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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":" \t\n'<\nChild Drowns at\nWest Arm Beach\nHoliday Turned Into Tragedy as\n6-Year-Old Louise Harry of Nelson\nFound Dead in Water by Playmates\nLast seen alive by playmates who left her to play alone\non a West Arm beach near Willow Point, six-year-old Louise\nHarry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Harry of Nelson, Friday\nafternoon was found lifeless in shallow water two hours later.\nThe same playmates, returning to the beach about seven miles\nNorth of Nelson, made the discovery.\nEfforts of a Nelson Fire Department inhalator crew and\ndoctor, called to the scene, were without avail. The child was\npronounced dead at 3:03 p.m., about an hour after she had\n\u2022been lifted from the water. The call for aid was made from\nthe R. A. Grimes' residence on the North Shore.\nThe child was holidaying with other members of the family when the tragedy occurred.\nHer death was the second waterfront tragedy in the West\nKootenay in two days. Two-year-old Murray Tillen, son of Mr\nand Mrs. J. M. Tillen of Lardeou, was killed Thursday in an\naccidental fall into the lake at Lardeau.\n7ul\u00ab<rtt\n8 CENT8 A COPY\nVANCOUVER, July 18 (CP)-At Duncan, Caroline Sav-\noge, three, was drowned when she tumbled into an 18-inch\ndeep fish pond at a friend's heme.\niCLAIMS TRUMAN\nACTION WON'T\niSTOP RAIL STRIKE\nSAN FRANCISCO, July 18\n(AP) \u2014 President Truman took\naction today tn forestall a Southern Pacific railroad itrike next\nMonday night but a union official\nindicated it would have no effect.\nThe President signed an executive order creating $n emergency\nboard to intervene in the dispute\nwhich led to the itrike call by\nthe Brotherhood of Locomotive\nEngineers, tl. memberi wlll be\nnamed ihortly, the Preildent\nlaid.\n17 Fires Still\nBurn After\nMonday Outbreak\nNAZIt.iV4S\nARRIVE Ai\nBERLIN PRISON\nHess Among Group\nSecretly Flown\nFrom Nuernberg\nContact Confined\nBERLIN,    July    18    (CP)    -\nRudolf Heu snd ilx other major\ni    Nazi   War   Criminal,,   all   untenced  at  Nuernberg,  arrived  at\n8pandau   prlion   today   to   lerve\nterms  ranylng from  10 yean to\nlife.\n'   The group was flown here sec\nretly   'rom  Nuernberg  jail,  where\nthey   have   been   confined   since\nlast   October.\nDetails concerning the transfer\nwere expected to be disclosed in\n:-. joint communique to be issued\nby the four occupying powers during the day.\nThe secret transfer was arranged\nto prevent any outside contact\nwith the prisoners and to avert\nanv chance of a demonstration.\nTO   HOUSE   LEADERS\nThe red brick prison, which is\niu the British sector of Berlin\nhad been cleared of all other inmates    and    placed    under    four-\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLook for 60-Ceht\nButter at Coast\nVANCOUVER July 18 (CP)-\nA strong Indication of a general\nwholesale butter price Increaae\nwas given today with announcement of a cent-and-a-half a\npound booit ln city retail price.\nA spokesman declared that an\nincrease in the wholeiale price\nmight be as high as two centa\na pound, resulting from what\nhe termed an \"unjustified\" recession of half a cent last week.\nWhile the present retail prices\nrange frdm 55 to 58 cents a\npound, wholesale dealers are\ngetting 55 cents. If the proposed\nBoost comes, the retail market\nprice will Iikily hit 60 cents a\npound.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nPlanes Inflict\nSevere Losses lo\nGreek Guerrillas\nVlCCTMWj.-^RmOTjp-UMglA, CANADA\u2014SATURDAY MORN\n__________________________________\nNelson's Golden\nJUBILEE\nAugust 3 to 9\nING. JULY 19. 1947\nNUMBER 75\nBy L. 8. CHAKALE8\nATHENS, July 18 (AP)-A Greek\nenmmunique said today Nationalist\nplanes were inflicting severe losses\non guerillas fleeing Northeast of\nIoannina before pursuing ground\n[forces and ravaging villages on the\nway.\nSeventeen fires were burning\nFriday night, the result of a lightning storm Monday night and a\nweek of torrid weather that turned\nthe dry bush into a veritable\npowder keg.\nExcept for three new fees on\nwhich co reports were forthcoming\nlate Friday night, a'k 14 of the 17\nfires recorded were under control.\nLate reports indicated that blazes\nhad sprung up in the vicinity of the\nBayonne Mine, at Deer Creek on\nthe Lower Arrow Lake and a third\ntire near Bridesville in the Kettle\nValley.\nWhile the later fires are attribut\nAmbush Victim\nDies; Keeps Mum\ned to normal causes, the rest are |\nthe hangover of a lightning-ignited: NEW YORK. July 18 (AP)-The\n22-fire breakout that followed the'second victim of a Lower East Side\nelectrical storm Monday night. gangland \u2022 style ambush shooting\nFires burning numbered three in ,died in hospital today without giv-\nthe Cranbrook District, two on the! '\"S P\"l'\u00ab any information he may\nCanal Flats, one in the Invermere have had regarding the killings.\nDistrict, four in the Creston District, I Alex Fern, 36, former tax b\none at Salmo, two at Arrowhead, _nver, died >n a hai 1 of IOu leh   ir d\nrW\u00b0kat   Efh8To\u00b0wderTrroaJ &' I ^\u2014^\u00b0K \"J\nonl'at Rossland and one at Bri-WMj\\^u^!'\u00a3X\\^toot\"ii& -der risk of being TRAIL,  NELSON\nville in the Kettle Valley. |pl\u201eyed Brooklyn stevedore, died this f\"\nafternoon\n,.,..   <\u00bb<\u00bb\u00ab   irllkltT    I    Police  said   the  four  men.  after\nSEND 200 AoAINil     ifiring at close range, ran back\npower administration to house for-1    War MlnistCT George stratos 6aid\nmer Nnzi leaders. 'another and larger guerilla offensive\nThe prisoners in addition to Hesswas expected along the Northwest\nHess, were former Economics frontier The Greck Government\nWalther Funk and former GFrand ,5aid tne (irsl guerilla band \"invad-\nadmiral Erick Reader, sentenced to;ed\u00bb Greece from Albania with the\nlife terms; Baldur von Schirach. aim o{ seUing up a separate Com-\nex-ycuth leader, and Albert Speer, * munist government,\nformer arms production chief, who^RiMES BRUTAL\nboth received 20 years; Baron | \"Bandits passing through villages\nCor.stantin von Neurath. former have committed crimes of unimagin\nReich Protector of Bchemia and abie brutality,\" the communique\nMoravia, 15 years, and former' from the Greek 8th Division said\nAdmiral   Karl   D-enitr,   10   years, i \"Villages   have   been   pillaged   and\nThe aircraft in which the pns-;many inhabitants killed.\"\noners were flown trom Nuernberg The Balkan sub-commission of the\ncircled first nver the United States United Nations was to leave Salon\nairfield of Templehob in Southern j jka during the day for Ioannina for\nBerlin as a \"blind.\" before turn- j another investigation. Both the Rus-\ning and. landing at Gatow air-,sian and Polish delegates opposed\nport   in   the  Northwest j holding the Inquiry at Ioannina\nGUARD8 FORM COLUMN Ithough G. P. Casparov of Russia had\nWhite'helmeted   military   guards accompanied the Board on a prelim\nwith   tommy-guns   and   automatic inary inquiry Tuesday,\nrifles   formed   a   d uble   column;    (The full U N. Commission report\nfrom   the   back   of   the   armored! ed to the United Nations that Greek\ncar  which  conveyed  the  prisoners ] civil strife was largely due to inter\nfrom   the   airport   to   the   wooden j vention by Yugoslavia and, to a less\nsteps   leading   to   the   interior   of er degree, by Albania nd Bulgaria,\nthe   prison.  Posters  on   the  prison I    (See story page 3).\nwalls   warned   people   not   to   ap-|\nproach- within   five   yards   of   the\nfiring at close range.\nOREGON   OUTBREAK  their car and sped awa)\nMADRAS, Ore., July 11 (AP)- EVELYN DICK\nFire wai racing through ilashlngii _..___, \u201e\u00bb. _\nat the edge of the DeschuUa Na   ENTERS ROLE\nttonat   Poreat todty,  asii>1omtr.c ,,. ,CED\u00bb\nofflclali  rounded  up  a  200-man Aj     LITER\n\u2022\"TheVetiaTn Sl-nd own-'_ KINGSTON, On. July 18 <CP,-\ned by th. Brook.-Scanlon Lumber Evelyn Dick, central figure In a\nCo. A Southweit wind wai blow- drama of crime that began *ith the\nlng the flames away from border- discovery of the hacked and mu l-\nlng green timber, but fore.ten lated body of her husoand John in\nfeared any wind change would en- a ravine near the Hamilton escarp-\ndanger timber Hands. ment, today played the last scene\nI of the last act. as she arrived it\nPortsmouth Penitentiary to begin a\nsentence of life imprisonment.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nWashington, July ia (Apt - Strange Acquatic\nThe United States Agriculture De-    . , r~U~A\npartment announced today the sale Animal loaned\nef 5,246.OOO pounds of dried wholr\neggs   to   the   British   Government\nThis purchase will make a tital i*f\n38,264,000     pounds     obtained     b>\nBritain  this year\nThe   seven   prisoners,   manacled 'CLIN IC  RUSHES\nfrom the moment they left Nuern-* , .. ,  .        _   ... ._\nberg    were   immediately    stripped: PLASM A TO COAST\nsearched, made to bath,  medically\nexamined   and   given   drab   prison        VANCOUVER, July 18 (CP) -\ngar*3 After an emergency call for blood\nISOLATED had been made by the Red Crou\nEach will be confined ln an Uo-     Tramfuilon   Service   the  mobile\nlated c\u00abil, but Wk. *HMgtW_#-*i*r4 '\"\u25a0Wl-*   -i-M    Blood    Trantfullon\nvice and folks will be communal.]\nThe   orisoners   will   not   talk   or\nPASSENGERS\nRUSH TO SIDE\nDISASTER CAUSE\n625-645 Dead or\nMissing in\nCoastal Tragedy\n76 SURVIVORS\nBOMBAY, July 18 (AP) - Between 625 and 645 personi were\nmissing and believed dead today in\nthe sinking of the *M0-ton coastal\nvessel Ramdas which capsized in\nthe storm-swept mouth of Bombay\nharbor Thursday.\nOfficials of the Indian Cooperative Navigation and Trading Company, Ltd., which owned the ill-\nfated vessel, said there were 76\nconfirmed survivors of 721 passengers and crew members reported\naboard at the time of the disaster-\none of the worst In Indian shipping\nhistory.\nDESCRIBES  TRAGEDY\nBrought to Bombay tonight Capt\nSaikh Suleman gave this account\nof the accident:\nHe had slowed the  Ramdas In\nanticipation   of   turning   when   a\nheavy iwel   litruck  the  ihlp on! ton, 36, Vancouver, B.C., divorcee,\nthe starboard ilde. Tne pasiengeri apparently   raped   before  she   was\nruihed toward the port tide, caul- killed\nIng the ihlp to list. Another iwell\nProbe Fails to\nBack Greek Charge\nDARK-HAIRED\nMAH SOUGHT IN\nNINTH SLAYING\nVancouver Divorcee\nFound Dead Atop\nCliff at San Diego\nA STRANGER\nSAN DIEGO, Calif., July 18 fAP)\n\u2014Information from a navy sailor\nand a marine was obtained by police today as they sought the strang-\nler of Mrs, Marian Davidson New-\nitruck and the vessel capsized,\nThe Bombay Port Trust, the Royal\nIndiap Navy and many fishermen\ncooperated in the search for survivors in a sea still running high\nfrom a week-old monsoon.\n\u2022Rescuers found survivors clinging to life preservers, sometimes\nseveral to one preserver, and to\ntrunks and bits of wreckage. One\nperson was found on a box. A few\nmanaged to swim in the heavy sea\nuntil rescued, A six-year-old boy\nwas among those thus saved.\nAlso sought for questioning was\na dark-haired rfian with whom the\nauburn-haired woman was reported\nto have left a night club Wednesday,\na matter of hours before her death.\nPolice Lt. Ed Dieckmann, head of\nthe homicide  squad, said the case\nBY   NORMAN   CRIBBENS\nCanadian  Press  Staff Writer\nLONDON,  July   18   (CP)-Morn-\nnu? newspapers, with exceotion of\nwas 'another of a bar-room pickup m| labor.mme<l Daily  Mirror and\nU.N. Team Will Seek Evidence of\n\"International Brigade\" at\nFighting Front; Report Protested\nBy FRANCIS W. CARPENTER\nLAKE SUCCESS, July 18 (AP)\u2014A United Nations team\nreported today it had found \"little first-hand evidence\" to support Greek charges that detachments of an \"international brigade\" had invaded Greece from Albanian territory.\nThe report was  received at U.N.  headquarters as the\nSecurity Council wound up general  debate on the  Balkans\nissue and cleared the way for discussion, possibly late next\nweek, on a United States proposal to establish an international\n\u2014* watch   on   Greece's   Northern\nborders.\nDr. Oscar Lange, of Poland,\nCouncil President, announced a\nschedule of five meeting* for next\nweek, beginning wi'h two Tuesday.\nHe said the case would he kept before the delegates until final action\nis taken.\nShortly after Alexander Parodl,\nof France, had complained in the\nCouncil that the delegates had not\nreceived reports from their subsidiary commission left in the\nBalkans area, the UN. said the\ngroup had received a report from a\nteam sent to the zone of fighting in\nBlast Gov't\nFor Newsprint\nImport (ut\nthe Communist Worker, united to-\nGreece.\nday in a fierce attack on the Gov-TO FURTHER PROBE\nMexican  hat  with\nacross the brim\n\"Sugar  Daddy\"\nclump  of  brush  atop  an   ocean\ncliff park on the Northern city lim-\nMore Dried Whole\nEggs for Britain\ncommunicate with one another unless  specially authorized  to do so\n* Contract with the outside world\nwill be confined to one visitor\nin each two calender months, except when additional private vis*\nits   for   urgent   family   affairs   are\n.authorized.\nPrisoners   will    be    allowed    to\nwrite  and   receive   not  more   thin\none  letter even.-  four  weeks.\nPunishment   depending   on   tlr\n:offence,   will   range   from   cancel-\n' la tion    of   privileges,    cutting    nff\nClinic at Trail  and  Nelion, B.C.,\nIs rushing  new supplies of blood\nand plasma here.\nE. L. Kenney, Director of the\nService here,, said that stocks\n\"got so low that we had to get\n100 special donors and rush them\nto the clinic where the blood Is\ntaken.\"\nSenate Backs\nTruman Veto\nWASHINGTON, July  18  (API- \u201e\nThe  Senate  late   today   killed  the|lts 'ate *<%*%;     ,,\u201e\u201e   Tr,\u201e(v\nsecond-run $4,000,000,000 income tax ,,Th\\ sal!or* ,John, ^fl   TTu5,'y*\ncut   bill   b\" upholding   President22*   ft3\u2122?\u2122'   mate. 2\"C. a'   the\nTruman's veto | naval hospital, was a friend of Miss\nThe House of Representatives had\nkept the Republican - sponsored\nmeasure alive several hours earlier\nby voting 299 to 108 to override\nTruman's dissent.\nBut the Senate tally of 57 to 36\nwas five votes shy of the two-thirds\nmargin required to overthrow a\nveto.\nBoth Hoviwi of Coijgreu must\nov*\u00bbfM\u00ab,to*put a bill \u00abb: the statute\nbooks over presidential disapproval.\n(See also story on page 3.)\nand murder\" and followed the\neral pattern of eight other violent\ndeaths to women in Southern Cali-:erpments decision to  cut  imports'   On the basis of the team's report\nfornia since Jan. 15.                          '-of newsprint. 'the subsidiary commission decided\nPolice said they would also like .         (   ,. (    {         ,od      ,or  Ioannlna| Iocal\ninformation from a man w,th whom     \u00ab \"   n             * ,           Gov.     ;    o( ,hf ,   h(       The m\n1T!i1ZI\u00b0V\"^ZmL10Is,1 ernment. said ** if the government plans to study documents gathered\ndis- at   Ioannina   by   the   investigating\ngainst   tne   press   ny team.\nphotograph  in  Tijuana   Mex.  The ^ ,\nman   wore  a   photographer s  stock :crjminat^on   Jgalnst   the'   pres\nstronger reasoning that was heard     ]n   the   closing  moments  of  the\nto. I,.]>\u201e,.ti,-,,.- \"tmrM c(\u201eff (in the Commons)  last night, they generai debate ,n the Council, Al-\nv He.ee iv\/- can 5carce1-' be 5Urprised  to hear'ban.a     Bulgaria    and    Yugoslavia\n\u2022niiwn in bdiibu suspicion    formulated    that    their     ote5ted    once    more    against    a\nFOUN_\"Tn\"b   i    \" \"i protested\nMrs Newton\" body was found in caH for th,e ,reedT ot Z,\"    i- \u2122]\u00b0\"'y \"P\"rt <* the U.N. Balkans\nm press ,s not more than rhetorical | Co^mis*ionF which   charged   them\nwith supporting guerrilla activities\nin Greece.\n\"Slavery Cose\"\nTo Jury Today\nThe Dally Express, published\nby Canadian-born Lord Beaver\nbrook, said the contract signed\nWith Canada \"with all the back\nIng and authority of his majesty's Government\" had been re\nEdna   Mitchell,   candv   store   clerk,,    pudiated\nwho went with Mrs Newton to the j    ^e        ,    Telegram  referred  fo\nnight club Wednesday rught. ft   ..nwngtr'ous ^ malignant a(...\nThe marine had simply reported (       f U)(, Government ins reduciR,\nhe  be leved  he saw  Mrs.  Newton 1>s 0, newsprint. add,ng tha,\nleave the night club with a civilian. ^  Goven,ment,   ,aced   wl,h   the\nThey expressed belief the    pick neressl,     of   reducing   dollar   ex-\nup    was by a stranger\u2014some onP per.dlture\nthe divorcee had met for the first nap!ers   a\nI austerity.\"\nThe Libera! New, Ch ^H\u00abt^^;dVr:^~Dru^R'oo'*i.\"\nsaid dollar savin* which would vfI, iM ]ast n|ght Ht wa, 79\nhave accured out of newsprint; ^t end of a brilliant career,\ncuts can make no material con- whjcb lr,c]uded editorship of Cosmo-\ntrlbut'.on to he reduction of our. ...^ magazlne, political writing\nenormous dollar deficit* hut wer' ,\u201er ,b6 0id New York world and The\n\"serious   discrimina\nting at the night club.\nhas\nthe\n\"selected    news-\nnew   victims   of\nNoted American\nJournalist Dies\nMONTEREY. Calif, July 18 (AP)\n-Samuel G Blythe, noted American\njournalist and writer and an lntl-\nOver $200 a Ton\nFor Newsprint on\nU.S. Free Market\nSAWMILL STRIKERS\nRETURN TO WORK\nCACHE BAY, On*.. July 18 (CP)\nWhile Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Esley\nIngalls entertained prominent guests\nin the former home of Oliver Wendell Holmes at 60 Beacon St, Bos-\ntor, their Federal prosecutor said\ntoday, Negro maid Dora Jones served them under a \"vLscious mesmerism\" that eventually reduced her to\nsingle   industry.'\ntion   against\nBy WILLIAM  D.  MORGAN\nNEW   YORK,   July   18   iAPi   -\nSAN DIEGO, Calif., July 18 CAP)  Some American newspaper publishers are paying sky-high prices for\nnewsprint in an  international  free!<\\r t_#       \\jj\nmarket   that   stretches   from   NewjUf  TTOr WOnTS\nYork to the Orient.\nPaper    from    Canada,    Sweden\nFrance and Poland Ls being sold andi    SEATTLE, Julv 18 (APl-The lure\nprices from around $200,o( Alaska u a ,and o{ promise has\nGerman Prisoner\nTo Live in Alaska\nWhile Spawning\nMinor Increases\nIn Some Rail Fares\nOTTAWA. July 18 'CP) - A new\nrailway passenger fare tariff is being prepared effecting minor increase in tares in line with rises on\ncompeting United Slates lines it\nwas indicated here tonight, but Just\nwhat points will be affected is not\nyet known.\nAt the national freighi-iate inquiry here. C. F H. Evans. Canadian\" Pacific Railway counsel, said\nthe increases wtre minor and did\nnot affect the genera: level of the\npassenger rate structure\nPORT ANGELES. Wash , July\n18 (API - Mel Ray gaffed a\nslrange marine creature off thc\nEdli Hock Club House float this\nweek which could pass ior a\nbaby  sea serpent\nThe fish was six ard a quarter feet long, had a horse-like\nhead, bright silver skin, very\n^arge eves ar.d a red mar.e-iike\nfir. extending from its head to\nIts pouted *ai'; It was spawning in (hallow water when\ngaffed\nRay's   catch    was   s\nsimilar to tlie diet\noffered\na ton  tip\u2014with  the accent on  the I filtered into a prisoner of war camp\nlight in the cell f<,r up lo a month. The   150   sawmill   workers   of   the.slavery. \"up    At least one publisher has paid, in   Northwest   France,   the   Alaska\nexclusion from open air for up to George  Gordon   Lumber  Company!    The   closing   arguments   In   thej$2Ma,on* Steamship Company  said  today  in\ntwo  weeks, bread  and water diet, here, on strike for 11 days, returned; four-week trial of the couple, whol    This $290 charge is 219 per cent | telling of a letter from a German,\ndeprivation of furniture and cl th- t0   their   jobs   today   when   the   8; lived at the Beacon Street address! above  the so-called  contract  pricelBodo Arndt.\n1 light in the eel! o'clock   whistle   blew  through   this!before   moving   to   California   last! of $91 a ton delivered in New York. |    **i would like to go North my fam-\nSaturday-Evening Post, came after a\nlong illness\nIt was Blythe who obtained tie\nquotation, \u2022Huerta Must Go.\" in an\nexclusive interview with President\nWilson, presaging the resignation of\nthe Mexican President.\nBlythe helped make history ln 1GU\nwhen he collaborated with the Chinese Government at Peking in framing a rejection of Japan's 21 demands\nfor a strong hold on Manchuria.\nind   fettering   (0\nspec\nvillage   of  ROD   residents,   15   miles\nNorthwest of North Bay.\nIron of\nknown .\n:' :s no*,\noar\ns the 0\ncqua'.ir\nfuh\nukir.gly\ndefini-\nanimal\nbecause\nmuch thicker than an\n IIIIIIIIIIIIIIKIIIIIIMIIMIIMlllllllll\nU.S., Canadian Party Studies\nLittle Cherry Disease in Tour\nOf Creston, Nelson, Washington\nResidents Receive\nHoliday to See\nv\/j(-P_Rpnn| Party\nGRANDE PRAIRIE. Alta, .!\n18 \u25a0 CI * - The 1,700 residents\nthis town. 400 miles Northwest of\nFdiri nton. received a holiday todav in order to ..'ree. {}\u25a0.,. Viceregal parts* er.r * ;'e to Dawson\nCreek RC. ar.d the Northwest\nTerritories\nTrie Governor-General Lady\nAlexander and their three chlldr-n\n,ve;e \"\"heduled for a hr:ef*' stop-\nTver here during which Viscount\nAlexander wi'l present FO William Francis Re er;t w.th the dis-\ntlr.gui*.h*d fivir.g medal Al! veterans if',: - have wor: fh*e ratuns\ned   ar.d   a   guard   of\n.year, also brought from U.S. Deputy.'\"e Pnre ;\" wmrn i|le 8rpaI m]K 0I' ily to Alaska uf Germany after bem\n|Attorney   Eugene   A.   Tolin   a   de- n\u00ab\u00abP''\"''* mostly from Canada, is|liberated as a prisoner of war.\" tin\nTerms of the strike settlement, ar- claratlon that: I^A.Ji^.T\/.VinBiilni\u2122' | letter said  \"Can I get of you news     EDINRl.'RGH\nand information over Alaska\"* Your   Killed\nKiltie Chieftains\nAmong 7000 Flocked\nTo See Royal Family\nranged  at  a   meeting yesterday  of*    \"Mrs. Ingalls was the controllin\nLOWEST ON RECORD\nJulv\ncompany officials, representatives of, character. Mr\nthe   Cache   Bay   General   Workers]0ne  in  authority  but ..\nUnion   1CCL1   and   William   Dunn,*5hrinking violet\"\nLabor  Department  Conciliator,   in-j    De[ense   Attorney   Clifford\n*   eluded a  10-cent-an-hour \u25a0*\u2022\nf crease\nIngalls was a lesser'    Publ';hers nf metropolitan dailies; Bodll   An,d, *\ns  small-town  papers  are hnme was ,,,\nHe   added   that   !\n...  Kronweik, Germar\npaying fancy prices to pad out dan-.    Th(, steamship company sent ::\u25a0-\ngerously   low   supplies.   Stocks   of,to Arndt it was mailing informati\nnewsprint held  bv all  United  States  nn   Alaska    sehedllles   and   fare-\ngerald maintained  that Ingalls. 64, | publishers at the end of Mav were!0\"      _*\"' ^\u00ab'\"*\u00ab and_fa_re,\n'*l!former   Massachusetts   lawyer   and the lowest level on record and only!\nHighland    r!\n18   'CPI   -\nleftams   were\nFitz-\nhourly bonus, 10 days pay at Christmas and deduction of two per cent\nfrom employee's pay for vacations.\nAccident Victims\nMarooned\nlegislator, ar.d Mrs. Ingalls, 62, slightly higher at the end of June,\ntreated Dora Jones as lf she was; according to the latest report of the\n\"one of the family\" and that the ' American Newspaper Publishers As-\nslavery charge was \"preposterous.\" jsociation.\nMan, Who Never\nUsed Title, Dies\nThe case is expected to go to the\njury tomorrow..\n'CPi\nto\nwill be prese\nreserves veto*\n_irt gide? u\nTta*.on\nI*-   form\nStudying th, effect of Little\nCherry Disease on the cherry industry in this area, a group ol\nAmerican and Canadian Government and fisn* igai'.iMtion representatives h.ve completed a\ntour ot orchards where lb*\ndisease    is   prevalent\nThe party visited t: \u2022*'\u25a0*\u2022. Tu-s\ndav Nelson District **\u25a0 Wedn's\ndav and Kettle Fa'.'s, Wail*, Pi**\ntrict where Little Cheiry I).see\"\nhas   turned   up.   on   Thursday.\nThe group IS seeking 1\" deride\nwhat steps sh *uld be taken m\nWashington State ul.rrr a survey this year revealed a number\nof   cci       encei  of   the   disease\nIn Creston, the partv was guided\nby D Waddell and Di M F\n\\velsb of the Sci.nef Serv;ci\nBranch of th* Dominion Department of Agriculture, and G R\nThorpe Ciei'on Diitrlct Agriculturist The two Science Service\nmembers came from Summerlnrd\nsome time ago to ronduct ex\npertementl in the Creaton area\nAt Creston lhe i*i\u201e,ip al*' ,***!i-\nMilted with John S Hal C.i.ir,\nn >r of RC Tree FrulU Ltd , and\n(1 P Srit<*l>, President of thr (**e>\nOr. Loca! \"f Ii C Fruit (,r*>*sei,\nAwoc'.atton\nDn the was to Nelion the ex*\nnenmenta! o:*!;aid al Kootenay\nBav ar rl several orchards in Sunshine Bav, I.\u201engbearh and Willow  F. ml   Distiiets  were eximm-d\nA,|       Nel        'lev       eotU'l'.'rd       H\nF xall Mi* ig\"' \"I th\u00bb Associated\n(**,, -ver.    of    HI*     (dart\n(,.. ,*., .\u201e\u25a0,. .-ere M, Th* rps\n\\*.     Wadd''     I\"     West*,.   Dr     D\nT'ii:*'*     I'      >'\u2022   Department   ol\nLands W F *er, Pr* vu na' De\n\u25a0Mrlri.e: * -I Agriculture Plan!\nPa'hal, gist\nFi *:* Wasblngt* n were tt\nI, Reeves 1' S Departmer.l\nof Aglleuliiire, Wennteher in F.\nM 11! il,*,*t Homer Wolfe and Dr\nCharles Wight ail of ll*,** Wash\ningt I* Slate Department of Ag*\nculture uid 'I of whom are in\nchar J' of 'ree frut' virus work\nW V W'd W.sh'nfton S'a '\nSoft Frul's C'mmlnor Eira Crut\nHortlcilt'iiul for Ninth S'rret\nSkcok'im Coopentlve, Winatchee\nW, Htmmllo Hortienltiirllt. Pel\nhastine Fruit Gmwert. Waihlngton\nF D Gemlnger, Chairman. Viru-\nCommittee I Washington Sl.re\nHoitlcu'.tirlnl As**ei\u00abt,on W A\nI,ure Asa,,eiale Counti Acent fo*\nVaVinni and Fail tV\u00ab\" h \u25a0' It\n\u25a0 evch     isrl     Seholaish'l'     Fouiuia\n'ion Committee\n7-Year-Old Tells\nOf Beatings\nAMOS    Que     Julv    tH\n\"They counted aloud each 1\nheat   yr \"\nThui   te.stimony\nN\niCPi    -\nme they\nofl   in   thir*\nunder the river's surface by a heavy\ncurrent af'er their engines failed\nwtiose engine had failed\nea:!:cr. was  :n  tow of No, fl\nTl'ie men, none of whom  was\nlured    scrambled   off   the   sinking\nvessels   onto    piled    driftwood,    A\nglial fire brought the resent tug\nlegal\nVANCOUVER.   July   18   'CPI   \u2014\\r,jr L\nVictims of a freak marine accident,' Ponder LOSe  Ot\nfive   crew   members  of   two   Van-' i       i j   ii      o\ncover   tags   were   marooned   foriJO-JO and  Myrtle\nfive hours last night on lonely Sea- TLfl Tiirflo\nlord   Island   in   the   Fraser   River, * \"d   lUTTie\naftei  their craft sank   A search tug!    REGINA. July 18 fCP) -\nlook them off at midnight ; the  dogfaced  boy   and  Myrtle  the 1 market, at $91- a \"grev market\nIhe lugs. Silver Skagit No 5 and turtle-woman   are   giving  the   Sas\n-   swamped   and   forced katchewan      Government's\nbranch headaches these da'\nAlthough they have not been\ncalled upon to consider the question, they are wondering if the 44-\nhour maximum weekly working\nweek, which went into effect here\nJuly 1, applies to employees of the\nCapt Pav.s*,,, Smith and Capt.lman-V carnivals now touring the\nloyish   tonei   from   seven-yeai oil Gordon   Home   were  in   command   province.\nremand    Mirtel.    left    spectator! The tugs were valued at $28,000       I    Spokesmen    for    the    Attorney-\nsho-kel   in   \u25a0   crowded   courtroom |Gcneral's Department said they felt\nhere a* the preliminary hearing .'. \\Klrr,A \u201e\u201e\u201e  C^.,^,-1 the Act applied to carnival workers.\nMrs    Jer*   Marie!    *!   Sl    Gerard,  VVreCKagC  COUnCl |but  because the  shows  were  here\nThese high-priced supplies, small*    VANCOUVER   July   18\nin relation to total  American con-'Funeral 5crvic\u201e        * held\nsumption, find their way into domes-! d(orG  N  B  Webster  74  a foi\nUc trade channels by devious routes.I CCF     al    ,      h     d .,,\nr^pst   of   the   dealers are relatively \u201e,  .      .\nsmall   operators   dealing   in   news-     _*,.-.    ,     .    ,.      ,,, , ru\nprint for the first time. It is a tem-!    Born   m   England,   Mr.   Webster  rho-.is\nporarv market for them, and  thev,w'1s   an   hereditary    baronet,    but en  pd\nare making the most of it while thev nev\u00ab  llse^   his   title    He   was   an   \u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0can. Some dealers call this free mar-;associate editor of Commonwealth\nJo Jo.ket, as contrasted with the contract, former   official   CCF.   paper.   H\ncame to Canada 25 vears a,zo.\nirr\/trg the thmng of more than 7000\nper.'n.-.s whn florked yesterday to\nHolvro'id }['\u25a0\",*>* for the biggest part\nof 'he Rova! Family's stav tn Scotland\nSome rame hundreds of miles for\nith\u00bb\u00bb onp\"-*'in.'v of seeing r.ewly-en-\ngaged I'lirre.cs Elizabeth and Lieut.\nPh:l,p Mountbatten.\ni The King and Queen, with Prlnc-\n- e^s thzabeth, her fiance, and Prin-\nMargaret, spent nearly two\nrs walking among the guests on\nspacious lawns behind the pal-\nannent home nf Scottish Kings.\nusands more watched the gard-\nfrom the lofty hills that\nthe prtlae*.\nA prnmin-'nt gue*; wa? Sir Harry\nLauder, who hai a long talk with\ntiie  H ival   Laity\nWhere Fruitvale Man Was Seriously Hurt\nieai  An**\ns  charges\n*.tI'--:-j\nI fo   '-:\n111 t\nJi\"\nHAL\n\u2022 i \"t\nMr\n, whn. he:\nforced !i\nin !hr b:!\nt.* pu! nil'\n\u2022h.r  co.-**\nIS    Oli)\\\nIbe tx. xerc Fr-:***\nfive ves: nld iii't. Ma: ;i\n[jrnthr: testified. ' n\u00ab\n\u00bblern n:i the floor xh.lr.\n;rr Winter weather, he w\n:ri 'hr bai n !\" *;>ep w:'l\nan .'M.'\"::i m.ukinaw cn.at\nbedding\nToo Thorough . . .\nKINGSTON. O\"' . Julv ifl 'CP'\n- Garbag* cnllef'or* here *:* ton\nthnro\\igh A' leg't that'** ih\u00ab npii-\nion nf A:me Paquip. who's working it the hntr! Dieu Hospital\nr>rew*d in his Sunday best\nPbquIti changed b.is rl 'ties in lhe\nhonpiUI yard nrd lef! his \"gn-to-\nmr*Mitig\" p1 nl near \u25a0'iii- gnrbngr\nput In When hr returned. n|l w.ti\nfene \u25a0 inrliu'ing \\aluables Thr\\\nv-,,,-1    h*r'\u2022   h'-.'-.rd   in   'Jip   citv    in-\ncln\u00abraior\nFAX  Julv 18 'CPi  - Find- 'or \u00b0n^' a *h\u00b0rt time no attempt to\nh'* uride:i:a:nage of ? Naval  ^force   it   wonld   likely   be   m,He\na::uaft bv a fisherman  14  ,]nleiS the employees lodged  mm-\nm>^ from ihe sbjres of Clam Bay   plaints\n*\u2022(!   to   ihr   belief  tonight   that   the. j -~~\nid Uie ;lnne perished   White W.I1S CflT\nnpting     to     ditch     their\nIn Negro Contest\nChe Firefly, with Lieut. John L\nmmi of > lLilifax and Toronto at\n\u25a0 stn k, and\/Lieut. Robert M. Gal-\nith   of   Milton,   Ont.,  as  observer.,\nytsterday    while  U1 a <i'-awinR conducted by a negr\nLOUISVILLE. Kv. J\nCharles H. Wabnitz,\nJ today   was  awarded   ai\nly Ifl fAP)\nwhite man,\nautomobile\nlisappear-ad late\nMigaged in \"honu\nts bas\u00ab at nearb\ng\" exercises from\nEastern Passage\ncollege soront\nA committee officii said that next\nday when the papers carried the\nOTTAWA, July 18 (CP)-Can-, rePort of lhB N\u00b0'th Carolin\u00ab case,\nida't .xttrnal trade paued the she was besieged by requests to de-\nhilf billion dollar mark In May -lar\u00ab the white man ineligible but\nfor tn\u00ab first tlmt In i pwcetlme said she told everyone, \"we will\nmonth, totalling (611,500-000. ,*tirk by \"\"\nOn onlv one prevloui occasion,, Today as Wabnitz received the\nMay. 1944, had It reached a high-'new car, he laid he had given Ins\ner level at $529,900,000. Tho May! old \u00b0n* '\" the mnn whu M,I(1 ,lim\ntotal for thli year wae 192,500.000 the winning ticket, Lee Roy Smith,\nabove that for April and $14,- negro Janitor at the hospital where\nROO.0O0 ahead of May, 1946. IWabr.iU is a biochemist.\nJohn Zulchovikl of Fruitvale wai pinned underneath the overturned iteam ihovel ihown above\nfor three houn, July 7, Buffering extensive InJuHei\nand burns. The accident occurred at a bridge i'te\nat Mfftdowi, npa\nSalmo. di.\"ing mm*? conitri\nclion\nwork    hy   Great\nNorthern   Railway   workeri\nMr,\nZuichovik i   wan\nheld   iinf1rrnr.it1!   a   cylindr\nand\nconnecting   pipe\nHr    ><    it'll    in    Kootenay\n1 ike\nGeneral   Hoiota\nit   Nr'ic-T\n \t\n _^\u2014,\t\n . \u2014\n\u2014\t\n '\t\nw\n1 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 1?, 1947\nCiuie\nUST TIMES TODAY\nCompleta Shows 2:00\u20147i00\u20149:00\nRed Skelton\nThe Show Off\nwith Morilyn Maxwell\nStarts Monday\nErrol Flynn In\n\"Never Soy Die\"\nLocal Cricketers\nTo Tackle Trail\nRossland Sunday\nNelson's cricket Ulant will trsvsl\nlo Rossland Sunday to plsy the\nTrail-Rossland aggregation.\nLineup ol the locals are E. Bowkett, J. Corbin, R. Mulloy. T. Nutter, K. Adrock, R. Main, J. Chambers, W. Formby. 0. P. Roberts, J.\nDawson and A. N. Other.\nBoxing, Hiking,\nGames Keep\nCampers Busy\nLeafs Come Up With\nFirst Win at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C, July 18\u2014Nelson Kiwanls Maple Leafs turned in their\ntint lacrosse win on the Trsil floor\nthli season when they took the\nmaasure of tha Trail Bruins 18-13 ln\na game that produced very little\nexcitement until tha last period.\nIt was one of the cleanest West\nKootenay Lacrosse League games\nhere thil year Tha win put the\nLakesiders within one game of the\n.Trail Club. A win Saturday night\nfor the Leafs when they meet the\nSpokane Dynamos will put them in\na tie with the Trailites for third\nplace\nNelson were masters of thesltu\nDoug Griffin, LaPointe ?nd Wassick\nlead the Leafs to their first victory here.\nTrsil was obviously hampered by\ntha temporary loss of their raglar\ngoalie, Gib Meredith and the handicapped Sammartino, who was both\nered by hip injuries.\nLineups with goals snd assists in\nbrarkets follow:\nNelson\u2014V. Graves. Appeil, Jones,\nL. Choquette 1. Krizan, Griffin 4,\nCooper <4i, LaPointe 3 (1), Maglio,\nA. Choquette (1), T. Grsves 3, Wai-\nsick 3 (11. Mayo 4, Townsend\nTrail-D. Baril. Moon 2, Culer.\nSammartino 2, J. Bilesky 1  (4), A.\nKoolaree\nEchoes\nllm, Allan Little, Brian Marshall\nUndarwatar - Lyle KUlins. Teddy Smith, 'Tlgar\" Milburn.\nDiving \u2014 David Murray. Ron\nErickson, Brian Marshall.\nBoat race \u2014 Bruce Routley, B.\nStevens, Brian Marshall. Glen\nJones.\nVollay ball championship was\ndecided this afternoon when Cabin\n2 beat Cabin 1. Bobbie Daviea, Norman Hamson and David Murray\nstarred for the winners.\nLAST TIMES TODAY\nComplete Shows 2:00\u20147:00\u2014B:S6\nCHARLES LAUGHTON\nUld\nRANDOLPH SCOTT\nCaptain Kidd\nStarts Monday\n\"Th* Braiker Doubloon\"\nand\nTh\u00ab Bohtmlon Girl\"\n.tion   throughout.   Trail   outscored1 Bilesky,   Mailie   2    (1),   Prescott,\nthem in  one period only, by ona Groves,  Kendall   1   (1),  Taylor  4,\ngoal in the third, but Nelson held!Brure 1, Robertson (ll.\nthe substantial over-all lead.   *       I    Referees -  Max  DesBrisay and\nNelson  coach  Bud Cooper,  who George Bishop\ndonned a uniform Friday night in     The game between Spokane and\nthe absence of Kuhn who sustained* Rossland was cancelled Friday night\nan   injured   ankle   in   a   previous! because  of  Ro6sland's Inability  to\ngame,  together with Baldy Mayo.'field a team.\nCAMP KOOLAREE. B.C., July 18\n\u2014 The highlight of the day was the\naquatic meet under the supervision\nof Ralph Stinson. Winners, first,\nlecond and third, follows: Pow-Wow night at campfire saw\n,    ,       .   ,        _ \u201e    ,,     I many braves receiving paddles on\nJunior   dash - Bruce   Routley, lh   seal   , instruction; even Ernest\nWebster Laurie, Robert Hale. \u201e the \u201eCowb     Wonder, ,h,d\nSenior dash-Ernest Ford, Glen! a   hard   t)m(, \u25a0      \u201eci      th,\nmountain.\nLome Irwin's tribe were responsible for tht cabin stunt, which inrluded the following boys: Ernest\nFord, Kenneth Hawkins, Tony\nBanks, Jack Duncan, Robert Gates,\nTom Garnett, Larry Henderickson,\nEdgar Hobsnn, Wray Kent, George\nLind nnd Allan Marriott.\n(Contributed)\nCAMP LOURDES, July lft-The\nNelson and East Kooteniy boyi have\nbeen making the best of the perfect\nramping weather. With the sun\nshining bo steadily there Is never a\ndull moment at Lourdej.\nThe latest attraction at Lourdes\nhas been the addition of basketball\nhoops so the boys are busy sharpening their eyes to try to get the\nball through that little hoop. By\nthe end of the session there should\nbe some sharp-shooters, Judging by\nthe way the boys are taking to the\ngame.\nThis evening there waj twilight!\ntrolling for the benefit of the ardent\nfishermen. No doubt there will be\ngreat eulogies of 'the one that got\naway,'while the one that didn't get |    gome  jj m]rieJ Hrld  technicians\naway will be amply photographed. wl]I  arrlve  here  ^ WMi(end  in\nHikes   have   been   in   vogue.   C. Red   Crofl6   van|   to   operate   the\n473 Bike Licences\nSold Here to Date\nFigures releajed here Friday show\nthat 473 bicycle licences have been\nissued at City Hall to date. This is\nthought to be a considerable increase over last year's sales for the\nsame period.\nBlood Transfusion\nVans in Monday\nRelay: Cabin 1 \u2014 Bruce Routley\nB. Steveni, Brian Marshall, Glen\nJones.\nPish pan race \u2014 Lyle Killlna,\nRobert Hale, Glen Jones.\nBroom race \u2014 Allan Little, Bobbie Davies, John Longworth.\nJousting \u2014 Ernest Ford.\nPlunge for distance \u2014 Lyle Kil-\nii miiiiiiMiiiiiiiiniuiiiiiiiiiiii 111 imnui i iii mi iTiihiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 22o line, 27c line black face typa. laryer typa ratal on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nRotary Luncheon Monday, July 21, ATTENTION\n12:15 p.m, Hume Hotel. \u2022 I    B C. Provincial Government Em\nployees Association members. Picnic\nSklntite Bathing Suits at\nJACK BOYCE MEN'S WEAR\nRollers for any wringer in stork\nat Skilton's Beatty Service. Phone 91\nbus leaves Court House at 9 and 11\nAM. Sunday, Instead of 1:30 P.M.\nPlease phone Secretary Treasurer\nfor reservations.\nFresh Flowers fnr Remembrance\nfrom VALENTINE'S\nDelacherois took the Juniors to Sec- mod xransfuaion  Clinic Monday\nond Point where the boys enjoyed Neljonltes   who  prevlous!y   \u201egned Brai; '   has   been   discussed   s\ni game of vo ley-ball before they,,._  A.,n\u201ei  ,b.  blood  do*,or  cam- \"rta,ey   \"\u00a3s   \u00b0'en  Q-5cu5sra   *\u00b0\n.    I       \u201e,,-,                               \u25a0        lup  curing   uw  oiooa   uu iur   c-u. Wldely   as   Eisenhowers   successor\n1JLZ\\ ;-,,,\u00bb \u201e^.r to,. <_,__\u00ab* 'p,lgn* wlU ,ul.''.   ,h,\"r Pledee' byne\/t ytar that it hii almost beeni\niTtMil^S giving a pint of blood to the service. ^       , d ,mlte a(tmimstra.\nP J, Lnni Vrll,  wVthev     W\"h   'ranrs,fu,i0Jn  ttljiipmenl   set ,.\u201e\/\u25a0,\u201e   ,n ,\u201e\u201e evfnt he wouW,\nof Second Point they.\u201e\u201e  ,t  ,he CtnttAl.r L _._p y o( ^ ro,e ^ VeXftim M_,\ntrator. which for two years has\nWritten Into\nBradley Tour\nBy J.  M. ROBERTS, JR.\nAssociated Press Foreign Affairs\nAnalyst\nThe    announcement    that    Gen.\nOmar Bradley, General Eisenhower's heir-apparent as Chief of Staff,: ~~ '    \"\nis going on an  inspection  tour  to'    Tw<> choice building lots 3rd St\nEurope and the Mediterranean leads Fairview. Blackwood Agency,\ninescapably lo speculation as to how!\nserious  Ihe  United  States Govern-]     8PENCER  HEALTH  SUPPORTS1 JULY 20TH. STARTING TIME AT\nment   considers   the   military   situ-1 Mri. T,  A. Glbion,  110  Kerr  Apts. CIVIC   CENTRE   10   A.M.   READ\nYOUR      KIWANIAN\nPORTRAITS BY  McGREGOR\nPhom 224 for appointment\nELECTROHOME\nElectrlo Fans\nNo. 7865 x 8\" \u2014 $8.05 each\nNo. 61068x10\" \u2014$11.50 each\nAt\nWOOD  VALLANCE   HARDWARE\nCO. LTD.\nKIWANIS   PICNIC   AT   KASLO\n\u201e?_\u25a0\u25a0?\u25a0 rPA\u201eP\"l I?*.**1*'   ^JHli'MORNINOrVoR   FUULLE1InN\nSTRUCTIONS.\nIUNDLE, DAILY NEWS,\npar*\nenjoyed s swim\nup  at  the Canadian  Legion   Hal\nthe unit will hmdle registrant! from\n'    PHONE  1177  AND  1178\nFAIRWAY FOR FRESH MEATS\nNow  open.   NeLson   Shoe   Rcpa\n_--   -  .      \u201e..,.,     j              ,        lub ui;u  mu i,t.,u.B itjauii,,, ....... m i n i \u25a0; t \u25a0* n t o r   w 100 Sor two vears Has now    uyen.    ,,wn    ,-mue    ot\nhn\u2122V!'hiteta^skato\u2122 ZS3 t0 S \u00a3'0nr ,a,t\"n\"0n \"t V\u00b0 B'\"'P'   \u2122\u2122Teo,e\u00b0L ZZ  rom Shop. 323 Victoria and Stanley\nhoys for a hike to Saskatoon Batch,    t     lght    Notification   cardi   hava n,,*f,,.rv   ma,.er,    Considering   the \u2014 '\t\nwhere ifter a round of berry-pick-          *ut t0 lh, vo!un*\u00abrs, and up. \u2122' Kld\u2122*^ ^^\"'S' \u201e* LABOSSIERE    SHEET    ME\n'^X^nVwutto^nar^i0\" a7'Val \"WIS.1 \"^ '\"I mitbe'supefv^by the office of AND HEATING. PHONE 1293.\nThe East and west Kootenayriv   tramfusion   will  be  taken,  a   rest r*h,ef nf staff it k onlv natural that -\u2014\u2014*\t\nairy had a chinee. to air Itielf list wlod provlded, and refreshments ^ \"\u2122n cnntemnlitm^; th<\u2022 lobwould sPecial v'lu\" \" COLLINSON'S\n$25.00  REWARD\nTo the person bringing in alive\nRainbow Trout of ten pounds or\nover, the Nelson Rod and Gun Club\nwill pay $25 00 for the first two. Tor\nMETAL full particulars contact the Game\nn.pt. or Mr. J. Bailey at 950-R.\nfind your houn In th\u00ab \"Claiilfled\".\n____\t\nDRESS-COAT\nSUIT-BLOUSE SALE\n60 printed silk and cotton dresses, %^ QQ\nregular $3.95. Salt  JL.sO\n120 printed silk and cotton dresses, \u2666(\u25a0 QQ\nregular $8.00. Sale      JaVO\n100 printed silk and cotton dresses, $\"f QQ\nregular $10.00. Sale       I tAtO\n75 printed silk and cotton dresses, $Q  QQ\nregular $11.00 and $12.00. Sale   O\u00ab70\n1\/3 off all summer coats; ^AQ *^rt\n\u2022Regular up to     \"7i3w\n4 summer suits \u20141\/3 off;                  '7*C aOrt\nRegular up to    \/ J .\\J\\J\nCoat Sale\nl-J OFF ALL SUMMER COATS\nRegular up to $49.50\nSuit Sale\n4 SUMMER SUITS \u2014 1-3 OFF\nRegular up to $75.00\nBlouse Sale\nSpanish ityk cotton blouses, blue, pink and white.\nSizes 12 \\o JO. Reg. $2.98. $1   JQ\nNow  - -    1.37\nFink's Ready'toAVear\n\"l most *ay that the man we\netll modern, the man who li\n\u2022ware of the Immediate present,\nIj rather the man who stands\nupon i peak, or at the very of\nthe world, the ibyaa nf the futurt\nbefort him, above him the heav-\nmu, and below him th* whole of\nmankind with a history that disappear* ln primeval miatj. Tha\nmodem man\u2014or let 113 say again\ntht man of the Immediate- prei-\ntnt\u2014i\u00a7 rarely met with. Thert\nare few who live up to the nama\nJor they must be consciouj to a\n\u2022uperlatlvt degree. Since to ba\nwholly of the present means to\nbe fully eonicloui nf one'i exist-\ntnc\u00ab u a man, It require! the\nmoit Intensive and extensive\n\u2022onaclo'ineM, wUh a minimum\npi unoonidousness It m'jst be\n\u25a0Clearly understood that the mere\nfact of living in the present does\nnot make a man modern, for m\nthat ca^e everyone alive would\nbe so He alone is modern who\nIs fully coii\/ciouE of the present \"\nGooderham & worts\nLIMITED\nTaranto, Canada\nPenticton. Members ot Ihe Nelsnn Graduate\n;    Eugene Coddens  of  Fernle  was Nur8fs* Association will assist din-\nup against a tough customer, but he |c nu        and lhp Exrp:,.or club \u201e,\niy now bears rcspor...\u201e\nilies under the Truman doctrine far *-\u00ab<\u00ab make It a date Saturday nlte.\nbroader   than   any   heretofore   at-     _ ~~\nThai family dessert favorite- ICE\nany\ntached to hi:, post in peacetime\n...boxed George Trainor of Nel- \u201e,_ Plu,.s church wl\u201e \u201erv( ,\u201e ,p   \"^t docmnVin'^w'.''d\"eten\u00ab ^EML^ havc \"ny 'lavor J\n:MBoh  Carney   of Vancouver   won ^Vu^\u2122        ''\" ^  \"\"ZZ   M^M  C\u2122T\"-  'Mt*^MIt\t\nLtuo in me evening ,sm   \u00bb*orl(i-w:de   in   scope,   which\nv*  must be held militarily as well as\necor.nm:c,-,!!v   ard   politically\nthe derision over John Hudson from\nL'imbJy', ,.  \u201e a   t      \u201e k    mce-wide     tour     Tuesday     u*he\nRudolph Korevar and Joe Oobe Grjnd ym^ W[1] bf ^..^   Af,f.\naccident victims free of charge\n , ,\t\nBand Concert\nHere Monday\nof Kimberley fought to i draw.\nKiwanis Club\nPicnic Sunday\nThe keys to the City of kaslo\nhave been extended to Nelson Kiwanis Club, which on Sunday will\n'stage a picnic at the Cherry City\nMembers of the Club and the Kl-     Tr.,   first  Cl'y   Band   concert\nwarns   Maple  Leafs   lacrosse   team vfjr6 wl*.i j,. h'ojrd Monday rig\nand  their  families   wlll  enjoy  the m th, Vernon Stree* Bowl   Art:.*,\naffair, which will feature a variety [rom   Castlegar,  who   have   played  States C\nof picnic sports.  A  baseball game jointly with the Nelson aggregation\nbetween Kaslo and Burton ii sche- a number of times in recen' weeks\ndu'.ed for the same day ar.d mvita- Wi!l augment the Band. S J  Newel!\n\u2022ion to the game was extended the u,.*i  bf conductor 'rr 'he concert,\npicnickers. which begins a' 8 o'clock\nEach   family   ll   taking   its   own      pa!-d roncer!; in the Bowl were\npicnic   basket,   but   the   Club   will a  popular  Summer  (ea'ire   in  the\nserve free coffee, ice cream and pop, ypJr, i,ef01*e the Band discontinued\nclimaxing the day with an issue of p',_vir.g. and large throngs gathered\nho' do;s and  coffee  at 6 o'clock, k\\oot Vernon S'ree' to listen\nThe picnickers Wlll leave in cars      *pn,   pr(,sfni   Band   was   gathered\nand a chartered bus from the Civic together bv Mr   Newell and regular\nCen're a' 11 a m practices have beer, held v*\"h some\n15 to 13 musicians part   *pa* eg\nKoffee Kour.ter open from 7 a m\nto 7 pm. Lunches, salads, steaks\nsandwiches, etc. 614 Vernon St,\nHow far this necessity will go\nassorting processes, the blood  wi.l  t,\u201e,   yf,   kn\u201e.A.n    But   ,iready   lh,\nbe   distributed   to  hospital   centres Kniled States :*.as assumed responsi-     J1J8T     RECEIVED     2\nfor   transmission   to   patients   ar.d k.,;,^ ;\u201e, helprg to reo-ganize and PRINTED     LINOLEUM.\nsupply   two  Balkan  armies   which PRINT SHOP.\n\u2022 ,n rlcie to 1,000,000-130,000 which\n'he Greeks plan to Phcreaie to J*J0,-\nnofl and  something like 700.000  in\nT'i l-i* v  which,  through  better  organ. z.,'r :i   a*.d  equipment,  it  may\nbe 1 '-r-i.b'r \u2022\u25a0\u25a0- reducf.\nThf o'lluny needs of th\/ Chinese\nNa'i'nilists,   of   Canada   and    the\nAmerican    Republics,   of    all    the\nrour.'nes which may participate in\nlhe    hold the line'  program, have\necome *h.e b'ulness of the United\n* Staff.\nROLLS\nFINK'S\nSLOCAN  WOODCRAFT\nP.O.  DRAWER 20\nSLOCAN   CITY,  B.C,\nCabinets, chiffoniers, door screens,\ncedar   chests,   novelties   made    to\norder.\nIf i*s woodwork you want.consult\nIf its woodwork you want-\nConsult us.\nEnquiries promptly answered\nWANTED\n_   .    r,., ,        ,, ,    ' , ,     Nelson  Golden  Jubilee  Committee\n\u2022SUTHERLAND. Jeweller. -'\"rating   their  Golden   Wedding\nAnniversary this year. Also mfor-\nDANCE AT KASLO mation \" l0 tht o!d\"' livin8 r\u00ab]*\nEvery  Saturday   night   \u2022:'.]   frd   of dent of the City and the first person\nAuguit. Good music* Admission SOr   :*orn  >\" Nelson. Write T. C. Lam-\n   oert, Jubilee Office, Nelson, B.C.\nLadiei' Sindali, Clearing \u2014 $215\t\nCblldren'i piack Oxfordi 8.13-2.15      Special notice to parents of Cubs\nVandals Ruin (5\nTombstones\nAlTadanac\nTRML, B.C., July 18 - Police\nhere are investigating extensive\ndamage to 65 gravestones in the old\nTrail cemetery at Tadana*\", used\nprior to 1929 when the Mountain\nView Cemetery waa opened\nTermed by a City Coune:! as \"the\nmoit flagrant act of vandalism\" he\nhad ever heard of, the headstones\nwere uprooted, overturned and\nbroken. Most of the destruction ls\nbelieved to have beea perpetrated\nlait weekend.\nWhile Tadanac polkemtn tUted\nthat perhapi 23 of the gravMtonw\nwere torn up lut Fill, indication*\npoint to children having cauMd the\nrecent damage. Others are of the\nopinion that a child would not have\nthe strength to push thr slabl ovtr.\nPolice are now patrolling the area\nat regular intervals, and an Investigation is under way in an atttmpt\nto apprehend the culprits.\nKING KONG KELLER\nUNDERGOES OPERATION\nDETROIT, July 18 (AP)-Min-\nager Bucky Harris of tht Ntw York\nYankees, said today ht had been\ninformed by Club Preildent Larry\nMacPhail that Outfielder Charles\n(King Kong) Keller had been operated upon for the removal of a\ndisc from hii spine yesterday.\nHarris said the outfielder, who\nled the club In home runs when he\nwa_j sidelined on June 6, probably\nwould be lost to the club for the\nremainder of the year.\nTHE  BOOTERY\nProminent Victorian,\nFather of Nelson\nTeacher, Dies at 68\nFLOOR FINISHING\nHardwood   flooring   supplied,\nlaid a::d finished.\nA   El   RONMAHK - I'll  369-IJ\nVICTORIA, July IH 'CPi-Thom-\ns Rfaurhamp Tye. 68 native Vic-\nir.a.n ar.d prominent ,n :he city's\ncry.r.r, t m.d sporting\nears, \u25a0[\u25a0fd Th ;rsd;iy\nStenography,\nRea! Estate: Gret\nBlackwood Ag'\nLakeside Propert:\n\u25a0hen  Gib\n-.r;es.      De\nand Boy Scouts. Going to be unable\nfo secure leaders. Cub camp will\nnot be held this year but Scout\nCitrr.p will open August 10 under the\nleadership of Commissioner Ure,\nAll Scoqts are requested to register\nwith Mr*. Ure on or before Aug, 2\naphme. Wanted 25 d:\u00abk to go to Scout\n'\u25a0\u25a0 w;'h Camp on Saturday 19 to make re-\nan'1 pairs to camp. Meet at Scout Hall\nat 1 o'clock.\nBRIIIIIIIflSY\ntot\nASTHMA\nAND HAY FEVIft\n0\u00abW\/ CLIARIT\nONLY\n2 treatments of \"Clear-It\" dandruff\nremedy wlll clear your scalp of dandruff, Itch, Irritation and falling\nhair.\nTests havt shown whtrt 08% out\nof 100% otmaa treated havt proven\ntffeotlve, Increased tht circulation,\nImproved growth, restored life and\nnatural oil to the hair.\n\"Clearlt\" Is not in ordinary hair\ntonic but a scientific formula for\nremedying scalp conditions.\nQet a treatment from your barber\nor halrdreuer today, Takt eart of\nyour hair while you havt It\nOn sale at Every Drug or Cosmetic\nCounter,\nLook for tht Genuine Clearlt\nLabel.\nIMPORTANT NOTICE\nBLACKHEADS\nTURKEYS\nThis common disease In turkeys strikes suddenly.\nThe organism is earned by cecal worms. The feeding\nof PHENO THIAZINE nne day each week to poults\nof 4 weks or over at the rate of I % in the mash is\nhighly recommended as a control measure.\nWe therefore will carry PHENO THIAZINE for\nthis purpose to be added to\nTHRIVO TURKEY STARTER\nTHRIVO TURKEY GROWING MASH\nBrackman-Ker Milling Co. Ltd.\nNelson ond  Rossland\nC.P.R. Dispatcher\nReturns After\n4 Years at Revelstoke\nG F**B'er, who for the Ifl.*' four\nyfari has hern er-:rr'r-.er\\ as flts-\npa*-hrr a' Itr-.i-'i-fkr has rr-r.f.rr'.\nto N'eUni lo rpplacf C Y Cr*\"'\nformer dispatcher at Nelaon ar.d recently trrir.sferred tn Troc'er\nPrior tn be;r.i[ transferred to\nRevels'oke Mr Foster sax se*e\nvears aerv.ee w.th the C P H et N'r.*\n;on tte left tne Nelson off.-rs :r\n;04,*S to take tite portion of dispatcher a* Revels'oke\nPatterson Resigns\nWASHINGTON. July 18 'AH -\nRobert P Patterson re. ;\u25a0 rf -,\nday \u00bb.> United S'Vej Serrr* *\u25a0*.'\nWar and Presider' T-.-ran ttat\nVnder-Se-rretary Kenneth C It-\nai his s'icressor\nlit   f.\nand i\nOn\nPo*.;\nV   *\n\u00bb   S;\nF.\u201e,,\nf.  Me\nfe (or many Dane\"   free   on   thi\nthe family Saturdas*    Nile    Jul)\nHotel. R*ioit s and c\ni*ed in England prices reasonable\nvt  the  firm,\n-tardxare.   Com.- F'.oora   sanded,    rr\n' 1 the outbreak ro-intera  ard   -frs-  \u25a0\nWa-   He  went machinery  A   Fo'.r.er\n\u25a0   '.914-19H  war I\"\"hQn_ 4S2-L-4\n19\n:.s rt*\nMoi\nA i*.d\nCm;\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nii.il services for the late Mri\n.hire Murray will be hold\ntht Thompson Funeral Home\nav a*. 2 p m. The Rov. A 1,\n*,n*i of St. raul'j Unitod\nh will officiate a:id interment\nbe   in   the   Nelson   Memorial\npn'BO\nVu\nhe se*\nwnere\niC'.ed  a\nis*.\n*-e  ua.s an\n, r a:*d rrr\nj'anding poe-\nirketer and a crack\n,, tnemhar of the\n'irb: Cinn and  tne\nh.s  w.dow,  Lillian\n,   Thomas  and  Ro-\na and Derek, Nel-\nThe latisfartlon 1haf *; od work\ng.ves us wor*h manv times what vo*j\npav Trv COI 1 INSON'S ' : FX-\nPF.RT WATCH REPAIRS S81 Baker\nSt , Nr'..,* n\nNELSON CITY BAND\nF.rs*  C-iiei*\nMonday  8   P.M.\nVernon St   Mils;,* Bowl\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nNOW ON DISPLAY\nCm he\nit tats.\nNEW TRAILER\nd fur cartage or fo\nEn\n*< Nel*\nF ire-al le-v.oe\nMn*da*. mormns 1\na- Ross Bav Cen.e*,\nVic*\nhe   held\nThe Weather\n251 Dog Tags\nIssued Here\nDo,\nIn   stock   asa.:*'   Plaitira\nqnd   plas'ic   iii*.  le'.iin,   finis\n\u2022a axr.g and scrubbing adds life .\n; eai'.v.   mexpen.s.ve    In   pin*   ,\nT .nnt   t.ns    HIPPERSON'S\nOOLFERS  AND  FRIENDS\nMake   ;ip   a   par's    tor,,*;'i'\ndance   a*   the   Cl'ih   H\" ise   11-'\neach   Not  p iblic as  [*: r*. .** .. 1*.\nvertised\nUSED BICYCLE\nand\nUSED TOWER CHAIN SAW\nDefoe's Super Service\nl Bak\nPhon\nmm\n2<!\nI-\nis*\n\u25a0Ml\n\u25a0Hv\nli|ht   I,*'-\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight i'V^'oV'\nSynopiit\u2014Grand Fo-ki Stv't  tor\nhonori wher thi rr.ernry climbed :r\nto 9fl   Kamloops, Lyt'on  and  Ash-\nrroft rx-orded hifha of 88, 87 and 98   Provi MCC5 in\nSomewha'  lower tempera*\nb# experienced over ***.e n\n; rovmre   as   'he   Psc.f r   a\nFas'\\'*ard  hi' good \\i-.,-f\npee'ed 'o ron'ltvie *r,r * -I\n.n mos' areai\nForecasts\nKooUnay\u2014Clear be<*omi\ndinng afternoon   Winds\nes   t \u2022-,\n-e Ci*y hii\nis   rTnr'ed   Frida\nr*r,i   wi'h'.n    City\nted to p ,:chase the\nGet yur bridal s\ndretsea fn*m Ada R.<\nvour lovelies' on > *\u25a0 '.\nA,'ra'tiv\u00bb   n'.ertr.n\ni.Is   and\n\u2022.'.a-1 and\nWedding\nat   reai*\nprices\n327 Baker S*\nof 'e^Conflict at Inquiry\nUT* \\W \\    .'\u25a0,'\u25a0\u25a0   *fl   -CT'   \u2014 I\nDONT FORGET THOSE   BIRTH\nDAYS   FOR   THE   LITTLE   nNf,\nCHOOSE PHASING GIFTS FROM\nTHE     LARGE     SELECTION      OF\nTOYS  AT  GREENWOOD 8.\nThe\nKsmi\n,'Al.I.EKS. JJ PER M\n* d    Spi uce   at    new\n-    Chase     Reds    made\n,    r-rr.    pry    week,    good\n-;***: 'a'\/iii from t**pm-\no*p Write to or applv\nCompany   Ltd\nRC\n\u25a0AI E\nVr\n\"ha   and\nhaLenjtd  some\n'if time Wi'h one of t'*** se     j\nthe rrar.k i'*d     ;'  come*\nI'or.a   HIPPERSON'S\n:.* Gold\n'lepbone\nMil\ntao-R\n\"REEK   PARLOS\nNo stands 7 oh.\ni 3.V. 12 circular\n.     2 circular ***ps\nV* '\u25a0  **     111*\nFIRST CI,*\\SS\n,-arpa\nLtd\n'er    Ken-\nBox   300\nof Alberta tha*   RURAL   RESIDENTS   ATTENTION   nw \" s,|0\\AR(*Tf   \"HEATFR7\"T)ii-\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ. C. MUIR\nPhones:    Nelion 77; Rojilond 171; Trail 1001\nConnection! tor:\nSALMO   -   KASLO   -   CRESTON   _   NAKUSP\nk to. Cist\nSunday outlook rleir\nNelson\nVanrnuver\nCranbrook\nCresler.l  Vallev\nKaslo\nGrand   Forks\nMl fl\n17 On\n\u00bbJt ISS\nSI rS\nSI M\nmpar\na d\nf  tha  Canadian If you wish guaranteed w\/trk and\n;c*ire prompt service, aer.d yo*ir watch re-\nong   Ihe   provinces, pain to  REDGRAVE  TIME  SHOP,\nv   against   rata   in- TRAIL. B, C. Estimates given on re\nrt t*g   n their vieui quest. All work raturr.ed COD\nof   freight   ratu  on\nBASEBALL\nI'otute  I Ofl  p -n    .1 llv   \")*h\nNAKUSP   ALL STARS\nNe\n-,, pond nu\nSpotless\n302   R.*o on   St.\n4S ACRES   fl\nTAKE S MECCA\nON HOLIDAYS\nTWt Ut F'mhim, Wln-flmni- f^*** J'T.\nUom,.\"^ i\u00ab) Uteti r<\u00bb n-^a r*\"> wi.\n\".' irrt\/ w\u00bb3 in fxtrmion n(\nr*_#- - thl* drvtZ. ipH in lhf\nd'H ng ifg.nr*.! h-ir;ri|i nf\nht P\"-\u2022r'l ot Irinpor' CDmmii-\n,or.*sr\u00ab i\". *hn rt'# :nv\u00abit;|itjon\nG.H.JONG\n15 veors'_np\u00abrienct Herbs for\nlllretotud   Stomoch,   Goil\nRlirlHrt 0\"(i Prostott\nI J.inrl  Tmuhlfi\nI.M  in  .,t.,,t  East. Caijary\nFARM  FUR SALE\nn. its Horn    11 Hidings and  iri.ga-\n'io-   .1   Cukoff   Wrss.tl\nFOR SM !\u25a0'. \u25a0 1832 fioflGF SFPAN\nR \"res Citv Au'o Wreckers\nG-ani'e R *sd\n6S\u00a3 JtHiTToW T6H _XLt\nfrtih in Mav  Jack Ntchvolodnff.\nPais Craak. Cait>;ar, BC\nDots  vour tyjitw-ritar or  adding BWBfiOM   _A.ND \"ffRFAKrAST\nmifhir. naed rapliri' V., have the      ,\u201er ,( \u201e\u201e  s,r,t]emin   Ph   7B4-R.\n:::*Tz.v^*b''^'^ ^^m ^T^-m.\nP    W    McDerby    * The   Tvprwr 'et      '   A  '   '\"\"'''   y'*'nn* w(\n,-tS    fddirg   Mad* ne    s.:,.,      sin nFl'frtriM   FOR   KENf.   I'l'lONI\nWard Street  Nelson ,    1011 V, ,\nNIUON   FO I    SENIORS\nAdrr.iiaion US*- md 15c\n\u2022I-E-L-\nNow It's Here * \u2666 .\nPower Sawing\nat it's \"Best''\nThe BEAVER'\njQL\u00a3&.\nONE MAN\nPOWER SAW\nWCQHT\nONLY 3_  LBS.\nA b-^rn woodcutter \u2014  pm-V* mor? tn'\\ -r hv*:! \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 fnr [\u00bbi \u2022\u25a07$\nth.m   anv thing   in   t1>r   <.\u2022,\u25a0<\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*,-- t,i,*i   *   t :   r  \u25a0'!..' -d    ;*  '.rs,\ntf\"7t   y.s't   min*  ~iTt ;*\u25a0\u25a0   : :o'.'    vt  Z-.-.  i>i;,:,,   _\u25a0;;   c   :.*.\u2022.'.   '.   n\nwork     l'4 B.ll P.\n\u2122\u00a3 Model C\nm V I   1 a n u p\nr.ATMT AtWtlON TO THE IFF   FAMILY OF I'linpI'CTS\nFor Information and Demomtration, Set\nSINNERUD\nTruck & Tractor\n191 BAKER ST.\nrl-IONF. 1030\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u25a0\u2022^\u2022^......R\"\"\n\u2014\n\u2014\n1\ntEAL SET FOR\nGRANTING INDIA\nINDEPENDENCE\nMagnificent\nCeremony Marks\nEnd of British Rule\n[CHIEFS PRESENT\nLONDON, July 18 (Reutersl-\n\u2014The seal was set today on the\n(\u25a0ranting of full Independence to\n400,000,000 Indians and the end of\nnearly 200 years of British rule\nU.S. Foreign Relations\nAccept Seaway Project\nINDONESIA READY\nFOR PEACE IF\nDUTCH EAGER\nBy STANLEY 8WINTON\nBATAVIA, Java, July 18 (AP) -\nIndonesian Premier Amir Sjarifoe-\nIndla, as a Royal Commission gave'ddin said in a radio speech today\nthe King's assent to the Indian in-j the Republic was prepared to halt\ndependence Bill which establishes,all hostiliUes and un(r*endly action\non Aug. 15 the twin dominions of\nprovided the \"Dutch show an eag\nerness to reach a peaceful solution\ntoo.'*\nIndia and Pakistan.\nThe  ceremony   took   exactly   15\ni minutes.\nLed by the Lord Chancellor. Lordi Th<- sPee(:h. broadcast over all In-\nIjowitt, a small group of figures in donesian stations, offered also to lift\n\u25a0 magnificent red, gold and black! the food blockade against cities oc-\nIrobes, wigs and cocked hats made.cupied by the Dutch.\nI their way to the front of the House, it came at a moment when Dutch-\nI of Lords Chamber. The \"Black Rod,'* I Indonesian negotiations appeared to\nAdmiral Sir Geffrey Blake, dressed] have broken dow\u201e nver a prop()s0()\n'In black silk knee breeches and ail- cease.(ire nrdfl. and police powers\nMakes Certain Issue Will Go to\nSenate for Action Next Year\nWASHINGTON, July 18 (AP)\u2014The Senate Foreign Relations Committee today approved by a vote of 9 to 4 legislation\nauthorizing the vast St. Lawrence Seaway and Power project\nThe\nin a projected interim government.\nThe Dutch had predicted armed hostilities would start this weekend be-\nver buckled shoes, was dispatched\nto summon the Commoners.\nThree taps of his gold-tipped black\nstaff admitted him to the House of\nCommons Chamber, where he deliv-1\"1\u2122    Sjarlloeddin    had    rejected\nered  his message  to  the  Speaker, 'heir  demands.\nCol. Douglas Clifton Brown, |    Deputy Premier A. K. Gani and\n\"LE ROI LE VEUT\" ISctiadjit of the Indonesian Republic\nImmediately the Speaker '.leaded postponed their return from Bat-\n\u25a0 procession of Commoners to thc!av*a] the Dutch capital, to the Re-\nLords* Chamber, where the Royaj publican capital of Josuakarta while\nCommissioners, doffing their cocked bnth jdcJ anxiously awaited a dc.\nhats th\". times in accordance with{ h.\nancient tradition, road the Royal as-!      ,,     ., ..    ,     ,a        ,. . .\nsent. The vital words, \"Le Roi  Lc\" \u00bb* Netherlands would   ake up\nVeut\" (The King Wishes It), spoken,\u2122 to solve the latest stalemate.\nIn the Norman tongue, conferred on |\nIndia the freedom she will assume Stafford   Cripps,   President   of   thc\nAug. 15. j Bo;ird of Trade and member of last\nSome of the chief architects nf the year's Cabinet mission to India-\nplans for India's freedom\u2014among; were among those who stood at the\nthem Prime Minister Attlee and Sir'back of the Chamber.\ncommittee's declilon thui\nmakes certain that the long controversial Issue, Involving expenditure of an estimated $600,000,000\nwill go to the Senate next year for\naction.\nChairman Arthur Vandenberg\n(Rep.-Mich.) said the committee\nwill delay its formal report to the\nSenate until the first legislative\nweek of the next session opening\nin January.\nA minority report will be filed\nat the same time, he said.\nA minority report wlll be filed\nat the same time, he aald.\nVandenberg told reporters Wed\nnesday that there Is \"no chance'\nfor the Senate to act on the meit\nure during the present session.\nThe Legislation, which has been\nbefore Conrgeu In various forms\nsince 1933, provides that the tea\nway be made self-liquidating\nthrough imposition of tolls.\nThe House of Representatives\nPublic Works Committee continuing Its hearing on the saaway,\nheard several witnesses favorable\nto the project,\nBoarding Party\nAttacked by Jews\nTwo Persons Killed, Womon Found Dead\nOn Ship; Smoke Bombs, Tear Gas Used\nJERUSALEM, July l 8 (AP)\u2014Some 4500 angry Jewish im*\nmigrants aboard a refugee ship engaged a 50-man British\nboarding party in a fierce battle today, and a British officer\nat Haifa reported two persons were killed.\nBritish authorities said the refugees attacked the boarding\nparty with smoke bombs, steam jets and olher weapons, nnd\nthat both sides used tear gas \u2014\nn the affray. 'outside territorial waters, had com-\n. ,.     , ,   Imitted an \"act ol piracy.\"\nAn officer of the boarding party ,    A Jew|sh informant here said the\nsaid that three bodies were  found ,ext o( lhe broad(.ast wa4 transmit.\naboard, one of them that of a woman t d b   Haf,ana j,,wlfn underground\ndefence organization, to Emil Sar.d-\nwho died in childbirth during the\njourney. The other two, he said,\nwere killed when the boarding\nmarines resorted to gunfire to resist\nstrcem. Chairman of the United Nations   Special   Commission   now   in\nPalestine investigating the problem\ntear-gas and revolver attacks from    f ^turbed conditions in tne Holy\nPLUS   POWERFUL   PERFORMANCE\nGives you both QUALITY and VALUE\nll'l lht ntw 1947\nMADE IN CANADA\nYOU'LL ADMIRE this distinctive streamlined  Plastic\nCabinet. (Either Ivory or Mahogany finish).\nYOU'LL LIKE the wide, easy to rune, illuminated dial\nwith slide rule pointer.\nYOU'LL BE DELIGHTED with the wondrous depth of tone,\nafforded by the Bass Compensation and Beam-Power\nOutput features,\nADMIRAL RADIO-PHONOGRAPH (25 or 60 cycle)\n\/V\nOVER HALF AN,\nHOUR OF MUSIC\nWITHOUT\nINTERRUPTION\ntei\n^\nChangti   twtlvt\nMADE IN CANADA\n10\"\n\u2022 r   I\nin   12\"\nrM\u00bbrdi\nautomat\nnlly\nHoi   a   big   5-Inch\ndynamic iptaki\nwhl\nh  ax\nlurti\nnarvtliou\ntonal b\nnu'y\nwithout diltortion.\nJuit cloit your \u25a0\n..,\n\u2022rtd\nyou **\nill U.I ye\nu'ft littin\ng at\nlht conctrt. 3  tubal\n.  .  ptrmantnf\nn.\u00abd\n\u2022\n. turn\nig  lii'itii\nIn  front\nitand ord  broodcail\n!*'i'*l  .  ,  ,  gtnul\nit   w\n\u25a0Inwl\nvtntt\ncabin**)\nPow.rf.l\nRod\no Parformanct,\nAll ol ttioso outstanding features lo, ONLY *|*tV\u2014-\nSMITH ELECTRIC\n645 BAKER ST. PHONE 258\nthe passengers.\nFive British destroyers escorted\nLhe vessel, identified as a former\nUnited States ship, the President\nWarfield, and renamed by the immigrants Exodus, 1947, toward Haifa. There, the refugees will be transhipped to troopships for trarv-ifer\nto detention camps in Cyprus, the\npractice followed in previous captures of ships attempting to run the Haifa\nBritish blockade. He  appea]ed  to  the   United   Na-\nMany ships  have  sought  to  run  t!ons Special Commission in Pales-\n, the blockade in the past year seek- Une   tQ   meP,   thp   vessel   at   Hn.f.\ning to land on the Palestine Coast .*and SPr just how we are treated by\nJewish refugees, many of them frnm t^p British.\"\nCentral Europe, who lack immigra-\nLand. The commission is scheduled\nto leave for Lebanon Sunday.\nThe broadcaster, who read his\nannouncement in both English ar.d\nHebrew, indicated the hoarding party had been frustrated in its first\nattempts to board the refugee ship\nand  ended  by declaring:\n\"Our ship is leaking ar.d wr urgently need help in order to  reach\ntion papers. The Royal Navy attempts to intercept the vessels and\nremove the immigrants to detention\ncamps on Cyprus whence they are\nadmitted to Palestine legally under\nthe immigration quota of 1500 a\nmonth.\nMANY INJURED\nThe announcement said '.hree\nmembers of the boarding party\nwere injured.\nA broadcast, purported to have\nemanated from the Exodus, 1947\nclaimed earlier that one Jew was\nkilled and that 25 were wounded\nseverely.\nThe British announcement said:\n\"Small irmi fire wai uied by\none of Hli Mijeity'i ihlpi againit\none man who wai threatening to\ndecapitate one of the boarding\nparty with an axe, and agalnit another man who wai about to uie\ni rifle.\"\nBritish officials said the \"Exodus,\n1947, an 1814-ton ship identified m\nBaltimore as a former excursion\nvessel which saw service in the Normandy Invasion in 1944 and later as\na troopship, approached Palestine\noff Rafah. a short distance from the\nEgyptian border\nEVASIVE TACTICS\n\"She adopted evasive tactics\nwhich made it impossible [or d^s*\ntmyers to remain alongside for\nmore than a brief period,\" tlie announcement said. \"These tactics also resulted in damage to H.s Majea-\nships\nThe broadcast said British authorities first tried to board the vessel at 2 a m , \"but we managed to\ntake them prisoner\"\n\"Again at dawn,\" it continued,\n\"They tried to board us and there\nwas fierce fighting, uith the British\nattackers using guns and tear gas.\nThe broadcaster said the ship had\nbeen shadowed all the way across\nthe Mediterranean from Marseille\nand added:\n\"We are now surrounded hy five\ndestroyers.\"\nBROADCASTS CEASED\nBroadcasts from the j-hip ceased\nabout mid-morning, inriicat:::g tha*\nthe boarding party had taken over\nat aDout that time.\nRepeals Stand\nAgainst Selling\nGold Above $35\nOTTAWA,   July   IB   <CTi Fi\nnance Minister Abhott reiterated in\nthe Commons yesterday the Government's stand against allowing Canadian mines to sei; - dd in the open\nmarket ht more than $35 an ounce\nThe Minister did rv.'. r .mm:', himself definitely on what act,\u25a0\"\u25a0r.. if any,\nhe would take regarding thr recent\npropoul uf the Anipnnn Smelting &\nRefining   Company   to   export   g< '\nThis damage was caused when 'he  from Canadian concert\natei .\nrefugee ship released life-saving\nrafts which fell on the upper decks\nof the destroyers.\nIn the Jewish broadcast purported\nto have emanated from the ship, ttie\nship's captain was quoted a.s saying\nthat Ihr resistance continued for\nthree houis. persisting, he asserted,\neven after thp hoarding party was\naboard because of reserve steering\nwheel which h.'d hern, built belou\ndecks\n\u25a0\u2022ACT OF PIRACY\"\nThe   broadcast   claimed   that   Ihe\nRoyal   Navy,   m   boarding   the  ship\nNOW\t\nHAVE YOUR\nOld Mattress\nMADE LIKE NEV\/ OR\nSPRING FILLED\nPILLOWS RENOVATED\nCRIB MATTRESSES MADE TO ORDER\nNelson Bedding Co.\n301  Baker St.\nPhnno  UH\nHOME STUDY\nBRING 5  BIGGER   PAY\nthan parity price;\nThe Government has all along\npermitted crtam gold mines in British Columbia whose ore cor.Urns\narsenic and required -special treatment which :i not (-uivemer.tlv\navailable in Canada. ' * ship their\nconcentrates to :he American company All other g >ld produced in\nCanada must he sold to tlie mmt\nWhile the United States insists\nHi at all gold produced there must\nhe yZ.d ti the f' S Treasury at parity price*, :' does all iw g'-ld frnm\nconcentrates imported for refining\npurposes lo be re-exported\nTiie Refining Cnrnpany hu offered t'i sell this g dd m Ihe open market at whatever pren:ium it r*Mild\nobtain an 1 g vr the Canad. m firms\nMl per cent \"f 'lie prem.um \u25a0\u25a0h'.nv.ed\nvan op mer.'    \u00bb\" i    m. **t    m\"r**v    :-'.\nTaming r \u25a0:*.   t >:   'h\u00bb j *\"> ahead\nHighei     A cioii'.h . v C   C,    A\nCiacbug       Fxper!  a^nkke^prng\nSalesm.arsh'P Caw Tr.iff;.\nMar.igrmcut Indus!: lal   M mage\nmen' IVi-uuess    M.ii ..,;.'ir.-\u25a0\nr.remar so,;.        Public Speakmg\nMacho e  Shorthand\nLA SALLE\nLrt-m'on   Unlvtnlty   'CM-ijm\nA  r*ir:rt|'V'dnri**  lrj'ilu'inn\nnr oftvi.  n\u00ab> w  nmai.v.iv,\nY.v*.   ,,-ivei\n1*1* ,* ,  I     II   III 'WIN   -i{:\nII ;\u25a0\u25a0*,   I* --,      I ,.   Ahi.i. : *-r*\nV **      I i'~   \u2022\u25a0** I Vet     -\nTRUMAN SAYS\nTAX BILL STILL\nWRONG KIND\nWASHINCTON   Julv   ;fi   -APi\nden:     Tr in,an\n-_-_--------_______--____-_____\n-%-Ue\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, SATURDAY, JULY 19,1947 \u2014 3\nAT THE \"BAY\"\nLadies' Wear\nCLEARANCE OF DRESSES\nLadies' summer dresses in crepes and   $\ncottons. Reg. $19.95 to $16.95. Each\nSLACKS\nLadies'convoy cloth slacks in navy and    $*^   T\"T\nbrown. Sizes 14 to 20. Reg. 3.59. Pair JL. I  I\nBOYS' SUITS\nBoys' wash suits in hard wearing cotton\nand washable. Sizes 1 to 3. Pair\nJEANS\nJive Jeans for the younger set. Navy\nand brown, sizes 14 to 18. Pair\nNYLON HOSE\n45 gauge nylon substandard hoscry. Latest $1  IT\nsummer shade. Pair I \u2022 I J\n10.95\n59'\n*2.95\nMen's-Boys' Wear\nMr.N'S BEACH SUITS\nShirt and shorts to match, tailored from a finely\nwoven rayon Sizes, small, niediuniiand\nlarge. Reg. $11.95. Clearing\nMEN'S INNER AND OUTER SUITS\nTailored frnm a light weight butcher cloth in pastel\nsummer shades. Sizes, small, medium, large and\nextra large. Reg, $12.75. $\u00ab\nClearing\nMEN'S SWIM TRUNKS\nTailored from a finely w ven r*\"nn gabardine with\nclastic  and  diaw  -.Inn*:   wart  .ir.d   moimy   pocket.\nColors of white, tan and gold, size.*., sit.;*'!, medium\nand large. Reg. $195.\nClearing\n$7.50\nh in pastel\nlarge   and\n'7.95\nMine with\n'\".*   pocket.\n*\\. medium\n(3.95\nMEN'S AND YOUTHS' SHORTS\nMens' are made of a light weight cotton gabardine.\nBoys' made of washable khaki with elastic in back.\nMens, sizes 32 to 36, boys 16 to 18 years. $| *_\\|~\nReg. $2.79. Clearing \\t7j\nBOYS' SWIM TRUNKS\nLight weight, elastic waist, rayon insert at sides.\nSizes, small, medium and large. Reg. $1.59. QQt\nClearing       ?Q\nStaples\nCannon towels; white, colored borders.     $1  |Q\nSize 22 x 44. Reg. $1.49. Each      1*1 7\nTurkish towels, all white. Size 20 x 40. ftQl\nReg. $1.19. Each   \/O\nBleached sheets, \"seconds.\" High qual-    $\/t Q|T\nity, 81 x 100. Pair    0\u00bb7\u00ab)\nPrinted lunch cloths, size 54 x 72. Reg. %*~% QQ\n$4,50. Each Z-.l\/O\nFolding camp cots. Folds into a small       $J  QQ\nbundle. Each     Ji\/O\nLawn or porch chairs, striped awning     $A   Crt\nseats and backs. Each    \u2122\u00bb^w\nCot mattresses, size 30\" x 72\". |Q QF\nEach     O.yj\nFoldaway cots, complete with $1\/1   QC\nmattress. Each    \\*t.A*J\nFeather sleeping bags. MO QC\nSpecial       \\.FtfJ\n16 inch lawn mowers, 3 only. Reg.      %\\ f\\   QC\n$17.95. Each          \\^t7J\nAddison 5 tube radios. ^^Q QC\nSpecial value  \u25a0\u2022\/\u2022\/J\nElectric fans, 8\" size. $Q QC\nEach    ytyj\nPHONES\nHosier,*.\niBniWttslflutdmpain!\nINCORPORATED    7\u2014   MA.Y   1870.\nSTORE HOURS\nWednesday: 9 am-12 noon.\nMon.-Tues.-1'hurs.-Frl.:\n9 a.m.-5 p.m,\nSaturday: 9 a.m.-9 p.m.\nTWO HELD\nFOR DEATH\nOF STOWAWAY\n\"Not Murder\"\nSay Investigators,\nFantastic Tale\nMONTREAL. July i\u00ab 'CP' -\nB-rmrd Mountain, 30, of Sunt\nJohn and Halifax, a chief itewird,\ninti Eaward Wilih, 24, nf Saint\nJohn, N. B., hii aulitant, today\nwen held criminally retponnhle\nby Quebec Provincial Police for\nthe death o' a ilowaway aboard\nthe Canadian cargo venel, Ma\nna G.\nDiscli-iurp the p 'lire were h *Mir.jj\nIhr two ?eamrr' .r. a charge ' '. mar.-\n.laughte: was tv.Adr bv Tlrp-ity [\u00bb;\u25a0\nrectir Hilairr ReHi.re'.ird it thr\nQii^ber Provincial I1 *i:r*\u00bb at a ;irr--.'-\ninference.\nTuo nf Beatiregard'j officers whe\nrnnducted the irivestigdtnn mto t;i\u00bb\ndeath nf '.he stow r.~.~iy. startirg w.th\nqueitrr.irg \u25a0t '.h* .<h:p> crew sfter\nshe arrived here last Saturday, attended  the <   r.ference\n\"It wa.i r.*it m irder,\" na:d Be .regard tti hn irveiti^a'nrv drtec'ive\nI^nn Pr^nnvnit and R '..ir:d A'ib'i-\nrhnn. (*ond by\n\"What we thought was blind t'i n-\ned out ti be pa'.r.t after inves' .%\u25a0*\u25a0\nho n \"\n\"J:i\u00abt hfcii.yr they fcned a !:tar>\nr-'iif.rrmrr.t f**r bringirg th\u00ab s'**'.v-\njwdv ah'iirh thrv lr; Ii.ir:v d;e,'\nsaid thr Hep ity P dn r P rr t. :,\nhr unfnldrd a fantast.r tale wh sr\nfust    rhipte-    wm    w:  \"ry.    ->-i    the\nllllllltlllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIi\nFlaming Gasoline\nBombs Hurled at\nJerusalem Police Car\nJERUSALEM. July 18 fAPl.-\nTwo flaming gaioline bomb_ were\nhurled today at a police armored\ncar. Ktt-rng off a general alarm,\nPolice laid two men in white\n\u2022 hirti threw the miuile* at the\ncar ai it drew abr.ait of the Imperial Cafe at King George Ave.\nAu*horltiei taid there were no\ncasualties\nThe area wai cordoned  off  and\nbuildingi were  learched.\nLf it than two houn before\nalarm ilreni iound ed throughout\nthe city\u2014uiually the ilgnal of an\nattack by the Jewiih underground,\nHowever, the all clear ngnal\nlounded .* half hour later. Unofficial reporti Mid a ham* grenade\nwai thrown at a gate of the Britiih  Security  Zone,  injuring a 10I-\nPARAGUAYAN\nGOV'T CAPTURES\nCONCEPCION\nRebel Leader,\nMembers of Staff\nTaken Prisoners\nWARNEARSEND\nIBEGAN MARCH 7\nI Thp revolt bfgan March 7 when\nj Communists and Kebreristas (followers of Franco, a former Paraguayan\n'President) tried to over-throw the\n! Government ot President Higinio\nj Morinigo,\nThe rebeb then seized Concepcion,\n| 150 miles North of Asuncion, which\n\u25a0they have occupied as a stronghold\nl for the last four mon tlu.\nI At one time rebel forces held 10,-\n: 000 square milfs nf country\u2014about\nlone-eighth of the total area of Paraguay.\ntl   fr\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiumiiiiMiiin\nmt\nSh.\n\u201erd\nwhere the s' \"\u25a0* i*.i .r.   j\nveuel\nDID'T  KNOW\nHe rnuld nn! have V.r. **.-. i then\nlhat he would sail in thr util.tv Inciter of the Canadian ship, nr that tern-\nperaturei ther-p went far nver irwi\ndegrees, :.*': that hos d<*ro*v,\\?\\te<t\nbody wnuld be fn.jtid in thr lnrker\nApr!! 21 and h*r hurUd n' t\u00bb*\nThe p,,;* <* I)rP*i-v iv;r,-t ,: H->yKr\n.'     'Vr     In!      i'<\u00ab\u00bb*.uv      .*\u2022\u2022':      *s\n\\t>\nIn\nc   H\nretu\nr\n(' ir^:rsi   a   sero*: 1   \\-e!n  nf   'hr   Rr*\npuoliran-lvi.-k-M   St. \u00bbon ivm.onn   tax\nmtUr.tt h.V, u.:n !i*r \u00abwrr'! >n tha'\n' H <.: ill 'Z.:r ' '.<, roi'i; ki: d nf '.ax re-\ndiir'w.n\"  a'   'he  -wrnT-a   !;n:r\nIlfi'.v nf !lr;':r;r:*','\\*r, Irarfrtl\nI'laiT.ed an m^vdia'e vote and rnn-\nfide*'.'lv fi'iecat* thf nrrejuar v Iwo-\nthuds ir.ajn;!''.   'c nver-nde the ve-\nBi' RepiMirani ( .;.\u00abt 1 \"le\nhnpe nf nlitaming an over-riding\nma)n; ity   in   '.::<\u2022  Senate\nIhe  ]t*.*i*r  wl .i h  o^i.r.A'td   lhi\u00ab  if\n,.,.\u201e   --v.'nr Ji*     ;    rhr   ' rtl   h.'l\nI., r',*r*' l;i' \u25a0\u25a0* r \u2022 \u25a0 i h 'if* \u2022\u2022r\\'\ne\\re,y  'hi'  ;'   i  *)'.**,   :*.*\u2022   *<  'i'ntr.   *t-\nifttir.g   \u25a0 it f-:  H *\u2022*,<\u25a0*',*;] i. t:-*i. Saml\nJ^hn, N   H, la^t Jan*iarv\nMmmUin and Wa'.jh were arra'gn-\np ! hefvr .!\u25a0; (ue Gerald Al'T, nd ar.d\nrharged with maiLilaughtT and pre\nbhmu-arv pn \u2022 nrv was -p' ' \u25a0; .T-ilv ?4\nfert   la.vt   ,! :'v\nSin.e \"*^i *,e'i<, 'he ]\u25a0\u2022 no.dfid taid\nThere hat :wp:. i i Vnwnr.g nf '.he\n;e-ed ' ' make  luhitantial paymen.t*!\nvibltr  drh'\nWhen the tim* r^mn tn >t_*#- th\n\u25a0-.\u00ab artime tax burden, it should h\u00bb r*\ndured \"nn a h\u00bb-\\n tha! in fair !i low\nnimme gruup* a\u00bb well m 'o high in\nron:r  g'nupt \"\nThe Rrp'ih'i .ir Mill trima taxr\nf-nm 10 per cf*.' - the 1 *rx\\ 'ax\n,},U   mmtrei   'o   |fl'.   t>e;   oe* '    -    ;\u2022\n... rt ,, ... ,.r ... ... *t;n; non B-**   -,}\nAttack Sugar\nControl Policy\nOTTAWA, July  18  (CP^ -  Op\npoiltion   attarki   on   lugar   control\nwere   launched   In   the   Commoni\nlait   night   ai   Pricei   Board   Mti-\nmatei came up for coniideratlon In\nthe late houn of the leulon.\nW     Chestpr     S      McLurr     iPC-\nQueen.\" fi-x.d s i,;ar mntrol nfficiab\nwrre i.'inc their  heads f**r nothing\nr. it   ' h;\u00bbt: irks\"   while   J -hn   Bin  k-\n:v.-:r   iSC-I.rthhndgei   kit ised   thr\nmntn llet   nf ' sah >'*iging\"  the   h<-el\n%\\iia: industry\nMr Mr I ure baaed his charge on re-\n'\u25a0_sV, of the Sugar Controller, fnr ' no\nlegitimate reason,\" t*> grant a sugar\nullntment to a Charhittetown cranberry dealer f ir pr: reusing\nFinanre Minuter Abbot! promised\nto '.tiok in'.i thp matter and s_ld ttiat\n\"justice\" would   he d -ne\nMr niarkrr.nre said (Jnverrment\nhert n-yi \\~  lu-v in 'hr hi*; in vr,,:s\n>#.  ,,.*,( -  \u2022 , iir ,ir-,.*rd    As the  lejuV\nf \u2022\u25a0* -, p  !*r-*, Huri-,1  ''\"p  veil   hee\u00bb\n? ij \\. ji \u25a0 ... --, .'f--'\\*: \u25a0\u25a0 i* \u2022\u25a0*\u2022'\nwea'*!' The n-.iideed?. *-f ''\u25a0**\u2022 ('\u2022 \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0\nPf'-me\"' w\u00bbre ' rr.ort 'hf. *\u2022\u2022: ;n*;*. \"\n.T.-hn Oiefei hiker 'PC 1 *>kp Ctr,*\n're> Asked if the C.overnmen' ir\niended tn jeek an If.rrease in sugai\nbeet pMdurtmn\nMr Ahh !! sa 1 thp Canadian rate\nnf .*; ;gar bee! pr 'dutrmn last vmr\nrxrrrded Iba! nf any other r-turlry\nn r mparisnii w,!h the pre-war rate\nS'lg^r storks n m* were above th->sr\nat tl*.:* time lajit year but they were\nnot above rnrira!\na., i, Kt ama. \u2022\u00ab.\n\u2022    -mn \u00abi naud.\n11,_   -IIIMH. turn. H\nfitt\/tfru \"0MfteM\nIf lltut tl TABLtTt\nRIO DE JANEIRO, July 18 \u2014\ni Reuten) \u2014 Paraguayan Government troopi have captured Concepcion, Insurgent headquarter!,\nand captured Gen. Rafael Franco,\nthe rebel leader, a Paraguayan\nGovernment communique, quoted\nby the Brazilian Newi Agency, announced today.\nMembers nf Genera! Francn's staff\nwere aLvi taken prisoner, the communique said.\nThe agency dispatch added:\n\"After four months the civil war\n;n Paraguay is drawing to a close.\"\nCheck Regulationi\nOf Nurses' Home\nTORONTO, July 18 (CP) -\nOntario Health Minister Kelley announced Way i probe by provincial authorities Into the regulations of the nurses' residence \u00abt\nLady Minto Hospital in Coch\u00abne,\nwhere Valair Vandeblet, slain Toronto   nurse,   was   Interned.\nYesterday at the Inquest Into\nthe 22-year-old brunette's death,\ncrown council denounced the apparent \"lark of control\" and\n\"slackness* in the hospital regulations.\nD,i.. THUNDERBOLT 1,1 \u2022 I ipitt, llqkt Ul. md kml, II iplit. dnwnoi)\n,1 Un end \u25a0 cold '..,*.'' 1 .1 poti lialfi ll i, ibiolut.ly\nul* .--I Hill I.II . lifttim,   S*litl*cllon ^uvinltfd.   For lu.thtr iolo,m.lio*i\nHENRY C. COLEMAN\nW* TAPk* RR:!!'.!! COHIMRIA\n \t\n.\n\t\n ,\t\n4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS\/SATURDAY, JULY 19,1947\nSlide Toward\nSeparate\nGerman Slates\nBy J. M. ROBERTS, JR.\nAP Foreign Affiln Analyit\nHlKh United States officials still\nre   unwilling   to  accept   the   idea\n,hat Germany must be divided permanently,  hut latest statements of\npolicy   indicate   clearly   that   the\ntrend is in thai direction.\nThe new directive lo Gen. Clay,\nand   the  administration  statements\non the, relationship of Germany to\nthe Western Europein reconstruction program are not primarily new\npolicy, but more In the nature of\ncodification and formalization of\npiecemeal revisions taking place\nfor two yeara.\nUnited States itlll hopei Ruaala\nwill join in unification of Germany.\nBut pending or lacking that, the\nfull strength of Industry in the\nAnglo-American zone Is to be\nthrown Into reduction of occupation\ncosts and Into Europein rehabilitation generally. Detail! remain to be\nworked out *Mth Britain, but ahe\nls assumed to be In general accord.\nNO  ARMS  REVIVAL\nThc U.S. intends to restore the\neconomy of Western Germany so\nauppjies it formerly received from\nareai now occupied by Russia and\nPoland. Increaaed Ruhr coal pro\nduction la expected to provide tne\nbasts for this recomtruction, aa well\naa contribute heavily to the needi\nof all Western Europe.\nThere will be aafeguardi against\nGerman military revival, but in\nother wayi the Anglo-American\nzone la bound to take on many of\nthe fundamental aspects of a separate state. .\nThere will be a big drop ln hopes\nfor unification It there la no change\nIn Ruasla's attitude when the for\neign ministers again take up the\nGerman peace treaty in November\nTalk of a separate peace with Western Germany and the studied development in that area of a buffer\nbetween East and West would be\nnatural consequences.\nNELSON\nINVITES YOU\nTO ITS\nAUGUST 3 TO 9. 1947\nTHE GREATEST WEEK OF ENTERTAINMENT EVER\nPROVIDED IN THE INTERIOR OF B.C.\nFeaturing on MONDAY, WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS at 8:30 P.M.\nQueen City Cavalcade\nAn Historical Pageant depicting the hiitory of\nNelton and Kootenay lince the dayi of the early\nlettlert to the present time. CAST OF 2S0.\nPRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY GORDON HILKER AND LESLIE ALLEN\nof Hllker Attractions, Vancouver, B.C.\nCaledonian Games\nPIPING AND DANCING \u2014 TUESDAY, AUG. 5th\nTHRILLS \u2014SPILLS\nAND EXCITEMENT\nat tht\nMIDGET  (I\nAuto Races\nWith  orer   15   can   entered   from\nSpokane, Seattle and Portland.\nRECREATION GROUNDS \u2014 WEDNESDAY, AUG. 6th\nSPORTS OF YESTERDAY AT THE\nOld Timers Sports Day\nTHURSDAY, AUG. 7th\nROCK DRILLING \u2014 LOG SAWING \u2014 HOSE REEL RACES\nBANNOCK BAKING \u2014 MUCKING ,ETC.\nSIX\nBOUTS\nBOXING BOUTS\nFeaturing   In   the   main   event\nTIGER JACK LEO \"THE LION)\nFOX vs TURNER\nof   Spokane of   Portland\nCIVIC CENTRE ARENA \u2014 THURSDAY ,AUG. 7th\nAquatic Sports\nFRIDAY, AUG. 8th\nLAKESIDE PARK\nDIVING \u2014 SWIMMING \u2014 SPEEDBOAT RACES\nSaturday Night, Aug. 9\nGigantic\nFireworks\nDisplay\nHundred, nf Rockrti. Set Plec\n\u25a0\u00bb t c , lurh ni hj(i ntvtr hrrn i h o\nIn   the   Interior  of   B.C.   before.\nBaseball\nTournament\nSaturday, Aug. 9th\nCompeting  Teimi\nTRAIL \u2014SPOKANE\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 NELSON\nDANCES-DANCES-DANCES\nMONDAY \u2014 TUESDAY \u2014 WEDNESDAY \u2014 FRIDAY \u2014 SATURDAY\nFEATURING, TUESDAY NIGHT, AUG. 5th\nH^ J    fklSftlifilc      AND HIS FAMOUS RECORDING\nI%tSU    r^lCIlOIa ORCHESTRA DIRECT FROM\n\u2014 CLUB MOROCCO IN HOLLYWOOD \u2014\nOnt rf the gr\u00ab\u25a0 ^tr*t name bandi In North America. A rare treat for muiic loveri of all agee.\nHUNDREDS AND HUNDREDS OF OTHER EVENTS\nOPENING WITH A MONSTER PARADE MONDAY, AUG. 4th, AT 1:30 P.M.\n\"^CfWrPil'S \u00ab'-\u2022\u25a0    .   -   **    '\nBARCLAY ON BRIDGE\nly SrHipwrtl  Barclay\nW DO IT\nNOBODY LIMBS te hare his\nguarded honors la such a position\nthat the declarer If able to lead\nthrough them (rem tht dummy.\nNaturally the declarer might like\nto do that a number ef times tt\ntnt can. B\u00bbt If you are the defender, you certainly don't want\nto help him with hia pten. To\nthwart It, you ahould ntrire as\nhast yoa can to force the lead\nInto hii hand, so he wlfl have to\nlead-to yoa, aat through yeu.\n4 8 t\n*J\u00bb1\n>J8\u00ab!\n\u2022+ A K Q K)\n4\u00bb\nf A  K\nMi\n\u2666 \u25a0T*i\nA\\ 8 7LW4***\nN\nW I\nS\n+ k ttm\nt\u00ab18\n\u2666 KQ48\n*J\u00bb\n\u2666 A\u00bbM>W\n?\u00bb*7\n4 AIM\n.\u2666\u2022> \u201e_\n9u*tet*-.  eeaee.  ^MHartPaHn\nSouth      Watt     [forth        la-t.\n\u25a0 \u2666 \u25a0**        \u00bb\u2666 ;,\u00bb\u2666\n84        Fat      i^     )rT)N\nNortt ceito__7 showed ptonty\nof s-mMenee In his partner's\nptaaung ability, or la hat oppo-\nnesaa* teek Of It, or ho*, by\nraisinsr Mm spades to game with\nonly that, doafeleton. Bat the or-\nsuing Croats proved Mm\nJu_t_M.\n\u25a0aowen n__ed Ibe thM\nlea*, ted to the ctob A and\nbaaa^rt back thc spade 8 tor a\nfinesse of the J. When that teHed\nthe 10, ke decided to count Halt\nfor all tha other trunrfw. He went\nto dummy with the club K and\nled the Q, giving Eaat Ma Unit\nchance for an error. Instead of\nruffing thia snd getting himself\nover-ruiTed^East discarded a diamond. Then the apade 6 was led,\nwhereupon Bttt made his aecond\nerror, playing the 5 Instead of tho\n9, whereupon South put on the 8\nta leave the lead In dummy.\nWhen the club 10 was led, East\ndecided he should prevent another\ndiamond discard, so ruffed wtth\nUw spade 8\u2014too lttt uat of that\ncart to da aay good. South over-\nruffed with the Q. killed the aptdi\nK with the A. took In the diamond A and gave up a diamond\nto make hit contract right on tht\nhead.\nNoHea wtat wmH hare htp-\nned If Bttt had ruffed the third\nch* tead, forcing declarer, to\nover-ruff and then play from hit\n, own hand. Also note what would\nhava occurred If East had covered the spade 8 on the next trick\nwtth the 6, making declarer coma\nup with a high one and leaving\nthe K guarded. Either of those\nplays would havt obliged South\nto lose one trick aach In spades\naad dtamonda, even If he played\nperfectly himself. JO\nIt a trump Is lod and the ite-\ndam holds tke K-Q-4-2 In dummy opposite his own A-&-8-5, under what circumstances should\nhe take that In the dummy Instead of letting tt.rtm to Ml oa*\nhand?\nThe Doctor\nBy HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D.\nPenicillin More Advisable for\nUse in Upper Respiratory Ills\nWhen you speak of a cold or sore\nthroat you mean exactly the same\ntiling that doctors do when they refer knowingly to upper respiratory\ninfection.\nThese days the sulfonamide drugs\nare often used to treat such conditions. In the opinion of Drs. Elijah\nE. Menefee, Jr., and Robert J. Atwell of Duke University, however,\npenicillin is much more advisable in\nmany cases because so many people\nbecome sensitive to the sulfonamide\ndrugs.\nPENICILLIN APPLIED LOCALLY\nFor treatment of upper respiratory infections they think the penicillin should not be taken by mouth\nor given by injection, but rather applied locally to the nose and throat.\nIn colds the nose and throat were\nsprayed three or four times each\nday for three days. Sixty-six patients were treated. It was often\nfound advisable to ijse some solution in the nose such as ephedrine\nto shrink the nasal membranes before spraying the penicillin. It was\nfound that this treatment was not\nof much value in overcoming the\n(symptoms of a cold but apparently\ndid aid in preventing complications\nsuch as sinus infection.\nSORE THROAT PATIENTS\nFifty-one patients with sore throat\nwere treated with penicillin by\nspraying every three hours. The patients had such symptoms as redness\nof the throat, and illght fcver, although none of them seemed very\nill. Twenty-nine of the patienti reported marked improvement in their\ncondition within 12 to 24 hours after\nthe treatment wai started.\nNine patients suffering from aeptlc\nsore throat, a condition caused by\nhemolytic streptococci were also\ntreated by spraying with the penicillin. All of these patients were improved within 12 hours and were ap\nparently well within 36 hours.\nSPRAYING WITH\nPENICILLIN\nIt would appear that spraying with\nthc penicillin is of great value also\nin clearing up many carriers of hemolytic streptococci. In five persons who were such carriers the\npenicillin spray eliminated the condition within two days.\nTrench mouth alao responded\nquickly to this form of treatment.\nImmediately upon a diagnosis, the\npatients were treattd by spraying\nof tbe mouth and gums. Then they\nwere given a solution of penicillin\nto use as a mouth wash. Within an\naverage time of three and one-tenth\ndays, the condition was cleared up\nin all cases.\nThus, it would appear that thc\nuse of a penicillin solution In the\nmouth and nose may be of value ln\na number of infections, though, unluckily, it does not do much against\nthat greatest of nuisance-makers, the\ncommon cold,\nTasty Recipes\nNice iweet strawberries in the\nmarket io, before they bow out,\nwhy not a strawberry festival of\ndellcloui desaerta? A graham cracker\npie cruit heaped with Ice cream\nand strawberries is likely to make\nmother the belle of the ball, so far\naa the family la concerned.\nTo aerve 6-8 have 4 tablespoons\ntable fat softened at room temperature, Roll 16 graham crackers into\nfine crumbs (tliere should be 1 1-3\nc. crumbs). Put the cracker crumbs,\nsoftened butter or margarine and\n4 tablespoons sugar Into a bowl and\nblend thoroughly, using a fork.\nPOUR  INTO  PIE  PLATE\nPour well-blended mixture Into a\nS-tnch pie plate; press mixture very\nfirmly Into an even layer on bottom\nand around aides of pie plate. Bake\nabout 8 minutes at 375 F. Cool. Turn\ncontrol on automatic refrigerator to\ncoldest point. Spoon one quart well-\nfrozen vanilla ice cream into graham cracker crust, spreading ice\ncream against sides and bottom of\ncrust.\nPlace entire pie on coldest shelf\nIn refrigerator freezing compartment, and keep in unit till ready to\nserve. Just before aerving, top with\none to 2 cups sliced, sweetened\nstrawberries. If freezing compartment is not wide enough to hold flinch pie plate, fill the cracker crumb\nshell with ice cream just before\nserving, top with the straberrles and\nserve at once.\nSTRAWBERRY PIC\nStrawberry Glazed Pie comes next\nad calls for 2 pint boxes of berries.\nWash and strain one box of berries.\nIf there is not enough juice for one\ncup add water to make up amount.\nMix 3 tablespoons cornstarch, Vi\nteaspoon salt, one cup sugar. Add the\none cup fruit juice and tablespoon'\nlemon juice. Cook, stirring constantly until thick and clear. Cool.\nFill an 8-inch cooked pie shell\nwith another box of berries, hulled\nand whole. Pour fruit juice mixture\nover all, spreading evenly. Whip ft\npint whipping cream and use aj\ngarnish; ii desired, sweeten with V.\nc. powdered sugar.\nFor a wonderful fruit cocktail to\nserve 4, wash and hull pint of straw-\nKoolaree\nEchoes\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nberries. Mix lightly with one cup\ndiced canned pears. Arrange in fruit\ncocktail glasses. Mix tablespoon lime\nJuice, Juice of an orange, and Juice\nfrom canned pears, and pour over\ntruit. Chill well before serving.\nSTRAWBERRY FLAVOR\nAnd, to capture the beautiful\nstrawberry flavor, how sbout\nbatch of strawberry Jam? To make\nabout 10 glasses holding fl oz. each,\nyou'll need 4 cups prepared truit. To\nprepare fruit, crush thoroughly\nabout 2 quarts fully ripe strawberries. Measure 4 cups into large saucepan.\nTo make Jam add 7 cups sugar to\nfruit In saucepan: mix well. Place\nover high heat; bring to full, rolling\nboil. Boll hard one minute, stirring\nconstantly. Remove from heat; stir\nin Vi bottle fruit pectin. Then stir\nand skim by turns tor 5 min. to cool\nslightly and to prevent floating frutt.\nPour quickly into clean, sterilized\nglasses, snd top at once with melted\nparaffin.\nHai Housing Plan\nHope for More Rain\nOWEN SOUND, Ont, Jul; 18]\n(CP) - Mayor E. Sargent of Owen\nSound todey sent to reconstruction Minister Howe a. three-point\nproposal for action to meet lha\nNation-wide   housing   shortage.\nHe urged that established Federal agencies\u2014such as emplay-\nment and ration boards across the\ncountry\u2014be transformed Into emergency housing agencies to determine number and types of housing\nneeds. Shortages of machanlcs and\nbuilders; easiest metnode of channelling supplies by priorities and\nthrough long-term financing to\nmake it as easy as for war veteran i\nto get housing as lt was for him to\nenlist.\nMONTREAL (CP)-Emile Prov I\nencal was fined court costs ln default when he failed to appear to\nappear to answer a charge that his\n12-year-old son had been found on\nthe street at 9:25 p.m.\u2014an infraction\nof a city curfew law Intended to\nkeep children under 14 off the city J\nstreets between 9 p.m. and 5 a.m. |\nunless accompanied by parents.\nEtuuuirltral fUtBHum dnwnant\nBaker and Hendryx\nL. DANIEL ERICSON, PASTOR\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School and Bible Class.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\n7:30 p.m.-Evening   Service.   Pupils   of   the   Vacation   Bible\nSchool will have a part ln this service.\nWednesday, 7:30 p.m.\u2014Mid-week Service.\nCOMING-Junlor Bible Camp, August 11-17. Adult Bible\nCamp, August 18-24.\n\"For He hath made Him to be sin for us, who knew ao\nsin: that we might be made the righteousness of God ln Him1\nII Cor. 5:21.\nBeauty Hints\nBy IDA JEAN KAIN\nRelaxtion and Laughter Ida's\nIdea of How to Lose Wrinkles\nMany of you inquire wistfully\nif facial exercises can tone th;\nmuscles and prevent wrinkles. I've\nnever had the time to plungf\nheadlong into facial exercises, but\njust between you nnd mo and o\nwrinkle, I'm convinced there Brother measures that brine more\nbeautiful results . . . namely, relaxation   and  laughter.\nOur habitual expression.! bring\ncertain muscles into play, over and\nover. If we are in the habit of\nscowling intently, that brings on\nwrinkles. Overworked muscle:\nget set in a prove, there's no doub\nabout that. Inner tension make,\nwrinkles. Our emotional lift\nleaves its handwriting on our far\"\nThe down lines of frowning an\nhelped along by the pull of gravity. When self-pity is mixed in\ngravity   wins!\nLaughter   is   a   tension   breaker\nLaughter   lines  are always  up .\nthat's   why   they   give   the   face   a\nlift. A relaxed mile eases tension\nend \"rests\" the face, When i per-\n\u25a0sm with a tense, wt expression\ntniles, the tension lines eaae\night out. And when a cartoonist\ncepicts a sour puss, he drawl all\ntie lines down.\nFine lines, the beautician* tell\nus, come from a dry skin. I know\none -.delightful old lady who has\nlever been ill and has always\nleen happy, and while she has ro\nJ-own or tension wrinkles, ihe\ndoes have tiny, fine lines, She has\n. ever used cream on her face\n(ream; lubricates the ikin. and\nj.iable skin does not wrinkle as\neadily. I believe creams play an\nmportant role in skin beauty and\nt tat the women who are allergic\n11 them should look into imn-al-\nJ rgv products.\nBut deep line*, tlie kind that\nr me from set expression* and\nI nsion. cannot be prevented by\nnything   as  superficial   aa  cream\n(Da.. (David. Q. Cmm-\nof Spokane\nBring? to you dally\nh taurifoa\nThe rrusicol program of established and\never-growing popularity\nCxxvi\nMonday to Friday, 1:00 p.m.;\nSaturday, 3:00 p.m.; Sunday, 3 p.m.\nThe main feature af the <toy\nat Koolaree whs the Treasure\nHynt, an annual affair, which\nproved as popular as ever. Under\nthe guidance of Bob Gray and\ni Denis Goddard the entire camp\npounded over Koolaree'a 145 acres\nin near record time.\nAt first clues appeared ln rapid\norder   as   Jonathan   Magwood   and\n\u25a0 Bobby Knowler of Cabin 3 found\nthe first two. Later almort any\nthing happened as the gang tore\nfrom corner to corner in search\nof   tha   buried   teaiiure.\nBill Lindley topped thi list\nwith the finding nf two clues.\nErnest Mason, Dick McBurney,\nYo Nakatani, Bill Findlay, Tom\nGarnett, Boyd Wallace also found\n| clues as the chase progressed.\nThe grand prized proved to ba\nthe stinker of the day, and It\ntook the entire camp, chiefs included, the better part of an hour\nto unearth it Terry Ward of\nCabin 7 finally made himself the\nhero by finding the winning clue\n'neath the rocks of the old wharf\nAt this point the loaders beat\na hasty retreat as the entire crew\nnf campers turned on them with\nblood ln their ey-fts and the end\nof the r>x:k In their minds, and\nthe 1947 Treasure Hunt ended in\nthe   traditional   manner.\nSwimming instructors report\nmaking good progress in \"Learn\nto Swim' classes are Bobby Knowler. Frank Varsveld, Keith Lane,\n\"Cookie\" Shorting, Erneet Vyse\nand  Alan  JakeL\nTerry Ward of Cabin 7 has or-\n?anized his softball team Into a\nighting organization. The score\nof tonight's game was ample proof\nof that when they beat Cabin 4\nby 29-16.\nCampfire ikit wai handed over\nto the Cabin leaders who put on\na firflt rate performance under the\ndirection of Dick Radcliffe. The\ncast included Glen Smith, .hm\nTodd, Ken Dimock, Derek Lowder,\nlionie   Irwin   and   Dick   Haywood.\nOn the seventh day of camping\nand all cabins are fighting to thr\nlast notch In order that their\ncabin may capture a \"K\" emblematic   of   Camp   Championship.\nCabins  ln  order of  their  standing are as follows: Cabin 2, Cabin\n1,   Cabin   7, -Cabin     ,   Cabin    fi\nCabin   3.   and   Cabin   3.\nEATINQ   HEARTILY\n\u25a0 Larry Henrickson from Rfs&Und\ni expressed Uie opinion of all the\n'boys in regard to Sally's cooking\n'when   he  remarked.  \"That  sure   \\w\ngood pie.\" If you don't think the\nj boys are eatirg just ask Sallv\n[in Junior Boys\" Camp alone, 1,1*50\n,buns and 87 loaves of bread hav\nbeen baked, not to mention th*\"\n]500 doughnuts and fl^ gallons nf\nmilk.\nAccording to Billy Gate* 1* Is\nthe dishes that pretent the problem\nHe says he never remembers on\nwhich side nf the table the fork\ngoes,\nA hike conducted by Ralph\nStinson was feature of thr dav\nwhen the boys went up the tracks\nto   a   F-wimming   hole\nProject work has been divided\ninto tlie following groups leather\nwork bv Fred Robins photography\nbv Hob tiray. ilgnalhrig bv Hnlpli\nStinson and belt making hv \\i>*:.:~\nGodd-ard   and   Ray   Mri .rod\nCampfire Munt wai t.ik',:i bv\nDerek Ixiwrier'i cabin A *'- ; v\nwss told by Archdeacon fl A\nResker   of  Cus-tlfptr\nThose lines that ridge th.n forhMid,\nthe concent ration lines between\nthe eyes and the rircp gro\"vr*s\nfrom n^se lo mouth, <nd down*\nat-thr-mouth    lines these    r r\n' lhe result* nf habitual fxpiesR*.*-i\nand tension. Fxcrrisrs cm help lo\n\u25a0 erase them by developing unused\nj muscles, but it takr* relaxation\nland a rhange of exprtwon to\nkeep thorn sway-\nTry this throw bsck your\n'hood, tip\" chin in air and yawn.\n,blg. In finishing, draw the urukr\n| Jaw un slowly, pro]* ngi tig thr\nvawn Repent la\/itv. irvral times\nThai i- ruarautrrd !<> I.'kr . \u25a0:'\nkmim    ,h\u00bb'    mak'    v :  ' kV\n\u00a3t. fcanumr'a pro-QIa%Jiral\nVERY REVEREND HIED P. CLARK, MA.\nTRINITY VII\n8:00 i.m\u2014Holy   Communion\n8:15 a.m.\u2014Willow Point\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holy   Communion\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nWednesday: 10:30 a.m.\nAll services will be conducted by THE REV   J   WHTN-\nFIELD ROBINSON, L.TH., Vancouver, B.C.\nHtufeft- (Illjtirrij Smrira\nDuring the month of July the congregations of Trinity\nand Saint Paul's United Churches are meeting rogerher\nin Saint Paul's Church. The services are conducted\nby Rev. A. L. Anderson.\n11:00 am\u2014THE CURSE OF BAD RELIGION\n7:30 p.m.\u2014CASTLES IN THE AIR\n(Eh. fcahmtum\nAnmj\nCapt. md Mrs. F. H, Pierce\nSunday:\n11-00 i.m\u2014Holiness Meeting\n7.30 p m.\u2014Salvation Service.\nThuridiy:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Prals*  and  Prayer\nMeeting.\nSunday School 10 a m. on Sunday\nSrlltrl (Tahrrtutrlr\nREV. J. W  RUTHVEN. Past *r\n9:4J , ro    Sunday   Srrvlrf.\nSunday Bchoo! ir.d Adult Bible\nC'.AS,\n11:00 im\u2014D.votlnnll S\u00bbrv!cfl\n7 30 p.m \u2014 Ev&sucliitic Servicei\nTun. S:00 rm - Bible Study\nFri, 8 00 pm-Young Peoples\n3Firat QHjttrrh nf\n(HhrtHt \u00a7rtpttttflt\nA Brinch of Tht Mother Church\nThe    Tint   Church    ot   Christ\nScientist in Boiton, Masi\nSunday School\u2014S:*I3 am.\nSunday   Servlc>2\u201411   i.m.\nSUBJECT:\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nReadlnfl  Room  open  dally 1-5\nExcept Wedneidiy\nAU Cordially   Welcome.\nJlml\nfjiTiduitmau\n(Tlutrrh\nV: '\u2022   :'.*\\   \u00ab\"d   K '\u25a0''.\u2022\u2022r*y\nIV. V   A   STI 'A AH T, Minister\n:: n m   \u25a0 :\"\u25a0<\u25a0 ti- *,,o i ..? s \u25a0\nNn fVPM! i service.\n8t .ihilin'fi\nfcuthrran\nStanley md Silica Sti\nReverend J Hennig, Pajtor.\n10 00 i m.-Sundiy School\n11 00 a m.- Divine Service\nThe Church of the Luther*! Hour\n3Ftrnt Sapttfit\n(Church\nSjipunrr. .1   A   It:.MM*:    Mr  W.\n]   Van.ss of Calvary, g.ie^t sol.,.\nNew Drug\nRelieves Hives\nrillCACO. Inly lit lAI'i Tvu\nIt. ihcitrr, Mtt'ti . |*h> *.:,*!.uk h.ui\n,,|,or'.*d that a itnii! hennrlryl. :\nhighly effective :;i treatment f\ncertain rliimiri of the skin iui I'\nai hlvM Writing in the journal o\nthe American Medical A Mod all or.\nthe phyalciatn. Paul A O'l.earv\nand Eugene M F.ibcr of Mm*\n,'lni'c reported thnt in rxpen*\nmnils wllh Ht |>,ti,*nti w. lm h.i'l\n*,    **c    hue.      **fl    uere    ,    n,|.le|,*:>\n(TIhutIi  nf\nthr iKrtVrntrr\n\u2022Angltrani\nFAIRVIEW\nRev   W   J   Silverwood\nAKC   BSc   Vicar\nJulv and  August  Itrvicea nt\n11 a m   ati.l fl p 111\nN.i CoiHinunioii July  20th.\n ,.*'\u00bb*.' ^W  4lfPl|PWi\n^\u25a0^m^if^gl^ \u25a0'* T'   ,*pr*-*W*-M^r1^ y nil'\nTf\nt\"H\nThe Following Are Just a Few\nExamples of the\nOutstanding Bargains\nOffered in Our 43rd\nAnniversary Sale\nMisses' Loafers in red, Misses' Ballerinas. Reg. $3.75. Sale\t\n'2.95\nMisses' Mocassin Oxfords, brown and black elk,\nbrown alligator, brown and white,\nsizes 11 to 2Ms. Reg. $4.35. Sale   .\nMisses' Brown Elk Scampers, sizes\n11 to 3. Reg. $2.95. Sale\t\nChild's Black Scampers, sizes 8 to\n10V4. Reg. $2.75. Sale \t\nBoy's Black and Brown Elk Scampers,\nsizes 1 to 5%. Reg. $4.25. Sale\nMen's Brown Elk Scampers, sizes 7\nto 12. Reg. $4.75. Sale \t\n$3.35\n'2.25\n'1.95\n'3.35\n'3.85\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfoshion\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VICTrUUX\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B.C. - Miuei\nBarbara and Norma Thomlinson left\nfor 10 days with their uncle and\naunt, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Kennett\ntnd family in Kimberley.\nI Charles Aylwin left for Hope,\nB.C.\nI Mrs. James A. Greer accompanied\n\u25a0f.argeant and Mrs. R. S. Nelson to\ntheir home in Vernon, where she\n\u2022vajs to be their guest.\nMr. and Mrs. Dave Milroy and\n! tiss Margaret Milroy, Constable\nind Mrs. R. B. McKay and son,\nSandy all of Trail are spending\naeveral days in New Denver.\nJoe Greenwood of Trail was the\nguest of hii uncle and aunt, Mr.\nind Mrs. Andy Schnaebele.\nMrs.  Jack  Baskerville   and   Mrs.\nA. McKenzie are spending a week\nl   NeLson   with   their   brother-in-\n*w and sister, Mr. and Mrs, L. Ott.\nFrances   Schnaebele.   Beverly\nDe'Rosa and Louie Zambon left to\nattend the Catholic Summer school\nat Nakusp.\nIvan Flint and Lloyd George left\nfor Russel Lookout at little Slocan\nfor ten days.\nMr. and Mrs. Andy Schnaebele\nhad as their guests the latter's sister-in-law, Mrs. William Greenwood\nand son Freddie of Slocan City.\nThey were accompanied home by\nSharon Schnaebele who will spend\na holiday with them.\nMiss Foster and Miss Tucker, Jap-\nineac Missionaries of Toronto were\ne gucst.i of Miss M. Clench.\nMiss M H. Buthn and Mrs. John\n\"aylor were guests of the former's\n'iece, Mr. and Mrs W. Jupp and\nbn Garry, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph\nTip at Nakusp.\n\u25a0Mra. Adelord Payette and daujh-\nThreia and son Roger from\n\u00a7Summerset, Man , who with the for-\n_ier's son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nLad Mrs. Eugene Launderville of\nfrail are spending two weeks hol-\n\\diys at the home of Mr. and Mrs\n\\baundemlle New Denver,\nIt Abo who was a patient in the\nLean Community Hospital wai\nfte to leave for his home m New\njNnver.\n^Miss M. Watanabc of the Orchard\nJ i patient in the Slocan Commun-\nff Hospital.\nIpaul Lucoln of NeUon waa a vli-\nfir in New Denver enroute  to the\n'cAIlister Mine which he ls work-\n|g at Three Forks.\nlEddte Angrignon of Ashcroft, BC\nj'.s been discharged from tho Com-\n\u25a0.unity Hospital and  :.<  visiting  his\n'-andmothcr  nnd  uncle   Mr*   K   F\nKigrignot: ard _VH Ar.^ngr'.nn\nIMaunce  Middlrt-Hii   whn  was as-\nf Ung   in   inspection   nf   the   imall\n] erry dis.__.f\\ left fnr Vernnn\n[ W.  F.  Jeffery  of  New   Denver  ii\n] patient in the Slocan Community\nI capita 1.\n[Rev. and Mrs Dmiglai Watney\nIld two daughters of Vancouver arc\nlie guests nf Mrs Watney'i mother\nMra. J. B  Smith\nJ. Corral was able tn leave ihe\nIsiocan Community H'-ipital f<>: hn\n\\ iome in S|lvertmi.\nRev. and Mrs Rnhlmon and Fred\nI Irvine of Nf l.nn were viilton i\"\nJ New Denver and gueits nf Mrs '\nIb. Smi'h Rev Reunion u relieving\nlVery Re\\ F P Clark nf the Pm\nli'athedral a! Nelsnn whn li holiday-\nling at thr Coait\nDonald Campbell  whn  wai a  pa-\nj ticnt in thr Slocin Community Hospital   wai   able   In   leave    foi    Nrw\nDenver\n|\\OOTENAY    fALLLY     l\/MR>\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAU FOR CHILDREN\nJinlian  \u2014   Beatrice   Plnii   \u2014\nColl   of   California\nBATHING SUITS\n$6.95   i     $11.95\nFashion First Ltd.\nLegion Auxiliary\nInitiates Member\nNEW DENVER, B. C, July lfi -\nThe Legion Women's Auxiliary tn\nNo. 101 meeting at the home of Mrs.\nAndy Schnaebele with Mrs. Harry\nT. Butler and Mrs, Andy Schnaebele\nas co-hostesses initiated Mrs. Douglas Martin as a new member. Members present were Mrs, T. R. Flint,\nMrs. George Burkett, Mrs, Andy\nSchnaebele, Mrs. Harry T. Butler,\nMrs. S, Christopherson, Mrs, Thomas Steenhoff, Mrs. James Latto and\nMrs. Douglas Martin,\nRefreshments were served by thc\nhostesses and a pleasant hour was\nenjoyed.\nKASLO\nKASLO, BC. - Mrs. M. Wit-\ntaker returned from Terace where\nshe visited h-r son-in-law ar.d\ndaughter Mr. and Mrs. A Kennedy.\nMiss Pauline Archibald of Trail\nis the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A.\nJacobs on Shutty Bench.\n1 Mrs, Phylio Thornns of Eire was\nthe guest of hrr parent.-, Mr. and\nMrs.   F.   S.   Chandler\n| Mn. M. G. Armstrong and youn3\ndaughter have returned fnm a\nvisit   to   the   coast\n1 Mr. and Mrs Ferguson and Mr.\nMiinard of Lethbridge are spending a holiday  in this city\nI Mrs. A. J Venables and two children Jimmv and Ann are .\u25a0\u25a0-per.dir.tf\na holiday in Nelson, gue^. nf Dr\nA. J Vrn.ih.iV pyrin's. M- -i; d\nMrs   H    V   Ven^blr.\n\u2022 A very pretty ceremony tooki\nplace Wednesday afternoon at three\no'clock at the First Presbyterian\nChurch when Rev. A. Stewart united in wedlock Margaret Ella Mc-\nInnis, second daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Mclnnis, of Willow Point and\nKenneth Alfred Harlow, second son\nof Mrs, M. Harlow of Nelson. The\ndainty bride was attired in a floor-\nlength white jersey wedding dress\nfeaturing sweetheart neckline and\nLily Pons sleeves over which hung\na finger tip length net veil held by\norange blossoms. She was attended\nby her sister, Miss Merle Mclnnis\nand the groom by Samuel Boyd of\nNelson. The groom's niece July Mae\nmade a dainty flower girl, The usher was Earl Young of Trail and the\norganist Don Kay of Nelson. Following the ceremony a reception was\nheld at the Willow Point home of\nthe bride's parents, where a dainty\ndecoration of pink and white\nstreamers was carried out. The tea\ntable centred by a three-tiered wedding cake was flanked by ivory\ntapers and sweetpeas. Presiding at\nthe tea and coffee urns were Mrs,\nArthur Barnes of Willow Point and\nMr.s. W, Carruthers of Nelson while\nthe serviteurs included Mrs. E.\nYoung, Mrs, F. Macintosh, Mrs, D.\nLantf, Mr.s. D. Wilson and Mrs. Thor-\nenson. For her going away outfit\nthe young bride changed to variegated mauve and purple dress and\nwhite accessories Following the\nhoneymoon Mr. and Mrs. Harlow\nplan on making their home In Rose-*\nmont, Nelson. Out of town guests'\nincluded Mr, and Mrs. Earl Youngl\nof Trail, Mrs. Dorothy Wilson and)\nson Jack of New Westminster, Roy,\nNewman of Edmonton and Mr. and;\nMrs. F. Mcintosh of Castlegar.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. E. Hawker, her |\ngranddaughter Janet Kennedy of\nWalnut Creek, Calif., are spending\nIheir vacation in Nelson, Mrs. Hawker is staying with her sister Mrs. T.\nGomer Jones, Mill Street, while\nMiss Kennedy is with Mr. and Mrs.\nWilfred G. Hall, Delbruck Street.\nMrs. Hawker was a resident of Nelsnn some 25 years ago and plans on\nbeing in the city for the Golden\nJubilee.\n\u2022 Mrs Norbert 0, Choquette and\nMrs. M. Daoust have left on an extended visit to Montreal and other\nEastern cities.\n\u2022 Mr and Mrs John Wallach of\nEsnuimalt and Mrs. Snare and son\nGilbert returned after visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Wallach. Mill Street.\n\u2022 In compliment to Mr. and Mrs.\nJ A Ballantyne, who plane to leave\nshortly to make their home in Edmonton, a number of friends gathered this week at the Summer place\nat Willow Point of Mr, and Mrs. W.\nWaldn Ferguson. Mr. and Mrs. Ballantyne were recipients of a farewell\ngift. Among the invited guests were\nMr nnd Mrs. George Lambert, Mr\nand Mrs. A. E. Murphy. Mr. and\nMrs J. Eraser, Mr. and Mrs. R. H.\nBradley, Mrs. Janes Coates. Mrs. J.\nW. Longworth. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon\nK Burns, Miss Connie Smith, Mr.\nand Mrs. Kirby Grenfell. Mr. and\nMrs. H Lakes, Mr and Mrs. Fergu-\n,\u00abnn. Hewitt Ferguson, Mr Wheeler\nof Hollywood, Calif, and J. A. Ferguson\n\u2022 Mra Danny _, McLean and\ndaughter Bonne who have been visiting her parents, Mr, and Mrs, W,\nGraham, Latimer Street have returned to th^ir home in Vancouver.\nThey were arenmpanied as far as\nRevelstoke by  Mrs. Graham\n\u2022 Mr? Rose Armstrong of Larkspur, Calif, is visiting her parents\nMr o-d M's P K-tpak. Second\nStreet,   F.\"-' '\"-w     V--S     -V-nstrnn;\nOn. ihs, CUa,\nli accompanied by her two children.\n\u2022 Miss Connie Smith, Kerr\nApartment* is holidaying at the\nCoast.\n\u2022 Mrs, Joseph Janni and children ol Wenatchee, Wash., and Mrs.\nGeorge Gill and son ot Vancouver,\nwho spent a month at the home of\nJulius Rlesterer, Robson Street, have\nreturned lo their homes.\n\u2022 John Ling of Vancouver Is\nvisiting his mother, Mrs. A. Ling,\nJosephine Street.\n\u2022 Mrs. Joseph Lindsay and her\nchild of Vancouver are visiting her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. White-\nheat, 514 Hendry Street,\n\u2022 Gregoire Choquette and Miss\nAlbertlne Choquette, Robson Street,\nhave as guest the former's niecQ,\nMrs. Blanche Tune of Los Angeles,\nCalif., ex-resident of Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. Wallach Latimer Street, have as guest, their\ngranddaughter, Miss Jean Wallach of\nBremerton, Wash.\n\u00ab Wednesday afternoon, Mrs. J.\nN. Hunt, entertained members of\nthe Circle of the Cathedral of Mary\nImmaculate when those attending\nwere Mrs. G. F. Stevens, Mrs. M. DeGiroIamo. Mrs. M. J. Vnrsevold, Mrs\nF Boyd. Miss W. Kinahan. Mrs. Ann\nAduddcll. Mrs. L. H. Choquette, Mrs.\nC. F McDougall, Mrs. W. F, Kopecki,\nMrs J. Morrison, Mrs. P. Bialkow-\nski. Mrs. n Mclnnes, Mrs 11. A. McPherson, Mrs. George A. Tapp, Mr.s,\nJ. Leslie, Mrs. Scolt, Mr.s. A. T. Nox-\non, Mrs Harry Korolak. Mrs. V.\nDoyle, Mrs Arthur Perrier, Miss\nAlbertine Choquette, Mrs. A. Ling,\nMr.s. M. J. Vigneux. Mrs. J. Vivian,\nMrs Edith Edgar, Mrs, M, Scally,\nMrs. A. G. Gelinas, Mrs, Norbert O.\nChoquette. Mrs. J. P. Herron. Mrs\nLouis Alexander. Mrs Louis Coletti.\nMrs. W. G. Fullerton and Mrs. J,\nMuraro\n\u2022 Mrs, Jack Soden nf Kimberley\nwho snent a month visiting her parents, Mr, and Mrs. C. R. McLanders.\nInnes Street, has returned to her\nhome.\nt Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham\nMoore nf Vancouver, are guests of\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Russell, BO!)\nThird Street, who with them plan\nnn spending the weekend at Queen's\nBav.\n\u2022 Bartnn-End, the North Shore\nhome of Mrs. A. H Hopkins, was\nthe scene of a most enjoyable pot\nluck supner recently when members\nnf the Past Matrons of Rose City\nChapter No. 28 of the Order of the\nEastern Star, were guests. Amonc\nthose atending wore Mrs. Edward\nQuirk, Mrs. H. E Dill. Mrs. R TV\nWallace, Mrs. J. Lundie, Mrs Sam\nRentlev. Mrs R Lnwery. Mrs J\nArmstrong, Mrs J. J. French, Mrs.\nS C Latornell, Mrs A Scales. Mrs\nJ H Argvle, Mr.s W Carruthers.\nMrs H. Hankin, Mrs G, H, Gill, Mrs\n.7. Draper. Mrs J. A. Curran and\nMrs E H Paterson.\nt Miss Muriel McLanders and\nMiss Norma Simpson of Ihe Daily\niNows staff are holidaying at Christina Lake.\nSATURDAY,\nCKLN\n910 ON THE DIAL\n00\u2014O Canadi\n02\u2014Press News\n07\u2014Sunrise Serenade\n:30\u2014Music for Saturday\n00\u2014CBC News\n: 15\u2014Pick of the Hits\n:30\u2014Morning Concert\n45\u2014Hebrew Christian\nOO-BBC News\n15\u2014B*cords at Random\n30\u2014Melodies for Junior\n59\u2014Time Signal\n00\u2014Nature Sketches\n15\u2014World Church Newa\n30\u2014Musical Program\n45-CBC News and Weather\n00\u2014Music Makes Pictures\n25\u2014The Notice Board\n00\u2014Musical Program\n25\u2014The Notice Board\n30\u2014Press News\n45\u2014Jerry Sears Presents\nCJAT\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014Hebrew Christian Hour\n7:15\u2014Press News\n7:30\u2014Newsstand   Novelties.\n7:45\u2014Fountain of Faith\n8:00-CBC News\nR:15\u2014Five Minutes of Fine Music\n8:20\u2014Musical Program\n11:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014.iecords at Random\n9:30\u2014Land of Supposing\n10:00\u2014Saturday Review\n10:45\u2014Press News\n11:00\u2014Music Makes Pictures\n12:0O\u2014On the Teen-Beat\n12:30\u2014Jive Hive\n1:00\u2014Musical Program\n1:30\u2014Musicana\n2 00\u2014Saturday Concert\n3:00\u2014El Ritmo Tropical\n3:15-CBC News\n' 3:30-Serenade\nJULY 19, 1947\n1:00\u2014In the Teen Beat\n.1:30\u2014Namea of Tomorrow\n2:00\u2014Saturday Concert\n3:00\u2014Old Favourites\n3:30\u2014Jimmy Dorsey\n3:45\u2014Swing Time\n4:0O-Hawail Calla\n'4:29-CPR Train Time\n4:30-Songs In Sweet Styla\n4:45\u2014Swingtime\"\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n5:15\u2014Hawaiian Harmonies\n5:30\u2014Peerless News\n6:00\u2014Flight into the Past\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:10\u2014Ed McCurdy\n7:30-Paul Page's Orchestra\n8:00-Alberta Ranch House\n8:30\u2014Lawrence Welk's Orchestra\n9:00\u2014Terry Spencer\n8:15\u2014This Week\n8:30-Wally Wicken's Orch\n10:00-CBC News\n10:15\u2014Dance Request Program\n11:00\u2014God Save tne King\n3:45\u2014Jazz Jamboree\n4:00\u2014Vincent Lopei\n4:30\u2014Xavier Cugat\n4:45\u2014Swing Time\n5:00\u2014Wayne and Shuster\n5:30-The People Ask\n5:45\u2014Sports College\n6:00-Flight into the Past\n6:30\u2014Music from the Pacific\n7:00-CBC News\n7:10\u2014Ed McCurdy\n7:30-Paul Page's Orchestra\n8:00-Albcrta  Ranch House\n8:30-Wally Wicken's Orchestra\n9:00\u2014Juliette\n9:15-This Week.\n9:30\u2014Chamber Music\n10:0O-CBC News\n10:15\u2014Holly House\n10:30\u2014 Hollywood Barn Danes\n11:00\u2014Request Programme\n11:30\u2014Peerless News\n11:40\u2014Sign Off-the King.*\nSUNDAY,\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n55\u20140 Canada\n59\u2014C.P.R. Train Time\nOO\u2014BBC News\n14\u2014Weather   Forecast\n15\u2014Songs and Singers\n30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n00\u2014B. C* Gardener\n:15\u2014Just Marv\n:30-Man of God\n:(10-CBC News\n:30-Chapel by  the  Side of\nRoad\n45\u2014Press News\n00\u2014CBS Symphony Orchestra\n30\u2014Church of the Air\n00-CBC News\n03\u2014John Fisher Reports\n15\u2014Weekend Review\n29\u2014Weather  Forecast\n30\u2014Hebrew Christian Hour\nJULY 20, 1947\n2:45\u2014Getting Sentimental\n3:00\u2014Old Favorites\n3:30-The Three Sum\n3:45\u2014South of the Border\n4:00\u2014Sunday Serenade\n4:29-Train Time\n4:30\u2014Peerless News\n4:45\u2014 Musical Program\n5:00\u2014Alec Templeton Show\n5:30\u2014Ici l'On Chante\n6:00\u2014It's a Legend\n6:30\u2014Musical Program\n7:00-CBC News\nthe! 7:15\u2014The Old Songs\n7:30\u2014First Piano Quartet\n8:00-Anthology\nB:30\u2014Music for a Summer Eva\n9:00\u2014 Music for Strings\n9:30\u2014 Vesper Hour\nI0:00-CBC News\n10:15\u2014Canadian Place Names\n10:30-Prelude to Midnight\n11:00\u2014God Save the King\nPlon Yukon Trip\nVANCOUVER. July IS <CP> -\nEighteen members of the transportation and Customs Bureau,\nVancouver Board of Trade, with\nHon. L. H Eyres Provincial Minister of railways and of Trade and\nIndustry will leave here on July\n26 on an eight-day trip tn thc\nYukon.\nThe groun will visit Northern\nBC points and the Alaska Pan-\nHandlr. Their h're *>f operations\nwill   b'-   wh'tehorse   in   the   Yukon\nCJAT\n610 ON THE DIAL\n8:00\u2014Press News\n8:15\u2014 Melodic Moods\n8:30\u2014 Lutheran Hour\n9:00\u2014BBC News and Commentary\n9:15\u2014Report from Parliament Hill\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n10:00\u2014Gospel Singers\n10:30\u2014Musical Programme\n10:45\u2014Press  News\n11:00\u2014Knox Church Service\n12:00\u2014 CBS Symphony\n1:30\u2014 Church ol the Air\n2:00-News and John Fisher Report*;\n2:15-1. B. McGeachy\nIt:,'t0\u2014 Music in Nature\n3:00 -Silver Theatre\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 19,1947 \u2014 S\n3:30-News, Weather, music\n3:45\u2014Can. Short Stories\n4:00\u2014Readers Take Over\n4:30-Music of thc Footlights\n5:00\u2014Alec Templeton Show\n5:30\u2014Ici l'On Chante\n6:00\u2014It's a Legend\n6:30\u2014Album ot Familiar Music\n7:00-CBC News\n7:15-The Old Songs\n7:30\u2014First   Piano   Quartet\n8:00\u2014St. Andrew's Church Bdart.\n8:30\u2014Music for a Summer Ivealnj\n9-.00 Music for Strings.\n9:30\u20141 Hear the Southland Singing\n9:45\u2014Musical 'Programme\n10:15\u2014Music for You\n10:30\u2014Prelude tn Midnight\n11:30\u2014 Peerless News\n11:40\u2014Sign Off-The King.\nKIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY,4 B. C, July IR \u2014\nAt a quiet ceremony July 10, Rev.\nT. E. Roulston united in marriage\nMargaret, eldest daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. William Waldle of Kimberley, and Vincent Martin of Elko,\nB.C.\nThe bride wore a dressmaker ault\nof brown crowfoot check and a picture hat of natural colored straw,\nHer corsage was of white gardenias.\nMrs. T. E. Roulston was the organist and during the signing of thp\nregister she sang \"O Perfect Love.\"\nFollowing a dinner at the home\nof the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nMartin left for a honeymoon at Rosen Lake. They will reside a short\ndistance from Elko.\nBLACKWELL-COATES\nOf interest to their many friends\nin Kimberley and district Is the\naccount of the marriage at Kerris-\ndale Baptist Church, Vancouver,\nJune 25, of Phyllis Agnes, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Coates of Vancouver to Frederick John, elder son\nof Mrs. Mary Blackwell and the\nlate F. Blackwell of Klmberley.\nRev. R. F. Filer officiated.\nThe bride, who was given In marriage by her father, was lovely in\nher gown of brocaded ivory satin,\nstyled with fitted bodice, lily point\nsleeves and full skirt entrain. Her\nveil of Illusion net, caught with tiny\norange blossoms was held by a halo\nof the same flower. She carried a\nshower bouquet of red roses and\nwhite sweet peas. Miss Coates was\nattended by Miss Barbara Keirn and\nMiss Wilda Oxley and the groom\nwas supported by K. T. Coates,\nbrother of the bride. L. Home and\nG. Bean were the ushers.\nFollowing the ceremony a reception was held at the home of Mr,\nand Mrs. J. W. Horton, where the\nbride and groom were assisted in re\nceiving the guests by Mrf. Coates\nand Mrs. Blackwell.\nThe bride's table was centered by\nthe tiered wedding cake which waa\nembedded in white tulle dotted with\ntiny rosebuds and flanked by cathedral tapers in crystal holders. The\ntoast to the bride was proposed by\nMr. Filer, the groom responding\nsuitably.\nFollowing a honeymoon tfip by\ncar to Yellowstone National Park,\nWyoming and Banff, Alberta, Mr.\nand Mrs. Blackwell will reside In\nKimberley where Mr. Blackwell Is\nemployed by the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co., and where\nMiss Coates was formerly on the\nstaff of McDougall Hospital.\nFor travelling the bride chose- a\ngabardine suit of Queen's blue with\nblack accessories. Her corsage was\nof gardenias circled by pink carnations.\nGALLPEN-FARQUHAR\nTwo well known Chapman Camp\nfamilies were united on July 14,\nwhen Mary (Polly), younger daughter of Mr, and Mrs, J. Farquhar, became the bride of Douglas Holland,\nyounger son of Mrs. Maude Gallpen\nof Chapman Camp and the late Melville Gallpen.\nGiven in marriage by her father,\nthe bride was charming in a dressmaker suit of new green with formal matching hat and corsage of\ncream carnations.\nShe was attended by her sister,\nMil. Jamts Pearson Jr, of Chapman\nCamp. James Pearson supported the\ngroom. A wedding reception attended by the immediate families only\nwas held at the home of .Mr. and\nMrs. James Pearson, Jr.\nMr. and Mrs. Gallprn will make\ntheir home m lower Blarchmont.\n5TEAM SPOUTS FROM\nPARK HIGHWAY\nYELLOWSTONE NATIONAL\nPARK, Wya., July 18 (AP) - Motorists were , a bit puzzled when\nsteam began to spout yesterday from\na Yellowstone Park Highway near\nThumb. Park officials roped off the\ntwo-foot wide hole punched through\nthe roadway and nonchalantly explained it might be another geyser\ncoming to life.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllll 'INIIIIIIIIIIII\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nThe House of Furniture Value*.\nPHONE 115 - NELSON, B.C.\nTrade In your old furniture on\nnew.\nBUY ON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN PAYMENT\nStore open till II p.m. Saturdays\n1111111111111 n 111 i 111 n n n 11 m 11111 n 11111111\nOTTAWA (CP) - Old-hands at\narmy headquarters here say love of\nmechanical power and things mechanized has replaced lure of the uniform as major drawing card for re-\ncrtiits,\nDULLUM'S\nLadies' Wear\n415 Holi St.     Phone 1320\nNEW ARRIVALS IN\n2-PIECE DRESSES\nLarge sizes smartly styled In\nfigured cottons, also one\npiece dresses In spuni and\nrayons.\nLOVELY BLOUSES, SKIRTS\nANDSUNSUITS\nfor the teen-agers.\n\u25a0_-__----*--,_\nTapadero\nRiding Stable\nSADDLE HORSES FOR HIRE\nSaturdays and Sundays ond after 3:00 o'clock on week days.\nWeek dayi SI.00 on hour.\nSundayi and holidays $1.25 on\nhour.\nHall Mines Road\u2014just above\nCottonwood Creek.\nVast quantities of B.C.-produced chemical fertilizers\nhelp increase the food supplies of a hungry world\nFifteen hundred tons\u201438 box con\u2014a train loud a day of chemical\nfertilizers leave Consolidated's plants for all  parts of the world\u2014\nAmmonium  Phosphates for the  Prairies,   the   Pacific   Coast   and\nEurope\u2014Ammonium Sulphate for the Pacific Coast citrus trade and\nHawaiian sugar and pineapple\u2014Ammonium Nitrates to Europe, the\nEast Indies and the Orient.   Fifteen hundred\ntons\u201430,000 bags\u2014each bag means bigger\ncrops   per   acre\u2014each   bag   means   shorter\ngrowing periods\u2014each bag means more food\nfor a hungry world.\nLarge Size Dresses\nfnr ills Itylllh  Itnutt\nS';r\u00bb 1\" :\u00ab'>  It* .    '*   **< snd  n\u00bbpM\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPl\nTHE CONSOLIDATED MINING & SMELTING COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED\n !\"''\"'*,<*'?'w<!1^^\ni.^*i.*,;nmiw\u00abwpiii*ii|i|f| imt iw\nmtfteni umimwm*\nm i*n_pwmi*J 7^ ym\nEstablished April 22. 1902.\nBritish Coltnnbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe  NEWS  1'UBLISHINO  COMPANY,  LIMITED. 268 Baker St.. Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail,\nPostoffice Department, Ottawa\nMEMBEH OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nSATURDAY, JULY 19, 1947\nThe Egyptian Complaint\nThe Egyptian Government has\nhanded to the Secretary General of the\nUnited Nations a note requesting the\nSecurity Council tp hear its complaint\nagainst the United Kingdom Government.\nThe terms of the Egyptian note are\nbeing considered in London. Sir Alexander Cadogan, the United Kingdom\n, representative on the Security Council will reply to the Egyptian Government's argumentation when the Security Council debates the issue which\nthe Egyptian Government has raised.\nLast year the United Kingdom Govtrnment negotiated concerning the revision of the existing Anglo-Egyptian\nTreaty of 1936 with the Egyptian Govtrnment, although that treaty is not\ndu* to expire before December 1956\nfind ita earlier revision could not be\nundertaken without the United King'\ndom Government's consent, which was\nk fact freely given.\nComplete agreement was reached ln\nIltt course of the 1946 negotations and\nom December 1 last year the Egyptian\nGoYtrnment Informed the United\nKingdom Government that it was pre-\nptred to sign a treaty and protocals\nin tht form already agreed. Then at\ntkt eleventh hour the Egyptian Govtrnmtnt raised the question of interpretation of \u00bb single phrase in the\nSudan protocol, which the Egyptian\nGovernment sought to contrue in a\ntenie which would have denied to the\nSudanese the right of self-determination. On that cardinal principle the\nUnited Kingdom Government could\nnot compromise. The Egyptian Government accordingly broke off negotiations, which have not since been resumed.\nThe agreement reached with the\nGovernment of Sidky Pasha had included an undertaking by the United\nKingdom Government to evacuate all\nBritish forces from Cairo, Alexandria\nand the Nile Delta by March 31 of this\nyear, and to complete the evacuation\nof British forces from Egyptian territory by September 1, 1949.\nDespite the Egyptian Government's\nfailure to conclude tho revised treaty\nas negotiated, despite the fact that in\nthe absence of a new treaty the existing\n1936 treaty stands with its provision\nthat the United Kingdom Government\nmay retain 10,000 troops in the Suez'\nCanal Zone until 1956, the United\nKingdom Government did complete\nthe evacuation of Cairo, Alexandria\nand the Nile Delta by March 31 last.\nMoreover since last December the\nUnited Kingdom Government has repeatedly made clear to the Eitvptian\nGovernment its readiness to resume\ndirect negotiations at anv time **n tin\nstrict understanding that the Sudanese\nright nf self-determination must lv*\nsafeguarded. Mr. Bevin even i ffen i :,\nsign separately a treaty nf niutu,,! assistance, including the evacuati in pm-\ntocol as agreed with Sldky I'asl.a, and\nto exclude the Sudan protocol which\ncould have been dealt with i.ilt :. This\noffer disproves Egyptian ailci'a!i*>ns\nthat the United Kingdom Government\nis using the extraneous question of tin*\nSudan as a pretext for remaining in\nEgypt. But the Egyptian (lovernmen!\nhas rejected Mr. Bevin's offer an I declined to resume direct negotiations. It\npreferred te\nuntv ('ounci\n( liie r\nsubmit il\n\u2022he S.\nbe stated with or without reference te\nthe Anglo-Egyptian issue. It is, to cite\nMr. Bevin, that \"If you enter into a\ntreaty which imposes obligations upon\nboth parties and that treaty is solemnly\nand freely arrived at and honorably\nhonored, it cannot be denounced unilaterally.\" Mr. Bevin added that this\nwas a fundamental principle which\nmust be maintained.\nThe Wall Street Week\nIn deciding to re-open for business\non Saturdays at the end of Summer,\nthe Board of Governors of the New\nYork Stock Exchange gave recognition\nto the fact that theirs is a national, not\na local institution.\nAlthough the Saturday closing of\nbanks in some Northeastern States has\nbrought about a five-day financial\nweek in this area, other sections of the\ncountry still regard Saturday as a\nhighly important business day, says the\nNew York Sun. It ls then that people\nfrom outlying villages, ranches and\nfarms drive to the nearest big town for\ntheir marketing. On these trips banking\nbusiness is transacted and such business often involves the buying and selling of securities. Employees of brokerage concerns and many brokers themselves will regret that this condition\nmakes it necessary for them to labor\non the feixth day of the week while\ntheir banking friends are relaxing\ncontinues the Sun. This, however, is\none of the things that go with serving\na national rather than a local need.\nLance H.\nWhittaker\nWE DON'T WANT PEACE\nThere are many reasons why it is difficult to believe that the world will some day\nsoon achieve lasting peace. One of the strongest of these is tne obvious but little realized\nfact that few of us actually want peace\nOh yes, the statesmen, the educators, the\nchurch and the press talk much about \"a\nworld longing for peace\"- but it isn't; certainly the people of the North American continent\ndon't want peace.\nThey think they do, and thry talk a lot\nabout It, but you only have to get away fron;\nthe subject of war and start talking about\nfree trade, an open immigration policy, justice for the Negro or the Jew to realize how\nfew-how very few know what peace is\nand are willing to pay the price Ger.era!\nEisenhower h.is sa:d: 'As I se.' it, we need\nan organized eff. rt, embrace t; every phase\nof soe.ety, whose goal w.ll be the development nf individual, commir.itv nnd national\n;it'.;tu(its that will remove war fr m toe nte-\ntjnry   of the  irii'Vitable \"\nM'.\".at :^ a fair statement which, if .'. v.\"-1\nfollowed, would umi-.iubt-.tily go \u00ab br.g way\n\u2022u ach.i w* ::.e dts.rt d reiul'\nNow |.;'j ex.i:n:ne fc ser.h v. >t i statement a.s .t applies ' ' you an! I:\n\"An o: _ ii:;. *.: effort, e;r.r:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'-i'A \u25a0 very\n: h,o-e of  \u25a0\u25a0   *;*'ty\nAre v-r w:Ki: -i to w\\\u00bbrk w.'h tne J'*a*-,\ntue Chinese the Japanese <>\u2022 the I) ukh :> ,:s\n:r. our d.strict toward \"the development <1\nat'itudei that will remove war from tne\n:\\i'' ,' *:y c' 'he i' ev.table '\" Arc .**.*\u2022\u00bb w.ll.r.g\n:\u25a0> develop an ir. i vidua! .i\".;:,i > that w .11\n:r,,l,tdr,'.ly si md a.;.i.:.at tne graM.\\: \u25a0 f ip.'c.a!\n; rivilefie to any diss or k:p 1 ot \\ \u2022\u2022 pi? :i ''\u25a0-'\u25a0\n.1 ur.': .     . w si   :\u25a0     ;gr.    :' v   i; v '.-\u2022:   ;\u2022 ... \u25a0 .;e\n,'.   ...: %  li ,(*.- Lp'   i a'.v* -;   *rn .! *.; a: t s  . <.'\"\n,*st*  o:   Kj.st-kd. .:   (V .-..!\u25a0 r.s   is r ; ia;   *.'n\nI .ooking Backward\n\u25a00  YEARS  AGO\nFrom   The   Daily   Newi  of   July   '9.   '937\n\u25a0.'umpet.r.g for the  M i::_)   M.Lair.n Jur.-\n\u25a0 r   \\to:i,r   N*.ir..: r   Shield   :t'.'.t:   h   W' v-   of\n'l.trd  '\u25a0'*   \u25a0 k.  tne   ::. 'n.hen     f !ne  TJ'. !   1 ' ' M Y\nCco.r.; ,i\".v,   (Pr!   Crudes,   havt   \"ftr   r\\ .\u25a0*,. \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 :\n\u25a0 \u2022*   C    K   K   Small of U'.s.-a..\nF-. d Bl\/urmiin, C PR F.:i' A 1 I:.\ns'.r.u' r, hai 71 in attrr'd \u00abr.rr a: \u25a0 - f . :..i*:\n::;r:.\\ \u00bb*-t\\ wnmer.'j f;:s' a.: clai\"'s .r ! \u2022\u25a0 '\u2022\n!  ':\u25a0:\u25a0,,!   V id' '.'.<\\   a: r   e\\'t ci 'i *i\n_S  YEARS  AGO\nFrom   The   Da ly   Newi   of   Ju  y   19,   19?:\n;    I\nHe --'.   A\nI   *!li    S\n,',*  1   an,\ni.ll'\n\u25a0 if\n\u2022   ( :,*\n:    P    Tiiami\n***;\u00bb   ', rr\n* 1,  M.ii\n'-..'.;   '\u2022:'.     :-.\nn tin* p*\nmud\nr* ,*\nr.ny,  ifAVri\n1 *Sty   1   *\n{':.-.,..-..i:.   w.i\nli nl wil!\nI'.tr.l   \\,i\nliie\ni' .us\nv:.!.'.\nA: ,   Y:i::rc,\ni-.-l  hfr  n.*Irr\nSln.r,   nl\nM:.5  Va\n(irnnrf   V * kl\nii.i.c s; .in\n\u25a0f 111\n'II    Will    111*    Il  fll'r.l\nli mini i\nMl*.    \\\nhai  ,,i\n'* Sell is\nil tht*\n* is a\num*\n1 run\nSO YEARS  AGO\nI rom   Thf   Dailv   Nrwi  rl  July   U.   1907\nT:,*   2'.KM   Ci-.-.b     i   I'm: i   a   mi    --.-'..ib:\nmain  'ti lo I'rnfifr Tt-.11r\u00abd\u00aby Thf Cily Uund\ni. I., l*p in altfiitlnr.rf\n.1 N N iwrll , ( Ihr F.rmrr'i I.\u00ab**l ind\nl'\u00ab*'lf t'''*:ir\u00abii>, Al'.Irh purrhaifl thf high\nl'l\u00ab*J f 'nr Ni*ll,*n <:*,! F il S'*,,*;**, \"rt IU *\n\u00ab\u25a0>*.   u   lni|>frla'g   hn   land   Irum   IUII   I\nK :-:r::A)    l..skr\n? ? Questions ? ?\nOp.n to iny reader. Namei Of penoni\n\u25a0iklnQ queitloni wlll not bo publlihed.\nThert ll no charge for thle tervice. Ouei-\ntlone WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL except when there It obvious necessity for prlvicy.\nSport   F\u00abn,   Nelson\u2014What   track   and   field\nevents are included ln a decathlon, used\nin connection with the Olympic Garms?\nThe decathlon ii a composite event which\nincludes a 400 meter run, a broad jump, a\nrunning high Jump, putting the ahot, throwing\nthe discus, a 100 meter hurdle race, pole vaulting, throwing the javelin, and a 1300 meter\nrun.\nZ. T., Trail\u2014Would you answer thii question?\nIs a toadstool poisonous and a mushroom\nnon-polaonous?\nThe terms toadstool and mushroom in\npopular usage refer Indiscriminately to any\ntype of fungus correctly known as mushroom.\nToadstool is really a nickname, and although\nit is used by some people to refer to poisonous\nvarieties, it actually has no such distinction.\nA A., Trail\u2014To settle an argument would you\nstate whether or not Glen Miller played\nany Instrument in the show, \"Sun Valley\nSerenade\"? Also did he feature himself\nin any instrument while with the band?\nGlen  Miller  played  the  trombone while\nwith his band, also in the show, \"Sun Valley\nSerenade.\"\nO. E., Castlegar\u2014What Is the birthstone for\nJuly?\nThe Ruby is listed as the birthstone for\nJuly.\nLetters to the\nEditor\nLetten may be publiihed over a nom de\nplume, but the actual name of the writer\nmuit be given to the Editor ai evidence of\n(jood faith. Anonymous letteri go' In the\nwaite paper basket\nMany Reasons School\nVote Beaten Says\nBurton Taxpayer\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014I have just read in your paper of\nMonday the 14th. where the voters of School\nDistrict No* 10 on the Arrow Lakes have turned down a bylaw fur a r.vx ychoul at Arrow\nPark by 376 tn 22H. V* ;i also state that it was\nfor the building of twfi much needed rooms.\nOn the face of it, trus would seem a wry\nshort-sighted actum of the residents of the\ndistrict, but when the facts are brought to\nyour notice you might think differently of it\nThe bylaw* was NOT for the building of two\nrooms but for an $34,000 school, which comprised of four rooms and a large \"play room\"\nibout 40 by 60 feet 1 understand, Naturally\nthe taxpayers could not see their way clear\nto provide such a fine community hall for\nArrow Park ju.t because their present one is\nnearly fallmg down. It was intended to build\nthe two rooms at o:.*:e o it the debt was for\n:he whole th:; :, n '.* iy sum of $34,000 or thereabouts There will have to be another school\niri.lt at Nakuap ar.d a proposed high school\nat .\/Ucwuod, y> '\u2022*\u25a0 z.h the scant papulation as\n\\i proven by or.ly au cit nOO votes on a keenly\ncontested issue > 'U can P'ai.lv Me tnat tiw\nproperly owner.** wcuM ne put c.unpl.teiy out\nsf the.r n.imes ' i tr.e r.oi.-p .ymci.t uf taxes\n,-vhich c   ;!d r: )t p*i:*-,oly be mtt\nM *,' i f the n -.dents of the d*strict wanted\n\u2022he R ir i to bu.'.-i \"rv rouui to tue Arrow V,r.'k\nSchool and one ' the -East Arrow Park S-bo'd\nwhich wo j Id have taken Cire of the s.tuat. u;,\n: mu yr. 'or A-:uw Park\nnu! tnat was u\n53  wu :.' t  con\nTr.t  mam i\nit Arr*  '.  Pirk\ntiding a school\nfl a: uu f-opula-\ns tyo tnat they\n;!.\u2022   to   keep   the\n* :u k industry\nCUI.e   in,   but   AS\n.   \u25a0*'. ,* :!'!   ne   a\nWuv tu t have\n..*'-..\u25a0    \u25a0 :.  the\n-i- .1 ;\u25a0 : Mis1\ni'.i .- tue children\n'.uu   11;. MnKin-\nh,   A::, w Park\n,:   \u25a0 ,;   \u25a0.'. ,th   the\n. b      We do not\nA'ur crossing\n_f    .\n~\\  .*\u00bb;\nd   :he   I\n\u2022!;.i  d::v\n1   a\nis accident is\nc-.-d \u25a0\u25a0 :\u2022\"\u2022 ;'\u2022 i v. :. !\u25a0\u25a0 'hr . fn ' cf the bus\n'*,*,:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'     'r.t Z(<e  wn cu   :\u2022   vr: \\- el   se  tn\nL'r.dfr preier.' rond.t.on.** ;,r. 1 w.tt-, \u25a0'..;! these\n\u25a0 ew buildings the taxei nf the Burton res:-\nlenti   have   increased   cms; lerably   ttn.\u00bb  year,\nseme to the tx'-tr'. nf two or three times last\nyrar s tyrr <\u25a0 .', \u25a0\u25a0-. \u25a0 u v. *\u2022 thtn \\ ala'.ial\nschrndl \u00bbr.d c \u2022\u25a0r.:v. ::..'; tial.s fore d on us\nxV.a'   will  the \\A\\rt, be  in  a year  or  two?\nTue rril \\tr'* ! :\".r V.\\*' side ot tre lake\nfr .in It .ru*:. *o \u00a5\u00bb\u00bb' A::oa I\\.rk mr all for\nimprove ! educa1, \u25a0\u25a0 mr'. \u25a0\u25a0'\u2022 11 \u2022 :;ip \"' r: '. th r.jj\nv \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0 : raior- bu' ' he a*kr \\ to %'ir. a rh* ijue\nfor $8V0(>0 tn i ;' a i :> vho I up '\u25a0.: h (.*\u25a0\u201e\u25a0,: *\n, .\u25a0 aim; ui it in, -e tl; ,n can hr expected Hu!\n' the Schnol Hoard * ill liitrn to -he desires\n\u2022f the taxpayer* aru! ru*1 try to run thmd^ en-\nturl\\   ns   they   tlv-k   I   an;   sure  thry   will   get\n\u25a0 I'prr.ition and the required montv for nre*\nr.v-iry ich.oel arromm'Kiatuirr\nTruitinK these fartji will jjivr a rlearer iiutl\ncorrect picture nf the situn! *u, nnd thankuu!\nynu  tf.   \\he ipacr th.i!   \\o\\i  h.wr ,;;\\iv;  uie.\nTAXPAV1H\nnurton. BC\nFIE At   TEETH  ARE USE\nrh;\u00ab   i r'iv   ree uumn.dal.on   lc:    V S    i  -n-\nirript.or*    mgiies't    deir-ocra   v    ,s    i* .    1 >\u2022 grr\n,  u 'ri'.t    in    )u|t    t>rmj    a; mrd    tu    t,.e    lal^e\nle.th     Man, ll\"!,   hy-iZi\":\nMovie Gossip\nWilliam Powell Will Be Away From\nHome Lot, M.G.M., for Two Years\ny i\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, July 18 (AP) -\nOne of the strangest deals Involving a contract player haa been arranged by William Powell' who now\nplana to spend the next two years\naway from his home lot M.G.M.\nThe actor \\s currently enacting\n\"The Senator Was Indiscreet\" at\nUniversal-International and will return there this Winter for \"Mr,\nPeabody and the Mermaid.\" He will\nthen rest for six months and return\nto tbe vulley lot for two more films.\nCOVERED CHARMS\nEsther Williams' next film, based\non the life of Annette Kellerman,\nwill be called \"International Venus.\"\nShe'll be completely covered by a\nperiod bathing suit for most of the\npicture. Esther Is exasperated by\nconstanf rumors that she and Ben\nGage are breaking up. \"To prove\nwe are happy,\" she said, \"I think\nwe'll make violent love in tha\nmiddle of Sunset and Vine every\nsix months.\" I put in a bid for the\nticket concession.\nROUNDUP\nfrom their studloi. Van Johnson,\nJudy Garland and Lana Turner are\namong the many yearning to do\nBritish pictures,\nThe many newspaper men planned for \"Miracle of the Bells\" have\nbecome three \u2014 representatives of\nthe Wilkes-Barre Record and Nati-\ncoke Journal, both mythical Pennsylvania papers and The Associated\nPress. The latter will be portrayed\nby Jim Nolan, R.K.O. actor who, I\nam assured, is a handsome, clean-\ncut type. No comment.\nMODEL BOY\nButch Jenkins is surprising everybody by being the model boy on\nthe set of \"Virtuous.\" Unlike previous pictures, on this one he has\nbeen the soul of sweetness and has\nkept his dressing room swept and\nneat, for which he receives $1 extra\nper week. His current allowance:\n$3.\nJoan Crawford, unlike most stars,\nseems to be able to get an early release for her films. \"Daisy Kenyon\"\nwill be finished in September, released in November . . . Eve Arden\nJ. Arthur Rank could corral more j is being set for a Roz Russell build-\nHollywood stars for films in Eng- up at Warners as a result of \"Voice\nland, if he could get them away'of the Turtle.\" It's about time . . .\nCapital Closeups . . .\nCanada's Envoy to China Finally\nSettled in Home He Took Wilh Him\nBY    DOUGLAS    HOW\nCanadian  Preii Staff Writer\nfor    the\nskeletons,\nThe    mysteries\narrival    had    unearthed\nof    the    Orient\nLaunch Final Phase of Plan fo\nCompensate Northwest Eskimos\nBy LOHNE BRUCE ithe   North Weat  Terrltorlei torn*\nCanadian Preu Staff Writer      1900 alrmllei Northwest of Eclmon-\nEDMONTON, July 18 (CP)-Theiton* Hargnve will itudy problem**1\nCanadian Experimental Department j encountered In Canada's relndetr\nis launching one of the final phasesi oern program.\not its long-term project to com- Th\u00ab Plan to convert the Eskimo!\npensate some 5000 Eskimos alon\u00abilnt0 ranchers Kot under way in 1939\nthe Northwest fronitler for changes lwhen \" w*15 decided to buy 3000\nforced by the encroachment of civ-1 reindeers -in Western Alaska. It\nillzation, lool( 'Vi years to \"drive\" this herd\nHarry Hargrave, Superintendent!t0 a Permanent camp East of th\u00ab\nfor 12 years of the Dominion Ex-1 Mackenzie River delta, Ihe animall\nperimental B'arm at Manyberries In I reaching their new home in 1935.\nSoutheastern Alberta, leaves Ed- HAVE MULTIPLIED\nmonton by plane today in an at-: With special care, lhe reindeer\ntempt to \"sell\" the natives on the have multiplied and now there are.\nidea of becoming reindeer ranchers. I more than 13,000.\nFederal officials wish to stabilize\nthe livelihood of the Eskimos in\nthc general area around Aklavik in\nBaptists From\nWorld Over Meet\nAl Copenhagen\nWASHINGTON. July 18 (AP) -\nBaptist clergy nnd laymen from sll\nover the world are converging on\nCopenhagen for the Seventh Congress of the Dnptlst World Alliance,\nopening July 29 and one of the\nlargest religious meetings since he\nThe Eskimo once was a nomad following the seal, the walrus, the\nspawning fish an dthe migrating\ncaribou. With the coming of th\u00ab\ntrading posts, hunters, trappers and\nprospectors ,there was a decided\nchange. The fur-bearing population\nwas decimated. Caribou changed\ntheir migration routes.\nFUR   MARKET\nThe Dominion Government wai\nconcerned lest the natives, confined\nto hunting as a menn,s of subsistence,\nmight be seriously nffrrted by the\nperiodic fluctuations in the number\nof fur bearers and by changes in the\nfur market. The relnderr were purchased.\nNow Hargrave, a specialist in animal husbandry, is going to the Arctic to inspect Canada's herds near\nthe  Mackenzie delta  and  then  fly\nim it,,-.'-.   ii.ii\u00abiiiu.*i   im.Liine.1   .ti i nr    Uf- i ,        a i       I , ,      ,       > . i     __ ,,       ,\nfore the war with between 4000 and Jo Alaska to study herding methodi\n5000 delegates. \u00a3emg followed there by the United\nStates Government,\nHargrave is on loan from the Department of Agriculture to the De-\nfell  upon  thc  judge;  frnm  Saskat- of London.\n'gates.\nFrom the United States alone 960\nBaptists are going.\nTwo of the foremost decisions to\nbe made are:\n1. Election of a president to succeed the late Dr. J. H. Rushbrooke\nchewan. As a good jurist, he\ncould only respect the Chinese\nlaw which decreees that if n\nfamily can prove a skeleton was\none  of  its ^ancestors  it  has to be\npart ment of Mines and Hesourcee\nfor his probe and on his return will\nbe named superintendent of the\nexperimental farm at Swift Current,\nSask.\n2. Determination whether alliance ; DEVELOPMENTS\nOTTAWA. July 19 (CP) - The\nhonorable ancestry of mysteriously-miscellaneous Chinese families\nhaving been financially satisfied,\nCanada's Ambassador to China ls\nfinally settled in tho home he took\nwith  him, , [paid for removal of said skeleton\nReports reaching an amused annl^Q gTp|^T RULES\nadmiring   external   affairs   depart-     In Chinese currency, this was big]i'\nment    here   have    told    the    last busine85   but   in   Canadian   money!5\nchapter   in   the  epic  tale   of how ,h    CQSt fj       d Qut t0 R few ^ wo Id The alliance says its purpose\nSaskatchewan's   Mr.   Justice  T.   C.j^   go  u,w;n.y  embassy  official*]lncludps   discussion of such themes\n(Tommy)    Davis    finally    planted; s\\nrtf>d    paving   off    without   any13*  relate   themselves   generally   to I will clear the way for distribution\nhis prefabricated Embassy in Nan-,^ t ru(pV lhe life of our people, as, for ex-1 of the reindeer to the Eskimo, nov\nheadquarters will return to London\nas is considered likely, or remain\nin Washington.\nThe organization haa no legislative or administrative functions in\nthe Baptist faith  which numbered\n000,000   persons    throughout   the\nHargrave has been responsible tor\nseveral valuable developments In\nrange feeding of livestock as well\nas production of types better suited\nto the prairies. In the North he will\nstudy reindeer herding habitg, feeding, breeding, slaughtering and general development.\nIt is hoped his recommendation!\nking cemetery and  made  it  stick\nIn  the  relatively  brief  story\" of j\nCanadian     diplomacy,     there     ti:\nnothing else quite like it.\nThe first chapters received con-\nample, evangelism, missions, world j becoming\npeace, religious liberty, etc.\" centuries\nOne of the greatest services\nrendered by the alliance has been\naiding displaced persons of the\nSecond World War.\nNew Glad for\nPlant Protectors\nThe  gossip  flow.   Euerals  began\nto   turn   in   the   direction   of   thc\nembassy    during    the    night    and\nfresh   graves  would   be   found   al-\n\u201ert most every morning. The payment\nsiderable publicity six months ago wpnt Qn\nwhen   faced with a Chinese hom-l    But  fina]1     a   lesson   in   tactlcl\nmg   shortage,   and   with   a   whnp-j]Hmed     lhe    ^^1^    buUt   a\np.?*.   S1\"]6?*    infMl0n'    h*d*' fence   around   their   property.   At\ncided   to   take   his   own   prefabn- n- M ds  wefe      ^   around\ncated home along with him. it   And   now  there   are  no  skele-\nFORMER CEMETERY tons,   not   even   new   ones   in   the\nBv devious cargoes,  lt eventual-[closet   of   Canadian   diplomacy,\nlv   'reached    Nanking.    Land    had;    As a final aside, it may be said\ni\" <:i    purchi.H'l    tor    its    arrival..that   external   affairs   Minister   St. I    r.\u2122r..ir.\nBut   here   entered   the   clutch   of Uurent    has    disclosed    that   the I    U11 AwA, July 18 (LI)- Those\nChinese   history.   The   land   turn-: total   cost   for   the   embassy   was I sharp characters who eye imported\net\\   out   to  be  a   former  cemetery. I$145,000   including  $63,000  for  that;shipments of plants to keep Cana-\nhe    excavations    In    preparation 'bone-ridden land. da free of unwanted insects and dis-\n\u2014  eases   from   abroad   are   chuckling\nover a boner by customs officials.\nTo the Plant Protection Laboratory at Estevan, Sask., came a parcel\nfrom the customs inspectors for examination. It was labelled \"gladiolus-chenille.\" Knowing that glads\ndo run to foreign names (Amador.\nBengasi, Pundibundus, etc.) the\nplant protectors thought they might\nhave a new one on their hands.\nIt was a new one, all right. The\nnew glad had bright yellow stamens\nin relief against wine petals and\ngreen leaves. The texture was s\nlittle different from the better-\nknown varieties, though. It was a\nfine chenille fabric,\n\"I'm grateful to customs officials\nfor taking no chances, W. N. Keen-\nan, chief of the Plant Protection\nDivision here, commented. He added\nthat he was even willing to overlook the zeal which inspired one\ncustoms official to forward to the\nPlant Protection Division fumigation station several hundred pounds\nof   freight   invoiced    as   \"whiffle-\n\"stick-at-home\"   afte\na nomad.\nBelieves Germany Not Entitled\nTo Good Fortunes ol Economic Plan\nBy DEWITT  MacKENZIE j\nAiiociated Pren\nForeign  Affalri  Analyst\nWashington's new poliry for eco-1\nnomic rehabilitation of war-ravaged'\nGermany is being welcomed by her\n! leaders, who interpret it as a step toward readmitting the country to\nworld economy and saving the Ger-j\n; nnn people from idleness.\nAnd well they mav rejoice. This\n;\u25a0; a wh.dlv unexpected visitation of\n.; *:td fortune and one to which they\nire not entitled, for they have Finned\ngr-itiy, and probably thought they\n!i nl been sentenced to economic and\n* political der.th, ,\nGANS PRUSSIANS\nThe springs of compassion become\nsluggish when the question of ease-|\nmrnt for Germany arises. If you I\n..hould suggest that all Prussians be.\n, put m solitary confinement for life,'\nthereby exterminating the race, lj\nwouldn't raise a little finger ln opposition, for I have seen those Huns.\n:n operation at close range In two,\nwars now They're no good. I\nHou ever, the rank and file of\nderma ns, whose blond does not,\ncarry the Prussian poison, are need-;\nwl fnr reconstruction of shattered:\nEurope, Sn we can forget the ques-\njt;nn of compassion (well, maybe we\nlean remember a bit) and say with\nsimple sintcnty that we are going\n1 t put Germany on her feet because\nthat i.s for the gond of ttie world as\nSays More Help\nNeeded il (anada\nTo Rear Stars\nVICTORIA, July 17 <CP< - Are\nCanadian tennis stars too \"amateur \"\nValerie Scott, ranked seventh in\nthe latest world women's racquet\nl.s\" of 1939 and currently teaching\nthe game professionally in Canada\nnnd the I'nited States, laid today\nthat player\" need more financial\nmd if the Dominion is to develop\nworld-ranking stars.\nI A member of the British Wight-\nman Cup 'i am which visited the.\nt'mted States in l!)3!t. Miss Scot:\nstayed nn in 'he United States nlong\nwith fc;r o'her plovers, when un*\n\":, VZv rny.u-ihd -it thr war's out-\nbreik   hv   P:;t;sh   nf?inal\u00ab\nS\".t* fmallv broke in*o pr.'fes-\n\u25a0v : ,i) r,\\*o,s trn inng at Pi,.Ird\nSMVs u'Si-Z..*-\ni Advis'ng yuuug.'tiTs nt the 00-\nyr.ir-old Victoria I.awn Tennis Club\nwhere East-Weit matches are being\nio hi tins week, the blonde nttrac-\nt.ve former Iled ford. Merfordshire,\nwoman NURgrsled lighter nrgnni?-\n,i':on of Canadian tennis as a means\nof  boosting nil bre  of  p'.av\nI,irk of ven i,.und ) h.v tor (';\u25a0-\ni.ui..ins v..o. a roii1i;buli\"g faetor\nni 1 * ue cluselv n laird to the fi-\ni an.-es  of   leimn\nIf a plaver like Brendan Marken\n'ranked No 1 on Canada's lalesl\nInt) could pl.iv all yeai and Afford\nto appear m several American\nt ii: nameuts he might become a\num Id l anker.\" added Miss Scolt\nuh i hai al tunes beaten K iv Stammer s   Men\/.in,   Ko\u00a3 laud's   top   Mar\nThe well-Delng of Germany is the\nwell-being of Europe. Germany is\nthe economic heart of the continent,;\na fact which Isn't altered because*\nthe heart is badly damaged.\nINTERESTED\nGen. Lucius D. Clay, American\nZone Commander, told a press conference in Berlin yesterday that Eu-,\nropean recovery couldn't lie attained without the revival of German in-;\ndustry. He added that he would very]\ninterested in any proposals for Am-,\nerican and British big business men.\nto underwrite Western Germany's\nindustrial recovery. Why Western\nGermanyn Because Eastern Ger-,\nmany Is under control of the Rus-:\nsians who have refused to cooperate\nwith their Allies in economic rehabilitation.\nSTEEL INDUSTRY\nA striking example of the Soviet,\nattitude was furnished yesterday\nduring a meeting of the Allied con-i\ntrol authority in Berlin. The Russians asked that German steel plants\ncapable of producing 13,000,000 tons\nannually be allocated immediately\nfor reparations. The United States\nand British representatives refused\nto discuss the matter, since they held\nthat the demand could be met only\nby stripping the great industrial area\nof the Ruhr. The Russians claim that\nthe steed capacity in question is \"excess.\"\nThere has been no indication that.\nthe Allies have the slightest intension of withdrawing their troops\n! from Germany before the task of\n|Teutonic reform is finished. The way\nthings now look it will be necessary.\n\u25a0to maintain forces in the Reich for*\nat least a generation. That means an\nAllied Military Control will see to\ni it that tbe economic rec >v*cry doesn't *\n\u25a0 involve tlie creation of a new der-\n' man war potential,\nBANFF SCHOOL\nOF FINE ARTS\nSTARTS SESSION\nBANFF. Alta , July IR An enthusiastic aggregation of rpuroxi-j\nmately flOO students frnm. many.\nparts of Canada and the United States answered the roll call, when the\nBanff Schoni of Fine Arts commenced its 15th annual session here today. Hoe to limited Bcenmmodation,\nHie school, which operates ai an extension course of tr.e I'mvnsi.y of\nAlberta, was forced to reject a large\nnumber of applicants, lhe qunla of\nmany courses having been filled a*.\neai'.v as April 110\nPopularity honors for the S'.immej\ncurricu'am this vear have g^or \\*\nliie ait coarse which has a Mle !\njuotfl of 22,ri students for wh^ni\nBanff s beautiful environs will in\nsomt- cases take the place of the\nconventional  classrooms.\nExcellent progress on the projected new school rub- on Tunn. I Mountain across the How River Valle\\\nfrom the celebrated Banff Spnngs\nHotel was reported bv I) maid I'.r.o*\nBron. Director of the Banff School\nof Fine Ails The new sclmol build\nings are expected to iuroinniodale\nlOitfl   students\nNEWTON. Wales TIM Mnt.t-\ngomeryshire police commission was\ntold bv Alderman T V. Kmsey thai\nhundreds of eaieass.s of .sheep killed hs Sp.mg hh.\/an's weir men-\nMivig  lhe dlstml's  uain   Mipply\nCANADA'S\nMOST FAMOUS\nHOIST\nThe London \u2014 an all-steel hand\nhoist weighing only 130 Iba., yet\nlifts 5 tons on s single line. \"Hil*\nlift can be multiplied many timej\nwith the use of gang blocks and\nmultiple lines.\nWrite for Bulletin\nIMMEDIATE  DELIVERY FROMj\nSTOCK\nPurves E. Ritchie\n& Son Ltd.\n858  Hornby  St.,  Vancouver, B.O.1\nlk.\nP.M.\n-Ve\nfne man\nPOWER CHAIN SAV\nLight\nSturdy\nCompact\nProtected\n\u2022O   IMD   HJ**ID--CUT1   H1HT   TO   T\u00bb.\n14.10,  tt\" HUT-TII'TID Cvmi   (111\nCLUTCK-COWTIO. *U\nmi r_i\u00bb_T-irr hiti\n!*,.<\u25a0     .    f    r   \u25a0       .-4\nctniwi uki\nrwio*j(,\"o-T roi\nl   ,m; lUtHT.\nBuilt to r\u00abnry\n\u25a0i-il-. and vrnrk\nwltliout   nt rnin.\nWf-lfthi   only   35\nlb\u00ab. v. it li 11\" rut-\ntrr    i>,it .    Sturdy,\nron no ml fa I \u2014 mvra\ntime, money, labor\nSold Exclusively\nin this Area hv:\nCentral Truck\n& Equipment Co.\n702 FRONT STREET\nNELSON, B.C.\nlor full Infc-riiintlnn ni.,1  prlrr ronlarl ilnu ,If.Irr nr\n< I II' an,I M Ml    IhU I III I'lIN\n<A^y'* I'M. I'riMlurl. (HIT) I I.l.     Illrpl. )\n'. iu;, i.u.i Molina, *\"\u25a0* i>\"< \", ii i\n; l'lr\u201e\u201e.   .r\u201e,l   \u201e\u201e\u25a0   full  ,,,\u201e,\u201e \u201e!\u201e,.   \u201el\u201e\u201e,r   ihr   I'  If.\n' On.-Mnn l',.urr II,  .*\u2022\u201e,,\n 1\nSPORTS\nfankees Seeking Record 20th\nlanked 8-0 by Tiger Two-Hitler\nDETROIT, July 18 (AP)\u2014New\n[York Yankee.' bid for their 20th\nfstraight victory \u2014 an American\nLeague record\u2014collapsed In the\ntwilight of Briggi Stadium today\nat \u2022Fyddi. Hutchinson, Detroit\nTiger righthander, pitched a near-\nperfect two hitter to blank the\nleague leaders 8-0. The second\nplace Tigers rattled out 18 hits,\ntheir biggest production this seaion, off Randy Gumpert and Karl\nDrews.\nHutchinson, who faced only 28\nen\u2014one more than the minimum\u2014\nidn't started a game in a month\nicause of an ailing shoulder but\nid everything he needed today,\nid then some.\naiked none as the Yanks hit only\nHe struck out eight men and\nve balls out of the infield in\n,eir   futile   twilight   bid   for   the:\nrecord.\nHutchinson himself, with two\ndoubles and a single, got more hits\nthan he gave the Yanks, and Ihe\nTigers put together their wildest\nhitting day of the season to register\n18 safeties off the combined pitching of Gumpert and Drews,\nJoe DiMaggio's sharp single to\nleft in the second inning, when he\nwas promptly erased in a double\nplay, was New York's only hit until\nGeorge (Snuffy) Stirnweiss beat\nout a bunt to the right of the mound\nleading off the seventh, Stirnweiss\nnever got past first and he was the\nonly runner the Yanks left on base.\nThe setback stopped the Yankee's\nwinning streak at 19 games, which\nequalled the American League record established by Chicago White\nSox \"hitless wonders\" in 1906, and\nleft the Yanks 10!*^ games ahead of\nsecond place Detroit.\n_______\nPhiladelphia!!\nOutstrips\nOttawa Oarsman\nDETROIT, July 18 (CP) - Jm\nMclntyre of the Philadelphia Vespers Rowing Club today won the\nsenior singles in the United States\nNational rowing championships,\ncoming home at least two lengths\nin front of Ottawa's Gabe Beaudry.\nEarlier in the second heat of the\nqualifying event, Beaudry finished\nfirst, about seven feet in front of\nMclntyre who was third in the\nheat.\nMclntyre's time was aeven minutes, 13 seconds for the course and\nlie did not have to work hard to\nkeep his lead from almost the start.\nHe thus qualified for the championship singles event tomorrow.\nLocke Edges Info Lead at\nScarboro; 201 Total al 51\ndominion Lacrosse Fans Question\nime Magazine's Recent Article\nBY RON GADSBY\nCanadian press 8taf Writer\n'TORONTO, July 18 (CP) \u2014\nIme Magazine, that writes with'\nrofound conviction on any sub-\n[ct you'd care to mention, took\nhalf-gainer a few weeks ago\n[id landed in a thumping f<nl\ntat splashed right across the tn-\nrnatinnal border.\nIn a built oxhubcrence, Time's\noris editor blandly stated that\niltimore is now the world's la -\nosse capitol. Just like that!\n:He went on to describe a la-\nJosse game between two unbeaten\nuna\u2014both from Baltimore\u2014and\njferred their tussle settled the\nlorld's Championship, Yipel!\n\u25a0No wonder the blushing editor\nIquired help to dig himself from\n\"e snow-drift of mail that plunk-\ndown on him from Canadian\nIcrosse fans who happened to be\nloser tn the boiling point at all\npries than any Brooklyn bleacher-\nThey asked, with commend-\nlle patience, where he got his\n^formation?'\n'Apparently    you    have    never\n|ard of St.   Cathnrinef,  home  of\nie perennial winners of the Mann\n|jp, emblamatic of world lacrosse\niprcmacv,\" wrote J. Douglas Wil-\nm   of   Fergus,   Ont.    \"St.    Kitts\nihletics     are      World     Lacrosse\niiampinni   in   the  same   sense   as\nle St. Louis Cardinals are champ-\n|n\u00a7   of  the   basebal   world.\"\nH. J. Kecnan of Toronto roared\nis   nickel's   worth   and   compared\nie Baltimore game  to settle \"the\n'orld's Championship\" to the aud-\n\u2022ity    two    local    sandlot    teams\nlight  have   if  they  played  a   serfs   and   declared   themselves   the\n^hlte  man's   1947  champions.\"\niBut  do  you   know   sumpin\".'\n[Timo,   ns   far   an  it's   Ft ry   goes\n[as  absolutely  correct.  There  are\n[w   places   Irft   where   Field   La\ncrosse is still played and Balti-\n[more is one of them. Most centres\n.have graduated to the chopped-up\n\u2666 box   version.   So   lets   give   Time\ncredit for at least a tie     . .\nDISAPPOINTMENT\nj When Joe Louis clubbed his\nway to the top of the fistic heap.\n\u25a0 straddled it, and then looked a-\n: round for more grist for his ever-\ntwilling mill, he did a whole lot\nI more than just use his muscle?.\nI He also used his noggin to bring\n(prestige to his race and no ono\ni has ever pointed a finger of\n'scandal at tbe rugged champ. His\nwar record and his conduct at\n' all times, has been an example\nto be admired by white and negro\n! alike.\n! Another negro athlete of champion caliber has fought almost un-\nsurmount-able odds to catch for\n| himself a place in the heretofore\n\"white man's domain\"\u2014the major\nbaseball leagues. Of course we\nJmean Jackie Robinson now hit-\n, ting the apple for the D\"dgers\nI with much gusto. A clean-living\nman with natural athlete ability\nRobinson testifies to me innate\n!qualities of the negro race.\n* That is why Doug (Norther\nDaily News) Hallet expresses regret that Jackie wasn't included\non the roster of National League\nAll-stars. He explained that Robinson, a firbt baseman, had little\nchance to beat out Johnny Mi?.e\n'Giants) or Stan Musical (Cards),\nHut it would have been a good\nshow  had  he  been  included.\nThere are few athletes who can\nlx>nst the Robinson prowess. He\nstarred in four majnr sports ani\nexcelled at football, being chosen\non a number of All-American\nline-ups. He can run like an income  tax evader, on  the tr.tck  or\nnn    tko    bac\u00abc,    snt-I    hin    hitting    .!\u2022.\nwell   over  the  .300  mark.\nNelson-Born\nBoy Wins\nStampede Honors\nA native nf Nelson, Alex (Sonny)\nWatson captured a couple of titles\nat the Calgary Stampede and Is doing rodeo work for the moving\nji ict ure \"Rainbrow Ridge,\" being\nfilmed in the foothills City, his\ngrandparents, Mr. and Mrs, W.\nRiley, 609 Innes Street, have been\nadvised.\nThe young rider won the title of\nbest dressed cowboy, youngest cowboy ever to capture the honor, and\nwon first prize in the wild cow\nmilking contest.\nHe was the first Canadian(to win\nthe best dressed crown for years,\nAmerican cowboys having walked\noff with it fur many years. Joan\nLeslie, who has the leading feminine role in \"Rainbow Ridge,\" was\njudge and in a picture in a Calgary\npaper is shown with Alex Watson\njust after he had been named winner. Jack Oakie is also a member\nof the film cast.\nWatson wore a royal blue outfit\npiped with white on his shirt and\ntrouser seams, He is the son of Mr.\nand Mrs, A. Watson who lived at\nTaghum for about three years, and\nwas born at Kootenay Lake General Hospital 19 years ago last June,\nleaving Nelson when he was a little\nnver a year old. During the war,\nhe stayed at Rlewett with his\ngrandparents while his father was\nserving overseas. He was \"crazy\nabout ranchlife,\" Mrs. Riley said\nFriday. He was riding for a Midna-\npore ranch during the Stampede.\nBy W. R, WHEATLEY\nCanadian Preu Staff Writer\nScarboro Golf and Country Club,\nToronto, July 18 (CP) - Bobby\nLocke, the methodical, low-scoring\ngolfer from South Africa, went into\na one-stroke lead tonight in the Canadian Open Golf Championship\nand the tournament at the 54-hole\nmark became a wide-open International affair.\nLocke, shooting a superb four-\nunder-par 67 today, brought his\ntotal to 201, a stroke ahead of Kd\n(Porky) Oliver of Wilmington, Del.,\nwho broke par wide open with an\neight-under yesterday, and Nick\nWisnock, Toronto amateur now\nplaying out of the Detroit Meadow-\nbrook Club.\nWEATHER BAD\nThe consistent par-breaking that\nhas featured the tournament so far\ncontinued despite rain, lightning\nand stampeding galleries. The\ndrenched throngs refused to take a\nbeating from the weather and raced\nwildly about the course. They\nswitched allegiance swiftly and thc\nLocke and Oliver contingents ranged from 1000 to 2000.\nSCORES ACE\nThe topsy-turvy third round\nlacked nothing in addition to the\nupset of Oliver's three-stroko margin. Phil Cote, an amateur from\nSarnia, Ont., sank a hole in one at\nthe 125-yard llth, Clayton Haefner\nof Charlotte, N.C., who stood six\nstrokes behind Locke at 207, registered a protest against the sand\nwedge used by Wisnock, claiming\nthe grooves were illegal, but this\nprotest was ruled out.\nUnofficial computations tonight\nfixed 226 as the qualifying figure for\ntomorrow's final, when the 75 low\nscorers and ties will continue.\nBobby Gray, the Scarboro host\npro, scored a four-undcr-par 87 today and pulled himself to 203 two\nstrokes away from Locke.\nNext came Herman Kelser of\nAkron, Ohio, with 205, and a trio\nof American contenders stood at\n206\u2014Ellsworth Vines of Los Angeles, who matched Keiser's five\nunder par; Bill Nary, also of Los\nAngeles, with a 08 today, and Ed\nFurgol, of Pontiac, Mich., with a\nthird-round 60.\nLew Worsham of Oakmount, Pa,,\nUnited States open champion, came\nthrough with a two-under-par 59\nfor 207, six strokes away from Locke\nand tied with Haefner who took a\npar 71.\nStan Leonard of Vancouver Marine Drive, rated one of Canada's\noutstanding players, faltered in the\nrain on hi.s home nine loday and\ntook a five-over-par 40. He posted a\n75 for a. M-hole total of 215. His\nfellow-townsman, Fred Wood of\nShaughnessy Heights Club, had a 71\nfor 224 and was inSicle the qualifying mark,\nPhil Cote's hole-ln-one set nn\nprecedent for the on.\nLocks at\nVancouver Sept. 10\nVANCOUVER, July 18 (CP) -\nBobby Locke, the South African\ngolfing wizard, will be ln Vancouver for an exhibition match Sept.\n10, it was learned today.\nLocke, who has won six American tournaments since his arrival\nfrom South Africa, is being sponsored by George Norgan, who has\nput up a $1500 guarantee.\n.pp*     .,._,  ,\u201e\u25a0,,,        ,\n*v%\number Employees Enjoy Picnic\n|_nd Sports Day at Passmore\nPASSMORE,   BC,  July   17-The\nissmore   Lumber   Co..   Ltd.,   was\nlost at a picnic and sports day to\n|ie   employees   and   their   families\nthe Burns Lumber and Coal Co.\nfid the Taghum Lumber Co., Ltd.,\ninday.\nThere were some 400 people in\ntendance and an enjoyable time\nas had by sports contestants and\ni-ectators. Ice cream, pop, etc., was\ni abundance and a wonderful\nncheon was served The results of\ne snorts events follow:\nGirls,  8  years and   under--First,\nJan Bayoff; second, Margaret Sink-\n; third, Polly Swetlikoff\nGirls, 12 years and under\u2014First,\nfcme Savinkoff; second. Nancy\nobaya^hi; third, Shirley Koba-\nishi.\nGirls, lfi years ar.d under -First\nellie  Plotnikoff;  second,  Florence\nJwhaohoff; third, Elizabeth Popoff\nBoys,   8   years   and   under--First,\nfleorge Wishloff; second, Harry\n[acornow; third, George RondToff\nBoys, 12 years and under\u2014First,\neorge Hamada; second. Peter Rcif-\nr; third, Hill Osachnff\nBovs, lfl vears n\".d under First,\n\u00bbte Zaitsuff; wound, IV 'er Rciffrr;\nird, George Hayashi.\nMixed relay race -First. Florence\nPoohachoff and George Klamakoff;\nsecond, Gertie Markoff and Nick\nSwetlikoff.\nPerhaps the most amusing event\nof the day was the grass ski race\nwon by the four-man team of J.\nMarkin, S. Verigin, F. Planidin and\nN. Swetlikoff The four-man teams\nrode two by four \"skis.\"\nA hug-of-war between the Pass-\nmore Lumber Company team and\na combined team frnm the Burns\nand Taghum Companies was won\nby the Passmore Company in a best\nof three pulls. Names of the winning\nteam were, Pau! Popoff, Steve\nFranczac, William Kootnikoff, Sam\nVeritjin, tyll Voykin. Albert Thom-\nerson. Bill Chernoff, Pete Wurm-\nlinger, Fred Reibalkm and Svlver\nRciffer.\nTwo baseball games rounded out\nthe sports events, and a horseshoe\npitch   was   well   patronized.\nRefreshments were served a' thc\nconclusion of the day at the Pass-\nmore Luu-.ber Company boarding\nhouse at Rums' Ranch nnd Harry\nBurns who was present throughout the day, stated that he wa\u00ab\nvery pleased\" with the gathering and\nhoped that the Companies eould\nshow their appreciation to thru-\nemployees by having an annual outing and picnic every year.\nOver \u00abl) Kids\nOut for First\nSwim (lasses\nSwimming classes at Lakeside\nPark got off to a splashy start Friday morning and afternoon when\nover 60 kids were introduced to the\nfundnmentals nf swimming,\nCt s.'s at Gyro Park were called\noff as Friday is cleanup day at the\nGyro pool. Anxious, water-minded\nyoungsters looked askance at thc\nempty pool ar.d wended thrir way\nhome. One raring lad had walked\ntwo miles to attend.\nAt Lakeside over 40 youngsters\nturned out for the beginners' classes\nin the morning. On thc beach parents kept vigilance over their offspring while they went through the\nrudimentary motions of swimming.\nAdvanced pupils, the producU of\nEd Kelter's training of last year,\nresumed their swimming after a\nWinter layoff. Although some were\na bit rusty, ail had retained the effects  of last  Summer's lessons.\nNakusp\nNelson\nF.O.E. Seniori\nADMISSION\u201435t ond ISe\nCIVIC CENTRE GROUNDS\n^^^^*mm***Fm*r^r^*m\nU.S. Ball Teams\nTo Visit Salmo\nSALMO, RC, July IR - A hue-\nhall pro;;: .mi with an international\ntinge will hold sway in Salmo all\nday Sunday, whm at least two and\npossibly three Washington teams\nare ,*-cheduled to cune across the\nborder,\nTeams frnm lone, Metaline and\nFruitvale will take part and a Spokane team is a possibility,\nLast weekend, Salmo travelled to\nMetaline along with a strong nuad\nof .vipp Tiers an 1 trimmed the C S\ntrain  Hi-fi.\nCanadian Regatta\nAttracts Nations\nLeading Scullers\nST CATHARINES. Ont, July IR\niCPi \u2014 Seven of North America's\n: *p scullers arc entered in the se-\nr.ior singles feature of the Royal Canadian Henley regatta here July\n_3-2fl including Defending Champion\nl, hn H Kelly, .Ir, of Philadelphia.\nKelly, who recently won thc British Dianmnd Sculls, a title his father\nhad been denied a chance tn win\nmany via:.. ~\\%\\ appeared to be tbe\nman to bea*\nRe'iimmg t i competition titer war\n<\"ivut Is f \u25a0wi*': ('mad,an rham-\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 T'.i * 11 it. .< \u25a0 t '.rr W.untprR\nIt w *._; i\" ,o M .1, w in 'hr even'\n\u25a0i :''\u25a0!; . \u25a0\u25a0 : \u25a0 ; i \u2022\u25a0 i:-f'b. <tui do t \u25a0\ni ,i:i r*i! I'\" i: ',,; Ki Ily a rl m   .jcc\nAUSSIES DEFEAT\nCANADA IN RADIO\nCHESS TOURNEY\nMONTRFAI., July IB <CPi -\nAuslr.,!] i drff.ilH CanArln ti',\nmatch'*** I\" t'i in Mir fin.* Inlrs-\n('mum nwr.iltli \\ln.i-i CIicm Tour-\nrwnirt.l N'lil irrrn'Iv. I) M l.e-\nllnin M<*i*,ti*r-V \u201e!*,'* ll rlir*ct\u00abr. nn-\nlinnnrH   ! -day\nV:vr timtphrs brl'irrn 'nm*\nIr-os M n'reil \u00abH Sirlrsy wer*\nhalved ?'i ea**h Ivi* Melhourn;*\nwon ,1 flor. vlrtnrv nver Toronto\n3 2\nAmlr.ilia i.,w ,. 11 ,,!,,,\u25a0 Ilrl'aln\nni  lln- rn-x!  1,1 11 ,1    f lh,. I*,.min , *.-\n*,:il<    T,,Ti.oii ,*. '      ,io.|    (*.,,,uln\nNELSON ELKS\nMAKE FRONT\nPAGE AT COAST\nGracing the front page of the Vancouver Sun Wednesday were three\nNelson members of the Elki Lodge,\npictured at Hotel Vancouver, where\n600 delegate* are attending the annual convention of the Order.\nProudly displaying hia Jubilee\nBeard was Bill Heffernan, while\nstanding by admiring his growth\nwere Jack Morrison, Ruler of the\nNelson Lodge and James Harvey,\nI Secretary. Morrison and Heffernan\nI were also wearing \"10-gallon\" hats\njin the photo.\nKaslo Plans\nLabor Day\nBall Tourney\nKASLO, B.C., July 18 - Executive meeting of the Kaslo Recreation Association meeting in the\n| Council Chambers accepted the\n.resignation of C. Lind, chairman\nof the Aquatic Meet to be held\nin August and Mrs. Greenlaw was\n! appointed with power to add to\n' her committee. Rev. C. O. Richmond reported that arrangements\nwere completed for three boys to\nattend Camp Koolaree, all expenses to be paid by the K.R.A.\nMrs. E. Glaholm was appointed\nto Instruct beginners in swimming.\n\u25a0 The committee consisting of Mrs\nRingheim. Rev. C. O. Richmond,\nand J, Matthews were appointed.\nto meet the City Council on the\nappointment of a Life Guard. A\nFirat Aid Kit for the park win\nalso be sought. Secretary, Mrs.\nAy den, reported on a meeting\nwhen a joint committee consisting\njof three members each from the:\nCanadian Legion and the K.R A\nwas appointed and given full\ncharge of the weekly da nee* to be\nheld in the Drill Hall during the\nSummer. The appointees from the\nK.R A. were William Hendren, F.\nAyden, ar.d T Glaholm. from thc\nCanadian Legrm, A. Waugh, A\n! Macdonald and L. Smyth. The\n* donee Committee reported that\n\\he Saturday night dance* to date\nwere a success with large crowds\nin  attendance.\nA bal! tournament on Labor\nDay was discussed, and that first\nand second cash prizes be contended for hy four teams, three\nof which will be invited from out-\n'side.\nLeafs ToMeel\nSpokane Dynamos\nHere Tonight\nIt will be a revamped .force of\nMaple Leafs that will battle it out\nwith the Spokane Dynamos here\ntonight. The Leafs, who have lost\nonly one home game since their\nturnabout in June, will be out to\nadd another of the same to their\nrecord,\nFrom the LeaJ camp in recent\ndays has come threatening noises\nabout the downfall of the League\nlacrosse might under the locals' big\nguns. The Leafs, who were shadowed by injuries in the first half of\nthe schedule, are utilizing the services of teen agers, Mickey Maglio ar.d Leo Choquette. Steve Krizan\na novice to lacrosse this year, will\nagain keep guard at the defence\nUne. t\nCooper, the guide of the Leaf\ndestinies, has expressed amazement at the tenacity of the younger\nChoquette. Leo played a close game\nhere last Saturday night much to\nthe consternation of his virtually\nhog-tied checks.\nNakusp All-Stars\nHere Saturday in\nLieu of Jap Vets\nNakusp All-Stars will engage\nNeLson F.O.E. seniors Saturday evening in place of the previously\nscheduled Japanese Vets of Spokane, who because of last minute\ntransportation difficulties were not\nable to travel.\nNelson club officials were notified of the cancellation 2:30 Friday\nmorning and after lengthy sessions\non the phone lined up Nakusp as a\nsubstitute team,\nNakusp baseballers appeared ln\nNelson last Labor Day when their\nace chucker, Ken Highland, lost out\n2-1 to Nelson in a pitchers duel. It\nis believed Nakusp will endeavor\nto bolster their pitching staff for\nthis game with Ted Graham of the\nSlocan City Club. Other weak spots\nwill receive similar treatment.\nNelson's pitching staff has been\nstrengthened considerably by the\nreturn of Steve Sentt. and the addition of Fred Townsend, Strasbourg, Sask., flash, and Jack Turner of Las tern Canada. Tyo years\nago Turner was chosen the number\none pitcher for the Camp Bprden\nAll-Stars.\nNelson will field as their team\nfrom R. Nash, S. Srott, F, Town-\nsend, J. Turner, J. Lang. H. Pitts,\nR. Porteous, B, McNabb, S. Tatchell,\nA, Abrosimo, W. Ileatherington, B.\nCollinson, R. Anderson and G,\nRichardson,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 19,1947 \u2014 7\nS. American Gallopers To\nChallenge Assault for Gold (up\nNEW YORK, July 18 (CP)-Rac-\ning takes its first long jump toward\na \"world series\" tomorrow In the\n$100,000 Empire City Gold Cup at\nBelmont, and practically all the\nfolks figure it will be Assault ln a\nWaltz over the two South American champions and five domestic\ngalhjpers.\nSome 50,000 fans are expected to\nsit In on this Ui-mile grind, which\nhas attracted Endeavour II from\nArgentina and Ensueno from Brazil,\nalong with Assault and Stymie, the\nworld's top money winners; Phalanx, lhe head man of the three-\nyear-olds, and Gallorette, second\nhighest winner of her sex in history.\nAdditional\nStock Markets\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nEastern Netslers\nSweep Matches\nIn Third Day\nCards, Fans Off\nTo Idaho by Bus\nTRAIL, BC. July 18\u2014Thirty-\nthree Tra.l ballplayers and supporters sre making the trip to\nCoeur d'Alene, Ida, bv special bus,\nleaving Trail early Saturday morning and returning hte Sundav.\nThe Trad Cardinal Baseball Club\nwill play in the Idaho town Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon\nThose making the trip are:\nRobert MacKinnon, Guisepp;\nMonaldi, James Morris, Charles\nStroulger, Andrew BiV.'kv. Miehail\nWolfe, Kenneth Stanton, Mike Bakowy, Salvatnre ' Sam \u25a0 Morascn,\nMalcello Anselmo. Clinton McNeil,\nJoseph Milburn, John Mead Buchanan. James Re:d. RoVrt Kerr\nWilliam Rae, Lome Mark, Dn-.ald\n'Trail Times1 Fleming, Archibald\nMcKinnon, Fred Shanks::.k. Paul\n.Tarry. Peter ORr;en, W:'!:.vr\nSchley, F,nr:.-n R.\u00ab;ro. Ralph Len'.'\nGeorg'1 Bet ,-,*s, Augurt:n R<\\1 i.\nJohn H McNVl. Murlo Mn:r:, : .\nJnm<\\s A Mr,ley. Kir' Br >h-: \u25a0*.\nLoo  Torre^an  and   Gird  u  R\"':>crt-\nBALL SCORES\nNATIONAL\nChicago m 010 200\u20147 lfl    1\nI'h'ladolphu      210 000 101\u20145 12    1\nSchmitz, Wyio (21, Kufih '3*. Tai-\nFcau 'ii' and Scheffmi*; Row*\nSchmidt '41, Donnelly Ob Schanr\ni9i nnd Seminick\nCincinniti 000 OOO 021-3 13    0\nNrw York (Wl 203 3(1 -fl 10    1\nLively. Heiki irt \u25a0. R;dd> '7'\nF.ra'itt '7' and Lamanno; Janien\nand W  Cooper.\nPittsburgh      ooi ooo nin\u20142 n  2\nBoston 001 000 000-1    5    2\nHlgbe and Howell; Voiselle and\nMas;\nSt   Louil 000 000 000-O    1    5\nBrooklyn 201 300 20 -7   7   (i\nMunger, Hrazle ,*(, and Garagiola\nBranca and Kdwardi\nAMERICAN\nWashington       000 000 (100-0   5   o\nCleveland 030 021 Ofl -fi   9    1\nWynn and Evans; Black and He*\ngan.\nPhiladelphia     ooo 000 001- 1   <   2\nChicago 020 OOO 20 -4 '.0    2\nFlnrei. Coleman   '8'   and   Rom:\nHavnei and Treih\nNew York 000 000 000-0   2    1\nDetroit 200 ool ll -fl in   0\nGumpert   and   Berra    Hi'   \u25a0 \u25a0 -.  \u25a0\nand Sw:C\nNTERNATIONAL\nBaltimore 7, .leriev C:'v *\nBuffalo 7. Rorhes'er 3\nOvercomes Lead\nOf Golfing Mist\nVANCOUVIR. July IB KT'\nRena O'Callaghan of the Qinli\nCoif Club dlipllyed terrific li\nthe back nine of the fint lfl\nnf her .Ifl-hnle final In the ol',\nchamplonihip with Babl Pav:\nMarine Drive at the Capilano\nCoune here 'in Vancouveri\nto go twn up on her youthfu\nponer.t\nOne down at the end nf nine\nas Mils Pavlei played par golf\nO'Callaghan toured the bark nme\n36* itrokei. four under par   11,*:\nhole round of 7fl  thtre under p ti\n.**    unofficial    women's    i .1\nTORONTO    <CPl      -    Tr\nnnd   cable   companies   \u25a0\u25a0:\nLi--,  vear p nes-rd  311 47\u00ab i\nwill*   In   1938,   the   !\u25a0 tul   '.'.\n180  m.lfi\nBy NORMAN  ALTSTEDTER\nCanadian Preii Staff Writer\nVICTORIA. July 18 (CP) - The\npowerful   Eastern   squad   made   a\nclean sweep of the East-West tennis   matches   today   boosting   their\nlead over thr West in the trials lead-\nin*,' to Davis Cup selection, to 18-3.\nlubi'.ed his near perfect style to a\nMontreal's Brendan Macken, exhibited his near perfect style to a\n-mall gallery drubbing Lanky Don\nHodges of Regina in straight sets\n6-0, IM. 6-3\nPlaying under a hot sun on thr\ngrass coin's of the Victoria Lawn\nTennis CI lb, Brendan's 21-year-\nold brother Jim allowed Vancouver's Art Jeffery hi.s first set of thr\nscries when hr whipped thc University nf Biiti.ih Coliimlva den-\nt.stry'student, 6-1. 2-6, 6-2. 6-4.\nIn whipp.ng Hodges, No 4 man\non the West's squad, Macken, thc\nEast's third player, moved a step\ncloser towards a berth on Canada's\nDavis Cup team whleh meets an\nAustralian squad at Montreal Aug. 7\nResults of matches here will be\nconsidered along with those at Dominion championships at Vaneou-\n\\er next week in selecting Camilla's\n: ram.\nSTRETCHES  ROCHON\nWiry Henry R -chou, Ontario and\nQui b,c, 19*17 tltl'.st and No. 1 man\n* u the East's team, was extended\nto finally down Vancouver's Jim\nSkei'.on, ttie West's second player,\n4-6. 8-6, 6-8. 6-1. 6-2 It was the\nfirst time in thr series thc Mon-\ntrealer hit 1 .-: a set\nSkelton, one - time Bermuda\nchampion, brought out a show of\ntemperament from the ilim, dark,\n194fi Davii Cup iquad member\nwho threw hit racquet to the\noround at the end of the firat ict\nBut he iteadied In the final two\nicti when hli unorthodox cutting\nityle battled the  Vancouverite.\nThe Ottawa veteran, Don McDiarmid, wai also pushed before\nhe overcame Walter Stohlbercj\nsturdy Vancouver champion, 8-10,\n6 2. 4 6. 6 4, 6 3.\nMINES\nBayonne\t\nBralorne \t\nB R Cons \t\nR It X\nCariboo Gold .\nCongress \t\nDentonia       \t\nGeorge  Copper  ...\nGolconda \t\nHedley Mascot \t\nInt C h C\nIsland Mountain ....\nMinto .... \t\nPacific Nickel \t\nPend Oreille \t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier  Bord  \t\niPrivateer\t\nQuatsino \t\nHed Hawk\t\nReno Gold \t\nSalmon\t\nSheep Creek  \t\nSilbak\nTaylor Bridge \t\nWellington \t\nOILS\nAnaconda  -\nAnglo Can  \t\nA P Cons     \t\nBritish Dominion\nCalgary k Ed ...\nCalmont   \t\nDavies  \t\nFoothills*\t\nHighwood\t\nHome    ~\nMcLeod \t\nMercury   \t\nMcDougal Segur ..\nModel     \t\nNational Pete \t\nOkalla  Com  \t\nPacific  Pc'.c   .-\t\nRoyal Can    \t\nRoyalite\nSouthwest Pete .\nVanalta   \t\nVulcan \t\nGlobe\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital  Estates  ....\nCoast Brew\nPacific Coyle\nPowell River\nUNLISTED  MINES\nBig Missouri \t\nBluebird\nBrooklyn St\nCentral Zeballos ..\nCanty  \t\nCuyunl \t\nFederal   \t\nHedley Amal .     .\nHome Gold     -\nNoble  Five  ..     ..\nOlympic\nPac Eastern Gold\nPilot\nProsperine  \t\nSpud Valley\nTaylor Windfall  ..\nVananda        \t\nWesko\nUNLISTED OILS\nCommand \t\nFreehold\nGranville\t\nHargall\nSouth End Pete\nUnited  .\n.07'4\n10.7.1\n.OS\n.091*,\n2.20\n.04'i\n.18\n.10\n.16\n1.03\n.3(1\n1.40\n.03*4\n.15*,*,\n2.00\n3.95\n.05 Ji\n.39\n.09\n.05\n,10\n.18\n1.10\n.70\n.50\n.03\n.10V4\n165\n.19\n.21\n2.31\n.55\n.22\n290\n.15\n4.30\n.08 li\n25\n.14\n.30\n.30\n198\n1.05\n.17\n18 00\n.30\n.17\n.30\n.5014\n8.00\n3.15\n.50\n35.85\n.03'i\n.02\n.0614\n02 li\n.04',\n.80\n.01\n* .05\n.01\n.014\n.06'l\n.30\nrr,\n,15\n.12\n.08\n.06\n2.40\n.05\n.20\n.15\n105\n.37V4\n1.75\n400\n.064\n.40\n.12\n.184\n1.12\n.55\n.24\n2.35\n.57\n16\n4.35\n.28\n.14'4\n.40\n.35\n2.00\n109\n.17 4\n.19\n.39\n950\n3.25\nThere are, too, Talon, from South\nAmerica who has been racing here\nsome time now, and Natchez, owned bv Mrs. Walter Jeffords. Both\nare lightly regarded.\nAssault already holds one world\nchampionship, the money-earning\nrecord. He recaptured that one a\nweek ago when he ran his greatest\nrace in the Butler Handicap to\nboost his bank account to $613,370.\nHe toted 135 pounds then, which\nmeans he'll have nine less, 128, to\ncarry tomorrow under the weight-\nfor-age conditions of the Gold Cup\nwith $74,000 going to the winner.\nChief dark-horse figures to be\nPhalanx, which can set fire to a\nstretch and which under the conditions has to carry a mere 110\npounds as a three-year-old.\nMarket Trends\nTORONTO, July 18 (CP) \u2014 A\nslight improvement ln volum* toward close did not make any\nchanges in price trends Bet. earlier\nin the day when industrials held\nunchanged to moderate up, mining\nissues down and Western oils unchanged.\nNEW YORK, July 18 (AP) -\nAssorted oils and special stocks\nexhibited some strength but dealings were the slowest in three\nweeks and many leader* inclined to\ngive ground moderately.\nMONTREAL, July 18 (CP)\u2014Price\nchanges on a scattered list of alow\ntrading stocks were about mixed.\nBoth industrial and mining volume\nwas slight,\nVANCOUVER, July 18 (CP) -\nOils started to rise while mines\nwere about the same and industrials\nwere unchanged.\nLONDON, July 18 (Reuteri) \u2014\nActivity 'in the oil share market\nprovided the feature of the day\nwith some material gains ln the\nsection despite heavy profit-taking\nquotations finally were around the\nday's best levels. Elsewhere there\nwas little active interest.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, July 18 (CP)-Llttle\nrun cleaned up at steady prices.\nThursday's receipts: 725 cattle, JO\ncalves, 558 hogs, 155 sheep. This\nmorning: 125 cattle, 75 hogs, 287\n1.sheep.\nHogs sold Thursday at $20.60 for\nA's at yards and plants. Sows $11.75-\n12.00 live weight.\nGood to choice butcher steers\n14.00-15.00; common to medium\n11.00-13.50. Good to cholct butcher\nheifers 1300-14.00; common to medium 10.00-1250.\nGood to choice fed calves 14.00-\n1450; common to medium 12.50-\n13.50.\nGood cows 9.50-10.00; common to\nmedium 7.00-9.25. Canners and cutters 4.50-6.50.\nGood bulls 9.50-10.00; common to\nmedium 7.50-9.00. Good to choice\nveal calves 13.00-14.00; common to\nmedium 10.00-12.50. Good stocker\nand feeder steers 10.50-11.00; common to medium 9.00-10.00.\n.18\n.06\n\"i'-i\n.08\n054\n,14\n,95\n06\n.17\n03\n.33\nM*i'i\nMONTREAL BANKS\nCommerce \t\nI),mmion\nImperial  . \t\nMontreal \t\nNova Scotia \t\n2' To\n26 00\n26 25\n27 25\n34 00\n23 25\n35 15\nMETAL PRICES\nSilver 64'\/i.\nLead 10.\nZinc 15.\n:NEW YORK STOCKS\nAmerican Can     .... 98.00\nAmerican Smelting it Ref 61.00\n1 American Telephone    156.75\nAmerican Tobacco  _ 79.50\nAnaconda                    37.00\nArmstrong Cork    47.35\nAssociated Drygoods  13.00\nBeth Steel   83.50\nCanadian Pacific     12.35\nCellotex  2*6.50\nCrane           34.25\nDupont    192.50\nj General  Electric   _  38 00\nGeneral  Motors __  60.15\nHowe Sound              __.. 37.50\nInternational Nickel   31.15\n.Inter Tel it Tel     13.25\nSchcnlev           30.75\nj Standard Oil of N J      ....... 78 00\nUnion Oil of California .... 23 25\nUnion Pacific    139.00\nU S Rubber  49.35\nBy the Starting Gate\nIhr tn\nHi\nhmi\n\\t   ou\nht'lM\nKo)t\nrt nt\nC,'*\\t\nodav\nIn I ii j\nMri\nAb'.iit r'.I wp- k;\nTh-irsday'iirijpa'.. :'\"<. r.*\\>\n[\u2022\u25a0*;.'..--.^m   nt   h;t   m <*\u25a0'.'.':*.   o\nHarbor, of the des.r.wfr M:  :i\nZr.r    freijhvr    Vnrrr,o':'.h    I\nwhi> thf a rr n uau wrappp-rt\n;.<  lhat '.hf  combined  uppfd\nrnlhdir.j; rr*-)ft wm r.ifficier.t\nrxfr.<ivp:y  rivr ik**  I'm-  Mici\nnearly tn mark he: i r lhe h\nThat s-.igtffdt-. '.*\u25a0 ne 'Z1 ,r, '.r.r\nof one i~:a'z, (\u25a0;   thr  \u25a0 'htr v.\nwithin   th<   ipec i   '.rrz   \\.n *\nfor fog r.Bs\\\".\u00a3}':   :: a! .1 ! a: ii   r n'.  '*.'h\nThr   f:u-',   v,   ;:   5   \u25a0 :\u25a0   I -   k' \u2022:-.-\u25a0,   .\u2022\nr.dh 'iht S.\\\\\". a-. 1 thp I ie*,***: '.\u25a0or-.'\nof Trarjp.i:! arc ,r,.' it.v.g :r.vra*;-\n(tatiori\nIt li itited thit thf, deitroyer'i\nradar icrren ihowed no illhou\u00abtte\nof an ipproiching cr\u00bbft. If that ii\ntrue, lomethlng cau ird it to fail to\nreg uter, for a* Irait leveral, per\nhlpi manv, mlnutei, and during\nthat time it hrr), an.-) herauie 0'\nthr fvident rclmnce glared cn it,\nlerj direc'ly   to  the  caih.\nIn a rerf-t A*\"nriulfl Boa*t!\ninquiry   in   th*   United   Stitei,   mtn\none   of   *~*t   rece nt   who la lair   air      \u25a0\u25a0   a ': \\s   r *   }:.n n   '\nplane  dimten     m   which   thp   a r   PILOT  DL tW UP HALIFAX\nHnercraihed Into a mountain, with      y,->   \u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0-,\u25a0-   >\u25a0.,,\u25a0 f, .* i   5 ,   \\ _-**-\\   1 -,   **'-u\nthe  Ion of  everyon*.  0 n  hoard --it   Krr.jvr < u i*7 rf \u25a0id ;n W   ill Wnr !\nv\u00bbai found  thit the  barometer  re    -.v.!**   pa\ncording titration ihcmed a read '\u25a0*-\u2022\u2022\u25a0.|-> n, >\u25a0-.\u25a0': \u25a0*, sh:\\~ rTp!\".-.'n of\ning that wai falif hv 4000 feet, a 11, .- fl 1917. a di.'i^'rr d.iv to thr\nreading that Med to thr pllot, tfli t). \u25a0i,:nu -t --..o.hor ruin bv n l.M-.t!\nlng him he wai ovrr half a milr .,;', \u2022 \u25a0*,*, t. , (i \u25a0--\u2022jf1**; t 10k n nhip ilowt:\nabove th# Irvel of thr peak, In* \u25a0>-.,\u25a0 t jr ,.' >*\u25a0,- h,rb*T forhliHci ',*\n\u2022 teid of being actually below it \u25a0-, ,*;,,w ,-',  )\u25a0\u00ab\";,    th ;\u25a0;  hrnmirt; oil\nThe ir.-ra! rjif.^t. *n .>\u25a0. ,*.\u25a0*.<. %h *,'. ' >;*r v*.,;i \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'V \\i that \\-.'prd rM:\no.&e of :.d.i*. ;*\\\\f\\r ., -iw crnt'. HaliSn't \\.atr-f: id nrd tnok Hm\n11 on the ru'es g*\\t:\u2022\u25a0;\u25a0',: '  g ravija    ,\\r \\>   \u25a0\u2022' '*\\ *--.\ntion \u00abt a p-i.n* rf r-.-'a-' tnff-r' I'pihipi 'ht n'.d-fashioiifd f\"C\nShould a nival op\u00abra<: >\u25a0\u2022 fi r there \u25a0 .'r ,.t r<\\* i*,:d*\\\\ todiv in ifj dav\nwtre i\u00abv#ra! rWr-TVJTi :\u25a0 'he r \\* t u n, verv \".<pf',il and vrT\\ reMibV\nm\u00abnt-ba rimed out in n tngdyir.d, If the merhir.iAn aturk, tho i^pera\nharbcr mo'.ith, :\u2022\u2022 a n-.afnfi nnnrirt; tor invrrd'atrh knrw It, nrd Z\nrxistPt'vP of Dip  tom ' I   *.    ' *,   |r.    \\r:.,\\ i't v orr   It  nisi'h:\nI!   tnn   t  ll-,  1    ,!   . f < \u25a0   .**.<*   'Z    \u2022   >\\r     :,;).*,      ..';,;,'*,;*, vi*:i  ml    1\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n!    30 Industrials    1R4R0 up .77.\n_') :-,<*:\u25a0;    19 33 up .07.\nlri  utilities \u25a0 35 r.)2  unchanged.\nWHIZZER MOTOR BIKES\nLightweight Motor Cyclei\nSAM BROWN\nSun, Lock, Sifa A Cycls Works\nPhono 104*5 737 Bsker St\nI,.\n.iki\nI\nI\ni;\nProduction goes up and costs come down when you\nhave a Disston Chain Saw woiking on your job.\nRuggedly-built for heavy duty, the Disston is th\u00bb\npower saw you want for all your felling and bucking.\nLet us give you all the facts obout the Disston Chain\nSow with Mercury Gasoline Engine. Come in and\ntalk it over.\nNelson Machinery Equipment Co. Ud.\nNFI.SON, BC.\n \u25a0 \u2014\n\u2022 \u2014 NILSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 19, T947\n\t\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nTrusting Wives on a Dizzy Whirl\nFaith and trust Is the theme of the three wives\nseated on the handle-bars as their mates propel\ntheir motorcycles In the motordrome at an amusement park. From top to bottom: Mr. and Mrs. Roy\nWoods of San Antonio, Texas; Mr, and  Mrs. Earl\nPurtle of Palisades Park, N.J.; and Mr. and Mrs.\nRudolph Coombs, of Yonkeri, N.Y. Race was the\nfirst of Its kind staged and was won by the Purtles,\nwho averaged better than 63 miles per hour during\nthe unique one-mile grind.\nBride To-Be Said 'No'\nReports Plot\nDiscovery\nRosinni Peverl (right), \u00abn English Brlde-to-Be who said \"No\"\nInstead ot \"I do\" and left the proipectlve bridegroom, Peter Vasquez\n(left) at the altar at Chicago, gives him a smile as she trie, to make\nup her mind. She blamed homesickness for her Indecision. London li\nme. (AP Wlrephoto).\nMoth Has Shell Like A Nut\nWwtian, WbvdiiL\nREADY    FOR    FUN\nWhiz-hang ensemble for Everything! Pattern 0104 outfits you perfectly for life fn the Open Air.\nwith crisp smart pednl pushers, a\nbutton-front bra, jacket and shorts.\nThis pattern giv?s perfect fit, is\neasy to use. Complete, illustrated\nSew  Chart shows you every step.\nPattern 0104 in teenage sizes 10,\n12. 14. lfi Size 12, pedal pushers\nand   bra, 3*i   yds.  35-in.\nEdouard Depreux (above), Interior Minister of France, announced in Paris thc discovery of\na \"very widespread\" plot by an\norganization known as the Black\nMaquis to overthrow the French\nRepublic and set up a military dictatorship,  (AP Wlrephoto).\nAs_vw>ut* V v Umax*;.\nJerkin. suit - blouse, evening -\nblouse! This can b\" all three' .hist\nstraight pieces knitted in ilantin^\nstripes of  -port  and  metallic yam\nThere's glamour in thi- girling'\nblouse1 Manv use\"' PaMern BW\ndirections,   sizes   12-14,   16-13\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins 'stamps cannot be accepted'\nfor each pattern tn Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept., 266 Baker\nStreeti Nelson, B.C. Print plainly\nPATTERN NUMBER, your NAME\nmd   ADDRESS.\nAUNT HET\nBy   ROBERT  QUILLEN\nThli li the royal walnut enlargrd about thret times its natural\nlire it the New York Zoological Society, Bronx Zoo. Not thr pest)\nkind whoie deiign for living li boring from within clothing, the moth\nhai Juit releaied Itielf from the pupa and fastened itseif to a small\ntwig to dry oft and gain strength. Most moths emerge from a cocoon,\nbut thli one difleri in that It comet trom a pupa and has a shell like a\nnut. When It gilni itrength It will have a wing spread of five Inches,\nIt Is nitive, colored rich brown with slate-grey forewings marked with\nreddish brown scalei and yellow blotches. The royal walnut moth has\nlong, spiny horns on the forehead of the body and feeds on hickory\nVISITOR- Senora Eva\nDiiarlr de Prron. uife of the\nprrsidirn' nf Argentina, wears a\nmmli-.li li.it as she arrives in\nKumc from Spain during her\nvisit abroad.\nVANCOUVER\nfl'.y'r,     police     c;\niii! Illfl  mile*   ir.\nvovleii  III  Sl   ace\nThis\njAtUTMER STRIKE'\n\\H00RAy.';\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy J\nimmv\nHatlo\nEverv Week for momtws, the gals\nturned out faithfully to root\nfcr the bowlih& team-\nwr Vs\nATTABoy\/   ;\u2014\\\nREMEMBER, WERE\npulling for vou J\nALL the time Jy\nComes it the team's banquet-and*\nyou 6uessed \\z-strictlystag\"\n<r\nn\nhf\n[HAVE A NICE TiME AT THE\n>MOVIE,DEAR.AND DRIVE\n\/AROUND about twelve.\n\\J MAV BE READ\/ TOGO\n(HOME THEN, AND A6AIN\n*-^T(^ I MAy NOT\nte MRS.\nCFSOETEBIER.SQ\nta^FAlWiEWAV.'il\nST. LOUI?-, MO       T\nVf.r   .'A   ft*. .1*1X1    A    J.,,1*    !  k*\nDial   .*v.**yh -if   iii   \u2022!*,.\u2022   fam.'v\n' means a r-,'1-  hear! nr a s-,?* hr\nSALLY'S SALLIES\nf <t\n\u00bb\/\nFAREWELL,\nOM PALEFACE PAL OF\nMY PAPOOSE\nWN5. I GONNA\nGET MARRIED.'\n7 THAR'S MO ONE WHO KIN\nI   KEEP Mt FUI-I TH' EiCK AH\nV loves, -cept TH'f;soar;)\n\u2022 V=k BOY AH LOVES.T\nM\u00bb\n(zuS^\nJiSih A\/w\n\\\nm\nz\n'). WHEPE DID\nTHEV GO ?\n~Sr\n5\nMV GOOOJE6*5 -IT5\nt vJIO',3 - WHAT M TH'\nWOBLD MAI HE GOT\n  THEBi\nll HELLO-J10G5-\nI TELL l.'E-APE\n*| *>OU MCT\/W '\nMOPE-I JU6T\nWENT TD A\nqacsso quiz\nppmgam .\".'\nill.\n=_i_.\nAWT Y\/Trl THPD PCI2E-THIG 1*3\nVE roUCTW TClP-WOULD *>OU LIKE\n:\/m: bubblegum-oc a tug boat*'\ni'd lke to send you a locomotive\nAU' A YEAP3 5UFPLY Cf= CO\u00abt if- ,\nV    \"\n^iiteet-\n\u25a0 *__- to.VcU^an\n\/ sec a tum\/tvoB.\nDOCTOA>yOH, IT*\n* HOUNTIE\nMO I RECKON *\u25a0*.;\nCAN  VW> IT T-!'l\nSOON AS Wt GET\ne*.s ic?r>T*.'srui\n\u2022-.-.\u2022a*-. *.*,E BETTER\nS-.oc51 AlX TOTE\nCC-AGT GUARD.\nM.V.III! NEVER*\nDULL (.WENT, IT'S\nGOOD THING I'M\nRUGGED  MZ -SAWYER,\nOR IV bi: FR SURVNt\nV  \u00bb\\ANY TA'ES WITH\nO0U\"     '\u2022\n1 ftOM    TriE    tSlX    1\n1 P08CH, Pti.L  FiREtMH\n1 i VI.,**, i   JdOT     I\n1  IMTO THE  AIR -    1                  jjf\\\n' i\n*\nVI\n__i\n^^__ H-L* _fl\n__XI\n \t\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED\nor Mine Office, near Nelson:\nLE OFFICE ASSISTANT,\nE 18 TO 25, EXPERIENCE\nT ESSENTIAL, BUT MUST\nGOOD TYPIST AND QUICK\nD ACCURATE WITH FIG-\nES.\nposition ls permanent, with\nattractive commencing salary\na young man desiring a start\nin office career.\npply In your own handwriting\n3ox 10481 Daily News.\nATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTI-\n,lon requires a typist book-\neper. Steady employment. Exigence not necessary. Interesting\n>rk with opportunities of ad-\nncement. Ideal working condi-\nins. Apply in first instance to\nix 10469 Daily News.\n*TED - CHEF OR FIRST\niss cook for resort operations,\niod wages, excellent accommo-\ntlon. Write qualifications to the\nite* of St. Leon, Upper Arrow\nkes, B.C,\t\ntSES WANTED. $120.00 PER\n>nth with full maintenance, 6-\ny week, 8-hour day. Good living\narters. Write Secretary-Treas-\ner, Macleod MuniciDal Hospital.\ntfTED - FOR GARAGE IN\nilion, front end man with book-\neplng and parts experience.\n\u25baod salary for right man. Ap-\nT Box 10168 Daily News.\niDER MECHANIC REQUIRED\n\u2022 Michel Colliery. Rate $8.88 per\n[ht hour shift. Apply Master\njchanic, Crow's Nest Pass Coal\n. Ltd., Michel, B.C.\nITED - MAN WITH PORT-\nle saw mill to ww lumber,\nginning Immediately. P.O. Box\nKailo, B.C.\nLE MAN FOR DAIRY -\n;ady work if satisfactory, G.\nmean, New Denver. Phont 1B-F\n;er 12 noon,\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL HUE IN-\nsunnce Co. D  L. Kerr, A|\u00abnt.\nWhen in Vancouver stop at\nAimer Hotel, Opp. C.P.R. Depot.\nSpot \u00a3ash forused goods\nof sll kinds   Phont  1081   Chess\n524 Vernon\nLONESOME - DO YOU DESIRE\nrespectable friendship? Hurry\nTime is fleeting. Somewhere your\nfuture sweetheart seeks icquiint-\nance. Splendid positions, means.\nInformation free. Canadian\nFriendship Society, Box 113 Dur\nham. Ontario\nMEN'S PERSONAL BMJO sIW-\ndries: 24 samples, $1.00. or 19 Deluxe assorted, $1.00 mailed in plain\nsealed wrapper. Finest quality,\ntested, guaranteed Bargain Catalogue free Western Distributors,\nDept. RN, 85 Ray Bldg.. Vancouver.\n290    L\u00bb\u00bbS PHOTS    ^\nP O Box 434, Vancouver, BC\nAny 8 exposure roll developed\nand   printed   29c    Reprints\u20144c\neach   Giant   size\u20147c   each.\n8x7 Enlargement Coupon  with\neach order\nLADIES! DELAYED MENSTRUA-\ntlon Why worry? Smart women\nsay new, improved, triple-strength\nDelaye Pills give prompt effective\nrelief for overdue, painful or Irregular periods (Regularly $8.00.)\nOur price, $3-00, postpaid via Air\nmail in plain, sealed wrapper (C.\nO.D. if you prefer) Women ahould\nkrep a box on hand at al! times.\nOrder yours right now! Western\nDistributors, Dept ACN. 85 Ray\nBldg, Vancouver\nmD-COOK FOR NFvV M1N-\ncamp. Small crew. Call Eu-\nrates Mine.\nfTED   \u2014   SKIDDERS,   WITH]\nn horse, to contract logs. Ap-\nr 718 Kootenay St.\nYTED - WOMAN COOK FOR\niali cimp. S. P. Pond, Ntlion,\nC.\t\nmt - FIRSt CLASS MA-\nlnlst, also a bookkeeper. Apply\nevenson's Machine Shop.\nCOOK ANp\" PASTRY \"COOK\n_inted. Golden Gate Cafe.\nrTED - FAI.T.ERS AND MiLl,\nnds. Burn* Lumber Co,\nNiagara\nOffers You\nThe Widest Variety\nof Personal Loans\nWE HAVE MANY PLANS\nCHOOSE THE ONE THAT FITS\nALL ARE LIFE INSURED AT\nNO EXTRA COST\nNIAGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY LTD.\nEst'd. 1930\nSuits 1, IWl Baker St., Nelson\nThone 1095\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWIPEG WIDOW WITH TWO\nlldren six, and one and one half\ntrs old. desires housekeeping\nsition by end of August Would\n3k after home for elderly couple\ninvalid. Can furnish best of\nferences as to character and\ntlity. Box 10IB2 Daily News\n'BUENCED PAINTER WANTS\nd jobs. Frpr.ch polishing, Ir.ter-\ndecorating. painting. Apply\nU Taxi Phone 400 \u2014\nIRIED COUPLETa CHILDREN\nacd 8   Can take charge  either\niness or farm. Box 10132 Daily\nFOR SALE. MISCELLANEOUS\nLOST AND FOUND\nSING FROM KOOTENAY HAY\nly 7th. 10-ft. Clinker Built Row\nt, almost new, built by Gardl*\nRewa-d   _)r  Information   or\nim.   Kootenay   Bay   General\n- BLACK COCKER SPAN-\npuppv with white markings on\nHO*?   Beatty   Av\u00ab.   Phor.e\n-^~AT\" LAKESIDE PATflf,\nidy's g**l-l wrlil watch. P.: tier\nive at Daily Nr*.vi   R<-ward\nTAIRBANKS-MORSE\nHome Water\nPressure\nSystems\nAutomatic electric pressure 171-\nterr.j for country homes, camps,\netc,\nNOW IN STOCK\nPeebles\nMotors Ltd.\nFOR    SAI F  - DF.WOLD    PORT-\nabls    ra-i:o in    good   condition.\nPhoni    Mrs. B.    Reefer,    Royal\nH\"te'..\nsf AS^A^frREcXiPi- \"Booi-TSTi\nreceipts  to  page   with  duplicate\niheeti. Nelson Daily News Print-\nr.g DepL   _______\nTOR\"SALE - GCRNEY RANGE.\nlike new, hot water front, also\nsmall ca.> stove   50H Observatory.\nr*TT^ :; Firi ings \u25a0Tt*iiE\"s7_SPir-\nclal   low   prices   Active   Trading\nCo.  !>:\u25a0)   Powell   St,   Vancouver\n^\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014,\u2014\nMACHINERY\n\u2014\u2014\u2014-\n\u2014^\nLAWRENCE MODEL 5-6\nDouble Drum\nWinch\nIn stock for Immediate delivery.\nCable capacity, 550 ft. H\". maximum pull 18,000 lbs. Heavy duty\nball bearings. Cams with antifriction bearing, hand operated.\nControl levers, all within easy\nreach of the operator. Gears,\nsteel cut, diameter and face\n24V x 3\". Power specification\nB0 H.P.\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\nSH Hall St.\nPhone 18\nMining, Milling and Sawmill\nMachinery, Building and\nContractors' Supplies\n\"II  it's   machinery   you   want,\nconsult us.\"\nTrailers\nSingle and dual axle trailers\nmade ln B.C. for B.C. logging\nrequirements. From 4 to 15 ton\ncapacity. For further details,\netc., wire, phone, write or call at\nB. C. MACHINERY\nSALES CO.\n850 Front St. Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE S87\nINTERNATIONAL\nMotor Trucks\nIndustrial Power\nFarm Machinery\nCentra! Truck\n& Equipment Co.\n702 Front St Phone 100\nNELSON, B C.\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nBody And\nFender Repair\nModern Equipment\nExpert Workmen\nQueen City\nMotors Ltd.\nPhone 43 Nelson, B.C.\nEOR SALE - 2 CHEVROLET DE-\nluxe model 4-door sedan at $1100\neach. 1-1942 Chevrolet Standard\nModel 4-door sedan at $1300. Good\ncondition. Apply Fruitvale Co-Op\nTransportation Society, Fruitvale,\nB. C.\t\nFOR SALE-CHILD'S CAR (ENG-\nlishi. Nearly new. Steel body,\nstreamlined, modern, ball bearing\n. back axle, pedal propelled. Cost\n$35, will sell for $25. Box 9392\nDailv News\n1930 DURANT COUPE, 1932 V-8\nFord Coach, 1936 Ford 2-ton truck,\n2 wheel half-ton trailer, 1929 Pontiac Coach. A Ford reconditioned\nsaw motor. Apply Nelaon Auto\nWreckinc and Oarage\nNEW AND USED PARTS FOR ALL\nmakes of cars City Auto Wreckers. Box 24. Oranlte Road\nWILL SELL OR TRADE 1939\nWillys, light delivery truck for\ncar.   William   Kahatoff.   Thrum*.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS   AND   MIKE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W WIDDOWSON St CO. AS-\nsayers   301 Josephine St., Nelson\nft S ELMES. ROSSLAND, B. C,\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Repreint\nRECORD REVENUE\nSURPLUS NETTED\nIN BRITAIN\nLONDON, July 18 (Reuters) -\nHugh Dilton, Chincellor of the Exchequer, innounced ln the House\nof Commoni todiy a \"buoyancy\" of\nrevenue which ilnce the 1947-48\nbudget wu Introduced Ust April\nhad netted the Treasury t record\nrevenue surplus of \u00a3 234,000,000\n($936,000,000).\nInitiating \u2022 debate oft the third\nreading of the budget which wu\npassed without division, Dalton attributed thia surplus chiefly to full\nemployment. Ninety-eight per cent\nof the insured population now is at\nwork, he jild.\nEvan with the deduction of \u00a330,-\n000,000 received from the sale of\nwar stores, \u00a320,000,000 from trading\nservices and \u00a3144,000,000 from miscellaneous revenue, there was a surplus of \u00a340,000,000,\n\"This never hits happened before,\" Dalton declared. \"We certainly have had a very good start.\"\nOn the other side of the balance\nsheet, he announced that concessions\nmade since the budget wii first Introduced\u2014including a chinge in the\nbasis of automobile taxation, cheap\ntobacco to old-age pensioners and a\nprofits tax concession to cooperatives\u2014had reduced the prospective\nbudget surplus from \u00a3270,000,000 to\n\u00a3258,500,000,\nThis was getting satisfaction \"relatively cheaply,\" Dalton commented.\n\t\nToronto Stocks\n-\u2014-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u2014\nva\nMINES\nAmal Larder   ...\nAnglo-Huronlm\nAquarius  \t\nArjon    \t\nArmistice \t\nAstoria   \t\nAtlas      _\t\nAubelle  \t\nAumaqu*\t\nAunor  _\t\nBagamac .\nBase Metili Mining  .\nBear Exploration\nBeattie Gold Mines ...\nBeaulieu Yellowknlfe\nBelleterrn   \t\nBevcourt \t\nBidgood Klrkland\t\nBobjo Mines \t\nBoneU] \t\nBralorne   \t\nBroulan    \u201e...\nBuffalo Ankerlte\t\nBuffalo Red Lak\u00bb \t\nCalin Flin Flon \t\nCimpbell R L \t\nCan Malartie   \t\nCiriboo Gold Quirti      2.30\nCastle-Trethewey       1.27\nCentral Patricia       1.68\nCentremaque lfl\nC Porcupine  14\nChesterville   \u201e      8.30\nCitralam   05*4\nCochenour       29!\n.77\n9 05\n.S3\n.UVi\n.49\n.09 V,\n.11\n.97\n.20**.\n4.30\n.18\n.09 vi\n.56\n.78\n.32\n.32\n.70\n.26\n.15\n.28\n10 115\n.30\n1.99\n.28\nmv,\n\u25a0a\n71\nA. J BUIE, Independent Mine Rep\nresentative  Box 54, Trail, B. C.\nW~ G THOMSON k CO. - AS- j\nsayers & Metallurgists All work\ngiven prompt attention. 1155 Pen-\nder St.. W    Vancouver, B.C.\n'CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT'\nROGER\" M HO-LAND\nChartered  Accountant\n815 Victoria St.     Trail     Phone 33d\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj colin mclaren. d.c, chiro*\npractic       X-ray.      Splnography,\nStrand theatre Bdg Trail Ph. 328\nFOR SALE-1946 FORD TRACTOR\nand cultivator, hydraulic lift,\nstarter and lights. Also 1940\nChevrolet 2-ton Truck with boic*\nand trailer hitch Good tires. Apply A. Willms, Pincher Creek,\nAlia.\n\"LONDON CONCRETE MIXERS\nSize; 2;. 24s,  3s, 34s  and  6s.\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nFROM STOCK\nPURVES E  RITCHIE k SON LTD\n658  Hornby  St Vancouver.  B C.\nCUSTOM MACHINE WORK AND\nWelding Cordwood Saws and\nmandrels STEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP, 708 Vernon St,\nNelson, B C\nDIAMOND   DRILLERS\nNATIONAL DIAMOND DRILLING\nCo., Ltd, Drilling and Bit Service   Box 508  Rossland    B.C.\nENGINEERS AND  SURVEYOR8\nr. w   iiAGGEN, Mining  and\nCivil  Engineer,  R   C.  Land Sur-j\nveynr, Rossland and Grand Forks.\nBOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST\nNelson, B C , Surveyor   Engineer.\nTIMBER PROPERTIES\nT. A. CLARKE, FOREST ENGI-\nnrrr and Forester, 425 Baker St.,\nNelson, Phone 1306 Timber\nCruised, Appraised and General\nTimber Management and Admin-\nIftra'ion\nINSURANCE  AND~REAL  ESTATE\nCHAS  F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate -   Phone 135\nSAWMILL. WOODWORKING AND\nContractors equipment of all\nkinds. National Machinery Co,\nLtd   Vancouver   R   C\nMACHINISTS\nSUMMER RESORTS ' -\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop, acetylene and\nlectnc welding, motor rewinding\nPhone  593 324   Vernon   St\n,OOL AND INSTRUCTION       BOATS AND ENGINES\nIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS\n\u25a0epare NOW for Fall exsmins-\nWn*e MCC Civil Service\nhool. 301 Flnderlon Bldg, Win-\npeg,  Mur.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\ny-Way Hank\nFOR RALE - ONE 16 FT, VEE\nbottom sperd Hydroplane, with\nnew 22 1 Evmrude Spcedl Twin\nmotor ai.d trailer. This b >at does\n35 n*. ph or belter. Anyor.t want-\ni-g prim or Information wrlta\nH \u00bb 7.1, (*\u2022\u00ab: brook. B C\nFOR   SAI.E ID   FT   4T   BOW,\nPper.ion B at New Glad len air-\nr* 'led engine Arply A. W\nflnrr.fr,  Balfour\nFi 'il SAI E .'*' IT\" fiT'KX MOTOR\nSit wiiM 30 bo Kermsth engine\nS<-e It. y  Adams,'Cutlegir  Ferry\nRENTALS\nCRESCENT BEACH AUTO CAMP.\n10 miles East on Highway. Modern fully furnished cabins, .sand\nbathing beach. Boats for fishing.\nPhone 47I-Y-1 or write or call for\nrites and reservations R R. 1\nNelson. B C\t\nSTA\" C R tl ST AUTO COURT.\nStuy'.e Rd While It* ok, RC. New,\nmofiern c ',:ri,:r-* Magnificent\nview. Spring f.iled mattresses\nClose to everyth.i.g R.,\".cs moderate\nfrawford bay- corrAoTTo\nrent bv week or montn Paitici*\nlars: J H Don-Lean, Port Crawford. B  C \t\nPINEWOOI) TOCRIST CAMP\nChristina Lake, RC SliOO wk\nBring heddu:**; Pillows \".ipplied\nRes   Box 314   Pr -p   Al  V'v.n\nfRTiiTlisT' A tt A D I ST, Lodge,\nQueen's ll.iy, b ,*.>, mi * r<. cabins a***! reals ('\u25a0 niplet,* vicatmn\nfacilitie,   Te'.epN i.c Bal four\nKING~GE0RGE~110lHL\nA riol spot nn a hot d*v\n__ Phone 5 _K*is:,-, RC\nfOT* It \"IS T AOCOMMODATfON\nCookmj  faHi'.ej   Phone 321).I,\n! WANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METAL3\nor Iron Ary quantity Top prices\npail Arlive Tradlrc Con-pans\n911  P-well   St .   Van- 'iver,   11C\nA'&TET) \"~ -\u2014 CfTAS* cWtflN\nl,i.i. b itt-ni re-m ed 7c .b\nBring   to   Da *v   News\nSlTTi' YTil'R IIILFS TO j V MOR\ngan   Nd.  \u25a0    H   .\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP-\nSpecialists in mine and mill work\nNIachine   work,   light   and   heavy\n708 Vernon St   Nelson  Ph  98\n8ECOND HAND\" STORES\nWE I'.IIY   SFI.I. ANP EXCHANGE\nWhat have vou' 1'h .134 Ark Store\nMigrating Britons\nUrged to Understand\nProblems in Canada\nLONDON, July 18 (CP) - C.\nH. Millard, Canadian National\nDirector of the United Steelworkers of America (C.I.O.) ina statement today urged that all Britons\nconsidering migration to Canada,\neither under the Ontario Government plan or independently, should\nso only with a \"quite clear understanding of the problems\" awaiting them on arrival.\nThe statement referred specifically to the Ontario scheme by\nwhich 7.000 British immigrants\nwill he brought to the province,\nbut Dana Porter, Ontario Planning und Development Minljter.\nsaid he had no comment beyond\nths fact that all immigrants under\nthe Ontario Ulan \"are full Informed of conditions awaiting\nthem.\"\nMillard aaid intending emigrants\nshould be sure transportation is\navailable, that there is housing at\nthe destination and 'regular employment   Is   reamnaWy   certain.\"\n\"I'm sure I speak for Canadian\nLabor when I say we will welcome\nBritish Workers to Canada but\nwe don't want one person to come\nor plan on coming without a clear\nunderstanding of the problem;,\nthey are likely to be confronted\nwith when they arrive,\" the statement continued.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nNEW WHITE STUCCO DUPLEX,\nunfinished attic, 3 rooms, toilet,\nShower in each, plastered. Ideal\nfor aulo camp, 350 feet frontage\non main highway. This is a corner\nacre. No clearing to do, just start\nadding cabins and watch the cash\nroll in Snap at $3800 cash, or\nterms $4500. Apply one block East\nof properlv RR1, to A Fotherbv\u2014\n600 yards East of Coffee Shop at\nWillow Point, Nelson, B.C. Phone\n462-L-4\nCoin Lake  \t\nCnlomac  Yellowknlfe\nConiaurum Minea\nConsolidated M & S ...\nConwest \t\nCrestaurum \t\nCroinor   \t\nDelnite\nDickenson Red Lake ...\nDiscovery\nDiversified\n.32\n.0914\n1.20\n05 50\n.93\n.30\n1.00\n1 mi\n1.04\n\u25a0111\n.90\nDome Mines     22 73\nDonalds\nDuqiiesne \t\nDuvay       \t\nEast Amphi    .\nEast Malartie\n 83 \",\n 88\n 13\n 38\n  ' 1.80\nEast Sullivan        330\n,73\n31\n4.20\nM,\n.16\n2 60\nGiant Yellowknlfe       6 25\nEider\nEldona\nFalconbridge Nickel\nFed Kirklind \t\nFraneoeur\nFrobisher\nGillies Lake\nGod's Lake Gold\nGold Crest   \t\nGold   Dale   \t\nGold Eagle     \t\nGolden Arrow\n.10\n 93\n.18\n 16\n OfitJ\n 18\nGolden Manitou       2 17\nGold Vue\nGrandoro\nGunnar Gold    -\nHallnor Mines      \t\nHard Rock Gold  \t\nHarker  Gold  \t\nHarricana   \t\nHasaga      \t\nHeith \t\nHeva Cadillac \t\nBollinger     \t\nHomer   \t\nHosco   \t\nHowey\nHudson Bay M At S\nIndian Lake\nInspiration\n23t4\n.11\n32\n4 50\n.35\n13\n.08\n.85\n.13 _\n27\nin as\n.08\nllli\n33\n4*1 nn\n,08 .\n58\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, SATURDAY, JULY 19,1947 \u2014 9\nWright Hfrgreivei _     a.19\nYellorex\nYmir Yankee Girl\nOILS\nAnglorCan\nBritish American ...\nBritish Dom\n.20 4\n.11\nI.M\n2*3.00\n.22%\nC * E Corp        2.31\nCilmont\nChemical Research .\nDilhousie\nDivies Petroleum .\nEut Crest\n.54\n.40\n.52',-i\n.184\n.10\nFoothills        2.6!\nHome Oil       4.25\nImperlil    *>    15.15\nInter Petroleum     13.75\nMid Continent 10\nNitional Pete  33\nOkalti   _      1.97\nPicalta   _ 11\nPicific Pete      1.07\nRoyalite      18.00\nUnited . 12V,\nINDU8TRIAL8\nAbitibi Power    18.00\nAbitibi Power pfd      JOM\nAlgoma Steil          85.00\nBathurst A     21.00\nBeitty      38.00\nBell Teliphoni    189.00\nBrailliin Tfiction       22.35\nBrewen it Distillers     18.00\nB A Oil      26.00\nB C Pickers        14.15\nB C Power A  _..   22.25\nB C Power B       2.00\nB C Pulp     52 00\nBuilding Producti       29.50\nCanadi Bread  -     7.50\nCan Brew . .  \u2014    25.35\nCanada Cinnen      20.78\nCan Car & Tdy     12.78\nCan Car k Fdy A    17 25\nCanadian Celanese     61.00\nCan Cement pfd       18.00\nCan lnd Alcohol A    14.75\nCan Marconi  \u2014     175\nCan Packers     38.00\nCan Par Riy     13 65\nCoast Copper       126\nCockshutt Plow    12.00\nCons Paper    19.00\nDistillers Seagrams     17.50\nDominion Bridge         32.00\nDom  Foundries     28 00\nDom Steel k Coal B     1485\nDom Textile     72.50\nFamous Playen     17.15\nFanny Farmer         85.00\nFord of Canada A     20 50\nGitineau 5 pc. pfd   10975\nGen Steelwares          16.00\nGeorge Weston i    27.00\nGoodyear Tire        95.00\nGt Lakes Paper     15.85\nGypsum Lime         1525\nHamilton Bridge _     7.50\nHiram Walker         14 38\nImperial Oil     15 00\nImperial Tobacco     15 00\nInt Metals\nInter Nickel\t\nKelvinator      \t\nLaura Secord \t\nLoblaw A    \t\nLoblaw B   \t\nMiple Leaf \t\nMissey Harris\nMassey Harris pfd\nMcColl  Front  .\nMoore Corp\nNat Steel Car\n20 50\n34 00\n17.80\n18 00\n29 25\n27 50\n12 50\n17 15\n29,25\n20 18\n7150\n23.15\n\"CANADA\"\nABOUT FINISHED\nBy GUY QAGNON\nCinidlin  Press Stiff Writer\nMONTREAL, July 18 (CP)\n\"Cinada,\" a symphonic suite to reflect cultural influences and char-\nicteristici of the Dominion's five\nmain regions, is about half finished\nits author, youthful Alenandei\nBrott of Montreal said today.\nAlready the musical depiction ol\nOntario and Quebec ls In the\nprinters' hands. One third of the\nmovement to represent the Maritime! is down on paper and Mr.\nBrott, commissioned by the International Service of the CBC to do\nthe work, has the rest of the Marl\ntimes movement worked out.\nSTUDY FOLKLORE\nThe Pralriei and British Colun\nbla? Mr. Brott says he must din\ndeeper into the Slavic, the Hung\narian and the Indian folklores\ncharacteristic of those regions be\nfore he can produce really repre\naentatlve music. It may take him\nsix weeks or more.\nThen the 30-year-old musician-\ncomposer will instruct In the playing of his music and perhaps about\nnext November he will conduct the\nsuite in a broadcast to be heard ln\nmajor world countries.\nEach movement lj a series of\nvariations on a main theme. Ontario Is an allegretto descriptive of\nEnglish - speaking Protestantism.\nQuebec Is a moderato maestoro with\nthe main themes sounded off the\nwell-known Alouette.\nInternational Nickel     34 nn\nInt Uranium\nJacknife\nJack Waite   ....\nlason\n.Tellicoe\n.Inliet Quebec\nKavrand\nKenvllle  Gold\nKerr-Addison\nKirk-Hudson\nKirk Townslte\n.35\n.084\n,10\n,15\nllli\n.36\n071,\n31\n7475\n.53\n13\nPage Henhey     28 25\nPowell River .\nPower Corp ..  _..\nShawinigan  ....\nSicks Brew     \t\nSimpsons pfd  ~\nSoutham \t\nSteel of Canadi \t\nUnion Gm   \t\nUniteM Cifrp\"\t\nUnited Stetl\nWinnipeg Elec pfd\nWinnipeg Elec com\nr> nn\n12 00\n2218\n13 75\n104 00\n1975\n76 50\n9 75\nUTS\n825\nion on\n1900\nKirkland Lake  2 09\nLabrador           5 0(1\nUke Dufault  50\nLake Shore Mines        15 75\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nSOLLY CHICKS\nThere will still he profits In\nSummer chirks for good poul-\ntrvm.in wrkmg with better\ns' *:*k High f-ed pnrrs are no\non'arlf when ynur birds have\nthe quirk growth and low mortality bred into 'he Solly strains\nfor 31) years New Hampshires\nand first cms'ss available until\nOr'mi.-r Wr:*e Solly Poultry\nBreeding Farm. Westholme, for\nI'.*;*-*! ,-> d ca' ilogue\nw\u2122.ir.~ nen\u2122*.~. ^rliuni Dathi XritiF\nson   Phone 08 I Clsni'ied Advertlimg Hi'ei\nKanTed ToTieTJT   \"siTTfi^1 ,,. r,   ... ,.,.   .,,,    -,r\nsn ill h   nt  r   ;{*'\u00bb set nnt rh:M pr-\nrt**\n\u25a0'. art nnt rh'.M\ner X\n*.i ii'ir\nIt* t\nUl UKU It RAISED NEW\nHAMPSHlUE ITI,LETS, past\nbrooder s'age All puilets raised\nfrom our f;r,\u00bbst ROP sired pul-\n[*' chirks All birds are running\niv;'. on     ir fice range.\nNEW SIBERIA  FARMS\nN   11, ii    \u2022 \u2022*.  It 11.2   Chllllwark\nFOR SAI.F   REGISTERED POlL-\ned Shorthorn bulla, for further In-\nf, iirali n   write  C.   Flick.   Edge-\nw. -*!, II   C\ni**ik sai E   \"\"s a uii le.'Tack\nhn ir. Rood woi k< r Harness, pack,\nridiiit s rl lies, complete outfit\nP\"X |0|i!4 Dailv News\nFUR SAI E .VI YEAR-OLD, HEAL-\nthv '.;, x Hampshire laying hens\n(I 71 ri  Ora*.   itesttv Ave . Nelson.\nfi 'ii i,m.i \"on-eTyrSTiiRe Cow,\n\u2022n \"<:\u2022*,; Sll\". \"h Apply Fred W.\nVil*ff   P*ill ant  Bt\nFun smh~    \" OT.JE-snn-rrNG\nr-,*v   1   F  I ,i*ig. Hall Siding\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\npi'II SAI t AT KOOTF.'J.W PAY\ni 17 .ii :,*< nn main roan 500 vr!<\n'*   \u25a0\u25a0    y-   iv   Larding    rt >-*   .1\" I\nI*\"   77n s Is .\u25a0' ',kr fr.---.gr,  1-i\nCANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY\nUnimproved farm lands and grazing lands in the Provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan at reasonable prices Fnr particulars\nwrite lo the Land Branch 908,\nDept. Natural Resources, Calgary,\nand you will be provided with the\nname and address of the representative in the district in which\nyou are Interested.\nBUNGALOW - 4 ROOMS AND\nbath. New plumbing. Cement\nfoundation, full basement 9 lots\nIn garden and fruit trees. Property\nremodelled and would take verv\nUtile Io finish. Owners leaving\ntown will .sell fnr actual cost to\nthem. $3200 F. A. Whitfield. 425\nBaker St.\nHljRRY -\"REAL HOME COM-\nfort. Log fireplace and lounge.\nRefined husiness folks only Kokanee Lodge opens three large\ndouble guest rooms from August\n1st for Winter. Rates weekly\ny. iid each sharing. Fleetline bus\nto lodge, 10c.\nLamaque Gold\nLaoaska\nLeitch Gold\nI^cxinden\nLineman Lake\nLittle Long Lac\nI.ouvcourt\nI.vnx\nMacassa\nMacDonald\nr, m\n32\n12(1\n.17\n.71\n162\n190\n.14\n3.si\nIO\nMacLeod Cockshutt           165\nWHY NOT CHANGE YOUR FTRE\ninsurance on Household Effects tn\na FLOATER ALL RISK POLICY\nThis protects you against Fire and\nThrft and many other hazards,\neither at home or travelling Ask\nus fnr particulars C W. Apple-\nvaid A- Co\nr\\r'*H\",:slfEP\nI'*   -i\nPill*\nVGA! '    N\"T!fT'i\n:*\u25a0   : *,- p\u00bbr i \u25a0'\n'.'' * per lim ra I\n*V \\ *.* :' \u25a0\u25a0*'\u25a0\n,r \u2022  .  *,, \u25a0;    ,*      ,f,ii j:ri> Fi H I'HdVI'T I'AYMFNT\n,,  ,.    j...     ,  s-s x Al 1   All i\\'K HAI'}'.* 1 ESS 'rt,\nTl '.'I F!\ns'.'hie and Siva!\nW   F -ser. Ke\nlt\nFARM, GARDEN _ NURSERY     \u2022uNrriptir-n A.tr*.\nrun  itrffct  si *ii   sFitvirr.    n** >\u2022\u2022\" *\n*  \u2022   ti- ! \u25a0 *n   .ind   fa-ni    M-\nwr.k\n1*110\nPeebles\nMotors I nl.\n, i*,r*.**..   :ni   ITS! Th.-d      \"*\u25a0 ' *''*':   l\"\"r \u25a0' ,r\nr a     !IC                                          Ma I *.** ('**    I\u00bb. *- i* 1\n*     *~~\" '\"             n.*r .-. \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022*\u2022 $   I 0(1\nWISSIF'O.     CF*     \\   \u00bbei*.]tll   \u25a0'*            Three fr   **'ll 7 '-1\nnit  10 w. ,.'  *,r 10 thi  rsmil'**'         Si'   \"\"'\"nth! 450\nOne sear 8 00\n(.'\u25a0  *\u00bbd Slale.s   I*- lr ' K ngd\u201em\nPer  \u2022*\u2022*\u00bb, 117*10\n*, , ,,.,, ,-b, aim\nV.-e. \".    - lis, t 'HI\nI'm n*. \u2022 lh 100\nW -. r ,xli, :\u2022  '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0I' s -r i i;rr .\n\u25a0 \u25a0    \u25a0 \u2022   :i*'i   -.'.!   I i  S\u00a3>\n' ir*\u00bbr  of  i  W.-n,pt|  i1..*:.--rr.r.l\n...    -,..\u25a0\u2022-.     a*   I    ::\u25a0'-    \u2022'-.    I,  ri\n\u25a0*    f   \u25a0    .    \u25a0 r    I   ;*.l     \u00ab     \\ik> I    a *\u25a0<*\nH'H   SM E I AllllF    MI.DERN\nil -y'.fi 6 1 \"s easy dis'ance Trail\nSu elter Separate owner's nuirt-\nrrs G'.oH levenus Reasonab,.' for\nrub   It, v 11417 Dailv Now.\nFi'H   SAI E THE   FQnf'MFNl\nand businms ,-' lhe Rose Cife nl\n(\u25a0**.*!' car An ,'ppm tunity for lhe\n: n'*l i -ii *, All firs! class equip-\nf-ienl ar.rl .-'-l a- , g*>ing concern\nF*T appoin'nient write or phone\nCvnl Be.' Cai'legsr, BC\n\u25a0t'^^ati- iiorcrsojrn\u2022*:\nSmall fills* eijnpprd cafe, a (*o,,d\nopportunllv at bargain price   Box\nI M.S.I  111-.   News\nFuVt \"SA\"!>    Sl\"k\"'.T*fm\"l*AHT-\nmilt  house   711  Vrinoii SI\nF.'Tt   SAI?\"       J\\\\'fsr*i~}   T1ATPT\nSai  1   *,  IU*   i:*,2 HjII  Mines Rd,\nFOR SA\"l.E - 5 ROOMED HOUSE\non corner lot. near schools and on\nstreel car line, basement excasit-\nnl and partly finished Call 824\nCarbona'e Street or phone 1221-R\nPure 13 inn\nFOll SAL\"fr^5\"S7)03lT*D HOUS?\non l'i, lots rlosa In car line and\nschools. May be used as family\nhome or 2 apartments Good revenue   Phor.e 123-L\n\\FaNTETrfo~5?LL IMMEDIATE\nly. 2 acres of land and five room\nunfinished house For furthtr\nparticulars inquire Box 10185\nDailv Ne**s\nFfill SALE-MODERN 5-ROOMtD\nhunK.alow on 9 lots with chicken\nhouse for 7S birds, large gnrden\ns***l several fruit tl'*es Earll or-\nrup.ifcv  V-   it ^2 1,\n(Wh L.i IT AND I'AHI'i.Y CHN-\ns'*'i'*led hour for s.,V ai v.ll\nHigh St Apply 507 Railway SI\nApartment 5\nffiirSAI.E OR RENT\" - ~4 R5ol\"(\nhouse in Ymtr or will exchangt for\nhouse In Nelson Box 508 Daily\nNews\nPMt SAI.E - .1 T.O'fS I8l5 WARD\nSI and building material Apply\n507 Railway, Apartment 5\nTOH SAlTE - LARGE FURNISH-\ned cabin, newly decorated Apply 48 Ymir Rd\nm- sale - j Garden loti\n5th    St   Fairview   Box   1047R  or\nenquire a; SlfMth St\nrWs F0R~?ALE APPLY D MAG-\nlio   1019 latlmrr SI   Phone 808 I.\nifOt'SF. Tift   TllRFF\"  I ctS'\" Al*\npis   or   phore   I0J4 I    livm  Pack\nRMAT.T. WoTsl!\"T?5Ti sale   d*a\nSixth St\nMadsen Red Lake\nMalartie  Gold F\nMarcus \t\nMclntvre-Porcuplne\nMcKenzie Red Lake ...\nMcMar-nac\nMcWatters\nMining Corporation  -\nMonela  \u2014\nMosher  _\nNegus  _\nN\"cw Bldlamique\nNib _\nNicholson Mines      \t\nNipissing Mining \t\nNoranda \t\nNnrbenite \t\nNorme'al\nNorth Inci Gold Mlnll\nnnrim Gold Mines\nD'Leary\nt'mega  Gold\n(lmej[a Gold\nOmnitram Explontlon\nOrer.ada\nOsiskn Lake\nPaniour  Porciplne  _\nPaiamaque \t\nPaymaster \t\nPend Oreille \t\nPerron Gold \t\nI'iradilly   ,\nPickle Crow Gold\nPioneer\nPowell Rouvn Gold\nfusion East Dome\nQuebec  G\"ld\nQueens'on       . -\nQuemont\nRegrourt\nRirhmac Gold Mlnei\nRi.-he I, I,\nRo'ivn  Merger\nSan  Antonio Hold ...\nSannorm\nSen li.vivn\nSheep (reek\t\nS.gma Rouyn\nS.scrje Gold\nSliden Milirtlc\nSpringer  \u2014\nS'adicoua \t\nStarratt Olsen\nSleep Rock\nSullivan Com\nSurf Inlet\nS\\ Ivamte\nT (' Resourrei\nT Lundmark\nTaku River Gold Mines\nTe.-k Hughti Gold\nThurbola Mines Ltd\nToburn  Gold Mines   .\nTowgamac\nLpper Canada\nVentures\nVirour\nWane   Am .>!\nW Mllartlr\nWlltSfT\n3 25\n175\n6(1\nif- n\n35\n15\n8 55\n.45\n13\n2 02\nMU,,\n.12    ]\nMV,'.\n155\n45 00\n31\n15!\n33\n2 15     .\n14\nn;i,\n17',\n,19-i\nna'*,\n121\n151\n,,\n45\nm\n2 91\n3 86\nI 1.1\n1 92\n55\n'. 17\n16 Sh\n27 lfl\n26\nMrs. Skunk Evicted\nI CRANBROOK. B. C, July 16 -\nBob Prltchird, retired police officer who spends the Summer ln I\nwood* home near Radium Hot\nSprings, wai recently the principal\nin some genteel eviction proceedings In which the tenants, i family\nnf skunks, left in orderly fashion,\naccording to his account in the\nweekly paper here.\nMrs Skunk ind hir four young\nones were well established under\nthe floor of his home when he moved back for the Summer. They tolerated him up to \u2022 point, ln exchange for thtlr lub-floor shelter\nand the use of hll garden for gamboling purposes. He tolerated them\nfor  practicil reisons.\nEnglish Cricket\nLONDON, July 18 (Reuters) -\nSomerset today defeated Middlesex\nby 24 rurus with only 10 minutes to\nspare In r County Cricket match\nwhich saw the Middlesex players set\nto make 358 runs for victory in five\nhours, Somerset got them all out for\n334.\nResults at close of todiy'i play:\nLancashire va. Northamptonshire.\nLanca won by eight wickets. First\ninnings: Lanes 271; Northampton 89,\nSecond ninings: Lanes 15 for 2;\nNorthampton 196.\nWarwickshire vs. Kent. Warwick\nwon by eight runs. First Innings:\nWarwick 104; Kent, 143. Second filings: Warwick 149; Kent, 102.\nGentlemen vi, Playen: match\ndrawn. First Innings: Gentlemen,\n302; Players 304 for 8, declared. Second innings; Gentlemen, 209; players 3 for 0.\nYorkshire vs. Leicestershire.\nMatch drawn. First Innings: Yorki\n167 for 3 declared; Leicester 108 for\n3. Second Innings: No play, rain.\nSomerset vs. Middlesex. Somerset\nwon by 24 runs. First innings:Somer-\nset 3.56; Middlesex, 227. Second Innings: Somerset 229; Middlesex 334.\nNottinghamshire vi, Hampshire.\nMatch drawn. First innings: Hants\n310 for 4, declared; Nottingham 256\nfor 4, Second innings: No play, rain.\nGloucestershire vs. Worcestershire. Gloucester won bv 65 runs,\nFint Inning: Gloucestfr 223; Wor-\nceeter 223. Second innings: Gloucester 133; Worcester 142.\nj Essex vs. Glamorganshire. Match\n;drawn, F:rst innings: Glamorgan\n1323; Essex, 25!. Second Innings; Gla-\n[mofltan 67 for 5; Essex, did not bat;\nrain.\nHli toleranct led to lelf-lmposi-\n,'.ion of tiptoeing sround the house,\nl making warning loundi when ht Intended to go in or out or even\nj through hia own yird. Finally ht\n\u25a0 got tired of thii and naturalists ar-\n;ound the area refuied to Uke tht\nresponsibility of advice,\nInvestigation ihowed that the\n:family had two outlets to their eel-\n.lar home. One day when the wind\nwas blowing in the en'rance Mr.\nPr;tchard, set for a strategic retreat,\nquietly poured ammonia ard water\ninto the entrance, keeping an eyt\nun tht txi*.\nSure enough, as the fumes drifted\nthrough the den and out the exit,\nnut wafted the little procession of\nMrs* Skunk ard 'he four skunksten\nwh-1 took off with dignity into the\npure air for o^e' parts where they\nare now penr .ner.tty residing.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n> in\nso\n401,\nua\nM>\nM\nJ 00\nI 99\nn\n: it   *\nI*.*,\nis\nAcmoes\n1 Outer -MU\nofi tr\u00ab\u00ab\nI. Terror\n\u00bb Cipltil\n(Hulgirla)\n10. Tipertry\n11. Him per\n1J City (FU.)\n14 Fver\n(poet)\n15 Food\n(HlwiMael\n17 Trimgreii\n18 Sodium\nlaym 1\n11 Ckw-i In I\nrttttl\n11 Onmpeaa\npoint\nllhhr 1\ntl Ulind of\nNapoleon's\nexile\n14 Kind of\n\u25a0lelfh\nIa Topn hum-\nmlng-Wd\nM Greek letter\n79 rhirpet**\n11 Border\nU KAmaiillm\n(\u25a0ym I\nJo A'step\nSH Muaic nota\ntl Simian\n11 Pirtleleof\niddltlon\n41 Belon-ttni\nto him\n4S Chmfe\n49 Sultin \u25a0\ndieree\n41 Perfuma\n41 Pertolatei\n4\u00bb Si we\nfrolloq)\nH Elevitlom\n(tolf)\nDOWN\n1 Northern\nI. At I\ndistance\n1 Kdftr\n4 Greek letter\nft Fxhu-tlrm\ne Epoch\n7 Provides\nwtth we*pow\nt Tlunder\nt Bettlnj\n11 Wiser\nID Orimpan\nlt Ciren)!\n!\u2022 Bt*\nmammal\n\u00bb Cluh\n1.1 Utile child\n17 A red star\nln Scorpio\nM Blbllril\nDime\nM Oty lit)\nSl Convert\nInto\nleather\nII Slldea Mlfljr\n14 lUllevM\n87 Simpleton\nitrna uuliu\nsua uu.uii-iiju\nua uuua uuu\nquu uan\nB'JiU   QUUi-UI.\nbob QBiati au\n*   \u25a0 i > \u25a0\ntmUHtr*, tatm,\n40 RplrltMmp\n41 MUt\n44 L*r|-ein>rm\nti Spawn of\n(Uh\n\"n\ni\nT\u2014\nT-\n\/ '\/\nr-\nr\u2014\nT-\ni \"\n*\nI\n'.\n*.\n'\\\n(\n:\ni\n*.\n\u2014\n\u25a01\ni\nI'\n\u25a0'\nrt\nw\n\"\nrr-\n-\n{{\u2022\u25a0\n'\u25a0'\n\u2022*\ns\nii\n\".\n'.*\n\u2022*t\n*.'.\n*\n;\na\ntt\"\na\nii\ni-\nn\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\n.*-.\n-rr\nmTFTO<Jt>OT\u00bb\u2014\u00bb rrypwirrim e|iint\u00bbHo\u00ab\n\u25a0 xh   tnjee   incjRiiR   hawm   niiygv\ncgtni.     lit J 11 >     T X I. A K     [1 v 11     ti v     s it\nII g \\ It       B A H Q .1 T W f\nTeeteritljt*!   OyptoqlMle:     CUD   KKNPFT1I    AND   C1VETH\nBUTH MOtlTH  ANU  THK. MUM     '\nDutribul*,) I*,  Kins  tr\nTr.'iSKK\nn I,. \u00bb'*\n \u2014\n\t\n\t\n\t\np\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 19,1947\nAn Orderly\nDisorder\nYou may have difficulty in finding our front door.\u2014\nYou may have to walk through shavings and chips \u2014\nthe odor of paint may assail your nostrils \u2014 the flash,\nof the electricians test bulbs may annoy you \u2014\nBUT \u2014\nOur stock is as large and as well arranged and our staff\nis as courteous and as attentive as always.\nWe hope to announce the completion of Nelion'i modern and up-to-date Drug Store within a few weeki.\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\nYIADON, Yorkshire, England\n(CP) \u2014 An ilr service connecting\nYeadon with London, Edinburgh\nand Inverness ii expected to be\nstirted ntxt yair.\nNEED NEW\nTires\nFor Your Holidays?\nLIVERPOOL, Eng. (CP)-The Elder Dempster cargo-passenger mot\nWHITEHAVEN. Cumberland. Eng\n(CP)\u2014Thirty-seven years after the\norshlp Sangara, 5445 tons, is back In i first application was made, a tele-\nlervice after salvage following twolphone has been installed at Wasdale\nyears on thc sea-bed at Accra, West1 Head, one of the remote Lakeland\nAfrica. valleys.\nTO HELP YOU KEEP YOUR\nHoover Cleaner\nON THE JOB\nWe Are Completely Equipped With\nSpecial Tools and\nGENUINE HOOVER PARTS\nIf you don't already own a Hoover \u2014 we can\nmake immediate delivery of the NEW HOOVER\u2014\ncomplete with all cleaning attachments\n\"It Beati ai It Sweeps oi It Cleans\"\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\nPHONE 544\n600x16\u20144 ply .\n600x16\u20146 ply .\n6.50x16\u20144 ply.\n6.50x16\u20146 ply.\n5.50x17\u20144 ply.\n500x19\u20144 ply .\n500x20\u20144 ply .\n$18.45\n22.78\n23.00\n28.98\n16.90\n13.45\n_ 13.78\nTRUCK TIRES\nRAYON CORD\n700x20\u201410 ply $53.00\n750x20\u201410 ply _ 63.78\n825x20\u201410 ply __ 72.28\n900x20\u201410 ply .... 87.80\nAll Tirei Guaranteed\nALL TUBES AT COMPARATIVELY LOW PRICES\nNo Finer Tirei Made\nWestern\nAuto Supply\nCLARE F. BLAKEMAN\nAuthorized Dealer\nPh. 145     433 Josephine St.\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Triniport Mln*\nIster Birnei ls studying thl possibility of treeing the fut 98 to\"\nbridges and 41 lengths of toll road\nin Englind, Scotlind tnd Wales.\nPHONE 144 POR CLA8SIPIID.\nCollege education doe* not come\nfree. They cost money. The sure\nwey It to prepty i college education. Let ut expliln the Occident!! Lite Plin to you. Phone\n910, Stuirt Silet Agencies, 877\nBiktr St., Nelton.\nIn a beautiful icenic letting\namong the pinei where it'i\ncool.\nDANCE\nTONITE\nFor a lighter and brighter\nevening of fun, head for the\nP'.aymor \u2014 the Kootenays'\nmost popular dance rendezvous.\nYOU  WILL  ENJOY   DANCING\nUNDER   THE   PLAYMOR'S\nNEW\nCrystal Ball\nOF A THOUSAND GLEAMS\nCutadaA,\n[NUMBER^ TIRE\nMake money on\nyour olrl, worn,\nunsafe tires. We\nwill give you a\nmost liberal allowance for them\nand equip your\ncar with Ihe .sensational new\nFirestone*. Drive\nin and trade in\ntods\/.\nPAY AS YOU RIDE\nBUYNEWFIRESTONES\nTODAY\nAS LOW AS\n'2.00\nPER WEEK\nlUTHBERT\n\u2022 MOTORS   1\n'        Limited          |\nDODGE - DE SOTO DEALERS\nOpposite  Post  Office \u2014 Nilion,   B.C. \u2014 Phoni  75\n-__.\u00ab_.. Mt*.  \u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u00bb* . ,.in^atetet*^.\nMrs. James A, Fraser\nTEACHER OF PIANOFORTE AND THEORY\nannounces results obtained by candidates in\nToronto Conservatory Examination, June 1947\nPIANOFORTE:\nGrade  1-  First Class Honors\u2014Rishard Fraser.\nHonors\u2014David   Barrett,   Daniel   Dolphin, Edward Thompson.\nPass\u2014Neil Morrison.\n1     First Class Honors\u2014Rochelle Crawford,\nRoberta Stevenson\nHonors\u2014David   Rrodshaw,   Harvey\nFleury, Doris Talbot\nGrade A\u2014Honors\u2014Audrey Norgrove\nGrade 5\u2014Honors \u2014 Isabel Trozzo, Michael Fraser.\nPass\u2014Mary Dry Brodie\nGrade 7\u2014Honors\u2014Guillford Brett\nTHEORY:\nFirst Class Honors\u2014Guillford Brett\nStudio 812 Carbonate St.\nIn Fairview 520 Fifth St.\nStudios Reopen Sept. 1st \u2014 Phone 620-R.\nAnother Shipment of\nMartin Outboard*\n7.2 H.P.\nONLY\nAMIRICVI    OUMTANDINd\nOUTBOARDI\nIT'I THI NIW\n*jfat&\nOUTBOARD     MOTOR\nSee If nowl\n\u2022 It's truly remarkable! You\nwont believe it until you see it,\nIt'i one motor that doei what\nyou always thought it would\ntake rwo motors to do. It carries\nyou over the water at speeds\nthat take your breath away\nand it throttles down to perfect,\ncrawling, mile-an-hour trolling.\nIt's the new MARTIN MOTOR\n. . . flood-proof, sputter-proof\n. . . instant starling. Its sparkling performance secret lies in\na revolutionary new principle\n. . . mechanically-controlled\npoppet vo\/vei\/\nMARTIN gives you everything you would ordinniily expect in on outboard motor,\nplus many highly-important\nexclusive features.\nSttltftlloi,\nIt'i a bflavtyl      ^W\nPHONE \u2014 WRITE \u2014 WIRE\nGarmat Pleasure\nCralt Limited\nPhone 482 L3 R.R.I  Nelion, B.C.\nROSCOE\nANO\nFOURNIER\nGARAGEMEN\nSKY CHIET AUTO SKtVTCl\nPhoni 123 NeUon. B C\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n\"Distinctive Funeril Servlct\"\nJ15 Kootenay St Phone 381\niiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiin\nField Team Leavei\nFor Isolated\nNorthwest Outposts\nIDMONTON, July II (CP) - A\nfilld teim consisting of one medlcil officii, one dentil officer ind in\nassistant lett Edmonton thli week to\ntreit Army, Air Force and Civilian\npersonnel located ln isolated outposts ln Northwest Canada. Their\nfour-week air tour will take them\nto such places as Fort Smith, Yellow-\nkhlle, Norman Weill and Aklavlk.\nThe team includes Capt. J. W.\nTurner of Esquimau, B.C:., dentist,\nMaJ. J. R. Nixon of Calgary, medical\nofficer and Sgt. H. R. finders of Ed-\ntnonton, assistant.\nRELIABLE   SERVICE\nAt   Reasonable   Colt  at  thi\nSMEDLEY\nGARAGE CO.\nNext te Poit Office\n\"ELLISON'S BEST\" FLOUR\nFer All Your Baking Needi\nGuaranteed to Satisfy\nYeur Grocer Hoi It\nFurmeei and Alr-Condltloning\nLES BROWETT'S\nTINSMITH   AND   8HEETMETAL\n8HOP\n610 Kootenay St        Phone 11B2\nKeep   youth   and\nloveliness with \u25a0\npermanent\nHaigh Tru-Arl\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\nJohnstone  Block\nTINGLEY, Yorkshire. Eng. (CP)\n\u2014Britain's biggest gasworks, costing\n\u00a31,250,000, is to be built here to\nsupply industries.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMEDICAL ARTS BUILDING\nSILVER KING TRANSFER\nGENERAL   HAULING\nOwned and Operated* by an\nEx Serviceman\nPhone 606-R2\nSTAN BACHYNSKI\nHove the Job Done Right\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE   815\ntt!\n_rw\u00abwwoR\nEMMS\"*-\nSummer heat plays havoc\nwith many foodstuffs!\nKeep your refrigerator in\ngood working order\u2014and\nsave on food bills,\nFOR RADIO OR\nREFRIGERATOR\nREPAIRS\nPHONE 1115\nWELLS\nSERVICE SHOP\n5234 Vernon St.\n(Below Farmer's Market)\nPHONE 1115\n15   years  experience  with\nT. Eaton  Co.\n4 TAXI\nLicensed to Go\nAnywhere.\nDay or Night Service\nLOUIS  CHOQUETTE\nFor all your floral requirements\nleave your order at\nOVERWAITEA\nPhone .07 or\nWalkden's Florists, Phone 1122.\n<A OFF BATHING 8UIT8 and\nSundreisei. 8l.es 12 to 18. Rose\nMarie Reid originals and Regent's Hollywood style.\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP\nPhone 1208 662 Baker 8t.\nPRESCRIPTION\nSPECIALISTS\nWhen we compound your prescription you may be sure thai\nit  will be  tilled  promptly and\naccurately.\nYour Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nPhone 94\nBox 480\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iliniiiiiiliiiii\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChertered Accountonti\nAuditor!\n9*80 Baker St. Phone 235\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimimiiiiii\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPreicriptiom\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed  Arts Bin\nPHONE 25\niiiiiiiiimimiimnr\nSLACKS\nfor Summer\nGet yourself a pair of\nthese slacks for Summer\nwear. Pleated with zipper\nopening. Gabardines,\nFlannels, Worsteds and\nTweeds.\n*Q.OO\nto\n17\nto\n$in.2o\nEmorys Ltd.\nThe Man's Store\nHave  your   Furniture  Expertly\nRecovered  at the\nNELSON   UPHOLSTERY\n413 Hall St\nPhone  148\n'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiimiiiiiii'\nRADIATOR REPAIRS\nCleaned and Recored\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\n301 Ward St. Phone 63\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiii\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\n(Prior  Bros.)\nUNDER  NEW  OWNERSHIP\nPHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 258\nSMITH\nELECTRIC\n645  BAKER  ST.\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\nPORTABLE RADIOS\n(\u2022elf charging)\n$139.00\nNelson Electric Co.\nGeneral Electric Appliances\nPhone 260 874 Baker 8t.\nr^CAfti^Q\nBring your doctor'i preicriptiom here with complete assurance of accuracy, purity and promptness.\nHOSPITAL AND\nSICK ROOM SUPPLIES\nBed pint, hot water bottlot\nbandage, adhesive tape, band-\nand attachments, ear tyring\u00a9,\natomizers, douchei, clinical\nthermometers, feeding tubei\nand cupi and a complete lint\nof trusses and belts, gauze,\naids, surgical dressing**.\nFleury'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nPHARMACY\nPHONE 25\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiniir\nELECTRIC\nLAUNDRY\nPhone 1170 \u2014 180 Baker St.\nIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl\nPrompt \u2014  Dependable\nPAINTING\nand PAPER HANGING\nALL WORK   GUARANTEED\nMAX FALKNER\nPhone 461R4\nAnnouncement\nOur Block Factory and Retail Lumber Yard will be\nclosed August 4th to 16th inclusive in order to give\nour employees and staff their annual holidays.\nW. W. Powell\nCompany Ltd.\nSee the New\nFLYINQ STANDARD\nCOACH AND TOURING CARS\nDependable, Economical Transportation\nEmpire Motors\n803 Baker St.\nPhone 1135\nLACROSSE\nGAME\nDYNAMOS\nvs.\nNelson\nKIWANIS MAPLE\nLEAFS\nTonight, July 19\n9.15 P.M.\nCivic Centre Arena\n$5.00 program priie to lucky program holder.\nFirestones have everything\nto assure you of long, low-\ncost, trouble-free mileage.\nSo naturally everybody\nwants such an outstanding\ntire, and stocks are running low. That's why we\nask you lo buy now for\nemergency needs only and\nplace your order for\nfuture delivery.\n***,, it* mils \u00bbtki\nfire$ton*\nCAR, TRUCK-TRACTOR TIRES\nRoscoe and Fournier\nSKY CHIEF AUTO SERVICE\nPhone 172\n?0(S Rnkr, St.\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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It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1947_07_19","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0418379","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","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":"1947-07-19 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. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. 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