'\ncni.-h Kama\n.i* a comp'.c'i,\n* th.* Wester,\n-aid. Ihey '.ser,\npeople   I   has*'\nnf   the   Marxist\nBy D'ARCY  O'DONNELI. Confer!\nCanadian Press Staff Writer month\n\"   OTTAWA,   Aug.   26   (CPi  *-   Dis- \"A-Ah\nmissions between representatives of\nCanada   and   Newfoundland   nn  *h \u25a0 A   P*\npnssihihts* of the  island's entry in' > *'<*ver-i\ncd   their   thirl\n*n   might   be  ex-\nng   of\nthe\nich\n,f Enrol\nCnuimuni\nlhe Allan\nMam oi\nFurope ss\nbark    d*:\nthe\nbedrnck in\nBnth    sides\nssull   back\nIf neith'r\nquences\nunit\na pit,a\n\u25a0hr\n\u00bbti\nhi\nsituation is a.s bad as prim-\n,ios culd br Nowhere is\nspirit \"f ronperatinn brinR-\nc.atlnns    tnge'.her    tn   soke\nI95H bv tm* (\nHe warned\nKremlin pel\nCommunism\nlov Russia bs\nry    *.\nand\nommnn   pr-blem.'\nnf   all   hu\nI'mted Sla'r\nmine desire t\n* bit Russia \"\newing a philos\nlo   .nil*   was*   i-\nIn hu\n.:h.\nla\n\u25a0 \u25a0ild\nnhbli\nrd\nth*\nir.d. anoth\nrepared fm*\nhat Britain *\nII.* s.nd lh.\nId  W.i\n20   s,\niple    *.s\nfor thr ve.i\n'in I* SSR\n'oris that th\nutpi na'.iuna\ni*d oppo.sitlo\n* and poimca\nwnuld n\u201e' b\n'   g'\nIhr\nIn\nimp*\nWu:\nChi*\nn* in,  Ca*hnl:<\n.irif  hi\"  talk  I\n-:',-, f send\nnri'am   during\nexpected   tn   i\nI  for the people nf tha: i\n:  long history.\n1     He thought that son\nbe.   done    to   In'.ser    pn*\nsuch  parrels\n\u25a0      Chi\nF  Wa\n'   Trail.*\nWII p.\nitinn to Communism in\nbeing wailed bv the So-\nI)env*.**ra*.s\nheved   tlu-   q.l,.,:;.,::\n*i:ite   w:ll he settli d\nPROGRESS SLOW\nThe   progress   has\nieen   rnmpar.i-\n1    There are 54SO islands in the Aegean Sea.\n111 in ii i ii i iTiTii iTTil 111 iTTTiTm i n i mTiTr t m\nFLEURY'S  Phormocy\nPreicriptiom\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed   Arts rtll\nPHONE 25\nIIHIIIIIIIIIIIItlll\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\n(Prior   Brci.l\nI'NDER   NEW   OWNERSHIP\nPHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER ST\n.i ., i \u25a0 111 bill ill 111 \u25a0 i: 11 \u25a0 I \u25a0 11111111 r 111 \u25a0> 1111 r i\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n_, IMRIE\nChartered  Accountanti\nAuditor!\nMO Baker S*. Phnne :.*!!\nIIIMIIIIIIII'IIIIM'HI'IM'I\" *\"*'\n,*ii.tifmii\u00bb*tn'imlli'\nHivt rour  rurnltur.   Expertlj\nRecovered  it  tha\nNELSON   UPHOLSTERY\n\u2666 13 Hall St Phon.  IM\n*f  the  ,::,\nCAUTION   DIFFICULT\n^avs B. C. Timber\n^ided Wnr Effort\nMovie Gossip\nKF! OWNA   BC\nRrvan    Latham.\nAug  in\nimediale\nCP'\nP.s!\nKingdom\nLeader  \"f\nRoland Winters Exception in Acting\nLife in a Gypsy Existence\nBy BOB THOMAS It n'oniar  wh . I... I*s in Vs r:\nMarconi   Foat-hcrline\nTRAVEL IRONS\n.95\n'12\nNelson Electric Co.\nGen\nPhone\nA opl'iecei\ntSS   B,K,'   St\nWc jpccialiic in accuracy, purity, courteiy and\nquick icrvicc lot cuitom-\nI'rs.\nHOSPITAL AND\nSICK ROOM SUPPLIES\nBed\npjni,   hot   -vvj-lrr   bottle*\n\u00abnri\n\u25a0tUchmfnti,  rar  lyrmge,\n111\"\n.-fri,     rtouc^p'.     chnic*.\nIh.r\n\u25a0pofveii-r,,    fer ding   tubei\nmri\nct,[it  Ji\"r1  a  complete  Una\nsi   1\n-tiei   *r\\    bHti.   gnuie.\nh\u00abn-\n\u25a0 ge   nd'-r* ve tape, band-\nA   :i\nis, rg :.i i   d fii'ngi.\nF\nYl-URY'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nPHARMACY\nPHONE 25\nI.kI.i\nlini.i.YWCtui)\nnun. *:i     I**.\".' ss '.i\nif I'*,\nhas\nII*\n\u25a0\u2022I'l.\nni.sti\nIt,,I\n11.\nno, the\n.tat-lut,\nsaid,\n\u2022 sn a,-,I\n*ing   h\nperis*\nI   \u00ab<\ni, ,de   *f  the *\u25a0' 'I\"\n11   ii'idei    cm AlU\"'\nthis   will    t,\"t gram\ntike  'he  s'.esi ilen*h\nnd   can   re.sul' a   life\n*,t\u00bbrt\u00bb we <h\u00bbll make\nHAI I m   I'Al'| ic,\ntha!\n'e 1 i\n::. k\nNELSON BUSINESS\nCOLLEGE\nnil  * \"i i rn \u00ab :iii  v phi'Vinc: *\u25a0:  m * * r \\ i :\u25a0 n\nCOMPLETE COMMERCIAL COURSE\n,,t   w:\nIns suit   II wlll brinK Bi.'h nl Ihe pi\ncloser   understanding   of in the saddle   F\nri's   pi.'hlem.s\" and, a rnund-facel Sss*\ntham and his parts*, accnm- handed llir inai'infs:-,- s\ns   W    A    MeAehm.   H   C \u201eev  Tnlrr.  Won died   I,,*\n'\u25a0rirral in 1,,'nili.i*. H   n.\u00bb:\u00ab iftn   [naklln: Ins :il*l CI\nCanadian   Tiinl.ri    Tiad** ,,.,,:,', (, :  ,, ,--.<\u25a0  .*..* ,,   ',,\ninner   in  1 \u201end\u00bbn  and  F   C, ,-,r,l  Winter-, a i nim an\n'nn.    IVpnl,   Minister   In* p.*.ned *'*i mc'i sCn, s ...\n,f Tiad,*   ,- d   Ir.lnsliv   ,n tan s    Kas   Ks.sr: *. al \u25a0-.\n-,-   usl,*:,!.,,   I,,   pas*   thin Fannls\nmil   si.:l   in   lhe   I',miner I caiithl  eliinps*.  -ind\n\u25a0rd    d'slln *    fl'lll    nreliarH' Wli't'l\"   I*     I\" \"' '     \"   lak'\n',      I :\u25a0...,.. ,;*'.,...    tl,   .     ,...., \u201e\u25a0\u25a0\n\"h irlies died c*\nW irnei  dl\nIr   Hi.s dealh .,*\nKla.s.s In Sld II\nvd\nli :e\nMi   rtlvii'd     t*,;^v.nt nq     rr,   'ijntipv*,\nlish     C    nrrr.rr      ;l    hiss     i     i'*n*rn*    ll    i;*,\nEnq-\nAt*\nd   1\nIndividuol Tuition - Commence Any Tim\u00ab\nNew  Term   Commence,   Tueldoy,   September   2nd,   1947\n107   Role   Street,   Nelton.   B.C.\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. 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Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1947-08-27 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. 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