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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":"  1 ,\u2014,\u2014\nI.W.A. Officials\nReject Contract\nTurn Down Agreed Terms When\nOperators Say Settlement\nDidn't Include Box Companies\nKELOWNA, B. C, Aug. 10 (CP)\u2014A strike threat tonight\nhung over British Columbia's Kootenay's area as the result of\nthe rejection late Saturday by officials of the International\nWoodworkers of America (CIO) of lumber operator's new contract for about 2000 Interior B. C. woodworkers.\nIt was announced Friday that I.W.A. bargaining agents\na new contract which included a wage increase of 12Vi cents an\nhad agreed to settlement terms in the lengthy negotiations for\nhour plus a reduction in the probationary period for new employees from 90 to 60 days.       (! \u2014\nOperator's    reprosent:\\tives    said      It could  not be learned whether\nthe settlement applied only to sav\n\t\n\t\nV*>Vwo\n\t\n T\u00bb \u2014\t\nilu #tm\u00bb\nNelsons\nJUBILEE\n1897 to 1947\nI\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-MONDAY  MORNING. AUO, 11. 1947\nNUMBER 88\n1 r ^kes\nMinister Dies\nthe I.W.A. strike in the Kootenays\nmiifand 'logging'operations and did originally nailed for Aug. 0 - and 1\nnot include box romnaniis where then postponed till Aug 13 and;\nwages would have to be negotiated then cancelled\u2014was now on or off. |\nseparately I    \u2022*lle rejection by union officials\nIn  a meeting  here Saturday  be- of th?  new contract for 2000  EasU\ntween    operator's    representatives Kootenay's woodworkers also halt-\nend IWA   officials, the IWA   an- ed   contract   negotiations   affecting\nnounced that settlement had to ap-  about   S000   BC    Interior   wood-\nply to box factories and as a result workers in tlm Kamloops and Kel-,\nnegotiations were broken off.\nVESCIO CHARGED\nWITH SLAYING\nWINNIPEG BOYS\nAdmits Offences;\nShows No Emotion as\nRemanded Until 14th\nENDS CHAPTER\nciwna dutrict,\nPOLSO STRIKES 5\nVICTIMS IN\nAH.RF.RTA.B.C.\n10  ICP)\nBLIND RIVER, Ont, Auf. 10\n(CF)\u2014All available men, planes and\nequipment were tonllht fighting 24\nforest fires In Northern Ontario\nwith the main force battling\nacre blaze in the rich Misslssagi\narea 25 miles North of here. Blind\nRiver is roughly 75 miles East of\nSault Ste. Marie on the North\nchannel of Lake Huron\nAt latest report today the Miuli-\nsagi   fire  wai  still  unchecked,\nfirefighters sought to prevent flames\nfrom   spreading   into   a   holocuast\nsuch as destroyed thousands of doi-\nOTTAWA, Aug. 10 (CP) - Burly,' lars worth of timber at thii time\ngenial  H. F. G. Bridges, Canada's last year in the same region.\nMinister of Fisheries and one of the.    Some 205 men were already de\nyoungest members of the Dominion'ployed  along  the 3^35-mile \"front*\nCabinet, died suddenly this morn-las  fresh  outbreaks  were  reported\npoliomyelitis ing ol a heart ailment at thc age of along the North shore of Lake Su\nthe   Greater 45. perior  within   125  miles  of  Sault\nThe   towering,   broad-shouldered Ste. Marie. Also reported by a lake\nwver-soldier-stntesman from New | freighter tonight was a new blaze\nG. BRIDGES\nMEN, PLANES\nAGAINST 14\nONTARIO FIRES\nFighters Strive\nTo Save Nova Scotia\nFishing Village\n235-MILE FRONT\nunswick    who   stepped    almost several    miles    inland    from    the;ner\u2014was  actively   associated   with\nthe mouth of the Montreal River ln an the Royal Navy for many years and\n'    known\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 10 (CP) -\nChief Constable Chailes Mac\nWer laid Saturday Michael An\nIjelo Vesclo, 22, of Port Arthur,\nhad been charged with murder\nIn the icx-ilaylng of two 13-\nyear old Winnipeg boyi. Roy Mc-\nGregor and George Smith,\nwhole klllingi terrorized the\ncity In January and September,\n1946.\nAt a press conference today,\nChief Maclver said Vesclo \"has\nadmitted both offences.\"\nVescio, wearing a grey suit,\nsnout five feet four inches in\nheight and of stocky build, later\nappeared briefly in police court\nbefore Magistrate R- B\nwho remanded him to Aug\nHe said nothing and showed no\nsign of emotion.\nVesclo wai brought here (rom\nStony     Mountain     Penitentiary,\nwhere   he   had   begun  lerving   a\nthree-year   lentence    for    armed\nrobbery'at. the Lake-head.\nChief   Maclver   declined   to   reveal   the   basis   of   the   charges, saturd\u00aby\nagainst    Vescio,    The    laying    of\ncharges against him concluded one\nchapter of a  search  which began\nJan.    4,    1946.    when    McGregor's\nbodv was found in a lumber yaid\nin  'the   Fort  Route   District   with\nthree   bullet  wounds   in  his  body\nThe bodv of George Smith, with\nthree   bullet   wounds,   was   found\nin   a West-Central   Winnipeg  Lane\nthe   following   September.\nUSED   MINE   DETECTOR\nChief   Maclver  said   in   a  statement  that a military  mine detector  was  used  to   locate  the\nfired   at McGreg\nThe detect\nVANCOUVER, Aug\nTwo   new   cases   of\nwere   confirmed   in\nVancouver  District today and    i\nthird  was  reported  from   Abbots\nford, B. C, about 40 miles South\neast of Vancouver. The new cases directly from the Army into\nsent the Prov;ncal polio total this Cabinet less than two years ago,\nyear soaring to th- 114 marls, in- tjlf,l at 0:50 a.m. in Ottawa's civic\neluding 86 cases in the Vancouver hospital only a few days after the\nDistrict, discovery  of an unsuspected heart\ncondition.\nEDMONTON, Aug. 10  (CP)  -     Death  of  the  youthful  minister,\nTv.*o more cases of poliomyelitis In who  moved   *nt0  the  Cabinet  im-\nAlberta  were  reported   Saturday me<j*ately after his first election to\nParliament   in   1945.   came   in   the\nascendancy of a fast-rising political\ncareer.\nHis loss reduced Liberal representation in the Commons to 126\nThe other seats are as follows:\nProgressive Conservative, 67; CCF\n28;   Social   Credit,   13;   Others,   10;\niiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiin\nPhilip to Be Duke\nOf Edinburgh?\nLONDON, Aug. 10 (AP)-The\nSunday Express said today that\nLieut. Philip Mountbatten wtll\nbe created Duke of Edinburgh\nbefore his marriage to Prlnceu\nElizabeth Nov. 20, and that the\nPrincess will be known as the\nDuchess of Edinburgh.\nNo comment was available at\nBuckingham Palace. Speculation on s British title for the\nformer Prince Philip of Greece\nhu been current since announcement of the couple's betrothal.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimilil\nMarriage Wlll\nMaintain Royal\nLink Wilh Navy\nTwo Trail Men Die\nIn Bus-Jeep Crash\nRUSS MAY LOSE\nVOTING ALLY IN\nU.N. COUNCIL\nCanada Seen as\nPossible Security\nCouncil Member\nJAN.l END\nThree Unconscious in Hospital at\nNelson; R. A. Priest, L. White Die\nTwo men were killed and three seriously Injured when a\njeep in which they were riding was in collision with a Greyhound\nbus on the Nelson-Trail highway Saturday night.\nRonald Arthur Priest of Casino, near Trail, and Lorn*\nWhite of Trail are dead as a result of the accident, whlls William Plotnikoff of Kinnaird and Ernest E. Wild of Trail are In\nKootenay Lake General Hospital. A third injured man in tht\nhospital has not been positively identified, but is believed to\nbe Eino W. Wittala of Fraser* **\nMills. Idred yards South of the road ent\u00abr-\nIt was the second traffic accident iin8 'he Brilliant dam area from th*\non District highways in recent 1 Western side. At the Ume, the bus\nmonths in which there were fatalit- \"\u2022\u00bb proceeding West, the Jeep com-\nies. Last June 16, Mr. and Mrs. E. H.' mg towards Nelson. ^\nKurpjuweit   and   their   baby   son ]    An Inquest will be held at a dtt*\nBy  MICHAEL  O'MARA\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Aug.  10   (CP) - The\nRoyal family's close links with thel By LARRY HAUCK\nNavy will be carried another gen-!   LAKE SUCCESS, Aug. 10 (AP)-IGlen, of Medicine Hat, Alta., and yet to be set. Provincial Police i\neration with the marriage of Philip: Russia may face a fight in the com-1 Mrs. Ella Schattle of Woolchcstcr,' investigating.\nMountbatten    to   the   heiress-pre- *ng elections for the Security Coun-1 Alta., died  in a collision  between]    Damag\u201e ,0 the bu, wal comptr.\nsumptlve, Princess Elizabeth |cil jf the Soviet tries to hold \u201e vot. 1 their car and a Fleetline bus at Ko-*atl\"ely slight the front bumper K\"\ntrirnmri'Ini liw quarter-deckm\"\"i'ng* P.artner. am.\u00b0n\u00ab. thp..\"  powers kanee Bridge on the Nelson-Balfour, ing benl bajk \u201e\u201e one whee!i ttt\nwas affectionately\nsailor king.\"\nHil  son,   the  present\ning bent back on one wheel,\nseated on the United Nations' top;highway. .radiator  grill  pushed  ln   and\npolitical body. ,   The collision at Brilliant Saturday I rignt headlight glass broken.\n,,,        The   terms   of  Poland.  Australia i night  occurred  about  6:10  p.m.  A\n' and Brazil expire next Jan. 1 and (truck owned by  R.  F. Briscoe of\n.      successors will be chosen during the ! Saskatoon, Sask., and parked beside\nth.\nking\narea so remote firefighters are ex\npected to have difficulty reaching it.\n(See also stories on page 3.)\nSYDNEY, N.8., Aug. 10 (CP)-\nThe red glow of a half-dozen foreit flrei lit up the cloudlet! ikleii \u2014\nover Cape Breton  llland tonightond-ln-command of the forward gun han ln selecting  the six  non-per-:    The jeep was badly smashed,   a\nThree of the living victims whe\nwere   seriously   injured   Saturday\nby the Provincial Department of\nHealth. The new cases brought\nthe total number reoorted In the\nProvince to date to 12.\nOne of the new cases reported\nIs that of a 15-year-old: qlrl in the\nLethbridge District. She Is in\nhoipital at Lethbridge. The other\ncaie is that of a 21-year-old  wo-\nman  of the Canon  area. She  Is vacant, \u2122e*\nunder quarantine at her home.\nThere have been two death! In\nthe Province thii year from the\ndisease.\n113  IN   MANITOBA\nWINNIPEG, Aug 9 ICPi - Infantile paralysis cases in Manitoba\nnow have reached a total of 113.\nurabam. Pr0vincjal Heaith authorities said\n. today, with 11 fresh cases reported\nto them. The latest victims range\nin age from 12 years to six weeks\nLONDON. Aug. 10 (Reuters)-A\nrecord number of 448 new cases of\ninfantile paralysis was reported in\nBritain during the week ended Aug.\n2. the Health Ministry announced\nThii was an increase of\n146 over the previous week's figure\niSee also story on Page 10.)\nSAYS ECONOMIC\nVICTORY UP TO\nBRITONS ALONE\nPowers Needed to\nDeal With Few Who\nWon't Aid\u2014Attlee\n10 MILLION HEAR\nafter i heavy rain Saturday halt\ned the ravenous flamei inly temporarily,\nTwo new flrei broke out Sunday and iweatlrfg fighters battled\nto save Pleasant Bay on the Western shore of the llland where a\nblaze was roaring down the timbered slopes of MacKenzie Mountain toward the tiny fishing village.\nSays Officers'\nAttitude Resulted\n'n Entertainments\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 10 (AP) -\nHoward Hughes told Senate investigators Saturday he began spending for entertainment when he got\nil.'B        SUSS, LUC LM C3CI1 I flu I II a:.        11 d .1 , , , \u2014 I      , , j ,        ., V. CI tr 8C1 lUUJlJ UlJUitU UIIU1UU\nthe erect, trim bearing of a naval,\u21221 sesslon of the General Assem-,the  road   was pinned  against the |nj h, when , j       ln whlch tt\nofficer-and rightly. He served with!b*l*   .     ,v   \u201e\u201e. \u2122c,ky bank as the bus driver, James were m     waJ ln , coUi,ion ^\nilstinctlon in the Tint World War,     So far the U.N. has followed the McLachlan, swung to the rght m at-* a   Greyhound   bus  near   Brilliant\nand, when Duke of York, was sec- j practice   of   geographical   distrlbu- tempting to avoid the collision.   ^  , mn r?ported to be improving at\nthe Kootenay Lake General Hoipital here late Sunday night\nThe attending physician aald thtt\nE. E. Wild of Trail would be flown\nto Vancouver Monday morning to\nturret aboard the battleship Colling- manent  members  but  there   were total loss\" in the words of one spec\nwood in the Battle of Jutland. i early indications that attempts mayjtator, and the task of removing the\nOn a recent Royal visit to the he made to move the Eastern Euro- dead  and  injured  was a  difficult\nhome fleet, drawn up for review inlpean seat now held by Poland.       lone.\ncompanied   tht   King,   Queen   andORIENT SEEKS BALANCE\nFirst   on   the   scene   were   Cyril'receive specialist'! care. Wild untamed serious head and brain In-\nPrincesses ai they went from ship:    In her two years on the Council Bell and Noel DeFoe of Castlegar,,\nto ship,  chatting  with   the  senior Poland has voted consistently with who assisted in the removal of the juries ln tne cre*h.\nofficeri, and Inspecting the men and .Russia in a series of 9 to 2 baljots. victims.  It was believed that Mr.     W.   Plotnlkoff   of  Klnnaird,   al-\nequipment. jFor her place, Moscow is expected pr|est  was  killed  instantly,  while though extensively injured ia ln tha\n,Z   JP BACKG^0UND I to put up Yugoslavia with Czecho- Mr. White died a few minutei after! best condition of the three, the doo-\nThe King, resplendent in the uni- Slovakia as a second choice. ' the crash I tor said. E. W. Wittala of Friier\nform of admiral of the fleet\u2014\"braidI   However, Oriental countries have!    The injured were brought to Nel- Mills, the third victim, li*ihowinf\n\u25a0ms,   mumbled one been  agitating  for more than the!SOn by West Kootenay Power and slight improvement but hli con-Hone seat jield by China and may Light Company Ambulance and by tion was deicrlbed at \"itlll eeriom.\"\ni .SL .*mfi. pre!s the ,ight t0 8et ** vote away Thompson Ambulance of Nelson,    i \t\n\"\u2122\u2122 5,  'i.J',  in *.**\u2022\"\".' frwn Eur\u00b0Pe ani better balan\u00ab \u00b0\"     Mr. Priest was the owner of the     Viola   Smith,   U,   and   Mauric*\nsailor\u2014led the way along the deck\nSeveral    decoroui    paces    behind\nuncertain of hii  part  in a Royal\nvlilt.\nIn the uniform of a naval lieutenant\u2014he is an Instructor at a naval\nschool in Wiltshire\u2014he loomed almost out of place among admirals\nthe three European countries -\nI tain, Russia and Belgium.\nThere already is some speculation\nDutch Armies in\nE. Indies Attacked\nBATAVIA. Java, Aug 10 - lt'5\njust about one week since the Indonesians and the Dutch ordered\ntheir troops to call \"ff the shooting\nwar in the Dutch East Indies after\nthe cease-fire order  was issued at\nconfidential word that Army offi- \u2122m\u2122,\"de\" \"\"\" T'81\"' \"0Cklng\n... ,    ,     -. *        shnlil   lis-   Vina \u25a0   nnlnnr.a.\ncers considered him a \"ituck up\nrich man who wouldn't \"kow tow.\"\nAlso, the millionaire plane designer, , manufacturer and flier\nsolemnly testified that he may leave\nthe United Statei for (ood tt hia\ngiant, much-cfraclzecf (fargo plafie\nfails to fly.\n\"I put the sweat of my life in thli]hir\"or\"t\"o'exp\"lain iome bit of naval\nthing, Hughei told a War Invei-; procedure. He alio chatted fre-\n\u25a0 LONDON, Aug. 10 fCPl-Prlme tigating Sub-Committee. \"My repu-1 quently with Prlnceis Margaret dur-\nMinister   Attlee   told   the   British ution is rolled up In It.\" tinjj lulls in the review formalitiei.\npeople tonight they must fight alone     Hughes said he could not guar- \\   Lieut. Mountbatten's naval future\neconomic   survival,    ai   they antee the plane would fly or that it li In doubt at preient. Although he\nCouncil as\nland.\nabout the Klng'a entourage. I   Term*'  of  the  oth\"  lhr\u00ab  non-\nHe appeared reluctant to be salut^P*\u212241*1*\u2122 members - Belgium,\ned by active officers many years his; Colombia, and Syria-have another\nlenlor in service and rank and kept y\u00ab\u00ab to run. United Statei, France,\nin the background aa much as pos- Rusela, Britain and China sit per-\nilble. Wth in order ai the Boyal! maoently.\nparty paaMd through a ahip, het thrjultt the ***(#let Onion lue-*\n| kept moving alongside his fiancee aaufqiiy resist any'move to cap-\nto exchange a smiling remark with\nBri-: jeep, but it is not known if he was Grandmaitre, 32. both of Vancouver,\ndriving the vehicle at the time. died Sunday when the automobUs\nBus passengers sustained cuts and in which they were riding itruck\nthat India may be boomed for the bruises, but none was seriously in- the rear of a truck parked us ths\nreplacement for Po-\njured. Dr. V. Goresky of Castlegar New Westminster district.\nwas called to the scene. \u2022 The driver, Jack Davey and hll\nThe collision occurred a few hun-1 wife suffered a shaking up.\nOdum flies World\nin 73 Hours\nlhe  requ*P5t  of the United  Nations ^'ork .t\nfought against Hitler's Germany would be a success, that he only\nin 1940. He called for \"a national, hoped it would. But he iaid the\neffort comparable to that which we criticiim of the project and of th\u00ab\ndeveloped during the war\" money spent on lt waj \"unjustified.\"\nPromising   that   the   burden    of     The Sub-Committee ls investigtt\nreturned to his instrncting job,\ngossip writers suggested he would\nget in Admiralty job in London.\nbullets Council    But   the   \"rdr-   went   unheeded  in ouilyirK sections nf thc\nwas used for three Indonesian republic, where Fcatter-\ndays, Eventually one of the bullets was found embedded in th\"\nthe ground under snow and ice.\nIt was senl to the Royal Canadian\nMounted Police laboratory at\nRetina for examination by bai-\nlist;cs   experts.\nThere Sgt A Mas n-B'n ke re-\nported that he had eliminated .ill\nOther types of weapons with exception of a nine-millimeti v\nbrowning.\nWhen Smith's body was discovered, a nine-mi'dimetre emp'y\nshell was found a short distan:-:\nfrom it, ar.d again Ihe m ne \u00a3\u2022 \u25a0\ntector was used U\u00bb locate the bullet found two davs late;- in a\nn'%rby garden, buried six Inches\nunderground. RCMP subsequently determined that the same gur\nw *s  used  on  both   murdi rs\nLater r !:'\"'' o!,:;.:r\"d at V -r.\nArthur a weapon which th-\\\nrlnim was used bv Vescio and ,,\ncompanion Frank George duarrisn\nto hold up the palm Dairies ther.\nJune 30\nTERRORIZED    PARENTS\nThe twin slaying* terr nz- d\nWinnipeg par cuts .ir.d rli'.ldr \u25a0\u2022!\nwho n nnally played < n the streets\nduring thp evenings scurried homi1\nfrom school prompth at 4 p tn\nand never left the vicinity nf their\nyards until the nin** o'clock schi id\nbrtll roused them in the mornings\nCo-* perating in the campaign\nto safeguard thr children, fl.-h\n(tchool rugby of fir. a I.s switched\ninter-enllegiate games from *h<-\nfloodlight hours to daylight \u2022;\u2022\norder that the plavers and fan*,\nfell\nmight reach home before darkne-j\nThp itory of the imperii\ndetention wai related hy t\"\"\nFree Pren, which iaid that\nwhii* police maintained officii\nil|*nr*s on the raie, confidential\n\u2022 ourrei had indicated Ihut len\nutional devrlopmenti could lv\nected\ned fighting persisted, and Sunday\nthere was word nf continuing at-\n;acks fin Dutch armv forces on Borneo and Celebes, two of the outer\nislands of thc Y.nr Indie; It was\n\u2022 r.e first report o' Lhgt.n,; outside\nthe mam islands of Java, Sumatra,\nar.d Madoi ra since the shooting\n0:led   m,   \\hr   Uith   of  ,1 i'v    Farh\n-.d sacrifice in the dark davs ing the wartime contract the Gov-\nwould rest equally on all ernment give Hughes' and indu*-\nthe Prime Minister declared trialiit Henry J. Kaiier for the\noadcast: aerial   cargo  craft  \u2014   the   world's.\ncannot   rest  upon   the  help biggest plane. It also Is looking LntolTimcs uid tonifht after\nUts\nnr.'\nvarfa\nWRECK TOLL CLIMBS\nDONTASTKR.   F.rehr.d.   .\nahead\nclasses\nin  a  h\n\"We\n.vhu'h our follow members of the\nCommonwealth have been and are\ngiving so generously, and even\nthough plans may be put forward\nbv our friends in America to help\nbring prosperity back to Europe,\nwe must s'and or nur own feet.\nMUST  RCGAIN   FREEDOM\n'We must reg;.;;; our emr.nmic\nfreedom ar.d ge- into a potion in\nwhich we pav for all we need by\n-mr own exert'ons \"\nB'i iad ratting official* estimated\n'h,!' well m excess if in WO 000 per-\n\u25a0 tr-.-i were tuned in for 'he address,\nRIOTING TOLL 700\nLAHORE, Indii, Aug   10 CAP)-\nA correspondent for the Hindustan\ntour of\nture tti \"companion\" icat, India\nli expected to leek tht place- held\nby Auitralia.\nThe situation there U even\nmere complicated. Originally\nthere wai general agreement that\nthli seat ihould alwayi go to one\nof the countriei In the Brltlih\nCommonwealth.\nSome memben have long felt\nthat a country with the power\nand prestige of Canada ihould be CHICAGO   Aug    10\u2014Fast-flying B\np^yCw\u00b0oUuM,l,,k:frto0Ze'l,nd*pleted hi, round-the-worldIhop, arriving\nThe   Brltlih   Government   hai p.m, to set a new record for flying around the world,\nAsleep at Controls, Just Misses Mount\nBreaks Wiley Post's, Own Record;\nOdom today\nn Chicago at 2:58 i\nHughes'contract during the war for [the Amritiar Diitrlct that 700\nphotographic reconnaissance plane*.[Hindu, Sikh, and Moslem adults and\nNone of either wai delivered [children had been killed during the\nwhile the fighting wai on. The Com- last eight days of communal riot-\nmittee wants to know why. ling* there.\nC.P.R., Consolidated Heads Here\nTuesday Before CM. & S. Inspection\nwhl\nfor\nu* to the ratio\nhn \"crisis bill\"-\n\u2022i Churchill as \"\nsaid,\nv nui\nreached no declilon on tha line It\nwill follow but there are Indication! that Canada may have flrit\nchance at the opening. Ottawa li\nreported undecided whether the\nDominion wanti the Job.\nLittle contest is expected over a\nreplacement for Brazil. The Latin-\n\u25a0 American republics uiually get together and decide nn a candidate on\n\u25a0the basis of parsing around seats on\n; the    various    councils    and    then hours tt minutes.\n.utilize their bloc of votes to put the      Odom did even better than he had\n\u25a0 favored one into office.    ' .hoped, breaking not  only the mln\nl    Members    of    the    Council    are  record   for   an   around   the   world\n(light but the m;irk for a flight of\nplarfes with a crew as well.\nThe actual time of Odom's arrival was clocked at 2:58.40.\nThe time-for the round-the-world flight was 73 hours and\nfive minutes. j*\nThe previous solo record wai let [ to take on additional fuel. But aftta,\nin  1933 by Wiley'Pf>st, who madeihis PUn\u00bb changed.\nthe flight in  186 hours. Odom aim'SLEPT 1 HR., 40 MIN.\nbroke the record set by himself ana\nMilton Reynolds last Spring, when\nthev  flew around  the world in 78\nROBBERS KILL FOUR\nJERrSAI.FM   A   ^   \/i\n'-Mid   nl   ar.-r.rj   !**'v>,'i .   f\n!., thr pr^s-\n14.\",. pn.hlri\n[he  prfjrnt\nVANCOUVER,  BC.  Aur   10-A mor. th.n 40 yun with brief ex* 'ltc'cd >\" thJ *\"'U,\"5r\u201eb>\" a l.w\u00b0-\nCanadi.n  Pacific  party  he.dfd  by-ceptlon   in   Weitern   riilroading   in \u00bb\">'t*3 vott of Ihe 55 UN. members\nas \"a W   M   Neal. CBE. Chlirman ind many varied operating capacities      '\" Mcret baliot.\nPresident of Canadian Pacific Rail-     The party consists of six directors\n\"that wav n*id Chairman of Consolidated G. W  Spinney, CMC,, E G  Baker,\n'heir Mining  and  Smelting Company of Hon  E  Philippe Brais. CBE, Hon\nthere Canada Ltd, and hy R E   Stavert. C   A.   Dunning,   PC.   R   H   Mac-\nPresident nf  the C.  M. A  S, will Master   and   L    J.   Relnap    Othei\n\u25a0hr arrive in NeLson late Tuesday eve- Eastern business leaders are S   G\ni bill ning. August 12, and will spend next Birki, Dr G R Brow, all nf Monday at Trail on an inspection tour treal and H E Sellers of Winnipeg\nof C  M St S Accompanying the parts* are W   A\nThe party will leave fnr the Weit* Mather. Vice-President, Western\nnn Thursday morning Thil will be | lines. A C. MacDonald. Assistant to\nMr Neal's first official inspection | the President, and J S Campbell\ntour of thr West since asiuming the j Manager, Department of Pubic Re*\npresidency of the Canadian Pacific, lationi all of the Canadian Pacific\nThe   railway   preiident   hai   ipent I Railway\nrater\nr; mined\nthe way\nTWO DIE WHEN\nTRAIN DERAILS\nKINGSTON. Ont, Aug. 10 -TCP*\n\u2014 The engineer and firemen were\nkilled but there were no reporti\nof any other caiualtiei of Injurlei\nwhen the fa|t Montreil-Toronto\npooled pantnger trim wai derailed a* It ipproiched the King-\niton ititlon tonight on lti Weit*\nbound  run.\nOdom had set out (rom Chicago\nnn his long, lonely journey of 199,-\n628 miles at  1 53 pm, Thursday.\nThe 27-year-old blnr.de (her enm\npleted the last leg of h:s\nin  one hour nnd 4!   minute-s. That\nwas the 571-nuIe hump from Fargo,\nNorth Dakota tn Chicago.\nOriginally, he had expected tn fly\nnon-stnp from Anchorage, Alaska,\ntago. Ijter, however he radioed\nfrom ovrr Edmonton, Alta , that he\nmtrrded tti land at Fargo Still later, he flew over Fargo, h<\\,dH fnr\nMinneapolis, where he had planned\nSpeedboats Churn West Arm Waters\nDuring hli brief atop In Fa.rg-9,\nOdom dlicloied that ha fall aileep\nfor an hour and 40 mlnutei whIU\nwinging Hli way between Anchor-'\nage Alaika, and Edmonton, Alta.\nMe uld he woke up Juit In ttma\nto avoid a mountain peak. Said\nOdomi \u2022\n\"It made ma itctr to my itomach\nfor a few mlnutM.\"\nOdom is a veteran filar who got\nthe aviation bug u a child in Kansas City, Missouri. He reilde* with\n(light his wife and two children In Rotlyo,\nLong Uland, about 25 mi laa from\nNew York City. During World Wtf\nII, he made 38 round trip* acroa\nthe Atlantic for tha Brituh Ferry\nCommand and flew the China-Burma hump l1^ times for the Chlnaaa\nNational Airway*. Among the crowd\nwaiting to greet the flier it Municipal Airport was hia aponaor In tha\nflight Chicago Pen manuficturar,\nMilton Reynoldi. It wai in Ray-\nnoldi' plane, the Bombihell. that\nOdom aet the new world ipaed ra*\ncord.\nWhl'\nrelief\nfe\nW\nrgn\n(TV\nvicilanre ov\nin Mir ijm-\nnl  attacks *'i\n:r child\ni   sevei,\nngs'ers\nUNION SEEKS RELEASE\nOF JAILED DIRECTOR\nAug lfl >CV> Thr\nle Workers of Ame: lm\ni in c invention tixlav\n\"national eniergei mv\ni.btam release of ttu-,:\ni.ttioiial diieftor H\nnflei    heating   drl<-\nOTTAWA,\nT'ntted Texttl\ni A FI,  TLC\nmapprd     a\nc inip i.gn'  in\nImp. .sorted     i\nKent   Rnwln\ng. !r\u00ab declare  Mini   lhc rhaiging and\nJailing   of   nieinln - s   of   Mie   Ci',i*>\"\ni\".   connict:on   v 1'h   laboi   dupu' s\n\u25a0r  Quebec   were* *   me-ica  'o   ill\n\"rgir.izad lit'\".-  \\r. Caradi\n,i,.iCli-g  \u201e (_n\nNaii?\n.*\u2022   (hf\ni JubMee Mf0a\u00bbtt   TH\" Uadar    It\n.\u2022\u2022nt bv  boatman  from  Vancouver,\nRcasWs U.S. Won't\nPull Tommies From\nGreece Too Hastily\nWASHINGTON. Auj. 10 (AP)\u2014\nGrtit Britain wai report-Mi today\nlo have rrainircr* lh\u00ab United StatM\nItiat Britsh tr.vtpi will nnt b* pulled hastily nu! nf Greere, dwplla\nearlier p'.ar.s t.i withdraw them by\nA   1*U*\"1\n_ V-r tlnt'jh fnrre there Ii small,\nnumbering nn'.y tiVKl mer,, h.it both\nA-i*.,*: , \u25a0\u00ab!*, ami llntlsh nftirull rt-\njird the preienre nf '.his gr<> ;p a\/\na stahilirinj farl.ir in Gree*-e.\nFORMER CANADIAN\nFORD HEAD PASSES\nWINDSOR, Ont\nWallace R Camp!'\n1 nf   the   Board   of\nA i(\nII. JJ\nCompany\nnome here\nmnre thai*\nCinada\n-tsv afler\nin tc?)-\nChairman\nFord Motor\nriled at hll\nin illneM of\nmpiny\nApril,\nON 5YN*cnr.ii\n,*   a ii- i*1    \\r*\nOllbfri eoira iround the coune lo hli possierfil Ladybird In an eihlbitlon ru\nthe  Kootinay Lilse cpan ehampiomhlp\nLt,\nvictory over Vaneouvar ipaediteri to re tai\nhad fo ba reduead whan choppy water fp.cad\nut many brata\u2014Daily Niwi photoi.\nhe lent He-\nregatta proq-i\nAn\n1   ndon\n;>*>:ic\u00ab\n : jijjipiypipi^i  -^e^mtmimmmy*^\n r\u2014'\t\ni 2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11,1947\n\u00bb\u00b0**N\nYOU\nWhen lovo\nseems lost...\nand marriage\ndead... even\nyou might ;\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\ndo as V\n\"Angel\" did!\nSTART\/HP TOOA>\u00a3- U\nCivic\n^ji.iinjtwiamnn\nsaMlswMs<Mm\nSANDERS\nHASSO\nOamU\nLANDIS,,\nt N\nn\n,4\u00ae\nLAKE ST'CCFSS, \\Y, Am?. 10\n(AP) - S*ere*flry-Or.rrai Trygve\nLie Saturday a::\"o 'jricH preliminary p'.ar* tn: the Tr:!'i Nations\nikyjcraper    h^r-.e M.-ir.h iM;m\nWh:rh   U-nnM    '\"(.   rn**-\":ir'f*d   V    n\neatima'ed   cr -\u25a0   pf   ; -'. rz\\ i.vt   r(:irj\nlake  fT   le- -\u2022   !*i ;r y*   ,',=   t-i  rn-np'.rte\nKo ripc|= op hv been reached yet\n0^  whr'p  -ii i'\"-  f; .>  p-',-.Py,\nToast4ea\nSecond Ace Feature\nStrange\nJourney\nwith\nPAUL KELLY ond\nOSSA MUSSEN\nInstallation ol\nPhones (limbs in\nKootenay Centres\nthe strain was lifted on\nrr prj'iipmrr.t, phone in-\nir.s in the Kootenays have\nP considerably* In tbe first\nr.ths of 1947 *ome 170 tele-\nwere installed at Trail, 117\nsnn. Installation haa ron-\n,'!\u2022 an all time high ar.d :n\nr'res rrew* are Jrt.ll working\nr harking nf order.*\nTe>phone   installation   fig-\nJan.   July\nHose Reel Races Thrillers in Olden Days\nMera li the itart of a hoie reel race won from Rouland by the Nelion team at New Denver May 24, 1899. Joe Thompion captained tha\nNelion crew and Cheiter McBrlde, ion of the late 0. M. McBrlde, the Roiilanderi. Note the lack on the Roiiland team'i cart at right. It carried\n100 poundi of flour, but legend hai It that the man at the rear of the cart nw to It that the flour had pretty well dribbled from a hole In\nthe tack by the time the race wai over.\nMany al Funeral\nServices for\nHenry Slirzaker\nSports Park Erupts Flame in\nHall-Hour Fireworks Spectacle\nMISS TARGET\nWITH\nAMAZON BOMB\nABOARD A U.S. ARMY SUPERFORTRESS   OVER   FA HUE.   Ger-\nFor  over half  an  hour  Sunday    The entire show ran  without a m.myi A]|(,   ln  (Ap, _  After six\n[night fire was spilled over the Citythitch. Over $1200 worth of powder days    nf    waiting    for    favorable\nof Nelson. It was the last touch ofj was   sent   into   the   sky   by   the | weather. United Stales Army fliers\nMany friends and former neigh-|(h. Jubilee Week festivitiei. Withjbombard.ers. In charge nf the fire- fxpcnmcntally dropped Ihe world*,\nFashions at Fink's\nBLOUSES\u2014White Jersey blouses, sizes 14 to 20. JtJ QC\nEach  \t\n8KIRT8-Knife pleated skirts, brown and black, ste att\nSizes 12 to 20. Each *   \"\nSALE BLOU8E8\u2014Sheer and Jersey, sites 12 to 20      CJ Qg\nEach      *\nNUR8E8' UNIFORMS-Long or short      $2.25       $4.95\nsleeved. Priced from  ~ to\nMONARCH DOVE WOOL-15 colors. 25|J\nPriced at  ^\nCLEARANCE  SALE  DRE88ES\n$3.98 $4.98 $7.98 $10.95 $14.95\nHOSE-Nylon, crepe, rayon, $1.40      $1.85\nPriced from  toT\nRAINCOATS-Blue and tan, $6.75        $7.95\nPriced at  \u201e    and\nFINK'S Ready-to-Wear\n2500 SeeFilms\nIn Jubilee Week\nNAKUSP\nbors attended the funeral services\nfor Henry Stirzaker, well known\nNelsonite who died at Port Alberni '71 nrn0rM.\nWednesday. Very Rev. F. P. Clark Pru8IK\u00bb\nof the St. Saviours Pro-Cathedral\nofficiated at the service conducted\nat the Thompson Funeral Home\nSaturday afternoon.\nMany   floral   trlbutei   wen   w\ncelved.\nHymn sung was \"Son of My Soul\nMrs. W. A. Manson was organist\nlargest bomb over lhe  heavily-re-\nmforced Farge submarine plant today -- and missed the target.\nThe   United   States-made,   25,000-\nInterspersed with the shells and' Pou\"d J \"Amazon\"    bomb,    which\n,   , , .    ,        ...     'reached supersonir speed in its drop\nThanks You*' specialty was touched rockets,were fire wheels and other frnm (h]s high.f*vlng B.29   |ande5\noff on the wall of the Recreation .flaming attractions in the centre of several yards from the underground\nGrounds. .the grounds. Following the opener. U-boat   factory   which   the   Nazis\nCitizens,    which    usually    stays eight pirfk pylons were lighted up * covered with ceilings of steel and |\u201e.      A   ,,,.* .\u201e,,\u201e., ,-.,, (\u201e \u201en.\nhome Sunday night, were out in Mil along the track. Then as the flames \u201e,\u201e\u201e, 2\u00ab ,\u201et th]rk | films depicted outdoor    fe in gen-\nforce They milled into the grounds\\subsided more powder was touched,    Tnrlav.c ,..,. \u201e ,.,    ,eral, touching upon forest conserva\nthe burst nf the \"atnmic bnmb\" Nfl-'wnrks was J. D, Woods of thp T. W\nson started on another fifty years Hand Fireworks Company, Cooks-\nville, Ont,\nFor   tjie   visitors   who   thronged\nhere last week \u2014 a flaming \"Nelson\nNakusp,  B.C. \u2014 Fred Johanson\nleft to spend his summer vacation\nat  7,fi00   ft.   Saddleback   Mountain\nby trail from West Demari,  tt  is\nOver 2500 saw the National Film; an eight mile trek. Fred says while\nBoard   and   Nelson   Film   Council'he Is there he will build a forestry\npictures run off at the exhibition, log cabin. He will be assisted by\nroom in the Civic Centre last week.iVlc Skalk who has preceded him\n\u2122 n*       i   i\u201e \u201en in* m with horse and food.\nThere were 24 reels in all and 03j\t\nshows were presented.\nW. S. Jobbing the National Film\nBoard, of Nelson was in charge. The\nInterment was in the family plot and after the fireworks were over, loff.   Fire   wheels,   throwing   flame:\nin the Nelson Memorial Park, flowed     into    the    flag-festooned and colored stars spun with jet pro-i\nThe  following   friends  acted   aa'streeto. .pulsion, while other apparatus ppot-1\npallbearers:   J,   J.   Bailiss,   J.   T.     The display started with a bomb- r\/d guttering fire.\nBrown, John Dolphin, T. C Halsey, .irdment of rockets and star shells     In all there were two dnzen fW\nJ. E, Hamaon Jr., and 5. C. Lator- from the East end of the grounds., pieces, each a thrill ar.d a novelty,\nnell. (Overhead thp sky was splashed with !    The  show ended  with  a  terrific\n I multi-colored   stars   as   the   shells'punch   line.   An  extra  lart;e   bomb\nburst. Kids clapped their hands in arched skyward and burst with a\nglee and asked questions of equally thunderous roar over the hushed\nabsorbed parents. onlookers.\nToday's was the third test of the\nAmazon bomb on the factory regarded as the sternest penetration\ntest fnr bombs. The first two were\ndropped last week and scored direct\nhi'-, hut the results h.\nsecret.\nThe Weather\nThe bombs used In the test are\nnon-explosive, designed only to test\ntheir penetration power.\ntion, outdoor sports and wildlife.\nAlthough entertainment waa the\nmain purpose of the reels they also\ngave an insight into the type of\n.pictures that could be obtained by\nve been kept,the district groups through the film\nIcouncils. Film councils are situated\nat Trail, Nelson, Creston, vCran-\nbrook, Kimberley and Fernie.\nSynopsis \u2014 A weak storm lies\nacross Vancouver Island and central B.C. and is giving intermittent\nrain in the Southern section of the\nprovince. The storm n moving\nSouthward slowly and little improvement in the weather is expected throughout Southern B.C.\nuntil late Monday afternoon.\nForecasts:\nKootenay \u2014 Overcast with show\nPublic Works Minister Soon To\nGo Over Proposed Victory Highway\nFurther evidence of the Inrreas-   In he  dwelt on the Vict*\ning interest now being taken in the na,  at sorr.e length,\nproposed    \"Victory   Highway\"    by     The   Victory   High\nCloudy with   widely  scattered Government officials, hasjust been vocated by the Rossland\nHigh-|\nr.j>   ad-\nLuZOII Under Wafer\nrYANILA, Aug. 11 (Monday)\nfAP)\u2014Manila was flooded hy torrential ralni today and many\npeople were marooned In their\nhomes by high water.\nA downpour accompanying i\ntyphoon which centred 60 milei\notf Luzon Inundated the entire\ncity,\nSEEK PLANE\nHALIFAX, Aug. 30 (CP) - Private and R.C.A.F. aircraft KQured\na 165-mile strip between here and\nFredericton today for a light pontoon-fitted fleet Canuck plane\ncarrying two men, reported missing\nsince taking off for Fredericton\nFriday.\nYOU'LL  FIND THAT  ARTICLE\nYOU WANT IN THE CLAS8IFIED\nGIRLS! WOMEN! TRY THIS IF YOU'RE\nNERVOUS, CRANKY, TIREO-OUT\nvrd [mm :hr Hon. F.. C. Cat-\nMinuter ot Public Works\nshowers and thunderstorms*Mon<\nafternoon ana evening. Clearing ::\nthe late evening  Winds light   Con\nlinulng cool. High Monday at Cran-     In a let'er In A   0. Nichols, See-\nhronk 98, Crescent Valley B8 retary ol lhe Rossland Junior Boird\nOkanagan \u2014 Overcast with In- of Trade, Mr. Carson stated that \"he\ntermitlent very light rain Monday is definitely planning to make the\nmorning. Cloudy with widely scat- proprosed trip soon over the V;c-\najtai-\nBC\nOand forks \u2022\nH-re\np.;*> <:\ni-e   rf\nKt*\nr\u201e: *. ,1\n'.* It, k-\nfirmer,\nKasln\n' T - \u201e   1   \u25a0 ,\n\u25a0 r; i ',->'\u25a0  1\n\u25a0':**';\nr* *.el:\nI*...,'<-,\nNak'^p\nNelson\nB   -r i::\n: '\n!   :\n\u25a0 A-i   i ,;,'\nNew  Der.ve\nrav r' ''\n*'       *    :1     \u25a0\n*:: \u2022*\n.--    *.\u2022\"  >\nHo* S C-re'it\nHnsslar.d\n1\n2()\n2A2\n55\n31\n23\n505\n59\n110     129\nwa   i.i4\nfifl       R2\n2470    2.W7\n85       37\ntered showers In the afternon;\nclearing by evening. Winds Southerly 15 Continuing cool High Monday at Penticton 72, Kamloops 72,\nLytton 72.\nVancouver\u2014Overcast with showers Monday morning becoming\ncloudy by midafternoon and clearing in the evening. Winds light ]\u2022>\ncreasing to Northwesterly 15 Monday afternoon. Little change in\ntemperature High tomorrow n'\nVancouver 69, Abbotsford 70, Nanaimo 68.\nHighway,  nnd  is  particularly\ninterested  in this route, having\ntion would re-route mrv*-.: \"f the\nSouthern Trans-Canada Highway\nbetween Rossland and Cascade. The\nproposed route would avoid the\nexisting 40 miles of m*.igh tnrtuous\nroad with its counties.1; s.v:tr:,:vicks\nby swinging down through the Sta'e\nof Waihington ji.-t aTnss 'he\nborder for a dijt.ir.ee of 25 miles.\nThis would not or.'y red'\nOn 'CERTAIN DAYS'\nof The Monthi\nDo female functional monthly\ndisturbance* make you feel ner-\nvoua, fidgety, cranky, so tired nnd\n\"dragged out\"\u2014at much timea?\nThen do try Lydia E. I'inkham'a\nmpou\nBuch aymptoms.Thia fine medicine\nis very effective for this purpose!\nFor over 70 years thousands of\ncirls and women have reported\nBenefit. Just Bee if you, too, don't\nreport eicellent results! Worth\ntrying.\nW.nrhf\n. ,ih Va!\n?r.   Va,\ni was tai-\nthe Amp\nthe Shenan-1\n: -md retaken:\n\u25a0in Civil War. I\noG\/Ma 6. (PfoJMoMb lllVo^l\nmind  the continued  reconstruction tance  now  travelled\nof   the   Southern   Trans-Provincial\nHighway,\nMr Carson was the gueit speaker\nrecently at a meeting of the Spokane Chamber nf Commerce where-\nah*\nmilei, but would pmv;\nstraighter road, nn a\nslope, the high' st Kt\nwhich would be the C\niand,\n39\n3D\nS43\n567\n3074\n3244\nCompany's\n841\nB75\nr.l\n392\n2\u00bb*\n312\n3\u00ab2\n1 1\n\u2022,\u2022,\n19\nVt\n45\nSALMO\nS-M.VO.   IH\"    -   Mr    **fA   Mrt\n;\u25a0:*    C,*i*.*;;    i,(   SjiT.o.   hsve    ar*\n.., t   -,- ... .,   nfr.   ,   \\,eek  sl   Nel-\n*.   ,.'<   .'it::   ,liih:'.ee    rr'.ebra'.'.or.s\nbi:     .,**!    Mrs     It, **\u2022*.    Ilorirt    and\n' ii   V*  s    H',*.se'.   H :*.'\u25a0::-\u25a0 KS   re-\n\u25a0 , *   '.    :\u25a0*    N,*; .mi    u here    '.hev\n\u25a0   *\u25a0 r   N, .,  -  (;  :,;, ii .Jubilee\n'lis    ,'    It    r*aje   \"(   Vanrouve-\n: r.-.i -g   a   lun sseelts   varallnil\n*  '      her    parenU,   Mr    and   Mm\n\u25a0\u2022    \",    Afrt   other   relatives\n'\u25a0'.  .1   Mary  Fer'iY   of   Vsnrnuver\n, ,s;',*|j    hei    parents,   Mr    sr.r!\nI s    H    feeii).   h-***hei    B    feeny\n. :\u25a0' .   Berranre\n'.' s     T.     1'r'rri,-::   of    Trail    haa\n\u25a0 *\u2022\u25a0*\u25a0   afier   waiting   her   s'.l'er\n'     \" -i   - :. ,*    Mi    ar*1   Mrs\n\u25a0    K  af   ai i\\   lu-.s-.-.ii-\nNelson\nSalurday\nMontreal\nToronto\nNorth   Bar    ...\nPor! Arthur\nKenora \t\nW:nni[>eg  \t\nBranrton     \t\nThe Paa'     \t\nRegms      \t\nSaska'oon\nPrince  Albert\nNorlh Baltleforr!\nSwift  Current\nMe-lin-ie li.it\nLethbridge\nCanary\nF.dmomon   \t\nKamloops\nPenlic'on\nVanenuver\nVictoria\nCranbrfolc\nTrearen! Valley\nPr nre  Ruper!\nPrinre Ceorge\nSeafie\n,'i i'l a\"*i\nSroka^e\n55\n5fl\nYf.\nhi\n.IIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIIIIIIIIMllll\nNews of the Day\nRATES: ?2c line, 77c Una black race type, larger type ratei on\nrequeit. Minimum two lines.  10% discount for prompt  payment.\nIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIII\nfxpr\nCuaret'e   tobarro,   $10*!  NEW   SHIPMENT   OF   RUNNING\nhalf-pound a*. VALENTINE'S\nOLD   PAPERS   FOR   SALE,   ISe\nBUNDLE  AT  DAILY  NEW8.\nWasher   tro'ibV\nIkatty repairman u\nJust   phone  9\n11 rail prompt*.;\n03\nTr\nDrib raps for Juniors  Seer at\nJACK   BOYCE   MEN'S  SHOP\nTvs*\nF.i.rv\nrhn!-e bmldmi lota 3rd\n>w.  Piarkwood  Agency\n42\n.-.*,\nM\nli\"\n72\nm\nn\n70\n72\nr*.'\n\u25a0J\n73\nIt pavs to phene  1177 and  1178.\nFAIRWAY   MEAT   MARKET\nJust    arrived\nFine    nr,\np: red fr,\nmodel\ni  U4 75\nK'hv not ul*\nrn-.ir fire ins\nday?-C   W\nFxper! '.)'*\nGooderham *. Worts\n11mi if n\nI # f \u2022 n I o ,    Ui \" ii (I ij\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\n\u00bb> i\\*,r)t l\u00bb-ajf*t' of 'h*\n. >r'h 'oc* <.-i'Z, fnr hit\nAkr;   in   :'.i   food   through\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10 J0 n m. \u2014 Esctpt Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM    H    M, IVOR.   Prop.\nTroil     Phone 1 35     Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nr ui a call to Inrreaie\niranre p-'**e-t:on to-\nAI'Pl K.YAIII)\nWi  Baker S*\nSHOE8 JUST  ARRIVED\nCIRLS'   AND   BOYS'   RUNNERS:\nOXFORDS,   8IZES   11 -2\u201411.45.\nLADIES*   RUNNERS.  3 9\u2014SI RO.\nTHE BOOTERY\nWINNERS   OF   JUBILEE   QUEEN\nFREE    QUIZ    CONTEST.\nFIRST: J. RENETTA, TRAIL, B   C\nSECOND:   MR8.   A.   A.   LAMBERT\nSOUTH SLOCAN, 8   C.\nTHIRDi MRS. A. TRUSWELL. STIR-\nLINO   HOTEL.  NELSON.\nCARD  OF  THANKS\nNelson K.lumen (\". .'*, *,* Or, .\u201e\n!ha-k the Ne!.\"*n r,a:,-!en C'r.n. M-.\nF ll*.i*. and Mrs (' .' li ..;\u25a0 es '**r\n'.heir kind as-.*'ance -a .-'.: -.::,-\nJubilee C *:   r.A'.  \u25a0'.\nCARD   OF  THANKS\nThe   family   of   \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u00bb   Ir,   Her'-.\nS'iriaker   ss*.h    '**   expr***.-    *'*.* r\n- nr^re  -har.k.*.  a***!   i;*p*,*    ,'    \u25a0    tn\nIheir   many   f-iends   for   ['* ,*,r   k nd\nVARNISHED  KITCHEN CHAIRS\nMADE   OF   HAROWOOO\nEACH   Ufil*,.     GREENWOODS.\nDorn'hy Wallare wishes In '-a-k\na'l  'hrvse  '.sho  I'e'ped  and tn-fn \u2014 'rA.\ntier in the Juhilee Queen rani; a:--\nSISC BATHING SUIT8 REG TO\n\u00bbA. SALE til\", nEG TO lo. SAI r\nM 05     FINK S    READY  TO  W F A It\nreavemen!\nlitlful   f'.Ol\n. funeral\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nTOR SALE\nes.   H IJini\n\"'   horse   p.\nir'.nn     We\nPI\nPoirder'i    Cine    OAfl.,\n* l*\".\\e des>* '. \u25a0 -fr .!\nV * full pan 'u!.vs r\nM^t r>mir.| K*'ka**f. I\n.*\u25a0 mediately   Ph, ne 1173 It\nIV,   V i-   rfiernes   lhe   easv\nssith   a   Da sv   rherry   p:!*er    ,1 :*.'   a\n'''\"',   i!,m\u00bb,d \"'''' ''\"'\"  \"''\" f\"'!   SALr        4  homi   KI'NuV\nsee.!   IIIMTRSONS \u201e,,.   \u201en   \u201e\u201e   x   ,, ,,\u201e.   ,,,    Sn,,.,\n,,,.              , .   . p;iifn    w.'H    fr:i:t    trrf *t.    In .vri\nWha*   ,***,.d   he   amar'er   n-   ,o.,, ^r^.\nrew ra,   \u00bb'iil !hin n rh-at'lu-r    \\K r\ntrtr   irlprMnn.   ttr.d   a   r    - f<1\"   SAI.R          I   rWO   HV    Y WH\nkjt   Mnrw   \u00bb'\u00bbi*,.\n-nr.ge   '\"\nSONS ,1\n1  p\\#rrnni\u00bb  \u2022'   C'fM\n>rv R-!\"r#. Wl Pat\n| A I L I D _ mti Kuhn. dr-\nporlfd formrr Dfrmftn-Am-rrl-\nr\u00abn Uund Irtdfr. U ihown In\nJill al Nfodwfc. Bavirlt. \u25a0< hr\n\u25a0 ^^\u00ab^l^d trial hrfi>rt\" a (,prman\niUii will* iti'.n rourL\np\"g*in#   Applv  P   Jt\u00bbr,\u00abt\u00bbn,  t?fiil fi'h\n\\\\ *\u2022 .   R'-iMiird\nW\u00bb t'rr\\  tvpPttnffr  nrd  add.-*;  fpR RaT.H       jVtTTfV   ^!^sfr^\nmarhlTf rlhhiri fnr  ill  mik***   I1      d<*'m\u00bb udin  Eir#'l\u00bbrt ri\".d,ti >'*,\nW   Mrl>rhv    The Typ#wnt\u00bb-  \u00bb-1      n\u201ev ^m f)t]\\v *,\u2022,\u201e, t\nfddmi   Mirh.r.   Mm.    5M   Wa- i ^ ^rfffi   1^^^.\"? f\u00bb  r.V.K\n.-a'.rr*\"   N<>U.**i    M   ( ,\nand      w a;''*\u00bbt>       Ap;   v      h'.t: .-.rn\nf i v**i. :*, ,*\u201e\u201e\u201e,* ,*,..,,-. ,i*e Jii!lLri\"\"l*L?.\u201e\nzrr::l\u25a0'\"-'':zr-'r''-z. sa*m*,.*,n\u201e ***,*,(s,-r-\u201e,-i\n.     ,    \u25a0 .-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0     r      ,-.-,,<.     \\   -    fr j',,,,,    1\n\u25a0    \u201e\u2022     MTPFR .1 iN  .\nGEE WHIZ \/\nWhat a Hm.\nEVERYTHING IN PRINTING\n%    Letturhtodi       %    Envelopci       %    Account Formi       \u25a0% Stolcmcnli\n%     Ruled  Formi        %     Ruled  Formi        %    Office  Formi %     Lcdgon\n%    Synopfici        %    Ledger   Leovoi        %    Timo   Sheoti %    Mining\nFormi        0    Lumbtr   Formi        %    Offiol   Printing\nPrinting Department\nPHONE   144\n  \u2014^\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u2014^^^^\u2014\n\t\n\t\n\u2022m\n(ASE OF KING\nVS. MRS, DICK\nENDS ABRUPTLY\nNo Jurisdiction to\nHear Crown Appeal\nAgainst Acquittal\nRobinette Thankful\nOTTAWA,    Aug.    10    ICP)    -\nHearing   of  a  crown   application\nfor   leave  to  appeal   to the  sup\nreme   court' against   the   acquittal   of   Mrs.   Evelyn   Dick   In   thr\ntorso    slaying    of    her   husband\nIn  Hamilton  in  March. 1946, end\ned  abruptly  Saturday  when   her\nlawyer,  J.  J.  Robinette     argued\nsuccessfully   that    the    Supreme\nCourt  did   not  have  Jurisdiction\nto hear the appeal.\nAs the hearing in chambers before   Mr.   Justice   J.  W.   Estey   of\nthe    Supreme   Court   entered    its\ntecond   day    Mr.   Robinette   rend\nB-ction   1025  of  the  criminal  code\nwhich   outlines  the   jurisdiction   tf\ncourts   He   said   that   the   section\nclearly  stated   the   Supreme  Court\ndid  not  have  jurisdiction  to  hear\nappeals    in    cases   confirming    cr\nsetting aside an acquittal.\nThe court's jurisdiction ums\nlimited to hearing appeals in cases\nconfirming or setting aside convictions\nMl Justice Estey said hP a-\ncreed the section appeared to make\nit clear that he had no jurisdiction\nto hear the application.\nW. B, Common, K.C, and W\nM. Martin. K.C, representing thc\nAttorney-General's department, a-\ngreed as well after confirming\nthat no recent amendments had\nbeen made to the pertinent section\nof the criminal code.\nAs\" Mr. Justice Estey rose from\nhis seat to mark the end of the\nhearing, Mr. Robinette smilingly\nsaid:\n\"That ends the case of the Kir*\nversus Mrs Dick for which I am\nvery thankful,\"\nMrs.  Dick  now  is serving   life\nImprisonment      In       Portsmouth\npenitentiary   In   Kingston   following conviction on charge of manslaughter   In   the   death   of   her\nInfant    llligltlmate    son     whosi\nbody     was    found     encased     in\ncement   Inside   a   suitcase.\nThe    application     fnr    leave    lo\nappeal   the   celebrated   17-months-\nold murder case to Supreme Court\nwas made after the Ontario Court\nof  appeals  denied   a  crown   appeal\nagainst the young widow's acquittal\nat  her  second  trial  on   charge   of\nmurdering     hrr     husband    whose\nmutilated    body    was    found    on\nHamilton Mountain   ih  March  last\nyar.\nAt her first trial she was convicted mainly on the strength of\nstatements made to the police following her aires' Th-3 conviction\nwas quashed by the Ontario\nCourt of Appeals on the grounds\nthat the statements, some ef which\nwere given without the caution\nl ^m ttie polire that they might he\nuied as evidenc, were inadmissible.  A  new  trial  was \"rdered.\nAt fhe serond 'rial the judg?\nSaid ho was found by the appeil\ncourt's decision and cnu'd not admit Mrs Dlck'i c'.V'-mor.ts as rv:*\ndenee   Her an.u.tta|  f .Unwed\nCivilian Shot\nForesee Cabinet Split\nin Steel Question\nLONDON, Aug,   10  (Reuters)-A\ncabinet split is believed developing\nover the question of nationalization\nof steel, on which some labor Members of Parliament in the last week\nhave suspected a government\nchange of mind, political observers\nsuggested Saturday.\nThe suggestion has been voiced\nthat the government, in view of the\nfinancial crisis, might decide upon\nsomething short of nationalization\nThis course would be resented in\nvarious labor quarters as a departure from Socialist policy and pledges.\nIn the cabinet itself, Health Minister Bevan is named as at least one\nmember strongly opposed to any\nmodification of the plan. Some suggest lie might be prepared to resign\non the issue.\nThe Champs\nFreight Car\nReturns Verge\nOn Target\nOTTAWA, Aug in (CPi - Returns of freight cars from Canada to\nthe United States Saturday were\nverging on the target set by U S.\n[authorities under threat of a stoppage of coal shipments from that\ncountry to the Dominion.\nWith today as the deadline for\nreduction of the \"adverse balance\"\nin cars to 8000, Transport Controller B. S. Liberty announced it had\nbeen cut to 8.545 as of three days\nago and the Southbound movement\nwas still in full swing,\nCanada had until midnight Saturday to bring that figure down to\n8000, representing the difference between Canadian cars in the U, S\nand American cars in this country,\nWhile the Controller would not\nexpress au opinion as to the likelihood of attaining the objective, it\nwas pointed out that on the single\nday preceding the one for which\nhis latest figure was issued, the balance had been brought down by almost 400 cars.\nBy deadline time, the Canadian\nrailroads will have had three days\nto move 545 cars across the border.\nDecision on roal shipments will\nbe made in Washington Monday by\nthe U S, Office of Defence Transportation, which recently told Canada the U S had a ear shortage\nand advised it would halt coal movements across the border unless Ihis\ncountry got back several thousand\ncars\nOfficials of Canada's External Affairs Department will m\u00abl with the\nO. D T. Monday, when final figures\non lhe adverse balance up to deadline time will be furnished.\nMayor T, H. Watera, who didn't mlai a thing during Nelson's crowded Jubilee celebration, Is shown here with his arms full of two young\npugilists from Trail. They are Raymond and Bobby Fredericks (wa\ncan't tell them apart either) of Trail, and they made a big hit at tha\nJubilee boxing show. Dally News Photo.\nAGREE TO MEET\nON GERMAN\nINDUSTRY\nEngland, France,\nU.S. Would Discuss\nRaising Level\nNO DATE SET\nr.e\nWASHINGTON   Aug   in  -  Chi-\npress dispatches from Peipmg\nsa.d that an American marine guard\nshot and killed a Chinese c.vihan\nand uoinded another civilian in\nfron* nf corps barracks at Tientsin. Thf dispatches adder! that :' u;i>\nbelieved the guard shot the civilians\nthinking the two were trying n\nbreak into thf barracks\nlist 9 More\nPioneers\nNine more old timers have been\nadded to the increasing list of residents of NeLson m 1897 or previous,\nRoss Fleming, Registrar nf the Nelsnn and District Old Timers Association, announced  Sundav.\nThe additional  names are:\nti   Noel Brnwn, Bonningtnn. 1893\nRalph Gillette, Room 33. Anr.able\nBlock.  Nelson,   1897.\nMrs H H. Logan, R18 Fourth\nStreet, Nelson,  1897.\nMrs. B Mo: an, Seattle, Wash.,\n1397\nMrs C F McGa ighey, 240 Park\nAvenue,  R.-nlnr,  Wash ,   1897\nMrs ().--ar Peterson, 2380 E\nFourth  Avenue,  Vancouver,   1897\nMi.v T. W. Roberts. English Bay\nManson, Vancouver.  1897.\nMrs. .John Wr;nk>, Goodson, Mis-\nsour:.   1897.\nW   C   Motlev,   Bonnington,  1894.\nEarth Tremors\nStartle Millions\nCHICAGO, Aug. 10 - Thf\nbiggest earthquake ever felt m\nthe area around Chicago startled millions of residents of five\nitatei dunng the night. The\ntremor itarted Jutt about eleven p.m. and \u2014 according to ieis-\nmograph record ir.gs \u2014lasted between three  and  four  minutei,\nQuake reporti poured Into police itationi in Michigan, Ohio,\nIllinois, Wiiconun and Indiana,\nThere were no renorti of serious\ndamage or casualties,\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 10 (AP)\n\u2014State Secretary Marshall not!\nfied Trance Saturday that the\nUnited States Is prepared to\nagree \"without deay\" to a three-\npower meeting on raising tho\nlevel of Industry In the British-\nAmerican sector of Germany.\nParticipants would be England,\nFrance and th.***. United States.\nIn a note released by the State\ndepartment, Marshall also stated\nthat ;he United States is \"similarly\nprepared to receive and discuss'1\nFrench views on the management\nand control of the Ruhr coal\nmines.\nNo date has been set for the\nlevel nf industry conference, nor\nwas it entirely clear the Mar- ]\nshall no'e whether the meeting\nwould include discussion of management nf thp Ruhr mines ur\nwhether that would be the subject of a separate exchange among\nthe   three   governments.\ni British and American delegations are scheduled to meet in\nWashington Tuesday to discuss\nmethods for increasing Ruhr *.coal\nproduction.)\nAIR AND NAVAL\nCHIEFS TO RETIRE\nOTTAWA, Aug 10 <CPt -\nWar and post-war jobs completed,\nthe Chiefs of Canada's Air and\nNaval Services will retire next\nmonth and be placed on reserve,\nit   was   learned   Saturday,\nThe two, Air Marshal Robert\nLeckie, 57, Chief of Air Staff\nand Capt. H. E. (Rastus) Reid,\n50, Chief of Naval -Services, will\ni ellnquish their commands after\nlengthy and brilliant service in\nthe   air   and   sea, respectively.\nAir Vice-Marshall W. A. Curtis,\n54. of Toronto likely will be appointed Chief of Air Staff white\nCapt. H. T. W, Grant, 48, of\nHalifax will become Naval Chief.\nThere was no indication who\nwould fill the posts of member of\nAir Council for plans and Chief\nof Naval Administration which\nthe-y now   hold,\n44 District\nMen Flghl B.C.'s\nBiggest Fires\nINDIGESTION it the Conference...\nTWO\nRENNIES\ninstant aid\nDIGESTIF\n. HHNtlS itn.'l ,.li.v.   y.vi  M,'o.,,\u201e,s,\nW, tn^l. lim. rm, low Y9i)i ito.lv\nMUM\nfay to fake\t\nAnytime, Anywhere\nVICTORIA. Aug 10 (CPi- Hot\n'ind dry wattier, with increasingly\nhazardous forest conditions in the\nVancouver District, including Vancouver hi and, were reported Saturday by tne B. C Forestry Service.\nSo far this year, the Province has\nsuffered 1)73 forest fires, costing\n$48,790. Although the number is\nslightly higher this year the cost so\nfar is i.\\-s than in 1946 during which\n958 fires occurred over the similar\nperiod at a cost of $60,548.\nFigures for both years however\nnre lower than those for 1945 when\n,1075 fire.1- occurred nver the same\nperiod at a cost nf $108,307,\nThroughout the province, 133\nfires broke during the week in ad-\n\u2022;\u25a0': in to 'he lit .\"'ill burning at the\ni\" -i nf lv* week Of these, 118 were\nextinguished and 34 are still burn-\nSaturday reports from the various\ndistricts show that no new fires\nnave nccurrci m the Vancouver dis-\n\u2022.[\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0 since Friday's report Tiie re\nare however, three fires still burning  in  the Chilhwack area.\nLargest fires are burning In the\nNelion area where 44 men are\nfighting eight blazes. Six firei are\nburning In the Kamloopi district,\nand there are nine small fires In\nthe   Prmce   George  district,\nHostel Residents\nNol Forgotten\nIn Jubilee Week\nWhilr Use rmphnsis nf tho ,1:1b*.!****\n\\V,*,*k ,;\u25a0\u2022\u201e\u25a0:,: :il.-n:s ss.o.s on I'Mv-\n*,.* !\u201e (,*.!:vi***, 'he ir.idcrls \"( the\nSfl.-f.   IL*.*.:,*:   In!    \\ffrl   Mm     some\n,f A-ir-,i hrlpr-l I , make Nelsnn\n-y.-.s- :\u25a0 it nn*,,.* were nni (,,[>*otteri\nVis.uu *. '.: ---[\u201e il 'hi nujjh the home\ni* I **,.,* S*i, r! .i:-fl ie,*r*,s*ed ar-\n1 i * -.br \u25a0*. *v th 'br --i'l timers\nWa',', II, : !*: k , I'i I s,,|. i.l ol the\n*.;*.'.    I   \",.*!. \u25a0*,** .    ;*:,* **n*erl     lhe\nli    I,    I *.,':   ,   **.   \u25a0\"   *:..\u25a0   h.i:.**.**rk\n:*   .',,-\"\u25a0 :-.- .;    -\u2022   'li  'he  p.,,, eer*.   All\n\"\u2022'    i,;,*l   o* \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0  ^ ven   ,*.,.<,*. In\nthe  nn '     \u201el  tin   week\nMi. |i Y lln'MOon. matron \"I\n'he hin-.-r. > iid thai Ihe Ai.fi men\n,*:;: -:,--'. til* in elves thomu^hlv .ird\nw,*i\u201e v.-!*. I'.,*' I ii I'M Hie kn. Iness\n,li,.*,, :\u25a0 ' , them *\n'     Thlnn,:),  III,' rn';' '* '.'. erk  til'* mid\n\u201e iv np.n .iled ii! the home area\nWhile ihe shows kept them awake\nIhe ie*..dents maintained that since\n,1 was \u25a0\"illy (ni ., week\" Ihey\nnnid put up w ith the noise\nI!.*(c, tlVO mini VI! 1**11 IS .sOllietllll\n, *. a -\u25a0 nip'\"!', ,'f 1 rnlnplaint wh.nh\n.in he cm ed and those whn has c\nhffi, ul'y   in dlsliniilishmn between\nnil ihen  pi*, .ici.in *. nre lhi**r tmi\n>-'r    -i* \u25a0\u25a0      .\u25a0 ;*.r    \u2022 f   *li    c  *l|e, t.tblr    ,|e\nIn ,rn* .   i\"f.,lil;on.s\nTrains (rash,\nt Dead, B Hurt\nJACKSONVILLE, Aug. 10 - A\nMissouri Pacific passenger train\ncrashed into the rear of another\npassenger train at Jacksonville,\nSunday. One man was killed and 23\npersons were injured, but none seriously.\nThe victim was 50-year-old Ar-\nmin H. Emich, a clerk in a wooden\nmail car,\nSeveral ambulances carried injured passengers Irom both trains to\nhospitals.\nThe accident occurred after a\ntruck, stalled on a crossing was\nstruck by a Southbound freight at\nJacksonville 10 miles North of Little\nRock,\nDebris from the truck was thrown\nacross* a track used by North-bound\ntrains, A St. Louis-bound passenger\ntram was flagged to a halt while\nthe track was being cleared.\nRailway officials said a flagman\nwas dispatched to halt another passenger tram headed for Memphis,\nthis train coming up from the rear\nnn the same track.\nHowever, the Memphis train\nrounded a curve and crashed into\na pullman on the rear of the stalled\ntram,\nApparently the engineer of the\nonrushing passenger train had been\nable to check its speed considerably\nbefore the crash Officials say that\nnnly the vestibule of the pullman\nwas damaged seriously.\nMany Support\nAssociation\n01 Pioneers\nNarr.es are pouring in for the new\ncategory of residents of IW! nr\nearlier, which applies to the proposed Kootenay-Boundary Pioneer\nSons and Daughters Association.\n\"The District is responding wonderfully to thc appeal for names,\naddresses and year of arrival. A\npride in rel.ition.ship to the pioneers\nof lhe early days i.s very evident,\"\nsaid Ros** Fleming, Registrar, Nelson and District Oldtimers Associa-\nWhile 'he Jubilee list c! 18S7 or\nearlier Old'imers applied to Nelson\nand immediate surroundings for\n\u2022he purposes of Nelson's Golden\nJuhilee, 'he new category of 1907 nr\nearlier pertains In any sect.ion in\nthe Knotenay-Boundary Diitrlct,\n\u2022htls covering a much wider area.\nA suggestion that Ihe Association\nshould include the Boundary country has been accepted The Kootenav and Boundary districts had\nmuch in common in the early days\nand the p.miners travelled to and\nfro a great deal. Mr Fleming said\nSunday\nMany nf lhe district points have\ntaken up the idea enthusiastically\nif compiling a list of pioneers and\n\u25a0heir descendants and m*i**h in-\nu-iguirg mim matinn has been re-\neised. Wllh the interest simwu. it\nlikelv   that  local   branches\nIni\" r-|\nTl\"\nill il*\n-... li  emi\n,c,ed  t\u201e\nr.'inilv\n!     111,*'.\nHie     me\n\\*'ie\nmulled\nn     Ml\nd   ins*,\nI   nld\nIS     S|\"i\ng\nrganirati\nEgypt Express\nBlasted Off Tracks\n.JERUSALEM. Aug 1(1 'AF^ The\n\u25a0rack \"Egvpl Express,\" bound from\nCairo to Haifa with Pritnh ironpi\nreturning from leave, wai blasted\nnff thr Hacks by a mme at Wilhel-\nmina, near Lvdda, Saturday, an official report untrl The engineer and\nfireman were buried beneath the\nriebrii\nThe Army said, however, that nn\nmilitary c usual tie* resulted\nThe mine, w Inch thr official an-\n'uuincemenl attributed tn tiie Jew\n*th underjr und. blew four cache*\nnff thr tracks\nMiMiimiiiimiiHiiMiiimitmiiimimii\nFLYING OBJECT\nBAFFLES POLICE\nNEW ORLEANS, Aug. 10 -\nThc K, B. I. has a mystery on itt\nhands in New Orleans. Two\nNew Orleans patrolmen found a\npiece of metal about an Inch in\ndiameter after an unidentified\nobject flew over the city and\nburned.\nAccording to the patrolmen,\nthe object had the appearance of\na parachute flare. They say that\nas they approached they heard\ntwo explosions and saw flames\neight to 10 feet high.\nThe patrolmen found only the\nsmall piece of metal and evidence of a wire cord and four\nshroud lines.\nIllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltl\nHEAVY RAINS\nHALT N. S.\nFIRE THREAT\nRacing Flames\nHeaded Off;\nTemporarily Safe\nSEVEN HOMELESS\nHALIFAX, Aug. 10 (CP)-Heavy\nrains which dampened burning\nforest areas In New Brunswick\nand Eaitern Nova Scotia Saturday temporarily ended the threat\nto farm homes and stands of\nspruce and pine through which\nfires have raged for the last two\ndays.\n(SEE   STORY   PAGE   3.)\nEarlier ihowen failed to halt a\nforeit  fire  burning   in  the   Mira\nDiitrlct 15 miles East of 8ydney,\nN. 8., but later in the day a heavy\nrain fell, heading off for the time\nbeing the flames as they raced to-\nwardi the 8ydney-Louliburg highway with 50 bungalows and farmhouses In their path.\nThree  fires burning  near  Moncton, one of them within 10 miles of\nthe  New  Brunswick  railroad  city.\nwere also smothered by the showers\nwhich weathermen said would fall\non most Maritim epoints during the\nday.\nThe Mira fire which destroyed\nthousands of acres of forest land\nand seven buildings in Eastern Cape\nBreton yesterday was the most serious of half a dozen fires burning\nin the island although on the West\nside of the Island a blaze in the\nwoods of Cheticamp Island sprang\nup again during the day.\nMore than 200 vacationists were\nevacuated from Mira by special\ntrain Friday as a fire which started\nnear Catalone, three miles away,\nwas swept across the countryside by\na high wind and roared down to\nthe shoreline. Telephone line* were\ncut as blazing poles fell across the\nhighways and traffic on the Sydney\nand Louisburg railway was halted\nfor a time as fire attacked the railroad ties.\nA dense pall of smoke covered\nthe entire areas as firefighters continued today to pour streams of water funnelled from thev Mira River\non the smouldering blaze. There\nwaj danger that a frseh wind might\nsend it galloping Northward again,\nbut there was also some hope for\nfirefighters in forecasts of showers\nThree homes and a barn were destroyed and girls and elderly women\ndumped water on embers that lit\non the roofs of a score of other buildings. Some 1000 acres of timber\nwere swallowed by the flames in\nless than four hours.\nThe sky blazed over New Water-\nford as a fresh outbreak spurted\nfrom four smaller fires near the\nhighway to Sydney and cut down\ntwo homes and several garages and\nbarns in its fiery path. At least seven persons, including six children,\nwere left homeless\nOn the Nova Scotia mainland two\nfires raced out of control near the\nuniversity town of Antigonish Believed in check early Friday, they\nsprang tn sudden life again Saturday and whipped through four miles\nof standing timber and demolished\n10;>,000 feet of cut logs and pulpwood A sawmill and a few isolated\nfarm houses wrre menaced Police\nsaid the fire had resulted from a boy\nsetting fire to a hornets' nest in a\nhayfield,\nTh esituation was relatively unchanged in New Brunswick where\nthree fires are raging near thc railroad centre of Moncton, scene last\nvear nf the mojt disastrous blares\nin the Provinces hsitory\nThe won' flare-up wis in miles\nNorth of Moncton but two other\nfires, near the airport ir.d the golf\nclub, still hid not been mastered\nIndustrial Growth\nIn S. Africa\nBy The Canadlun Pren\nIndustrial pxpansion is under uiv\nin the Union of South Africa expansion mirked by u flood of foreign factories and capital There is\na Urge-scale movement of factories\nfrom overseas and in some instances\nwhole plants are being transferred\nto Canada's sistei hnnnnlnn Italian,\nFrench  and  S-\u00ab 'ii ken  are  fin\nancing the vent '.\u25a0! it n expect\ned  that  within  - *   \"T   tw \u25a0 $1RI \u25a0\nfion.nnn in firtours \u25a0.ull be established there\nThe Northern Transvaal Chamber\nnf Industries said United Sta'e< and\nBritish firms have more than $2fXV\nnOO.000 ready for investment in the\nunion.\nIt is understood that the Italians\nare transferring their factories\ncomplete because nf the uncertain\neronomir conditions in Europe. All\nof the factoriei will be spread over\nthe country. And thry represent a\nwide variety of industriei A $20,-\n000,000   alfio'ho|   plant   is  scheduled\n'for Natal. A big iron and iteel far-\nlory wiU be established to exploit\nSouth African Iron ore and millions\nwill b# invested In plants to produce textiles, building stones, pottery  and cersnirs. and  ill  kinds of\nI electrical   goods.\nBRUSH, FOREST\nFIRES RAGE IN\nFOUR STATES\nMARKLEEVILLE, Cal, Aug. 10\nhoun battling brush and (orest\n\u2014Fire-lighting crewi had weary\nfires ln Louisiana and California\nand the National Parks of Montana and Idaho.\nThe Louisiana fires are the\nworst outbreak in the state's history. Already more than $1,000,000\nworth of damage has been done\nby 77 separate blares.\nA five-day-old fire was burning out of control early this morning in Markleeville, California.\nBut another huge California blaze\n\u2014in Tujunga Canyon \u2014 was\nbrought under control after it\nswept over 4000 acres of watershed. Three persons lost their\nlives.\nTwo fires roaring over 2600\ntimbered acres in Idaho. National\nForest, apparently were under\nunder control as hundreds of firefighters worked to save burning\ntimber in the National Forests of\nMontana and Northern Idaho.\nLightning set off 34 new fires.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1947   S\nCanada Seeks\nDisplaced\nGerman Women\nOTTAWA, Aug. 10 (CP) \u2014\nImmediate steps to bring 1.000\nwomen to Canada from displaced persons camps In Germany as housekeeping help were\nannounced 8aturday by the departments of labor and Immigration.\nDeclaring his action was th\"\nforerunner of a large movement\naimed at relieving the National\nshortage of domestic help, the 'innouncement said the first 1.000\nwould go to ease an \"acute\" scarcity of housekeeping labor in hospitals and service establishments\n\"If this movement proves satisfactory,\" the departments declared, \"further movements of\nwomen as domestics from camps\nwill be carried  out.\"\nThe step is thf implementation\nof an earlier government decision\nto check over women in Germany's displaced persons camps to\nsee if they are suitable for, and\nwill accept, domestic work here.\nThe firs', selections will lie based\non the needs of hospitals and service establishments. In future\nmovements, the announcement said,\nattenticn will be given to ihn.\ngenera! need for household workers   throughout   the    country.\nRepresentatives of the Department of Labor now leaving for\nEurope to aid in selection work\nincluded Miss E Amas of Saskatoon.\niMConronAiio ar* may 1am\nNYLON\nHOSIERY\nFine quality Supersilk\nhosiery, full fashioned to\ngive a perfect fit and lovely even seams that will\nbring you flattering attention. N-cw shades. Si7.es 8*4\nto 11. 45 8a\u201eSe     $lifj5\nSilvertip Merino\nWOOL\nA soft, downy yarn woven\nfrom fine Botany wool and\nrabbits' hair. For garments\nwhere light weight is required. Colors nf cool\ngreen, flight grey, sunlight,\nyellow, sundown pink nnd\nsnow blue. 75lt\n1 oz. skein     ....        * *T\nCLIX-O-FLEX CAMERAS\nA compact, modernly designed candid type camera, completfl\nwith an ever-ready carrying strap. Takes Instantaneous or tlm*\nexposure pictures. Takes IG pictures IH x Hi,\"\nregular No. 127 film. Price .... \t\n$4.95\nTop International\nConferences Set\nFor This Week\nWASHINGTON, Aug 10\u2014A new\nseries of top-level international\nconferences begins this week ar.d\ntheir achievements\u2014or lack of them\n\u2014may be decisive m uniting or dividing the world, American Secretary of State George Marshall will\nleave Washington Tuesday or Wednesday for Rio de Janeiro, where\nhe will head the American delegation at an ir.ter-Amencan Conference.\nAlso important to world peace\nand well being is the Anglu-Amef\u25a0\nlean Coal Conference opening in\nWaihington Tuesday. This will consider means of raising the output\nin the Ruhr Coal Mines in Germany.\nMore roal is needed from these mines to mre*. the fuel demands of Europe as a part of the Marshall Recovery Program. Tied in generally with\n'h;s problem is tbe question of raising the level of industry in Germany. The American State Department disclosed Saturday tha: a separate conference will be held with\nBritish and French officials to discuss this problem The French objected to Anglo-American plans Tor\nreviving German rvhi'.'rv up '\" a\nyearly production of 11 or !:.nnn,rm<i\ntons of steel.\nAn Anglo-American L<->an Revision meeting also ls in ea:lv prospect, nlthougi th*\u00bb time a:1 p'.a^e\nfor it have rot yet b\u00bben fixed exactly It ls expected, to b-vm ths\nweek,  probably  in  Washirg'nn\nA Japanese Peace Treaty Conference :s planner! ar.d may tie held ;n\nW as h i r, g t o n in earl;.' September\nTen nations are expected in attend\nwith Soviet Union making an eleventh if it rhoosei tn accept.\nFilling out the hut of international meetings are the United Nat.ms\nGenera! Assembly in New Y';k\nbeginning September 17th. a p\u25a0\u25a0^:-\nhle concurrent meeting nf the C>- in-\ncil of Foreign Mmutecs ir.d a Foreign Ministifs Council meeting f*>:\ncertain in November in Lon [\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nThe man; purpose <-f this latter <e.<\nsion will be to try nm'e mere ' \u25a0\nrearh vomr agreement m   a (,r  \u25a0\u25a0\nStill Owe Much\nUnder Contract\nOTTAWA. Aug 10 -IT' Figure*\nrelf-wrd by ttie Foreign Service nt\nthe Trad\" Department indi. ated t-\nHsy that Canada will have i*> make\ncontinued haavy shipments of beef\nbaron, other meat, chee.se, milk\neggs and fruit pulp to the United\nKingdom if existing long-term f >M\ncontract! are left untouched by B:i-\ntain's plani to meet her economic\nmail.\nTlie wheat and wheat flnur c-mi-\ntracts for the crop veal ended Ju'.v\n31 have bem filled, but R recent\nsurvey indicated that laige quantities (\u00bbf other fnod* re-name I !<> be\nshipped if r-T.trart requir*-mrri<\nwn* in ba filled.\nIntensive Search\nFor Missing\nGerman Jewels\nBY   RICHARD   KASISCHKE\nBERLIN. Aug 10 (API\u2014United\nStates Bters's launched an intensive investigation Saturday >-! the\nmysterious disappearance of part\nof\" a fabulous collection of Orman crown jewels, and a slepsnn\n*if the last Kaiser said he thought\nlhc   Russians   wen*   involved\nPrince Ferdinand valued the 29\nmissing items at $2,000,000 and\nthc entire r uiertlon at J5.000.000\nAmerican Criminal Investigation\nDepartment agents previously reported the missing portion was\nworth more than 55.000.non and the\nwhole collection cf 95 pieces about\nSl. 000,000.\nThe jewels belonged to Ferdinands mother. Princess Hermin'\nwid *w of Kaiser Wilhelm II They\nwere smuggled from the Russian-\nand some quarters here speculate\nthat the Russuns might demand\nthat the balance of the treasure,\nnow in American custody, be returned to  their zone\nAmerican agents said a young\nwoman friend of the 34-vear-n.d\nPrince snin'erl the jewels from\nPrinces Hermit.e, a' Frankfurt-\";-,\noder, to herson in the America\"\none. Princess Hermine died m the\nRussian-zone   city   Th'i's-lav\nThe prince said the jewels vanished from his trunk while he *,, .s\nivir.g m the An'.Tiran sec* r of\nBerlin\nNew Power\nShovel Arrives\nAl Cranbrook\nCRAN'BRnOK. Br*, Aug \u00bb *\nDeliveiv ma*. \u25a0::\u25a0\u2022'.> > \u2022 :\u00bb W'dr.es-\ndav b\\ Wi'.lurd E*|iirmen*. Vancouver, of the ri'y's new S yard\npower shovel a* a cos' of $11,-\nK2 Fll B Cranbrook following the\nspring bvlaw rirber'ure of pub.ir\nvs* rks \u2022-,[ upuicnt It '.raves ur.de*.\nits own p wer and it w.ll he pu;\nto use iti street building ginerii\nnxr,-- ss*.   ;t    ami   ;: :*.      p*\nparalu ns   for    water    and    sewer\nlues.\n\u25a0[br new center' sidewalk on\nS*or*i*   Mike:   Sfer:   has   bee.    ro;:*\n., K ,.,.,,. S..\u201e. ,,,\u2022*, \u201e,.. At-g;\nand H-.de S're-ts Vb r\u2014:r>*\u25a0<\"\nof \"h-'lis* ha,! bl-ek on P 1'wel\nAve*\")'   \u25a0\u2022-<'\nnr.\":-g * f r\u2014.rr, s*d\u00bb*s*s'ks <*.\nArms*; *rg   a-.-a   N*  rhur*.     V **:\u2022:'\nhv     *h\"    e'ee'r r     Pg! *     '!\u2022\",* ,\":*\"*\n:s  under   *.* iv   This  is   .**   t   '*! '* <\nnd decora* ve l:gh*:rg st ind i:o\nat tute: *. i.s along these st* ee'*\nThe    s*.in*li;*!'.    ss, 1    b\"    |   wr**\n,,..*,   r*;n, ,.P   ,\u201e,,,;,.     [   I**..,     v :'\t\nwiring   *\u25a0\u25a0;    *-'*ee*s    A 1   SUpp.es   i\n**:\u201e    ,.:*,e,*    \u201e-,   ,.,,    !\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\u2022     **:*!\nThe   ,**'\nsubs' in*\nhi , k   S*\nEXILES RETURN\nSHANGHAI, Aug. 10-One thousand Russian exiles boarded a\nsteamer today for a voyage into the\nunknown\u2014a trip to their homeland.\nMany of them had not set foot in\nRussia since the days of the latfc\nCzar, and some, born in foreign\nlands, had never been in Russia. The\n1000 pioneers are the vanguard of\na large group of exiled Russians\nwho have decided to go back home\nfrom t\"\\ma. They are making the\ntrip on ,-i 22,000-ton Russian liner\nwhich sailed today for Vladivostok.\nFind 2 Bodies in\nPlane Wreckage\nU GUARDIA, N Y\u201e Aug. 10 -\nTwo bodies were recovered from\nthe wreckage of an American Air-\nlines flying laboratory. A search\ncontinued for the body of a third\nman who died when the radar experimental plane crashed Friday\nnight tn the East River near La\nGuardia  Field\nA crane brought the sunken radar\nfxpenmor.tal plane to the surface\nSunday morning. The' bodies found\nwere those of the pilot, Captain William Davidson and the first officer,\nWalter Zundel The missing body is\nthat of Hrnry ,1. Hickey, a mechanic.\nTwn n'her crewmen were rescued\nhy a police launch before the plane\nsank  All five were from New York.\nLike a policeman we prpteet\nyou agalnit property Ion with\na   complete   coverage   Theft\npolicy,\nBe Protected\nMill \"arr\" (\u2022\u2022lew <-r furlSer\nNAME\nSTRECT\nCITY\nF. A. Stuart\nBoys Wanted\nTo tnkp ovrr Dnily Nrwj pnprr routei in Foir\nicw and Uphill  irchoni of thc city.\nA|,pK t-\nNrlium Dailii Jfruta\n( mCULM ION  LHI'AklMINl\n ajeeme^\u2014\u2014-\n\u2014\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014^^\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014m\n^^~\n4-NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1947\nTasty Recipes\nWhat to eat when th\u00ab weather\nwarms up and appetites are apt to\nbe less ravenous, is the home\nmaker's; problem during the Summer months. Meals should be\nlighter, but still substantial enough\nfor health and to give the family\npep enough for work or play.\nMilk is one of the best foods at\nany tunc of the year, and it helps\nto make menus fit the needs outlined above. At least one hot dish\nshould be served at a meal, and\nthen salads, milk dishes and fruit\ncan lake care of the rest, with iced\ndrinks instead of hot if you prefer,\nalthough I like hot tea unless the\nweather is simply sweltering.\nTODAY'8  MENU\nCold Meat Plate\nHashed Brown Potatoes\nCreamed Cabbage and\nGreen Pepper\nLettuce\nCocoanut Pudding Iced Tea\nCREAMED  CABBAGE   AND\nGREEN   PEPPER\nTwo and a half cups cabbage, cut\nInto y2 inch pieces, 2 tablespoons\nbutter or margarine, Va cup finely\nchopped onion, 1 teaspoon sugar, 1\nteaspoon s.alt, 2-2 cup hot water, V\\\ncup chopped green pepper, '2 cup\ntop milk, 1 teaspoon cornstarch.\nMelt butter or margarine, add\nCabbage, on inn, sugar, ,^alt and\nwater. Cover and simmer about 6\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nminutes, or until water ls cooked\ndown and cabbage is tender, but rjot\novercooked; add green pepper and\nmilk which has been mixed with\ncornstarch, and cook just long\nenough to heat thoroughly and\nthicken slightly. Serves 4. The\nonion may be omitted if you prefer.\nCOCOANUT PUDDING\nOne-half cup bread crumbs, Mi\ncup moLst cocoanut, 2 cups milk, 1\negg, 3 tablespoons sugar, Vi teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon butter.\nSoak bread and cocoanut in the\nmilk until soft, then mash and add\nsugar, salt and melted fat. Beat the\nwhite and yolk of the egg separately; add yolk to the mixture, then\nfold in the white. Pour into a\ngreased baking dish, set in a pan af\nhot water, and bake in a slow oven\n-250 to 300 F. Serve hot or cold.\nCUSTARD SOUFFLE\nOne cup milk, 2 tablespoons flour,\n12 tablespoons sugar, 2 tablespoon*\nbutter, 4 eggs.\n|    Make a while sauce of milk, flour\nand butter; stir in sugar and allow\nj mixture to cool slightly, then add\nbeaten egg yolks, blend thoroughly,\n\u25a0 and fold in the stiffly beaten whites.\nIPour into a greased baking dish\n'and bake in a pan of hot water in a\nmoderate  oven   (375 F,)  until  egg\nwhite is .set. A souffle .should always\nlhe served hoi, or it will fall. This\nsouffle may be served plain or with\nlemon sauce or cream.\nt!. '\u00a3 ^ ,' ^   THE   SURF \u2014 Here are seven pretty reasons why summer visitors in\nFlorida enjoy swimming in tbe gult. The girla are kneeling ln surf near St. Petersburg.\nEvents Strengthen Thought That\nSocialism Reaching Individualism\nThe Doctor\nBy HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D.\nDisorders Affecting Kidneys\nCannot Be Safely Neglected\nThe work of the kidneys U so*\nImportant to the whole body that\nno disorder affecting them can be\nsafely neglected.\nOne of the most rommon of such\nconditions and one which can occur\nat any age is pyelitis, or inflammation of that part of the kidney\nwhere the urine collects before it\ntmpties into the bladder.\nGerms causing the inflammation\n\u25a0may be brought to the kidney from\nsome olher part of the body through\nthe blood stream or they mav pass\nupwards from the bladder. Rut i'i\neither case, according to Dr. .Joseph\nC. Birdsall of Philadelphia, they do\nnot usually become entrenched in\nthe kidney itself unless there is\nsome blocking in the urinary tract,\nthat is, either in the bladder or in\nthe tubes which lead to it from the\nkidneys.\nA diagnosis of pyelitis is made\nby such symptoms as a burning\nsensation when the bladder is emptied, and frequent emptying nf the\nbladder. Fever is often present An\nexamination nf the urine shows the\npresence of many white blond cells\nPyelitis may omir in persons of\nany age. It is more freriuent in girl\nbabies than in boy babies.\nIn s'.ich cases, the disorder usually starts with chills and fever, and\nthe tempera'ure mav r \u25a0 as high as\n102 to 106 degrees Sickness to thc\nitomach and vomiting arc often\npresent. Constipation or diarrhea\nmav also occur in r\\-\\t r rhi'.-irr-r\nIn    BdllK    when    pvel 'its   ;-b\nthere usu\u25a0*\u25a0!!>\u25a0 i** ?\u2022\"\u25a0-\u2022\u2022\u25a0*> r.f;fiT'i,a*:rr;\nalso  of other  parts  nf  the  kid'ify\nThis condition tends tu (vci;r >\nciallv   during   prrg;-.;,::; y   or   rf ;\nchild-bearing time.\nIn treating pyelitis, the p.i\nshould lie put to nrd at r rr,:\nrest and given a d.rt c .: ta::.::.\nhighly seasoned '. \u2022\u2022 is He sr.\nbe given plenty of funds ny rr.\nar.d if necessary the fluids ma\ninjected under the ski:: Com-\ntlon, if present, should be <\u25a0\u25a0:\ned. Frequent cmpt>::,g of \u2022'\"<* !\nder and swratir.g ;v: il i al.1 : *\ncnura.:*1 ! H* ', u > ' ; * *. - :r \u25a0\u2022!\nuse < ' a*: ,:.:, art' Im 1; f ;i r,r:\nto Ilr. It.;.:\nA fr?.'.\nIn fed :\nsinuses.\nfound, should be cleared up since\nthry may he contributing causes\nfor the pyelitis.\nVarious drugs may be used to\novercome pyelitis, depending upon\nIhe type of germ producing the difficulty. For example, mandelic acid\nis used for baciiluria or infection\ndue to bacilli. Sulfonamide drugs\nand penicillin are helpful in those\ninfections which are produced by\nstreptococci and staphylococci.\nAn X-ray examination may be\nmade to determine if there is some\nblocking of thc flow of the urine\ndue to a kidney stone or other cause\nIf such a condition is found, operative treatment may be required to\nget rid of it. If it is not treated\npromptly and thoroughly, pyelitis\nis likely to recur and may become a\nchronic or long continued disorder.\nLADIES AID\nNETS $170 IN\nKASLO TEA\nKASLO. BC. Aug 10 - Ideal\nweather favored a fete held at trie\ncharming home of Mr. and Mrs\nCordon Bowker, on Thursday af-\nternorn, by the Ladies' Aid of the\nKaslo Victorian Hospital, There was\na very good crowd in attendance,\namong whom were many visitors\nTiie tea tao.es, centred with deli -\nrately c lo:ed nasturtiums, were\nS\"i\".t*.i by the Misses Geraldine\nCj:\u25a0\u2022:\u25a0[::(\u25a0;-, Sh,; It v Thompson. Aud-\n\u25a0 v I \", t ]\u25a0]'\u25a0 and D i.nthv Amas. as-\n\u25a0 Mrs  .1   McCuish ar.d Miss\nBy DEWITT MACKENZIE\nAuoclated Preu\nForeign    Affairs    Analyit\nTwo days ago this column in\ncommenting in Prime Minister Ait-\nlee's drastic proposals for \"dealing\nwith Britain's economic collapse,\nventured the view that his country's first all-out Socialist experiment already had arrived at the\npoint of considerable regimenta-\ntipn of the individual, in fact had\nmade a sharp turn toward a regime\npartaking of totalitarianism.\nEvents strengthen that thought.\nYesterday thc House of Commons-\nintegral part of the \"Mother of Parliaments\" and watch-dog for tlu*\nlittle man's Bill of Rights\u2014adopted\na measure that places in lhc bands\nof the government emergency powers which Democracies associate\nwith the exigencies of wartime,\nThe legislation is called the \"Crisis Poweri\" Bill. It empowers the\ngovernment to fell the workers of\nEngland where they must be employed, and what hours they must\nwork. The government can take\nuver the management of firms considered to lie operated inefficiently.\nCHURCHILL BLAST\nThe old Conservative maestro,\nwartime Prime Minister Churchill,\ndeclared in a blistering attack on\nthe bill that Socialists were asking\nParliament to give a blank cheque\nfor Totalitarian Cover:: me r.t and\nwere using the crisis as a pretext\nAnd whm Home Secretary Chute:\nEde said thc government believed\nthat \"this is a crisis likely tn move\nforward with such rapidity that v. i\nshould have power \\o deal drastically and swif'ly with awk'A.u'd m'u.i-\nL.or.s that mav arise.\" Church;.!\nM.apped: \"Hitlei said that!'\nWei!, Churchill is leader of tht\nopposition ard he ciia.-'.'M'.s w\/h a\nn-avy political hai.d P< tonally i\nshould want to know more of tin\nfut ire before charging the S'.rul-\ni.'ts r.'Z.r. TVil.tar.-n skull.i::.'g.-.y\nTnat  thev are ab nt to apply  rt j..-\nDUE TO EXPERIMENT\ngreat.\nThc Conservatives charge that the\npresent crisis is due to this Socialist experiment. Perhaps some of it\nis, but there rxo he no doubt that\na considerable portion of it was an\ninheritance from the World War,\nWhether the difficulties could have\nbeen overcome with better management under any form of government\n. is a matter of debate.\nIn an event, the Socialist regime\nnow is caught in a net from which\nit probably cannot escape without\nthe aid of \"crisis powers.\" Those\npowers assuredly mean regimentation of the individual, but the big\n\u25a0question is how long that regimentation will have to be employed, and\nhow far it will lie; carried. This\nmuch we can say;\nTiie longer regimentation is practised, the more closely will it approach Totalitarian dictatorship,\nAnd should dictatorship be reached\nthere would bc no turning back\nthrough the pi act fully expressed\nwill of the electorate.\nGEN. DENIKINE,\nFORMER LEADER OF\nWHITE RUSS, DIES\nANN ARBOR, Mich., Aug. 10-\n(AP) \u2014 Gen. Anton Denikine, .76, a\nformer chief-of-staff of the Imperial\nRussian Army, and commander of\nlhe White Russian Army in its fight\nagainst the Bolsheviks, died late\nFriday In the University of Michigan Hospital.\nThe exiled General, son of a Russian serf who rose to top military\n! rank under the C\/.arist regime, wa.s\nI stricken with a heart attack at a\n\u25a0Summer home near Dexter, Mich.,\n' where he was visiting friends with\n: his wife, Xenia.\n[ Denikine, who lived secretly In\nOccupied France during the Second\nWorld War, had come to the United\n1 States a yea^ ago.\nAuthor of two books on thc White\nArmy, the General was writing an-\nother when he became ill 10 days\nI aSn*\nIn lf)38 he gained widespread attention with charges that Hitler was\nI planning to invade Russia, At the\n1 .same time he sharply denounced\nother exiled Russians who offered\nto support the German leader.\nFuneral services were set for\n.Monday, with burial in Detroit,\n!:*\n1!\nT*\nff:.*;* :*,'.   ll.ali.igcmen*.   nf   con-\nMr.   ('   Hr.vker.  is = -iis'.cd  b*.\nC.'.-i-.- f   y.-.s   li   R -.Cmr it.,!\nbake *,:.>. ::i rhiTjte ft Mrs\ni'.:.-;,js ;,:.d  Mr,   C,   H:   .*\u25a0**'.:\n:*. \u25a0;:*.',.k'**.\u25a0   of   '.he   af'.c:r,*>o:\nC'-'i\nV\nt.     l.i:..  i*\n\u25a0i- f A:::,\n..i .*. 1:   :: ::.-\u25a0\n-. .   TS v   ,  i*\nr:zr'\"'z;z':\n' If\ni   * ,'(.c   *: ::\u25a0*!, r  tr.e  I'iper vis.,,;\n* Pres  !*\u25a0\u25a0;\u2022   Mrs   Y   S   Ch,- i\n-*\ni::.f   :-..   .!.\nf.Zf   Y.\nas::\n:   y.r   Cv.i:.d'.r-' h.rlrt :':,- -.-as.\nsi::'.,-   (I. : !. *    Hv.vke:,   Cf.:,:r\n!   '.:.,*   H\u00ab.ii   *,\u201e!   EUvii.   ,!:<\u2022\u25a0*\nV.\nle**s :,; .:  C,\n'\u25a0if   \u25a0    se   '.\n::.,  C,-r- *.*,.*\nI':\n-\u25a0::.:..i;-{   :::.::.:r:s\n:i. At:,- \u2022*..,:\u25a0  bv Mrs   T   Ciia-\nI)       brnn,    Tdkihard,    J\nl.r\n.ma*.\ne'.'.rit   she  I\n\u25a0;>\u25a0 j ;7o\niii*!.] i.i.,; '.'),\nid ci  A.d  a;.p:\nLove Problems\nBy JANE ATKINSON\nGirls Defend Themselves on\nCharges Laid by Angry Males\nAs I -a as saying awhile hack, fo hooked,  why  do they  contlnua to\nn:.:..*.* li*;:, is have arrived in reply *ue the tame line they used when\n;\" ,';,e,.b,v; ,wn\"  rr:rntli'   h,ur'cd they were lonesome Gl's? If. usual-\nsiicn   ueva-t,.t:r.^   iritic sin   at   tne\npost.war K'-l th.it I feel liie vounz '? ^ie ^e^ow v*'^\u00b0 P^ls the Idea of\nmen o::_ii' io be jjivrn a chance to getting serious into a girl's mind by\nidling her she's the 'one and only,'\nnr hy asking her; 'Where have you\nbeen all my life'\" and things to that\neffect. Or else he showers the girl\nwith kisses, which only helps the\nUirl become serious. Of course you\nran ray that if a girl doesn't want\nto be kissed she can refuse\u2014but can\n\u25a0\u25a0he'.' Do ynu realize that nine out of\ntm times the fellow you date gets\n:\u2022-. -\u25a0;!''\u25a0.'! if ynu dnn't kiss him right\naway? He thmk.s you're old-fashioned, rhiUlish, and darn right mean . ,\n! dnn't think trie boys have grown\nijp. because if they had, they'd realize that just bccau.se one girl did\n:hem wrong, is no reason to conns all \"\n\u25a0   feilnw   who   wrote   to  you\na man must have a car and\n.1 off before a girl will go out\n;::i is all wrong. I am IH years\n$1005 Won By\nSmellermen\nFor Suggestions\nTRAIL, B.C. Aug. 10 \u2014 The sum\nof   $1005   was   paid   out   by   the\nJoint Production Committee of the\nConsolidated during the month of\nJuly for a total of 89 suggestions\nreceived according to a statement\nreleased this week by L S. Piper.\nchairman of the Committee, Heading the list of priewinners was\nPatrick Rochford of the Phosphate\nPlant at Warfield who was a-\nwarded $125 for suggesting the\ninstallation of a screw conveyor\nfrom No, 2 primary screw in the\nFines Crushing Plant to No. 4\nRock elevator. As a result of this\nidea, fine rock handling facilities\nwere greatly Improved with a\nconsequent saving in grinding\ncosts.\nThe second highest award of the\nmonth was noted for the ingenuity\nof the suggestion which prompted\nit. F. E. Boss of thc Smoke Testers\nat Tadanac designed a slide rule\nfor the use of smoke testers in\nmaking Reich calculations. A considerable amount of time wis\nsaved as a result of this idea and\nthe suggest er was congratulated by\nthe committee for his originality.\nThis suggestion merited an award\nof  $7,100.\nA $50 award went to R. L.\nMathews of the Sullfvane Mine,\nwho suggested thc installation of\nnice trie water beaters in \"doghouses\" underground, instead of\nlhe usual typt of ouen coiled\nheaters minimized the chance\nof fire and proved to have removed an appreciable safty hazard\nK, Dawson of tim Tadanac Foundry was richer by $4i\"> fnr his idea\nto install pr:ds at the entrance of\ntlie warehnu.se basement to allow\nthe two motor to drive into th^\nbasement. A considerable savin.*\nin labor resulted from this suggestion.\nOther larger awards made during the month were fis folows:\n$,30 to A. H. Turnbull of the Phosphate plant at Warfield for an\nimproved method of H2S04 feed\ndistribution; $2,i to G. Mclntyre for\nsuggesting an improvement in the\nequipment at the Warfield Hydrogen Plant to remove a sSfeiv\nhazard1 $20 to W. C. Jones of War-\nfield for an improvement in thc\npattern of the Tadanac type dia-\nphram pumps used in the Phosphate Plant and $20 to John Fischer to the S02 repair shop for\nsuggesting an extension of the\nsafety guard on the gear drive of\nthe Bird Centrefuge at the S02\nPlant.\nBesides these ma]\u00b0r awards, fll\nolher awards with a minimum .if\n$5  were  given during  tiie  month\nFor Parents\nBy GARRY CLEVELAND MYERS, Ph.D.\nLearning to Help in the Home\nA \"\\Aust\" in Proper Upbringing\nToday the average child from lev-\nen to fifteen does little or no work\nabout the home. In the city or rural\nhomo these youngsters may be mere\nparasites, hardly knowing what to\ndo with their spare time. Should\nthe parents occasionally request\nthese children to help them, the\nchildren may feel they are being\nimposed upon.\nThink or all the lawns the loafing\nyoungsters never cut, the weedy\ngardens they never help to cultivate, or the dishes they never help\nto wash, Think of the busy fathers\nand mothers who work long, late\nhours at these jobs while their husky children loaf or play or run\nabout.\nHIRED HELP\nIn some instances hired help do\nI most of this work about the home.\nWhether they do it or the parenU do\nit themselves, see what the children\nI are losing. How can any offspring\nold enough to help about the home\ngrow well in stuff of character; how\ncan he become fitted to bc most useful after he has grown up, if he has\nnot had good training at sharing in\nthe work and drugderics about the\nhome?\nBut let us not blame the child\nwhether he be six or fifteen, if he\nhelps little or none at all at home\nIt is his parents' own fault that he\ngot lhat way. Nor should we be too\ncritical of his parents. They have\nheard and read from many experts\nthat every Job about the home\nshould be made so attractive that\nthe child will naturally choose of\nhis own free will and accord to do\nthis job. Moreover, many parents\nhave heard from other parents of\ngreat social prestige and influence\nin their community that a child\nshould not bc reuired to do anything he does not feel like doing \u2014\nPROCTER\nPROCTER, B.C.\u2014Mri. J. MacLeod, Mrs. C*. A, Brady and Mrs.\nW. Brady were co-hostesses at a\nshower in honor of Miss Winnie\nPalmer, bride-to-be of Michael So-\nkolowski, held on the verandah of\n\"Holiday Inn,\" The table, centred\nwith a lovely vase of gladioli, was\nladen with lovely and useful gifts\nfor the guest of honor. Serviteurs\nwere Mrs, J. Riley and Mrs. F. T.\nGriffiths. Those present were Mrs,\nS. Major, Mrs. M. Major, Miss E.\nAylwin, Mrs. F. Neale, Mrs. N.\nShkwarok, Mrs. S. Bonacci, Mrs.\nJ, Renzie, Mrs. F. Bonacci, Mrs,\nSokolowski, Mrs. A. Voykin, Mrs.\nN. Dosenberger, Mrs. Layeock, Mrs\nJ. Griffiths of Youngston, Ohio, and\nMrs. R. Herrick.\none of the basic teachings of Progressive Education.\nMAKING JOB8 ATTRACTIVE\nMany conscientious parents who\nhave been led astray by thia silly\ndoctrine have done their utmost to\nmake jobs about the home attrac-   ,\ntive. Having failed to get desirable   i\nresults  these parents have blamed   J\nthemselves   for   failure,   or   even\nblamed the child for laziness or lack   >\nof love of his parents.\nPlodding on to do practically all\nthe  work  about the  home   them-   *\nselves, some of these parents have   \\\ngrown annoyed at these children's\nfailure to help them about the home.   '\nAs a result the  parent-child relationships have grown impaired, even\nstrained. Then as the irresponsible\nnon-helping child grows older and   '\u2022\nolder, he is less and less Inclined\nto share in the home responsibilities.\nMany parents of children over ten\nor .so might aa well \"put up and\nshut up,\"\nPARENTAL AUTHORITY\nThe wise parent begins early to\nestablish parental authority, holding the child strictly to routines like\ngoing to bed at a regular hour and\ni coming into the house when the\n[lights appear; also to assign a few\nregular jobs to the child he cannot\nescape anymore than breathing. My\n; bulletin, \"How to Tearh Child to\nHelp at Home\" may be had ln a\nI .stamped envelope.\n! No harm in trying to make the\n:jobs attractive, but there is harm\n! in assuming there should be no requirements. Don't trust to talk. If\nthe child does not do the assigned\njob promptly make him pay a penalty, such as sitting without any\namusement for a definite time several times as long as the Job might\nhave required.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\n\u25a0 1111 f 11 ii i r m 111 r it i u tin 11111 n 1111111111111 p\nBUILD  B.C.  PAYROLLS\nGood\nHealth ond\nGood\nMeals\nSn     1'\nthat all\nj.L!.t p:.\nTne   f\n!(r   is  i.\nIll\" eliap wt.o said\ni he nu t were eith-\ni.i.  nincompoops or\nibat  nf\ni.ght at\nlimn wh.i\n'.r.r-c the:\nCandidate for\nWomen's President\n\u25a0 TORONTO, Aug. 10 (CP)~Dr. A\nVibert Douglas. Dean of Women:\nand Professor of Astro-Physics at\n(Queen's University, Kingston, Ont,:\nis one of the two candidates for the1\nPresidency of the International Federation of University Women, Mrs.1\n, Richard Crummy of Toronto an-'\n'nounced Saturday on the eve of the\n, Federation's conference, which is to i\nopen hero Monday.\nParents of Willow\nPoint Man Die\nWILLOW POINT, B C, Aug. 10\u2014\nRobert L. Hong received word recently of the death of both of his\nparents in Scotland.\nThe couple were both 99 years\nold, and died within a couple of\nmonths of one another.\nSell the Classified Way 1\nNo kitchen should be without nourishing Pacific Milk.\nFor healthy, tasty meals and\nfor the babies' formula, you\nwill find Irradiated Pacific\nMilk a real favorite. Irradiation means extra sunshint\nVitamin D,\nPacific Milk\nIRRADIATED AND VACUUM\nPACKED\niiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiitinmimiiiiimiumDi\nCERIOgiVes youSVRE RESUUS\nGait Lump and Stove, Newcoitle Lump, Crow's Nest\nCobble and Stoker, Three Hills Lump, Canmoro Briquettes.\nWest Transfer Co.\n,,-l h-m: insist-, :  ,  47  Vi\nPhone 33\n719 Baker St.\nNET   STARS \u2014 Memberi of lhe nrlll.li WIfhtman Cup\ntennis  lr,,m  .uilvnir  In  Vis   York.  po\u00aberi*  for Ihl. picture.  From\nrj.lillf\nnil.   Mis\n,kul,r    Mr\nMuli) nuii\nMrlh   When, .lean Querller. Jor\nMis   Kajr  SUmmera Mnuirs.\nI ,-tl,, Is fruit j>ertin tlie natural Jell.i-ii int.-\n.Uure aitrarteo* from finit. It enshlrs i.-n t\u201e n.e\nFull, ripe fruit iinlrjil p( the unilrwipe fruit\nrail.,I fnr in old-fashioned trrip...\n1 POUND OF MM OR IHIY MADE WITH\nCERTO CONTAINS NO MORE SUCAR TNAN A\nPOUND MADE THE OLD LONG-BOIL WAY.\n \t\n\t\n '  \"\nM\nAstoria\nBy Scott-McHale\nBLACK KID BLUCHER\nBoots\nSizes 6 to 11.\nWidths D and E\n*15,50\nR. ANDREW\n& Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nF. L. IRWIN\nDr. Ray Shaw and Floyd L.\nIrwin, conveners of the Nelion\nJubilee Regatta Committee, who\nguided arrangement! for the*\nmany competing Coait and Seattle ipeedboati.\nHEAT WAVE\nWELCOMED BY\nONTARIO FARMERS\nTORONTO, Aug. 10 'CD \u2014 Thc\ntip-it wave which gripped Ontario\nfnr n week v*.v,s ^rnrrally welcomed\nby farmers ;.s ideal for hay and\nwheat crops retarled at seeding\nt me bv prolonged Spring rains and\nther. hy floods.\nWhile the heat discomfited urban\ndwellers, forced closing of some industries nrd baked Northern bush-\nlands Indi r-drv with a h:\u00bb:h fire\nh.t\/rird, it ','\u2022 .is appreciated by the\nf.inr.r: \u25a0**,.  A  Ctnadian   Press  survey\ntha!   :\u25a0  r-v^ht  h: .\u2022.\u00a3 about drought\nC   Hfll'm-   \u25a0\nFrom Cil* rame nr\\-v< that the\nf-nurd   )\u25a0\u25a0  'ha'   arra   n  \"hone  dry\"\n\u00ab\"d   \"\u2022    needed   f\"*'  root  cropj.\nhit only in ihr Count u s of Kent and\nF\u00ab.spx -rv-ted for tnharo and tomato crop.', wh:ch require plenty nf\nr.rn wa\u00ab. 'rr; mr, concern expressed\nO', rr ct nti'iuing dry weather,\nlast Rites at\nCoast for Former\nKimberley Man\nKIMMFRI FY, R (* A--.-* *n -.\nmora: *.r: \u2022.:,*,*.*. -.irr b, 1.1 ,*,l Van-\nin rr [,,i Ii.iv.d Mi-C.reg \u25a0: BT, a\nof K m.lirilev.\nms Mr. M.*(;*r\u201e**r\n' \u2022*.,* dry K****i!s dr.\n* Mi, \u2022. Cirri; S'mr\n*,,d  '-\u25a0\u25a0   his   ISifr  III,,I\nM iii, r-:   nl  I- i'.'\nHis Admiring Throng\n\"Butch\" Milne, ion of Mr. and Mn, Jamei Milne, li the envy of the\nkids here ai he playi a prominent part in the regatta held during\nJubilee Week at Nelson. He ii shown on the officials' barge. Butch\nbelongs  to  the   Kiltie   Band.   Dally   News   Photo.\nCranbrook Wails Visit of (.P. A.\nBefore Extending Airport Runways\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Aug, in -\nThe city has decided to await a\nvisit from Canadian Pacific Airlines\npersonnel before starting new work\non extension of runways and grading at the airport. W. (', Townley,\nSuperintendent of Capilano Airways, whose application for transfer of the scheduled airline franchise between Vancouver and Cal-'\ngary is now pending, will he consulted  on  specific  needs.\nSafety standards and method of\nfinance will be considered by thr\nCouncil before action is taken. The\nairport has been used more extensively this Summer than ever before,\nand interests of  Cranbrook  Flying\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIQNEUX\nPRETTY SUMMER\nCEREMONY FOR\nKIMBERLEY BRIDE\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Aug in The\nUnited Church, Kimberley, was thr\nscene of a lovely mid-summer wedding when, on August !, the Rev,\nW. Ball united in marriage, Helen\nChristine, daughter nf Mr. and Mrs,\n0. E, Jahren of Kimberley and John\nWesley Smith of Kimberley, snn nf\nMr. and Mrs. J. Smith of Regina,\nSask.\nThe church was beautifully decorated with snapdragon and sweet\npeas, The wedding music was played by Mr.s. Cliff Swan and during\n'the signing of the register K. Mr-\nJNicholas sang \"I Love You Truly,\"\n1 Given in marriage by her fa'hrr,\njthp blonde bride was lovely in her\nI gown of white taffeta. The fitted\n| bodice was made with sweetheart\n; neckline arid fhort sleeves, and the\n,full .skirt was made :r. three tiers\n,She wore lace elbow length mitts,\nHer floor length veil was held in\nplace by a crown of red roses and\nshe carr:I'd a colonial bou'pirt of\nroses and ft rn\nAttending the bride were hrr sister Miss Effie Jahren and Mim Bt s-\nsie Jahren as bridesmaids, and Mis.\"\nEnga Jahren and Miss Ileene Lily\nas the daintv train bearers.\nAlec    MacDonald    of    Kimberley\nwas  best  man   and   Cleave  C\"i'a;n\nami Uoyd Niven  were usher',\nTh'-   wedding   breakfast   was held\nServices, which uses it as base for\nits air school and charter plane\nservice, will be considered in any\nchanges. If the franchise is granted\nfor the scheduled service it will\nstill be necessary for the Department of Transport to rule on stopping points.\nTRAFFIC   BYLAW   READINGS\nThree readings were given at the\nspecial City Council meeting to\namendments to the Traffic Bylaw\nwhich will limit speed in the city\nto 25 miles an hour, and in the\nswimming pool and school zones to\n15 mile.s an hour. Three readings\nwere also given sidewalk construction bylaws planned for execution\nin the  1947 program.\nin the crystal room of the Home Inn, *\nI where the bride's table was center- j\nled by tlie four tiered wedding cake, j\n; Many congratulations were read by |\nthe happy  couple.\nLater a reception for iome 200\nguests was held at McDougall Hall,\nwhich was decorated for the occasion with pink and white streamers!\nand vases of Summer flowers.\nFor the honeymoon to Vancouver\nvia Spokane and Seattle, the bride\ndonned a cocoa brown gabardine '\u25a0\nsuit with matching accessories and'\nblouse of yellow sheer. Her corsage\nwas of yellow roses and fern.\nOn their return Mf. fn*d Mrs.\nSmith will reside in Kimberley. Out\nof town guests were thc groom's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Smith of\nRegina, his sister, Mrs. .E. I.undie\nand son of Clarkson Ont., the bride's\ngrandmother and uncle Mrs. E. Dillon and E. Dillon of Golden. B. C,\nand the bride's aunt and uncle Miss\nCarrie Jahren and Nclmer Jahren\nof Cranbrook.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Carter\nformer residents of Nelson, now residing in San Francisco, Calif., spent\na day in the city on their way to\nVancouver where Mrs, Carter's\nbrother is seriously ill.\n\u2022 Dr. and Mrs. H. E. Banford\nand their son Dr. Fred Banford, all\nof New Westminster, are guests at\nthe home of Mrs. Banford'.s brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nB. Gray, Baker Street.\n\u2022 Mrs. P. S. Beatt of Port Alberni is visiting her daughter, Mrs. E,\nW. Kuhn, 414 Hall Street.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Laughton\nand son Walter of Vancouver, were\nguests of Mrs. Laughton's brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Smith while attending the\nJubilee. They were accompanied\nhere by Miss Noreen Smith who has\nspent the past few weeks in Vancouver and Victoria.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. William Shugg\nof Watford, Ont, are guests of the\nlatter's sister, Mrs. L. Hanna, Cedar\nStreet. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Utter of\nArkona, Ont., who are enroute tn\nthe Coast, also visited for a short\ntime.\n\u2022 Mrs, Sam Hunter former ex-\nresident of Kaslo, who has been the\nguest of Mrs. L. Hanna after a visit\nin her old home town, is leaving for\nLos Angeles by plane, where her\nson and sister both reside.\n\u2022 Mrs. Gertrude Murphy, pioneer of Nelson, and sons Mike and\nJoe of Aberdeen, Wash,, left for\nhome after attending the Golden Jubilee. They were guests of their\ncousin Mrs. Bruno Bourgeois, Latimer Street, while here,\n\u00ab Mr. and Mrs. G. Atkinson,\n1013 Carbonate Street, have had a.s\nguests, Mr. Atkinson's nephew and\nfriend, Russell Atkinson and Desmond Payne of Victoria, who have\nreturned aftef enjoying the Golden\nJubilee celebrations.\nt Miss Marie Adams of Fairfield, Wash., has returned after a\nweek spent in Nelson, guest of Miss\nQraduate\nChristine Fornelli, Second Street.\n\u2022 Miss Minnie Calder of Regina\nis visiting her brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. W. Calder, Second Street, Fairview.\n\u2022 Walter Raey of Trail has returned after visiting F. A. Stuart in\nNelson.\n\u2022 Miss Gonda Polac, Edgewood\nAvenue, has as guest her moiher,\nMrs. Polar.\n\u2022 Miss Thelma Carson of Calgary i.s holidaying in the city.\n\u2022 Miss-Patsy Hunter, who has\nspent the paM [ew weeks at thc\nhome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs,\nRoy Hunter, Nelson Avenue, Fair-\nview, returned to Vancouver where\nshe will complete her nurse in training class at St, Paul's Hospilal.\n\u2022 Mrs. Jack Wright has left to\nspend a holiday in Winnipeg. She\nwas accompanied there by her father II. E. Batehian who will remain\nin Winnipeg.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R- L, Stevenson,\nNorth Shore, have as guests Mrs,I\nStevenson's brother a tut MMer-in-;\nlaw. Mr. and Mrs. II. H. Matthews\nof Medicine Hat. Alta. Mrs, Steven-!\nson's niece and her husband and\ndaughter\", Mr. and Mi , W. Gilh--'\npie anrl Barbara of Care-land, and a\nnephew, N, Carpenter of Calgary,\nreturned home after a short visit.    I\n\u00bb In honor of Mis Kay Anderson, who is leaving the city to make;\nher home at Ihe Coast, a surprise,\nparty was given at the home of\nMr.s. Balding on Friday. Mrs Agnes1\nRenwick presented the guest of\nhonor with a m-r bowl after dainty\nrefreshments hail hern served. Invited guests were Mrs Kay Anderson. Mrs Agnes Renwick, Mrs. Jean\nWaldie, Mrs. Ruth Bradley, Mrs.\nRuth Kraft, Mr.s. Earl Reid, Mrs.\nMary Darwin, Mrs. F.I ise Bereau,\nMrs.' Balding and Mis   Kay Massey\n\u2022 Mr. and   Mrs,  ('\n812  Victoria  Street,  h\niheir   daughter  and   g\nMrs. C. E. Battl\ncouver.\nG. Calbeck,\nve a.s guests\nanddaughter,\nVa!,  of  Van-\nThree Reasons for Caution in\nTerms for Newfies Joining Dominion\nROME, Aug 10 fAPi-A provi*]\nsii.ral accord tn: a $50,000,000 credit\nlo Italy, which was announced Friday by Cesare Merzagora, Minister\not Foreign Trade, was signed with a\nFrench company representing i\ngroup of Canadian, American and\nFrench private interests, it was!\nlearned Saturday.\n'Reports had indicated the credit\nhad been granted to Italy by Canada, and official., in Oittwa were at\nOrtthsL Obc\nMONDAY, AUGUST\n1 ormer i\nFor    -\n\u25a0\u25a0as   Mar\nitr'n'f\",'\nirre   Id\nCKLN\n1240 ON THF DIAL\n7 00\u2014O Canadi\n7 02-Prrs- Newi\n7 07\u2014Sunrise   S< rrn-.de\n7:30\u2014 Music tor Monday\nH 0O\u2014CBC   News\nR IS-JiM   f**r   V    :\n8.4'>-Heh:r.v   Chrtstaln   Hc*\u00bb\nflf)(V\u2014 BBC News\n9 13- Th.' Bm (kf.io r\\ .h\ni* 4a    Three Q lartr:   T.n.\"\n.'\u25a0 no   Tram T mr\n.nni   W\n1947.\nCJAT\nAll ON THE BIAL\n7 00\u2014 Hebrew Christian Hour\n7 \\')-Vu7s News\n7 .10-Mel. dv  Ranch\n7 4\">    Foint.un of Faith\nH on- ('!!(\" Newi\nR \\') -Hi.'.;!.!-.   i.me\nR 4ri-I.i ....  Limited\n[i nu \u25a0 M ..\u25a0>.,. ,1   rr-ograxrr.i\n('.\ni 4.\nr<\n-roil\nlOr.t.\n\\    M iplr    Clerk\n* t '\"\u25a0    tl,.,'   h >\nS1    rk    (It'iv  -\nMID SUMMER\nCLEARANCE SALE\nNOW ON AT\nFashion First Ltd.\nl'i ]'\u2022    V'.r i\nin \\:<   w.zz:\n11 nil    K< vn\n11 IS-C*h.i:l\n:: ,io  f.i.'v\n\u25a0; c>   f.i-v\n12 iv^ n z\n12 2.V-NO' ,*\n12 30-Pin-\n!2 4.->    F'hil\n1 DO\u2014Ol I -r\n1 30-AfH :\u25a0\n1 4.'> -W..T.1\n2 rm    Yr i' ;\n.'   I'\u00bb     S    \u25a0 7.\n: i'i   h\n'i \u25a0'\nF.-| \u25a0\n' i   Me\nThis story, last of a series, discusses the terms of a possible union between Canada and Newfoundland.\nBy D'ARCY O'DONNELL\nCanadlin Pren Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Aug, 9 <CP>- Canadian Government officials are\nshowing the utmost caution in the\ndrafting of terms under which\nNewfoundland might join Canada as\na 10th province,\nA source in clo.'e touch with the\ndiscussions said there were three\nmain factors responsible for the caution:\n1. The government does not want\nto create a precedent which existing provinces might use a.s a lever\nto obtain increased grants from the\nFederal Treasury.\n2. The government does not want\nto be accused, as was the Canadian\nGovernment of 189a, with being\n\"niggardly\" in its terms.\n3. The government wants to avoid\ndoing anything that might hr in'er-\npreted as an effort to influence the\nNewfoundland people in their\nchoice of'a future form of administration  for  the  island.\nA committee of Canadian ar.d\nNewfoundland representative* now\nare drafting general terms under\nwhich union of tne two murine?\nmight be workable. Thee term.'\nwill be placed before a meeting of\nseven Canadian cabinet mm;ste: s\nand the seven-man Newfoundland\ndelegation, representing the island s\n45-man National Convent,on,\nFAIR BASI8\nParticipants in the dis*\" ^<;:ors\nhave it routed that it was a q.;est,or\nof both -countries nuti;:'.;:.,: wn.it\n.term) they considered \u25a0,',.* ,'.d he ;*.\ni fair and workable twis for \u25a0.:\u25a0\u25a0..*\"\nIt was r.ot a question of ne^.*.,r*\n! ing terms hpcaus** the p '-*1* e:s > ',\n: the Newfoundland delrgati'r; wnr\nlimited to fact-finding. Thp mnvr-*.\n'tion which the delegation represent\nwas elerted only to recommend f'i-\nI lure form or forms of government\nfor the commission -con*: nl'.,*d island.\ni    It  ii  likely  that  complete   ::\u25a0,?\u25a0\u25a0>-\u25a0\n\u25a0matwnon the tcrrrn will r.n' he released  until   thr  d>'>Kat, >'i   icprn's\nback  tn the convent: *r.\nLITTLE   INFORMATION\nLittle information or, the rj \\r\\-\ntion of trims has leaked < .'. !:\u25a0>\u2014.\ntne camera riisruviot s 'Ah,,-;: In \u25a0\nRan June 2.V H-> a ever, 'r.r: r h,**,\nbeen a good deal of <,<.,cc Z. t''u:i ;r\nunofficial circles a.s t > the p \u25a0<.\u25a0*..hie\ncnlt to the  pomini >n.\nOnr sourer %^-i(\\ a major item ' \u25a0\nhe face! m thr d: afting \"f te: :i >\nwas New-fn inland's $7-: -on oon\np iblic del '. He <a;d tha' den! a\\e--\nages about $120 per cap,'a u\\:.^\nCanada's public debt avi.^is mmr\nthan linon prr capita\nWhile Canada might not object\nto taking over thr Newfoundland\nrleht. there might he iome dua*\ngreement on the quntion rf\ngranting iome comppniation for\ntha debt the lilanri hai not con\ntrtctad.\nWhen        {'  \"\u25a0'.-\u25a0{r-A'ri\"        '.    \u25a0  -* >..)<\n\u25a0 fnrmed.    'br    YrZ.r-.Z.    C   *..      *yr* :\n\u25a0 under! -k   t .   P,n    ':*..*   y    \u201e\u25a0 '     \u25a0\nand much of 'he public debt represents railway deficits,\nCanada would also Inherit the\nmammoth Gander Airfield, which\nnow is operating at a deficit of\nbetween $500,000 and $750,000 annually.\nPossibly the third largest item\nwould be the subsidy the Dominion\nwould pay the island if it agreed to\ngive the Federal Gove;timent exclusive ii.-e of peisonal income, corporation and inheritance lax fields.\nThi.s subsidy, similar to that now*\nprovided h\u00bbr in agreement with\nseven (if the nme provinces, would\naverage between $12.7a and $la per\ncapita and pro'uab'.v would mean a\ntotal outlay of about $.i,00'),OOU annually.\nIn addition thc Dominion would\nhave to pay the aunu.il subsidy of\nR0 cents per capita as provid* d for\nin the (\u2022lusvutior.. Thus would amount   to  about  $26(}.OOf)   iumaa'.ly.\nIt is known that some island rep-\nrcsenta'ivf'S fe,*l ;i sp, rial .subsidy\nshould De paid for possibly the first\nhi ye.ai.-i to brmg Newfoundland'.1'\nservices up to a par  with those  in\nThe Ni wf Miidh.nd people will he\nask( d t'i dec.de m a referendum,\npossibly r.i x\" Ma}', '.vhich 'vpe of\ngove mini rt the;\/ want the island tn\nBuy.   iell,   trade,   rent,   iwap,\nwith a Wart Ad,\nMias Maude Dolphin, daughter\nof Mr. and Mri, T. Dolphin of\nNelson, It shown at the McGill\nConvocation after receiving her\ncertificate as Superintendent of\nSchools of Nursing, In McGill\nUnfversity. She took a position\non the itaff of Royal Victoria\nHospital.   Montreal,   Aug.   1.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs E, M. Crisfield of\nCalgary announce the engagement\nof their only daughter, Dorothy\nMarv, to Mr William J. Ryans. eldest son of Mrs D. E Ryans of Nelson and (he late Mr, William J.\nRvans of Silverlon. Tlie wedding\nwill take place August 25. at 2:30\np.m., in (he Pro-Cathedral of the\nRedeemer, Calgary.\nMr, and Mrs Frank Caliguiri announce the engagement of their\ndaughter Mafalda Helen to George\nHenry Coleman, youngest son of\nCaptain and Mrs. (1 C. H. Coleman\nof Nelson Tho wedding will take\nplace September ath.\nMr. ar.d Mrs. S. P. Dixon of Merritt, H. C, wish to announce the engagement of their second daughter,\nMyrtle Anne to George Clifford,\nyoungest son of Mrs. W. C. Leno\nand tne late Mr. Leno, 1424 Stanley\nStreet, Nelson. The wedding will\ntake place September 1, at Trinity\nUnited Church, Nelson.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1947\u20143\nKASLO\nKASLO, BC - * Mrs A, Hunter,\nwhu spent .in extended holiday\nhen* li fl fnr her home in Lagum\nBeach Calif Enroute she will be\nthe nuest nf Mis. Maud Hanna in\nNelsnn fi r ,1 few days,\nMr. and Mrs 11 I, Chirks have\nas Riles'.s, Mrs Clark's ulster Mrs.\nDavidson and son Billy of Victoria.\nMr ar.d Mrs Boss Whittaker and\n'\u25a0.vi s .i.s .lark and Billy, have re-\ni'Uni'd !*) their home in Castlegar\nfr.im a h**lul:,v spent with M\".\nWlnttakeis mother Mis, M. Whil-\nt ike r.\nMr and Mrs Waller Butler of\n\/.met n 1* fl hy motor to Seattle\nui other r'nst cities, Enroute home\nIhey v.\"ll lie lhe guests of Mr.\nBillet's s:s',*r and brother-in-law\nMi ,-n.d Mrs M. Elder, Kamloops,\nf  -   a   f* is*   rir.f\nMrs ,l Easton and son Donald\nof Sidnev 11C, and Miss Edith\nCo'.ilm*.; f Cost,n were guests\n*f Mr aid Mrs f) McDougall\n.Mr anil Mis Vein Cook and\n\u25a01 ii^l.te. M*,'*,a nf Creston were\ng :, ***\u25a0\u25a0 , 1 Mr and Mis 0 Mc-\nI)\u201e*,:g.,:i    f**r    a    fiw    days\nBanner Headlines\nFor Hollywood\nMovies Ban\nLONDON, Aug. 10 (CPt-Britain's\nheavy tax on American motion pictures may have sown the seed of\nBritish-American disunity, a top-\nranking American film executive\ntold the British press Saturday.\n\"Thc British announcement, which\nto all intents and purposes confiscates 75 per cent of all American\nfilm earnings, has sent a shudder\nthrough every man and woman employe^ in the many aspects of the\nindustry, and this may be followed\nby deep resentment on the part of\nthe entire American public,\" Chee-\nver Cowdin of Universal Films told\na press conference.\n\"How do you think your people\nwould feel if we in the United\nStates were to confiscate 75 per cent\nof your property?\"\nBanner headlines informed the\npeople they would be deprived of\nHollywood movies, one of then-\nchief forms of escape from the troubles of austerity-ridden Britain.\nMORE SLAVS TO\nRETURN HOME\nDESPITE REPORTS\nWINNIPEG. Aug. 10 'CPi - The\nthird and fourth groups of Yugoslavs to leave Canada (or their\nhomeland are expected to depart I\nlate this year, despite unofficial ad-\nverso reports concerning the recep-l\n(ion the first party met upon their\narrival in Yugoslavia recently.\nSources here said that despite reports that SO of the first 500 Yugoslavs to return to their native home*\nfrom Canada had been imprisoned,'\nthe October and December departures would be carried out according to schedule.\nIMPRISONMENT\nCOMMON\nThe movement of Yugoslavs from'\nCanada to their homeland \u2014- altogether there are approximately 35,-\n000 Yugoslavs domiciled in the Dominion \u2014 was carried out with a\nminimum of fanfare until Peter\nStankovic, Editor of the Winnipeg\nWeekly Croatian Voice, charged this\nweek that imprisonment wa.s the\ncommon lot of the repatriates upon\ntheir return to the Tito-dominated\ncountry.\nMr. Stankovic, who said he had\nreceived his information from one\nof the first group to leave Canada,\nclaimed that the jail terms had been\nbased on charges of sabotage or on\nalleged refusals of the newly-returned Yugoslavs to carry out the\norders of authorities.\nAdditionally, he charged that their\nmoney had been taken from them\nand that they had been stripped of\nmachinery and tools brought from\nCanada.\nAmong the Yugoslavs still In Canada these claims brought a mixed\nresponse. Among those intent on\nremaining in the Dominion an open\nmind waj! kept. Those planning a return to their homeland, however\nridiculed the claims and countered\nwith the charge that Canadian\nnewspapers had been giving space\nto \"anti-national propaganda against\nYugoslavia,\"\nMONTREAL, Aug. 10 fCP> \u2014\nEdwtrd Yardai, Chairman of the\nCanadian Council of South Slavi,\n\u25a0aid today that itatcmenti that at\nleast 50 Yugoilavi who returned\nto their homeland from Canada\nhave been jailed \"are nothing but\nlow-down ilander of the lowest\norder,\"\nBack Ir, my office I have letters\nfrom 350 of the first group, and\nthey all tell-of the fine reception\nIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllUMHIIIl\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nThe House of Furniture Values\nPHONE 115 - NELSON, B.C.\nTrada In your old furniture on\nnew,\nBUY ON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN PAYMENT\nStore open till 9 p.m. Saturdays\niMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiinnniiiiEiiiiiHii\nCranbrook Girl\nWeds (algaryite\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Aug. 8 -The\nmarriage took place at the home of\nMr, and Mrs. Clarence Ryde of their\noldest daughter, Evelyn Margaret, ta\nLawrence Charles Thompson of Calgary, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nThompson  of Lacombe, Al'a,\nThe bride wore while silk jersey\nand her attendant was Miss Connie\n(tiles, wilh Ernest Ryde groomsman. Hev. Father Anthony performed the ceremony. A reception followed for a host of friends at the\nK. P. Kail, and thc couple left on\nto Coeur d'Alene,\nwearing a tan suit,\ntheir home at Cal-\na wedding trj]\nIdaho, the bndi\nThey will mak<\nShe was born nnd grew up here,\nand has been with ihr staff of the\nQuality Grocery fur a year. The\ngroom came here to start the Okay\nRuhber Works, returning to Calgary\nlast Spring. He is a veteran of the\nUnited States Armyfcervice.\nROBSON\nROBSON, BC, - Mr. and Mm.\nC. E, Tut* have as guests the latin's brother-in-law and sister,\nMr and Mrs J. Todd of Vancouver.\nMiss Mangold Wood is spending\nthe su num r vara tion with her\naunt   Mrs   G    Magwood.\nMiss R. Hnd' \u2022 '\u25a0' ,r \u00bb\u2122.iver\nis tho guest <\u25a0( Miss Phyllis Humphries.\nMr. and Mrs. J, T Webster are\nvisiting   friends   In   Manitoba\nthey got and how well they hava\nfitted themselves Into their new\nlife,\" said Yardas, whose organization Is sponsoring the back-to-Yu-\ngoslavla  movement.\nWt wondtrful*\nNO   OVERNIGHT\nBAKING-\nMakea Better, Finer FlaToured\nBread in Vi t\u00abo time.\n4   tft^\/op*!   per   eartWL   tach   envelop*\nmatti  5 loovet,\nHEX kcepfl fresh for wrrkn without refrigeration. As Quick RU-\ning aa Fresh Yeaati\nLALLENAND'S\nRE.1-yi.rk.Ri.,isiiD.*vY\u00bb*.i.iiVoj|,\nII\n\/ cfare a\/\/\/o\/\/e fo say that fh\/Ws around our bouse \/ook\nirinnnirr\ni\\ooTFN\/iY  Valley   \\j\\in-r\n.-, r.   n* ** i * \u25a0 \u25a0*\n-, .III -y.r-ir,.   -,,\n*\u2022 i;   ,,-,     iii\nPASTEURIZED\nMil K\nr, SMI IOR CHILDREN\nII 1*1   (*,. 1* , j.\n, .m    1   III     '.V.s .\n; is   rm*  Sr   -\n7   111     Ilr*   I ,'    !   **\n\u25a0; r,  .1.,, i, s*  *\nII lb    V-.i ,    l.i  \u2022\nMin 9EARON\nCLEARANCE SALE\nt-l   n\\ir\nENTIRE STOCK\nMILADY S FASHION SHOP\nI\nII   I.*, I  *Mi,',r*\nil IM, S.  *l  I, f*\nli III AM  S'.i\nI 1*1 I   in   I!\niii\u00ab- cm   *.,\nin r, \\rl-n,\nill ,:i: b .*, Y-\n-. mi i, A s.a\nbr  ,    , ',\n' \u25a0 -\n'n*   In.!,, ,,sr  I   vs  a       .1  ,in\nIn pmtl prr in;**'.! <\u25a0'. '-r:   ,!.\"> I.m ; r \u25a0\nlllkllon.   * *    l.'tfl.II*''UT'     In i: il   .**\nI \u2014 a^-.a-\n\u25a0i\nrrr.l   ,,f   l.r   per   rn;1   **\"   s .  1:   .1\n,f   i   b'-A'.\n*\u25a0> i\nmr.i'UIil   \u00bbre, |r|   run   i**.'ri   |!Jli*>\">\"\n\u25a0i  11 .mm\n'**\nP,ym.pi'.t nf I'lrll nn mr. \"i, ' in.'\nl.-il'**.*   R,\nI'V'I\ntiling prnlpnti frnm riisiin*; |,i.*ii,\nrr,   sshnsr   Inlrrrst   pasnir-.'s   r.'i\nr<\\   ,-iilv   111   ihr   th ,'u-ands   n'   H'l!',!,*\n1  n' rr  1\n\u201er||i\na* thr tlm* Ihey rn'rird I* -tn,'..   -\nkrr  Show\n**.*   Miller\nMinncr\nTRANSPORTATION  COUTH\nAnnthfr    large   ,-rn-   :-:   Ihr   !rrn\n., imld  I-r  thr  pi ,*r  I mm!a   a --:,',-\nIlrm'i  .\n* W uk\npny   thp   islHiid   in   lukl* ^   n*.n    r\ntrjstispnr'*,':\"ii ss.'r*,*   T'*r Tiaisu*\n1 A 11. S\ns'.ilnr   lln;\u00bbii,    t-.il; M    1 *    ,'\u25a0!,*    a\nl';rj***.b,*\n\u25a01\nminy   as   p,*ssi!,!r  nf   Ilip   U*VI   ,,**,*\n.* *>   IL,,!.\n*    Ihr)!,,\nm'.lllltiPs staltpipil s!\"i\u00a3 '.hr   ilan 1\n\u25a0Kmn   milrs   ,*(   nm:; rr    >i,   ,\nstriirlrrl   al   a   roll   nf   m.*rr   I:*.,*    Ju\nrssi ryin  |\u201e \u201er'v a '*\u25a0'.,  \\rai, s * .. \u25a0*\n1   ' h. \u25a0 i\n-\u25a0\u25a0.i'i i* linn l-ru it stm , r a i .* I*\nSince \/switched fo extra-soapy Sun\/ig\/it\nfl\nExtra- loopy Sunlight Gets Thingi Extra Clean I\n, Sunlt\/jlit i\nis lirn all purr rttrit suk py Sunlight mmrs muni\nr, llir n l-itrit. hnr\/itrit, airrt.it n ashrs'rvpr. Am\n, JPI\n( ,,l,,rs\nr work\ntuiks i.iu\nMr' . . . \\\nsorssili'   Sunllglil's  ipml.  lalhrrinjj su'ls Ira, li in and grt\ncvrri  grrjsv  drrpilussn  ilirt   ssitlnnil   liutl   ruhhing\nCs\u00bbme  llrinhtrr    ttrsli  as   flnssrls atirr  r.iin     Makr  \\i\n\/ ijf\/ifpr. use Sunlight Iur ri rry i lean-up pili arnunil llic house\nfrnm tlish ssashinL; tu , Ira,nnn wiminsss ami w,\u201e\u201elssorls.   Sep\nium linmr snaiUr    \\ null agree   sl Nl K.IIT IIOMFS ARF\n( I I Wl l(  III IMI S,   I ,\u201e,k hrn Iur Sunlight un  mur grncrr'a\nshrliis l,.,lai.\nfor a compute WASHING job YOU CANT OO MTNOUT EXTRA-SOAPY SUNLIGHT\n \u2014\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n1 \u2022; 'i\"\"\n\u2014\n\t\n\t\n\t\nNHsmt Saihj Nmts\nEstablished April 22. 1901\nBritish Columbia'*\nMost Interesting Newspaper    \u25a0\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nUn NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED  288 Baker Sl   Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized aa Second Class Mall\nPostoffice Department. Ottawa\nMEMHI'lH OF   I'lIK CANADIAN  PRESS AND\nTHE  Alllli1   HURI'A!'   OF  CIRCULATIONS,\n~ MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1947~\ni\nThe Control of\nBritish Imports\nA special dispatch from Geneva\ncarries the somewhat disturbing news\nthat the British Government may not\nbe able to accept all the terms of a\nmultilateral agreement worked out at\nthe International Trade Conference.\nSir Stafford Cripps, London's spokesman on trade matters, has intimated\nthat Britain cannot for at least one year\ngive a pledge not to impose discriminatory import controls. It is not questioned that Sir Stafford gives a true\naccount of the British position; but\nAmerican officials have hinted that his\nannouncement may \"wreck\" the Geneva discussions and jeopardize approval of the Marshall Plan at Washington.\nImport control is now practised by\nBritain on a wide scale and in detail. In\nfact, virtually all major importations\nInto the country are under license,\nwhich inveflves a check on both quantity and price. Control, other than by\ntariffs, is exercised in various ways: by\nbulk purchase, quotas and restrictions\non the use of foreign exchange. We in\nNorth America, accustomed now to\nreading that Britain proposes to cut\ndown imports of food, tobacco, films\nand some other commodity, do not always keep In mind the network of\ntight Governmental restrictions implied by these decisions, says the Toronto Globe and Mail. Britain, thr traditional home of free trade, has departed far from the commercial policy\nwhich made her prosperous in the nineteenth century.\nControl of imports, like other forms\nof control, tics up naturally with Socialism; and manv British Socialists\nbelieve that it must be a permanent\nfeature of their general policy. How,\nthey ask, can a Labor Government plan\nproduction and consumption at homo\nif importers an* free t*> bring in what\nIhey like al what price thry likr? When\nthe terms of the American loan were\nunder discussion nearly two years ago,\nlabor economists like G, D. H. Cole argued that the Socialist experiment in\nBritain (\u25a0'\u25a0'.ild not he :;;vi n a prop* r\ntrial if the Government bartered awav\nits right to control imports as it saw fit.\nIt ran be argued, however, that as\nmatters star.*! today any Government\nin London would bo bound to keep a\nfirm hand on imports. Britain Is very\nshort of foreign exchange and cannot\nsafely allow free spending of what\nthere is available. As tiy* shortage is\nespecially acute in dollars, this moans\nthat purchase*; fron the L'n:'.'**l Stales\nand other \"hard money\" countries have\nto be kept clown. The national ecotvmy\nwould not stand unrestricted spending\nby British hovers on goods made m\nAmerica. A (' insrrvnt;ve (', **. crr.nn :.t\nIn Britain ! ulav might v\nto make tho same anr.o*,:\nSir Stafford Cripps has r*\nGeneva meeting\nIt is a pledge not to im;\nInatory\" import control I\nH States war's ':  Ii-\nIs no', hard :*, nr.-',* rs','\nand the American pub!\nloan to Britain was appro\nthat one advantage an\nUnited S'atos, ,n \u25a0'*,,. 1 ,IU\nonce, w\nLetters, to the\nEditor\nLetten may -be publlthtd over a nom de\nplume, but the actual name of the writer\nmuit be given to the Editor at evidence of\ngood faith. Anonymoui letteri go In tne\nwaits paper baiket\nPays Tribute to\nNelson in Verse\nTo the Editor:\nSir As Nelsnn is celebrating her \"Golden\nJubilee\" nt this time, 1 am enclosing part of a\nletter written in verse to me by my father in\npraise of NeLson. He is a visitor to Nelson at\nthe present time, guest of my sister, Mrs. L.\nPeerless, and his words seem to me to do\nJustice to your lovely city.\nSincerely yours,\n(MRS)  ALICE MARSHALL,\nVancouver, B, C\nWhat shall I say of Nelson Cily1\nIn Summer garb she's more than pretty,\nDressed in varying shades of green,\nGarments fit for any queen.\nA jewel indeed, in gorgeous setting,\nHigh praise from one and all  begetting,\nDame Nature  has been  more than  kind\nTo beauty lovers here. I find;\nFor all around the towering hills\nThe heart of man her glory fills,\nWhile at her feet, calm and serene,\nThe water of the lake is seen,\nBut sweeter  tongues  than  mine,   I   fear,\nMu.st sing the beauties pictured here,\nWhilst I, who scarce can sing at all,\nAltho' the beauty does enthrall,\nMust stand amongst the silent few,\nContent, If Nelson gets her due.\nSoon  my  visit  will  hr o'er,\nAnd I'll  be bound for home once more\nSummer days will soon be past,\nAnd Winter here with chilling blast,\nBut in my mind I'll offtimes see\nNelson\u2014by the Kootenay,\n??\nions ? f\nhad\n.-ie \"di*\nor ea ior an\nThe Ma: *.!..*!\nve*!, expected\n* run if to I at\n*,*.! , the Hr:'*\nV'.:,::   if :* is\nI\nWritten  at  Nelson\nhv  visitor   Mr.  '\nJuly   211,   1947,\nF   Stewart,\nToday's Horoscope\nYou have positive ideas and opinions if\n(his is your birthday, but are sometimes diffident. You have determination, perseverance\nand energy. Ynu are fond of spoils and pleasures You will not fall in love at first Eight,\nbut when you dn love, you will do so thoroughly and with absolute devotion. The clay's influences are doubt ful. Things can be done\neasily and efficiently during the daytime hours\nbut the evening indicates over-expectation,\nover-doing and other extremes. Providing excessive expenditures are curbed, the society of\nyoung Intellectuals, artists and musicians\npromises gun and happiness in the next year;\nelders the reverse. Born on this date, a child\nwill have the Intellectual, perceptive and reflective faculties well developed, and will be\n\u25a0vi'(v-Vul :r the rV'T!) career. LMers, how-\npi-Pi   pav 'e-iipn-.ir'ly re'-^d rmar\"?.\nVen\nerse\nNELSON-ON  HER GOLDEN  JUBILEE\nr<v 't >\"*..'[ in a: the wp'rr eating'\nNo-.*, hi-ic el.-e has N it'ii'e l'n .>  >\"!\nFiel-i an 1  fore<t, lake nnd lard\nBeauty   brrkons  from your  doorstep,\nDays and Ivurs your hea-' beg'iile\nFol:--,*;  nr\"   friendi',',  handr'^ps  welrorre\nAM   v. no   f;t:-;y   hr-r   awh.ie\nBuildings  nev   and   mid err,   cl.mbing\n\\r  tne b>v  tbf*rn*:i,'hf.ire,\nSp.re and cm*;; nf church and chapel\nr.-nk t-.e url ] a-1 Sab^rh '-:\u2022\u25a0'\n[*\u2022.,*, *\u2022-\u25a0*. s . ;s   ., \u2022'\u25a0'.[,.'   <-r '*\u25a0 \u25a0 '  '\nTo  'he   wa' e rs,   cry st a 1 - s p . r.,\nP'i:p>>*n,idei   rr''*'ir*a ;r <   'nw\u25a0\" r:'. g,\nLift   '\".\u25a0',r   >afv   :*\u25a0 ir.rhr.s   *'<: .'.'ard\nHit l.t   ti. It\ni-ved to thr\nFivon\nrili-rr\nVs ther  *.' ell\nIt   *'.rre   *.*.. re\ni'l\", ,*\u00ab*  \"(l.i i .   j ;<.]\nRESEHVI    IS  OUT\n*.*.. re   i   \u2022!   \u25a0 i   at   sl.\ni ':, *,.,* ,*!.,; I,,,*. 1    ' , i:i |*r**fi* the\nHi.l ,.!,   in    I'll  . il  ',,*      1*   *A    Mid   l\u201e*   :\n\u2022 i*. .nil.uie I i An ri :, mi li.oin *. I*. .*,*tid\n'ill ! pav \"t'.iv lv.* exh.ri .111',,' their\n*! ::.,* :es \u25a0;::.-. .in a ! *::tv A S.i S',,f\nfll    I':  p; ,    \u25a0 .!\u25a0:,    .;**    .\u201e\u2022 .    I'.i*    i*\nf ,-rh * I*, ,*.   fi   *,    (,. * . \u25a0   ,   *     **   * * \u2022   l\u201e\nEtiquette Hinfs\nf ,,\u201e\n'** I ,   'il,il mine\n**l'l*   1 .11 '.   ,1*\nBy the Starting Qate\nOptn to any reader, Namei of penoni\nasking queitloni will not bo published.\nThere is no charge for this icrvlce. Quel*\ntlom WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL except when there li obvious necessity for privacy.\nD  Y-, Nelson\u2014What can be done for leather\nwhich has become mildewed?\nKeep\u00abshe leather articles in a well ventilated, dry, light place. When first detected, the\nmildew should be washed off with soap and\nwarm water, or simply wiped off with a moist\ncloth and lhe leather well dried.\nSubscriber, Kimberley-How d'd'the .expression \"freelance\" originate?\nIn the later Middle Ages, bands of knighti\nbearing lances, and men-at-arms went from\nstate to state selling their services to eny lord\nwho was willing to pay for their nid. They\nwere free from allegiance to any one country,\nD S, Nelson\u2014Could I have a recipe for raspberry sherbets, using gelatin?\nI tablespoon gelatin, Wi cups cold water,\n14 cup boiling water, 1 cup sugar, a pint of\nstrained  raspberry  juice   and  juice  of  two\nlemons, Soak the gelatin in Vi cup of the cold\nwater. Add the boiling water and stir until\ndissolved. Then add the sugar, remainder of\ncold  water, and  the strained  raspberry and\nlemon  Juice,   Chill  and   freeze.\nON THE SIDE\nBy E. V. DURLING\nA dog is immune from poison Ivy, but if ht\nchases a rabbit  through poison ivy you may\nget  poisoned  from  petting him.  So states a\npoison ivy expert.\nFAIR TIP8\nWhat ls a fair tip? That Is a question on\nwhich there seems to be a wide variety of\nopinion. It is, however, one that people who\nwLsh to the right thing often ask. I believe\npeople who exist on tips should organize and\nIssue a list of what they consider fair tips,\ntyarvey Smith, a travel expert, says a bellboy\nshould be tipped no less than a quarter. A bartender, says Harvey, should nnt be tipped at\nnil unless he fcive-s special service, Then ha\nshould get a dime tip for one drink, a quarter\ntip for a round of drinks. A hotel maid, according to Mr. Smith, should be tipped 25 centi\na day; a hat check girl, a dime; a manicurist,\na quarter; a waiter, 15 per cent for a check; a\ntaxi dr.ver, a dime.\nBRIDES' CALENDAR\nAm asked what the celebrated \"Bride^\nCalendar'' has to say about the July bride. It\nsays: \"Tiie br.de of July is handsome but quick\nof temper.\" Prospective and present husbands\nmay br interested in whnt the calendar aayi\nabout other brides. January bride: \"A prudent\nhousewife and sweet of temper,\" February;\n\"An affectionate wife and mother.\" March: \"A\nfrivolous chattermag given to quarrelling.\"\nApril; \"Inconstant, not over wise, ind only\nfairly good looking,\" May: \"Fair of face, sweet\ntempered and contented.\" June: \"Impetuous\nnnd open-handed\" August: \"Sweet tempered\nxr.d active.'' September: \"Discreet and popular\" October: \"Fair nf face, affectionate, hut\n]'\u25a0\u2022 (Vis\" November: \"Open handed, kind\nhearted, bu* inclined to be lawless\" December;\n\"Graceful in person, fond of novelty, fascinating, but a spendthrift.\"\nPIPE 8M0KER8\nWe often hear of people who smoke M cigarettes a day. Of cigar smokers who consyme\nfrom 15 to 20 cigars a dav. But statu'lcs on the\n\u00bb umbi r of pipef ds sm *ked by heavy pipe\nsmokers have been lacking Nnw I note a report '.'r.e celebrated California legal light, Eugene Williams, who owns about 400 pipes,\nsmokes 25 pipefuls of tobacco a day,\nFASHION- TREND\n\"No matter what fashion dictates, I sm\nno: g ,::g to wear long skirts,\" writes a Ros-\ntonian. \"Nor is the fact that my husband is\napposed to shirt skirts going to influence me.\nI have thi same two rrnsor.s for wearing short\n<kir!s tha* Mnrlene Dietrich has. F S - my\n!: *.r\\i\". i is a minister \"\nPress Comment\n\u25a0* ;\" '.Is,- '::,' *.r:.r .:*. *., *,:\ni*f\". s :*\u25a0** * ss.i: \\ '.:*.\u25a0* f ! i* s; *. f i j.\n,l*,l   she  lb br-.  *,*<   \u2022*.'.   nf  v.r,.\na::.   :\u2022(*   \u2022*:.\nI    In  \u00ab!\u2022\u00ab\u2022 b\n*   ,- l:s:,->.,\n.'   Wis!  !* *  k\n'!>,*.   ! *\nrd'\nth\" l\\ l-'.r is sirt ' * he !h\nI*.   It   H   -ir  if    -     \u25a0-,-,\u25a0\nTTST AN'-.wr f'\u00ab\n\u2014Trapping\n\u2014A Way N\nI certainly hope it does not be-1\ncome the fashion among the law-\nenforcement authorities of the various Canadian Provinces to bring\nindictments charfing mayors and\nother elective officfals with \"agreeing to accept bribes.\"\nIf the high law officer* of the\nCrown in the various Provinces\nshould become addicted to that\npractice, I hope Canadian Juries\nwill produce only discouraging results for them.\nIn a case where nn official is\nseemingly In the act of accepting a\nbribe, why should not tiie Crown let\nthe act be completed? Then there is\nsome real evidence to go on. The\nmoney or other consideration has\nchanged hands, the individual bribed has performed the service for\nwhich he was paid. The transaction\nis complete; the guilty person has\nclosed the trap on himself, And the!\ncourts will protect the community\nif wrong has been done It.\nBut where the Crown steps\nat  the   point  where  the   official:\nhai merely given a verbal assent j\nto a proposition that he accept a;\nbribe for changing hli attitude on;\na matter of financial Import to the :\nbriber, what has It caught? j\n(I am supposing that there Is act-'\nually such a crime in the Criminal'\nCode ot Canada, as consenting to accept a bribe for doing or refraining\nfrom doing something Involving*\npublic duty.)\nAlmost any kind of verbal evl-!\ndenee may be countered. i\nIn the case of a bribe proposition,\nnegotiations will certainly not extend beyond two individuals. If one1\naffirms, the other can deny.\nLet's go further, to the rare in-!,\nstance where there might be con-1\nfirmatlon of the verbal acceptance\nby its being reduced to writing, or*\nby a hidden recording device, or by*\namplifying devices that would carry'\nthe conversation to witnesses secreted in another room.\nEven then, what has the Crown!\ncaught in its trap? Certainly nothing |\n['(inclusive.\nWhat would the average official,!\neither elected, or administrative, do\nwhen confronted with a bribe offer? Just about what the average\nman would do under similar circumstances,\nNine out of If) individuals would\nbe as mad as hatters at the bribe\noffer. Six or seven would throw the\noffer back in the teeth of the party\nmaking the offer. A couple would\nsay to themselves:\n\"Here li an Insulting ikunk who\nii trying to get me to commit a\ncrime In hli Intereit. The only\npossible way I can bring what he\nli doing back to him, li by contenting, snd -then  fully  Involving\nBribe Vermin\not To Do It\nhim* and then exposing him.\"\nIf every man who was offered a I\nbribe hurled it back, no offerers of\nbribes would ever be convicted of\nbribery or of attempted bribery.\nTRAPPING ATTEMPTED BRIBER\nThere have been simply countless\ncases of persons who have been offered bribes, seeminjf to consent, as\na necessary step toward the law being invoked against the attempted\nbriber. Sometimes the person who is\noffered the bribe takes others into\nhis confidence and concerts with\nthern measures to involve Ihe attempted briber; sometimes he writes\nout the matter in full and deposits\nU in a bank ln escrow, to be produced under conditions stated; or he\nmay outline the plans he proposes\nto pursue, and entrust them lo good\nkeeping; or he may take the law\nofficers into the plan, to have a part\nin entrapping the person of criminal aims.\nBut what official, or other Individual, who has been approached with\na bribe offer, is going to take into\nhis confidence law officers who value the pelt of a bribe-taker or a\npotential bribe-taker, far above the\npelt of a bribe-giver or a potential\nbribe-giver?\nWhat chance will there be of\nbringing a bribe-giver to book, under such a policy by the legal higher-ups?\nI have been actuated to these remarks by the recent Canadian Press\nreports of the Attorney-General of\nOntario ordering a prosecution of\nthe nature I have described, Somebody sweats he offered a bribe to a\nmember of a municipal council, and\nthat the party he approached agreed\nto be bribed. On the strength of\nthat, the law enforcement officers\nof the Province are ordered into action.\nAt some high level there should\nbe discretion as to prosecution of\nborder-line cases. There Ls in fact\nsuch discretion, and it is exercised\nby the Attorney-General of each\nFrovince, It is exercised constantly,\nTo my mind, prosecution of the\ncrime, or for willingness to commit\n\u2014aside from the point I have made\nabout consent being a necessary\nstep if the bribe-offerer is to be\ntrapped-is very much like prosecution for Intention to commit a\ncrime, or for willingness to comm|\na crime, and that in turn ls very\nmuch like prosecuting a man for\nhis thoughts. Even though there is\nauthority for prosecutions of that\nnature, there is also authority lor\nusing discretion. Large servings of\ndiscretion are often helpful in mainlining the high respect in which\nCanadians generally hold the law.\nOLD HOSS\nPHONE   144   FOH    CLASSIFIED\nTwo Men Who Graduated at 18 Work\nTogether on (anadlan Housing\nBY  DOUGLAS HOW\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Aug. 6 (CP) - Two\nmen who were doing big things\neven when they were 18 and who\ngraduated from the same university in the same year are working together now as Canada's top\nFederal officials in the vital housing field.\nOne is David B, Mansur, who at\n41 is president of the Central Mortgage and .Housing Corporation\nwhich has assumed responsibility\nfor Ihe majority of the Government's housing worries. At IR, he\ngraduated from the University 'if\nManitoba with a bachelor of arts\ndegree.\nThe other is Ma).-Gen. Hugh \\.\nYoung, C.B., C.B.E., DSO, Who\nat 43 is Mansur's right hand man\nas Vice-president and who simultaneously heads the crown's wartime housing In efforts to build\nbetween 8*000 and 10,000 homes on\nvarious community plots this year,\nAt 18. he began a long soldiering\ncareer by enlisting in the 251st\nbattalion for service overseas in\nthe  First  World   War.\nNow their red carpeted offices\nadjoin one another in one of Ottawa's wartime temporary buildings. In a number of ways their\ncharacteristics also are close. Both\nnre go-getters.' Both handle their\nbusiness in an infnrmnl manor,\nRoth like to slash red tape.\n20,000   HOMES\nBetween them, they have about\n40,000 homes under their wing and\nare placing the funds or the services of their agency behind some\n20,000 or morc of the possibly 68.-\n000 homes that wdll bc reared in\nCanada this  year.\nMansur, quick as a whip on anything financial, is tali, wavy-\nhaired, Incisive in speech and\nfiction. Born at Rock Island, Que.,\nhe formerly served wllh the mortgage department of the Sun Llfo\nAssurance Company and built up\na knowledge of mortage administration in all phases of Canadian\nlife. In 1939, he was appointed\nGeneral Superintendent of the\nGovernment's Central Mortage\nbank'and left that job Bhortly to\nbecome assistant chairman of the\nForeign   Exchange   control   board.\nIn 1941 he joined the war savings\ncommittee and a year later became assistant chairman of the\nNational War finance committee,\nIn this job, he was responsible\nfor publicizing victory loan drives\nGen Young has an engineering\nbackground and knows construc-\nifon. He Is sUicky, partly bald,\nopen   and   friendly   in  manner,\nBorn In Winipeg he joined up\nas soon as age would let him and\nwas eventually transfered from th**\n2ilst to the 44th battalion He\nwas wounded In action. On his return, he also went to the University   of   Manitoba   and   graduated\nin 1924 as a bachelor of science.\nA permanent force soldier, h\u00ab\nwent uversens in 1940 as a Major\nand whs a Brigidler in Command\nof an Infantry brigade In the fighting around Caen and Falalse. Hii <\nleadership won him the Distinguished Service Order. ,\nReturning   in   1944,   he   becam\u00ab\nQuartermaster-General    and    wai\ngiven the tough job of getting tha J\ntens   of   thousands   of   Canadian |\nsoldiers hack  home.  His  actlvitl\nas   repart iatln   boss   won   him\ncompanion of the Bath Award.\nFLIN FLON HAS\nSASK. HIGHWAY\nAS THREAT\nBy JACK AVESON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\n!    THE PAS, Man., Aug. 9 (CP) \u2014\n! Northern   Manitobans,   faced   with\n\u25a0 what mining men describe as tht\n| greatest mineral development their\nregion has ever seen, have let slide\n\u25a0 talk of secession from the Southern\n| part of the province. But they are\n'confident that their point will be\nwon . . . Indirectly.\nI    The argument between North and\nSouth flared into the open last\nj Spring when residents of Flin Flon,\n.The Pas, Sherridon and Cranberry\nPortage declared their Intention of\n\u25a0 seceding from the rest of Manitoba\nunless  the  Provincial  Government\n[took prompt steps to link Flin Flon\nwith the South through highway\n'construction.\nj Today the Northerners admit that\ntheir secession threat \u2014 described\nby Government officials as constitutionally impossible to achieve \u2014\njwas merely a medium used to\n'publicize their demands. They have\n[a much stronger weapon now . . .\nthe highway tbe Saskatchewan\nGovernment Is constructing Into\nFlln Flon.\nROAD NEXT YEAR\n\\ The road, in Its second year of\nconstruction, ts expected to be completed in 1948 and when that happens Flin Flon \u2014 cradled on the\nManitoba-Saskatchewan border \u2014\nwill have direct communication\nwith the South by road as well as\nby the present train and rail routes.\nCompletion of this hlghwaj will\nresult in a considerable amount of\nNorthern Manitoba-earned money\nheing channelled into Saskatchewan.\nMeet After 46 Years\nWILLOW POINT. B, C, Aug. Id-\nAfter not seeing each other for over\n46 years, Robert L, Hong, Willow\nPoint, and K. P. Hong, Minn., U.S.A.,\nhave met here.\nMr, Hong was accompanied on his\nvisit by his wife.\ni& &*$\u00a3$ tptt twuit\niif*wt\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS  AGO\nFrom Thr Dally News of Aug. It, 1937\ni ):\u25a0.\"-, a- *j c* *\u25a0 rr* (rates nveived a' '.he\nI'adanac ; .ar,'. of ::.\u25a0\u25a0 C'-nvdidated M:- ,ng ard\nhr.r)'. : i' (' im;*anv ;n the first week nf Aug :st\na:r *.*..'>*<\\ to in 943 : rs, mak.ng n c ;; ts for\nthe  y.-ar  '''   Aug   7  total   3M 2.'7  tons\nF   ('   Waijon  of Kel*twr.a  vu.ted  Nrlyin\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally Newi of Auguit 11, 19?2\nF\u25a0)\"\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0:' '.'\u25a0   .lu'vor   ha'!   piayrn   r  ntmued\n :-.a   'Vr****'\u25a0<   :r   'hr-   >\u00ab(\u2022 \\*   r'\u00abv   hy\n*.*\u25a0* \u2022 \u00bb' t-ir G:ar'< n 19-2 trimming\nFifty :.rg-necked pheasants arrived in the\n>*\"V**\u00bbriay  conngr.ed  to  the Nelson  ard\ni-.-t  PM and Gun CI :b. #\n\u00ab    F    Ogden   ird   daughter   Fi 'h   re-\n\u25a0\u2022 ,h: from Varriuvr\n40  YEARS  AGO\nFrom Thr  Daily  Newi of Auguit 11, 1907\nThe ch:. f xai'cr c nur.g bef  rs the Co m-\n!     i-'   rvh:   '-wi   ihe   ]\u25a0.'\u25a0;   '<fd   fx(r-i;>n   rf\n\u25a0\"   !..''\u25a0 ,:   *i'Vr:'i   ji \u25a0\u25a0   ti  :hr   Uke  c^iplrd\n:M   a   '\",':\u25a0       ;\u25a0 d   '\u25a0''\u25a0';\u25a0':\u25a0'\u25a0 r   tf. v re\n'\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022    W    S    I>\u00ab:c\\   has  been   spp^'.r.'.H   (n\ne >       '1  s'.if!\nW.i't:   Clayton, rt the Its', firm of C'sv-\nr   A   C ,v   v.  h\u00ab< r'-'r:r.\\   'hr  f.:---  n{ Tav'. >r\nWords of Wisdom\nT**  wh-*T.  ran   ;.-hr<  R.ve  rrpuV   or  trn\n\u25a0\u25a0:'\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0'.   ,-r    ; >,\"  it,    h ;'    '.hr   go vi    I'M   J-it'\nlest  Yourself\n'.he P;'*!. ,:r ***.. Ten\nAll   lh.l   Th,,.!..   Fn,inr\u00ab,r.  know   .)\u00ab\u201e,(   l,\u201e,M,n|-  f\nt\u201e*,.m\u201el\u201elr.    ,,v.    mm    ll,.    \u201e,,,-     l1P.     |*|,\u201e\u201e\u201e,|\n'''\" '\"I   \"   ' \" I'\"\" \u2022 r-llh,\u201e\u201e ,!,\u201e\u201e!    I    ,\u201e,r,|   f,\u201e   .,,\n-I ,|\u00abtn~.rr.l   (,\u201e   ,,\u201e\u201e!,\u201e,    - 1 \u201e,.,\u201e,.,,,,|   |,\u201e   \u201e.,\u201e\u201e,\u201e\u201e\nI.inniwr.l   lu |,Hl\u201ei\u201e,n\u201e   \u201e\u201e|   | \u201e,.,\u201e\u201e,,,|   (\u201et    ,\u201e\u201e\nI.XTT      And, in iH.lltmn In h.ini lli- ,,lt,t 1*1,,\u201e\u201e,,),\n..., Unit hr l hrr.l,,, il,, |\u201e, ,,,\u201e  |'l,,\u201e,.,,,!, i, ,\u201e,,,,!\n\u201e,,,!   Hown   wllh   III.  In.,.1.\nCWfc .fin* flIljmOUth feature!...\nHm   M.S   M.4.\u00abA   kn.., .t..^A,,   KmlSr. IW\u201e   t,.!..\nM\u2122.,*,,, m ,*^s^ Ah,nnm \u00abN.\u00ab Slam , ;\u00bb. ^,^ \u201e, dtlh ,\nW.t, l\u201e w,\u00bb.i, ,\u201e .1-,^. n.iA^*Sm.H.m hmim. S...\nIf\u2014...  \u25a0 I,,,  p,^,rw0  \u2022 ss\n\"\u2022\u2022I   t...^   K, .*.,\nPEEBLES MOTORS LTD.\nIS) BAKIR ST.\nPHONI  1090\ni\n \u2014\n^^^\n\u25a0\nm\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nSPORTS\nqi9\niards Win 9-3 to\nake Jubilee Tourney\nSwerving Cars Thrill Race Crowds\nail Cardinals came from be-\nto register seven runs in the\nthree innings nnd defeat Nel-\nF.O.E. Seniors 9-3 Saturday to\nt olt fir.st prize money of $300\nhe four-team Gulden Jubilee\nball tournament played in Nel-\nidinals reached thp finals by\nibing the hapless Slocan Val-\nAll-Stara 2*1-1 in four innings\nlay while Nelson trimmed Kim-\nsy 11-0 to become thi' other\n1st. A playoff between Kimber-\nand Slocan Valley to determine\nthird best team went to the\nKootenay club by a convinc-\n20-4 score,\nie final game, featuring Trail\nNelson, was the best contest of\nday with Trail hard-pressed be-\nfinally disposing of the Lakers on a four-rut;, seventh inn-\nsplurge.\nght-handrr Fred Townsend\nhed for Nelson in the final game\nhe and his buddies matched the\nlites for six innings, holding\nr 3-2 edge until the unlucky\nmth. Two more counters hy\ne Denwc's boys in the eighth\nie, along with a singleton in\nfinal canto, clinched the game.\nlling hurler was .lark Mathers\nirand Forks who finished off a\ndy nine-inning, three-hit per-\nlance hy whiffing the hist two\nion batters.\nI OPENER\ntl early lead was racked up by\nion in their opening game with\nibeiiey. Roy Anderson's crew\ning 10 runs in three early inn-\n, while lefty Steve Scott blank-\nhe East Kootenay team for four\nlea. Kimberley broke into the\nlng by notching five runs in\nfifth inning. A grand-slam hom-\nn the ninth by Hril nf Kimber-\nadded another four tallies, hut\nthem two runs off the pace.\nIDINALS HIT\n\u2022all Cardinals wasted little time\nStablishing a lead over the Sin-\nValley AU-Stars in the .sec md\ne of the tourney. The booming\ni of the Cards showed little\ncy for a string of Slocan pitch-\nai they sprayed 19 base-hits,\n1 for 2f) runs, about the field\ning to the damage of thc Trail\naught were nine fielding errors\nmitted by Valley players. The\n(Iter City team scored   11 runs\nin their initial time at bat and 10\nnunc* in the second inning. Mathers\nstarted on the mound for Trail and\nwas relieved by Joe Monaldi In the\nsecond Between them they did not\nallow a hit, Sloc.m's lone tally walked in by\" Monaldi who issued four\n.straight passes to first base,\nPITCHER   INJURED\nSlocan Valley team suffered their\nworst setback of the day during\ntheir playoff with Kimberley when\ntheir ace pitcher, Ted Grahame,\nsustained what was believed to have\nbeen a fractured arm. Grahame was\nabout to deliver the ball when it\nslipped from his hand Splints wcr-s\napplierl at the ball grounds and he\nwas taken by ear to Kootenay Lake\nGenera!  Hospital.\nMcAskill, who started against the\nTrail team earlier, took over on\nthe hill for Slocan and finished the\ngame. Kimberley scored five r,uns\nI in the first inning, four in the third,\na pair in the sixth and finished off\nwith nine rums in the sixth. Annul-\ndrud looped the batters for the winners with an inside-tbe-park homo\nrun in the fourth frame\nLine scores:\nNelson 253 001 0 -11    B    2\nKimberlev .000 071 4-9    4    11\nScott and Richardson; Amundrud\nand  Kilhurn.\nLineups:\nNelson Anderson. 1,ocatdli, McNabb, Richardson, Tatchell, Akl-\nyama, Abrossimo, Scott and Nash.\nKimberley R Richardson. Liv-\nIlell. F, Sullivan. W.\nMellor, C Kllburn,\nAmundrud\n11  10 1 2--2*1 19    0\no   i o a - i   o   {)\nmd Ansrl-\nC   Thring\nThe thrill of swerving cars on a sharp turn\nhushed shouting crowds at the Golden Jubilee\nMidget Auto  Races.  Here two cars In the trophy\nrace make the corner at the East end of the Civic\nCentre Recreation Grounds.\n\u2014Dally News photo.\nChallenge Cily\nSpeedboat To\nRace Next Year\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUOUST 11, IMT\u2014T\nBalling Leaders\nBy Tha Auoclated  Praia\nPlayer and club\nWalker, Phili\nBoudreau, Ind\nBefore leaving Nelson Saturday. Ke!!, Tigers\nBert Anderson and Ted Currel of DiMaggio. Yank\nVancouver  issued  a  challenge,  on Cooper, giants\nbehalf of the Vancouver Power Boat Galan\nG AB R H Pet.\n1(12 375 59 120 .344\n97 344 53 117 .340\n98 377 411 128 .339\n98 371 73 121 .326\n01 345 58 112 .325\nReds 04 284 41   90 .313\nAssociation, to race L. F. Gilbert's nun\u00bb baUed In-National League.\nLadybird next year over a two-mile MlM, Gianti, 05; American League,\ntriangular course, here. .Williams, lied Sox, 75.\nMr. Gilbert, they said, had held'    H\"m\u00ab \">n\u00ab - National  League,\nIhe  Kootenay   Lake   championship Mize, Giants, 36; American League,\nlong enough, and they intended to; Williams, Hed Sox, 25.\nwrest it from him.\nBert   Anderson   drove   the\nThunderbolt which came in second\non Friday and Ted Currel was third\nin tlie 7-11. The Thunderbolt was\nhandicapped   in   that  race  with\ndamaged   rudder,   and   it   was   (\nplained  that   the   7-11   requires\nlonger course.\nEnglish Cricket\nBaseball Scores\nBy Tho  Ctnadian  Pren\n\u2022SATURDAY\nNATIONAL\nPhiladelphia 5, Brooklyn 8\nPittsburgh 5, St. Louis 4\nBoston 9, New York 4\nChicago 8, Cincinnati 1 (tint)\nCincinnati 5, Chicago 0\nAMERICAN\nPhiladelphia 8, Washington 1\nBoston 6, New York 4\nCleveland 5, St. Louis 2 (first)\nCleveland 5, St. Louil 4 (ten innings)\nDetroit 8, Chicago 4\nINTERNATIONAL\nBuffalo at Syracuse postponed\n(rain)\nMontreal 6, Baltimore 0\nToronto 8, Newark 2\nAussies Polish\nOff (anucks\nGRECO TRIO\nARRESTED\nMillstone,   C\nGelling.    B\nlohnson an\nTrail\nSlocan City\nMathers. Monaldi '1\nmo; McAskill, Tateish\nand M   Yamada.\nLineups:\nTrail M Anselmo .1 Bilesky. K\nStanton. C Strouleor,',1 Morris, S\nMarasco, M Wolfe A. Bilesky, J\nMathers  and   Monaldi.\nSlocan Vallov- Ii F**rsvthe. K\nBavashi, Ii Crellin, Ii Posilrth\nwaite A Cush, W. Thrinj. .1 Fair\nhor.-!. F Huftv, Jr., M Y.i\nMcAskill. Tateishi. ar.d C. Thring\nSlocan 030 010 - \u25a0(   4    :i\nKimberlev 504 'b'il   2\u00bb 10    1\nT  Grahame. McAskill '?'. ai '1 F\nHuftv, Sr. Gibbons and Kiibunt.\nNelson (ml  101 000   3   3    6\nTrail O'.O 001 '21    9 13    3\nTownsend and Richardson; J. Mathers and Anselmo\nNF.W ORLEANS, Aug. 10 fAP)\u2014\nolniny Greco, Canadian welter-\n,*eu;ht champion, ins manager,\n'rankle Doyle, and his trainer,\nliekey Genaro, were arrested Sat-\nrdiiy   after   they  allegedly   struck\nci'it promoter Louis Messina who\nnleiid the iing Friday night dur-\n**.,; the lOtii round of a fight beiven Greco and Cosby Linton,\nMes-sina, whose license wa.s re-\n.dud by the State Boxing Com-\nussion   pending   investigation    of\nHundreds Attend Ball Games, Final\nDance, Exhibitions on Last Day\n01 Jubilee; 3000 See Week Exhibit\nDespite   ralnshowera   and   wind-;said Saturday was the busiest day\nstorms, large crowds were again out at the curling rink,\nfor Nelson's Jubilee celebration Saturday, final day of the week-long\nprograrfi.\nApproximately 700 saw the day-\n[iiiauihorucd entrance into the ,onfi baseball tournament, hundreds\nR\nthe trio attacked him on\n\u25a0 street here and charged him\nth saving Lin.'on from \"a sure\noekiiMt.\"\nI  was walking along very non-\n\u25a0ilantlv,\" Moss.na said\nbroke\nMc-\n:he   K\nthe various exhibits in the cur\ning rink, which enjoyed its best\nday, nearly 800 attended the final\ndance, and throngs again took in\nthe various entertainments offered\nSuddenly by Crescent Shows,\nthree guvs came along, and The Flower Show, Rod and Gun\n*.-\\,ivz. <\\ cursing and abusing Club exhibition, commercial dis-\n,ey in*, me in the jaw and in plays and films run oft* in connec-\nf\" and I went down.\" lion   with   the  sportsmen's  cxhibi-\ndrr.an .Julian Hebert said he tion,  were popular features Satur-\nup tlu- nuke and that after day.\niiid the trainer (iff,\" thc other,    Two events  were  canea off for\ni;t.\" 'the day. The fireworks display was\n,!,a jumped into the ring ln postponed  until  Sunday  night  be-\nt:i   rnur.d   Fi;ri.\nThe week-long Rod and Gun\nexhibit was visited by more than\n3000 persons, most of whom stopped also to see the films shown by\nWilf Jobbins of the National Film\nBoard. Mr. Jobbins officiated at\nmore than 10 film ihowlngs each\nday, so that well over 100 picture-;\nwere seen. The pictures depicted\nwild life and various other subjects Interesting to both children\nand adults.\nA wide variety of commercial exhibits were on view, white the three\nday Flower Show attracted a large\nshare of the visitors. Some of tiie\ngorgeoiLS flower displays, which\nhad wilted after two ho tdays, were\ned the figiiti\nnr.'i pointing\nMice   wav* d\n.d   tiie   fight   (\njii  w;\nreplaced by exhibitors for the Sat\nht   and cause of the rain, and low hanging urday crowds.\ns, gesticulating clouds  prevented   the  RC.A.F.  air     The last Jubilee Dance was sche\nto Linson's cut show which was to have been held duled to be a free strict dance, bu\nh:m   frnm   the in the afternoon. I had to be staged at thc Civic CantP\nnucd, with:    Officials conducting the exhibits'because of the poor weather.\na unanimous deci-\nize Humps Runs Scored Total Over\nmlury Mark; Drew Shackles Sox\nhis entrance\ntatement:\nuund was over\nmgratulatc Inn-\n1 I wxs feeding\nwanted to be thc\nI,i-l to congratulate him.\"\n!(Fslna   explained\ni the nug w.;n the\n1  though!   the\nI jumped into\n.  Everybody s*\ni In the lions. I\nGolfers Plan\n2-Ball Foursome\n'JUNIOR NIIMETO\nPREP FOR TRAIL\nSHOWING HERE\nBy  STEVE  ROBERTSON\nCanadian  Pren  Statt  Writer\nTith lanky Karl Drews p.'.china\nIt ball 8 2-.*)  mn.lies.  tr.e  Am-\n>D   League*!   l.ace-stttir.g   New\nk Yankees vanquished the sec-\n,-place   Boston   11**1   Sox   Sunday\nto extend the  'i auks   .ead  ove:\n1845  lea ie <!*..-,m| ioi.s ir,  12':\nlei.\nl his firs' romp.o'.e game ' t '.he\nr,   Dress   \u00bbt:*.< *\u25a0:   \u2022- \u25a0'\u25a0   nne   '\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0'*\u2022\nred tiie f.rst '.'i Six ;:: ,-:,:r:f He\ne up only  tune  hits i;n*.l  the\nth Inning when  tne only  Hos* ,:.\nwas  scored   ami   uaua'd   only\nr.  One  of  me   puses    *.o   ever-\ngerous   Ted   W..1 ..ii.s    '-'.as   in*\ntlonal\nBe Dobson, f-it.fi.' \u2022'. R '  '   11 11 11.*\nthis   sets \"ii.   1   '  n''(''   '-\u25a0' -:\u25a0'-\u25a0   a5\n] as Ins eppo: \u00ab*:**.  is- \"1  \u25a0-\u25a0'*; 1  '*!'\u2022\"\niks scoreless m.l.l   1.'*.,*  Coa.  \u25a0 '\u25a0-\u25a0\ng   when   w.'.h   :*.*.      ** .*.   S:  :'.'r\nrnwe.ss si: g.i 1  '.    '*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 *-  in  *\u25a0'*\njimatrs\nHITS\n,t   De'.ro.i,   ('.*.. .u *   Win'.e   S\"x\necie.l   11   .'..* .    :. ... i.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0!   '\u25a0-  \u2022'\u25a0is\nre I'niileVs *.  *,.-::*. h.nuT. t\nm theT.ii :s '.', 2 '.   *f tne seven'n\ncaiio *.*,**   :*.*  ii.  c ..;.\".*  ii.'nn <   hi\nlat,   While   S   \\   hrn. no, r.   *\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0::\nh seven-i.:' ; .'. nn -1 \u25a0'''i'i 'ne \u25a0 *s*\nH   ;.,   Fi**ii.**   il :'*.'. : **n   :\u25a0:.-,\nBobby   Feller   limited   St.   Louli\nIrowni   to   live   hits   in   the   tint\nmie   of   a   doubleheader   at   St\nou,l to win  h , f.fth  shutout for\nlleveland   lnd ani   and   his   14th\nIctory    of    1*.    vear,    6 0     The\nrovsns  tame   1 ack   in   the   night\nip  to  lalvage  the*r   only   -.ictary\nf the five game ser es, 4 2\nhiladelph ,,  A'\u25a0,.,*. ... ,,*  1 W.,0*.-\nton  So:.;,*   :> o... !*  !   \u25a0\u2022  '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 *\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nh   '.he   As   :     ,.**   .;  \u2022*   I***'.*mm\nItina   the   N.'*>   *'   '\u25a0    r   !..*.   .:\nmina the f '\u25a0' a *n \u2022* ! *' *r '* H \"'\nrbo: , ,,*i   * ..\"'i    .i   '-\u25a0   I'n   \u2022\nphia in*-     .   us.  \u25a0   ' \u25a0 ii '\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'\nCARDS  MOVE  UP\nOver ::i the N'a'ional League, Kt\n[,n;s Cardinals rdRi'd n half-zamr\nI'lnser ti the leading Hr iok!yn\nDodKers by (r;;.-r;^.:.^ PitU'niirjjh\nP.rates 7-5 in the second Rame of a\nriouh.ehradcr after Murrv n;eksr>n\nr.r' ! 'he 1'iratt ; \\-i fo tr !:;'< for a\n5-0 tr.umph 1:1 the open r. n.cksnn\nappeared ;.yi:n in 'V 1. .:ht--ap\n\\>.'hrr. he rrheved t'arti-r Ke:. H.;:.**;-\nhart  in  tne eighth  I'U.uv\nMeanwh.lc the D '\u25a0\u25a0<':'\u2022 rs plaved\nii.lv a smple Ramp hut wo;; it as\nH.xie Walker pared 'hrrr to a 2-0\nw;n over Ph:l*id'\\ph:n Ph.illirs by\nh.Tttin\/ :n both rur's ,*s S uthpaw\n,T\u201eo Hit: \u2022:-. st \u25a0; uft! the Vrr.U or,\nh:r   h.ts   .11   1 .it: .tch:-.;   Phx   Do:,-\nW.ilk.r   -'.r-rr   hr*-r   F*1   S\"\nHerman Keiser\nOulslrokes\nHogan, Furgol\nBy JACK  HEWINS\nSI'OKANK, W\nIi-:-r:;;.n    Kei^r\nish.. Aug  10 (AP)-\nA nine-hole medal two-ball foursome will be played Thursday night\n'at the Nelson Golf and Country\nClub.\nStarting after !i p.m., it will be n\nmixed affair. Entries are being\nhandled by Leigh McBride and W,\nP. Kapak. A dinner in the Clubhouse will follow the round.\nPlayers without partners are-\nasked to contact thc Match Committee members, who will make\nnecessary arrangements,\nNext Sunday morning, male\nmembers will compete for the C I.L\nFairview Athletic Club's Nelson\nJunior baseball team will hold n\nworkout Monday even;::;; at the\nCivic grounds in preparation for a\ngame with the Trad Juniors Sunday\nThe Nelson club is also hoping t\ntravel to Kaslo ;n the near futurt\nto play the Kaslo Seniors\nSo   far   this  season   the   Junior*.\nwho pack an imposing array\nkids, have been f-rced to 1\nmajority of their guim s aw,\nli *me due to hirk of time,\nNelson diamond. Tins romi:\nday will bo the first tune ;\nweeks that thc elub has had\ngame. Plavers ou* fm- th s\ninclude ri'.b Koehle, Hi r'\nFred    Koehle,   Rrd    K ich't\nofl\nf   Akron,   Ohio, (jup  0n   a   basis  of   full   handicap  Dozzi,\nha I\n:,u (',.:,:.: \u25a0\nThe New Yo^^\u25a0;^| v,nr, the opener 6 2 with Larry Janien winning\nhli 13th game .ind hn fcurth in fl\nrow over the Bravet. Johnny M ie\nhelped him along with, hij 36th\nhomer of the year, Mize alio iter\nrd five timei in the two gamei to\nincrease hii runi icored total fer\nthe teaton to 'Ql. thui becoming\nthe f\u25a0 rmt player in either Irague\nto  pan the century  mark.\n\u25a0, N C ,\n:re \u00ab7?\ndice tl<\nthe\nf;rdt place\n1 open  golf\n>ur:der-par\nKd Furgol\n: score*\nKeisci\nthe leaders\nuas John\nho hnd one\nmd wound\nsi:h Furgol\nfit]   today,\nwhich members expect will em\na win by a dark horse. Entries are\nbeing filed up to fi p.m. Friday, Aug.\n15, .so that the draw may bc\npublished.\nHood,\nHenn;\nJim\nBon\nKraft\nTodd.    Hi\nKi\nNew Coals Keep\nHands Busy\nCanadian Yachts\nOutrun in\nGeorqe Cup Series\nROCHKSTKIl.   N*   V .   A ;.:\nThe Rochester Y.\u201e*l*.t (\" lii's\nskippi-rcd   in*   ,T..ri:;   (I ;* :*,!,,,.*!\nwon lhc ir-;.t[..,\u25a0..,-*:i 1 (I \u25a0* *.:\nPARIS, Au?\nroats -- \"wra|\nsiiiiilur to\n.lis\n('.\nIne 11.ten\nat the Fa\nModels\nlasiii\nir.rlud,\nwith  ;,\n,-.'..-\u2022   t,h\niiit*   5\n10 (Rcii'.ers)-- Tube\naround\" Karrr.en'.s\nthat went liy lhat\ni: .ward M Siicnx\nly known designer\n\u25a0ii showii'.K here.\n*d or.e i\". K'*'.d carr,-\nbcaver collar\ns,   while   aii-\nsenes r,\nstraicht\nrli\nhold the\nThc R\nAphrodr\norday's\nihe thrr\n\u25a0Quest n\niCto\n\u25a0rs\nSoft\n\u25a0ilr!.-\nat**:*lJ\niiii.kiiit ai\n*.*  have  J*.\nToronto Life\nGuards on Strike\nranged\na der\n;ve a:i\nTORONTO,\niill   iio  :l.,l:*,i\nit in Manitoba\nNNNii'F,;\nEg S,  'i .:\n>nl  Mo *\niih.,::  As\nchu:;;*   *\nled W, <* *\nKASLO LEGION\nDONATES $25\nfO HOSPITAL\ncarded\n11 thud\ni*S unlf-\ndav   Oil\n18-holc\nsuit   of   da 1 k\nn   all-round   |\nkeWwas (\ns .eier\nwilh au a!\nndiT a '.* ne J\nid with a pl.i.d Tan\nmate!*.:!.;: scaif at\ntin\nrk of tiie jack\nhavers   of   fn\n.islar.i   wool   s\nsinus,    while\nnilcl was of h\nle band of [la\n\u2022 liie jacket\nI):,.s.scs sh in\n1!   models  pic\nntrd   \u00bb\ndress\nr    (Ira\nincluded two ta.!\nCaptures Feature\nSkills   for   afternoon   'an\nfour  inches  brl nv  tile  k \u2022\nok for New Records\njm Victoria Meet\nBy  .MM   Mr CURDY\nCinidiin   (rrn   Bul'   Writci\nICTHHIA,   A r    i *   '*  i'*    I'*\n,   1.,,,   .1-;..,*       sia:.    s   .,   1   *.s\nmAi'.CI .: i   -\u25a0',   1  \u25a0, *,  1   1 *' i*'* .   *\n\u25a0.\u25a0fl   Is'.,* *l  oi;   *.i    . I  li    -.;:,  1\nbis   I.**    iht    1.  .    \u2022    r    ll-ll   Aff\nidlflli   s'.s'.u**i   * fc   * h,au*|*    **.sli\ntit   hf'd   1**   I'**,*   fan om   ( us*\nd\u00abns    l'*.\u201el    lire    Mo.da*.     A\niday    T r   :\u25a0 r,     -.. as   ;,,**   h,*\n(   111   lil-2\nht   211   cn '<    '\u2022   1     r-i\nl lurn   :    \u25a0\u25a0-., 1   -  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0  ;  :  *.,;\ntllllirs    f***n      .4    ,  \u25a0\u2022 '\u25a0 s'.o\npxprii  '\nland ,*,:    *\nF.i'.l\n,':'. Canadian Ball\nPlayer Faces\n'   r . ,   . c.     , Suspension Charqcs\nCricket Finals knin . -     ,\\ \\\n\"nds in Deadlock l!    , i'       .\nz.t \\ *\nBreak Shoot Record\ntn f.i\ni.,n   S-i s'1   H    r   \u25a0\nA,   \\i sSs   Z,t   ROO'i   p.\nI    r   !*\u2022,:\u25a0*.  ,.*\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u201e\nII : \\r.    ' W \u25a0,!  [..\n; \u25a0 \u25a0 r',.  ' :*i'        \u25a0 i r\n\u25a0I   T ;xr\ni,    nf   Y.i\nI'PllON'TO. Aur   lfl '(']'\u2022       T\n,\u201e   *  ,        f.- .1   :: tn-pi.ivinci.il   enckrt   rh;n\n\u25a0 '-ii.'Zry    f* ;\u25a0    thr    H.ram    W ilk\n, Tinphv   ir-uZiVd  t (dav   m   n   ' r  \\u*\n,'\"     j '\",   Iwivn Hnlmh Ciilunili ,i iin I ' U.'.-t:-.*)      Tor   nu\n'! ^ ,;|.'r  whirh  j.Htitlv   ihaic   thr   I \"\u2022\u25a0   *.*tu*r Skiff.   *.i\\\n\\.     n'i',,..-,   >\u2022   ^rok-l'Hii;   lournanipnt   in   u huh i!**vn hv  '\nV    l  '        guphfc   nrd   ?   I'l-Mirifi   rW-vrn   hIs.i Y\u00abm k   Y,r\n, [he   cotnpPtH -r.in   drni;\nt!)p tPC       In Ihtlr (m-tl ganif SfltuH.iv Hn' wo:].I   --n * \u25a0.   *  \u25a0\n*.,it.   t*KP iih rnlumbia and Ontario wr-.r mi- tlir Y.hihi v.* \u25a0   '\n.ihlp tn hrcak thtir deadlock, thnr uup   pcrj^i,'    \\V\nlapt   match  ending   in   a   \u25a0': ,r-.<-'   Or. wfir v.o\\ '.,'.'\u25a0\u25a0\nred   191   run*   wh:>   HritWi Nrw York\n- \u25a0  vi    s-i.a .,-.,(\n\\c\\   ,\u00ab   f-ill   %)*..*,  r   , f   l\nn   i   Divu'llr\nMl 7'.\nt:i\nColumbia had   1S5 fnr  nmr  wu-krti ColmRii. wl-n mr.l ' Mir.   f  \u25a0  :\u25a0\nit! thr c!n<f of plav Tnrnnt.i   M..pV   I r..f.        :    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 I   '\nMranwlulp   Quebrc   drfr.^rd   the thr  Hr,.:s l.i-t Th \u25a0:*:.,\u25a0.   !    M .1 -\nl':,i,nn   bv   7\/   run*   m    tin-   ntlun don   n  111-!   : \u25a0\u25a0\nf 'm|   iv il,h   tn,(|   h;n!   n.i  I).  110 1;  a- M:      S     \",         .1\n\u25a0\u00bb.     ,',,*\u25a0*,    ,,;\u25a0  1 P     (j,r'wr    -.. ,i'ti\\ '.  im*.  '\"*.-.      '   \u2022\ny: : w-   ii..-*Z  I,\". fo,   the lose: . ^-r\\,--.r ,-( ,.,,-\nLONDON,  Aug.  10  (Reuters)\nIn  a  day  in  which  batsmen  gen- j SUNDAY\ntrally   had    the   measure   of   the  ..._.-...,   .......\nbowlers, Peter Smith, the Essex f^\u2122?*!- LE^?V,?n ^ \u00ab .\nspin bowler who wont to Au\u00ab-1 Philadelphia 000 000 000-0 J\ntralia   last  winter   with   Errand's'Br\u00aboklyn 100 000 (Ux-2   7\n[tea. Saturday   captured   eight   Lei-1    Donnelly   and   Seminick;\ncestershire   wickets   for   08   runs an\nfor one of the best Individual per-\nIformancea   in   opening  day's  play\n'of  County  cricket  games.\nj    Middlesex   scored   537   runs   fur\nI the   ols   of   ony   two   wickets   in\nI their game with Surrey. Ruberlsun\nAug  10 (CP)\u2014Can-1 w^\u00b0 scored   ^7,   and   brown   had\nspectator's role lnian   \u00b0P^nillg   partnership   of   more\n'than 200.\nScores:\nSomerset vs. Glamorgan, first\ninnings: Somerset Hlfi for nine\nwickets declared; Glamorgan 21\nfor no wickets.\nSurrey vs. Middlesex. First Innings:  Middlesex  537 fir two.\nSussex vs. Kent. First innings;\nKent H63 for nine declared; Sussex  54 for  one.\nYorkshire vs. Gloucestershire.\nFirst innings: Nottinghamshire\n191:   Derbyshire  204  for  one.\nNorthamptonshire 170; Northamptonshire   191   for  eight.\nHampshire vs, Warwickshire.\nFirst   inir.gs:   Hampshire   394   f' >r\nMONTREAT\nada assumed\nI the Davis Cup competition today as\nI the Australian  net team, victorious!\n'without the loss nf a set in five\nmatches against the court men representing the nation, prepared to\nIplay against Czechoslovakia  in  the\ninter-zone final.\nDinny   Pails   and   Goof   Browa,\n] Australia's two singles players, completed their nation's sweep against\n!Canada Saturday on the grass courts\nlat the Mmmt Royal Tennis Club by\ntaking the measure of Brendan\nMacken and Henri Rochon. Pails\ndefeated Macken 6-4, 6-2, 6-2 while\nllrown accounted for Rochon 6-3,\n0-7, 6-2.\nPaiLs appeared mnre Impressive\nthan his singles mate, Brown, in his\ntwo matches against the Canadians.\nHe always seemed to have plenty\nin reserve in defeating Rochon\nThursday, Bl, 6-4, 6-2 and he held\nthe upper hand at all stages against\nMacken.\n13ROWN IN TROUBLE\nBrown, by comparison, had a fair\n\u25a0 imount of trouble in beating Macken on opening day, 6-4, 6-4, 6-1. His\nservice, a booming ace threat\nagainst Macken, proved unreliable\nagainst Rochon.\nThc little French-Canadian broke\nthrough Brown's serve twice, the\nonly times in five matches that the\nAussies Inst service, and there were\na half-do?.en other occasions w'r.rr.\nCrown fell behind 0-30 or 15-40 or\nstrvice.\nOn contrast, PaiLs served up five\nLove gair.es in three sets against\nMacken and broke through Mack-\nen's serve three times at Love. Or.ec,\nPails won 10 straight points in the\nfust set. Again, in the second set\nhe won three complete games \u2014 12\nsum -si-.ve points \u2014 at Love. He\npolished off the second set with a\n.sTv.ce ace.\nI\n0\nHatten\nFirst game:\nBoston 000 000 200-2   8   2\nNew York        000 120 12x-fl 10   1\nSpahn, Lanfranconi (6), Wright\n(7), Johnson (0) and Camelli, Masi\n17); Jansen and W. Cooper.\nSecond game:\nBoston 000 001 114\u20147 U   0\nNew  York 020 002 010-5 11   0\nBarrett, Shoun (8), Johnson (8),\nFranconi <0i, Spahn (9) and Masi;\nHansen, Trinkle (8), Jansen (9) and\nLombardi, W. Cooper (0).\nCine\nChicago ...\nVandermei\nand  McC.ullf\nFirst gam*\nPittsburgh\nSt. Louis\n000 101  100-3\n000 020 02x-4\n\u2022   and   Mueller;\nigh.\n12   2\n7   2\nLade\nIJ?\nsix.\nEssex vs. Leicestershire. Fir.it\ninnings: Leicestershire 388; Essex\n36 for nne.\nSouth    Africa    vs.    Lancashire\nSouth Africa 84 for no wickets\nFirst     innings:     Lancashire     218;\nRoyal Navy vs. RAF. R A F\nwon by seven wickets. First \\n-\nnings: Royal Navy 157; RAF. 219\nSecond innings: Rolay Navy 177;\nRAF, llti for three.\nBritish Soccer\nResults\nLONDON.  Aug.  10   (Ik-uters)   -\nivsiiliivl  .is   full-.ws: '\nSCOTTISH   LEAGUE   CUP\nDIVISION   A\nClyde   -I    Airdrcor.iar.s   2\nDundee 5. Third Lanark o\nFalkirk   5   P.ilnrk   Thistle   6\nHibernian  1.  iiearla 2\nM.thcrwell 4 Queen o! thc S\nMOXTRKAI\nA'.:?\nin    ICPI\n-\n:- chn\n!*iv.,ki\nl\nwill\npm   lis  hi \u2022*\nr a |\n.ace ::\nhe C.\nallengc rou\nid\n:* Ihe\nD.ivis\nL\nup 0\nl iwn slaiw\ntnier\n.la:\n11 V\nDrobny     a\nid\n.ihm.s\nav Co\nk.\nTho\nCavil\n1\nhave:\n5,   fresh   from\nn(|U,**\niv  by\nCi :;i.\nY.\na\nIV\nir ope\n- ami\nere\narrived  hi\n..nin were\nc Moun*. Ii\".\nhey will rr.\nQueens Park 4\nRangers 2. Cei\nSl\nMnrCn 1\nc 0.\ni   0,   Aberdeen\nLEAGUE  CUP\nRovers 3. Dundee Cn:\nfinal\n'k,\nik n,\nay:ng\nmanager Dr. Franl\nid they will bo j0::.t\n.v days by a third team men\n(i:.,lav Hecht, who now :s :\nn.ti'J States, but that th\n; r::p player, now in li\nytt., *.*. .11 be ured only in ,i\nRecord Dance\nCrowd Sees\nQueen Crowned\nA  i,    id   d.m.-e  crowd  saw\nSCOTTISH\nDIVISION\nAlbion\nfl.\nAl'.oa   Athletic\ncademicals   2\nAyr United  2,   Kiln a:\nDunfermline    A'hletic\nHovers  2\nDumbarton   5.   Sler.h*-\nKast   Fife   .1.   Stirling\nSt. Johnstone 5, Arbr.*\nFort Garry Out\nOf Race\nVANCOUVER,\nFavorites ran hot\n'.rack at Mailings 1\nhere Saturday.\nFort Carry, one .\nwas   scratched    f:\neve:*,:, the C   A   Ci\nLadv\nHam!\n000 000 005\u20140   4   0\n001 040 OOx-S 11    1\nHoe, Lyons (5i  and Howell, Salkeld (8); Dickson and Wilbur.\nSecond game:\nPittsburgh 000 200 030\u20148 U\nSt. Louis 024 000 lOx-7 14\nBonham, Singleton (5), Roe (6),\nRugby 181 and Kluttz; Burkhart.\nDickson (8) and Garagiola, Wilber\n18).\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nWashington      000 000 002\u2014 1   15   (I\nPhiladelphia    100 020 OOx\u2014 3   9   0\nWalt Masterson, Marino Pierctti\n18) and Rick Ferrell, Joe Coleman\nand Buddy Rosar.\nSecond game:\nWashington       000 300 002\u20145   0   1\nPhiladelphia      101 000 000-2 12   2\nScarborough   and   Evans;   Flores\nand Guerra.\nNew York\nBoston\nDrews,   P\nDobson and Tebbetts.\nChicago 000 503 030-10 14   0\nDetroit 010 000 001- I   7   S\nLopat and Tresh; Hutchinson,\nH.,Ottoman (71  and Swift.\nFirst game:\nSt, Louis 000 000 000\u20140   D   1\nCleveland 000 201 30x\u2014\u00ab 10   0\nKramer, Brown (7) and Moss;\nr\". iler and Hegan.\nSecond game:\n1.   Louis 000 301 000-4 U    0\nicv,'.and 000 001 001- 2   7    1\nZoldak,  Moulder   (8|   and  Early;\niCack, Willis 18)  and Lopez.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nJersev City 7. Syracuse 5.\nToronto 2 0, Buffalo 7 12,\nNewark 3 3, Montreal 1 4,\nBaltimore 4 0. Rochester 0, 5.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nKansas City 2. Toledo 1\nSt   Paul 6, Indianapolis 7.\nMinneapolis 0, I,ouisville 8\nMilwaukee 3, Columbus 8\n000 000 002-2 t 1\n000 000 001\u20141 S 0\n'8)   and  Robinson;\nAug\nand c\nin (CP\nid or, au\nS-l *\nAid And Bonus\nFor Food\nShort Eskimos\nOTTAWA,   Aug    10    (CP) -- A\n'.\u25a0v.tch ;n lhe migration routo of th*\n\u25a0fnrthlar; l's ranhnu herds hai left\nt.r.y r ;\/*:.v ,,( Eskimos threa'.rn-\n!   v. ;'.:i   5' s:\\--Z.,-ir.   in   an   Lsola'.eri\nr.t r < '. t:;e Northwest Territories.\n}',.:'. t'>' r.v.ivrV misfortune ii be-\n\",;   '.:\u25a0.:\u25a0 1   ln'.n   a   n.inor  bonanza,\n;\u25a0   ' :c 'Hk- *:\\r:ri   Department,   in\n'.: .\"  a  fi'-'.r.g  rrlii'f  expedl-\n.  r.    ',  \" .::.\u2022,    n!j i    cilrclaicd    thf\n\u25a0 u:;   Y.Z.,.' . i   l.ir.Z.Z.c*-   would   bt\n,.:,. i    y  '  7  t .sh;-  h ,:v.;?ri under\n*\u25a0  V .r , ,   A\/   ,u:,'.!  Act,\n.:. .',',; '.'. :I i o r.ewi to tht\n'  :\u25a0 'r   rr.cn   r-uely\n\u25a0   ;.,*  :\u25a0  \u2022\u25a0\u25a0:-.\u2022 rv  :n  the  South-\nv- \u201e\u25a0*\u201e \u25a0.: ' ' K* \u25a0 'A-at.r, N.W.T.,\n\u25a0 :,'    :*, ,! !\"'' \\! !\u25a0\u2022;\u2022 -b.-i border\nGood Companions\nl ' .';    C    * *\u25a0 ,*',\n\u2022*.   ,   1     li, Sl:\nC      *  I\nI\n., !;,\u201e *s,  .'    it   s*.,^   w    \\   ',i\n, A.*,\"   .    II        \\      II      till,  *   '\u25a0' ',    1   *\nA ,  * i.  ii ; ,\\; c   \u25a0-.-\u25a0  ab  * ji\n,; *,.*,,. *,*   .1    J     I!   * *\u25a0   ,   '\u25a0'\u25a0    ':'\u25a0\n\u25a0'., ,,*   !   I     (ius*..'*.*,!\n,,         IIHVroN,    Al'a     'll'i Wl\nIs , !\u00bb,*\u00ab \u25a0 i a s .1 *|,'*.  * ' s'vnpl HI\nip Is. l'..s**i \u201e.**\u25a0   I*   11   It,   I,  lo*.*   I\n ;**,r  ; r* I   I a'.  \u2022 **. , f  a  s\n1    tfad ,*l\nOLD CHUM\nThe Tobacco of Quality\ncut comi ion hipi    cut riNi for rouino your own\n ^^-.9\u2014\u2014\u2014^-^\u2014\nft\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11,1947\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nPassengers, Crew of Nascopie Reach Churchill\nHappiness plainly written all over their faces,\nthis group of passengers and crew of the wrecked\nNascopie are shown aboard the N. B. MacLean with\nmall they received on their arrival at Churchill,\nMan, Left to right are, front row: George Morri\nson of Kincardine, Ont., Edward Bind of Toronto,\nOnt,, and Dave Andrew of Winnipeg, Man. Seen\nIn the back row are stewards whose work aboard\nthe wrecked Nascopie was highly praised by their\nofficer In charge.\nNascopie Hero   Sister Kenny Back   On Probation\nWtfP.\n^Hf^r.frZ> \u25a0\n-.i.  \"\u25a0\u25a0\n\u00aby Sz'..\nWy\nrZi\n\u25a0. \u25a0 %K.?*;z~r '\n' i '\"\u2022\nJ- rffsJ\n\u25a0f (.,' .,.* ....\n* .-,\\ \u25a0' Z \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\n^^*H^^\n.. \\ .. I^JBwfc1\nShown above Is Alex Steven-\nion, of Ottawa, whose work\naboard the Nascopie was praised\nby tbe officer In charge. Cause\nof the Nascopie wreck was\nblamed by officials as a combination of circumstances beyond\nhuman control.\nHudson Bay Boss\nArriving In New York on the\nQueen Elizabeth, Sister Elizabeth Kenny, world-famed crusader against Infantile paralysis, completes a tour of 14 countries demonstrating her treatment for the much dreaded dis-\nCrashes Curtain\nAmong arrival* In New York\nen the S.3. Queen Elizabeth wn\nSir P. Ashley Cooper, Governor\nof the Hudson's Bay Co., and i\nDirector of the Bank of England\n\u2014 the \"Old Lady of Threadnee-\ndie Street\"\u2014which was recently nationalized by the Lsbor\nGovernment of  Britain,\nHFCINA <(T^ - Tennis cV: fci\n-denyin^tration teams of tf p p!ar-\nti to t^nrh br(f.r.r*TS th* '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\nF'Zr.t+u dlvls'nn rt* Lh\" -SmIc*'-\n.h-w-t\" (o\\*e:r.m*\u00bbr* s-.d *'-.\u00bb\nrHr.'s nf the gam* -.v!'1 to*:: s rh\n*'T\\ Saskateh^'svar, this ^\u25a0:rr.r.:>>r\nr*n completion of r.eR'.A'i rt r.-w\nunder wiy hfwr, lh,\u00ab Fhys n\nii-yr r   T\u00abn:s   C. .b\nSIZES\n12-20\n30-42\nVnwdan, TTlafitbi   I\n8UCH EASY SEWING i|U\nGet into a carefree mood! Get in- --\nto this frock, Pattern 0218. So simple jj\nyet stunning, so suitable for nil or- Z\ncations! Choose frnm four sleeve O\nversions. Eyelet is optional. g)\nThin pattern Rives perfect fit, Is\neasy to use. Complete, illustrated;\nSew Chart shows vou every siep.    I\nPattern 9218 in sizes 12, 11 16, 18,\n20; 30, 32, 34, 3fi, 38, 40, 42. Size 16\ntakes 3's yards 35-inch fabric. \\\nShown leaving Federal court\nIn San Diego, Calif., Is Mrs. Alfred Wesley Ingalls. She was\nfined $2500 and placed on five\nyears' probation with a provi-\nilon that she make rent itu tion to\nDora Jones, the Ne-gro maid she\nwai convicted  of  enslaving,\nrl Elizabeth Arrival\nil     Wl  Q\n^>U.sM,   \\J  V    UckLVft.\nUSE  UP SCRAPS\nSend TWENTY FIVE CENTS In\ncoins *'1,,,Tips cannot hp .icceptr-)\nfor each pattern to Nelson Daily\nNev.i, Pattern D.*p,t., 2(6 Baker\nStreet. Nelson, BC Print pLunly\nPATTERN NUMBER your NAVE\nand   ADDRESS.\nAUNT HET\nB>   ROBERT   UUII.LEN\nEither    Dorothy,   flnl    A-e-1.\n'.\"   *-ul\"*rll   \u00ab \u2014,\"   to   [\u2022\u2022   \u2022 *\"!\u25a0\n\"\"It.d    In   t>-e    80V*el    I\"   ~n,    |.\nrlvn hark it LlGuirdu Fif'd\nN Y A furrier. MIm Do-nthy\nnulled hack the \"iron c jrta n\"\nlo attend tor C ty o' L\" \"*\u2022\u25a0 A II\nl.rit   '\u201e>   auction   I r.e   \".11.\nSome rjsn v.ear fri hats: lome\nrjn'l A---Q If. m, is D \u00bb\"\u00ab\nWv\u00abva'd. Rnt'sh trtret. *,br\n, .,.*, .,,\u201e,\u201e,..,,a \u201e ,,.. II c,\n,-.   A.,   r,.,   ,\u201e   * Cavikirl.**     SI*.\n\u2022 I h o a. n in a lonely I A* r fram\nng chacrau as she A-r :rb in\nNe.s York , n l**e Queen El*\/a\nI ....    si\"     i   ,  - -. ,\"j   on   i- - I or\nThey'll Do It Ever)' lime\n^Bff_.\nMO-HONEST, ^Y\/\nOFFlSHER-SHELPW\nME-ALL I HAD Ji '\nWASH TWO        ''-\n4(4>l     Z'\/.let,   li- '^\nFCAnK .1 r\\NLEAV\\'\n___ 'i*\"l MTTftHIX I'Vl Lift HIlM,\nfr   >.'ikii*jr,\\r\\)i is. *>\"n*s\/\n\\,i\n\"Mv V'isl'iu*. I  nrvrr  hm  ;ii  vsll\nn*.r,  hr nn-plv  <::f  ',\"   \u25a0*\u25a0'  n*,i:c\niy^sPi\n\\OH-1ee*e*ato>,.i\u00ab,vau^m\u00abtt.i |\n|?INISHED.,r-AND,w\u201eHl\nMER LAST GASP-THAT IN- *\nSIGNIFICANT LITTLE. BLONDE\nMARCHES INTO THE. HALL OP\nMUSICAL 1MMORTALITY.'.'-\nYOU'RX NOT DAISY MAE.'.'\nYOU'RE NOT EVEM DEAD.*7-\nYO' IS (\"SflOAV-w) RIGHT\nFROM BEGINNIN'T'END.-rJ\n-IN TH' BEGINNIN,'\nAH LEAPED OUTA TH* ; ,\nBRUSH.T'fiRAB DAISV J\nMAE-;\n-A-\n:A\nPOP YOU'RE REAL GOOD ^'\"'','1\nAT THINKING UP EXCUSE?\nWHEN VOU COME HOME\nLATE--WILL YOU\nHELP ME '\nno-onpfrv -'m MOT eci'l-3\nmiT  A.--TSA I.Yfr:,*::.- - -I'M\noor,  D*7\/.\u00bbi TO ' .mm Ar       r'*]\ntijat***, c-r-bO\nvfjj r\/..;'T   r.l\"\na,;v iX> 1* <   \"\ni\nOU-VES-M1S6 T| yru'.MM\n\u2022\u25a0in-f-AV pEaD - ' >' Wv-\nR IT I'M  COI'-J'-i   r(J ',[\"{=\nZ-OK'-[Z AflliMii-'',   TU!U\n__      APTtfUNUOJ' __J\n'\u2014\\T\nift\nWELL-WV-IAT\nWANT '\nVJ\u00bb\n^AT PO l-\u00ab\nMtAKJ  RV\n\"iAvsiir,\nTHAT\u2022 \t\nI DltmiT SAV THAT, -5*1\nI SAID HE WAS A80AI?P\nWHEN WE TOOK OFF BUT\nWAS NOT ABOARP\nWHEN WE LAMPED.\nWELL- IWT IT THE SAWE\nTHING? 10U 6*W NO PARACHUTE HE COOLD HAVE USED,\n\u00ab1P YC*U*y*V HE COULDN'T\nHAVE FALLEN OUT. TOO,\nDIDN'T HE CONF'DETHAT\nUE WOULD DO A\nFADEOUT l?ATHEJ\/  UUT\nNOT VERY WIU.'\nDON'T VOI *;ee,\u00ab\u00ab1\nTH6 1*5 COINS TOM\nQtllTEASHaKTOTH\nGIRL, AND lPKIMISEj\nTHIRSTY ID...B*<IEAJ\nTHE NEWS GENTLY.\nEllDinC.\nTHE\n\u2022STBANftf\nOCCJOA'US\nC\u00bb THE\nMVSTIOlOJ*\nCHATEAU,\nFCCTLOClf\nWATCH 64\nTHEU\nPRtPASE\nTO\nVURtER\nKltii-Z\n'&K\\ I   dC.HEAO.\n*^S5 S   WAH.. Kit.\nti%JZ u \"\"\u25a0'\nJ\nfl JLi'-scrrA stcpthit'\n\u25a0 BUT IWN 1MISS.lTlLto\nCtUiuS fctl BOTH IfiMS\n\/Meanwhile, pwh ha^heapd the dh\u00abp-c\n'.^UEAL1N6 DOWN T\u00abE Slew ts* ,h \u2014\nNC.fa csrA,*[3\ntuere 2 6f \u25a0*. :J\u00ab  ,:J\n\u25a0j that : *-?s *. LL'r.y\nHt  TlCs.10 CU - ,,[ ',\nVELUNG tCR HELl\n1\n^l^B^\/I\njn M\n^,35-iSl\n ^\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbvir,w.^'p\u00bbT^^,,i\u2122*^^upii)p\u00abp^(|p^i(pr5\"\n'(pb^ww . ifw\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\u25a0!!*\u201e!t(lf\u00ab(l*'\u2022\u2022f-S^MIp.W'1?w>\u00bb#Ws;\u00abi\".\u00bb.\u00bb\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab!\u25bail.u)>***tim*sm ee*'1*'\n\t\n\u00b0l\u00ab)\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nBIRTHS\nPERSONAL\n\u2022ACKAY-To   Mr.   and   Mn.   J.\nMackay  of Crescent  Valley, at\ntenay   Lake   General   Hospital,\n6, a son.\nHELP WANTED\npntractor to construct rock\ndam. Must have equip-\nmt to load and move 3000\n6000 yds. of broken rock.\nlenville Gold Mines\nLtd.\nBox 390    Phone 189-Rl\niLS WANTED-ANY GIKLS IN-\nIrested In learnlnK packing and\nIrtlng apples and doing so for\nfcro or three months: please anplv\n\\ P. O. Box 430, Vernon, B C\nomfortable. clean cahlns with or\nIthout board provided. Kxcellent\nlance to earn good money ln a\ntort period Wages have been ln-\n\u2022eased 20 per cent over last year's\n'ttl.\nftSffS WANTED - MICHEL\nlospltal, Michel, BC Salary\n~~ 00 per month, less $30 00 full\nalntenance Seventeen beds, no\naternity. Attractive living quar.\n\u25a0ra. Two and one half days vaca-\nIon credits for each month's\nork. Aoply Dr. R. M. Glasgow.\nIchel. BC.\nOCERY CLERK for order\nounter.     Male or female.\ntate age and experience in\nBrst   letter,   or   apply   at\niffice.\nITDSON'S BAY COMPANY\nlm GROWER ' IN OLIVER\n\u25a0anti an experienced orchard\nid Immediately, married and\ntth working wife. Needed till\nCt. 30 Cabin, wood and water\npplled. Electric light ln cabin\npply to P C. Coates, Phone 43G\nliver. B   C.\nNTED - MINERS, MUCKERS,\ndrift on contract basis and take\n\\rtr new camp. JJslnjt portable\nj compressor and Jack-bits 1,0\nted In Slocan District, up from\n|hree Forks Write Miner Boy\n820.  Nelaon, or phont  Eu*\n[hratea Mine,\t\nNTKft-BOrtKKEEPER, MALE\nfemale. Capable of handlinp\nbmplete accounting system of\n\u25a0elson retail store. Aply stating\nptperience. salary expected, to\nlox S15S, Daily News.\niKTED - MAN AND WTTE OR\nomen to do cleaning and Janitor\nork at auto camp, no children\n.coommodationj provided If\nJacessary. Apply Lakeside Bunga-\nkw Court. BOB Nelson Ave.\nWAWANES'X MUTUAL TIRE ttl-\nsurance Co D L Kerr, Agent.\nWhen in Vancouver stop at\nAimer Hotel, Opp. C.P.R   Depot.\nSPOT CASH FOR USED GOODS\nof all kinds Phone 1081 Cheu\n524 Vernon.\nMAtTRESSES1   A N D \" PILLOWS\nrenovated, spring-filled. Crib mattresses Nelson Bedding Co., 301\nBaker St., Phone 1314.\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nsecretaries We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order Immediately Daily Newi Printing\nDept., Nelaon British Columbia,\nMEN'S PERSONAL DRUO SUN-\ndrleit 24 samples. $1.00, or lt Deluxe assorted, $1 00 mailed ln plain\nsealed wrapper Finest quality,\nteited. guaranteed Bargain Catalogue free Western Dlitrlbuton,\nDept. RN, 85 Ray Bldg., Vancouver.\n290      LIONS   PHOTO     y9^\nP O Box 434, Vancouver, B C.\nAny 8 exposure roll developed\nand   printed   29c.   Reprinta-4c\neach.   Giant  alie\u20147c  each\n5x7 Enlargement Coupon with\neach order\nLADIES! DELAYED MENSTRUA-\ntion Why worry? Smart women\nsay new, Improved, triple-strength\nDelaye Pills give prompt effective\nrelief for overdue, painful or irregular periods (Regularly $8.00.)\nOur price, $300. postpaid via Air\nmail In plain, sealed wrapper (C.\nOD. if you prefer) Women ahould\nkeep a box on hand at all times.\nOrder yours right now! Weitern\nDistributors, Dept ACN. 83 Ray\nBldg., Vancouver.\nNIAGARA\nOn* Trip\nAUTO LOANS\nPHONE FIRST TO GET AN AUTO\nLOAN IN A SINGLE TRIP. $20-\n$1000 ON OWNER'S SIGNATURE\nLITE INSURANCE AT NO EXTRA\nCOST.\nNIAGARA\nFINANCl COMPANY LIMITED\nEst'd. 1930.\nlulte  1, 500  Baker  Street\nNelson, Phone 1095.\nWANTID, MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE-WATER WELL CASING\nWANTED 2-INCH STANDARD\nPIPE  IMMEDIATILY\nHECTOR MACHINE CO.. LTD.\nPipe Line Contractors\nOth Ave. and 19th St.. Eaat\nCALOARY, Alta.\nmP ttt VOUft StRAP MtTALs\nor Iron Any quantity Top pricei\npaid. Active Trading Company\n910 Powell St..  Vancouver.  BC.\n(VANWft - CLEAN CcTOM\nraga, buttoni removed 7c Ib.\nBring to Daily Newi\nWANTED -SMALL   MODERN\npiano. Phone 1198-X.\nmP Y6uS HiDes TO J p itoft-\n\u00aban Nelson B C\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT, BY SEPTEM-\nber 1st, unfurnished house or suite\nby mother and two Junior High\nchildren. Careful tenanti. Excellent referencei. Apply Box 793,\nDally Newt.\nWfWLb OKI K> EXdHANGfi\nmodern rented houie across lake\ntwo milei from ferry suitable for\nWinter occupancy for auite or\nhouie In town. Phone 481-Y-l.\nWANTED - ROOM AND BOARD\ner houiekeeplng room, by Sept.\nMarjorie Serrei, Harrop. B. C.\nWORKING GIRL WANTS 1 OR 2\nhouiekeeplng roomi. Box 3188,\nDally News.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT - CLOSE\nin. Phone S53-R.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT. BY THE\nmonth. Apply Stirling Hotel.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nFOR SALE - HIGHLY BRED,\niprlnger spaniel pups, both colors,\nalio Springer pup 4 monthi old,\npartly trained under good command, retrieves to hand, obeys\nwhistle. Sire son of ch. Keith's\nBrownie Dam daughter nf rh,\nBuckarro of Tors Park.\u2014J. A.\nRowland. Silverton, B   C.\nFOR SALI. MISCELLANEOUS\nStone Bord\nA Western Gyp$um Product\nHARD SURFACE\nSMOOTH\nDURABLE\nFIREPROOF\nWill not warp and will take any\ntype of decoration.\nH-lnch thick, 4 ft. wide, in lengthi\nof 8, 7, 8, and 9 feet\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n214 Hall St\nPhone IB\nMining,' Milling   and   Sawmill\nMachinery, Building and Contractor!' Supplies.\n\"If It'i machinery you wint,\nconsult ua.\nFOR SALE - 10-TUBE CABINET\nradio. Apply 704 Fell St, Box\n1142. Dally Newi.\nFOR SALE -TRAILER, GOOD\ncondition, 2 spare tirea. Apply 815\nSilica St.. Phone 355-R.\nPIPE - FfTTINGS-TUBES, SPE-\nclal low prices. Active Trading\nCo.,  916   Powell  St.,  Vancouver.\nFOR SALE\u20141 carload of lit cut\nbailed alfalfa, about 17 toni. Write\nto John Tajenar, Box 223, Creiton.\n1 KITCHEN SINK, 1 COLLAP-\nsible baby buggy. Apply Fink's\nPrint Shop.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SALE\n(FAIRVIEW)\nNew home, require! iome finish.\nFull cement foundition. Thii\nhouie cm be lived in now and\nflniihed at your convenience. 2\n^ $4700\nPrice\nALSO\nHome with 3 bedroomi, ileep-\nIng porch, good white plumbing.\ng** * $3750\nA Very Lovely Home\nSome termi. quick occupancy.\nT.\u00b0rm\u2122\u00b0nt \"CtUm'      $6500\nQuick occupancy.\nSmall House\nQOTTAGE TYPE\n> bedroomi, ilttlng room and\ndining room. Stone foundation,\nwhite 3-plece plumbing. Needa\niome decorating and a few re-\npaln. Close In, no $9350\ngirden **\nImmediate occupancy.\nFour Room Cottage\nAll newly decorated, linoleums,\nrange and heater.      $3 f 00\nImmediate occupancy.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE OF CLOSURE\nSection 119, Subsection 1 of the\n\"FOREST ACT'\n\"In view of the hazardoui condltloni of the foreit cover, lt li hereby\ndeclared that the araaa described below are closed dlitrlcti that no person shall enter or be ln for,the purpose of recreation, camping, fiihlng,\nhunting, berry-picking, proipecting\nfor mlnerala, or any other like pur-\npoae, without first obtaining from\nthe Forest Service a written permit\ntherefor, until further notice.\"\nAll landi situate within the watershed of Crawford Creek lying\nEait of the Eaat boundarlea of Lot\n6937 and Sub-Lot 14 of Lot 4395,\nKootenay Land Diltrict\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1947-'\nFamed Architect Plam\nAllQlass Hotel\nBy JACK RUTLEDGE .lobby. A storage ipace under thi\nDALLAS, Tex., (AP)\u2014A 47-stor-[ h\u00b0<el would accommdate 1500 auto\ney hotel of glaas, to be erected here mobiles. The roof garden would be\nat a cost of between $10,000,000 and I covered   with  a   traniparent  glass\n$12,000,000,   has  beeq   designed   by jceihng.\nFrank Lloyd Wright, International-     Skeleton of the hotel would b,\nly famed architect, for Rogers Locy \"M\" stecl ln can'ilevered construc\nTexas oil man and financier.\nI.acy estimates the possible start\ntion, and the outer walla, a radical\ncparture, would be dlamond-shap\nof construction at about two years i*-''1 8lass Pa,le\" wltl> \u00bbn axl*> measur\nfrom now. Under normal conditions I ln8 ,lve '\"'\u25a0 \u2022\u2022\u25a0*'* mch\"- Th<l Pan\"\nhe said, completion of the building | would consist of two cuti of plate\nwould require from 15 to 18 monthi I t'lass   wilh   \"   quarter-Inch   plastic\nCommencing at the S. E. corner\nof Lot 889, Kootenay Land Diitrlct;\nthence North 20 chains, more or less,\nto the angle corner on Northerly\nboundary ot Lot 888; thence IJast\nalong the Northerly boundary of Lot\n888 to the height of land which\nforms the Northerly boundary of the\ndrainage area of Akokll (Goat) Hon of glass, magnesium and light\nCreek; thence North-easterly, East-'stainlesi steel was as \"simple as tho\nerly, Southerly, and. Westerly along.branching of a tree from Ita trunk.\"\nafter work begins.\nWright who admittedly has no\nlove for cities and ikyacraperi, said\nhis new type structure would be\n\"a human habitation of harmonious\nunity.\"\n\"I have avoided making another\nstore and office-building hotel of\nwhich the nation is too full already\"\nhe said.\nThe architect said the construc-\nfilling. This is a new development\nsvhich Wright haa teited for Texas\nhailstorms.\nEach row of panes would project\nfrom two to four inches. This would\nafford an optical illusion as to the\nhotel's height and make the walla\nself-cleaning without drip itreaks\nfrom rain.\nThe panes are to be aelf-lnmlat-\nmg against the weather, and tran-\nsluscent. In daytime they would\ncover each room with sufficient\nights unnecessary even for reading.\nNorth and West along the East and\nNorth boundaries, respectively, of\nlaid Block 4 to the South-east corner\nof  Block 3 of Lot 888.  Plan 817\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nAUTOMOTIVE,\n20 Buses for\nSale\nFOR SALE-Wurlitzer B-flat tenor\nsaxophone, fair condition. Price\n$120. Apply Box 104, Nakusp, B. C.\nFOR SALE - ALASKAN 2-OVEN\nheavy duty cooking range, ilightly used. Rex Hotel, Trail.\nFOR SALE - MASSEY-HARRIS\npotato digger $100.00. Box 5143\nDaily News.\nGUN  EXCHANGE-\nMen'fi Shop.\nJACK BOYCE\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR' SALE - LATE MODEL\nlight weight 6 h p Marine engine\nlike new. Phone 473-Y.\nENOGRAPHF.R    Atft)    BODK-\nieeper wanted Immediately with\nwithout experience. Apply to\nJecretary - Manager, Kootenay\n.eke   General   Hoapltal,   Nelson,\nc.\t\nYS * C,6on DAILY NEWS\naper   routes   are   coming   open\n|oon. Now ls the time to place\nour name on the list to get one\nthese   routes.   Apply   to   the\ntelson Daily Newi.\nLET - CONTRACT CUT ANb\n|tid large quantity logs and cedar\noles. S. P. Pond, Nelson.\n\u25a0fcWrttt-riRST-CLASS WELD-\nApply Stevenson's Machine\nItiop.\nSTED \u25a0*\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0  ftELlABLJ YOUNG\n|ian to learn good trade   Apply\nJ. Boyd, Daily Newi Job Dept.\nCAPABLE\n\u25a0tNTED  -  CAPABLE    STENO*\nprapher. Apply Imperial Bank of\n.anada'\nPOSITlOft\ntmmfwr\nreliable taJeilady\nInk'i Print Shop\nApply\nLtfTtD - GIRL TO WORK\n*art time each day. Blue Top\nhingilow Auto Court. Ph Vd.\nIWED-GfRL TC M!LP WITO\nJJpIaon Baili* Npuif\nClassified Advertising Rates:\nlie per line per Insertion, 44c\nper line per week (6 consecutive\nInsertions). $1.43 per line .per\nmonth (26 consecutive). Minimum, 2 lines per Insertion. Box\nnumbers, lie extra, coven any\nnumber of timea.\nPUBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES.\nTENDERS, ETC.-20C per line.\nfirst insertion, 16c per line each\nlubsequent insertion\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10*\nSubscription  Rlteet\nIingle copy   $   05\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance K\nBy carrier, per year IS 00\nMail in Canada, outaide NeUon:\nOne month           $ 1 00\nThree monthi      2 50\nSix months         4 50\nOne year . ... 8 00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nPer year     $12.00\nSix monthi       6.00\nThree months .      300\nOne month      1.00\nWhere extra postsge Is required,\nabove rates plus postage\nBeating capacity 24 to 37\npassengers. These buses at\npresent in regular operation\nand. in average condition. |fARM\nDelivery can be made about \\\nSeptember 1st. These buses\nwould be particularly ideal\nfor transportation of school\nchildren. For full particulars write Box 1083, Nelson\nDaily News.\nfOR SALE - JOHNSON OUT-\nboard motor 3 HP. twin. 634\nNelson  Ave., Nelson.\nGARDEN & NURSERY\nFOR   PERFECT   SOIL   SERVICE\nfor garden, ranch and farm, Mc-\nSt. Trail. B.C.\nDougall's Earthworm!  1791 Third\nTAKING ORDERS FOR SMALL\npickling cukes. Grand for dills. 3c\nper lb. del. in Nelson. Mrs. R. G\nGardner, Blewett, B.C.\nFOR SALE-2 1944 MODEL K-7\nInternational logging trucks with\nColumbia trailers. Completely\nequipped, and In first clasi condition. Apply Cady Lumber k Pole\nCo., Ltd., 701 Front St., Nelion,\nB. C.\nIUSINISS AND\nPROflSSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nA88AYIR*   AND   MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nI~W\"  WIDDOWSON  i  CO   AS*\nsayen  301 Josephine St, Nelson.\nJL S J!\u00b1MK, R6SSLAND, B. C,\nAssayer. Chemist, Mine Repreant\nA. J BUIE, Independent Mine Rep-\nresentatlve. Box 84, Trill, B. C.\noueework\nat    Willow    Point\nm\ntt)  ->\u2022  CARP\n'eyor,  machinists\nSTftf-\nenvllle Gold\nIdines. Ltd . Box 390  Ph. 189-R-l.\nIt\nmwtto - YOUTH TO m\n\u25a0optical trade Apply Rm. 210, Mc-\nloal Arts Bylldlng, Nelaon.\nBulldl.\nTwr\nINTED - TWO USHERETTES!\nLpply Clvle nwatre evenings.\nS(TUATIONS WANTID\nIlBRIFD COUPLE. 3 CHILDREN\nand 8. Can take charge either\nftuslnee* or farm. Box 10133 Dally\npews.\nPflSiWW\nISMAN WANT3\nith a wholeiale firm Good ref-\nreooM. Box 1127, Nelion Newi.\nNffft-tfASHTNO AND IRON-\n|ng to do In own home Ph. 437-X.\nluHNEH OPPORTUNITIES\nINTED-SMALL BUSINESS IN\n.ootenays State full particulars\n0 Box  1128,  Nelson  News\n\"ft SALE-SIX Suite\" apart\nBnent house  711 Vernon Rt\nW. G. THOMSON i, CO - X5-\niiyera Jc Metallurgists All work\ngiven prompt attention. 1155 Pender St, W.   Vancouver, B.C.\nCHARTtRtO   ACCOUNTANT\nROGER M. HOYLAND\nChartered Aecountant\n813 Victoria St    Trail     Phone 33b\nCHIROPRACTORS\nJ. COLIN McLAREN. D C, CHIRO*\npractic X-ray, Spinography,\nStrand theatre Bdg Trail. Ph. $23\n1946 MONARCH 6 - BASSENGER\ncoupe, 9000 miles. New car condi\ntlon. Spotless. 302 Robson St.\nPhone 124-Y.\nSUMMER R!SORTS_\nCRESCENT BEACH AUTO CAMP.\n10 miles East on Highwiy. Modern fully furniihed cabini. land\nbathing beich. Boats for fishing.\nPhone 471-Y-l or write or call for\nrates and reservations R.R. 1,\nNelson, B.C.\n1\u00bbM MONARCH 6-PASSENGER\ncoupe, 9000 miles. New car condition. Spotless. Phone 124-Y, 302\nRobson Street\nFISHERS* PARADISE LODGE\nQueen's Bay, boats, motors, cab-\nIns and meals. Complete vacation\nfacilities. Telephone Balfour 2-X\nA 7-ROOM, FULLY MODERN, 2-\nstory brick house, furnished, In\ndowntown Trail. Full basement,\nfurnace, water heater, laundry\ntubs, wired for electric range, insulated. Inlaid linoleum In kitchen, hall and bath. Brings ln good\nrevenue. Good location for boarding house. Apply 1725 Groutage\nAve , Trail, B C.\n*    l,,.     ,     I'    1   IS ,     .111,1       >>,-.*>IMIV       I|,       111   .Mil   HUIK    II.    a     USD    11 Ul.l    ,M>     \u201eu\u201en,\nthe heights of land which form the! Because of its lightness and design,!Hinged windows would provide an\nboundaries of the drainage area ofj he said, it would be stronger than'outslde vlew \"\"'I additional ventil-\nAkokli (Goat) Creek to the East [reinforced concrete and there would I non-glare light to make electric\nboundary of Sublot 46-A of Lot 4595; [be little or no vibration In the struc-! 1'8ht*' unnecessary even for read-\nthence North to the South boundary'ture. lin8- Hinged windowi would prov-\nof Lot 888, thence West along said I Further, it would be completely ;ide. an outside view and additional\nSouth   boundary   to   the Southeast J fireproof,  with  even   the   curtains ventilation.\ncorner of Block 4 of Lot 888. Plan!an[j upholstery of fpun-glass fabrics, j All roomi are outside rooms, rei-\n917, Nelson Land Registry; tnence|    A 5eVenth  floor, midway  would jched by interior sun gallerlei.\ncontain barber shops, beauty shops,     Wricht iaid the hotel would he\nconcessions,   gift   ihops,   lounging thoroughly safe and lasting\u2014so lait-\nand writing shopi. l>ngi |n fact, that \"as for Roger! La-\nRooms would be reached through cy_hj, nam, wiU llv, to mlrk j**,,\nsun   galleries   encircling    ,1c9 where Dalla, once stoo<r\ncentre court that would in-     Wf| h ldeslKnpd th, Im     *,, Ho.\nelude on the ground floor an irre-     ,     Tok        ,\u201e       d      d j\naularly Bhaped pool of water. Those'       .,,, ' .\/      .      \u2022    .\nfun  gallejie.   Wright said,  would condlH?n .\u00ab <\"   ewthquitag. and\neliminate today's \"tunnel, of corrl- \u00ab\"*,^e Arizona Blltmflr*. \u2022 \"red-\njj^j,, | ited to a Wright itudent and follow-\nEscalator! would earry guests to er, had hl> actlve P'rtldpatlon In\nthe seventh floor. design. The San Marcoi In the dei-\nACCOMMODATES 1600 CARS ert project for Chandler, Aril., ind\nA carport would earry weary and 'he   Crystal   Height)   development\ndusty   cross-country   travellers   to, for Washington ire described uhli-\ntheir  rooms   without   crossing  the torlc if unbuilt plans of hU.\nC11T    A 1 j thence North to the South boundary1  ,'\"'\"',\"\u25a0 '\n.W.Appleyard|^t\u00ab\u00bb; .h.-c. \u2122 to pom to\u00ab|\u00ab'^\n& Co. Ltd.\nMinister of Lands' it Forests.\n\"GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\n(Section 28)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION TOR\nCONSENT    TO    TRANSFER    OF\nBEER LICENCE\nFOR SALE-29 ACRES, 3 CLEAR-\ned, reit In buih. House, bathhouie,\nbarn, outbuildings, young fruit\ntreei. imall fruit*. Irrigated by,\nwater-wheel. V( mile from itore,Tw\u00ablv\u00ab \"2' In Block Four (4), of\n\u25a0H mile from Poit Office. $1300. L\"1 Tw0 Hundred and Six A\nApply Mrs. Helen Kabatoff, Slo-|!J06-A),   Map\nNOTICE ls hereby given that\non the 5th day of September next,\nthe undersigned intends to apply to\nthe Liquor Control Board for consent to transfer of Beer Licence No.\n7891, issued in respect of premises\nbeing part of a building known as\nSalmo Hotel, situate at Salmo, British Columbii, upon the landi deicrlbed   ii  Loti  Eleven   (11)   and\ncan Park, B. C.\nWHV NOT CHANGE VOUR FIRE\nInsurance oft Household Effects to\na FLOATER ALL RISK POLICY\n(206-A), Map Six Hundred and\nTwenty-two (824), Nelson Land\nRegistration District, in the Province of British Columbia, from\nLeon   Celestin   Cremeri  and   Bert\nStruggle fer Freedom Has Brought\nTiny Indian Woman To Front\n| OF HIQHirr OAITI\nThrough all h\u00bbr\nBv   CYNTHIA   LOWRY\nNEW YORK  (AP) - A  duiky-1\" Through\" fll far trthttht, MN.\nskinned, sarl-clad, delicate little Pandlt'a Interests have tocuied <a\nwoman, Incongruously carrying a the single ceute of Indian \"aweraj\"\nheavy, overstuffed brief case, was!\u2014Independence\u2014and het later-day\none of the outstanding person \"        ' \"\nalities'honors are witness to the lucceta of\nThis protects you againit Fire and 'Carlson    to   Ida   Gray,   of  Salmo.\nTheft and many other hazards,\neither at home or travelling Ask\nua for partlculara. C W. Apple-\nyard & Co.\t\nFOR SALE - 10 ACRE FRUIT\nand dairy farm, 8 mllea from\nNelson, on main highway. Immediate   occupancy.   Apply   Box\n184 Nelion.\t\nDAIRY FARM, COM-\nFOR SALE\nplete; 30 acres land, building,\nequipment, 11 cows, 3 heifers, 2\nhorses, 15 tons hayin, seUingjnilk\nto Pilm.  Apply\nNews.\nHOMI\nBritish Columbia, the transferee\nDATED at Salmo, B.C., this 31st\nday of July, 1947.\nIDA GRAY,\nApplicant and Transferee.\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER OF\nBEER LICENCE\nat   the   General   Assembly   of   the\nUnited Nations a few months ago.\n,'oday that same woman, Mrs. VI-\nJayalakshmi Pandit, has stepped\naside as head of India's UN. delegation to become the British Government's first ambaisador ln Russia on behalf of India, and the Empire's first woman ambassador. Mrs\nPandit   Is   faced   with   a   touchy,\ngravely  important Job  to be per--     - -    - -\nformed in the uneasy dayi of In-|\u2122   country  fieedora,   among her\nher generalship.\nHer appearanee aad her family\nbackground, howtver. leem fo mak\u00bb\nher public life a paradox. Her Jem-\nIly li of the very hlgheit Indian\ncaste\u2014Kashmiri Brahmin. But like\nmoit liberal Indian**, the nitlon'i\nancient caste system seemi to play\nlittle part In her public Uft.\nWhile Mm. Pandit hai been ton-\ncerned with the broad problemi of\n.dia's emergency to Independence\n' I    No   political   meteorite,   t-hls  47-\n. Notice is hereby given that, on year-old   fighter   for  Indian   lnde-\nBox  8744  DallyUhe  28th  day  of  August next,  the ; pendence has climbed steadilv md\n  1 undersigned Intends to apply to the BUrelv to the front and now belongs,    '\"'j IrfVaT'lmiinvlK* \"(JiV\u2122itille\nSMALL  ?AftM   AtTO  HOlsrt   AT.Liquor Control  Board for conient to a tlnv sorority of world-famous, [e\u2122,\u2122 *f \"he Vast   Jub^nCt\nEast   Robion    on   Arrow   Lakei  '\"'\"\u25a0\u00bb'\u00ab of Beer Licence Number women ieaden. whicn h     alvk;      b\u201en pkgu(sd b,\nBox 1118, Duly News. .7804    and    Issued   In _ respect _ of;    Mr,.  pandifs  father,   a  wealthy! epidemic^and famine.\ndeepest personal interest! hai been\nIhe fight for equal righti for Indian\nssomen, who are pioneering ln the\nomen's righti in the Eut.\nMra  Pandit al\u00bb li vitally ton-\n8\nKING GEORGE HOTEL\nA cool spot on a hot day\nPhone 5\u2014Kaslo. B C.\nNEW AND USED PARTS FOR ALL\nmakes of cars. City Auto Wreckers. Box 24. Granite Road\nTOURIST \"\" ACCOMMODATION\nCooking facilities. Phone 329-L\nFOR SALE\u20141939 5-passenger coupe\nHudson, with radio At heater. Goexi\ncondition. Nelson Auto Wrecking.\nFCJR SALE-ONE 1944 3 TON'FORD\nTruck, reconditioned. Apply Will-\nams Transfer\n*U FORD SEDAN. RADIO, HEAT-\ner. $1350 or best higher offer. Box\n1066. Daily Newi.\nfOR SALE - 193* FORD COACH\nKooteniy Stationers and Sport\nShop.\nBRANDON. Man. (CPI - A\nlocal farmer reported that hm\ncollie lovel to chase rabbits and\nsvas doing so one day until he was\nforced to stop for a breather. Another rabbit had been chasing\nthe dug and decided not to stop\nwhen he did. The dog looked a-\nround and saw the rabbit bouncing toward him\u2014the dog took off\nfnr  the  safety  of the stable.\nFOR SALE\nvrith bath, breakfast nook, new\nfurnice, good garage, on 2 flat\nlots, excellent garden. Phone\n127-4R\t\nCRESTON INSIDE AND OUT-\nside property. Lowest prices Buy\nnow, before the Summit-Creek\nTrail road Is built Apply to R.\nLamont, Beimsville, Ontario\nFOR SALE - ULTRA-MODERN\nhome, lean than replacement price\nPhone Mrs. Brett, 993-Y Close In.\nwanted to buy - small\nhouse with 3 or 4 lots. Box 5155,\nDilly News \t\nSALE\nROOM   HOUSE, premises being pirt of a ^uildlng j Indian lawyer named Motile! Nehru,\nknown ai the Queen'i Hotel, it Nel- * WM onP 0f the early leaders in In\nson,   British   Columbia,   upon   the dia's long struggle for independence\nBe?'\nher,\nher role u am\nbassador, la probibly the molt dlKl-\n\"   The\nNorth of her huge eoupfry,\nlit job\n.... i .   she ever haa tackled.\n15 shadow of vast Ruaala lootoi large\nthe NTth of her huge oountry,\nSeasoned  diplomats  and  politic-soon to be partitioned Into Hindu\nnd Moslem  statee. The Influence\nIN\nPhone\nDAILY CROSSWORD\ndiamond driller*\nITOTOTXr dIaMond Dfflimn\nCo. Ltd. DrUliatj ind  Bit Ser-\nvice. Box 308  Rowland    B C.\nTNfiTfsTERU AND  \u00bbURVEYOM\n5TW.\"tfA(7aW, Wmfcfl ANb\nCivil Engineer, B. C,  Lsnd Surveyor, Roulind ind Grind Forks.\nBbrt c. aMUcK. Jis 60hfc sY\nNelson. B C. Surveyor  Engineer,\nTIMIIR PROPIRTIEI\n.x clarks. imsrtmr-\nneer and Foreiter. 425 Baker St.,\nNelson, Phone 1308. Timber\nCruised, Appraised and General\nTimber Management snd Administration\nLOST AND FOUND\nfcT - MONDAY NIflHT VICIN-\nRtrreiition Groundi, diimond\nIhap*   brooch,   wt   |rrfn   itonei\n\u25a0lnd brlllianti. Phone SAO Reward.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nCfhite, Green\nd Olive Duck\nin ito<\"k. differfnt m-ldthji,\nAny len|thi\n|Peebl<?s Motor Ltd.\nNrlann. BC\nlihiiuRAfltE Jfrib'titACWrVtl\nCHTs F McHARDY, JNSIJRASFE\nReal Eitate - Phom 13!.\nMAcT-nfiTi'..\n~      fekNMtWS LtMITB\nMachine Shop, acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor reminding I\nPhone 5M 324  Vernon  St\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINI IHOP-\nSpeciilisti In mine snd nslll work\nMachine  work,  light  ltld   heavy\n70\u00bb Vernon St. Nelion. Ph M\nIECOND 'hand TfoKfl\nWI BUY. SELL AND EXCHANCIK\nWhit hive sou** Pb tU Ark Store\nvANCotrvr.R.   bc.   (CPi   -\n\"ffirs and wis tiken la tow hy\nill. wind*\"red lo the newipiper\nrnunrl','1 building committee his\nrecommended a by-law prohibit\ning hmement suites. Including lhe\n(anil,it's. In new aparlment siru\nmrs     I'resenl     legulnlinps    pm\n...r II.\u25a0,,'     ,(    the    |,,\u201eMn,|il    !,,\nised   f*,|   lising  quarters\nACROM\nt. Often\n(poet.)\n4. Apex\n7. Soothe\nS. People of\nArabia\n11. Animal\n(Bo, Am )\nIS. Parrot\n14. Pitcher\n15.Cole (Jap 1\n14. Tantalum\n(sym.)\n17 Foreit\nlt. Morsel\n30. Tapa again\nit. New wine\n14. Compiles\nVI. Squander\nM. Male\ndswceadanU\n17 TMn illce\nnfheron\nM flnlih\nM. Harbor\n10. Muaic note\n11. Oram pue\ntl. Ingredient\nof beer\ntt. Plague\nSI. Ugltlmlti\nW Llterirv\ncomposition\n40 Betimes\n41. Und.\nmea lures\n41 Poem\nPOWN\n1. Leather\nbeg for oil\n1 Areas\nbetween\n1* tees and\n\u25a0 greena\nJt* (golf)\nS.God of war\n(Norse)\n4. Domeatl-\ncated\n5. Persia\n8. A woode-\nman'a shoe\n7 Devoured\ng. Decree\n10. Fine\nfabric\n11 Device for\nhitting\nInsect!\n15. Diitrcss\nsignal\n18 Goddeisof\nharvests\n19. Thickly\nbranching\nshrub\n10. Imitation\nof a rose\n11. Black,\nhard woodi\n12 Serve\n13. Top of a\nmast\nSB Conflict\n27 Fabuloul\nbird\nN Takes\nbooty\n11 Eskera\nS3 Monster\n(myth )\nw\n'*'\u25a0*     [l|\n\" i\nii* '*1\u00b0 ' ' ' \"\no 5 jjff \u00bb S X s\no \u25a0'.\n\u25a0   | P|l Nl I N\nil\n. ii m|iBt\nl\u00bbiaiii\"\u00ab\nT . -,|f. i . e\ns\nI '.\nI   K\nI   sil'fiu Mjl I I\ntUtjoati do\nff i|\u00bb| 'Ci!\n\u25a0i ;\u25a0\n'- V\nA 1   DMT I  l 6 \u00bb\ni i TM. s*, I *a I\n1\n* \u25a0*\u25a0*\u25a0*\"\u00bb 1\n2 *INE   lots- for\nFairview.   Good   locstion.\n1148.\t\nLOTS FOR SALE. APPLY D MAG-\nllo, 1018 Litlmer St. Phone 808-L.\n\u25a0 SMALL  HOUSE   FOR  SAI.E.  1M-\nmedlate occupancy. 514 6th. St\nlands described as Lot 11 of Block,Her brolher. Jawaharlal \"Nehru\n2, Nelson City Official Plan, Nelson one of India's most powerful men\nLand   Registration   District,  ln   the\nProvince of British Columbia from1 lln,  w,iched  her  performance\nArchibald Isaac Leach and Maude prt,enting India's case at the UN.inf Russia wltshln her tmntrj een\nLeona Leach to Soloway Hotels ,n(1 opPnly expressed their admir- not be measured exectly, but most\nLimited, of the City of Nelson, the ation. She ruled committees with an nbserven think Russia ti Interested\ntransferee. *rrln hand, marshalled her facts like in many phases of Indian life\u2014and\nDated at Nelson, BO., this 38th a liwyer, avoided waistc motion and has   achieved   alreidf   a   foothold\nday of Julv  AD  1947 uied her small delegation to the best among the untouchnbW\nt>o.ss,hle ad s*i n' a Ce *  '\nSOLOWAY HOTELS LIMITED. J?r, Pandlt haVbeen fighting for'\nIndian and Ind lam, shoulder-to-\nshouldfr with the rest of her family, for years. She was 'h* first\nwoman minister In any of the Indian governments- in the Cona:rP?s\nminlitry of the United Provinces\nfrom 1937 to 1939 Kten aa fhr\nheaded   her   country's   U N\\   delp-\nPer; S. P. Soloway,\nGeneral Manager.\nc\u2014,.    ,     \u25a0   ,\nMACH.NIRY\nFARE 112,000,000\u2014\nINFLATED, THAT IS\nVANCDirvER (OP) \u2014 Oan\u00ab\u00aban\nChmeaa who wish to bring uielr\nfamilies to Canada are faced with a\nSin.nnn.non to $20,000.no0 proposition\n-h'i* it Is not as bad tti it sounds.\nr.y-.-.      rs   e   T   T-l   neaaeu   \"n   tuuiiii,.   ^ ...           Officials estimate that some 200\nL j   J IJ      Sk  A   I     e~l     gition she  wai  minister of public may Like advantage of the changes\nJL   V\/JlV    \\7JJ7\\jLj1u   health   and   local   self-government in the Chinese Exclusion Act and\n *-* - send for their families. It co#ts ap-\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\n\u2022sslsMsj's Anwer\nS4.Cbum\n35. Cunning\n37 Biblical\nname\n88 Sign of the\n\u2022odlte\n1\nWanted\n30 000 POUNDS OF LIVE\nFOWL, A POUNDS AND\nOVER\u201420c PER POUND.\nF.O.I.\nDO  NOT SHIP WITHOUT\nAPPOINTMENT\nSunnyside\nPOULTRY FARM\nTrail, BC.\nWE OFTR RAISED NEW\nHAMPSHIRE PULLETS, past\nbrooder itage All pulleti railed\nfrom our finest ROP sired pullet chicki  Ail birds ire running\n.it on our free rente\nNEW SIBERIA FA\nN   Bilikihln, RR2  Ch\nIsvirk\nFOR RALE - J WELL BfiOKF,\nheivy horaei. Dick Kleef, Willow\nPoint\nCtrrTOttCOTB\u2014A cryptogram ejaoUHea\nrer   pjv qi j ipee rvRnrTBvrcK\nTtrwpn fcjw fcp pkp-cpvbmbfri\nNalursUy'a Cryftoqootel SMALL I.IC.HTR ARE 8001.* El\nOUT, HUGE FIRF.S A11M1F,    SHAKESPEARE.\n1,1,1,iliulril by Kln| Fftturte Syndlstle. Inc.\n\u25a0>\\VN\nTOR    SALE    -    YOUNO    FAHM\nhont. W   Allen, Upr, Granite Rd.\nWlMlPEa (CP) - When CIif-\nfnrd Brown emerged from a Winnipeg drug itor* to find hii hi*\ncycle gone h\u00ab reported the Lhtft to\nprllete-~then took up a patlrnt\nitind at Fortaga Avenua and Mam\nStreet Thrta houra later he \u00bbp^t-\nted a man riding tha riiryrle Jumped o\\ii in front of the hike and\nahnuted for polire whn arreat-'d\nMike   Shawara,   'M\\\nFnr   btq   rpiult*  at   imall   coit   -\nTHY   A  WANT  AD.\nOne used  Qeneral  Moton gasoline\npower unit. 100 belt horse power.\nOne 193* C-M International Hi-ton\ntruck.    Excellent    condition.   Price\nWOO,\nSinnerud\nTruck &\nTractor Co.\nPhon*  IOW 1P1  Baker  Ht.\nNelaon, B.C.\n|    CONCRETE WHEELBARROWS\nComplete with pneumatic rubber\n::red wheel Available for immediate\n.delivery from atock.\nIpTfRVES t   RITCWr St SON LTD.\n'<H8 Hornby St Vancouver, B.C.\n;  MA 4M7 B-fl\nFOR SALE 33 FORDSON TRACr-\ntor .equipped with heavy duty\nWiimtisin motor V*tv econnmi-\nral on gas i^.d oi! In z^rvi run-\nfl-g order Chrap for cash Snm\nHood'mff, Erick aon, R  C\n: CUSTOM MACHINE WORK AND\nWelding Cordwood Sawi and\nmandrela. STEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP. 708 Vernon St,\nNeUon, B  C. \t\nSAWMILIs WOOOWORKINO AND\nContractor* equipment of al]\nkind*.    Natlonnl    Machinery    Co,\n'    ltd .  Vancouver   B_C\ni no. 30 Gas CaY. with SladS\nNelion  Aulo Wrecking.\nfor the United Provinces.\nLike ao many other Indian leaders, she spent some ume in priaon\u2014\nin twn occasions, Her brother P-'t1-\ndit Nehru and her late husband, Dr\nHanjit Pandit served m'irh Inr.per\nt\u00abrms Bven the two Pandit children,\nboth girlj, have been imprisoned.\n\u25a0oximately $1000 to bring a Mmily\n-vit frnm China, but cm*1 Cansdian\ndollar is worth $12,000 in inflated\nChinese exchange.\nYou'll Find It In the Claiiificd\nNEVILLE,    Saik     tCT)- Wataon\nBowlea waa forred tn atop ae\u00abding\nwhan he Injured hli hand Hit\nha farm was the* first completely\nseeded in thf area. Ten neighbours\nhorn ing of his misfortune, left\ntheir nwn fields despite Ihr fact\nthiil sreding w.is twn weeks he\nhind    Mhrduk,    nnd    finished    his\n\u2022 IWIY   REVISITS   FARM  .\nDewey of New  York  revisits the Ououo\nOov.    Thomaa    F.\nMich., farm  nf  F.aM\nlfi.  Putnam\nI'll In am   (left),   where  hp  u\u00bbs  a  farm  hand  uhfn\nImlds hia grandsun. His sun, (ieorge, la al ttxht.\n.senlli'i;\nI\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\t\n\t\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 194.\nB.C. Champions of Vim Past\nA Few Suggestions\nFOR THOSE WHO ENJOY POETRY FOR THEIR\nSUMMER READING\nDon Blonding \u2014\nFloridayi   $2.50\nVagabond House   $2.60\nThe Rest of the Road    $2.60\nMemory  Room   $2.50\nToday is Here.   $2.50\nSong of the Seven Senses   $2.50\nLet Us Dream        $2.50\nDrifters Gold   ...      $2.50\nPilot Bails Out     $2.00\nStowaways In Paradise   $3.75\nTed Malone \u2014\nBetween the Booktndi        $3.00\nAdventures in Poetry   $3.50\nThe American Album of Poetry   $3.00\nThe Best Loved Poems of James Whitcomb Riley   $1.75\nThe Collected Poems ot Rupert Brooke  $3.00\nBehind the Lines by A. A. Milne   $1.25\nCollected Verse of Edgar A. Guest  $4.00\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\nAlberta Scheme Routs Midwife;\nFree Hospilal in Maternity Cases\nEDMONTON, (CP) \u2014 The midwife Is disapearing from the AlberU scene, a victim of the Provincial Government's free hospitalization plan for maternity cases.\nThe three-year-old scheme which\nitarted off producing the lowest maternity death rate for any province\nIn Canada's history is the only one\nof ita kind in the country.\nLaunched to meet the problem of\nan abnormally high mortality rate\nin births not in approved hospitals\n\u2014isolated farms, homesteads, Indian\nreserves and other places-free maternity hospitalization has proved\na great success.\nBefore the plan became effective,\napproved hospitals handled only Bil\nper cen* of births in the Province.\nNow they take car* of pfi per cent.\nDr. A. Somerville. Provincial\nmedical inspector of hospitals, says\nthe plan, \"certainly has been well\naccepted by the general public and\nhospitals and appears to be giving\nvaluable service,\"\nThe Social Credit government inaugurated free maternity hospitalization.after Dr. Somerville showed\nfigures to show maternal mortality\nrates for cases handled \"not in approved hospitals\" were generally\nmore than double those for births\ntaken care of in approved hospitals.\nAverages over the six years 1937\nto 1941 inclusive show 2.3 deaths in\n1000 births in approved hospitals\ncompared with 7.8 deaths in 1000\ncases \"not in approved hospitals.\"\nThe difference was emhpasized by\n1940 figures\u20141.8 compared with 9 5.\nLOWEST IN HISTORY\nIn 1944, during which the free\nhospitalization plan was in effect\nfor only nine months, the maternal\nmortality rate for all births ln the\nProvince was 1 fi.\nDr. Somerville feels this rate, the\nlowest in Canada's history, was a\nbit \"freakish\" but stresses that in\n1945, first full year of operation, the\nrate was 2.3, Although this showed\na slight rise from 1944. it was still\nnot so high as the previous Alberta\nlow of 2.4 recorded in 1942.\nSome 18,000 births, 96 per cent of\nthe Province's total, are handled\neach year under the plan and the\ncost to the government in 1945 was\n$670,000 with the money coming\nfrom Albertas' general revenue\nfund.\nFree hospital care for the mother\nahd child is given for a maximum\nof 12 days, but the average confinement has been 10 days. Plan does\nnot cover any doctor bills. Free confinement is provided only at approved hospitals\nDr. T. R. Clarke, prominent obstetrician, .said:\n\"We think it is an excellent plan\nIt enables people to get better care\nMaternity deaths are reduced and\nthere is 8 reduction in cases of\nmothers whose physical abilities\nhave been mnre or less seriously\nreduced by conditions which did\nnot quite  rau.se a death \"\nDr. J. Hoss Vant, another prominent Edmonton obstetrician, said\nmost medical men fefl if the plan\nalso covered complications of early\npregnancy and the treatment of\nthreatened and complete abortion,\nit would \"do a lot more than salvage babies.\"\nDr Vant also advocated free hospitalization covering all female afflictions.\nWinners of tne provincial title In 1901, 1902 and 1903 were Nelson\nhockey teams. The 1903 team above show, hack row, J, Fre.d Hume,\nHonorary President; J. F. Thompson, forward; C. I, Archibald, point;\nG. E. McLaughlin, Manager; H. J. Hacker, forward; C. Jeffs, forward;\nW. A. MacDonald, later Chief Justice, President; A. A. Perrier, forward; C. D, Blackwood, cover point and captain, Seated on floor are\nH. Bishop, goal, and C. Baker, forward.\nREMEMBER  HOW\nMother's kits heaUd cuts, blisters, wounds.\nNow newly medicated\nCRESS PLASTIC WOUND AIDS\nheal  a cut  In  12 hours.\nRecommended by\nYour Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co,\nPhono 34\nBox 460\n2 Die in Coast    IBoomed Dime Books From Church\nILL!!' J Crypt to World Business\n10 \u2014 Two persons were killed and\ntwo others narrowly escaped injury\nin a traffic accident on the King\nGeorge highway at Surrey, B. C,\nearly today.\nThe dead are 21-year-old Viola\nSmith of Vancouver and Maurice\njGrand-Nacire, 25. also of Vancouver. Two other passengers in the car\n\u2014Mr. and Mrs. .lack Davey, Vancouver, were uninjured.\nThe accident occurred on the King\nP\u00bbeorge Highway aboii tone mile\nNorth of the new Mclennan road in\nSur rev.\nWINNIPEG  (CP)  - A  new use\nfor vacuum cleaners has been found.\nA man pruned some overhanging\nbranches off trees in his yard and\nafter draggmg the larger debris\naway swept the remainder up with\nhis vacuum cleaner.\nAirmen on Second\nLeg of World Flight\nPRESQUE ISLE, Aug 10 -Clifford Evans of Washington, D C,\nand George Truman of Los Angeles,\ntook off from Presque Isle. Maine,\nSunday morning on the second leg\nof a projected round-the-world\nflight in two light \u2022 planes. Thrv\nleft fnr Goos eBay, Labrador, -Soil\nmiles away Th eairmen estimated\nthat they would make it in about\nsix hours.\nEvans and Truman took off from\nTeterboro, N J , Saturday on a\nroute of 23,350 miles '.hat thev expert will take them from 30 ta 4a\ndays to cover. The fliers made unscheduled overnight stops at Presque Isle to gather weather dnta\nUNIQUE BLACK MARKET IN BERLIN\nOPERATES UNDER ALLIED SUPERVISION\nFor all your floral requfrementa\nleave your order at\nOVERWAITEA\nPhone 707 or\nWalkden'a Florlita, Phona 1122.\n\u00bb111 \u25a0 \u25a0 111\u00ab1111 j iTTi i tii 111 fn 111 \u2022 111111 m 11\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountant!\nAuditors\nMO Baker St Phone 235\n\u25a0IIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIH'IIIIIIIIIIII I\nRELIABLE   SERVICE\nAt   Reaaonabla   Coit   at   tha\nSMEDLEY\nGARAGE CO.\nN\u00abxt to Poit Offlc*\nOur Auoclation paid nut $13,000\nIn beneflte In July. There leva\nreaaon why more people carry\ntheir hoipital anrl medical\nthrough Stuart Agencies, bit\nBaker St., Nelson, B.C.\nStart Work on\nIndian Constitution\nKARACHI, Aug 10 - The constituent assembly of the Indian province of Pakas'on me' in Karachi\nj Sunday to begin work on a constitution The predominantly Moslem proviiKe will become a British\ndominmn next Thursday.\nA Hindu leader, active in the Moslem League, Jogendar Mandali was\nelected rhairman of th** Assembly\nFifty-three of R9 delegates are in\nKaraehi for the constitutional contention.\ni Hi111m1nTi11iMiiMHi1111111111.il mm ii ii\n. RADIATOR REPAIRS\nCleaned and Recored\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\n!    301 Ward St- Phono 63\n|iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii\n*\u00bbsastwsrst\u00bbsfsssisfiss\u00bbsiws\u00bb\u00bbsa\u00bbsfss,sis>s\n'J. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMEDICAL ARTS BUILDING\nBy  ROSS  MUNRO\nCanadian  Presa Staff Writer\nBERLIN (CPi - A 'barter\ncentre\" opr-raVs in the United\nStates lector nf Berlin which practically amn'intR tn an officially-\nsponsored and supervisee, black\nmarket\nThe currency Is chiefly cigare's\nlike any other continental black\nmarket B*;* there isn't a black\nmarket like thus anywhere else in\nEurope\nThe Americans apppar to accept\nblirk market deals between 'heir\nsoldleis and oor'rn! copimis-smn\npersonnel and lhe Germans as inevitable,\nIns'ead 'hey try *o disr-o,;ra;;e 11-\nleiial street corner and hark room\n'tadirii: by se'.'ir.g up lhe centre\nwhen o;,,.:ai|or,s are r-er.t rnhzed\nand pit o, an r.ffiridl :f no* legal\nbasis\nTh*- bar'er cen're h, *s been doing\na roaring Ifis-.r.r-.-, fnr five mnr.'h.*-\nand seems '\" gr**w m popularity\nbo'h \u00ab*:*'*, the Geimaris and Am-\ner:**a*i<    11 ,b   and   (\"v.adlanj   ir\nAllied p, l*'*i:*I*e* \u25a0\u201e In no,\nen*:,-,-..,*  *,,  th,*   log  !,*:\u2022   where  \u2022'-,\nported  privately  and  articles sold\nm  Arm\/  and  Control Commission\ncanteens aren't acceptable\nTRADE  HOUSEHOLD GOODS\nAt the other end of the sprawling hut. Germans shuffle in with\nhousehold and personal art:**!,*.-\nIhey want to trade They also rr-\n\"eivt* barter poir.'c fr--ii '***\u25a0 cigars*\nfood md *Vh\u00bbr goods Urned ;r by\nthe  Allies\nThe hu* looks like a small town\nBericr.il store. w.*h German g *,*d-\nheaped on wo ,-lrr ,-n, lv, ,, attended\nby Geinni* rlerk V:,*,i pernor,,\nwander atn'it.d buying whatever\n'heir point.score ran s'.ind\nThere is no store u, Germany\nWllh this a.s.sortn*,*i*,* Yon can h is\nIVr.-ian rugs, suprrh rad.os, fun\nGerman !*,*,\u25a0:* mug , dm* ,*: -r-.-.-Sn-, .\ndorks and Itr-corn rhma su:' ar I\n'he;     ,*:,,*::   -.,- ,;   ,-,,, , ,   ,    s,,v, , ,\nIhousai.d Germ;,' . ,!\u25a0..;.. hi*:' , I\n'\" \"**'\u2022'  ''*'<  .-.vap'for pr.r:   ,,\n*.\u2022\u25a0*!\n\u25a0'...*\n,'   G* \u25a0      I\nS*,*e 1*.\nll      I*\n       Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nDURABUILT\nCARPET\nSWEEPERS\n$7.95\nNelson Electric Co.\nGeneral Electric Appllancei\nPhone 2BO 574 Baker St,\nII HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII\t\nELECTRIC\nLAUNDRY\nPhont 1170 \u2014 180 Baker St.\niiiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nimiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiir\nWilton's Cleaners\nSVt Joisphlne St.\nWe do dry cleoning, prenlng\nand oltcratiom.\nAgenti   for   Esperl   Cleaner!\nIn  Vancouver\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nKeep    youth    ant\nloveliness   with   \u25a0\npermanent\nHaigh   Tru Art\nBeauty   Salon\nPhona 327\nJohn,ton*   Block\nROSCOE\nAND\nFOURNIER\nCARAGEMEN\nSKY   CKIKF   AUTO   SERVICE\nPhon* \\22 Nelson. R C\nHare the Job Done Right\n\u25a0 LONDON, (Reuters)\u2014They made\nHomer's   Odyssey   into   a   100,000-\nicopy best seller and revolutionized\n| the British publishing business on\na capital of $400.\nThey brought some of the best literature in the world as well as some\not the most popular reading \u2014 and\n.; ive it tn the pubhr for a dime.\n\u25a0 That''; 'he st^fry of the Lane\nbrothers of London, who pushed\nf.i ward their idea about Penguin\nbooks during the height of the de-\npression in the 30s despite the fart\nlha' everyone told thrm they were\nrr.izy.\nTodav their company has sold\n100,000,000 volumes, only a minority\nr'f them reprints. Yet neither Allen\nnn:' Rirhard I\/me claims any spe-\ni'. ;! credit for their efforts.\nAllen w;is 33 years old, and manning director of th'.1 family publishing business, Ti;e Bodley Head,\nfounded by his late uncle, ,Iohn\nLane, when he got the idea about\nPenguins.\nTh\u00b0 Bmrd of Directors laughed\nat 'he scherm- Ten cent books were\n0'insensical, they snd, and refused\nn.) pu' any money into th'1 venture\nThey figured they would have to\n.-ell 17.500 copies of_each book tn\nbreak even. So th\u00b0y \"ordered 20,000\n'\u25a0\u25a0-p:es nf e**rh of 10 reprints, No 1\nnr mc Andre Maurois' life of Shel-\n:\u00bby. \"Ariel\"\nAllen toured Er.5l.1nd talking hi?\nht- id r ff but ro'ikl get only 7000 or-\n'.\u25a0 r- V, ik-el>r.s wei-* afrctid cheap\nrepr.n's w,, ild hur' the sal\"1 of \u2022 x-\n[\u00bb\u25a0?\u25a0::\u25a0-::'\u25a0\u2022 b \u25a0\u25a0 ks All*!; approached\n\u2022hr W r.iv . :\u2022;-] **;nres Tlie buyet\n1 \u25a0\u25a0j*-,.,] w-'we-'hi\"- 'h\" public would\n'\u25a0uv 'he i.. i'I'ks, hut be agreed to ask\nti -  w:f-   Sh- w;is en'husisistic\n!)\u25a0 f Fndav the tut' Penguin nrd-\nrr v. \u2022 d\"',Vrifd On M mdav Wo-1-\n'.'. \";'\\'< ,ik^ f.M- fiROM rr re ropi<-s\nINVOICES   IN   TOMB\nlr   'Zr.f  i <:\\\\ day?  the war-^h \"ise\n\u25a0' H \u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 f- V. -v Tn y'rh ' f'ik''.'-\nFt .-j \\.i,-jh:r S'*,*k cH-r.r jn\n\u25a0 ;.'i; ,i chut :n 'he g: .vcyari\nAr \u25a0*;\u25a0:'*. ''\"'\u25a0 w.th.**. Ue; e ! iblets '*\n-*:e de.i'i a\"i t'*ri;::'*r| 'hnjf walls\n\u25a0'.ere 'he h*i-r< 1 > m;inv -\\ h.rg r\\--y,\n-  -,.:yv -\u25a0\u201e\u25a0    o-ir err.p'v  ' ,-nb h i'i\u00ab-\n\u25a0 !   :i,vo,-i* j* ,* kv another  the  pe\";.\nT   Uy  'hr  h\u00bb'id^u\u00ab:\u00bbi :\u2022.  arP   [.*   r1\n' \u25a0* :ms   Ht     ;* in   .\"mp;   -,r,., ''[n   ,>.,;\n\u25a0a ii i'S*;.sr \u25a0,**\u25a0(- .vnrtn poo \u25a0\u25a0 ,[>;\u25a0>\u2022\u25a0; \u25a0 (\n\"i\"   UKI   io   IVi   t\/lrv' \u25a0\u2022    print    ai '(\n..':.\"A:'.::^;::!1;*vr!,'-;\"-\nSubs >* i-v cnrnp-(-;r., h,ii d!r Pen-\ni'\u2022\u2022-'\u25a0'*   \"    f .-adi   md   'hf   Ln.ted .\nStates,\nThe Lane brothers pay them-\nselevs a salary and put all the profits back  into production.\nDuring the war the Germans\nbanned Penguins being issued to\nprisoners of war, due to the many\nviolent anti-Nazi books the firm\nhad published, but Goebbels issued\na forged I'enguin for propaganda In\nneutral countries.\nWhen Penguin Issued the plays of\n.George Bernard Shaw in 10 volumes\nto celebrate his 90th birthday\ncrowds lined up at bookstalls to\nbuy them.\nSpirit Subject\nOf Lesson-Sermon\n\"Spirt\" was the subject of the'\nlesson-Senn n in all Churches\nuf  Christ,   Scientist,  on   Sunday.    I\nThe Lesson-Sermon included the\nfollowing passaget from the Bible:!\n\"But will God in very deed dwell1\nwith men on the earth? behold,!\nheaven and the heaven of heavens'\ncannot c 'Main thee; how much\nless this h >use which 1 have\nbuilt!* .    II  Chronicles  6:   18.\nAmong the selections from theL\nChristian^ Science textbook.'\n'Science*and Health with Key to\nttw Scripture?\" by Mary Baker'\nEddy, was the following: \"The\nScriptures imply that God is AU-1\n.n-all. He fills alt space, and it is\nimpossible tj conceive \u25a0 f such\nomnipresence and ndiv\"'\n:\"\"p' as infinite Spirit or Mind\nHence   all   is  Sp::\/.  and   sp.ruua*.\nOver $1 Million\nIn Hail Damages\nFor Alberta Farmers\nRY, Aug 10 iCPi-From\nI 1 $11,000,000 is expected lo\n:\" in hail losses to Alberta\nhis year hy the Alberta\nacre Board, .1 Glen Elder,\nsn d Saturday\ns this year was about the\nne las'. 10 years A total ot\nr* were made so far thu\nof this number 1000 were\n-.*< the firs*, three days of\n: Aoi'i >x:mat*>lv 600,000\n* 1'.:* hy ha:', *,s*;th damage\nf 'he area be.r.t*  .p\nCAI\n1,0\"0,\n111 1*1\nrent\nKnives and spearheads used bv\nmy S* uth Pacific Meianese tribes\nre rn.ide of obsidian, a black, vol-\nImperial Oil\nBuys Whitehorse\nRefinery\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 10 (AP)\u2014\nSale of the Whitehorse Refinery In\nthe Yukon, last major surplus item\nof the wartime $140,000,000 Canol\nProject, was announced Saturday by\nthe State Department's Foreign Liquidation Office. The buyer is Imperial Oil Company Limited of Canada, which agreed to pay $1,000,000\nin U, S. currency,\nA pipeline running for oil wells\nat Fort Norman, N. W. T., to Whitehorse and related facilities, the other major surplus item in the Canol\nInterprise, was sold last month for\n$700,000. Distribution facilities used\nin the enterprise to assure adequate\noil for North Pacific defence posts\nare being retained in a standby status and have not been declared surplus\nTORONTO,   Aug.   10   (CP)   \u2014\nImperial    Oll,    Ltd.    wil    ipend\nbetween  $6,000,000 and  $7,000,000\nto   establish   the   preient  Whitehorse   Refinery   In   Edmonton.\nTis  was  stated   by  CE. Carson,\ndirector  in  charge of  manufacturing, in confirming the Washington\nannouncement   that   the   canol   rt-\nfinery    had    been    purchased    by\nImperial Oil for $1,000,000.\n3TART   IMMEDIATELY\nMovement of the plant by highway and rail will start immediately, first by the Alaska Highway\nto Dawson Creek. 918 miles, and\nthen by rail some 430 miles to\nE'd monton\nThe refinery will be erected on\nthe company's 365-acre Edmonton\nproperty and is expected to be in\noperation by the end of 1948. It\nwill be an outlet for the new\nLeduc Field South of Edmonton.\nIn addition to the property from\nWhitehorse, further equipment will\nbe shipped from Sarnia, Ont., and\nother points.\nMr. Carson said that the cost of\nmoving the present plant and\nestablishing it on its now site will\nbe about the same as the cost of\na new plant. The purchase, however, would save 18 months over\nthe time required for a new refinery and earlier production\nwould benefit the surrounding territory in product costs, as well as\nconserve foreign exchange through\ncutting  down  imports.\nSAYS BRITAIN'S\nHANDS TIED\nBY LOAN TERMS\nMOSCOW, Aug. 10 \u2014 The Communist newspaper Pravda said Sunday that Britain's hands have been\ntied by the American loan of $750,-\n000,000. According to the Moscow\nnewspaper, the terms and conditions\nof the American loan made it impossible for Britain to solve her\neconomic problems.\n\"By England's example. Western\nEuropean countries counting on\nAmerican credits through the Marshall plan can convince themselves\nhow steep is the price of American\nassistance,\" Pravda declared.\nPravda also had a word on the\nAmerican decision to hold a conference at Washington on the writing of a peace fnr Japan. Pravda\nsaid the action of the United States\nin calling the meeting was unilateral\nand that \"nothing short of a foreign\nministers conference will satisfy the\nSoviet Union\"\nMarine engines, 1.000,000 times\nbigger than watch m chanisms.\nmust b econstructed wi'h the same\n\u25a0sccuracy\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\n(Prior   Broi.t\nL'NDUR   NEW   OWNERSHIP\nPHONE 1175 -   182 BAKER ST\nNew\nFall\nSweaters\n100% Pure Wool sweaters\nfor Fall. All styles, all\ncolors.\nSLEEVELESS\nBUTTON VESTS\nPULLOVERS\nCARDIGANS\nZIPPER JACKETS\nEmorys Ltd.\nThe  Man's Stors\nFisheries\nMinister Passes\nOTTAWA, Aug, 10-Frank Bl\nges, the Dominion Minister of Fl\neries, died Sunday in the Otta\nCivic Hospital. The 45-year-\nFredericton man had entered\nhospital shortly after the House\nParliameht prorogued.\nHedley Francis Gregory Brid\nhad been prominent in politi\nlegal and military circles for sc\nyears. He first entered the politi\nfield in 1930, as a candidate for Ri\nigouche Country in the New Bru\nwick Legislature. Mr. Bridges \\\ndefeated in that election, but v\na provincial seat in 1935.\nRESIGNED IN '38\nFrom the first he showed pron\nas a legislator and orator, and\n1936.the cabinet member was m*\nspeaker of the Provincial House,\n1938 he resigned the post becausi\na disagreement with the Premiei\nthat time, A. A. Dysart. Mr. Brid\ncontinued to sit in the House a\nmember until the end of hij t<\nin 1939.\nShortly after tne oumreak of\nSecond World War, he entered\nlegal branch of the Army. A.\nserving overseas he returned\nCanada ln 1945, shortly before\nFederal election of that year.\nAs Major Bridges he accepted\nLiberal nomination for the con\ntuency of York-Sudbury and wo\nresounding victory in the traditl\nally Conservative riding. On A\nust 29th of the same year he <\nsworn in as Minister of Fisher\nand held that cabinet post up to\npresent.\nPrior to his political career,\nBridges studied law at the Unh\nsity of New Brunswick and Uu\nschool for five years. In 1920 he\ncame President of the New Bru\nwick   Teachers'   Association.\nMidget Cars Fight jor Position\nH\n4 TAXI\nWhite nnd R,  wn SADDI F O'- FOPfr*,,\nr *mp* .sit **n \u2022,  >.c   P.: i r\nChildren'-, Bin* k BOOTS   sue V ; t \u25a0 7* -\nCoir\nCi-,1'7    I OAIH-\",     '   '.\u25a0\u25a0.-Mirttr   ',    Ihr*    ,,\u201e\u201e,*\nFal^h-if*-*    ['-nt\nPlnMi,   1*11)1 (TIM M II'I'IP'*,   In,p. ,*.H\nhlark plnstir   Pnu\n*295\n$1 95\n$1.40\n1\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTFR PLUMBER      *\u00bb\nPHONE   815\niiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiMiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nFLEURY'S  Pharmacy\na  n Preicriptiom\nnyKr*-   ,.\nfall 1     < *\u2022\u25a0'i-minr-i\n\u201eV Amir.l.ly\n\/' u     VH   Arts Aik\nL1-      PHONE 25\nR\n1  \u25a0:\u25a0'.  Uiimillllll\nTHE BOOTERY\nIII'IIIIMIIHII'I'I'iiiiiiiii'MIIiihiii i ni i nn in in ii mm 11 umm\nBATHING SUITS\nSundress,-!,  Tor-ilmy  Shnrts nnd\nnlhfr   Summrr   Togs\n1 3  to   12   OFF\nCHILDREN'S SHOP\nPIUAlUt \u25a0*iA .*^A *\u2022*\u00bb\u25a0\u00ab! \u2022% A \u00bb r* * *\nO Llctnied  to  Go\n.. Anywhere\n\u00a3 Diy  or  Nighl  Service\nS LOUIS   CHOQUETTE\nHavt   four   FurnlUjrt   Expertly\nRernverrd   \u2022!   ths\nNELSON   UPHOLSTERY\n413  Hal) St Phon*  MA\nPrompt   \u2014   Dependibld\nPAINTING\nand PAPER HANGING\nAl L   WORK   GUARANTEED\nMAX FALKNER\nYOU\nBe The\nJUDGE!\nWe only ask that you\ntry our Dry Cleaning\nService \u2014\n, . . then you wlll reallzt\nthat EMPIRE cleaned\nclothei are all that we ny\nthey are, Our trained per-\nlonnel, our modern plant,\nour Interest ... all add\nup to your complete satisfaction!\nSummer Coats\n115\n2 Day Service\nMen'i 3 Piece Suitt\nLodies' 2 Piece Suitt\nOrciien, 1 Piece Plain\n90*\nHave your Sleeping\nBags cleaned\nCurtains and\nDrapci Cleaned\nAGENTS\nSalmo\u2014E.  Johni\nSlocan City\u2014\nJ. B.  Hacking\nMr.  Peochey,  Bul\nDepot, Silverton, B.C.\nnf Ihr ,,,*'lg.| .\u201etni i**,\u00bb'\nirl,   n||...    \u201e,   ,,.,   |     \u201e\nlhf r.lvlt   Qrnunrl.   rt\u201erlng   Nflion*.    lubil.f   r.-lfbrnlions\n',,H I-r  lh.   spf.Hv   \u2022\u25a0huns**   I,   is(,gnll.-t,    Nm.  Ih,   crhwrt\nI\"     P\u00bb,|y    H.-M   1'holr,\nPhont   461R4\nKing George Hotel,\nKailo, B.C.\n\"ELLISON'S BESt\" FLOUR\nFor All Your Baking Needi\nGuaranteed to Satisfy\nYour Grocer Hai It\nEMPIRE\nCLEANERS\nWE CALL FOR\nAND DELIVER\nPHONE 288\n'llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL   HOME\nAMBULANCE   \"SERVICE\n\"Diltlni hvt KiiiitjI SrrvlcT\nJl.s Kootrniy SI                Phom Ml\nMIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIItlllimilllllllllll\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. 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."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. 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_08_11","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\/1.0418387","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. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1947-08-11 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/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]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1947-08-11 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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