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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" \t\n'Nelson Qolden Jubilee\nWWWPWWWSPiB)\njBWP^BTfWI.I' ' '\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0,'* \u00bbW\u00bbl^^.l|^JW(\\*f\u00bbJ\u00ab',\nimmwiem*\nToday's Program\n1:30 p.m.\u2014Monster parade and floats. Forming in Fair-\nview, route will include all Baker and Vernon Streets, ending\nat the Nelson Civic Centre.\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Golden Jubilee opening ceremonies at the\nCivic Recreation Grounds.\n4:00 p.m.\u2014Band concert at the Recreation Grounds,\nfeaturing the Vancouver Police Department Band, Kootenay\nKiltie Band and Trail Maple Leaf Brass Band.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Queen City Cavalcade at the Recreation\nGrounds.\n10:00 p.m.\u2014Street dance on  Hendryx  Street between\nBaker and Vernon Streets, with modern and old time dancing.\nThe program Ior the balance of the week will feature Caledonian\ngames, pioneers' luncheon, boxla game and dancing to Red Nichols'\nBand on Tuesday; midget auto racing, Cavalcade and dance' at Civic\nWednesday: First Aid competitions, oldtimers' sports, beard judging and\nboxing card, Wednesday; lake regatta, Cavalcade and Jubilee Queen\nBall, Friday; baseball tournament, barbecue, fireworks display and street\ndancing, Saturday. There will be various displays all week ln the curling\nrink.\nNelson (enter of Huge Industrial\nDistrict With Production Valued\nAl Over $100,000,000 Last Year\nThe City of Nelson, today celebra-1\nting its 5Cith yeur of incorporation,\nls the center of a District which last!\nyear produced well over $100,000,000]\nIn mining, lumber and agriculture,\nproducts.\nThis Include! $72,872,213 In lead,;\nzinc,   gold,   lilver,   and   chemical j\n\u25a0 nd fertilizer products; 162,000.000!\nfeet board measure in forest pro- i\nAnxious, bul\nTired, Britons\nArrive in Canada\nducts valued at $8,000,000; and agriculture and varloui manufactur-\ning products.\nThli District laat year:\nHad a population of 63,760.\nPaid out $20,800,000 In wagei.\nHad a poit office revenue of\n$155,000.\nDid a wholeiale, retail and manufacturing buslneu of $101,500,000.\n1111111111111111ri 111 ii\u25a011r 11 r 11111\u25a01111111111i\nMission Man in\n28th Day\nOf Hiccouahing\nMISSION. B.C., Aug. 3- The\n33-ycar-old Mission man who\ncan't stop hiccoughing* Ray\nSilverton\u2014Saturday was his\n28th day of hiccough misery\nSuggestions have poured in\nfor a cure but the remedies\nseemed to have no effect and\ndoctors said the hiccoughs will\nhave to take their own course\nAlthough Silverton is not critically ill he is suffering a\npartial paralysis of his left\nside\n4tffjtatlg #*\u00ab\u00bb\n3^\nThis Is Nelson's\nJubilee Week\n1897 to 1947\n*fi A COPY\ndEEfcOW, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-MONDAY MORNING. AUGUST 4. 1M7\nNUMBER 88\nJohn Houiton, colorful newi-\npaperman, who wm flnt Mayor\nof Nelson.\nJubilee Celebrations Open Today\nWeeks Carnival\nBy FRED  KERNER\nTORONTO, Aug. 3 (CP) - With\nanxious, but tired expressions, 39\nBritons arrived at nearby Malton\nairport this afternoon to complete\nthe first step of a historic mass air\nmigration to Ontario from the\nUnited Kingdom.\nThe first of some 7000 who will\nbe flown across the Atlantic at the\nrate of about 250 a week, the group\n\u2014 comprising engineers, builders,\nfarmers, mechanics and typists \u2014\nwere weary after more than 20\nflight hours and a delay at Gander\nairport, Nfld, but happy at the\nthought of being in Canada.\nHundreds of persons gathered at\nthe airfield outside Toronto as relatives, friends and prospective\nemployers waited for hours for the\nhuge four-engined Trans - Ocean\nSkymaster arrived hours after it\nwas due, delayed by ground fog in\nNewfoundalnd early today.\nRushed through a stand-up medical   examination,   questioning    by\ncustoms and immigration, the group\n\u201434 men  and five women\u2014found\nthemselves with more offers' of employment than thev knew what to\ndo with less than an hour after they jtw0 [j1\nlanded.     There     was    excitement' Anoth\namong    the    group   as    reporters, ,day*\nphotographers     radio . men     Redi    The strike which has been In pro\nCross officials, and members of the i\"\u00bb since June 9, was still in pro\nOntario   Government   singled    out\neach of  the  Britons as they   were\npassed by immigration\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nAttempts to\nSettle Nanaimo\nStrike Fail\nW. E. Wation, while net the\nfint City Clerk, lerved In that\ncapacity for 42 yean, retiring in\n1942.\nHarvard Planes\nTo Fly Over\n(ity Saturday\nAn air show will be one of the\ntreats in store next Saturday for\nNelson Golden Jubilee celebrations.\nMayor T. H. Waters, who some\ntime ago asked Western Air Command if some R.C.A.F. planes could\nbe flown over Nelson during the\nweek, has received word that three\nHarvard aircraft will fly over the\nCity for half an hour next Saturday, weather conditions permitting.\nIn writing, Mayor Waters had\npointed out that while Nelsonites\nhad.played a large part in the war\nDutch, Indonesians\nAgree to End War\nBy STANLEY SWINTON\nBATAVIA, Aug. 3 (AP)\u2014Both the Dutch and the Indonesian Republic announced tonight they are willing to abide\nby the call of the United Nations Security Council for a cessation of hostilities in the East Indies.\nActing Governor-General Hubertus J. Van Mook ordered\nDutch troops in the rich Pacific islands to cease firing at midnight tomorrow night.\nThe Republican Government in a formal statement signed\nby Premier Amir Sjarifoeddin declared it was \"agreeable to\na cessation of hostilities and this cessation of hostilities can\nbe effected.\" Fighting started'-\nSHOOTS WIFE,\nKILLS HIMSELF\nDURING BATTLE\nDispute Over\nPaternity of Child\nResults in Deaths\nNEIGHBOR TOLD\nThe announcements from both\nsides marked the first positive result from a direct attempt by'the\nUnited Nations to halt a conflict.    |\nWhile Van Mook by his order j\nmoved to comply with the demand I\nof the Security Council, the ranking\nDutch official in the Kast Indies'\ndeclared his government remained j\nconvinced the Council's resolution\n\"constitutes an interference in the j\ninternal affairs\" of the Netherlands'\nkingdom.\nThere still was disagreement on\n[he question of arbitration. Van\nMook emphasized that the Netherlands had accepted the good offices\nof the United States to bring about\na settlement of the conflict between\nthe Dutch and the Indonesians after\nthe cease-fire comes into force.\nSEEK  ARBITRATION\nThe Republican Government,\nhowever, expressed a desire for\narbitration by several countries, an\napparent indication that mediation\nby the United States alone was not\nsupported by the Indonesians.\nThe Republic also formally requested the Security Council to\n\"continuously supervise the execution\" of the cease fire. The Republic\nsaid It was \"prepared to concert all\nits efforts for the execution of the\ncessation of hostilities.\"\nVan Monk told radio listeners:    I\nBURY, Que., Aug. 3 (CP) - A\ndlipute over the paternity of a\nchild was reported tonight by\npolice to have resulted In the\ndeathi of a young huiband and hit\npretty wife. Police iaid that the\nhuiband had ihot hli wife and\nthen Inflicted fatal woundi upon\nhimielf with the lame gun.\nPolice said that Preston Allison\nANTI-JEWISH\nRIOTS RAGE\nIN Ul CITIES\nShops Smashed,\nLboted, Burned;\nCall Off Meeting\nCUT FIRE HOSE\nLONDON, Aug. 3 (AP) -Anti-\nJewlih demomtratloni, which\nbroke out Saturday night In\nLiverpool, Glasgow and other\nUnited Kingdom cltiei at a reiult\nof the hanging of two British\nicrgeants by the Zlonlit underground In Paleitlne, ipread today\nto Londbn.\nPolice closed an open air meeting\nin London of the Jewish Ex-Servicemen's Association when a crowd\nof 200 onlookers shouted threats at\nthe participants. Six windows were\nsmashed in a synagogue in suburban\nCatford.\nNo casualties were reported.\nNew riots broke out in Liverpool\nand Manchester tonight as mobs\nsmashed, looted and burned tJewieh\nshops.\nFlying squads of police restored\norder in both cities.\nIn Manchester, approximately 400\npersons surrounded an assembly\nhall where Jews were holding a\ndance and kept them penned inside\nfor several hours, while other rioters threw missiles through Jewish\nstore windows and shouted \"down\nwith the Jews.\"\nRioters slashed fire hose In Liverpool while firemen were attempting\nto extinguish a blaze in a cabinet\n\"I   am   sure   the   present   orders: four-year-old child lived with Alii\n. be executed 'by Dutch forces)\nwith\nsense\npromptitude    and    common\nNANAIMO, B. C, Aug. 3 - At- had.played a large part in the war Indicating the Dutch expect to\ntemps to effect a settlement of the effort, they had had little opportun- \u25a0 retain control of at least some Re-\nstrike at the Imperial Laundry in ity to see modern war machines in!publican areas overrun by Nether-\nNanaimo have failed. Owners of the action, and urged that an effort be i lands troops in recent fighting, Van\nlaundry\u2014John and David Cook\u2014 made by the Air Force\nani bargaining agent* ot the leund- planes here for the Jubilee\nry\nfactory   owned   by   a   Jew.\n27, a veteran of six years overseas!said adults were encouraging chil-\nwith the Canadian Army, had shot'dren to loot wrecked stores,\nhis wife, also 27, after an argument!    Horace Newbold, Secretary of the\nSaturday night. Allison succumbed:Lancashire and Cheshire Federation JJjfJJJ\nin  hospital   at   nearby  Sherbrooke, of Trades Councils, a labor union\nthis morning from wounds said by j organization, said he was convinced\npolice to have been self-inflicted.       the   mobs'   \"feelings   were   being\nThe woman was shot in the Uving,played upon by Fascists lurking in\nroom of the  10-room frame house'the background.\"\nwhere she and her husband and a|    in Liverpool, police reported that\na Jewish doctor was attacked in a\nson's parents about three miles cafe and a synag0gue and five shops\nfrom the Eastern Township, town of su\u201e    d h d window, s        ,\nBpoyiice said that the paternity rtrt-I^ST      \" \"'\"   Chalked'\"\u2014 \u2022-*\u25a0'\u2022*'\u2022> \u2014\nus of the child born to Mrs. Allison     j    Glasgow, there were demon\nhad formed  the basis of domestic\nstrife which gradually became more\nintense  on  Allisoj* . return  from,3_,.,.. '\nTo Mark 50\nYears' Progress\nFifty years ago the City of Nelson came into being.\nToday, Nelson opens a week-long celebration of its fiftieth birthday.\nTo commemorate the rise of Nelson and men who hewed\nout of the wilderness a centre deserving of its cognomen,\n\"Queen City\", a gigantic birthday party is being celebrated\nby the citizens and visitors who have travelled from the\ncorners of the continent to attend the Golden Jubilee festivities. *~\nFrom a shack town only fivej\ndecades ago Nelson has crossed the \u25a0 J\nramparts of infancy to adulthood. ]\nWhere pack trails once marked the\nintersections, paved streets, railroads and civic buildings have been\nbuilt by a generation of Industrious\ncitizens.\nProgress haa been the hallmark of\nNelson's uprise. Starting from nothing but the elements and the Ingenuity of the peoples. Nelson now\nowns its own street railway, gas\nworks, power plant and water system. From the time when volunteer\nfiremen drew hoserels, to the mechanized equipment of today, when\n\"Bogus Town\" was Fairview, and\nwhen crude board buildings lined\nthe dirt streets, Nelson has continued to grow and prosper.\nNelson is the distributing centre\nof the West Kootenay not only In\nmerchandise but of civic ideas. The\nPolice\" parade of Mayors, from John Houston to Thomas H Waters, stands as\na monument to progress that ls typified by the City of Nelson. Each\nterm   of  office   has   left   its   mark!\nupon this town. The lights that glow'Recreation Track. Sixteen rnldgd\nin the houses of Nelson were the cars from Seattle, Portland and Spo-\nwork of Mayor and Council, as are I kane will burn up gas and rubber\nthe street railway snd the modern for 'he prize money and for the\nCivic Centre building | amusement of the grandstand.\nHOST OF INDUSTRIES I    Thursday the sports of yesteryear\nToday, from office, on the maln|wl! c0\u2122 nto-Uwlr own. From the\nstreet are handled mining, lumber- en.\"re Kooteniy and .^0U,n\"iar3,*1IneIJ\n'-- and a host of other basic in>ho \u00bbre 'amUlar with the art. of\n\u25a0ies. Daily freight car, shunt in i log splitting, rock drilling, and a va-\nlumber yards, taking away the tim-!net-' <* olh<V d \"\u2122 >Pa'['' \"\u25a0}\u25a0\nber that wa, cut down in the sur- (converge on Nelson to match their\nMAYOR\nWATERS\nup   by\nIn Glasgow   there were demon- j J\"*\" \u00a3j\";' ** \u00a3 *- \/\"\"-f^, 70\u201e\"\" j strength and skill. In the evening\nstrations   in   Gorbals,   the   Jewish   \",.\"   ',,   .   d ,,J ,of the same day an extensn\nand  police  reported   WK*.^!^ toSk1\" \u00a3\u00ab   *$*&\nsend I Mook  tHUa-heeeen'-a  reports Tv'S'mu \"  \" Tlbricki   were   tossed   through   the L, indurtry_t0 district points. This \u201e\"\"L \u00bbm fiv 7h\u00bbt \u201ei^h?Tn\/t^\nmake it posaiMe. those parts of J.val'^^.aid that matters reached a 'windows o   11 Jewish shop.. An 1- L \u00a3 \u00a3i\u00a3* of today; the* Nelaon \u00bb^.^'g1)\u00a3*\u00bb\na_nd Sumatra where the Netherlands) climax Saturday  night when Mr, \u25a0^hjlogans were discovered on |y,al ,,\u201e, *,\u201e \u201e\u201e t?,,wo \u201eorw ,,\u201e\u201e, j S S^olSJw. .ndlSi ^raer of pSrtl\n\"and is expected to be the biggest\nworkers' union-rrPercy Law\u00abcm I   ajp   Vfce-Harshal   J    J,.   Plant,\nid  Dan  Radford\u2014deliberated   for .c.B.E , A.F.C, Vancouver, wrote ex-, Government  will  take  over  direct! Allison  refused  to accompany  her the pavements,\nhours Sunday without success. I plaining that  Air  Force  personnel \u25a0 responsibility for law and order will'husband and his parents to a dance.1    At. Birkenhead,\ni0\nher meeting will be held Mon-\nwas low in numbers, but that sub\nject to suitable weather, three Har*\nvard machir.es would fly over the withdrawn\nCity for about half and hour Aug.\nEngland Works\nAgainst Crisis\ngress However the picket line was 9 Following an exchange of wires,\nrestricted to three women and a jt was arranged that the planes\nman instead of the usual score or*WOuld arrive here about 2:30 Sat-\nmore of strikers and sympathizers. :urday afternoon.\nFriday   Magistrate   Beevor-Potts '\t\nof   Nanaimo   found   22   employees'\nguilty of participating in an illegal\nbe clearly indicated.\" ! Allison's parents finally went to the\nThe Republic wants Dutch troops dance, leaving the coupie behind.\nto   positions  they   held'    In resconstructing the story, police\nbefore hostilities began July 20. said that Mrs. Allison was believed\nAddressing the people of the East, to have told her husband that she\nemployed in the municipal Abattoir i day.\nrefused  to  handle   Kosher  killings1\n!the Nelson that today Is flag-fes-\nslaughtermen tooned to celebrate its fiftieth birth-\nafter tomorrow, A spokesman said |\n\"We have decided on this stand as\nIndies   and    Holland,    Van    MookI intended to separate from him and British troops in Palestine.'\nemphasized that the Dutch doubted*that she had gone to pack her be\nwhether   the   Indonesian   Republic [longings. They said that Allison ap\nwould be able to enforce a cease-1 parently had taken up\nike. He fined them $1 each with\nj costs of a $1 in each case The union representatives were found not\nguilty.\nThe    strike\u2014which    was    called\nwhen two women workers were dismissed  for absenteeism\u2014precipitat-\n-The  ed the first test of B. C.'s new  In-\nnd woof of Britain's thread- *dustria!   Conciliation   and   Arbitra-\nBy HELEN FRAME\nLONDON, Aug   3 (Re\nnans\nwarp a:\nbare living pattern was under Cabinet microscope tonight\nThe Labor Government worked on\nIts plan for huge slashes in dollar\nexpenditure tn meet a threatening\neconomic crisis regarded as the most\ndangerous Bn:am has ever kr.o'.vn.\nThe outcome will he aim -uncM by\nIV,me Minister Attire in the House\nOf Commons Wednesday\nAgainst a curtain nt secrecy\ndrawn by the Government, speculation has run widely on how tn\nrombat the countrv's adverse trade\nbalanrc of at leas* \u00a3 4Vi 000.000 'Sl -\n800.000.noo 1 this vear and the\ndwindling dollar loan, i.ow expected to run out by November\nOutside the inner rzy. well-informed circles predict'''! a return\nnf wartime labor control, supervised allocation of raw materials to\nchannel manpqwer anrl favpr export over home production, relentless scissoring of canned fond imports 'possibly linked with rationing of meals in restaurants', a big\nrut in the private gasline ration,\nacceleration of armed forces demobilization to the peacetime level\nand pressure on a request\nUnited States to piy for z\nshare of imports need to feed West\nem  Germany\nion Act\nSearch for Planes\nLeaving Without\nPermission Fruitless\nWASHINGTON. Au*  2 <AP\nState     Department     relay     <\n\"rumor\"  that\nwert-    puiM'd\nCaribbean de:\nlies there on\nwhile     Domi\npatrols got s<\nvasion \"\n(But   nothin\nwhere.\nThe  Dominican  Republic,  v\nofficials    have    been    talking\nmonths  of  a   n\nrevolutionaries\"\ncountry,   told   11\nGermans Fight\nGrain Guards\n\"BERLIN. Aug 3 'AP>-Ger\npillaging crops fought gun battles\nwith German vigilantes and police\nassigned to guard the harvest in\nthe United States zones, Gen. Lucius D Clay's semi-monthly report\nto Washington disclosed today\nSeven shooting affrays occurred\nduring the last two v.eeks of Julv\n111   Hesse\nIn Wuerttetnberg - Baden, more\nthan   400   persons   overwhelmed\n\u2022.even   t\\f\nin Florid., '\nmat ion\" sent a\n1 fruitless hunt\nican     Rep'ihl:\nto fight  off 1\n;    happened\nt  by   \"Comm\nio     invade\nambassador\npersi\nill German\npotal-i   h.n\nforce  pr\nsters\non o:\nWin\na p|\nvising\nWith\nmans arc roving ww r\nbicycle, rattletrap au\ntram to lay in a food\nsiderable absenteeism\nis attributed to this $\u25a0\u25a0\nfire among its forces. 1 shot his wife in the head\n\"The   (Dutch)   Government  shall| TOLD HIS NEIGHBOR\nhave  to  observe  whether  the   Republic   will   also   comply   with   the\nrequest of the Security Council: It\ncan  only  decalre  at   this juncture\nthat a cessation of hostilities should\ninclude  in  its opinion cessation of\ndemolitions,    of   acts   of   violence\nagainst members and groups of the\npopulation  in  Republican  territory\nand   of   hostile   propaganda   which\nlately   has   even   incited   to   mass\nmurder.\"\nThe    Republic's    statement    said\ncessation   of   hostilities   could   be\ncarried out effectively only if Dutch\nand Indonesian armed forces were\n\"withdrawn     behind     demarcation\nlines fixed bv both .sides\" last Oct.\n14\nThe Oct  14 truce agreement slowed and eventually halted the bloody\ng    (ier-  warfare th\nside by Indonesians on one side and the ten as Governor-General of the Do\n!\u2022 s and Dutch and British on the other from minion of India and nf Mohammed\nv Con- the time of Japan's capitulation in Ali Jinnah as Governor-General of\nndustry the Second World War. Pakistan, the India Office announc\ning seen in the way of a fight at\nNelson since John Houston went\nelectioneering.\nBIG WATER SHOW\nprotest against me treatment of jy^'\"\"^ MayoMf!' H* Waters, I    Friday   Is   water   gala   day.   No\nhimself a pioneer here of 40 vears.'stone was left unturned by the Nel-\nFive arrests were made in Liver- jn   extending  greetings  to  citizens, son Launch Club to stage a water\npool. Four persons were taken into and vl5jtors show fit for a king. \"Famous racing\nrifle and custody    when    an    angry    crowd:    The Mayor said it was fitting \"that boats and skippers from tba Weft\nEXTENDS GREETINGS\n\"We celebrate the greatest event:\nin the history of Nelson, its Golden\njper-\nLONDON, Aug   3\nKing   has   formally\n. had raged between the  appointment of Vlsc<\nAfter .the shooting Allison went,\nto the home of a neighbor, Gerard,\nLaPointe. and informed him of whit\nhad taken place LaPointe telephon-;\n'ed to Dr. W. Bennett of Cookshirei\nand he and the doctor went to the.\n, Allison home. They reported finding\nAllison, standing with gun in hand,\ntn the doorway, and went to inform\npolice.\nOn reaching the scene, police\nfound Allison in badly wounded\ncondition walking along the highway. He had suffered severe facial\nand head injuries.\nkincTapprovis\nappointments\nReuten 1\u2014The\napproved   the\nMouptbJt*\ntossed bricks at a police station\na fifth was arrested for looting\nind\nwe should pay tribute to those pio- Coast and the interior of the Prov-\nIneers whose vision, forethought and ince will match n\u00bbutical skill and\n'energy laid the foundation for, and the speed of their crafts against a\nJERU8ALEM,  Aug. 3  (CP)  \u2014'made possible, so much of what we host of local entrants.\n(rgun Zvai Leumi today threaten- now enjoy.\" I    At the same time Friday a iwIbi-\ned to hang more Brltlih soldiers.     **We also pay tribute to Viose who* ming meet will be run off at tha\nIn  a \"communique\"  read  over * on various occasions have gone from j Lakeside Park. Swimmers jn g^j.\nts   secret   radio,   \"The   Voice   of their homes and countryside, manydren's and open classifications will\nFighting Zion,\" Irgun, which last of them never to return, to uphold, battle it out for  the  prize money\nweek    murdered    two    youthful  the traditions for which we stand   and the grand aggregate cup ln a\nBritish  sergeants  In  revenge for We honor and remember them for regatta that is eipected to draw con-\nthe   hangings   of   three   Irgunists their service and sacrifice\" testants from far and near.\nTueiday, said leven more Brltlih .    He extended   \"to our visitors, on     Saturday night will see the town\nsoldiers   are   \"icheduled   for   the behalf of the Aldermen, citizens of let  go  in  a  grand   finale  of tot-\nH0W,,, Nelson  and  myself, a  sincere and works, barbecue and street danciruj.\n\" hearty welcome  We trust you may Not content with half measures, tha\nenjoy  the  time you  spend  in our .Jubilee Committee  has engaged\nMiDTUIIQ   PRFR AR City'and District' Your visit is ap- firewoTks display  that  will  illum-\nCAK I rlUs\\, vl\\Ls\\\/M\\ prrcjate(|, and you will always find mate the town with a constant show-\n\/\"\"ftKJTIKIl IC TAI \\L*\\ a futur*** welcome in Nelson\" ;er of rockets, bombs and set plecef\ntvrl       rlUC   IMkixJ       |    \\ve*come sign5 at each entrance of never before seen in the Interior, af-\nthe city convey to visitors and for- ter the roasting of 4 whole buffalo\nmer residents the spirit with which which will be portioned out to the\nTOKYO    Aug    3    'AP' \u2014 Cen   Nelson has entered into its observ- crowd. Those who still have the go\nMcArthur and Gen   Crerar, senior  ance of 5<1 years as a city   Miles of after a week of celebrating will get\nON JAP PROBLEMS\nirch foi; food\n\u2022\u25a0\";,-\nhert\nGlobe-Circling\nFlight Postponed\nCHICAGO.\nMAY  FORCE  REVIEW\nOF   PARTNERSHIP\nWASHINGTON. Aug 3 (AP> -\nReports of a new British financial\ncrisis, apparently taklnc United\nStates officials hv surpilse, mav\n**orre a rev *-'.'. soon nt thp A*i\u00bb:ln\nAmerican     p T'nersli,** '    ir    '\u25a0> 01 id\nlhat   * all   preca itions\"   were   being\nlaken but \"not a single aircraft has\nbeen heard in the sky\nThe excitement  started  when   A\no  the T    Brar.tlty.   deputy   collector   0!\nlarger customs at Tampa, issued  the   following alert:\n\"Notify all airports to be on the\nlookout for two P-38 and five P-51\ntype aircraft, believed leaving the\nUnited States for foreign country\nwithout permission \"\nAug 3 -AT*\nOd un postponed the take-,\ns\"lo globe-circling flight. <\ntor  todav   ii'itil  tomorrow\nWilliam\nV. nf his\n:heduled\nbecause\nIt was followed by the Linggad-;ed today,\njati nr Cheribon  Agreement under;    All the present governors of In-\nwhich   thp  Dutch   recognized   Indo-  dian   provinces   have   placed   their\nn.esun  sovereignty  over  Java,  Su- 'resignations   m   the   hands   of   the\nmatra  and  Madoera   The Republic  Vl\"ro_T wlth  ef'eCl   Aug    !^\nundT the Agreement was to become\na  member  of  the  United  States  of\nInduncM , comprising all the Neth-\nerlands Fast  Indies  islands\nThp present conflict  grew  out of  \u201e\ndisagreements   between   the   Dutch,Colville^ Governor of Boni\nand   the   Republic   during   negot:.\"S\nMors for if. interim government to\nfunction until Jan   1. 1949 wl\nflags and  colored  lights flank  the a chance to work off excess energy\nange   of   Japanese  streets   Overnight a crop of totem in the closing event of street danc-\ng a two-hour formal poles mushroomed out of nowhere   mg.\nt     reliable    sources The jingle an'dthe clang of the visiting   carnival,  the   lighted   streets.\nofficer of the Canadian  Army, dis\ncussed   a   full\nproblems dun\nsession    tonig\nsaid\nIt was the second time in a week\nthat the Supreme Commander for\nAllied forces had discussed Japanese affairs with a leading foreign\nvisitor, looking toward a pros-\ninclude pc'\"\" P'aft u'\"''i MacArthur\nheld several conversations with Dr\nannouncement listed several retain\ned   in   the   appointments  after   thc\ntransfer   of   power    These\nLt -Gen   Sir  Archibald   Nye,  Gov-\nDavid Herbeit V   Evatt, Australian Minister of External Attain, during the\nFound Shackled\nTo Rooming\nHouse Beds\n. ernor of Madras, Colonel Sn\ndari, Governor\nSaleg   Akb?r   Hy\nf Assam\nssed wue\" in the insulation\n. I'm- which Odom's backer, Milton Reynolds, said would take sev-\nP.*S*   ho'l'S *0  check lUOClIon   UI*.U1  Jao    1.   i.m  wi:\u00abu   i::e    \u2014\u00bb    y. (**> I  J   \\kf     J\n' For four hours after the scheduled United    States   of   Indonesia    was  \/J-Tear-Uld  WeClS\ndeparture  time   mechanics  worked scheduled, under the Cheribon pact,  n   \u2022 J        1 QJ\nnn  the \"Bombshell\"  before  1!  was to Jam full sovereignty. The OSDUMUC Ul   7t\nbee\njam full sovereignty.\nnounced   tha*   the   tak\u00bboff   had was   to   be   a   partner   with   tha\ntpocd until 2pm Monday   Netherlands under a Dutch crown.\nBombsliell.\"   a   converted      In   Batavia   A   K   Gain.   Deputy\nlatter's brief visit here\nGen. Crerar. who arrived Saturday will review American units in\nthe Tokyo-Yokohama area Wednesday and Will plice a wreath in the\nCanadian section of the occupation\ncemetery.\nthe  pilgrimage  of the pioneers in\ntheir birthplace are only an insight1.\ninto the week's activities\nSpecial church services Sundav\nsaw citizens of all denominations\noffer thanksgiving From the pulpit MINNEAPOLIS Aug 8 fAP) -\ncame reminders of the greatness of Tw0 men |n(, , wom,n ,,, luthr.\nNelson and the mm who labored to m [pVfr<, undernourishment, were\nelevate It from a pioneer settlement fnlJnd Saturdlv bou\u201ed or ,hlcklid\ntn its present s*and:n\u00a3 with Cana\ndian cities.\nToday the feitMtlei begin In\nesrneit A monster parade boait-\nng over half a doren bandi.\nThe\ntta\nlha*\nAuthorities h\u00bbre sant to,!,,\nif thr Bn*ish situation is as grave\na.*, pictured in reports from London\nin 'be last week then the emergency\n:- wiii'h the United States finds itself may he great indeed\nUp to this point theie author-\nIt ns have taken the position that\nwhile Britain would need addltlonil help in dollars fairly soon the\nMarshall plan for European recovery could be put through soon enough to provide that help\nTo Cover Jubilee\nFashion Parade\nWill Tell Dress\nlength Vogue\nr owned\nin mufar\n,'   April\nIt, vn *1 i\n(AP*\nWill   th\nlu*   Reynolds. Premie,\nirer,    girdled olher   I\n\u25a0:!b  Odom  nt leasee\nand  a  fl*ght (rom lu\nhZi-.-y'yi', \"\\*,-Z\nwhethei\n[through\nDETHOIT. Aug 3 (API\u2014Climax-j\ning a romance that started 18 years\nago, William v**an Asperen, 73, Sat\nEllen   Davus\nThe couple first\nThev   fell   III   I 'fr  '\u25a0\nIhe   wav '   of   thru\nll   Ihe\nRue\nPARIS.  Aug   3\nskirts  be  long or  short'\nThis is the question .\nfrom Champs E'.vsers ti\nPaix as Paris awaits Ihe annual Tall\nshowings, scheduled to begin Monday\nPie-showing reports indicated\n<ome fashion houaes may follow the\n'md set laat season in Paris snd\nfollowed last month in New York\nof dropping the ikirts halfway between the knees snd the Shoe tops\nSea Gull\nGrounds Plane\nOAKLAND Calif. Aug\nA collision with a se , gul!\nan Auitralian plane fr\nSaturdav\nThe DC S had arrived from Hono\nlulu and had taken to the air agnu\nwhen tile plane's wing struck tlie\ngull A nine tiy four inch hole was\nripped in tbe aileron\nof   the   Republic,  and   six* uritJ t00k as his bridt 94 year-old\ndon.esian   leaders  were   re-\niv   Netherlands   authorities\nr.e arrest under which they\n1 h.-ld su'.oc Julv 20\ne\\i'r>*s.*rd    \"grave    doubt'\nihe   Republic   could   put\nworkable     cease fire\norder by midnight  tomorrow,\nI    \"On   Java   alone,\"   he   said,   \"our\n'forces arc divided  under four  area  headquarters   announced\ncommanders   and    at    the   present Royal   Canadian    Mint\n^p, _   time I  VI,rv there  Is  very  little i manufactur\nunded communication with them'' |taln Medal \u201e soon as diet ire re-\nGani said the group released hy reived  from  the  United   Kingdom\nthe   Dutch   would   \"await   Initrur-; Striking of the medal already  has\ntions    from    our    government    in itarted  in   Britain\nJog)aksrIa   as   to   what   we   should'    Servicemen      who      served     six\nSoewirjo, Republican Mayor of. months in Britain before tbe end of found nu^\nDaughter Kept in\nDork Room 7 Years\nMEDAL TO BE MADE\nOTTAWA.  Aug\nlff*l\ninenta\nlak\nto their beds in a rooming house.\nPolice said they were Martin Anderson, 42, his brother, Clarence,\n38. and his sister. Violet. 35\nfloats Mrs Berths Anderson. 72, who it-\nand costumed marchers will wind scribed the trio as \"mv children,\"\nthrough Nelson from Lakeside was detained for questioning.\nPark.  At  night  the   Queen   City\nCavalcade   wlll   be   preiented   In    A   KIATIHM  PlC\nIt.   premier   performance,   which  r\\  IN A I  IUIN  UT\nwlll  ba repeated Wedneiday and\nPrlday nights.\nDuring   tbe   entire   wrek   dances      I.ONPON\nwill be bold   On Tuesdav night the  is s\nband of Red NirhoN from the Cl*ih      N\nMorocco  i*i  Hollywood   will   be   lm    -.,\nhired at  'tie Civic Centre *hi\nThroughout   tile   week    ('-event  dr'\nINDIVIDUALISTS\nAug\nst 1\niCPi \u25a0 Defer.'-*\nthat   \\h*\nill    I'urt\nthe Deter.ce nt Brl-\nrepairs.\nlUtavia. and   Deputy  Mayor Joesnf  hostilities   will   receive\n.lak')a remilned under trriMt 'About 342.(W1 Canadian\nthe   medal\nquillfy.\nMARSHALL. NT   Aug\nP:   W   A   S,nis   Mr.'!'\n^a'-.i !,'v   riiht   b'.-v\nWVlV.m*.   .    Who    hr*    M*A\n:-.--i *n;pr'r\"i'.   had   hrm    taken    by\nnfficers   fr* m   a   dark,   dirty   r^'un  Shows midway will hf in ''.!! *w\nwhere   *he   was   a   virtual   prisoner      The uhir! of the bagpipes and the\nby hrr parents for almost six years   fling of the plaids to please the eye\nPi     Sams   said   that   a   party   nf and ear of any Scotsman or Jubilee\ndpputv sher.ffs, acting on a writ of spectator! In general will usher in a wife\nhabeas   corpus,   had   removed   her  Ihe Caledonian Games Tuesday. Tlie  ^n*> ?ii\nfrom   a   cabin   deep   in   the   North  games will continue all day. and will      \\jr<\nCarolina  Mountains see pipers from as far West as Van- the wi\nThe   woman,   Dr    Sami   Mid,   ts couver and Easterly points iuch as shop\nsuffering  from  advanced  malnutri- Calgary and Kimberley. wouldn't\ntion and li ln \"bad shape\" She wai     Wedneiday Is the day for lovers plained  she\nand   upllli.   From  ]0an and\nof :rd\n\\ni   Vrr\nchar\nA\nAPi -Britain\nviduahsti,\n, sin-ounced she\ni !a L tdv G vli vi\nof UVstgate --\nlv as possible\"\nM b* fined s!x-\nnV  for hospital\nW   M\nbed nf boards, ap-  of   speed,   thrill]\nRobert Francis nf\nStandard is among\npapermen  assigned 1\ncover   th*t\n'her  *t<\nles\nmdujtru\n\u2022a  \\r.   K>\nthe   Montreal\nisiting   news-\nthf ir  papers\nNelson   Jubilee   and\nof  genfal   inters!   m ,\nird   other   develop-\nUJekjomn: TUIaml ^oldm, QuhiksL UL&ii&iL!\nparently Without any aanitary facil- acrou the line an Imported covey of      Magui\nitin racing cars will careen  around  the   *f>d up \"\ndo the\nfered i'\nwho I-,\"'\nVi.'k rv\nB .hH\n\\ri Cn\n'ht ige\nell, FM. advertised ft*\n!'.< venn (if age or older and\n'I \\\\: '.,'li\"'s ir the first mail.\nKate Ir*m pasted a sign in\n:dow of he' London antique\nAmericans no* served\" She\nv   why,  hu-   friendi ex-\nvas ' upsr*   ab-im  the\nht'ical situation \"\nie PiUitu\n.   Jasper\nMm\nl  Mked\n\u25a0p.   tr:\nj4H.tV0'\nk^lvne\n,f he c,\n\u2022k.   ani\n -\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u2014\n-^\u2014\n\u25a0^~\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014^\u2014\n'\u25a0\n\u2014\u25a0\n\u2014\n1 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUO. 4, 1147\nWELCOME JUBILEE VISITORS! MAY YOUR STAY IN NELSON BE A HAPPY ONE I\nTht) Ytti't Mett Urnuual Drama I A\nyouth who turned against the worldi\n\u25a0And t hone who brou-jht him true\nloyalty, along tht trail oi 1,000 ptriltl\nMAISHAU\nTHOMPSON-TOBIAS.- BEVANS\nind'BESS'\nF^jfB\"\nComplttt Showi Today Qt *\n7:00-9:00\nMatinee Dally Except Monday\nLatest World Newi\n\"I Lore My Wife But\"\nCiuie\n^*<fo**tJm*e1k4\nSTARTS TODHV!\nCAHIOl\nA   PAMOUI   FUYIR!   THIATBI\nIhowi at 7:00-9.02\nIur) Kimberley\nliner Improves\nCALGAHY, Aug. ! <CP)-SerI-\nLilly Injured Friday when a mine\nMrge exploded In hll face at Kim-\nItrley. BC, 21-ye\u00abr-old Fred Mile?\ni reported \"f really impmved\" ln\ncapital here tonight Milei was\nUven more than 200 milei to Cal-\nJtirjr after doctors in Kimherley ex-\n(mined him earlv Friday evening.\nR ll not known whether he will\nJrjie hll light His fare, nook and\nSoulden were also Injured The\nttploaion occurred when Miles In.\nCttljatad i charge he fired which\nd tilled to exr'.ode\nTwo Calls on\nFire Department\nOver Weekend\nA frau fire and a false ilirm\nfcfougnt out Nelson Fire Department\ntqulpment over the weekend\nThe grass Ire was ex'mguiihed\nJeturdiv at r.oon Sunday at .13n\nftjn, truck*; prorf..ri.r\\ \\- rne City\nwatarfrort where ar alarm had heen\nftyundad Ciuse cf the falie signal\nU r.ot known\nTohst4iea\nCAPACITY CROWD\nAT TRINITY\nJUBILEE SERVICE\n! A rapacity congregation Ittended\nlhe special Jubilee dedicatory service in Trinity United Church Sunday morning, when St, Paul's and\n, TnnS'y parishioners were combined. Rev. A. L. Anderson, new minister of St Paul's, addressed the\npioneer* and eloquently described\nthe characteristics of a good citizen,\nRev Gordon McL Boothroyd <Je-\nscribed the foundations of a city as\nmaterial and spiritual. He said:\n\"Nelson is richly blessed in the resources of mines, timber and soil\nShe n'ar.ds in the centre of thor-\nnughfarei for trade and commerce,\nand her people have shown enterprise and initiative throughout more\nthan half a century\" The speaker\n\u2022raced 'he development of the\nchurches in Nelson and said thi*\nthe Christian congregations have\nbeen as ' wa'chmen un'o the L*md \"\nHe concluded with the reminder\nths* orly 'hose rich in wisdom, ex-\nperienee and affection could fully\nappreciate their city.\nNames of thoee members and adherent* of the Unload Church, res;-\ndr*-' Vl years or rnorr\\ were read\nColorful Parade\nTo Initiate\nGolden Jubilee\nPerhaps thi largest parade In\nNelson'* hlitory\u2014a trtln of some 50\nfloats, five bands, representatives\nof civic organizations, comic marchers and other associates of fan-fare,\nwill snake through the City Monday\nas an opener to Golden Jubilee festivities.\nAssembly will be at ths Hum*\nSchool, whence the stream of vehicles will movs up High Street at\n1:80 p.m.. advance to Baker Street,\nproceed to ths C.P.R. station, back\nalong Vernon and Front Streets to\nthe Civic Recreation Grounds,\nwhere inaugural ceremonies will\ntake place.\nLeading the vast procession will\nbe a standard bearer, majorettes,\nthe Maple Leaf Band of TraU and\nthe Vancouver Police Band. Official\ncars, Including that of Mayor T. H.\nWaters of Nelson, will also head the\nparade, along with the City's pion-\neeri, ex-service men and women,\ncadet and Boy Scout groups.\nService clubs, lodges, civic and\ngovernmental bodies, and a wide\nvariety of other factions wlll havt\ntheir banners in the parade In the\nform of floats. A score of local business houses too will havs gaily-\ndecorated floats on hand.\nStreets along the parade route\nwill be blocked off, and atreet cars\nwill operate on 20-minute loops from\nthe centre of town. For the convenience of patients desirous of seeing\nthe passing show, nurses at Kootenay Lake Genersl Hospital will\ndirect moveable patients out of\ndoors, it Is expected.\nOldtime and comic costumes were\nmade available Sunday fo children\nand adults Joining in the parade.\nSeveral hundreds of dollars are offered as prizes for the best-decorated floats and variety-costume\nwearers entered.\nFreedom of City to Be Extended\nTo Eight Ex-Mayors During Jubilee\nNelson will bestow freedom of\ntha City upon all living ex-mayors\nduring Jubilee Week.\nFreedom ot the City hai many\nhistoric associations,\npedia Britannica lays\n'\u25a0X.'\nThe\nEncyclo-\n\"FREEMAN: The term ipeciiical-\nly applied to one who possesses the\nfreedom of a city, borough or company. Before the passing of the\nMunicipal Corporations Act 183.S\neach English borough admitted\nfreeman If cording to its own peculiar custom and by-laws. The rights\nand privileges of a freeman, though\nvarying in different boroughs, generally included the right to vote at\na parliamentary election of the bor-\nough, and exemption from ftll tolls\nand duel. Thl let of 1835 respected\nexisting usages, and every person\nwho wis then in adfnltted freeman\nremained one, retaining all his former righti and privileges. The admission of freemen is now regulated by the Municipal Corporations\nAct 1882, whereby the term \"freeman\" includes any person of the\nclass whose rights and Interests are\nreserved by the act of 1835 under\nthe name either of freemen or of\nburgeuei. No person can be admitted a freeman by gift or by purchase; that is. only birth, servitude or\nmirrlige are qualifications. By the\nHonorary Freedom of Boroughs Act\n1885, however, the council of every\nborough miy admit persons of dis\ntinction to be honorary treemen.\"\nIn British Columbii. Section 19 of\nthe Munlclpilltiei Act defines freedom of the City thus:\nFor the purpoie of bestowing\nhonors upon my person dlstthgullh-\ned for nationi! or local servicei, it\nshall be lawful for the Council of\nany city municipality to confer, by\nresolution passed by unanimous\nvote of all the members of the\nCouncil, the freedom of the city on\nsuch person, and, notwithstanding\nany Statute or law to the contrary,\nany person so receiving the freedom of the city by resolution of the\nCouncil ai aforesaid shall, during\nthe pleasure of the Council, be a\nfreeman of such city, and ahall, if\na British subject, be deemed to be\npossesse dof all the qualifications\nrequired by persons to be nominated\nanrl elected to hold the office of\nMayor of the city, and, further, the\nname of such freeman shall be placed first on the list nf electors of the\ncity, and he shall be eligible tn vote\nat any election for Mayor Or Alderman.\"\nEx-mayors who will thus be Ignored this week ire:\nJ. J. Malone 1914-13-18\nJ. A. McDonald 1919-20, 1628-27\nC. F. McHardy 1921-22\nL. H. Choquette 1923-24\nR. D. Barnes 1928-29-36\nJ. P. Morgan 1931-32-33-38-87\nS. H. Smythe 1933-34\nN. C. Stibbs 1938-194(1 inclusive.\nJohn Leask, Prominent in Cranbrook\nLite lor 15 Years, Dies at toast\nPhilo Vance, u*io wai in au-\nfeority   rn   irt   n   \\> ell   is  rn\n\u2022rim*, wvi in Th* Cararv M ir-\ndw f.'a**?'-\u25a0' } vtry g\u00bbr ;*.\".**\nwork of a:- hn.' i rj \u25a0*'.\u25a0'\u2022,\u25a0 u h\nibe cr.'.ri ci'.', t'.i*- r.nr~* \\*-\\\ntflthuii a sm, tnd \u25a0\u00bb p or * a r, \u2022' \u25a0\nA Copy, nr irr.'iv-f t\\. \u25a0\u25a0' k- '\"i*\ndilt.r.g inh ' S. chiri' \u2022\u00bb: \u00ab\\r; ;('s\ntOO pPTfr ' \u25a0 * i-A-r' .\".-\u25a0 r!.t-<\\\nton tr**\". F.Vt\u00bbn r-' Z~*r<*r-i\nICinr.s \/\u25a0' ': ' Va , 1 V , v r\nswarp ' *' \u25a0'httt \u25a0' i *v! d'A'tV-\nm\u00a3 :n H-\u2022\u2022 \u25a0 ;',. a: d \u25a0'. \u25a0 *\u25a0\u25a0 *.\ntior.i \u25a0; \u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0' . v .*('' ;\u2022\u25a0 >*\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\noriBir.-1,   <:   <    \u2022\u2022-',   \u2022.,\u25a0\u2022'. r.>s\nnevsr [ r- \u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0* \u25a0 :-.*\u2022 \u25a0*\u25a0:\u2022 *\u25a0\u25a0*. *\n4sre-- h\u00bb s '<*<i :\u25a0 >\u25a0 \u2022 < \u2022 ;.-\u2022\u2022 -j\n^ I the dt'tZtr r.f I *,*\u25a0 ;t \u25a0\ntJtor w -k' u,'\". a \"\u2022 f- v\nIClOuint>w i\u2014l a \u25a0*,(\" ,.. i|\nC*r\u00ab wh.rh 're n:\\--r ir ',\"\u25a0'\nthf\u00abM nf tti' \\*e Is) r \u25a0 ' *\u00bbr\nexh* '.( Ard Y\".r * \\V* \\ -:-'\nIhSfS t rn wav nt r> ,'a* rg\nthat er1: *,*\u25a0 a---* t-A .\u00bb;\u25a0. -.'a-\n:e*v \u2014 'htt* e*taf -- '*-- -h a-\nrtr.i \"ll ra-\"-j ; - t*:r?\nHnuf \u25a0\u25a0 r-joa^ls. a r \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u2022 av\nre*s\u00bb*o'.tti*\u00bb a' \" i i \u00bb' * - - \u25a0 \u25a0 t a\nvai' p: v.'v: '-i\"i'- d \"r rt -\u25a0*\u2022\nb*tM.*\u00bbr- t;;\u00bb-i I \u25a0 \u2022* ' , \u25a0 \" \u2022\u25a0*\".*\nt%   aru-'-' \u25a0 '\n'ia r'-' '\u25a0''  ' \u25a0   ' '\nGooderham^ Worts\nLIMIT! I)\n1 \u2022 r\u2022n I ft ,    (nnodl\nMrs. Roosevelt\nSuggests Congress\nDelegate for U.N.\nWASHINGTON. A';? 3 - Mrs\nE>anor RooseV^l^. making sorr.f\nrorr.rrT's on th* Uni'*d Nations\n,r. th* mirSf of \u25a0 sp\u00bb*ch *' an-\nn'ls! m-pmnnsl (\"X-tcii-sb for Pr*s\u00bb.-\nier* Rnonrvp'.t, f .^GPRtPd thst con-\nfret*, gh^U'd he Tfr*Te*en\\ec\\ ti\nr. \u25a0fr; Nntrr.n mfti'i^p Nl^\npnnspvflt d-^erribpd Rusnian U-N\nd\">g i'r\u00ab '\u25a0-\" t.y-0 wnrris- Th*v\n,1-, r\u201e. rVj,r,gf thrtr :d**aa a< *n-\nrt.\".d'.ais. for 'htr ir# r'>i'.m\"*d *n\nn ''V   dictated- by   th<*ir   Govrrn-\nDetroit Prepares\nFor ford\nEmployees Strike\nCETROlf, Auj. 3 fAP) - United\nAuto-Workers  (CIO.)   representa-\nilso the mmei of couples who this 'lve!f^ e|8ht h\",jr8 ol bar\u00abaln;\nvear celebrate golden wedding ,n- '?\u00ab, tod,a-' *ltb an innouncement\nnivenariaa l\"16' nhl>' a last-minute truce could\n' , , a Istave a strike of 107.00(1 Ford Motor\nMrs.  M. J.  Stallwood  and  Mis5Vompany   production   worker!   at\nMarie Stringer  rendered  the  duet|n00n Tue,aay\n\"Love Divine All Love Excelling,\"     jnt(ra,tion,] Executive Board Of\nby Sinner, and the choir rendered; lh, CI0 |jni\u201e,d Aulo Workers ap-\nthe anthem,  'Dear Land n   Home,   pr\u201ev(,d a pj*0posed strike of 107.000\nby Sibelius, with Mrs  C, W. Tyler i f-or(1 production workers. The Board\nas  organist.   In  the  avening.  Mlss|gavP jt! conjent for the workers to\nMarie Stringer and George Spence(flrlke not later than Tuesday,\nsang the duet. \"Children Pray His     The situation looms as the gravest\nLove to  Cherish.\"  by  Spohr.  The] management-labor crisis in Detroiti\nchoir rendered the anthefn, \"0 HoW[jmce November, 1945   At that time!\nAmiable Are Thy Courts.\" hy Maun-;the same Union led 173,000 worker*\nder, while Mr  George Spence sang out.on a 113-day strike against the\nthe lolo, \"How Long Wilt Thu Tor- General Motors Corporation\nget Me\"\" by Eville I    Main issuei  in the writing of a\nIIHllllllllllllllllllMIIMIIIIIlilllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIII'MIIIII'IIIIIIIIIII\n'News of the Day\nRATES: 22o line, 27c Mm black tace type   lamer typa ritei en\nrequist. minimum two linei  IO*7*,, discount for prornpt piyment\nn i ii m in 11 iii 111111 ii iti uti 11 iii i iiii 11 ii ii i mi 11111 ii i iii ii Ki 1111 mi ii 1111 mn i id ii i rinr'\nFeather! of jll colors for Jubilee     Have voir chimneys cleaned ind\nCostumes JACK BOYCE. repaired   by   Pounders   Chimney\n \u2014 Service   Phone   9M-x\nOLD   PAPERS   FOR   SALE,   15c *\t\nBUNDLE  AT  DAILY  NEW8. I    ATTENTION    ALL    LEGION   W,\n  A.  MEMBERS. PLEASE  MEET AT\nW = .h.r    frrv.h'.'     T\u201e.l    nbnn.    Ql    TOURlST    PARK,    HIGH     STREET\nwasher  trojDie    .(uat  phone  is'., -mn..,   ,   ^ \u201e     \u00bbA    ,*,..   \u00bb..^I\nBeatty repairman will call promptly. 1\u00b0\u00b0**   1\u201e\u00a3* \"; ,T0   J0IN   T\"|\n . K        PARADE. DRESS WHIT1 BLOUSE\nThe Po,. Cife - Castlegar, will \"*\"*< SKIRT, W. A. HAT,\nbe closed all diy. Aug. 7th only - '\n \u25a0  Tickcti   on   iali   \"today   for\nTwo choice b Hiding loti 3rd St. Jubilee   Anracfloni   ot   Civic\nFairview. Bl.ckwood Agency. Cen(fe   offJ\u00a3e   flnd   flt   fkM\nWhy rot give ui a ci'.l to lncreaie booth in front of Bank of Com-\n*oir fire  iniunnce  rrntertlon  to* mcrco,  Baker St.\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Aug. 4 -\nJohn Lenk, Stipendiary Magistrate\nand Justice of the Peace here for\n25 yean, ind one of Cranbrook's\nearlieit buiineu men, died recently at Vancouver, ige 88 yean.\nHi wis born at South Shields,\nEngland, and came to Canada as a\nyouth 16 live It Qore Bay, Ont. He\nfollowed the trade of tailor there\nand when East Kootenay opened\nfor settlement in 1898 through com\npletion of the Crow's Nest line of\nthe Canadiah Pacific Railway he\nwai one of the first to go into business continuing as I tailor.\nHe was appointed Justice of the\nPeace and Stipendiary Magistrate\nin 1918, and served in this capacity\nuntil retirement In IBM, when he\nand Mrs Lea5k moved to the Coast,\nShe survives him there\nHe loaves 41 descendants, five\nsons, Russell and Elvin, Vancouver,\nThomas, Sllverton, William Beaver\nHarbor, N.S., and Merritt, Cranbrook; three daughters, Mrs. H. J.\nCaldwell, Cranbronk, Mrs H.\n.Greenhaigh and Mrs H. Lynous,\nVancouver; 24 grandchildren and\nnine great - grandchildren. Three\nbrothers, James and Andrew, Cranbrook, and George, Victoria, also\nsurvive him.\nBUY A DRESS\nAT A BARGAIN\nCOTTON PRINTS, all sizes. $\u00abJ.60\nSALE  .-.._ ___..     ._   L\nNURSES' UNIFORMS, white.   1*^.25 $J.9$\nSALE  L and     J\nPRINTED COTTONS and RAYONS. $3.9*8\nRegular $5.95. SALE  3\nPRINTED COTTONS and RAYONS. $4-98\nRegular $8.00. SALE .'.    T\nPRINTED COTTONS and RAYONS. $-f.98\nRegular $XO.OO. SALE ..._       \/\nPRINTED COTTONS and RAYONS. $1 A.95\nRegular $15.00. SALE    IU\nPRINTED RAYONS and JERSEYS. \u00abl \/1.95\nRegular $21.00. SALE l*t\nCOOLIE COATS. f\\pe\nEach   _  : y J\nDRESSING GOWNS. $Q.95\nRegular $14.00. SALI . O\nnew contract stem from Union Insistence upon a workers' pension\nplan ind immunity from certain financial nubilities ipecified in the new\nTaft-Hartley Labor Act\n17 Fires Alight\nIn Kootenay\nForeit fires burning in Kootenay-\nBoundary as of Sunday totalled 17,\nBC. Forest Service officials at Nelson stated.\nMajority of the blaze* ire under\ncontrol, ind 43 fire fighters are employed throughout the District Two\nfires in the Fernie District snd one\nit Canal Flats have Just recently\nbeen spotted, and no report is available on their extent.\nFires burning Included two at\nCreston, nine at New Denver, one\na! Elko, one at Nelson, two at Fernie lnd two at Canal Flits\nStone Captures\nTrail-Rossland\nOpen Tourney\n! TRAIL, B.C., Aug. 3 - Thp second annual 54-hole Traii-Hosshnd\nOpen Gnli Tournament was won by\niRegp Stone, local pm, when he\nnosed out last year'? winner, Harry\nDonaldson of Rowland, hy one\ns'mke   with   a   218   two  ovrr   par\nColored Team\nPopular in Trail\nTRAIL, BC, Aug 3-The zantest\nand positively the most entertaining\nteam that has appeared In Trail ln\nthe last 10 years kept a large crowd\nIn stitches Sunday afternoon at\nButler Park,\nTh* colored team from Sioux City,\nIowa, played a local squad from Bill\nMann's Trail Softball League and\ndefeated the locals 8-fl, but the score\nwas incidental. Led by Catcher\nCompound Favors, the \"ghosts\" after\nbuilding up a substantial lead proceeded tn put on a show, the likes\nof which has probably never been\nequalled here and has to be seen to\nbe appreciated. Their shadow ball,\nslow motion acts and various other\ntricks would vie, with any Hollywood comedy production.\nHowever, the local softballers *\nproved Saturday night when they;\nmet the Ghosts in the first of their,\ntwo game series and gained a 1-1\ndraw, that they hau$ a high calibre!\nof softball here and had the visitors\nCost of Living\nClimb Continues\nOTTAWA, Aug. 8 (CP) \u2014 Re-\nfleeting Increases In food, clothing, fuel and ItSuM furnishings\nthe cost-of-living Index Jumped a\npoint during June to, 136.9 from\n134.9, tha Dominion Bureau of\nStatistics reported today.\nFlva of the six component\ngroups of the Index showed Increases and one was unchanged.\nOn the baia 1936-1939 equals 100,\nthe Index at July 2 was 8.9 polnti\nhigher than at the start of th\u00ab\nyear and 10.8 points higher than\non the corresponding data last\nytar. When adjusted to the base\nAugust, 1939, equals 100 the index\nmoved to 134,8 at July 2, compared with 133.8 at June 2.\nstuck   strictly   to   ball   tht   rtiult\nmight have been different.\nThe touring softballers who play\n-it least seven game* a week from\nMay to September arrived late Saturday evening believing that night\nball was played here. Consequently\nmany of the fans had left the park\nbefore the visitors had arrived.\nsrnre,\nStone, nne of Ihe two professionals in the tournament, \\*ro\". himself\nthe P. F. Mclntyre Trophy ar.d a\nrherk fnr $150 offered to pro-\nfessionals.\nErnest Brown, Vancouver Pro.\nand Secretary nf the BC Professional Golfers Association, automatically collected a cherl*; for $75\nMr, Brown spoke highly of th\" ron-\nd:Hon of the  co':r?e ard promised\n?-C   W    APPLF.YAnD\n\u201e, .   ,       ,   . .   . Grod light  is s necessi'v, r.ot I\n-Jm7\/.   \"fLiiln    ,'   v 7 -*'\"\u25a0' A \u2122\u2122n Lamp or Lsn-\nri'inters snn   f.,ir\u00bbw  windows   Nrw . .     ,   ,   '\n^*n\u25a0^r^!^^rv  A   Folhfrbv, RR  No. 1. ,    '* J-\"i >,n'i ' ' **\u00abM you w'nl\nr-f-e 4R2L.4 r Vll'lr S-J*rm'*r r.rbp or camping\n'\u2022I'\nbfrff,   Int'.AV   ,t-\nHIPPERSONfl\nFive Escape Death\nNF.W     WFSTMINISTER.     BT\n\\*,a a* t'f \u25a0 Yrr pf*,Bnr,\u00bb bf-.r-\n\u2022-<v.'r: r- ii-.rA] rle-s'ts Saturday\n, -rti 'a *,.,' ,ni ':\u2022-,',., r,*'-n!*d at\n. Ir.'.orufi ' \" \u2022\u2022'. 'h, Va, ,1 t a-'!\nK * i   ti*1 \u2014,.   h.^hwi;. s   birch   r.l\nEVERY  DAY   IB  BARGAIN  DAY\nAT   FAIRWAY.   PHONE   1177   AND\nI17J, NELSON   AND   DISTRICT   OLD\n\u2014. .  TIMERS cms, lo th, reil room, In\nTrttt.   Oancf   Prnr'\u00bbr   Hrt*i\u00bbl   A..| **\"\u2022 Cl*5lc Cpntrp to meet end wel-\n'   rh:rker.  Dinner .*> tn 7 Smday \"*\"-'    you'    oM    Tillicums.    Open\nRnnrr.,\u2014boi'** (nr re:,'. 'fry  i,y   '.00  p.m.  till   10:00  p.m.\n  1,n   in   tt>e   Nelion   Cimerj   Room\nfr-   r\\;n-i   rr\\--A:-i   ar.d   f**'   aT- and Ladies In the badminton loung,\n*   -\u25a0 a'  tind\u00abra*e  pru-Pi. b i * \u2022* g your Pol low  tne  .rrnws.\nt a'.rh  rn pa, -t;  tn Ci'.i.ntnr.'f *\u2014\n.II.'HII.EE PARADE A.:\u00abuit 4!h\np..    tn    the    t'avi'.nade     Fajle F\\*.erv.re   nnn   ind   *A*nmrn  are\n-\u25a0 t-*-;i:*   f *r   *r*r :;\u25a0\u2022\u2022'   \\,,1,   he   ra:*- \"1 leated *n fail in at Hime Srhool\nrr'led   i:**,] A :|   it it 1 . rn  Oid vr'erana whn ire un-\n-. ....  able   :n  n*,lke  ,  inn|  marrh  pleill\nSS'b 1af\u00bb'.*nn V- '  -yii  as-.em.bie report   a*   the   I.e|ion   ai   amnge-\n'-.\u2022 th- (time Srh.nni : no pm .sharp men's u*ll he \"*,-), for them tn fall\n\u25a0-dav in  at <nme pn;rt erirnut*. Dren\u2014\n ..._-.. i.rr.fi:  raps and m**ria!a\nCvpana **n    Watrii    Br\u00abre>:i   fnr\nliei ml ,.,,*\u00ab m jnid-filied and Bry    *-**i*    PnrtlMe    Typewriter\niinlex reel \u00ab\u2022 Hir\\ev'i Jf**\u00ab'.len ' *'*'- T'*-*r\"' nonrleli nnw in itnfk fnr\n  r*:n*rd i*e   delivery    Can   Pe   snlfl\nNelson Pioneer\nReceives Decoration\nFrom Pope Pius\nHi\u00ab Holinm Pop* Plui XII has\ntaken coiniiance of Nelaon'a Golden Jubllte by conferring one of the\nhlghut honori of tht Church on a\npioneer reiider.t and member nt the\nCathedral Parish He hai ron.f\u00bbrr\u00bb-!\nIht medal \"Pro Ercleiia et Pont;-\nfice\" on Joseph O  Patenaude\nIn choosing Mr Patenaude for\nthu high distinction, the Supreme\nPontiff iaid he wished to acknowledge the contribution tn\nChurch and Country made bv nil the\npioneers, of whom Mr Patenaude I'\na \"most worthy representative\"\nthat\nrr\nwould   hr   bring\nng   many\nmore\ni\nlfprs  from  the C\nout\nnext\nTo\n}\narry   Dons'.dson\nwent\nthe\nPro-?\na\na   trophy   and   a\npriM\nfor\nhPin?\nc amatp'jr with\nhe Id\nvest\nscorp\nli\nthe tournament\nTh.\n:r\nwere     manv\nhand,,\noftne\npr.v**\nw\non by golfer* In t\n\",e vat\nioui\nhand.\ni d'.v.bior.s.\nAVO'nfn  THE   MfAT\n*.'. ami ;*.,   \u2022 r\nMe    \u25a0,.,.    ,,,.\u25a0     -.-i.-l-.-t    b\n,-   r.'-  . :::    hv   ' fr     gh'   of  s\n,s***.p   I*  *.isi no:  t,,(,  i,ad  l\nR:\u00ab*..*n S :ede Pimp- Beg   *4 *\"\nSpecia: ;::^\nr,.r*S  Wf.'e   I! n-lrr    JJ !<\nTHK BOOTERY\nlannWN   RUEDE    PUMPS    REO\nMT,,  SPECIAL 12 Ti\nGIRLS' white    LnArtRfr |1.2',\nTHE  ROOTERY\n'TRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\n,p***-.   ,-.:\u2022   a-1\nr:    ,'     (\u25a0\u00ab*,'.'-, -rf,\n\u25a0'I   Pa<e:   S*ree!\n*he:r\n! bro-rh-\nV S'o'e\na:*,d  see\net    ;*\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10 JO o m. \u2014 Eicapt Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nnt   ti  Meivnn, prop,\nTroil\u2014Phone 135     Nelson\u2014Phono 35\nwepammmMmmmmmmmmmmimmmammmmmm\nCir   1'iick   nf   radio   ba\"e:\nromplete    ItWO-hout     A     Batteries,\n\\ ,'.   It Pa is.    ! tj.a.iit  A  Hattenes\nfi-.   it   H  H\u00bb'*e::es   V  :   bellei   per\n'orman-e  and   Innge,   i fe  t'i   It u\n,;cas   Ha\"r*  es   f'rtfl   Hlpptl\"'!, s\ne;:her for ca*h or cnnvenitnl month.\niv pa*, rn.e-'s Liberal allowance fnr\n*. v,r nid typewrl'tr D W Mcplerby\nThe Typewriter and Adding Machine Ma**,**. ,1*18 Ward Street. Nel-\ni  n, B  C,\nMONPAY   sTPUfT  CABS\nti*., ,> j '** Ne ,,-s, (Jnlden .1 it* 'ee\nb .   . -.    \u25a0\u25a0 r   \u25a0,\u25a0...!   B.i.l.a*.   lervira\nl       1     -r    (i   ,,      ;'r  1    *i   ,1 ,[;g    the    P**  lti\n* ,    1  *\"   p :\u25a0:     Mnndlv     A   10.\n\u2022r    ir*-:;r.    W.ll   be   Tib.   d'.iridg\nho.r.s fron*, Stanley. Baktr\n\u25a0r am ;nd the hill, and from\n\u25a0 frnrt     corner     to    Fairvitw\nThe Weather\nTnrtcait:\nKootenay \u2014 Oar Mnndlv\n**orning clnurly by lilt af'ernt\nIsolated thundtrahnweri Mor\nevtning Wlnd.a light Continn\n'.term High Monday Penticton\nKamlnopi BP, Lyt'on P0, Cranbr\nB8, Creican*. Valley fl^\nMontreal IKI     11\nToronto i.l     fi\nWinnipeg KS     Hf\nCalgary M     HV\nF^ntirton        ... 52     Oil\nVancouver In     \"1*\nVictoria M     71\nCranbraok C-     Hi\nCreacent Valley al     Hi\nSeattle *;     Hi\nSpokane 80    i)\ndeaths\"\nrOPTl.ASn. Ore   i APi       C,er\nM   Tohm, M. once   wlfle'y   kr\nn  hockty nrclel\n$2,000,000 Damage\nIn Texas Storm\nNASHVILLE, Aug. 3\u2014 Tp**s Ii\ncounting up the damage Inflicted\nby the tropical itorm which\niwept inland from the Gulf of\nMexico Friday night ard lathed\nit the Rio Grande Valley. The lou\nIn cottnn cropi wai eitlmated at\n$2,000,000, The cotton damage re*\nlulled Iron heavy rain iquall|\nwhich accompanied the itorm and\ncauied both a reduction In yield\nand a lowering of the gradf of\ncotton, hut paiturti and other\ncropi benefitted hy the rami.\nFind Body of Girl\nIn English Bay\nVANfnUVF.n, A \\g S -TV -.- ir\nVar- \u2022 \u25a0 ivpt r!,t^.^vrrrri tht blf!v nl\n,i \\i\"it;g wrrnn fi \u25a0i':rig in 'h-* v tt-\nr-*A ct Try **\u25a0., B.), >?s **r, ,i -'If\nfr\"m lh-\" Knval Vanr mvrr \\'\u2014h!\n;'mhi iv:: r.t The hul;., badly de-\n-nn'pmtd, ',% hf'itfvp'l to havp been i\nt.  thr  u'.-'Fr  fnr  thi'ff weeka. ',\nPol; \u25a0* tri!ii'i\\f!y idrntifiMl th\u00bb\nh'idv a. !fi vt ,i: oM Pev\u00bbr>y Joan\nKt\u00bblia, te'pphnn* ipftator, who hM\nhetn rejv r>1 nnaalrg in^f July U ;\nLll'f jf.iardi at 'he tlm\u00ab rapnrtaxl a\nyontxg c.:k) heiifvM *o hav\u00ab b\u2014n\nM w Kt.lt. n*.im 6ut frnm I Spin-\n,*h Hnrk.< lUttrh anrl dl\u00bbpp#arrd\nSubi+Tiart ft'-rt* fc> Wicata MIm\nKrl'.i nrd f'rf'Uin| Ittrmpt* Vn\nlht hnr!y Ufre l--th unaurr*MW\\il\nLACROSSE\nGAME\nRossland\nREDMEN\nvs.\nNELSON\nKIWANIS MAPLI\nLEAFS\nTuesday, Aug. 5\n9. is P.M.\nCivic Centre Arena\n$5.00 program priie to lucky program holder.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\n\/kt  rno\\i  sn   rDr.rwnnn\nAt*    -t   I'i'ttv   b,,-t    Mark    infl\nnf.-r     Trt-r.l    le|    11   ipralnfrl\nNO   I AKtVDE   CAWP   HMOliLn '*\"' '   \"\"\" ,                 _.,   \u201e .__\nnf    WITHOUT    ONf    LIFtnAFTB K*\"t|l   SAl.K     IB13 \\lkl.7 TON TICK\nFOR   FUN   IN   HUN   AND  WATER '\u2022!'    '\"irk      larallant    ronditlfin\nSEI THIM  at Ai-r':   Entire Momra\nr.RitNwoon's Two noTTO \"SiMTl KO?  (tNT\nApply 121*1 rmialt)r Ava   TlMine\nthil Yi*>U     IMJ-X\n\u2022jLAfLAuUeXtXTZ-rr ;;<cjmt i.ai-IBBU\nSi-i- MiM'l Chirrififd SfClltm\nrarjr 9.\nVM.FNTISF !, .  ||\u00bbl\n\u2022 ke a-ltaeiaje of their wtrl* rin|e\n(   l'i    * t\u00a3rai..*;t    S ,|.|l es   a,A   I te\n,i   .... ;   *,..,     ,.    *      HFi'tiHl\"   \" r\nStreets Closed\nDURING JUBILEE PARADE, Baker St. from\nRailway Sf, Interieetion along Baker to Cedar, Edge-\nwood Av*., High Street and Nelion Are. will be\ncloied to traffic frem 1:00 P.M. to 3:30 P.M.\nBaker St. during Parade muit bc clear of\nvehicular traffic during parade houn, alto Vernon\nSt. frem Hallway interaction tn Hume Hotel.\nYour cooperation  *iH  he  greatly npptfiriatpd\nBy Order,\nChief of Police,\nROBT   HARSHAW.\nHAY FEVER RELIEF\n7HE EASY ORAL WAY\n]anti&en \"E\"\n(AKIN BT MOUTH NO PAINFUL INJLUIONS\nLANTIGEN \"E\" contains extracts of pollen!\nof grasses, weeds, and sporei of Canadian\norigin to which Hay Fever sufferers In\nCanada arr* usually allergic Sufferers from\nHay Fever are well adviser! tn st.-irt taking\nLANTIGEN \"E\" about a month before their\nusual attack begins. The (severity of the\nattack may be greatly reduced, if not eliminated entirely, when LANTIGEN \"E\" is taken\nas directed Since bacterial infection of the\nupper respiratory tract frequently occurs\nwith Hay Fever, LANTIGEN \"E\" combines\nthe antigens of these organisms, a vaccine,\nwith Ihe pollens of grasses, weeds,and spores.\ni\u00ab\u00bb\nTsnitj&en\"E\nfoi? srWNi; AND Mil It PIS\n$6.00 per bottlu       OBTAINABLE AT ALL DKUU STORkS\n NEGRO HELD\nFOR KINGSTON\nKNIFE DEATH\nKINGSTON, Ont, Aug. 3 \u2014Tha\natory of how a Klngatort man died\nearly today aa the reiult of a gam.\nbl lng argument haa been told by\nKingston Police who reveal they\nare holding  an   American  negro.\nTwenty-four.year-old   Leon  Stafford   of   Waycroia,   Georgia,   ll\ncharged  with the  fatal  atabblng\nof 22year-old Harrlaon of Toronto.\nStafford'! companion, another Negro, is being held a* a material witness. He ls 23-year-old John Harris\nof Tallahasee, Florida.\nPolice say the victim was stabbed\nln the heart at Lake Ontario Park,\nabout two miles West ot Kingston,\nas the result of a dice game squabble. The three men, Stafford, Harrison and Harris were said to have\nbeen quarrelling when Stafford\ndrew a heavy knife. He allegedly\nstabbed Harrison, who died instantly\nWhen police arrived on the scene\na few minutes later, they arrested\nthe two Negroes near Portsmouth\nPenitentiary. The men are reported\nto be tourists.\nCoroner M. J. Morison of Kingston says an inquest will be held\nihortly.\n'\nOttawa Newsman,\nFormerly of Nelson,\nHere for Jubilee\nE. S. Planta, Business Director of\nthe Ottawa Journal ia re-visiting\nNelson (or the Golden Jubilee celebration. Mr. Planta was formerly\nBusiness Manager of the Daily\nNews and later of the Vancouver\nNews Herald. He is accompanied\nby Mrs. Planta, the former Gloria\nStephenaon.\nAGREES TO TAKE\nCORFU CHANNEL\nCASE TO HAGUE\nLONDON, Aug. 3 - The Moscow\nradio said the Albanian Government accepted the United Nations\nSecurity Council's recommendation\nthat the Corfu Channel case be takan to the Hague International Court.\nThe broadcait declared that Albania criticized the British for submitting the same case to the court\nIn the form ot a direct accusation.\nBritain had filed a complaint with\nthe Security Council charging that\nAlbania sowed mines in the channel.\nTwo British destroyers struck the\nmines last October and 44 sailors\nwere killed. Britain iftnl to the Internationa! Court immediately after\nthe Security Council acted.\nOffers Apartment\nTo Princess\nRECORD TOBACCO CROP\nOTTAWA, Aug. 3 (CP) - A\nrecord tobacco crop in Canada\nthis vear was forecast by Dr.\nNorman MacRae, Chief of the\nCentral Experimental Farms\nTobaco Division, who has just returned from a tour of the major\ntobacco    producing    areas.\nWelcome to American\nand Canadian\nLegionaires\nMeet Your Friends at the\nCANADIAN LEGION\nOne   Block   South   of   Hudion'i\nBiy   8tore,\nCHICAGO, Aug. 3 - Forty-nine-\nyear-old Mrs, A. Splvac, has revealed a rare exchange of letters between herself and Buckingham Palace. The letters, the first addressed\nto Princess Elizabeth, who will wed\nLieutenant Philip Mountbatten in\nNovember, follow:\n\"Dear Princess:\n\"I read of your plight in this morning's Chicago Sun, and I would\nlike to be of assistance to you. It\nsaid that because of the housing\nshortage you can't find an apartment and you are forced to live at\nBuckingham Palace with your parents.\n\"I too lived with my mother and\ndad when I was first married, and\nbelieve me, it just doesn't seem\nright. I would very much like to\nexchange my three-and-one-half-\nroom apartment with yours at\nBuckingham Palace. Hoping you\nconsider this, and with sincere\ngood wishes for a happy future, I\nam very sincerely\u2014Mrs. A. Spivak.\"\nHere is the reply Mrs. Spivak received:\n\"Dear Madam:\n\"I am desired by the Princess Elizabeth to express to you her Royal\nHighness's most sincere thanks for\nyour very kind offer of help. The\nPrincess, too tppreciated the kind\nthought which prompted you to\nwrite, out I am sure you will understand that her Royal Highness's social engagements must necessitate\nithe Princess remaining in or near\nLondon.\n\"Her Royal Highness wishes me\nto express her grateful thanks for\nyour message of good wishes.\n\"Yours truly, Margaret Seymour,\nLady-in-Waitmg\"\nBig Achievements\nReported by\nAtomic Commission\nOAK RIDGE, Tenn, Aug 3 (AP)\n\u2014'Great Achievements\" in medi-\nclne, biology and industry have\nalready been made with peace\nproducts of the United . States\nAtomic Energy program, a report\nissued by the U.S. Atomic energy\ncorrmisiLin declares.\nThe report'gave the first sum-\n'mary of progress in research conduced in the same kind of uran-\nthe country since a year ago\ntoday. That was when \"radioisotopes\" produced at this important s:t# in A-bomb development first were released for sa.e\nand distribution to outside investigators.\n\"Radioisotopes\" are radio-active,\nlor \"ray'-emitting, forms of common\nand rare elements. They are produced plutonium for atomic bombs.\n1 They can be used as atomic\n\"labels\" or \"tracers\" for the study\nof many chemical, physical, bio-\ni logical and industrial processes\nimportant to man In some cases\nthey serve as means of furnishing\n.direct radition in the treatment\nof certain diseases As \"tracer\"\nmaterials, their pre ser ce can b\"\ndetected   by   del irate    ins'rumen ts\n-\u2014\n6000 WOMEN\nDEMONSTRATE FOR\nELECTORAL RIGHTS\nSAN JOSE, Aug. 3\u2014Six thousand\nwomen staged a demonstration In\nCosta Rica, demanding equal electoral rights for all Costa Rlcans.\nThe women waved flags and sang\nthe National Anthem as they demonstrated in front of the Presidential palace at San Jose.\nThe Costa Rica President Tea-\ndoro Picados, pronjised a settlement on the issue soon, but thut\ndid not satisfy the demonstrators.\nThey said they intended to re-\nmam In the park in front of the\npalace until they got a better answer.\nThe Government opposition\nparty sponsored a work stoppage\ntwo weeks ago demanding whnt\nit called \"free and impartial elections\" in Costa Rica. Thousands\nare   still   on   strike.\n\u2014\n\u2014\n^^^\u2122\nteemem\n^H5\nAgreement Is\nReached\nRail Blast In\nPalestine Kills\nArab, Injures 1\nPALESTINE, Aug. 3-A railway\nmine blast occurred in Palestine at\ndawn Sunday between Jerusalem\nOfficials placed the blast in near\nRehovot, saying one Arab was killed\nand the all-Jewish city of Tel Aviv,\nand another injured severely, The\nexplosion caused slight damage to\nthe railway which had been cut\nin another place by still another\nmine blast an hour earlier.\nSporadic violence thus maintains\nthe tension in troubled Palestine,\nEve nso, Tel Aviv spent a quiet\nSabbath with thousands at the\nbeach seemingly unaware of the situation which exploded Into street\nrioting by British personnel Only\ntwo nights before.\nTel Aviv was quiet again although\nrumors have spread that Hagana\nplans to forestall any other disorders by British troops. Hagana has\nopposed  violence,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUO. 4, 1947 \u2014 S\nThe \"BAY\"\nSOFIA, Aug. 3\u2014A new economic\nsnd social agreement between\nBulgaria and Yuogoslavia waa con-1\neluded Saturday by Marshal Ti'o\nand Bulgarian Premier Georgi\nDimitrov. The agreement , was\nreached at the conclusion of three\ndays of conferences between thi\ntwo   Balkan   officials.\nUnder the agreement, the two\nNations will aid one another and\nwork towards a full customs union, and Yugoslavia, under th\"\npact, renounces her right to $23,-\n000,000 in reparations form Bulgaria, granted in the Paris treaties\nOxford Group Founder\nDirects Crusade to\nChonqe Men's Hearts\nBY ERNE-ST G. FISCHER\nCAUX-SUR-MONTREUX, Switzerland, Aug. 3 (AP) - From a\nmountain retreat here 2.500 feet\nabove the Castle of Chillon, the\nWorld Assembly for Mora! Re-\n(armament is crusading to change,\n.it says, the hearts nf men and thc\n;destiny of mankind,\ni Frank Buchman, founder of the\n! Oxford group and Chief Exponent\n!of the Philosophy of Moral Rearmament, calls the movement a\nChristian Revolution to eliminate\npersonal, political, industrial racial\nantagonisms. Domestic relations,\nstrife between labor and capita!\ninternational complications and the\nclash of ideologies all come within   the  province  nf  the  revival.\nThe group's $1,000,000 plant heie\nincludes three hotels where 1.000\nworkers and guests are lodged and\nfed. The average stay of each\nguest is 10 days.\nThe establishment will be open\nmore than two months this Summer, its second season, and almost daily there are groups which\nfan out from here int > 61 countries to spread the gospel of\nmoral   rearmament.\nThree Dead in\nExplosion\nPITTSBURGH, Aug. 3\u2014Three\nmen were dead and five Injured\n\u2022\u25a0 the reiult ol a terrldc explo\nsion late Saturday at the Pittsburgh Coke and Chemical Cornp\nany Plant outilde Plttiburgh, Pen\nniylvarria. The blait of unknown\norigin, demolished a large corru*\ngated sheet Iron building and\nrocked a wide area. Fire follow\ned. One man died Instantly and\ntwo others died during the night\nof severe burns.\nRuss Disagreement\nBars Creation of\nInternational Force\nLAKE SUCCESS, Aug. 3 -\nAn American Military representative to the United Nations. General Joseph McNarney said Ru?-\nsian disagreement prevents the\ncreation of an effectice Inter-\nnationav Police Force McNarey\nsaid three major policies were\ninvolved in the disagreement between Russia and the other bit*\npowers Until the differences are\nsettled, the general said, \"ther*;\njust is not going to be an International Security Force\"\nWELCOME,\nOLD TIMER!\nThe Nelson ond Drttrict Old Timeri Aiiociotion\nextendi the GLAD HAND to all former residents of\nthis District and cordially invites them for a visit in\nour REST ROOMS in the Nelson Civic Centre.\nBe sure to register and receive your OLD TIMER\nribbon.\nGeo. W. Steele, President\nA, C. Emory, Treasurer\nRon Fleming, Registrar\nR. G, Joy, Secretary-Hiitori.vi\nThreaten Embargo\nOn Shiomenfrs\nOf Coal to U.S.\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 3 fAP) -\nAn embargo nn shipments of United States coal to Canada is possible\nwithin a week unless Canadian lines\nspeed the return of empty cars tn\nthis country, an association of American Railroads official said Saturday,\nThc A A R official said J Munroe Johnson, head of the United\nStates Office of Defence Transportation, has beer, trying for a month\nto get the Canadian lines to send\nback empties which this country\nneeds.\nCanadian and United States cars\nire freely interchanged in the\nfreight traffic across the border, the\nAAR official said, but the Canadian lines now have approximately\n12,000 United Sta'es open-top Gondola cars which are '-'.'anted hor?.\nRumor Double\nWedding in\nMussolini Family\nBY GINO  MAGNONI\nFORK)  DISCUIA,  I*al\\.  Aug   3\ni Reuters The   island   of   Ischi.'i\nset in the blue waters nf ttie Bav\nnf Naples, is alive with gossip\nabout the possibility of it double\nwedding of member of the Mussolini family- the former dictator's\n57-year-old widow. Rache!cp ar.d\nher 18-y ear-old daughter, Anna\nMaria\nRumor h;ts it thit (hey will\nmarry reipect. vely ,i father, 59-\nvear-dd Vito Calise, nrd Vincenz>\nCalise. his 21-yeai-old-son. wh \u25a0\n:>wn ;: number of vineyard*** or.\nthis   island\nShelve Plans for\nLow-Cost\nVancouver Homes\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 3 (CP)\u2014It\nwas reported Saturday that plans\nfor 1500 low-rost. five-room homes\nhere have been shelved by the British Columbia Building Contractors'\nAssociation.\nFergus Haig, Secretary, said the\nplans had to be shelved because of\ndemands by Trades Unions for increased  wages.\n\"The Association members refused to commit themselves in scales\nproposed by the labor unions,\" he\nsaid. \"The Association is opposed to\nany further increase* in materials\nor wages \"\nCarpenters, now getting $1.25 ar.\nhour, seek $160; electricians, now\n$135, demand $150, and bricklayers\nnow $1 45 want $1.75.\nThe project would have involved\nnearly $9,000,000, Mr Haig reported.\nVancouver Police\nSearch for\nMeanest Thief\nVANCOUVER Aug 3-Police\nVancouver ?:?\u25a0 sea roiling for i\n\u25a0ther   randidate   f r   the   title\nthe\nM\nC11V s\n\u25a0s     C\nhome\nlor.er,\no;\nmeanest   thief\nTrombley.   an   old-ag'\nand   sto>   a   wallet   an*-\nreports   a   thief   entered\nppr\nS31\nPoult rv \u2666hieves raided the perr\n-t C F Mn re Saturday night .and\nsto> .\"I white pekin ducks, valued\nat ne.-Mly $130 Moore says thrill r k s were k.lled on tbe pens\nfind taken away.\nJUBILEE QUEEN\nCORONATION DANCE\nCivic Centre Hall\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 8th, 9:00 P.M.\nMUSIC BY\nBOB'S RED TUX MEN\nADMISSION\n75t  PER  PERSON\nVot\u00ab for Your Fa\u00bborlt\u00ab Quttn \u2014 Ticketi 50< or 3 for $1.00\nEach Ticktt Entitle You to 100 Votei\nQUIZ PRIZES \u2014 lit, Fri|iooir\u00ab      2nd, Walking Machint      3rd,  Radio\nSPONSORED  BY  NELSON  HNSMfcN  CLUR\nItalian Experts\nCarry Proposals\nTo Paris\nROME, A*.;k 3- A nine-man del\nrg.itti.n of Italian rxperti left Rome\nIn a;r for Pans with Italy's detait*\n\u2022A proposals on the Marshall plan\nfo: European recovery with American aid The delegation, headed by\na member of the Italian constituent\naiemb!;.*, Roberto Tremellor.i. will\nloin the chief [talun delegate to the\nEuropean Economics Conference\nPie'ro Campilli whose proposal of a\ncommittee to study labor problems\nwas arcep'ed on  Friday\nPlaster Nazi Signs\nOn British Offices\nLOS ANGELES, Aug 3 fAPi -\nFour s:grs hearing swastikas md\nthr words, ' British Nim,\" wtra\nfound ou'side 'he British Consulite vi the llth floor of a downtown\noffice  building  here\nA rnnm'.ate guard reporVd he\nIur\"'f*\u00bb*i 'ht sign, stenciled on\n'h\u00bb ''.ills \u2022<-:'n r\u00abd pamt, whui he\nmad* * r '!:';\"\u25a0\u25a0 rh-*?*. Tu*y Vjo\nh-o*. thr ;nin ,pMnn, Exod'is 1947\"\nand  d 'Har  %:gr.*\\\ntn Chicago. Aim liar ngni w*n\u00ab\n\u25a0epu'ed hv pohr* on th* sldewilk\nui frui-,' of ihe London Guiranty\nBuilimg, a North Michigan Avenue\nskvsc: ipei which houiei I lie British   Consulate  offices\nWnr Memorial\nWASHINGTON, Aug 1 - The\nManila Harbor Island fortress of\nCorregldoT wai turned over formally 'o the Philippine! by tf.e\nUnited Statei Army Sunday There\nis r.n longer a plac* for the hi*\ntone mek   in  the American mill\nt.irv\nrh*\nTh* icntim-nUI value of thn\nha tt ered, ihell turn llland li inch\nlha1 the Philipplre Government\n*t:!! conver' i'l inili!!it!ori mti\na   p\u00bb: rr.itr.e r.t   war   memorial\nTHANK YOU NELSON\nFor Your\nFRIENDSHIP\nSINCE 1892\nTHE CITY OF NELSON\nThe beginning of the city of Nelson may be. stated to date back to\n1S87, when its present site was located by Gilbert Malcolm Sproat. In the\nfollowing year, by using a rope and some pickets, Sproat roughly subdivided\na small portion of it into town lots, whkh sold readily. In 1889 an official\nsurvey of the town was made and registered, when, after having at first\nbeen called Salisbury and later on Stanley, it was named Nelson after the\nlieutenant-governor of'the province at the time.\nThe location of the famous Hall mine on Toad Mountain, from which\nfortunes were made, had taken place in 1886, but it was not recorded until\n1887. There was a good reason for this delay, as the nearest recording ojfice\nwas then at Donald, and it entailed a 300-mile journey through an unsettled\nwilderness to get there.\nNews of the richness of the Hall mine and other discoveries soon\nspread, bringing a rush of prospectors and others. The hills, mountains and\nstreams were searched, resulting in numerous other locations. Many of these\nproved worthless, but quite a number became valuable. Consequently great\nactivity in mining came about, and soon hundreds of men were employed\nwithin a short distance of Nelson. Wages were high and \"prospects\" sold\nreadily, some at ridiculously high figures. Money was plentiful and was\nspent freely. Nelson was then a typical western mining town, with all the\nname implies.\nA post office was opened in August. 1883. On the first of June, 1890,\nthe first Nelson newspaper, the MINER, made its appearance. A railway\nwas built from Robson to Nelson and regular service u*as given in 1891,\nbut for some years it was operated during the summer months only. The\nNelson and Fort Shephard railway was built and operated in 1893-4. This\ngave to Nelson the first all-rail connection u,'ith the outer tcorld to the south.\nThe town kept on progressing steadily, goods stores and other business establishments were opened and a flourishing trade was done. Jn 1897\nits population had increased to betu'een three and four thousand. The Hall\nmine smelter was built in 1855, and gave steady employment to some 250\nmen, until it was destroyed by fire it! 1911.\nThe Bank of .Montreal found sufficient inducement to open a branch.\nhere early in 1892. To reach Nelson, the manager, then appointed, had to\ncome on horseback from Spokane. Thrre is a report, tvhich, is generally\ncredited, that he did not bring any cash and that, ivithin a couple of days\nafter his arrival sufficient funds were deposited to meet requirements.\nIn the month of May of that year, the. Hudson's Bay Company opened\nits store, with G. R. Robson as manager. Tlir establishment u*as for several\nyears under the supervision of Chief Trader James Ogden Grahame, stationed nt Kamloops. Tlie business seas then carried on in a rented building on\nBaker Street and was confuted to grnecric*. provisions, tobacco, spirits and\na fetv staple articles for Indian trade. Considerable furs tvere obtained. In\n1899, the Company began the erection nl a substantial, commodious two-\nstorey stone and brick building. 60 by 90 feet. As business increased, it was\nfound necessary later to extend the building. Its location is one of the. best\nm the city. It was opened for business in 1900 as a general store, carrying\nfull lines of goods.\nThe Crow's Nest Pass raihcay reached Nelson In 1899, thereby giving\nthe city direct railway connection u.*ith the cast, west and south.\nThe first H.B.C. store manager. G. R. Robson, teas transferred about\n1898 to Vancouver. After him, rame Norman McLeod, and when that.\ngentleman retired in 1900 K. F. Gigot teas appointed to the position and\nremained in charge until 1917s, when he retired. He teas succeeded by J. A.\nGibson, who, after a short stay in Seison, was succeeded by W. S. King, who\nwas followed  by A, Carter until  1937 when  he \\rnr, succeeded  by T.  H\nGlover, the present s'ore manager.\nJfab \"Bay.\"'SayL * * .\nHats Off to the Pioneers of Nelson and District\nAND\nBest Wishes to Nelson's Old Timers Association\nWITH\nCongratulations and Best Wishes\nFor a Successful Jubilee\n1892 fofaimy t>\u00ab{t (tomptmgi. 1947\nINCORPOR ATED   2*?*?  MAY 1670.\n piipw,.\n_\t\n,   ,,,  ,-,.-,, ,,-,,,. i\u201eVi,     - -- ..., -, v\u2014\u25a0tiTS-\"\"Hi)\u00bbi.<|i\u00bbni*m;n|ii \u25a0.fiy^i^itii i , 1.u,.-.f ^.^.-......-.Hpa..-.\n4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 4, 1947\n36 Births for\nMonth of July\nMonthly birth total) for Nelion\ncontinued thalr upward trend Into\nthe month of July with a new high\nof 3d being recorded at tha Vital\nStatistic! Branch ln Nelson. Deaths\nrecorded for July totalled nine,\nwhile marriages numbered 12.\nOne birth was recorded for the\ndistrict and deaths totalled five. No\nmarriages were recorded for the\ndistrict last month.\nCapture Gun-Toting\nFugitive From\nIndustrial School\nVANCOUVER, Aug. J (CP)\nSix nights otf hiding out ln an\nabandoned snow chute ended Saturday for a 16-year-old gun-toting\nfugitive from the Cor|ilitIam Boy's\nIndustrial School, who escaped\nfrom   the   scool   July   25.\nThe youth picked up hy enn-\nstabHies 18 hours after discovery\nof his lair, was held by authorities\npending his appearance In juvenile\ncourt here next week.\nPolice said ho confessed to\nburglarizing a home and stealing\nan   ancient   fireRrm.\nBARCLAY ON BRIDGE\nBy  Shepard  Barclay\nThe Authority on Authorltle***\nCANTERBURY, England (CP)-\nPieee.s of pottery made by Lucunus\nand Mommus\u2014potters of Southern\nGaul in the reigns of Tiberius and\nNero\u2014were found during excavations off Burgatc Street.\nTO ALL OLD-AGE\nPENSIONERS\nRESIDING\nIN NELSON....\nIf you or* deslroui et etttnilng flit Pioneer Day\nSports, Thunday, Aug. 7th, a FREE TICKET con bt\nobtained at th* City Mall with Hi* compliments of th*\nGolden Jubilee Committc*.\nALD. T. I. SHORTHOUSE,\nChairman.\nTWO WATS TO THK GOAL\nTHERE ARE two contrutlntfy\ndifferent ways to beat certain No\nTrump contract*. One It by developing your own side's suit a*\nearly as possible, so as to take\nmore tricks than the declarer can\nafford to let you win. The other Is\nto prevent him from developing a\nsuit In ht* own hand or the dummy, Some contracts can ba\nthwarted only by the latter method, and then only by knocking out\ntha aide entry (or tha hostile suit\nIf you do this by deliberately sacrificing a high card of your own,\nwhich otherwise would be ft trick\nwinner, the play Is called tho\n\"Deschapallea coup,\" after tho\nFrenchman who discovered lt\n\u2666 At\nV K Q 10 4 2\n410 2\n+ 954 2\n4K9S7\n\u00a59853\n4>K5 4\n+ A7\n4Q J82\nVJ6\n\u2666 ACJ8T\n4KQ3\n(Dealer;   South.   NefOier\n\u2022sulnerable.)\nSouth     Weat\n1\u00ab> Pass\n14)        Paaa\nINT      Para\n4 10 8 3\n\u00bbA7\n4> J963\n+ .11086\nN\nw i*;\ns\nNorth\n2*\n3NT\nMs  chanc*\neMe\nEast\nPaaa\nPase\nto\nEtvrt fumbled\nbeat that contract He properly\norertook West's club J, which\nwas led, and then made tha fatal\nellp by returning the 7 of the\neuK, which South won with the\nQ. The heart J was ducked by\nWest, who came In with his A\non the 6. He returned the club 8\nto the K, which established his\ntO. But the bean* were already\n\u2022pilled. South led to the spade A,\nran   the    dummy's    remaining\nhearts, finessed the diamond Q\nand so collected four tricks ln\nhearta, one ln spades and two In\neach minor to score the nine he\nneeded.\nIf East had sized up the problem aright, he would have seen\nthat the contract almost surely\ndepended on the dummy's heart\nsuit. West was virtually marked\nwith two hearts to the A and th*\ndeclarer with a doubleton la the\nsuit Hence, If West held up tha\nA until the second round, th*\nault could not be cashed unless\nthe spade A remained ln dummy\nas an entry.\nHad East reckoned that way,\nhe would have seen the deslrabtU\nIty of a Dcschapelles coup\u2014a leae}\nof his spade K. Sacrificing that\ncard would beat the contact,\nwhereas leading any other spade\nwould have enabled South to win\nand retain the A as a dummy re.\nentry. With the spade A knocked\nout by the K lead, South could\nhave scored only three tricks In\nspades, one In hearts and two\neach ln the minors, leaving him ft\ntrick short of his quota.\n*,!> fl 5 4\nSf A 9\n4>J972\n+ M63\nProblem\n4)83\n4*732\n4) Q 10 ft\n+KQJ83\nN\nW  E\nS\n\u2666 J 10 7\nV 10 8 5 4,\n4>K83\n+ A94\nAAKQ2\n\u25a0f KQJ6\n4>A 64\n+ 75\n(Dealer: South. Norther sld*\nvulnerable.)\nIf West leads the diamond J,\nwhat should South play from th*\ndummy to assure his 4-No\nTrumps 1\nOttihsL CWl\nMONDAY, AUGUST 4, 1947\nCKLN\n1140 ON THI DIAL\n7;00\u2014O Canada\n7:02\u2014Press News\n7:07\u2014Sunrise Serenade\n7:30\u2014Music for Monday\n8:00\u2014CBC News\n8:15\u2014Just for You\n8:45\u2014Hebrew Chrlstaln How\n9:00\u2014BBC New\u00bb\n6:1.5\u2014The Breakfast Club\n0:45\u2014Three Quarter Time\n10:00-Train Time\nToday's Jubilee Program\n1.30 P.M.\nMonster Parade and Floats. Forming in Fairview,\nroute will include all Baker and Vernon Streets, ending at the Nelion Civic Centre.\n3.00 P.M.\nOolden Jubilee Opening Ceremonies at Recreation\nGroundi.\n4.00 P.M.\nBand Concert, Recreation Grounds, Vancouver Police\nDepartment Kiltie Band and Trail Maple Leaf Brass\nBand.\n8.30 P.M.\nQueen City Cavalcade at Recreation Grounds.\n10.00 P.N.\nStreet Dance on Hendryx Street between Baker and\nVernon Streets. Modern and oldtime dancing.\nBalance of Week's Program\nAUGUST 5th\n- Tuesday \u2014\nCaledonian    Games    at\n9:30 A.M    Juhilee\nHecreat on   Groundi.\n1 fit)  P.M.    Caledonian  Gsmei  at   Recreation\nfr.it-,..   arranqed   through   the   cooperation\nol    tl.tn    t.'.L'.t'y    snd    |h\u00ab    Nelion    Kilt*\nDA-i\nf, 00  P \u25a0*>'   -Civic    Doner   honoring    NellOo'l\np.oncer   reiidenti   o'   50   ye.-i   nr   over,   St.\nPa ,   i Cbwtb  Ha\"\n' 1'   I'*.'      West     k-otenjiv     tragus     B-\u00ab'a\nl,.:-r     rir'i-r    Ki.*..vli    Mnr'e    lea'a    vi\nI*\nI l>.l.,..\u201e\n'        (),.*ri*\n'    Fie.I     N\nRe\nrat\no HaU to t*-e\n. hand direct\nid.  California\nAUGUST 6th - Wednesday \u2014\n* *   \u00ab*   A V       M   *',jrt       A 1,10      Racing        T  \u25a0*'\u2022\nC'-\nll\nV\nT-*ali\ndgrt  A,.to  Racing. T i\n[Vi-.*\"-,. P.I a rat lir ni, arranged in co opecat*on\nM.tt,   i,.*,i,.,|   (...pir,   Midgat   Auto   Rr*\u00bbj\nIS',      at    n   o<  Spokane,  Washington\nfi *0 P M     Quern    C Iv    Cavalcade     Kerr,.\n.it , \u201e   Groundi\nUln   PM      Dane.     C.r    Centre.    Music    hv\nCaitlegar  Red   lu.   Men\nAUGUST 7th-Thursday \u2014\nHr. 't*A\\    n    (.ro.)\"'1     1 OO    AM      Flrei     A'H\n(  ' r-rM  t  \u25a0**\u25a0\",   M'i an-q-rd    I\"   CO  Opt* THt Inn   W \u25a0 ( H\nl>sr   Bnl'ih  Columhii  Department  cf  MlnM.\n7 00  P.M    -Old   Tlmcn'   Ipertt.\nThf   Ijflrjmg  of  lh#   FWird   Conteit  will   takl\npl-tCf   during   \\hf   nft**rnoon.\nROO   P.M      Civ:.-   Arrni\u2014Boilng   fjrrj.   Meln\nr.rnt     TiQi>r Jer**  Fo\u00ab     '\u00abr> poundil  vi   I eo\nTurni*-   ' \"fll   p uinrtii, and * ilr nng  mpport\nlng   r,rrl\nAUGUST 8th - Friday \u2014\n2:00 P M -Lakeiide Park. Regatta Speed\nBoat Racei. Arcangrd In oo operation v,tn\nNelion Launch Cluh. Aquatic Sporti\nBIO P M. -Queen City Cavalcade\n10:00 P.M,-Jubilee Queen Bill and crc*n.\nlng o' Jubilee Queen Arranged by Ne!ion\nKinsman   Club\nAUGUST 9th - Saturday \u2014\nRecreation   Groundi    Baieball   Tnumament.\nNel.on.     Trail,     Kimberl-y*     and     Spokane\nteams.  PI rat game   10:10 A M. iecond  game\n*.** Noon, final double header at ? 10 P M\nfi 10  P.M      Moniter   Bar  B Que.\ni 10 P M   -Plcmorks Dlipla,\n*n 10  P M      Street  Dancing   HenHr ,< Street,\nbetween  Baker and   Vernon  Streetl.\nOTHER ADDED ATTRACTIONS \u2014\nRod   and   Gun   Club   Display   all   week   In\nCurling    Rink.   Free    moving    pictures   for\nchildren svery morning  from  10 12\nriower  Show   \u2014   -Nelson   Garden   Clubi\nThursday,   Friday  and   Saturday   In   Curling\nRink.\nInduitrial and Commercial Dlsplayi In Curl\nIng  Rink  all wails.\nM'narsl Display In Chamber of Mlnei, Biker\natceit, all week,\nNelian   Camera   Club   Display- Salon   and\nKoda-Cheoma    .    lr,     at    Wood,    Vallanci\nHardware  window each evening.\nChesi   Tournament    Canadian   Legion\n10:01\u2014Women's Corner\n10:15\u2014Music tor Everyone\n10:45\u2014Waltzes of Ihe World\n11:00\u2014Keyboard Console\n11:15\u2014Charlie Spivak\n11:30\u2014Easy Listening\n11:45\u2014Easy Listening\n12:00\u2014B. C. Farm Broadcast\n12:25-Notice Board\n12:30\u2014 Press News\n12:45\u2014Ethel and Albert\n1:00\u2014 Old Favorites\n1:30\u2014Afternoon Recital\n1:45\u2014Women's News and Commentary\n2:00-Feat;ire Concert\n2:110\u2014 Songs In Remember\n2.45-Rural Route No 11\n3:00\u2014Cowboy Troubadour\n3:15\u2014Serenade to America\n3 30\u2014Serenade\n3:45\u2014Jimmy Dorsev\n4.00\u2014Chilo Valle and Loa Cubanos\n4:15\u2014Modern Musicians\n4:30\u2014F-specially for You\n4:45\u2014Children's Program\n5:0(1\u2014Sacred Heart Programme\n5:H\u2014Train Time\n5:15\u2014Bob Elicrly with John Bart\n5:30\u2014Peerless News\n5:45\u2014Organ Reveries\n6:00-Your Hit Parade\n6:30\u2014Jubilee News\n8:35\u2014Cavalcade  o!  Melody\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:15\u2014CBC News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Recital Time\n7.45-.lack Sco't\nB 00-Tor.t[ht a* Timber Lorjje\n8 30-Press News\n8.45\u2014Canadian Manufacturers' Association\n0:00\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:30\u2014 All S*ar Dance Parade\n!):45\u2014Lean Back ar.d Listen\n10 00-CBC News\n10:15\u2014Neighborly   News\n10 30-S:i:i Francis.-) Radio Theatre\nil.'jO-GuJ Siva Tne  Klnj\nCJAT\n610 ON THE DIAL\n7 00\u2014Hebrew Christian Hour\n7:15\u2014Press News\n7 30\u2014Melndv Ranch\n7 45\u2014Fn ir.tam o! Faith\nBOO\u2014CBC News\nR:1.5>\u2014Holiday Time\nB 45-1.aura Limited\n9 [Mi-Musical  Programmt\n0 15\u2014Breakfast  Club\n9:45-I,*,irv L.i.ton\n10 00-M*l<:ral  Programme\n10:15- 1*. S   Naw Hand\nl'i 30- Merv  Criff.n\nin to- Tine Simp\nIl:!5-Mid  Morning  Me'.od'.ei\n11 30- F.asv L.J'.,*:* ng\n12 ilO-I.unrht-n Concert\n12 :'0-l':,.,r News\n12 45- Lit . '* con  (' \".cert\n1 OO\u2014Tourist   Parade\n1 30-Aftern ,<,n   Recital\n1-45-C*. mm cetsry and Talk\nF.i\nfi* *.'\n-nil'\n!l,i\nRr\n7 30- Hr.  i.,1 '1 me\n7 45 -.buk   S, .***.\nI 10   T : .,:',: at Timber I-ndge\nH in    Tlie lop-v\n0 on- Fiji \u00ab  l'i: err Shny\n:i I*.   M.>.,.,* i *, :'.** Miller Mam er\n'l .iii -Men: ,n   La: o\nII 15    Ilr.go- Pratt, ,\u25a0 Work\n10 i)i)   rili* Sr\u00bb-.\n10 1.5-Bl dee ' , ll:r i-,:,,..!\n10 JO-San Franrnc, Had... Theatri\n11 OU   Handuni Rhythmi\nli 15   Mil'on C'urlis\n11 30   Peerlesi Newi\n11 40   Sign Off   The Kinj\nINVKHNFSS. Sellar I iCPi- Thl\nfire! *n of Inverness nji bestowr-fl*\non  Sll   lao  Hamilton.  Preiident of\nlh- 11: V.'i Log  'ii in Scllaiid\nPublic Benefactor\nN0.1\nYour Insurance\nCompany\nCongratulations and Best Wishes\nTo the City of Nelson on Its\nQOLDEN JUBILEE\nMY INSURANCE FIRM TO 14,000 BRITISH COLUMBIANS\nCash on the Barrelhead\nIN THE PAST 7 MONTHS OUR ASSOCIATES\nHAVE PAID IN CLAIMS OVER $112,000\nWithout Fuss or Feathers\nWithout Obligation Fill Out and Mail Coupon Below\nChecking Off Type of Insurance You Are Interested In\nSTUART SALES AGENCIES \u2014 577 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nLIFE D\nCASUALTY   D NAME\nFIRE I I STREET\nAUTO n\nCHILDREN   i I\nHOSPITAL and PROVINCE\nMEDICAL     H\n\"1\nCITY\nL\nSTUART AGENCIES\nPRANK A. STUART, Mgr. ^^^ 577 Baker Sf.\nBonded ond Licenced in Nelion Since 1934 \u2022****'\n '^PPiiPPPW'\n< m, .\u00abt\u00bbi\u00bb IU|PI\u00ab|IIPP'\u00bb.^'\u00ab.P'\u00ab*;\"\" ,*rp-*\u00abK|-f.\u00bb!W 4II!^'9JW<IP!W*,*P<PP'I1*'\nli|'llJWiiyi.MJIf.'\u00bbUT|iiluii\u00bbl,p|i*ti \u2014   imieiW*^p\nI   ,<WH,i\".H\"\"\nW\\\nCREPE SOLE\nChille\nTies\nIN\nBrown Elk\nSires 4 to 9.\nWidths AA B.\n$7-95\nPair    \/\nR. ANDREW\n& Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M.J. VIGNEUX\nCRIS8ALL\u2014ARM8TR0NQ\nA quiet informal wedding took\nplace at 8 o'clock July 29 in the\nChurch of the Redeemer, Fair-\nview when Rev. W. J. Silverwood,\nunited in huly matrimony Meriam'\nLenore, youngest daughter of Mr,\nand Mrs. Walter D. Armstrong\n920 Nelson Avenue, and Harold\n.Walter Crissall, only son of Mr.\nand Mrs. Bert Crissall, Gordon\nRoad. Given in marriage by her*j\nfather the lovely blonde bride\nwore an afternoon-length dress\nof white jersey, with the new\npush up sleeves and a round slit\nneckline. White gloves.white shoes\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jon<8\nBlairmore, former residents of\nNelaon arrived ln town at tha\nweekend to attend the Nelson\nGolden Jubilee,\n\u2022 Billy Hamson, Delbruck\nStreet and his cousin, Norman\nHamson. are guests of their uncle\nand aunt, Mr. and Mrs. A. V.\nScribner,   In  Cranbrook.\n\u2022 Mrs Hoy of Nakusp was\nholidaying   in   Nelson   last   week.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brun-\nton of Edmonton and their child\nare guests at the home of Mr.\nBruaton's   mother.\n\u2022 Mr.  and  Mrs.  Ross Fleming\nJubilee Historic Feature\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 4, 1947 \u2014 5\nNelson, Once Salisbury,\nSought Incorporation '88\nThe name of Nelaon first appeared |ed to carry on the sense of this Ithe Hoover addition by a vote of\non the maps of British Columbia In meeting as embodied in the resolu- 13-10. It was supposed that the wat-\nthe Fall of 1888, when Surveyor Far- tion.s, that is, draft the necessary er interests actuated much of the\nwell surveyed a townsile at the ter- petitions and obtain signatures opposition that bill encountered.\nmi nation of navigation on thc West thereto, etc, except in the matter Hon. Mr. Hume got a subsection in-\nArm  of  Kootenay   Lake,   and   the,of incorporation, and business con-jserted to give the towns the right\nand   a   shoulder-length   veil   held 224 Behnsen Street, have as guest\nby a  halo headpiece and  crimson their     daughter,     Mis    Rosemary\nand white carations completed her Fleming who is on vacation from\nensemble Thc bride chose for her I the  Royal  Victoria hospital, Mon*-\nattendant   ns   maid   of   honor   her.treal.\nsister,     Miss    Shirley     Armtrong,|    \u2022    Mr. and Mrs. Vic Nelson of\nwhile   Stephen   Krizan   supporter!\nthe   groom.   The   wedding   break-\nTrail    are    holidaying    guests    of\nMrs.   Nelson's  mother   Mrs.   Beck-\nman,  Vernon  Street,  also of  Mrs.\nJames H.  Boyes,\n'iiiiii.iiiiiiumiimii.iiiiimiiiiiiiiuiii\nWATCH FOR\nLIBERTY SPECIALS\nTOMORROW\n1IIIIII1IIMIHIIIIHIIIMIIIIIIIHIUIIIIIIIUI\nMIIHIIIMIIIIIINlNllll.llllllllimilllllll\nBUILD  B.C. PAYROLLS\nfast was served at the North Shore\nhome of the bride's parents which * Nelson's   father,\nwas    beautifully    decorated    with Fairview.\nsummer flowers. A three-tiered \u25a0 # Miss Irene Laughton. Edge-\nwedding cake centering the tablo wood Avenue, whu has spent the\nI was flanked by shell pink lighted past week visiting relatives in\nI tapers. The guests included only Cranbrook and Kimberley, has re-\n! immediate    relatives,    the    groom turned.\n(responding suitably to the toast \u2022 Among those holidaying in\nlto thn bride proposed by Rev.'Nelson are Mr. and Mrs. Green-\nIsilverwood. The happy couple left laughs of Blairmure.\nion the noon train for their honey-: \u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Charles\n'moon tn be spent louring Coast j Stewart, Granite Road, have as\ncities,  also Vancouver Island. I guests their son-in-law and daugh-\n\u2022 Mrs. l\\ Hopple. Silica Street, I ter\u25a0PMr. and Mrs. Frank Lawrie of\nwill have as guest during the j Vancouver who arrived Sunday\nGolden Jubilee her daughter, Mrs. j night to attend the Golden Jubilee\nMcDougall   of   Spokane. :and   will  spend   tne  remainder   of\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Towgood of their vacation here.\nSandon    are   in    town    to   attend\nNelson's   Golden   Jubilee   and   are\nGovernment gave it the name of\nNelson in honor of the Lieutenant-\nGovernor of that period.\nPrior to this, the hamlet of tents,\nwith a few log cabins and one or\ntwo shake shanties, was known to\nfame as Salisbury.\nMr, Farwell, after surveying the\ntownsite, held the first auction of\nlots, and from that date the community of Nelson had both a name\nand substance,\nRAILWAY HAD HALF\nThe C. P. R, received from the\nProvincial Government half of the\nlots, all the odd-numbered ones falling to its share, and it also held\nperiodical sales, while the Government continued with its annual sales, The final government sale was\nheld in the Fall of 1896, in two sections, and C. A. Waterman was thc\nauctioneer.\nA steady growth, based both- on\nthe mines Immediately tributary to\nthis focal point, and also on a growing commerce, brought the community to a size and importance where\nnected   to   tho   hospital   for   which to use any  unappropriated waters\npurpose there shall be special com- j hut this was excised, the act went\nmil tees.\n\"Members elected to serve on original committee of five: Messrs.\nHume, Fletcher, Bigelow, McLeod,\nMarks.\n\"Members elected to serve on the\ninto force, and Nelson became a city,\nits incorporated area being 536\nacres.\nIt was understood, however, that\nthe rights of the towns would be\ntaken  care of  in  a general water\ncommittee to carry out the original j rights bill to be passed later,\nintentions as to the hospital: Messrs.)    The bulk of this information was\nLemon,   Tectzel,   Hamilton,   Hume, (written on March 1.\nMorrill. Arthur, Labau. j    On March 2, John Ayton Gibson,\n\"Members elected to serve on the (Secretary     of    the    Incorporation\ncommittee   for   incorporation   pur- Committee, received  the following\nposes: Messrs. Howes, Houston, Per-,wire:\nry. iHOUSTON ORDERS\n\"Moved  by Mr. Bogle, seconded JOLLIFICATION\nby Mr. McLeod, that a public meet-1    \"Bill   unexpectedly   passed   third\ning  be held  to  receive  reports of reading today, Barnard knocked out\nthese  committees,  on  January   28, j completely. Only change made was\n1893. (taking in Hoover addition. Licuten-\n\"Meeting dissolved,\"\nEFFORT NOT SUCCESSFUL\nThe committee, on January 28\nreported that 100 male British subjects must make the application for\nant-Governor will assent tomorrow\niThe people have just cause for jollification.\n\"John Houston\"\nThe city's first election was held\nSister Seraphina\nSupervisor al\nMount St. Francis\nFrom the Mother House of the\nSisters of St. Anne in Victoria comes\nthe announcement of the appointment of Sister Seraphina, S.S.A., as\nSuperior of Mount St. Francis,\nhome for the aged in Nelson.\nSister Seraphina, formerly Sup-j\ncrior of St. Ann's Academy, Kam-!\nloops, came to Nelson three months'\nago to lay the first foundations for\nMount St. Francis. In that time the'\nhouse on the property has been renovated and redecorated, and at\npresent has three guests.\nTo Sister Seraphina will fall the\ntask of the supervision of the construction for the new home for the\naged. It was during Sister Sereph-\nina's term of office that St, Ann's\nAcademy in Kamloops was rebuilt.\nSister Seraphina is assisted at\npresent by Sister Itha, S.S.A. a pioneer of some 24 years at Holy\nCross, Alaska.\nA third Sister will presently be added to the community here.\nThe guests at Mount St. Francis\nat present are C. Holm and J. Anderson of Moyie and Mr. Leason of\nTrail.\nSO RICH\nAND\nSMOOTH\nYou'll   like\ncreamy-rich\nith their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Sturgeon,\n618  Silica   Slreet\n\u2022 Mrs Roy T.innel of Cranbrook who has been visiting Mr\nand MrsC. R. McLanders, Innes\nStreet, for the past week, has returned to her home.\n\u2022 Mr and Mrs. W, MacPherson\nof Parsons are in the city\nhome of Mrs. MacPhers' n's parents. Mr. and Mrs. H, E. Cooper,\nSilica Street, to attend the funera'\nnf Mr. McPherson's sister\nParker.\nnd that one month's on April  15, 1897. There were two\napplication  must be candidates   for   mayor  and   12  for\n'  'aldermen, as follows:\nFor mayor\u2014John Houston, John\nAnthony Turner,\nFor aldermen\u2014Dr. Edward Charles Arthur, Angus Charles Buchanan, Alexander Dow, Franklin Jef-\nPocifiC    Mi Ik's: wm'iwwuwwMwiHi\ntexture \u2014 it's1\nIrradiated to give an extra\nmeasure of goodness \u2014 and]\nit'i vacuum packed which\nmeans it will keep indefinitely! Try a can today.\nMIDSUMMER\nCLEARANCE SALE\nNOW ON AT\nFashion First Ltd.\nincorporation\n...._,  r_ __  notice  of   the\n.    m.\u201e   n   w   bi.. ,.h i.,\u201ek   ln 1893 lt was considering incorpor-1 given hy publication. It recommend\n,     m     a ,Z     7,    i        sl      k i!\" ation. ied that the limits of the proposed\nter Meredith, who have been hull-      ; ,    ,    , ,, . \u25a0*,*,, u ,u\ndaying at the home of Mrs. Slycs A<*tu\u00bbl Incorporation, however, municipality be as shown on the\nparents MT and Mrs. C. R Mc- was not effected till four years lat- government map of that time, which\nLanders Innes Street, has returned er, in '897, and the one act of legis-jwas restricted to lot 95, group, coin-\nto   her   home'  in   Cranbrook jlature placed Nelson, Rossland andjprisinfi 372 acres.\n\u2022 Mrs. Motherwell Smith wasjGrand Forks on the map of the Pro- A further report presented on icrson Farley, Frank Fletcher, Jam*\nholiday   in   Nelson. vince as incorporated cities. 'February 9 related that a canvass es Arthur Gilker, Charles Hillyer\n\u2022 Gordon Batley of Winnipeg One of thc landmarks of the city's \"' lho town h*ld bp\u2122 madc* and John J. Malone, Patrick Joseph Rtu-\nis visiting his parents, Mr. and early progress was undoubtedly a:registered owners representing a 'sell, William Franklin Tectzel, Ed-\nMrs. J. E. Batley of South Slocan, I public   meeting  that  was   held  on-'P1'\"!1\"^ va,ue \"f SSO.OOn, had signed mund   Cornelius   Traves,   Charles\nat'theiwho with him are enjoying a holi-1 January   14,   1893,  at  which   many|lr\"\" petition for incorporation; that j William West.\nday  on   the  North  Shore. idemands   for   public   services   artel 'he assessed value of the land in the I    Nelson's first council consisted of\nGeorge W. Steele, Silica Stree.|bulldjn\u201e W(,re formulated and the Ilown hrin*! $254,000. signatures rep-! Mayor John Houston, Aldermen\nhas   as   guest   A,   J.   Watson    of \u201e   t cam ,or incoIporation was\nKootenay Bay who arrived Irlday.], h.K   s '\n\u2022 Mr.   and   Mrs.   Albert   Ham- needs FORMULATED IN'93\nson Delbruck Street, have as guests NEhDS FORMULATED IN 93\nfur   th*i   next  few   weeks  Mr.  and:    The   minutes   of   this    meeting\nMrs   Tewksbuty  and sons of Cal- j which are contained in a musty doe\ngary,  ex-residents of  Nelson, who'ument at the City Hall, make inter-\nplan    on    attending    the    Golden .esting reading, as showing what was\nj Jubilee. I in  the   public   mind   at  that  time.\n\u2022 Mr. and   Mrs.  Alex  Mitchell They are iu full as follows:\nand son Reginald has returned  to,    \"Public meeting held  in  Nelson,\nI Trail after spending their holidays'January  14, 1893; Mr. C. E   Perry\nPRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP) -\nBecause of a beiigerent prospector who he wished to avoid\nWatson Moyese, Indian, had to go\n125 miles out of his way to shop\nPolice moved the human road\nblock and Moyese now can travel\nthe comparatively short 75 miles\nto Fort Ware instead of 200 miles\nto Telegraph Creek for his grocer-\nIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIH\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nThe House of Furniture Valuei\nPHONE 118 - NEL80N, B.C.\nTrade In your old furniture on\nnew.\nBUY ON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN PAYMENT\nStore open till 9 p.m. Saturday!\n111 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0niniimniiiiinisU.iiiim.nii.ini\nWhen you are tortured by fretful\nnighti, never com-\nfortible, and you\nfeel oYer-tired intra\niliytimr - jour kidneys may Ke to\nblame. For healthy\nkidneyi ahould do\n2\/3 of their work jn tbe daytime. If thty ft!\nout of order and fail, extra \u2022train la placed\nupon them and they muat work overtime it\nnight. That ia the time to uh Dodd'i\nKidney Pilli. Dodd'a Kidney Pilli help\nrelieve thia cause of night discomfort and\ndisturbed rest. Help you enjoy restful\nsleep and awake refreshed. 143\nMID-SEASON\nCLEARANCE SALE\nof   OUP\nENTIRE STOCK\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOP\nMrs\nresenting   $127,500   were   required, Gilker, Dow, Malone, Teetzel, Fict-\nthis leaving $77,500 still  lo be oh-idler and Hillyer.\ntained; ond that $110,000 wa.s avail-] *\t\nable on Ihe roll'. The committee believed there wire reasonable\ngrounds for anticipating a success-\nPacific Milk\nIRRADIATED AND VACUUM\nPACKED\nli'DilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinUt   s\nK\nootenay Valley |\/aii\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\nChairman; Mr. E. Applewhaite, Sec\nretary.\n\"The Chairman said he belif>ve<i\nthe meeting was called to settle\nsomething definite about three\nthings, namely, incorporation of thc\ntown, and to procure a court house\nand hospital for the town,\n\"Mr. Bogle proposed that a petition should at once be sent to Vic-\nM.   Fleury,   Mr.   and   Mrs,   George toria to the effcct that it was absol.\nLambert and Mr. and Mrs. George* ute!y I1\u20accessary that a court house |\nith their parents Mr. and Mrs. W,\nCalbick, 618 Third Street, Fairview,\nand friends in the district.\n\u2022 Harold Bateman, Winnipeg,\nMan,, has been visiting his daughter\nand son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nWright, 124 Victoria Street.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. W. A. Fleury,\nand two children Leone and Joanne,\nof Vancouver are visiting  Mrs.  E,\nful result.\nIn , this anticipation, however,\nI events did not bear out the enmmit-\nitee, and the 1R93 movement for incorporation failed.\nOVERCAME  OBSTACLES  IN '97\nWilh a population oi 1000 approximately, the community again\nwen' after incorporation, in 1R97,\nand this time brought home the bac-\nName Officials\nFor Crowning\nOf Jubilee Queen\nFleury, all ot Nelson.\nEngagements\nMr, and Mm. H. H. Heywood. Nelson, wish to announce the engagement of their daughter June Hose,\nDouglas A. Griffin, youngest son\nMrs. A. Blais, NeUon, marriage to\n| take place on August 19, at St. Saviour's Church at 7:30 in the even-\n, ing.\nFormer Nelsonite\nNatal Store Head\nMiss Vivian Hall, 1946 Nelson Day\nQueen, Mayor T, H. Waters and Dr.\non. '(j. R. Barrett, President of the Nel-\nJohn Houston was at Victoria, and'son Kinsmen Club, will officiate at\nfought through the johjt bill that the Nelson Golden Jubilee Queen\nRave charters to the cities of Nel-j vrowning ceremony to be held in\nson and Rossland in the Kootenay'the Civic Centre dance hall Friday,\nand Grand Forks in the Boundary, iof Jubilee Week. \u25a0\nClose touch was maintained be-1 A dance has been arranged ln con-\ntween the committee in NeLson and nection with the event with a well\nshould be built, and what was even ,h   bi|] |n (h   ,,,,.,\u201e\u201e.,, bv mrans knnwn Distncl orchestra supplying\nmore urgent was to pass a resolution \u25a0     rnns(      w]|.ps an\u201e lr.tf,rs music ,or the ,        crowd anj,      6\no use every means to ootam from;    whpn \u201e      j   Fred H{mf wired ;ted h   the KlnfmPn Cmb\nthe Government a land registry of- \u201eSubmit  ]]m|,f  |(] ppnp,e an(, ^    Th(,   Qutfn   contest|   which   ^\n^,,    w,60n . ward.\" a public meeting was at once'caused   much   interest   throughout\nMr. McLeod proposed h an jm-     ^ :,, thp fi\u201e ha]] (m Frhn]arv >he Kootenav, Ls sponsored hy Kins-\nendment, and Mr. Bowe* seconded, \u201e   flnd fm mo(lon of  f   A   Turnpr men Club ;n conjunction with the\nthat a committee of five be appoint-^ E p  Wha,w jt ^ defi(]fd to Jubllee Committce. The Queen coned to retire  a*i  frame   resolutions ^ f,,r th(1 ]r(,:,;;jnn of Afldlt]f)n A   ^^  lhe  Mi\u00a35H  Ruby  JarbeaU|\n!of Mrs. A. Blais, NeUon, marriage to p^L\" meeting. uynAy km>wn as H(inV(T ,,dd..:on   Kleannr Maglio, Bunty Waters. Col-\n\u25a0  \"\"     \u25a0 \"-   \" ..,,      n     , , ,,  , I     nnmn'mnnfnr  V  ('   Arthur and   leen   Hvssop,   Dorothy   W\n\"Mr. Bogles motion withdrawn.       \"\"\"\u25a0\" * mur anu\n\"The Chairman then nominated\nMessrs. Bigelow, McLeod, Marks,\nLemon and Houston as the above\ncommittee,\n\"The resolutions, framed by the\nrommittee and then re id to thr\nmeeting bv the Chairman as follow:\nCOURTHOUSE, CUSTOM HOUSE\nAND WHARF\n\"1. Moved by Mr F Fletcher, seconded by J, Gilker; Resolved, That\nNATAL BC, Aug3-Tbe mem- th* Provincial Government be pet-\nbers of the Natal-Michel Trites- Hioned to erect a court house at Ne!\nWood staff held a farewell party son, not one of brick and sufficient\nrecently in honor of Mr. and Mrs. ly large to accomrmxlate the cunti\nArchies Corrie, Mr. Corrie re- assize court, but all tne distr.c', of\ntiring after being manager of th** ficuils Carried.\nMichel    store    for    a    number    of     \"2. Moved fly Dr. Arthur, second\nai;d E\nask fnr the inc\nusually   known\n! On motion nf Dr Y. C Arthur and l\u00abn Hyssop, Dorothy Wallace\nJ, A Turner, a resolution was ad- Bunty raterson, are all well known\nopted not;ng' that the Consumers' and popular young ladies.\nWater Company was applying for Vote returns on the various girls\nan extension of its n^hLs which have been coming in steadily and\nlapsed through ita nonfulLlmeat of up to ihe present time, the standlnf\nconditions, and that unknown part-\n(ht Old JimsUL\nWHO FOh 35 YEARS HAS BEEN SERVICING AUTO\nAND MARINE ENGINES IN NELSON\nWELCOMES ALL VISITORS\nAND EXTENDS CONGRATULATIONS\nTO NELSON ON ITS\nGOLDEN JUBILEE\nSMEDLEY GARAGE CO.\nes had  give:\nCi\nek,\nnotice of an\n:er chart* r\n;d   \"earnes\napp.\nAm\nnmp-\nUht fo\nAm\nor water fr\n['ri rk or the Kast fork of Cottonwood Creek, and asking the legislative assembly to hold these Waters in trust for the town uf Nelson\nfairly close with very few votes\nseparating, the contestants.\nSupporters wil! tie able to vote for\nthe.r favorites until 9 p. rn., on the\nnight of the dance. The committee\ncheck the ballot con-\nHunter, chartered ac-\nRyalls and L, Gustaf-\nappo\n,-LStS\nvd\n'it J\nM\nrp<\nA\nrred\n[':\nIL Se!'\nH    F\nn.mded\nPrizes for\ncontest whu\njunction   w\nyears.    The*    staff    presented     th\" ed by Mr. Wh\nguests of honor with handsome en-  -j]e member fo;\nI gaverl     suitcases     Staff    members\n1 Albert   Parsons   and   Dave   Sherra\n\u25a0 marie    the    presentation    speerh\"s\nwith Mr.  and Mrs. Corrie respon '\ning\nThe new charges in r. anagement\nsince the  retirement  of Mr   Corrie\nfrom      the      Mi<hel     Tr:te<-W* od\nstore    Include    .Limes    Pres'on    of\nFernie.    u*ho    is    manager   of    t\n. gn eery  department\nRes-uL\nThat\nj,kcd\nlr*\nh.\nK''\nwinners of the quiz\nbeing run in con-\nthe   Queen   contest\n\u2022n away during the\nluire\nMu\nto use his ii\nappropnatio\nand bonded\nCarried.\n\"3 M\nby Dr Arth\nappropriate\nadditions to\nat Nelson, f*.\nt by Mr  Bogl,\n'\"\"      Proceeds fror\nrjuiz ar.d dance,\n\u25a0ires  Nelson    slu'nile*\ni the Queen contest,\nwill go towards the\nand    the    Nelson\nAou\nCt\nW;.\n('\nfor a  spec\"\nDISCREET COUNCIL\nA MK HSU AM, Buckinghamshire\nFr,g!a:\/1 U'l'i Bi cause no member\n:if trie \\'*.\\huy C ui.c! would undertake to it-ik hnuseuives to cut fuel,\nd v..is deeded not to run a local\n\u25a0 saving  campaign.\n'\u2022*-, y~--\/\n**\"  '\u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022-  I\n\u25a0. ..... .    ^\n(       ,.     A--  V*,..*\nr\n'       &+\nzyzzj\nWk\nr;   J\n*i+*H\nJ s  -J\n.  i\n\u00ab2Llmm\nA\/ ^V\\\n%ttAj,\nDrivers in Collision\nBoth Guilty\nproving Ihr sirens ,-'. Nr-.sor.   Ciu-\nr-.tA\n\"Mr Flrtihcr's amrndmpr.t u- :b,:i\nresolutini.,   r.amr.y,   *'.l*..r.   :,**.,*   (Inv-\nrnuri**!.'. be ,,.*.ki,I *.*i :,:.-\u25a0 .1- b::i- ::.->:.-\nCRANBROOK.   II   C.   A*:*;   3   -   Py t\u201e |K* . xprri!.**! ui.il.r *.h,* .mi; .r-\nDenr.-.s  Push,  rr.inhr.ink, and  11   J   ii*,:ri.,i,.;.,*,. ,,{ ,*,  ,-..:,in-.v. .\u25a0 u*:n|\t\nDn.iK'.as   S\u00bbr.  F-anrisrn.  whn h.id  a  r(|   ,,;   lw\u201e   ,\u25a0:..;\u25a0-..-,   and   lh,*   (I* . I\nn-r-.-r   ( .*:li.\"..*r.   ,11   Ihr   inlorsfi-tml*.   r\u201enimi.s.S!nl*.i'r,   Ai  Nuls,,!*.   IS  ,!  \u25a0.;[\u25a0\nnf    Kni-.rh    and    Kdwards    Slrrr-'.s  (\u201e.\u201e,,..,   m.;\u201e.:*..,:., ,*   \u2022\u201e    -..,-,,-    .\u201e,n,c\nWrdnrsrlay    rvu.ir^,    were    Iniir.d   V,)K.,   ,,,   ,\u201e   ,(.,v,.   a(!.i:r\u00bb.*   was   on\nrqi.illy   Rilllly   In   r;*v   jinl.rf   mur!   sh,,n*   nf   hands   rtorl.llH   Ins:\nTh'irsday undrr Ihr Hiihway Art r*f      \u2022\u25a0<   m ,,, i |,.,   M,   H,   --   ,,,,,.., iPl)\nfailure In rxr:i*:>.* pr   ;,rr rarr a: ai:   bv   Mr    .,lii:*Ki    -lUi-is ,-,i' lb,:,:   :,**,,\u25a0\nlin:rr.sn*l:*in   and   v.oir   rarh   fined   Prnntvisl (.nvrinmrn', l.c ps**i:*..*,n-\nSI\" ar.d r**d.s ,..|  ;\u201e rrs*(imm,.r.ii  ihr  n;,; **.:*.*n:,*i.:\nThr   *. \"ns'   car,   a   Pa  k.v.1.   was   ,)V  ,,,,.  li,,;,..!:;,.,,!  C,-\\,-r:,:,n:  ,,r  a\n'.-.i-s-.ACifl '.\u201e Ihr rx'.rr:-. -\u2022'.  ;::--:r \"un   ,.',,\u201e,,v    ,.,,.,,\u2022    j ;(i,;,.    ; ,.     Knnlrnaj\n5*|i*n. a-.A :!-.,* I* * ,il car !** Ihr rx:rn:  di.**.rn\"t   I'arr.o I\n\u2022'\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0-\"\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0 i-\" \u25a0 f   Mnvrsl  hv  Mr   Ilovsr-.. srmrd-\nrd   lis*   M:    Im.k.i    H,*s..;w*!.   Thai\nIhr   Pi,*\\in,a;   (linrrnmm:   h<*   p,'.\n::,,:.rd   hi   app,nni   a   irsidrn:   s ,p-\nn-tr.r  n-.rl   i,*,:;s:i ,r   fni   K - :.i iv\nDECLARED FOH\nINCOHPOBATION\nf,   M*,*.,* '.*.!,      \\-r-    \u25a0     r.   .   -\nI ftitifc**!'\nr^ Cleans Your Breath\nI While It Cleans\n?  Your Teeth!\n25< 40^    \u00a3?\u00a7g\n11\n7 M**i,*l hi M: ii. <,-.. >. \u25a0-: ,'.\u25a0\nid hi Mr *l.:i; ,i. Krs,,'*,,\u25a0,! Thai\nnnnirdiatr s'.*ps br lak.n '.*, s,...:r\na \u00ab.tr f*n a !***ip.*..,; a* Nr'.snii. .r*d\n'hat Ihr r:r, :,,*n nf Ihr hu.l ilnu hr\nrninnirntrd al ni,,* Carrird\nMEMORIAL  FOR SLOCAN  LINE\n*l> M.nrd hi Ml 11,,*;:,*. .,-. *,i*..|r,|\nhy Mi II if'- :i. Hr, \u25a0\u25a0-.,-'.. Tha: \":<*\nIxisinrsj n.i, i,sis ,,f Nr',s,,n ir.pnir\n\u2022A IS'f-s. ihl c*'* :-,'\u25a0>\u2022 ',, S'.'..<\". .is-\nI: irl. and lha! a n ,!:*\u25a0\u25a0! it! hr p* ,i-\nrn'rd !,* Ihr <* I' 11 , mnpn is\np *'\u25a0   Ih.rni   Ihr\nmariAgrnirn! n:;.i;\nnr,*rs.s 'v f,*t thr III*\nsl! l.-l.ni nf ,, hi.,* nf I\nIhr S'.'K Ml mil ,-.i list\ni an Hum ai .1 I ...,,,\n,-rs,s  'hr   l,<\n..I\nit, s    C ittir.l\nMnvrd   l*i   Mi    r\nCONGRATULATIONS\nAND\nCREETINGS\nTO\nand Residents\nOn the Occosion of This\n50th ANNIVERSARY\nf r   m   Thr   jtcH   and   Manogrn'>pnt   of\nBill Defoe s Super Service\nNelion'i  Youngeit  Automotive   Deolcr\nAnd Service Buiineu\nhtnhlishcd   19.1\/\nDEALER  FOR\nWIL(.YS  JEEPS AND STATION  WAGONS\nDIAMOND T TRUCKS\n\u25a0 \u25a0\nWARNING!\nIndications still point to a shortage of\ncoal next Winter.\nThe better grades, especially, are not\nbeing produced in sufficient volume to\nmeet the ever increasing demand.\nPHONE 33, and place youf order now,\nwe can make delivery of \\\\u- f blowing\nimmediately\nGait Lump and Stove, Newcastle Lump,\nCrow's Nest Cobble and Stoker, Three\nHills Lump, Canmorc Briquettes.\nWest Transfer Co.\nNrlv -i *, I ..fl Mn  h mU I   i \u25a0! ' > \u25a0\u2022 ns\"\nPhone 33 719 Baker St.\n II|P!|.IPI   III     .    \"\u25a0\n\t\n>. wm^-\\ivw*<igmmmm\nWWffM\nJMamt Satin Neroa\nt.sluuiulieu April 21 mi\nBntssh Columbia'*\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished tvery  morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS  PUBLISHING  COMPANY.  LIMITED. 266 Baker St.. Nelson. British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall\nPostoffice Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDI*!   BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMONDAY, AUGUST 4, 1947\nprogreulve colonlei at that.\nIn Morocco's case political freedom\nand personal liberty would not necessarily be synonymous, and it would be\nfutile to argue that independence\nshould be granted in the interests of\na democracy. The Moroccans have a\nway of life that conflicts at many\npoints with Western systems. Perhaps\nit ls enough that they like it.\n? ? Quest ions ? ?\nThe Golden Jubilee\nFor months Nelson has been preparing for Its Jubilee celebration. The\nevent, from an amusement viewpoint,\nand because of Its historical connections, will be the greatest in the history\nof this City.\nNever before has Nelson attempted\nsuch an elaborate program of amusement. The program is varied. It ts the\ntype of program which Is certain to\nappeal to every taste and to every age.\nThe quality ls exceptionally high. It\nmay safely be said that never in history has a town of Nelson's sire prepared such an elaborate program of\namusement at such heavy expense.\nMany people have worked to make\nthe coming week a success. Night after\nnight there have been committee meetings and subcommittee meetings. Night\nafter night the difficulties of arranging\nior programs and arranging for their\npresentation have been the subject of\ngatherings at which all-difficulties have\nbeen smoothed out.\nThe members of these committees\nhave performed a public service which\ndeserves the gratitude of the community. They have given their time and\nenergies cheerfully and generously in\nthe interests of Nelson and the district,\nand with the sole purpose of arrangirfg\na program which will cause citizens\nand the hundreds of visitors which are\nexpected to come to the City during\nthis week to feel that they have, had\nfirst class value for their money,\nThe committees have done a grand\nJob, and those who attend the various\nevents will have plenty of opportunity\nto realize it.\nDoggy Talk\nWhen the British House of Commons turned to a discussion of greyhound racing the other night, an unidentified M.P. barked for two minutes.\nHansard may read: \"An Honorable\nMember: Yipe, yipe, yipe,\" and so on\nfor half a page.\nMartha Truman\nThe obvious affection with which\nPresident Truman regarded his mother\nwa.s fnr many people one of his most\ncreditable characteristics. For him\nthere was nothing in the sudden eminence which he achieved which need\nalter the tender relationship that had\nalways existed between them. When\npeople commented on it in Mrs. Martha Truman's presence, she would say:\n\"I raised my children right.\" It was a\nremark to ponder these days.\nHer long life, which came to an end\nrecently, spanned the great development period of the American nation.\nHer father ran a freight service for pioneer settlers over the famous Overland Trail, more than a century ago.\nhomestead, suffered from the depreda-\nShe herself, as a child on a Missouri\ntions of raiders ln the Civil War days.\nShe married a neighboring farmer's\nion, and her ion, Harry, was born on\nthe farm they set up in 18111. From\niuch simple conditions to tho White\nHouse was to bo Harry's unseen destiny, and nne which Mrs. Truman said\nshe had never envisaged or even en-\ncouriged.\nThe reflected glory which shone\nupon her in her last days changed her\nnot a bit. Strong-minded, outspoken,\nfull of vitality, jho remained to the end\nitrictly herself Such a vigorous personalis* was bound to inspire legends,\nand there are manv stories nf her direct remarks and plain-spoken wisdom, A spirit like hers was bound to\nhave hail a great influenn.* on all with\nwhom she came into contact, nnd the\nPresident made ni secret of his mdebt-\nedness :*i her Whatever life holds for\nanv man. he will hsVe nn mnre valuable\np*'s -i\"r.'\".: than the hu-p ar.d respect nf\ni tt   ther  H'*: ;r.fi*n*\", *\u2022\u2022  as in ','* ;s\nMorocco\nSir* t,i* <,';; i uii;s nf natmnahsm a:e\nhe;n,; heai ! ill Mnrncm, and Indications sre tha! the l'nite*l Nations will\nbe Asked tn grant full Independence tn\nthis African trrntnrv. n >*,v divide I intn\nFrench an I Spanish prnterlnrntes\nWhether tl'.ii is a popular demand\nor inert*!'. : * fleets the ambitions \"I\ntt iba! i ':..' if :r an* * :*<\u25a0'*; i;ut*s*. It re\nmams tl *:e, h.ns ever, tb.it M *; ,,*ro\ncons'.i'.u'.i s ,i n.il ;i ,il unit u hi, h has\nht-rii c.rve 1 it'e colonies, an 1 not *   rv\nLetters to the\nEditor\nLetteri may be publllhtd over \u2022 nem de\nplume, but the actual nime of the writer\nmuit be given to the Editor ia evidence of\ngood faith. Anonymoui letteri go In the\nwaite paper baikct\nNelson's Opportunity\nDear Nelsonites:\nThis week you will havt a great opportunity of expressing your appreciation of the\nwonderful city you Inhabit and are an integral\npart of its development and well-being. Therefore, rise to thli opportunity, and do everything within your power to make thla Jubilation something never to be forgotten, a jubilation that will live forever in the minds of\nthe rising generation who will bless those who\nmade this great event possible.\nMessn. Hilker and Buckingham have a\ndifficult and intricate assignment ln the coordination of the many scenes and items to\nbe presented In the great Cavalcade, and their\nhearts being In the task, they nre deserving of\nthe fullest support ahd cooperation. The success of this Cavalcade wlll mean tha succesi\nof the Jubilee, and will also mean a lot for\nMessrs. Hilker and Buckingham.\n\"Do not let them down liy apathy and lack\nof interest. Support them to the limit for in\nthis you will be doing something for yourselves as well as for Nelson. In fact, it is the\nduty of every citizen to go all out in this celebration. Mr, Spence NeweU appealed to all\nveterans to do their stuff, and it ls well known\n.hat they never fill down in supporting any\nworthwhile project.\nDo you realize how proud and thankful\nyou ihould be u a member of thia community,\nliving ln a charming city In Glorious Kootenay? Think and look around at the great development that has taken place in your city in\nthe last flO years Look at the fine laid out\nstreets in the residential section, with their\nfine houses and groundi Kiving this part an\natmosphere of pence nnd prosperity. Nelson\nmay also be proud of Its business section, the\nwell planned streets, attractive itorei of every\nkind, its up-to-date hotels, its Civic Centre,\nparks and boulevards that provide a floral display to charm the eye of the many visitors to\nthis resort of the West who every year come\nIn greater numbers from every part of the\ncontinent. Do you realize what you owe to the\nmen who designed snd laid the foundation of\nthis fine City of Nelson; the engineers, archl-\n' tects, carpenters, masons, electricians, etc.,\nftr \"? All of them combined to build up your\ncharming city.\nAnd thoie men who laid the sound foundations of Nelson are the Old Tlmen of today.\nTo them the inhabitant! of Nelson owe a great\ndeal of gratitude for their foresight and planning, so it is up to everyone who enjoys the\nresults of their brain, brawn, muscle and sweat\nto give them a specially good time during the\ncelebrations, for to them is owing the high\nstanding of Nelson among Canadian cities.\nAgain, it ls moit Important that everyone\ncooperate to the utmoit of their ability to\nlighten the tn<k of Messrs HI.Ker and Buck-\ningham. ROBERT MAIN.\nOpen to any rJader. Namea of pereona\nasking queitloni wlll not be publlihed.\nThere la no charge for thla tervice, Queitloni WILL NOT BB AN3WEREO BY\nMAIL except when there la obvloui necet-\n\u2022 Ity for privacy.\nM.  C.  M\u201e  Roisland\u2014Could  you  tell me  If\nthere are two ways of playing \"500\". It\nthere are  could  you  give  me  both  aets\nof rules.\nFollowing are two sets of rulea for \"BOO\";\nnumber of players\u2014two to six,\nRank of cards\u2014As in Euchre (the bowen\nbeing used), thus: Trump suit; J {right bower),\nhigh; J of same color (left bower) A, K, Qf 10,\n0, etc., suit same color as trumps: Joker when\nused la tht highest trump, ranking above tht\nright bower. When using 62-card pack, the 13,\n12 and 11 rank in that order below Q and\nabove 10.\nCutting\u2014Cut for deal. Low deals\u2014ace being lowest of a suit; Joker lowest of t\\\\, The\nplayer on the dealers right cuts the cards after\nthey have been thoroughly shuffled, and ha\nmust leave at least four cards irt each packet.\nDealing\u2014Each player muit receive ten\ncards; the remainder of the pack ls left fact\ndown on the table for a \"blind\" or \"widow\"\nand must bt laid out between the first and\niecond rounds, thus: Deal three cards to each\nplayer, then lay out the widow, then four\ncards to each, then three, in rotation* to the\nleft, beginning with eldeit hand.\nRules\u2014If a dealer exposes any card dealt\nto an opponent, that player may demand a\nnew deal. A deal by the wrong player may\nbe stopped before the last round ls dealt, but\nafter that it stands. If, after a player has made\na bid, he is found to have either more or less\nthan his correct number of cards, and adversaries have the right number, the widow\nmuit also be wrong. The player in error loses\nhli bid on that deal, but hia hand must be\ngood from the widow.\nDiscarding\u2014Highest bidder takes the widow into hli hand and then discards to reduce\nhli hand to ten cards. He may retain part or\nal! or none of the cards taktn up.\nLeading\u2014After discarding, successful bidder leads any card he chooses. It Is not obligatory to lead trumps.\nThe plstf\u2014Each player in turn to the left\nmust play to the trick, following suit if possible. If no suit be held, player can trump or\nthrow off a card of any other suit. Winner of\nfirst trick leads for next one, and so on.\nNo-trump hand\u2014On \"no-trump\" bid, the hand\nis played without trumps,\nGames of 1000 and 1W0:\nThe pack, rank of cards, deal, bid, lead\nand play are tht same as 500, In counting the\nhandi, each player scores additional points, as\nfollows: For each ace taken in, 1 point; esch\nK, Q, J and 10, 10 points; each 9, 9 points; each\n8, 8 pointi, etc, each card taken In being\ncounted at lti numerical value. Joker does not\ncount. These additional points are not reckoned towards making the bid good, and are\nthrown out if bidder ls set back through failure to take number of tricka bid.\nIn 24-card pack there are 50 of these additional points to each suit, or 200 in all, 32-\ncard pack, 65 to suit, or 260 in all; 44\u2014340 in\nill; flO-card pack, 114 to a suit, 456 in all\nGame^lOOO or 1500 points, ai agreed upon.\nToday's Horoscope\nIf you are marking a birthday anniversary\ntodsy, although you are positive, somewhat\nopinionated, wilful, shrewd and Intellectual,\nyou are Just and alnrire, and do many kind\nand noblt deed a unknown to othen. You\nare friendly and have many fine friendships,\nYour home and family ties are dear to you.\nThe day Is doubtful. Avoid taking important\naction, ai drastic changes are likely to be ln\ntha masting Keep on the good side of the\nauthorities Some good fortune is presaged\nfor you in your next year, in spite of sudden\ndisagreement and Indifferent henl'h of relatives Secret activities are well signified Born\nnn this date a child will be fortunate, especially if folbw.r.g a novel ocrupatinn involving\nlong voyages. Spiritual ability Is shown\nlest Yourself\nI In booming preildent nf Columbia Unl-\nvers;-;.'. New York, will General Eisenhower\nhe the first or aemnd military president nt thr\ninstitution1\n:. Whn ti th* ! p commander \u2022\u25a0'\u25a0 the United\nStates Navy1\n3 Whit il la'.d fn hr '.''>* ?:<*. ;\u25a0\u25a0 -'.-xiot-\n\u00bb:i ;> \"i i.i' *\u25a0 'r n\"v mn!,\"\u00bbl \u00ab' \u25a0 ***'. has been\nMtuViihed at what 'inivtrn's1\nTUT ANSWERS\n1 The  first\n2 Admiral  Chester W   Nimltz\n1   C.irnell  I'nlvfrally\nEtiquette Hints\nIf ynu  hive a reservation <^n any plane,\nillr-md train, bui or othm public rnnviyanet,\ni nd find you car nnt use It, telephone and\n'ar-rel \\he reservation as qu;rk!v ai possible\nih.i ii oi lv -gnnd manner* and fan *.<\u25a0> other\nmonger\u2022 whn are staking reser vnt'.nr,*\nWords of Wisdom\nJealousy is the niter of ]*.>\u25a0*.\u25a0#, at '.lie dev.l\n\\k\\hf brother of angeli    Bouffleu\nIt   !S   dlffirult   tn   aay   which   mav   I*   r*.n\nmuichievniii tn the human heart, the pram *\nthe dliprilie of mtn -Mary Biker Eddy.\nIt takes \u25a0 jjtrat deal nf gram tn he nh'.t to\nhear praise Centura seldom rtn*-.*, *u tn irh\nhurt \u2014 \u25a0Sp'irgee.n\nThe pra.se of nthrrs mm v he cf mr \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nleaching U|, int what wt* air. l'i' wh.-.'. \u25a0,-,*\u2022\nr*u|ht to he     Hare\nThink n t thoie faithful who |>r., ,r ,,|' \"*,,,\nwordi and ai\",;ons, tnt tVse wli.i k;:,dl> ic\nprm c   thy   (nulls     Sn< ; a'.rj\nPlays Here Tuesday\nCut in Duck Staton\nMeans \"Substantial\nReduction\" in Kill\nWASHINGTON, Aug, 1 (AP) -\nCutting the United States rjuck-\nhunting leaaon to a 10-year low, the\nFish and Wildlife Service preu-ted\ntoday a \"very substantial reduction\"\nin the kill in waterfowl this year.\nThe agency which controls the\nsportsman's trigger finger reduced\ntht shooting of ducks and geese to\n30 days in the East and 35 days in\nthe Central and Western states. This\nthe shortest season since the\nduck-depression years of the mid-\nthirties.\nThe new regulations also shortened each hunting day by an hour,\nand clamped new limitations on the\ndaily bag,\nThe earliest seasons begin Sept.\n1, in Alaska and some Northern\nstates. They extend to January 31\nin Georgia and Mississippi and\nFebruary 12 In Puerto Rico,\nCustoms Revenue\n$49,112 lor July\nCustoms and Inland revenues for\nthe port of Nelaon and its outports\ntotalled $49,722.95 for the month of\nJuly, This total marks an increase\nof $5,91253 over the corresponding\nmonth for last year. Totals for\nJuly are the second highest recorded this year, being exceeded only\nhy Mav revenues which reached\n$31,859.93.\nTotals for Nelson and outports\nfollow: Nelson, $48,194.7(1; Waneta,\n$181.01; Cascade, $434.55; Midway,\n136.75; Carson, $563.95; Nelway,\n! $34194.\nYukon Member Won't\nRun Again He Says\nWHITE HORSE, Y.T., Aug. 2\n'CP) - George Black, 74-year-old\nProgressive Conservative member\nof parliament for the Yukon and\none-time speaker of the House of\nComons, announce hert that\nne would not seek reelection again\nbecause parliament in redistribution had more than doubled the\narea of his constituency.\nTIMMINS, Ont. (CP)\u2014A Junior\nreporter hired for the Summer\nmonthi shuddered when he was told\nthat the telephone number at the\naccident admitting ward of St. Mary's Hospital here la No. 18.\nRASHES\n1 To help heal and\nI clear up Irrlti-\nII inns fast, uie\nI pure, emollient\nm\nCUTICURA\n'SOAsPcwulOINTM'cNT\nA giant power hoe which can dig,\n400 feet of Sty-foot trenah per hour |\nhas been developed.\nI Try Cuticuri Baby Oil.\n| Great for diaper rath, I\n\u2022 rhafinn, akin Irritation.]\nRed Nichols, leader of a famoui American recording band which\nwlll provide topnotch muilc at the Civic Centre Tueiday night aa\npart of the Golden Jubilee Celebeatlon.\nA host of the nation's most famoui musicians have graduated\nfrom the Red Nichols aggregation!, Included In thli itellar lilting are\nBenny Goodman, Jimmy and Tommy Doney. Miff Mole, Jo'e Sullivan, Charlie and Jack Teargarden, Artie Shaw, Gene Krupa and the\nlate Glenn Miller. Each of theie men hai played with Red'i group\nat one time during hli career, and each payi tribute to Red for Invaluable  musical  education.\nNelson Unit\nGranted Charter\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug  3 - Word ha\n'ASKS   CHEAPER   POWER,\n[BETTER   ROADS\nSUDBURY, Ont. Aug, 3 - The\nOntario Llberlal Leader-Farquhnr\nOliver, has called fur cheaper\n'power, more mental institutions\n'and a University in Northern\nOntario. Mr Oliver, speaking at\n,  , ,        k.     n      Sudbury,    also    asked    for    better\nbeen  received here from the Pro- roads  in  Northern  Ontari\".\nvinclal  Command   by  Capt.   H.  W.  -\nMinton, President of the Rossland-\nTrail   Unit   No,   289   of the   Army,\nNavy   and   Air  Force  Veterans   in\nCanada,   that   the   Charter  for  tlie\nNelsnn  branch has been approved.\nThe   Char ter   will   be   presented   V1\nthe NeLon Unit on or about Sept.\n11   by   Brig.   J.   Sutherland-Brown\nCM.G, D.SO. The unitl number of\nlhe Nelson Branch will be 291.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom The Dally Newi of Auguit 4, 1937\nBy car and train, this morning, Nelson's\nfive girl track stars Journey to Vancouver to\nrepresent the Lakeside city in the C.tli'd^nian\nsports program there Saturday. Doreen Long,\nBertha Molr, two of the athletes, accompanied\nby Joe Wallach, coach; Harold I\/mg, trainer;\nand Miss Jill Wigg will travel by car, while\nAudrey Emery, Helen Wigg and Isabel Donovan, accompanied by Mrs. Harold Emery will\ntravel by train,\nA group of claims on Monk Creek form\neight nf the 14 claims recorded recently a', the\nMining Recorder's Office at Nelson.\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally Newi of August 4, 1922\nIt wis reported last night that four fires\nwere burning in the vicinity of Nelson, one\neich at Castlegar, Crescent Valley, Klnnaird\nand Lemon Creek A thick haz-- of srr.ike\nhovered over the city from early morning\nyesterday,\nKokmee Park, recently reserved for park\npurposes, embracing M square miles of wonderful and picturesque scenery, that will nne\nday become one of the greatest assets to the\nKooteniy district, ind a drawing card fur\ntouriiti, will be officially opened by thr Kokanee Mountaineering Cluh on thrir rr.'v.u-\ntain trip scheduled fur August 2.1\n      -- _k_\n40  YEAR   AGO\nFrom The Dally Newi of August 4, 1907\nW   A   Calder and iome other residents of\nFtre Valley and Upper Arrow Lake nre coming dnwn  next  Saturday  hv  appniiitment  t\ntalk nver the iltuation with the C 1'H  officials\nhere with regard to a  Winter schedule\nWilliam Hunter, M L A, came In frnm\nSilverton In it night He says the district Is\nlooking well md since the Hewitt deal wr\"!\nthrough whereby an English syndicate Is \u2022.\u25a0**\u25a0\nlng nver the operation of 'hr property, cr.\nfidence in  thp  futurt  is still  s'mr.g\nGems of Thought\nPERSONAL PRAISE\nAl thi C.rcrt m.-i, ttia: y It*.,*: k* *.*.' h \".s*\nIn flitlfr, few know how to pns:st\u00bb Wet.firli\nPhillip,\nJULY WEATHER\nWARM AT\nCRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, Fl, C, Aug, 3 -\nMean temperature for the month of\nJuly as recorded by the Meteorology branch here was 65 4 degrees,\nauuve average. Highest temperature\nregistered in the nvMilh was 1)3.8\ndegrees and the month's minimum\njwis nearly O'J degree*\" lower at 35 5\ndegrees,\n,    A total of .33 inches of moisture\nI was recorded during the month, accumulated  total of showen  which\n1 accompanied thunderstorms at intervals, and there were also traces\n\"f hail during the nioi;;h.\nEffect of over three inches of pre-\n:\\p;'V.:.t:. o:i field ci ops on St\nMarys Prairie in June were spoiled by July's hot drought, with grain\ncr ps well headed, but filling to attain height of more than around\ntwo feet. The fire hazard was acute\nmust of the month but the situation\ni emau.ed   m   hand\n$2500 Lost in\nCoast Stickup\n' VANCOUVER, B C, Aug 3 'CF>\n- Armed bandits made a $2V)0 haul\ni here when thev held up I.i'vlson (1\n\u25a0Huddi 1-y, n* trat.T nf the R yr,l\nii'an i 1, \u25a0* .\u00ab' *>'A- r \u25a0:\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 ; v* ,r.g at a:.\nEngl.sh Ray can,,', dl.\nA.s   Baddi ley    <'-\\y-d   frnm   hi*\nYou can't always bar burglars from your home but you\ncan protect valuables with\nour Theft Tolicy\nBe Protected\nWill coupon below for further\nptrtlculir,.\nNAME\nSTREET\nCITY\nF. A. Stuart\nWelcome Visitors\nAND\nCONGRATULATIONS\nirX   TbrfAjOJL\nON ITS 50th BIRTHDAY\nFROM THE DEALERS FOR\nFORD\nTHE CAR  THAI  HAS SERVED IOR NEARLY\n50 YEARS\nQueen City Motors\nFORD\nMONARCH\nFOR SALE\nSawmill Machinery\nLocated at New Denver, B.C.\nFor full specification* and pan to Inspect apply to:\nBRANCH SALES MANAGER\nWAR ASSETS CORPORATION\n1108 Weit Georgia Street, Vancouver, B.C.\nTERMS AND CONDITIONS\nOfferi to purchan merchandiit are Invited lubject to thi\nfollowing condltloni;\n(a) The Corporation ihail have the right to accept or to\nreject any or all offeri In whole or In part.\n(b) If an offer li accepted, nle wlll be on an \"ai li-where\nli\" baili, without warranty of any kind {except ai to\nthe Crown'i title), and will be subject to the other uiual\nSalei  Condition*  of the  Corporation.\n{e)    On acceptance of offer, purchaie price will be payable\nIn full,\n(d)    Purchaieri will be required to take delivery of mer-\nchandlie sold and to remove It from the  prrmliei at\ntheir   own   expense  within   a   time   limit  let   by  the\nCorporation,\nTIMH\nOfferi forwarded io ai to reach the addreu noted below on\nor before the 19th day of Auguit, 1947, will be comidered, unleu\nan offer latlifactory to the Corpratlon hai been received and\naccepted  prior to  that date.\nOfferi ihould be addressed to The Branch Salei Manager,\nWar Asset* Corporation, at 1108 Weit Georgia Street, Vancouver,  B.C.\nYOUR  TREES\nmMt^zs-\nBe tUattikjMWe fox*.-\nN*3, 2 In \u00ab icriei of Infonnitlve advert item an n\nPitte then in ynur scrip, book for future reference\nPULP & PAPER INDUSTRY\nIN     BRITISH     COLUMBIA\n [!.\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0-\u25a0 1*.>W\u00bb!\u00ab**^*\u00ab1*^ *<*-*.**^***y*j**-r^*\u00ab-*f^^\npifipif ii    l >il| i\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, AUO. 4, 1947 \u2014 7\nNELSON\nThe \"QUEEN CITY\"\nof the KOOTENAYS\nExtends a Cordial\nWelcome to Its\nGOLDEN\nJUBILEE\nAUGUST 3rd to 9th\nHere is a picture of Baker Street in the \"good in 1 898, a year after incorporation, and the pic-\nold days\" when they had no street cars, cement ture was taken on July 1st, when horse rogng\npavement or modern conveniences. This was back        took place on the main thoroughfare.\n1897\nCity Council\nMAYOR\nJOHN HOUSTON\nALDERMEN\nJ. J. MALONE J. A. GILKER\n* W. f. TEETZEL F. FLETCHER\nCHAS. HILLYER ALEX DOW\nTHI FIRST COUNCIL Ol\" THI OITY Of NUON\n\/fta*jcr vii ffottritH ot ttx Cffg ot IWeon\n*:    ,\n. * -\n1947\nCity Council\nMAYOR\nT. H. WATERS\nALDERMEN\nB. C. AFFLECK     J. W. RINOROSI\nAv M. ALLAN       T. I. SHORTHOUSE\nT. D. ROM.INO    Q. C. WALLACH\nA Full Week of Entertainment . . . Never Before\nEqualled in the Interior\nof British Columbia. \u2666. Has\nBeen Arranged for Your\nEnjoyment ... it Is Our\nSincere Wish That Your\nVisit to \"NELSON\" Will\nBe a Pleasant One.\n'   VIEW OF NIUON'S IU-HWESS DISTRICT \u2014 1947\nTHE MAYOR, CITY COUNCIL AND CIVIC EMPLOYEES OF THE\nCORPORATION of the CITY of NELSON\n B^*I\"M>M  J   .\u25a0'W'*\"*^\n\u2014,\t\n\t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 4, 1947\nPRESIDENT OF\nURUGUAY DIES\nMONTEVIDIO, Aug. J-The President ol Uruguay, Thomas Berrela,\ndied tonight following an emergency operation for an internal ailment.\nHe was 71 years old. Berreta was\ngranted a leave of absence Friday\nand the Acting Presidency was assumed by Vice-President Louis Bat-\nlie Berres. Doctors said that Berreta\nlapsed into a coma following the operation and then died.\nBerreta's election as President of\nUruguay last November climaxed a\ncareer of more than 50 years in Uruguayan politics. He was a self-made\nman, the son of an Italian laborer,\nwho immigrated to Uruguay. His\nformal education was limited. He\nserved in Congress, then as a State\nGovernor and as Minister of Public\nWorks.\nITUNA, Sask. (CP) - A dead\ndeer found under the covers of a\nfarm home bed, was among evidence presented when Frank Ser-\nwathlwlch was fined $105 and costs\nSAYS RUSSIANS\nHAVfc NO\nDESIRE FOR WAR\nNEW HAVEN, Conn., Aug. 3 -\nYale University Issued a memorandum called \"Moscow Report,\" lum-\nmarizing the conclusions reached\nby a Yale professor who spent two\nand a half months in Russia, and\njust recently returned to the United States,\nProfessor Percy Corbett said lt\nwas impossible to think of the Russian people or the Soviet Government as being addicted to war, \"On\nthe contrary,\" Corbett said, \"the\nRussians appear to be worried for\nfear war may be forced upon them.\"\nThe professor said the Russians\nhave one big desire, and \"world\ndomination is not that desire.\" The\nYale professor said the Russians desire to work out their own system\nof social life in the land which they\nregard as their own.\nin R.C.M.P. court here for snaring\ndeer.\nThe\nCorporation of Penticton\nEXTENDS\nCONGRATULATIONS\nAnd BEST WISHES\nTo the City of Nelson\nON THE OCCASION OF ITS\nGolden Jubilee\nCongratulations\nand Best Wishes\nTO THI\nCity of NELSON\nON THE OCCASION OF ITS\nGOLDEN JUBILEE\nCorp, of City of Slocan\nCongratulations and\nGood Wishes\nTO THE CITY OF NELSON\nOn  tht   Occoiion   of   Id   Fiftieth   Anniversary\nTHE YOUNGEST CITY IN B.C.\nThe City 0\/ Kimberley\nCLIFF SWAN, Moyor\nGREETINGS and\nWARMEST\nCONGRATULATIONS\nFROM THE COUNCIL AND CITIZENS\nOF TRAIL\nTO THE COUNCIL AND CITIZENS\nOF NELSON\nThe  [V pitiful   PI :, ;r    jr \u25a0)     '   flT  K     tmns*\nON THE OCCASION OF  ITS GOLDEN JUBILEE\nAnd   So  Again,   Congratulation!   Nelion,\nAnd the  Beit of  Luck and Goodwill tor th*  Futur*.\nFROM YOUR GOOD NEIGHBORS AT TRAIL, B.C.\nTo Investigate\nAlleged Labor\nRacketeering\nHOLLYWOOD, Aug. 3 - American House Labor Subcommittee is\nscheduled to start an investigation\ninto alleged labor racketeering and\nmusic manoeuvering in Hollywood,\nCommittee Chairman Carrol Kerns\nj.says that his group is going into the\ninvestigation open-mindedly. He\nadds tnat a specific object of the\nprobe will be the activities of the\nutau of tne American Federation of\nMusicians, Hamcs Petrillo.\nAldermin T. 8, 8horthouie,\nGeneral Chairman of the NeUon\nGolden Jubilee program.\nLove Subject ol\nLesson-Sermon\nFirst Church of Christ Scientist\nwhich waa organized in this City\nin 1908,' held service on Sunday\nmorning, when \"Love\" was the .subject of the Lesson-Sermon, and included the following passages from\nthe Bible:\n\"Now the sojourning of the children of Israel, who dwelt in Egypt,\nwas four hundred and thirty years.\nAnd it came to pass at the end of\nthe four hundred and thirty years,\neven the self same day it came to\npass, that all the hosts of the Lord\nwent out from the land of Egypt,\nBut the Egyptians pursued after\nthem, all the horses and chariots of\nPharaoh, and his horsemen, and his\narmy, and overtook them encamping by the sea, beside Pi-hahiroth,\nAnd the Lord said unto Moses,\nWherefore criest unto me9 Speak\nunto the children of Israel that they\ngo forward. Thus the Lord saved\nIsrael that day out of the hand of;\nthe Egyptians. Exodus 12 and 14.    j\nAmong the selections from the;\nChristian Science textbook, \"Sei-!\nence and Health With Key to the ;\nScriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddjr,\nwere the following: \"Through the\nwholesome chastisements of Love,'\nwe are helped onward in the march\ntowards righteousness, peace, and \\\npurity, which are the land marks of!\nScience. Beholding the infinite tasks:\nof truth, we pause, \u2014 wait on God.\nThen we push onward, until boundless thought walks enraptured, and j\nconception unennfined is winked to\nreach the divine glory.\" \"Love inspires, illumines, designates, and j\nleads the way, Right motives give\npinions to thought, and strength\nand freedom to speech and action.\"\n\"Each successive stage of experi-,\nence unfolds new views of divine\ngoodness and love.\"\n\"Divine Love always has met and j\nalways will meet every human\nneed.\"\n\"Every trial of our faith in God\nmakes us stronger, The more difficult seems the material condition\nto be overcome by Spirit, the\nstronger should be our faith and the\npurer our love.\"\nThe solo, \"Teach Me To Know,\"\nby Delia Lacy, was rendered by\nRoberta Patterson of Victoria, B.C,\nVenetian glassmaking guilds had\nreached the peak of their artistry in\nthe IMh century, bringing importance and wealth to the city of canals.\nO' VICTOR\nThe City of\nVICTORIA\nCongratulates\nThe City of\nNELSON\non its\n50th Anniversary\nTO\nThe City of\nNELSON\nWe extend to you our congratulations on this your Jubilee\nCelebration. May thc next fifty\nyears bring you continued growth\nand prosperity.\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE\nCITY OF FERNIE\nTo the City of Nelson\nITS CITIZENS\nAND VISITORS\nCONGRATULATIONS\nAND BEST WISHES\nFOR A SUCCESSFUL\nGOLDEN JUBILEE\nThe Corporation of thc City of Kamloops\n8\n9\n7\nKOOTENAY BREWERIES LTD. PLANT, NELSON, B.C.\n53 Years in Business\nKOOTENAY BREWERIES LIMITED\nSALUTES NELSON\nON ITS\nGOLDEN JUBILEE\nAnd to Visitors to\nNelson on This\nAuspicious Occasion\nWe Extend. \u2666 \u2666\nA Cordial Welcome\nWe Are Proud to Have\nBeen Able to Keep Pace\nWith the Progress of This\nThriving City and After\n53 Years in Business Are\nStill Expanding\nKOOTENAY BREWERIES LIMITED\nNELSON and TRAIL\nt'.'L0\nKOOTENAY HREWFRIES ITH   l'i ANT,  TRAIL,  B C.\n'sis  \"1 mrv in   ('. j'.iiir-,'.\n 111\n\t\n\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0*\u2014\u2014\n^*****-****^*mmmmmmm****m\nSPORTS\n.eafs Walk 19-5 Over\nfoung Dynamo Team\nThere were teen-agers and,\nroniet and would-be lacrosse\nlayers on the Civic Arena floor\naturday night when the Kiwan-\ni Maple Leafs walked over the\npokane Dynamos 19-5.\nThe locals emerged victors from\ngame that saw youth matched\ngainst age and experience. Sei-\nom before have the Dynamos\nired so badly and never before\nave they floored such a young\nlam. Five Juniors and one mid-.\n(tt graced the visitors' 11 net\n\/here the Laface brothers usual-\ni patrol.\n'ifteen-year-old Bertnva of tho\nDamns centred off with towering\nin Morris of tho locals. The mirl-\n, leaguer showed a fighting heart\nv that saw him checked liy men\n(lead tailor and sometimes Sll\njnds heavier. He i.s nne of thc\ningest players ever to lake up a\n:k in a senior league game.\n. Tourson, nne of lhe five Juniors\nlO played tho full time, notched\nt counter fnr the vUituis, Mis\nMtant breaking into the crease\npaid off in the start of the\nirth quarter. Tnurson hooked a\n\\ ducked around the Nelson de-\nId. pass intended fnr a Leafian\nice region to slam home a goal.\nTor the homesters it wa.s a mafch\nthe way. The Loafs pressed hard\nthe first period and rollicked\n'Ough the Dynamo lines almost at\nU, scoring nine goals lo which\nsre was no reply from tho visiting\nnp. The Dynamos .scored one of\n! three counters in tho second\njne and dropped nut of Bight 14-2\nthe end of the third. Tourson and\nlire boosted the Dynamo score tn\n[her digits with  three goals  in\niinal canto but there was no\nipping of the Leaf avalanche.\niVUh a reminder that several tim-\nbeiore   they   had   blown   -sure\nI things, the Leafs went out In the\n'second and third quarters to plunge\njnto an overwhelming lead. In the\nj fourth the Leafs made what appear-\njcd to be a practise session out of the\nI game. They passed the ball even\nwhen in the clear.\n! Coach Dud Cooper, who again\n; donned the pads for his club, proved the axiom that one should practise what he preaches. He set up\nseven marks cjnd was in for a goal\nhimself. Seven goals in lacrosse is\ncommon enough but seven assists,\nj the fans say, is something out of thc\nordinary. Every Leaf player with\nj the exception of the goal tender,\ni marked up counters. Although most\nof the tallies were easy again\u00a7t the\n'junior Dynamo goalie the play mak-\nI ing wairanted the applause from\nthe bleachers.\nj John McMilHan, a now addition\njto lhe Loaf camp, scored his first\n'goal in his inaugeral performance\nwith the regulars. The now comer\nshowed fair speed and a leach-like\nadherence to his checks.\nSpeodhall of the Dynamos, Art\nWhite one of the three regulars who\nsaw action Saturday night, regist-\nIered three of the five goals scored\nI by the visitors. White, along with\n'linesmen Satan Zokal and Gibson,\n|shouldered lhc majority of the Dynamo attacks, _\nLineups with goals and assists In\nbrackets follow:\nNelson\u2014Viv Graves, Mayo 2 (2),\nA, Townsend 2 il), F. Graves 3 (3),\nMaglio 1 (21, Cooper 1 (7), Morris\n, 2, Wassick 2, McMillian 1, L Cho-\niquette 1, W, Townsend 1, LaPointe\n\u25a02, F, Thompson 1.\n! Spokane- Klit, Gibson. Zokal 1\n'2), Robertson, White 3, Tourson 1,\nPookochoff,  McCabe,  Bertova,\nTy Culley selected Leo Choquette\nland Stan Morris and Art White of\nthe Dynamos, the three star performers of the evening,\nWest Kootenay Girls'Soflball\nChampionships Slarl Aug. 24\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 8 t- Wwt Kotv\ntenay girls' softball championship\nplay will get undw way at Trail\nand Rossland Aug, 24, It was dt\"\ncided at a meeting hera.\nBracketed with Trail Ui Fruitvale,\nand with Rossland is Nelson, according to a draw announced by\nFrank Bishop, President ol the\nTrail League.\nBoth semi-finals will be best of\nfive, with double-headers to be\nplayed in Trail and Rossland on\ni games back in Fruitvale and Nel-\nthe 24th, and one, and possibly two\non Aug. 31. In the event that fifth\nand deciding games are necessary,\nthey will be played in Trail and\nRossland during the following\nweek, with the visiting teams\n| getting 60 per cent of the gate receipts.\nj The final series will be bast-of-\nseven, with the games starting in\n| Trail or Fruitvale with a double-\n1 header on the 7th of September.\nThe second double-header will be\nI in Rossland or Nelson the following week, and if further games are\nj necessary, a double-header will be\n.played in Fruitvale or Trail on the\n121st. A seventh game would go, tf\nneeded, to Rossland or Nelson.\nAPPOINT TRUSTEE8\nTeams are restricted to 18 players, which must be submitted in\nwriting prior to the first game of\nthe semi-finals to Baba Tavoroli of\nvale and Helen Ling of Rossland,\nEach team will -supply one um*\nplre, the officials dividing each\ngame behind the plate and on the\nbases.\nA twfw constitution was drawn\nup at the meeting which decided\nthat if any further centres desired\nto enter in the future, they would\nhave the privilege of appointing a\ntrustee. Trustees have power so\nlong as their towns are represented in the playoffs, Teams must\nsignify' their intention to compete\nprior to Aug. 1 of each year.\nThe luck of the draw will decide the bracketing of teams and\nthe location of the opening games,\nwhich will rotate with double-\nheaders until each series is completed.\nNelson Splits\nAl Coeur d'Alene\nCOBlUR D'ALENE, Idaho, Aug. 3\n(AP)\u2014The Nelson, B.C., Junior\nbaseball team today defeated Coeur\nd'Alene's Junior Legion team 7-2\nbehind the one-hit pitching of Herb\nPitts to split a two-game series\nhere.\nCoeur d'Alene won yesterday 12-2.\nErrors were  plentiful  as  Nelson\nmade   four   misplays   and   Coeur\nd'Alene seven.\nTrail, chairman of a board of newly-j Nelson 000 430 x\u20147   3   4\n[appointed trustees for the Province:Coeur d'Alene      001 100 0\u20142   1   7|\nRecord Nearly\nISO (Ily Pioneers\nCup.  Others  are  Tony  Arcure  ofi   Pitts and Koehle; Good, Mahr (6)\nNelson, Sandy McGinnis of Fruit 'nnd Croy, Iloffman (6).\nNames of NeUon'i surviving old\ntimers, wanted In connection with\nJubilee activities, have mounted to\nnearly 150, Rosa Fleming, Registrar\nof the Nelson and District Old\nTimers Association stated over the\nweekend.\nWith the cooperation of local\ncitizens, 23 additional pioneers\nfound their way Into the latest list\nof persons who lived here prior to\nor including the year of tncorpora- (6l and W.\ntion\u20141897. (4),   Sewell\nThe extra pioneers follow: Kluttz.\nMrs. J. E. Annable, 505 Victoria New York\nStreet, Nelson, 1897. Pittsburgh\nRay Ball, White Rock, B.C.\nV. Bolettl, 1945 Falls Street, Nelson, 1897.\nRobert Bell, 210 Vernon Street,\nNelson, 1891.\nJack Bell, 1885 Riverside Avenue,\nTrsil, 1891.\nGeorge A. Brown, 824 Silica\nStreet, Nelson, 1897.\nMrs. G. A. Brown, 924 Silica\nStreet, 1897.\nMrs. Vera Mabel Elsdon, Bonnington, 1896.\nMrs. Reginald Haggarty, 505 Victoria Street, Nelson, 1897.\nMrs. John S. Haigh, Box 90,\nMission, B.C., 1897.\nMrs. G. A. B. Hall, R.R. No. 1,\nWellington, B.C.. 1B97.\nEdgar Jamieson, 20 Washington\nStreet, Rossland, 1897.\nMiss Ethel Jamieson, 924 Silica\nStreet, Nelson, 1897.\nJack Mulholland, R.R. No. 1,\nNelson, 1893.\nRobert McDougal, Ymir, 1893.\nBAU SCORES\nSUNDAY\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPhiladelphia .. 100 000 14J\u2014 1 IS J\nSt. Louis   301 102 12x\u201412 12 1\nSchmidt, Jurisich (8) and Padgett, Lakeman (8); Burkhart,\nBrazle (8), Wilks (8), Dickson (9)\nand Garagiola.\nBrooklyn     000 000 000-0   7   0\nChicago 000 030 2!x-\u00ab 10   0\nBranca, Gregg (7), Taylor (8) and\nEdwards; Schmitz and McCuUough.\nNew York 10 513 010\u201411 17 2\nPittsburgh        001 211 000- 8 13 1\nKennedy, Hansen <8), Trinkle\nCooper; Roe, Bagby\n(6),   Queen   (8)   and\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUO. 4, 1947\nU.S. Motorboat\nFlotilla\nVisits Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B.C., Aug. 3 - U.S.A.\nmotorboat flotilla, the goodwill\ncruise which was organized by E\n011 120 01-8 10   1\n000 032 01-6   \u00ab   3\n(Called after 8th-Sunday law)\nJones,   Beggs   (6),   Trinkle   (7),\nJansen  (8)  and Lombardi;  Higbe,\nSingleton (6) and Howell.\nBoston        .     003 010 000-4 10   1\nCincinnati   ...   100 010 000-J   7   0 others following on good lime. Fran\non the wharf.\nThe Leland Hotel and Pine Lodge\nwere proud hosts to most mtmberi\nOf the party, some of whleh were\nentertained at private homei\nThe flotilla will proceed up the\nArrow Lakes to Beaton, Trout Lake\nand Revelstoke to spend most of\nthe week before returning to Nakusp. Clyde Stecher of Spokane is\nagain in the party, and will give\nexpert demonstrations on water\nskiing and tobogganing at a water\nregatta which is being planned.\nThere are some .10 persons In the\nH. Geti, Commander nf American party of American visitors, Includ-\nmotorboats from Spokane, and in-1ing Commander Gell, Dr. E. J.\neluded craft from Grand Coulee I Stevens, Ca;itain-in-Charge, Mrs,\nDam, Kettle Falls and Spokane, ar-j Stevens anil daughter of Spokane,\nrived on schedule at the Govern-[James Eaton of Garfield Bay, Pend\nment wharf at Nakusp early Satur- O'reille, Ore., Mr. and Mrs. Clyde\nday morning. The visitors reported!Stecher, J. Domfucr, Ray Seely and\na grand journey from Trail to Na-json Neil, J. Shaw and son John, Joe\nkusp, and found the scenery and 'Holland, Dave Ritei, Haden V. Top-\nquiet waters \"most enjoyable.\" pin, all of Spokane, ahd others.\nFirst craft arrived at 5 p.m. wllh \u25a0\"        i\"~r\"T7iT~7;   \u2014-^\nand\nand\nBy the Starting Qate\nThat Silly Jericho Wise-Crack\nA Shave That Cost 40,000 Lives\nubs Cosl Dodgers Ihree Straight\nNlhW Win; Yanks Take 5-1 Game\nout the right eyei ef all the In-\nhabitants. That reply mtde Saul\nKing, for he used the leven-day\nreiplte granted for consideration,\nto hew a yoke of oxen In pleoei,\n\u2022end the plecei all through Israel,\nand raise the nation agalnit the\nAmmonites, whoie army wai\nwiped out.\nI can find no record of the aetual\nforward young  man  to  \"tarry   In!contact ol David with any Nahaah,\nJericho till thy beard be grown.\"     but ,pparently Nahash, if there was\nIt was considered rich when some on,    ,h( onC| or Nahlsh No   2| if\ndisputant, in early manhnnrt, had the\nWith beards to right of us, side-,\nwhiskers to left of us. chm-whiikej}\nand paint-brushes behind us, and\ngoatees and moustaches in front of,\nus\u2014mo^t of them on the faces of\npredominantly youthful citizens\u2014in\nour Capital Cjty of the Kootenay-]\nBoundary today, we may appropriately consider some of the aspects ofj\nthat old-time withering advice to a*\nMrs. W. R. MacLean. 904 Edge-\nwood Avenue, Nelson, 1808.\nE. H. McDaniel, Occidental Hotel,\nNelson, 1897.\nMrs. A. R. Peters, 408 Vernon\nStreet, Nelson, 1897.\nClarence Shannon, R.R. No. 1,\nNelson, 1893.\nMrs. A. M. Sturgess, 485 Ward\nStreet, Nelson, 1895.\nMrs. R. Turner, 1239 Navelller\nStreet, El Cerrito. Calif, 1897.\nRichard Turner, 1239 Navelller\nStreet, El Cerrito, Calif.\nWilliam Turner, Ainsworth\n^VETERAN, YOUTH\nCANADA'S HOPES IN \u00ab*tujioay\nCANOE OLYMPICS\nBurnett,    Larifranconl    (81\nMasi; Blackwell, Peterson (7)\nLamanno, Mueller (8).\nBoston .  000 001 000\u20141   7   0\nCincinnati 010 500 00x-6   9   1\nWright, Shoun  14), Karl (7) and\nCameili,   Masi   (41;   Raffensberger\nand Mueller.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nCleveland 021 001 000-4   J   1\nNew York        401) 000 001-5   8   1\nBlack, Stephens (11, Klieman (9)\nand Hegan; Reynolds and Berra.\nSt.  Louis        . 000 000 000-0   8   0\nPhiladelphia     000 020 00x-2   8   2\nKinder,  Fannin   (7)   and  Early;\nMarchildon and Rosar.\nSt.  Louis 00 003 20O-4 10   2\nPhiladelphia     200 010 000-3   4   0\nSanford  and   Moss;  Flores,   and\nSavage.\n(Chicago       010 000 100\u20142   9 .1\ni Washington .100 000 000-1 7 0\nI Papish and Tresh; Scarborough,\nFerrick tB) and Ferrell, Evans (8).\nDetroit     100 321 102\u201410 18 1\nBoston      001 001 010\u2014 3 10 0\nNewhouser   and   Wagner;   Gala-\nhouse, Johnson (4), Harris (7) and\nTebbetts.\nINTERNATIONAL LIAOUI\nMontreal 3, Newark S.\nRochester 6, Jersey City 8.\nToronto 4, Byracuse 8.\nToronto 1, Syracuse 4.\nBuffalo 8, Baltimore 3\nBuffalo 8, Baltimore 8.\ncraft continued on to the Gates of\nSt. Leon where they spent the\nnight.\nIn the evening, the Nakusp boyi\nstaged an exhibition of water skiing and toboggan riding,, to the delight nf the large crowd gathered\nWhen ordering bicycle parts\npleaie state name of hub, type of\nhanger. We have a good stock\non hand.\nSAM BROWN\nGun, Lock, Safe 4 Cycle Worki\n10.    Pittsburgh    2\nBy DOUGLAS HOW\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nOTTAWA,  Aug.   3  (CP)\u2014A   28-(\nthere was a second, had been pretty j year-old veteran and an 18-year-old\n-,, ,, , , , ,L'        LUSIC    WIS   .  OGLUI.il,   III\ncand e-snuffer put ori him by thui, D    ,d occasion youngster who took up paddling last\nsquelching   remark   by   a   mature, ^_ w \u201e\u201e\u201e,,\u201e,\u2022 \u201e ,,\nNew *York 4.\nBrooklyn   9.\n7,     Philadelphia\n4,    Philadelphia\nBy STEVE ROBERTSON\nIf Brooklyn Dodgeri want to\nfurther Increase their lead atop\nthe National League, It would be\n\u25a0 good Idea for them to secure the\nservices of a ralnn-aker every\nlime they're due to play the Cubs\nIn Chicago.\nThe Chlcagoans Sunday made It\nthree straight vi-tories over the\nBrooks with a 6-0 decision behind\nUlt seven-hit pitching of Johnny\nlehmlti.\nHUlph Branca held the Cubs to a\nIfle until a fuur-hi' outbreak pro-\nICed three Chicago runs in Ihe\nMl. Branca .'ell apart in the sev-\nith, Issuing a walk ard hitting Ed\n\u00bbltkus with a pitched ball Heifer Hal Gregg walked another\n\u25a0fore Phil Cavaretta singled to\nnd two home ond lhe Cubi add-\n. another in the eighth.\nSchmitr. presented uith a new\nitomobiie before the game hy the\n(mefolk of Wausau. Wis. allowed\nily three hits in 'he first seven\nBings, then loosened up with iwn\nthe eighth and rsr.e. r the ninth\nAt Pittsburgh, Hack Greenberg'l\nird home run of the day and his\n\"ILLISON'S BEST\" FLOUR\nFor All Your Baking  Needs\nGuaranteed to Satisfy\nYour Grocer Hai It\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\n(Prior   Broi.l\nUN'DFR   NKW  OWNERSHIP\nPHONE 11\/5 ~ 182 BAKER ST.\nHivt  your Furnlt'jr* Expertly\nRecovered  it  thi\nNELSON   UPHOLSTERY\n413 Hal. St Phor.e 146\nI second nf the nightcap, gave the\n'Pnates a 6-6 tie with New York\nafter the Giants won the first same\n11-8. The second contest was cnlled\nat the end of eight innings because\nnf Pennsylvania's Sunday curfew\nlaw.\nBRAVES WIN 4-2\nIn the National League's other\ndoubleheader, Boston Braves defeated Cincinnati 4-2 in the opener\nto snap Ewell Blackweli's string of\nrnnsecutive complete games pitched\nii! 13, while the Red? walked away\nwith the afterpiece, 6-1.\nTed Wilks checked a four-run uprising m the eighth inning st St.\nI\/mis ar.d Marry Dickson halted\nanother threat ;n the ninth to save\nthe game fnr Ken Hurkhardt in the\nCardinals' 10-8 triumph over Fred\nSchmidt and the Philadelphia Phillies Going into the Phillies' half of\n'.he eighth, the Cards led 8-2\nOver m the American League,\nLarry (Yogn Berra's long fly to\ncentre wi'h the ha.'es loaded in the\nninth scored B'>b Brown with the\nwinning run as New York Yankees\nshaded C'eve'.and Indians 5-4.\nAll:? Revr.n!d3 .former Indian\nwent 'he mut? tn gam his 13th victory fnr the league-leaders.\nClubbing five R*\">s!nn pitchers for\n16 hi'.*. Detroit Tigers trounced the\nRed Six 10-:! for Uf'v Hal New-\nhouser's llth tr.umph He was aided\nby  Id* '.  Ewr's  two-run  homer,\nThe second place Snx now trail\nNew York by H'i games and are\nonly ;i-ga:r.c Ahead of the third-\nrung T,,:rrS.\nAt Philadelphia. St. Louii Brnwr.s\novercame a three-run deficit tn\ntake a 4-3 decs'* n \\n the second\nCame and guin an even break with\nthe A'hlrtics wh.\u00bb '\u25a0'\u25a0'**n the opener\n2-0 i ih:rd On! tr,, -bom Phil Mar-\nch.ldi \u25a0; 'a ho ;.H<.wed ri^hl h\/.s but\nNrw  York 3,  Cleveland I\n'game.  14  innings).\n(first\nNew   York\n(first  game.)\nPittsburg  5,\nChicago   12,\nCinclnattl\nSt.    Louis\n>me occasion i yuunsMer wuu kjua. UJj *j*iuiui\u00bbg i\u00bb*\u00bb  (njr>ht)\niwhen he needed'a friend. It mightiyear found themselves listed tonight      *\u201e'..,\nleader of thought whole conclusions \u00ab\u2122* \u2122      \u00a3\u201e whUe Davld  \u00ab\u201e'*, c.nadV. chief hopes for canoe AMERICAN\nmTS to relate   with !\u2022\u00ab\u00ab*\u00bb\u00ab \u00ab \u25a0** Jumps .hud of Suljlliutli in Ihe 1948 Olympic Games.\nMj   mother used  to  re.la e   wltn       V   \u00ab ...       **     f     h R, Dou8 Bennett of the Excel Boat- \u201e-\u25a0\u25a0-.\nobvious approval, how a well-known.m ttie wimerncsi, or wnen as ^ing     \" Tt.*      . . ,  a      , \u2022.,_     Second gamf*. called  after elgh\ncolics,* prwident, in Nova Scotia, in of Judah he was warring w th Saul, tag Clu| of ^W\u00abJ, *\u00ab.. a lean * p( darkn\u00a3sl;\nher vounc days, got tired of the re-'Whatever its origin, thu friendship trtillwy veteran,climaxed *icome      ^ Ynrk 3  c,cve]an(i \u201e\nrurring* propositions advanced in \u2022\u2022 .evidently persisted after David was; back campaign  with performances     phiUla(iclphia   R>   st   I\/Ulll   j.\nreligious macazine by a young min- established at Jerusalem.i King of, \"> \u00ab-\u2022 \u00bbn nu\u00abI can.u tin v a-oe as-.   chj ,3   w,sh,ngton   *.\nisler,   or   possibly   professor,   and|All Israel. G \u00b0th   Ck-cnd IhlTs on     m INTERNATIONAL\nproffered h.m -ho advice to tarry n     Sq wh|n Nah\u201eh fm,u d ,\u201e i^'XlAeT\" Iingle blade s.ng\"     Toronto 0. Syracuse 3  (nlgM).\n\u25a0'\"ichountd.ctc.rhcBapt.stword h Dv^ ,    j cl|     fl    Rochester   j\n\" ,d rock'ed w'th m h^Thi w k\"''\u00ab**\u2122 \"\"'\" Ha\u2122\" lhc s\u00b0\" <* blade tandem spot wUh dubmatc' Baltimore 7, Buffalo 2 (night).\nbo! isola-ed  ins'tan\u2122 I  once  ,e,d>\u00bbb*\u00bbh, as his father shewed kind- Harry 2mMnv.\nsome historical articles in the Man- n\"5 unt0 me*' and sent a A*lfZ*-\\ His youthful teammate. seler'M metre double blade single event in\ntime Baptist in which a similar case11\"\"1 ,0 \"P\"\" sorrow and friend- by t[\u201e Olympic committee of the England next year and was chosen\nwas mentioned   I can imagine that ,h'P* , ,      CCA. after watching two days of to team with his clubmate\nin the Eastern States a century ago.     Hanun. however, had . bra in that r,cing,  is lanky   Hank   Harper  of\nwhen beards were worn with dis- w\"*jW rattle in a hollow hair, and Gan.noque, Oni, who picked up a\nnotion,   propositions   to   tarry   In when the delegation arrived, Instead i paddle seriously for the first time\nwa.s named a.s\n\/ Checki\/\nMeans Cigarette Perfection In\ni\/\n'\u25a0a ; pa\nhi* i In\n,1. richo 'were often advanced to the n' sending for old counsellors of his I [H[ year. Today h\nbrardleis and unseasoned who show-, father who could tell him the fads,! Canada's represents\ned up to tilt in the lists, he accepted the idea of the princes\nFor ail I know, the same advice around him, that the me.ssengtrs\nmay have been tendered to Pitt, were David's spies, \"to aearch, and\nwho governed Britain at a youthful to overthrow, and to spy out the\nage. Remember that monstrosity of land,\" as Chronicles puts It, or, \"to\ntiratory, \"Sir, the atrocious crime of search the city, and tn spy it, and to\nbeing a young man,\" etc? overthrow it,\" the book of Samuel\nHiitoncally.   beards   were   lm- version,\nportant to the Israelites, probably|    And what did thf younf fool do?\n\"Wherefore Hanun took David's\nservants, and ihaved them, and\ncut off their garments In the midst\nhard by their buttocks, end sent\nthem away.\"  (Chronicles).\n\"Wherefore Hanun took David's\nservants, and shaved off the one\nHalf of their beardi, and cut off\ntheir garments In the middle, even\nto their buttocks, and sent them\naway.\" (Samuel).\nThe one half of their beards! That\ndid it.\nDavid   sent   to   the   messengers,\ncowering    in   their   shirt tails,   the\nGerald\nCovey, in the 10.000-metre double\nblade tandem race.\nA fifth member of the team will\nbe selected next Spring for thc long-\nve in trie 1000- distance tandem.\nSWEET CAPORAL\nCIGARETTES\nSEE HOW PERFECT A POSTWAR CIGARET ll CAN BE\nmark of manhood and matur\nity, and  It seems to  me that In\nlater times they were mandatory\nfor members of the Jewish 8an-\nhedrln.   Thry   must   have   meant\nsomething  to the   Arabs too,  and\npossibly   all   Moslems.   \"By   the\nbeard of Mahomet.\" \"by the beard\nof the Prophet,\" \"by the beard of\nllderim,\" suggest that,\nDn somewhat :he St.me lines, it has\nitlway? beee. an indigir.lv to forcibly\ncrop a woman's hair. This was illustrated in liberated Brussels after\n'.he  fiermar.s  moved  out  following\n'he   191R\nwho had\nmar.s were i\\\nrr pped    Ti. ,\nwhen   the   M\nArmistice,   when  women Vmdlv couniel to \"Tarry at Jericho\nassociated   with  the  Ger\n' ni'ibbrd a\nst.il   going\nr.t   into   Winter\n<*.cels area dur-\nR'\naiZ r.gto! \u2022Zs'-r-.tr rs :-\nhis   ninth   v.C'.vv   f i\n'\u25a0\u25a0 Sn*< I- waj (Zn;c.y .\n;\u25a0*.  lfl gan.'-s wuh  th\nou may re-\n4 TAXI\nLicensed to Qo\nAnywhere\nDiy or NigM Service\nLOUIS  CHOQUtTTE\n[iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinitiiiiiiiniiiiiii\nCAMPBILL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountonrs\nAuditor)\nMC R\u00abK\u00abr St. I':* *! r :3.i\n11111M11111111) 1111 11 b 11 s 11111111 s 11111\nROSCOE\nFOURNIER\nGAHAGEMFN\nIKY  CHI! Y  AL TO  S! RVICf\nPhon. i:i Nr'.inn. It  C\nHave thc Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE    SIS\nfs\\r sH your f Tor al rifjtjlriminls\nleave your orrJar it\nOVERWAITEA\nPh   ,i.    *0*   rr\nWsltsdrn s   F !.r sts,   I'hcn.    I * ,V\nBalling Leaders\nBy  The   Associated  Press\n\u2022'!.,*., : .irl fir.i     C.   All It H IV!\nw\u201e!'\u201e,:  !*:*..:,       wi r-: :.n ;;.* f.i:\nKi      I* .:\u2022 i i*i iir-s 44 cu mc\nI! * . !:, ,*.,   I:  Is      ,,\u00ab X,'! Sf, 'rli till\nWC     ,*   r, :s     h.i ;i.*i ;*; )r,  :i;*;\nI>.M i  ,*    .   Y..!.ks H!l 371 VI i:i   3M\ni;,!,i:     It,  ! 117 I'd!  311 H*,   K'\nII ii.i l ..\"ci  **.    Nat .il I...I! u*\nMr,-, li \u25a0** *-. Rli. A'i:**:;.,i!* I.r.i^.ir\n\\V.**  hm. II, I S  x   74\nII ,,T.r   * im N'.i'; ii*\u00abl I,Piij'i|.\n\\I *.*. Ill *\u25a0 Is. 3.'. An * :;.a:; I.*. ',! :r\nW...:.i\"...*. I!* ! S   i. 2-1\nOVERSEAS CRICKET\n.n Chnstn .a w^tk\nHevertirg t \u00bb heard\nmember they wre somewhit fash\nimniile in the Sixteenth Century\nwitness Shakespear*\n\u25a0Englishman   r.imed   Drake,   wai\ntheie.   '.vho  pl.inned.  nnd  executed,\npxped'imi'.s des.gned  lo \"singe the\nKing '*f Spain's beard'1\" Drake wai\na I.s. i  i bu'*v and enntrnti'd man dur-\n\\r.g,   ihe  period   when   tlie  Spanish\nArmada [iaid x visit in slate to thfl\nrlnglisli Ch ir~r.fi\nENTIRELY MISAPPLIED\nIlu! ex*Ti'';i'in?ly funny as thr\n''. iv:.' :s thu'.ight th.it jest shout\nhi 'i\\:-Z, grt>'.v;ng :n Jericho was, it\n.ever jii.>'..f.r I It was a mis-\n.\\\\\\\u00abn cf ,i message .sent nv\nit Orient.il King named David\nhiv trusted servants who were\n1 di epi st distress and hunuli-\nlt \\\\i\\\u00bb the wresting of a re-\nen:,rely iway frnm its con-\ni applv .' to entirely different\n'*-,* w.!h i meaning it did net\nii.iy have, even remidely. The\n'. ,i\u00bb; wh i miiajiplied it should\nii en tried for literary lirrrnv\nre are two irrounls ef this\ni\u00ab ;-i 'he O'd Tritament, to\n\u25a0   i   i-s;-   ';\\eiv   ;-,   II  Sarru'l\nuntil   vour  beards  be  grown,  and\n)\u2022) ?*'L 1 lhpn re,urn \" In rffoct> lhls was Per'\nmission to bide out until they were\npresentable.\nAlmost immediately the Ammon-\nitici caught on to th\u00bb fact \"that\nthey stank before David,\"' and hurriedly hired four small Kings, with\nThVreuVi'i\" \"lprc'nfy '.!1LCV;l0 hol\",thI'm.\"1;'**\nr-, David directed his general. .Joab, to\n\\\u00bbke measures Joab stacked his\ncompoied most of the mercenariei,\nand ltft his brother, Ahishai, to deal\nwith thp Ammonites, massed at the\nCity Gate\nThe Syrians, however, legged It\nfrom the field, and the Ammonites\nprudently retired into the nty.\nGathering another Syrian King ar.d\nhis army for ree n for cement ^ the\nAmmonite allies concentrated At a\nplace called Helam This time David\ntook more time, \"gathered a'.l Israel together,\" and crossing Jordan,\nfell on the -enemy\nOVER 4O.0OQ\nSYRIANS 8LA1N\nAccording to Chronicles, \"David\nslew of the Syrians seven thousand\nmen which fought in chariots, and\nforty thousand footmen\" The Samuel account snyi, \"David slew the\nmen of aeven hundred chant's of\n!he   Syrians,   ami    forty    th\nI i\nK\ntn\n'nrt \u25a0,>,!*. I*v De:*..\n\"Cha'v.t'nr.sh'.rr\n.\u2022\u00ab' s-..:e of hu\nJ . , fstcrihite\nW..\n\u25a0ksh\nFi\nr.-s. x \\ W, , fsfet.>hi:r K.rat Innings   W. rrener  tB.l (or five\nGlo.irfs'tnh re vi Romersal\nfint mri'igi G!oiicfj>r 244 Som-\nersflt 08 Second inningi, Gloucester\n30 for nf wickets\nKen' vi Hampshin Kirs' inr.lnp\nKent 44''  for  seven.\nLeires'Tshtrt vi Nn'himpiin*\n\u00ab'\u25a0,\u25a0<\u25a0     K\"st    :r,i :\u25a0 ,;*     N'.trthan p'.u;\n\u25a0 i] L''*:\\ci.*-:'Z:\\r<\"e. Cm Sen's,\nd ii. lilflil, d. in't distinguish\n: ihe t ,*. it mentions, and np-\n\u25a0 nvs imed Ihey referred to\nie Individual Uut the Ox-\nclopedir Concordance. 15*02\n-..  I,st4 two different  kings\nname - on   whst   authority,\n\u25a0 profane i ecudi, or Juit in-\nI have no idea.\nI\nsemen \"\nIf there were lfl men lo ^*'h\nchariot, the tun accounts igrrr t-n\nU:rr up against the Svnans. who\n'h.v feiture As t*> thr 40 nnn who\nAire alio slain, you'll have to take\nMvir choice between the two nffn'ial\naccounts as to whether they wrre\ninfantry or cavalry.\nAt any rate, the rest of the Syrians hastened to make peace with\nDavid, and Hadarczer's armv, the\nlast to be enlisted for the alliance,\n\"became hii servants;\" I suppose\nthat means, entered his service.\nNeither would the Syrians help the\nI\nNihaih No, 1 w\u00abs certainly no children of Amnion any more\niacim itciMtrl rose- When cant ssy thet I blame them\nIsrael were hollaring to hava i I suppose the Syrians soaked Hm-\nKing i,He all their heathen neigh- un planty for their services, and for\nhori-end Saul had been prlviUly the reputed *7.D00 men killed; apart\ntipped off by lamuel \u00bbhel he was from any loss there wai of Amnion-\n\"If\u2014Nahash moved up with en lies He probably regretted the rest\narmy, all sime\u00ab Jee ftialin, and of his Ufe having been io hasty with\ni nr ri beside JabeshQIIaad. and the raior.\nM\nI\nwhen tht men of Jibesh expressed\nhope* to him that He would make\na treaty with them, he rjracloutly\nrnnientrrl t\" fitrr into \u00bb rnvrnanl\nLtn t jndition that he  nvght thrust\nAnd that grim event li the bails\nfor that silly w4ie crack to the\n\u25a0youthful about waiting till or\\e'e\nheurd It grown!\nOLD   HOSS\n<^\n\u2022v\n&\nSP* The New \"GARMAT\" 24 ft. Aqw-MiM\nANOTHER IMPORTANT STIP TO MARK NELSON'S 50 YEARS OF\nPROGRESS IN INDUSTRY\nAc|uipl\u00bb*ie  8[*o*t\nartist's conception of tne\nr deI 0\"etl ,nrl  nn\nThis lioaulif;;! now rr.ift. r\\t-\nrl lv\nNelson's tiolrlen Jubilrf* wetk. Wr sine\ni*h will mort\nOAHMAT CHAKl'SMK\nlirve lha* v.o l*,;ivc ill*. :,'\n\u20221 d;\n1 an\nnindpin pleasure rrnft\nlined lo establish new\nW\u00abrr  Just ;\ntho apprnva\n1 nf tl\no Hi ist\n11\n: nfl\nling,\ntics-\nstandards nf\nWATCH\nrnmtort, pel f nnianco and\nFOR GARMAT \u2014 \"The\nappeal ai\nProudest\n\u25a0e m tlu* h*-,,\nBoat  Afloat'\nutrs 'ro*n tr-ry IflnHing.  Drop In  ,n rl  sre\nvhlle  1ttenHn*j   Jutsil.\nSen your local dealer or write  for  illuirrotnl  intoolgne  to:\nGARMAT PLEASURE CRAFT Ltd.\nTelephone: 482 L3\nMail Addreu: R.R.  No.  1,  NeUon,  B.C.\n \t\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0*\u25a0*\u25a0\u2014\n-^__\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 4, 1947\nHuge Bomb and Crew That Will Handel It on B-29\n \u25a0\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\n*\n\t\n\u2014\u25a0\n_^\u2014\nFOR SALI, MISCELLANEOUS\nBIRTHS\n>8MA\u2014To Mr. ind Mri. Louli\nI ot Harrop, at Kootenay Lake\ntral Hospital, July 31, a daugh-\nTHERLAND-To Mr and Mri.\nimln Sutherland, 709 Hoover\nit, at Kootenay Lake General\nltll, Aug. 1, a eon.\nDOUGALL -To Mr. and Mrs.\nMcDougall, 411 Carbonate\nit, at Kootenay Lake General\nltll, Aug. 1, a son.\niCINTOSH-To Mr. and Mrs.\nht Macintosh, 1023 Stanley\nt, Aug. 2, at Kootenay Lake\nral Hospital, a daughter.\nPERSONAL\nwawaNSsa SjutUal rSFw\n\u2022urance Co D  L. Kerr. Agent\nI WHEN IN VANCOUVER STOFaT\nAimer Hotel, Opp   C P R   Depot.\nSl'OT CAStl FOR bSED GOODS\nI   ot all klndi  Phone 108L Cheu\nI    524 Vernon.\nHELP WANTED\nTED \u2014 TWO ENERGETIC\nlng men, lots of pep, calling on\nnes for one of Canada's oldest\n1 best known firms. Car an\ntt. for appointment write Box\nDaily News.\nPLE GOOD MEN TO CON-\nct making of ten or twenty cars\nlar posts. Good place to batch,\ne surroundings for real woods-\niti. Bring truck lf have one.\nltt Box 967, Dally Newa.\nNTED - STENOGRAPHER\nJr.  High  School.  Duties   to\nnmence Aug. 25th. Apply stat-\nqualiflcations and references\nFloyd L. Irwin, Principal, 704\nover St., Nelson.\t\nS \u2014 GOOD DAILY NEWS\njer routes are coming open\nin. Now li the time to place\nST name on the list to get one\nthese  routei.  Apply   to   the\nlion Daily News,\t\nRN PHOTO ENGRAVING -\nMllent opportunity for youth,\nor girl to itart ln skilled\n(It\u2014Apply In perion at Daily\nWl Office at 10:30 a.m. today\nKTaTTRESSES AND PILLOWS\nrenovated, spring filled. Crib mat-\ntressea. Nelson Bedding Co., 301\nBaker St., Phone 1314.\nbuilders,   workmanship   guaran\nteed.*  Apply  Cunningham   Store,\nCrescent Valley, B.C.\t\nATTENTIOI-I &Ch6oL BOARD\nsecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mlmeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order Immediately Dally Newi Printing\nDept., Nelaon, Brltiiri Columbia.\nMEN'S PERSONAL -6.RUO \u00abUN-\ndries: 24 samples. $1.00, or 19 Deluxe assorted, (1 00 mailed ln plain\nsealed wrapper. Finest quality\ntested, guaranteed Bargain Catalogue free. Western Distributors\nDept. RN, 85 Ray Bldg., Vancouver.\n29tf\nLIONS   pHOTO\n2H\nP O. Box 434, Vancouver, B.C\nAny 8 exposure roll developed\nand   printed   29c.   Reprints\u20144c\neach    Giant   aize\u20147c   each\n6x7  Enlargement Coupon  with\neach order\nOn Display\nAT THE\nCURLI'NG RINK\nAir Cooled Engines\nElectric Plants\nThor Automatic\nWashing Machine\nThor Gladiron\nWater Pumps\nCalco Irrigation Pipe\nFairbanks Morse\nCoal Stokers\nAnd Many Other\nHOME APPLIANCES\nPeebles\nMotors Ltd.\nNelson Representative of\nCANADIAN\nFAIRBANKS MORSE\nMOTORCYCIU, BICYCLO\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nEOR SALE-1845 DODGE PLAT-\nform truck with 120 H.P. mot6r,\ntwo ipud rear axle and 8.23-20\ntires. Mileage 24,000 and cab etc.,\nin excellent condition. Prlct $2360.\nTrade and terms lf dealred. Apply\nBox 389, Grand Forks or Phone\n93L\n(\u25a0OH sAlS-1940 INTERNATION-\nal 4 yerd Dump Truck, D.S.30. Engine completely overhauled, 4\nnew tltes. Apply R. rlegel. Long-\nheach, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nFOR SALE - OR WILL ACCEPT\ncar trade-in: 2-ton International\nTruck, A-l mechanically, appearance ss new. Phone 405-Y, or Box\n846. Dally News,\nWANTED-LATE MODEL PANEL\nor light delivery car. Offer 1931\nDodge coach. All new brakes, almost new tires, painted as part\npayment. Kerby, Kaslo\nMACHINERY\nGREETINGS and\nBEST WISHES\nFOR A\nFOR SALE - POOL TABLE 4V4 x 9\nft., good condition, with new\ncushions, and accessories. Vernon\nPool Room. 621 Vernon St.\nNEW AND USED PARTS FOR ALL\nmakei of can City Auto Wreck\ners. Box 24. Granite Road\nFOR SALfc - 1 1938 MAPLE LEAF\n2-ton truck, fish plated frame,\n$600. Shorty's Repair Shop\nFOR SALE-Otffl 1&44 J TON F6RD\nTruck, reconditioned. Apply Williams Transfer,\nFOR SALE - 1936 V-8 FORD,\ngood condition. Price $82S. Apply\n309 Carbonate St.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nLADIES! DELAYED MENSTRUA-\ntion Why worry? Smart women\nsay new, Improved, triple-strength\nDelaye Pills give prompt effective\nrelief for overdue, painful or Irregular periods (Regularly $5.00 )\nOur price, $300, postpaid via Air\nmail in plain, sealed wrapper (C.\nO.D. if you prefer). Women ahould\nkeep a box on hand at ill times\nOrder youn right now! Western\nDistributes, Dept ACN. 85 Ray\nBidg., Vancouver. '\nFOR SALE-BEAUTIFUL CHEN-\nille bedspreads $4,89. Manufacturers clearance first quality chenille\nspread! for double and single\nbeds, ln all two-tone color combination. Worth double the price.\nSent C.O.D. plus postage. Money\nrefunded lf not satisfied. Handicraft Distributors, 254 Sherbrooke\nSt., W., Montreal 18, Quebec.\nl\u00a5K) - WOMAN \"TO LOOK\ntr three children wjille parents\nholidays from Aug. 24 to Sept.\nPhone 507-Y,\nfTllD - COOK FOR SMALL\nPhone 8S7-R or write S.\nnd, Box J84, Nelson.\nTTID - CAPABLE STENO\"\nipher. Apply Imperial Bank of\nnidi\nKit) - CArtPKNTER, Stupor, machinists. Kenvllle Gold\nnei Ltd., Box 380, Ph. 189-R-l.\now cook and Try cook.\nio waltren. Good wagei. Gold-\nOite Cafe.\nED-ITRST-CLASS   WILD-\nApply   Stevenson's   Machine\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT - UNFUR-\nnlshed 3 or 4 room cottage by\nquiet couple, no family, non-\ndrinkers, within 8 miles of city.\nBox 980 Daily News.\nYOUNG BUSINESS WOMAN URG-\nently requires one or two roomed\nsuite close to business section.\nReply Box 1017 Dally News.\nURGENTLY NEEDED - APART-\nment or small house for 3 adults.\nC.P.R. man. Box 1008 Dally News,\nWANTED - FURNISHED   ROOM\nfor business man. Box 1053 Daily\nNews.\nFOR SALE-AT REASONABLE\nprice a stack of well-seasoned\nClover hay, about 20 tons. Apply\nJim Maloff, Tarrys, B. C\nFOR SALE-FOUR LOTS WITH\nfurniihed cabin, apple and cherry\ntrees, in Kaslo. Apply Box 396,\nKaslo, BC.\nPIPE - FITTINGS-TUBES, SPE-\nclal low prices. Active Trading\nCo.,  916  Powell  St.,   Vancouver\n2 Storey House\n2 bedrooms (space for a 3rd),\ncorner property, 2 lots, corn,\npotatoes, etc, car passes door. A\nfrd.buy      $3100\nA Very Lovely Home\nSome terms, quick occupancy.\nRosemont section.       Sfi^OO\nTerms\n3ulck  occupancy.\nFOR SALE - ELECTRIC RANG-\nette. Good condition. Box 106\nNelson. Phone 99.\n(fe\nSUMMER RESORTS\nED - TWO USHERETTES.\nily Civic Theatre evenings I\nTID - AN EXPERIENCED\niltreil. Apply Sterling Hotel.\nilTUATIONS WANTED\ntHIED COUPLE, I CHILDREN\n111 B. Can take charge either\nlinen or farm. Box 10132 Daily\nm.\t\nI EXPERIENCED COOKS FOR\nor   buih   camp.   Available\nmediately. Box 206 Nelson.   *\nL LOOK AFTER-CHILDREN\nthe evenings-Phone 437-X.\nCRESCENT BEACH AUTO CAMP.\n10 miles East on Highway. Modern fully furnished cabins, land\nbathing beach. Boats for fishing.\nPhone 471-Y-l or write or call (or\nrates and reservations R.R. 1,\nNelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE - STANDING HAY,\nQueen's Bay. You cut. S. P. Pond,\nNelson.\nFOR SALE - LARGE COLMAN\nOi) Heater, nearly new. Oll on\nhand. Ph. 594-Y.\nOUN EXCHANGE-JACK BOYCE\nMen's Shop.\nFOR SALE - 1 STUDIO LOUNGE\nin good condition. Phone 275-L.   .\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nSmall House\nCOTTAGE TYPE\n2 bedrooms, sitting room and\n* dining room. Stone foundation,\nwhite 3-piece plumbing. Needs\nsome decorating and a few repairs. Close in, no *t01*^n\n',   garden -P^OOU\nImmediate occupancy.\nFour Room Cottage\nAll newly decorated, linoleums,\nrange and heater,       S3 I 00\nJubilee\nWeek\nFrom one of\nNELSON'S AUTOMOTIVE\nPIONEERS\nEstablished 28 Years Ago\nChrysler - Plymouth -- Fargo\nAgents Fairbanks Morse\nNelson, B.C.\nJohns-Manville\nPrice\nFISHERS' PARADISE LODGE,\nQueen's Bay, boats, motors, cabins and meals. Complete vacation\nfacilities. Telephone Balfour 2-X.\nKING GEORGE HOTEL\nA cool spot on a hot day\n Phone 5\u2014Kaslo, DC.\t\nTOURIST    ACCOMMODATION.\nCooking facilities. Phone 329-L.\n..NTED, MISCELLANEOUS j     \u00bb0*TS AND CNSINES\nA88AYER8   AND   MIM\nREPRESENTATIVES\nt  W   WIDDOWSON   &  CO   AS-\nlayers 301 Josephine St. Nelson\nff S .ELMES. ROSSLAND, B. C\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Represnt\nImmediate occupancy.\nC.W.Appleyard\n& Coj Limited\nFireproof\nMoisture-Resistant\nWill Not Attract Vermin\nEosy to Install\nComes in Two Thicknesses\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n214 Hall St.\nPhone 16\nA J. BUIE, Independent Mine Rep*\nresentatlve. Box 54, Trail, B. C.\nPE\u2014WATER WELL CASING\nANTED 2-INCH STANDARD\nPIPE   IMMEDIATELY\nECTOR MACHINE CO., LTD,\nPipe Line Contractors\nIth Ave. and 19th St., East\nCALGARY, Alta\nP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nIron. Any quantity. Top prices\nId. Active Trading Company\nfl Powell St. Vancouver, BC\nHffcD   - \"CT.fiAS \"c*5TT6Ki\nbuttons   removed.\nlng to Daily News\nf'VouR HIDES TO J. P MOR-\nn. Nelson. B C\nFOR SALE - 18 FOOT CABIN\nBoat. Good beam, Star conversion\nmarine clutch, practirallv new.\nCheap for cash. Phone ' 1254-R\naite** 4*30 p m. or Box 962 Daily\nNews.\nFOR SALE - t,AUNCH-TYPE\nboat aid trailer. Best offer. Phone\n1132-R\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nlb.'FOR   PERFECT   SOIL   SERVICE\nfor garden, ranch ar.d (arm, Mc-\nSt, Trail. BC.\nDougall's Farthwnrms  1791 Third\nW~G. THOMSON &  CO. -  AS-\nsayers it Metallurgists. All work\ngiven prompt attention. 1155 Pender St., W    Vancouver. BC\n\"CHARTERED   ACCOUNTANT\nROGER M. HOYLAND\nChartered  Accountant\n815 Victoria St.     Trai 1     Phone 33d\nChiropractors\nj. colin mclaren. dc, ch1ro*\npractic      X-rav,      Spinography,\nStrand theatre Bdg Trail. Ph. 328\nDIAMOND   DRILLERS\nNATIONAL DIAMOND DRILLING\nCo, Ltd, Drilling ir.d Bi! Service   Bex 508 Rossland   BC\nlone  144 for Cratelfled  Adi\nLAMBERT CHERRIES 5r LB  PICK\nyourself R.C Handle)*, Kailo, B C.\n)AILY CROSSWORD\ntl. Music note\n7. Teit for on\n8 Scrutinize\nP. Quality of\na sound\n10 Worry\n14. Ust\n19. Mcitturi\nJO. Belli\n21. Gim\nI slu ngi\nI.'  Vs: -i\n23. Cut. m\ngnuse\nf*S Hurk\n26 Toper hum.\nmlng-Mrd\nV Herd of\nwhales\nN Finnish\neeaport\nSl. Aatem\nW, !\/,-\u2022 used at\nChristmas\n8\u00ab Apportioned\nS7 A wanderer\n38 Melt\n88. An ancient\nletter\nIO Incite\n12 Edge.u\na hat\n\u00ab Eve\n\u25a0 rriTrjsft:\u2122\nr.. i \u00abt*'B\u00b0 \"it \u00abI\u00bb\n> ui >!u|,, r|N i|i\nuuu uum una\nubeiic\nA|8   1   <,  T AjHr  D ICl C\nd|i n t \u00bbBc|* ' i *\nDUN E I MjOJv Ei$\n9p j I Jr|1a 1\nrti   \u25a0\/ feM-j m i A k\nI   (   P  tftl\" AITY\n\u25a0 p|* *jvM\u00ab\u00b0\u00bb l\n(Vtirsli)'! Air\n44. Winged\ninserts\n47. Self\n4* Railway\n(abbr.)\nACBOM\nClamor\nJtkaants\nfood\n.Zeal\n2. A kind of\nMUt\u00b0\n1. Palenaai\nI.WIM\nI. Cunning\nI. Therefore\n9. Afresh\n\u25a0*. Pot otf\n.Bport\n.Measure\n(Chin.)\ni. Cigarette\n(liang)\nI. Town\n(Abyutnla)\n). Early form\nof an ins-e-rt\nLPuU\nJ. Through\nJ. Froth\n!. Ooup\n.Re*!\n.Behold'\n. T*o tut teat,\nMha.hr\n. intern\n. lU-r.Af.\nvtafete\n. W-rtvth\ni.MmMe\n. mn of -\u00bb~ii,\n.lArft,\n\u2022ounoed\n\u2022upolM\nTSOSATI\n. Stitsrt iWef*\nVerbal\ni.Lajny\nCo4n (Peru*!\nL Appeal**\n\u2022\u25a0 If eaten\nCtrrTOQTWTr'-A rrjpfoirrani qnolaalea\nOVLVLWVG.      OR*R      V R      VfRA      \u00abK\nhrr, n a r   com tklfc f it f tkko\nTKLf C- I sr U I VOT A.\nSall.rd.v's   Crrploqu.'te'     WFt\/lOME   EVER   SMILES.   AND\nKilEWELL GOT.H OUT SIGHING    SHAKESPEARE\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nK7W.   HAGGEN,   MINING   AND\nCivil Engineer, B   C. Lar.d Surveyor, Rossland and Grand Forks\nBOYD C. AFFLECK. 218 GORE ST\nNelson, R C, Surveyor  Eogmeer\nTIMBER   PROPERTIJ8\nT. A. CLARKE. FOREST \"enGI-\nore: ar.d Forester, 42*) Bakt r St\nNelson, Phone 1,106 Timber\nCruised, Appraised and Genera!\nTimber Management and Admin-\nistration.\nIN\" S U R A\"N C 0\"N D\u2014rtTAtTESTATE\nCI1AS F  McHAKDYrrNSURANCE\nReal Estate -   Ph me li'-j\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Sh.np, acetylene snd\nelectric weld.ng, mi*'**r rewinding\nPhm*e  5*13 ??l   Vernon   S!\nSTEVENSON'S ItfACHINETffOF-\nSpecinlists in mine snd mill work\nNtarhine work, lutht and heavy\n70H Vemor St Nelson Ph W\n'SECOND HAND STORES-\nWE BUY SELL AND EXCHANGE\nWhst hsve v **i' Ph Ml *>.*k S'ore\nNrlfliiu Onthi $ms\nClmlfled   Advertlilnj  Kstei:\nIlr  per  !!ne   per  Insertion,  4le\np**r iTe per ll-rrV. lfl rnrsccil'ive\n:n,r** \u25a0 ,* $! S- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- ' nn ,*.*:\nn*. ,. T :ti * *i...** I'.vr M \u25a0 *\u2022\nniiirn   3   *!*\u25a0*.'  r^n r*.,nr*   ,\u25a0   n  x\nPI'Hl.IC il F.i.AI i NdTICFS.\nTENDER\";. FT'\" 2\"'* per l.i e,\ntint tnjerf.cn. Iflc prr !:ne ea-h\nI'lbsrq lent   insertion\nFOR PHOMI'T PAYMENT\nAM, ABOVE HAI'KS LESS lot\nBubserlptlon  Ritei:\nSingle ropr J     03\nRv i srrie*    per nr, k\n10 \u00ab*l\\\u00abnic M\nRv rsninr. \\irr vra- 13 00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson\nOne month I i nn\nThree rrwithi *.* vi\nSix monthi 4 mi\nOm yeir Rod\nl':*.''rd Stales, United Kmg.l   rn\nPer yeir 11200\nRlx  months (100\nThree n *-n'hs J IKI\nW\nird.\nNEW WHITE STUCCO DUPLEX,\nunfihished attic, 3 rooms, toilet,\nshower in each, plastered. Ideal\nfnr auto camp, 350 feet frontage\non main highway This Is a corner\nacre.,No clearing tn do, just start\nadding cabins and watch the cash\nroll in Snap at $3800 cash, or\nterms $4,100 Apply one hlnck East\nof property RR1, tn A Fotherby\u2014\nnnn yards East of Coffee Shop at\nWillow Point, Nelson. B C. Phoni\n482-L-4\t\nWHY NOT CHANGE YOUR FIRE\nInsurance nn Hmisehnld Effects to\na FLOATER ALL RISK POLICY\nThis protects you against Fire and\nTheft and many n*her hazards,\neither at hnme or travelling Ask\nus f'.r particulars C W Apple-\nvard fi Co\n17ROOM \"HOME     CENTRALLY\n'nra'ed in \"he fi'v AH modern.,\nF ::l cement basement and 2 loti.\nOwner leiving town Available\nSep'   1,   Apply   Phor.e  892-X\nffrS-GALnw\"\"~ 4~r1toms\"an5\nha*h 4 lo's nr. Gordon Rd Cement\n'nundatior    J.nw on   Terms.   Oc-\n\"\u25a0ipanrv  'mmertia'elv\nt   ROOMS   AND   PATH    VERY\n! **e *..   Kxreilr-t location   1  lot.\n<X*nnilno   Immediate   orc*ipancv.\nF   \u00ab.   Wh *',r],|       .(2- Raker S;\nKdli    SAI.F        10    ACRE    FRlfff\na** 1   riairv   farm,   fl   miles   frnm\nNe'sor     nn    n*aln    !*.: ,:h*.i. a v.    Im-\nmeda'e    OCC iplnnv     Applv    Rnx\n!\"l Nelson\nFUR   SAI F   ~\u00ab  ACRE?-1  MlLl\n(;,,.\u201e    l,,Xr      1    -in..*     house,    light,\n.. !-,- 'elephnne, rhmken house\ni ,. nrin ,,..,(. imrnedla'e oecu-\ni i*r\\ 1\"*. \u2022**,* 7*1 X-2 af'er 1pm\nFOH SAI F fi ROOMED HOTSt,\nnen'-e    nf    town.    Phnne    I'.fl-L,\nI OTS FOH 5ME *\\ri''ATIl\"MA(1\"-j\n' r,   -r.r, l at'mer S*   Phnne 80S I,\n.' 1 OTS FOR SALE INTERVIEW\nGood lO'itlor   Phnne 1149\nS\\f UOlTil^F  FO^\"SALT\" I\\f-\n\u25a0ne !*i'e   nnn-ips-nv    ftll  fl'h    SI\nFOH  SAI.F    20 ACRES  POULTRY\n'rs *v Ft ni Irrlgi'ed  snme wmd\ni*   ii ,.,....,...   \\;n!er!,;e   it  o\nhoi niEn sur.AR PLANrrnn\nI\"!**! om   *.   ,.'*.   \\t,., ,  ifl'i-\n\\** ** ,-e-e. **. '*>\u2022 e Seen r*n*p'et\u00bbd\n'   -    \u2022*\u2022 e    se**'en*e\u00bbt    n'    ,*W1    rel'imld!\n*..*'i ers as sii|ir plinteri on rl-\ni meil   land   near   till   Ztllilind\n* An TO* ie*,:,~, ate spnr.s irnA\nI if >,*.* Ihe I'mf.'lnil Cn-Operativl\nS \u25a0** i*l\\    \\. 'nch   w'll   .Ttom   them   to\n\" :-'.en*l*rrship and rnlarite ill\n*\"ii!l   '*'  i\"nie   'A.'h   rx'ra   ra'ie.\nHA' !F\\X ifl'i \u25a0 There's an old\nf'tltijh plrltamentirv traipl **n thlt\nspeeches sre In he slid a-d rn! read\nRu' Speaker George Romkey Join,\ned in the la ighter following a s*ite-\nn*'i\" hv .lanes F Hnlledje (I,..\nHalifax Centiei lhat public utility\ns'rikes should he banned \"Why,\"\nh\u00bb  nld,   \"politiriini   wouldn'l   hi\ni' 'e * * F:\\e their speeches If\n-r  \u25a0\u25a0    ,*    ,,   ,\u2022*,,,,   \u00bbalke,|   out**   II\n* J.   *' r     \u2022 '*,   |*a*l   nf  his  -pre  h   he\nMining,   Milling   ind   Sawmill\nMachinery,  Building and Contractors' Supplies.\n\"If It's machinery you want,\nconsult us.\"\nLONDON DEEP\nCONCRETE WHEELBARROWS\nComplete   with   pneumatic   rubber\ntired wheel Available for immediate\ndelivery from itock.\nPURVIS E. RITCHIE & SON LTD\nfl.18 Hornbv St Vancouver. B.C\nMA 4557-8-9.\nLeROI GASOLINE POWER UNITS\n38 and 52 H.P. In itock.\nCOLUMBIA LOGGING TRAILERS\n4 and 8 ton ln stock.\nCUMMINS DIESEL POWER UNITS\nBAYES EQUIPMENT COMPANY\nCranbrook, B C.\t\nCUSTOM MACHINE WORK AND\nWelding. Cordwood Siwi ind\nmandreli. STEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP. 708 Vernon St,\nNelson, B C.\t\nSawmill, woodworking and\nContricton    equipment    of    ill\nkinds    National   Machinery   Co,\nLtd . Vancouver. B  C     \t\n1 t*lo\"\"30 GAS CAT. WITH BLADE\nNelson Auto Wrecking.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nWanted\n30,000 POUNDS OF LIVE\nFOWL, 4 POUNDS AND\nOVER-20c PER POUND\nFOR.\nno  NOT SHIP WITHOUT\nappointment\nSunnvside\n*- t    I cVi I    LVIA    [    S'-I^P\nPOULTRY (ARM\nTrail, BC,\naW~Sff|f3!T[Aftjttftiilw\nHAMPSHIRE PULLIT8. past\nbrooder ilage All pulleti Tilled\nfrnm nur finest RO.P. ilred pullet rhirkl All blrdi an running\nout on our free range.\nNEW SIBERIA FARMS\nN   Ralakshln, RR2   Chilllwack\nP5R SALFrU lfKAlYflm CAT\ntie including purebred hull, 3 vrs\nOld  Bnx 973, Dally Newi\nITO SAI F    1700-lb FARM HORSf,\n11 (id E H Hird. Slacln Citv\njo\u00bb   7),  Nelson. II   C\t\nBURGH CASTLE, Suffolk, Enlland (CPi A hionze plaque bear-\nmg an ur.nce of Mais and believed\nI** \\-r a relir of ihe Rnman oerupa\nlinn ol Britain, was discovered here\n<w\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n\"GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\n(Section 28)\nNOTICE Or APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT   TO    TRANSFER   OF\nBEER LICENCE\nNOTICE U hereby given that\non the Sth day of September next,\nthe undenlgned Intends to apply to\nthe Liquor Control Board for consent to tranifer of Beer Licence No.\n7691, luued ln reipect of premises\nbeing part of a building known as\nSalmo Hotel, situate at Salmo, Brit-\nsh Columbii, upon the lands described as Lot! Eleven (11) and\nTwelve (12) In Block Four (4), of\nLot Two Hundred and Six A\n(20\u00ab>A), Map Six Hundred and\nTwenty-twB (822), Nelson Land\nReglitratton District, In th\u00bb Province of British Columbia, from\nLeon Celestin Cremers and Bert\nCarlson, to Ida Gray, of Salmo,\nBritish Columbia, the transferee,\nDATED at Salmo, B.C., this 31st\nday of July, 1947.\nIDA GRAY,\nApplicant and Transferee.\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER OF\nBEER LICENCE\nNotice Is hereby given that, on\nthe 26th day of August next, the\nindersigned intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for consent\nto tranifer of Beer Licence Number\n7604 and Issued In respect of\npremises being part of a building\nknown as the Queen's Hotel, Ht Nelson, British Columbia, upon the\nlands described as Lot 11 of Block\n2, Nelson City Official Plan, Nelson\nLand Registration District, in thc\nProvince of British Columbia, from\nArchibald Isaac Leach and Maudie\nLeona Leach to Soloway Hotels\nLimited, of the City of Nelson, the\ntransferee.\nDated at Nelson, B.C., thli 28th\nday of July, A.D. 1947.\nSOLOWAY HOTELS LIMITED.\nPer: S. P. Soloway,\nGeneral Manager.\nAPPLICATION FOR A LICENCE\nTO OPERATE A\nCOMMERCIAL  AIR  SERVICE\nAssociated Air Taxi Ltd, hai applied to the Air Transport Board\nfor a licence to operate a non-\nscheduled charter commercial air\nservice from a base at Nelson, B. C\nThe service would Include the\ntransport of passengers and goods.\nAny person desiring to.make representations concerning this application must file a complete submission w*lth the Secretary, Air Transport Board. No. 3 Temporary Bldg,\nOttawa, Ontario, by August 23, 1947,\nand send a copy concurrently to the\nappllcint, addressed to Suite 414-419\nPacific Building, 744 Hastings Street\nWest, Vancouver, B. C.\nAIR TRANSPORT BOARD\nOTTAWA, July 23, 1947.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nPRINTERS NOTICI\nEully equipped, medium liied\nPrinting and Lithographing Plant,\ncentrally located ln Vancouver, B.C.\nfor lale. Value $72,000, including\nbuilding (concrete) 50 x 10D, with\noffices, camera roomi, plate-making\nroom, art room; an ideal Printing\nBuilding with lots of room and daylight. Major equipment as follows:\nHarris Offset, 17 x 22; Miehle Vertical; 25 x 38 Cylinder Press; 10 x 13\nHeldleberg Press; 2 Platens; Colts\nPress, 14 x 20; Baum Automatic\nFolder, 17 x 22; 32\" Power Cutter\nAutomatic Clamp; 2 Stitchers; 1\nPunches; 1 Perforator; Plate-mak\nlng and camera equipment. Fully\nequipped Composing Room. And all\nnecessary accessories, making a well\norganized and efficient Printing and\nLithographing Plant.\nAll replies strictly confidential\u2014\nPlease give references. Reply Box\n788 Daily News,\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUO. 4, 1M7 - ''\nMay Set Up Means\nOf Hearing Cases\nOf Rental Hardships\nOTTAWA, Aug. i (CP)- Tin\ntouches now are being ptd to a pin-\nunder which penoni will M permit\nhomei tf they can ihow they an\nsuffering greater hardship than th<\nted to obtain possession of thei*\npresent occupants.\nThe plan would lncluda the eitab\nUihment of orginjiatlona ln the\nchief cltiei acrou Canada to heat\nindividual cases of hardahlp c\u00bbus\ned by existing rental regulations\nThe present eviction regulations\nprevent a home owner from obtaining poueulon of hli home.\nMUST SALE - (BAKERY EQUIP-\nment). 1 dough mixer, 1 wrapper\nbread, 1 sllcer bread, 290 pans, 3\nmycing bowls, r iteet oven door\n(for brick oven), 1 iteel fire door\n(for brick oven). Plus numerous\nmiscellaneous Itemi. For best\noffer. Box 168 Daily Newi\nFOR RENT OR SALE - MODERN^\nly-equlpped butcher business and\nproperty, two-storey bldg., full\nsize basement, business going concern. For particulari write Box\n1080, Fernie B.C.\nMILL OWNER REQUIRES PART-\nner with flnancei and business\nexperience. Interior location. Box\n859 Daily Newi. \t\nFoh sALfc-sik SUITE APART-\nment hnu.se  711 Vernon St.\nAgree B.C. Labor\nBill Needs Amending\nVANCOUVER, Aug J (CP) -\nA member of the Brltlih Columbia\nlegislature and two Labor Leaden\nagreed with Magistrate Lionel\nBeevor-Potts, who convicted 22\nlaundry workera at Nanalmo of\nparticipating in in illegal strike\nand fined them 11 eatft, that B.C.'s\nnew labor bill need some clarification.\nAllan J. McDonnall, eoalltlon\nmember for Vancouver centre, Mid\n'of the 76 clauses contained therein, only No or three need clarification and this wlll probably\nbe done at the next senlon.\"\nAid. R. K. Gervln, A.F.L. official, said he thought the \"Oovernment recognizee the fact that the\nact has to be amended.\"\n(\"More than word correction Is\nneeded to rectify thii anti-labor\nlegislation,\" said Hirvey Murphy.\nVice-president of the B C. Federation  of Labor   (CCL).\nRockrtiwere nnd ai a military\nweapon al early il 1702 In India.\nMother of Three\nGiven 30 Days\nNANAIMO. BC, Aug. 1 (CP)-\nA mother of three children, Chrli-\ntine Henry, today was lentenced\nto 30 days ln iali 'to sober up\"\nby .Manistrata Lionel Beavor-Potts.\nMrs. Henry was convicted on a\ncharge of Intoxication.\nAdmits Entertaining\nElliott Roosevelt\nWASHINGTON, Aug. I (AP) -\nJohn W. Meyer admitted to Senate\ninvestigators that he ipent $108 entertaining Elliott Roosevelt in a party of ilx at New York night clubi\nUie day Rooievelt drafted I report\nrecommending that the government\nbuy Howard Hughes' alrplana.\nMeyer, party-giving publicity\nman for Hughes, Identified on ttie\nwitness itand before the Senite\nWar Inveitlgatlng Committee an \u00bbx-\npense voucher he had turned ln for\nentertaining Roosevelt Aug. 20, 1643.\nChairman Homer Ferguson (R\u00abp.-\nMich.) laid that wss tha nme diy\nRooievelt, ion of the lata Preildent,\ndrew up hli report of a trip to Culver City, Calif, to lnapect Hughei'\nphoto-reconnalsiance plana.\nNo Decision on\nAid for Poland\nOTTAWA, Aug. J (CT)\u2014 Thl\nCanadian Government hai decided\nthat part of the $15,000,000 Port-\nU.N.R.R.A. Relief Fund voted by\nParliament will be allocated to Austria, Italy and Greece, but no declilon hai  yet been  made  ai  te\nhether any aiilstanca will be given Poland.\nOfficial announcement On tba allocation of tha fund ll expected\nshortly, but meantime It WII reported that Greece and Italy Would\nget $4,000,000 each and Austria $3,-\n000,000,000. The queitlon of whether\nthe remilnlng $4,000,000 'would go\nto Poland was laid to be under eon-\nslderatlon.\nChemical Explosion\nBlamed for Fire\nBAULT STI. MARIS, Out,\nAug. S (CP) \u2014 Exploiion of a\nchemical known at D-iulf-X wai\nblamed for the $100,000 fill which\ndestroyed tho Experimental Plant\nof the Chromium Mining and\nSmelting Corporation. Before being\nIsolated by the quick action of\nfireman, the ipectacular blaja\nthreatened the corporitlon'i miin\nplant and caused extensive damage\nto nearby homei and buslneu M-\nUbltshments.\nSTOCKHOLM, (CP) - King Oui-\ntaf has left for the French Riviera\u2014\nMa fixst-visit since before the war\u2014\nand will return In time for his 89th\nbirthdiy in June.\nLEDUC CONSOLIDATED OILS\nLIMITED\n\"Next to Imperial Oil, the blggeit operator In Ledui field.\"\n(Vancouver  Dally  Provlnee \u2014 stilly if)\nAuthorized Capital\n1,000,000 Shares (N.P.V.)\nIssued\n1,710,000 Shares (N.P.V.)\n\u00ab\u2022   87\nIMT1IDUC\ncmsouMirD\nE\ntr\n\u2022VNfAO\nCAN.\nIMP?R1AI< OIL\n- S\n\u2022 TEN WELL SITES (400 acrei) clou In to production.\n\u2022 DRILLING 7 WELLS. Approximate preient depthn No.\n1, 4200 ft.; No. 3, 1000 ft.\n\u2022 No. 2 WELL to be ipuddod Immediately.\n\u2022 480 ACRES fives miles due Eait from production\nWe> rrrrmmend Leduc. Coninlidnted ni the ouHtandinq buy in t'*\u00ab\nLrcluc area   The stock li listed on Calgary Stock. Exchange\nFor further  Information  pleaia  coll  or  write:\nMcDERMID, MILLER & McDERMID LTD.\nYorkshire  Building\nVancouver, B.C.\nHall  Building\nVICTORIA SECURITIES LTD.\nVancouver,  B.C.\nPACific 3177\nPACific  9421\n  1 ps .   \"1W->\n12 \u2014 NILSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AUG. 4, 1947\n\u25a0*ps*ppii*ppip\n- wiyiigiUM.,,\nii I ii^ ii Win W J\n\u25a0^pifW. 'ww!p^i\u00bb.i.(iJiippiil!!l|i:i)|iilli|i\nWELCOME\nTO NELSON\nWe or* delighted to welcome thoie guests who have\ncome to join ui in celebrating our Golden Jubilee.\nThe proprietor and staff of this, the oldest Drug Store\nin the District, invite you to make our store your headquarters.\nWe hope your stay in Nelson will be a happy occasion.\nVOTE COLLEEN HYSSOP POR JUBILEE QUEEN\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\nLONDON  (CP)\u2014British natural- 1533 aliens, including 589 Germans,\niiation certificates were granted to during May.\nImportant\nAnnouncement\nDue to circumstances beyond our control our\nitore will be closed from August 9!h for some\ntime.\nTo those customers who have standing orders\nwith us please pick up your orders by that date.\nOut of town customers will be taken care of.\nWatch this paper for our re-opening announcement in Medical Arts Bldg,\nBUSH'S CIGAR STORE\n532 Baker St.\nDon't Fail to See\nThe New\nFARMALL CUB\nINTERNATIONAL HARVESTER'S ANSWER TO A\nGREAT NATIONAL FARMING NEED\nOn Display at\nCIVIC CENTRE\nAUGUST 3rd TO AUGUST 9th\nCentral Truck\n& Equipment Co.\n702 Front St.\nPhone 100\nthnjounaumiiL\nI wish to announce\nthe change of name ot\nthe former Wright's\nGrocery to Baker's Grocery and Confectionery\nand take this opportunity to thank the many\ncustomers for their valued patronage.\nAnd by the way of an invitation to the people of\nNelson and District and visitors during the Jubilee\nWeek, why don't you drop in and see the old time\nshelves and bins used 42 years ago in this same old,\nfine store.\nAnd While We're About It\nCONGRATULATIONS TO NELSON ON ITS\nGOLDEN JUBU.EE\nBAKER'S GROCERY\n& CONFECTIONERY\nIn Business in Nelson for 42 Years\n104 BAKER ST. PHONE 46\nOur Semi-Annual\nSALE\nSTARTS   THIS   WEEK\nOur Entire Stock Will Be Reduced for This Event\nThe following are some of our bargains:\n$9.30\n$2.49\n$3.95\nMEN'S BROWN BROGUES. Reg, $1080.\nSale price\nLADIES' SANDALS, odds and ends, Reg $3 50\nSale price\nMEN'S\" BEDROOM   SLIPPERS,  opera  style,\nReg  5 20  Sale price\nMENS BROWN OXFORDS, moccasin toe, Reg $4 45     M \u00a3A\nSale price     ... JJ.WV\nTHE BOOTERY\nBATHING SUITS\nSundrtsiei, Tomboy Shorti md\nother 8ummer Tog\u00bb\n1-3 to 1-2 OFF\nCHILDREN'S SHOP\n$500.00 death from any came\nbenefit, and $40, $60, $80 or $100\nmonthly wages, for al low as\n$2.00 a month. Call Stuart Agencies. 577 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.,\nPhone  980.\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\nPORTABLE\nRADIOS\nNelson Electric Co.\nGeneral Electric Appliances\nPhone 260 574 Baker St,\n'115\n2 Day Service\nCUTHBERT MOTORS LIMITED\nTHE FRIENDLY SERVICE GARAGE\nExtends to Nelson, Its Citixens and Visitors\nCongratulations and\nBeit Wishes\nFor a Successful\nGOLDEN JUBILEE\n-   OPEN JVEN]NGS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE\nUTHBER\nMOTORS\nMen's 3-Picce Suitt\nLodics' 2-Piecc Suits\nDrcnei, 1-Piccc Plain\n90*\nHare your Sleeping\nBags cleaned\nCurtains  and\nDrupes Cleaned\nLimited\nDODGE-DESOTO DEALERS\nOpp.lsitr   Post  Oltirr    ,    Nelson,   B.C. PKonn   75\nAGENTS\nSalmo\u2014E. Johni\nSlocan City\u2014\nJ.   B.  Hacking\nMr.  Peachey,  Bul\nDepot, Silverton, B.C.\nKing George Hotel,\nKailo, B. C.\nEMPIRE\nCLEANERS\nWl CALL FOR\nAND  DELIVER\nPHONE 288\nKeep  .youth   uid\nloveliness   with  a\npermanent\nHeigh Tru Art\nBeiuty Salon\nPhom 337\nJohnstone  Block\n11111 \u25a0M11r 111r 11n i\u25a0i! ir11)bi (r111 i 111 \u25a0111111 !<\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescription!\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed Arts' Blk\nPHONE 25\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim\niiiHMMMimimiM.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii\nELECTRIC\nLAUNDRY\nthsxse 1170\u2014 180 Baker St.\niiiiiiiiiiimii.iimmiiiiiimMiHi.il'. tin\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL   HOME\nAMBULANCE   SERVICE\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\n515 Kootenay St. Phone 381\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimilh\nYour Clothei\nLook Better\nFeel Better\nAre Better. ..\nCLEANED THE\nEMPIRE WAY\nThert Is a pleasing satisfaction In wearing clothes\ncleared by our modern\nmethods.\nTHERE 18 A DIFFER-\nENCE that you'll like and\nappreciate.\nSummer Coats\nimMiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiMiMiimimmiiMiimimmiMmiiMiMimiimmimiimiiMiM\nNELSON BUSINESS\nCOLLEGE\nTHI COLLIGK WITH A PROVINCIAL REPUTATION\nCOMPLETE COMMERCIAL COURSE\nShorthand, typewriting, accountancy, commercial English, commercial law, commercial spellings, commercial\narithmetic, filing and general office procedure.\nIndividual Tuition - Commence Any Time\nNew Term Commences Tuesday, September 2nd, 1947\n107 Baker Street, Nelson, B.C.\n' iiiiilliliilliillilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllii\nHiiimiimiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiimmm.\nWe carry a full stock ot\nLANTIGEN\nA    tor    common    Colds.    Sore\nThroat        -\nB for Catarrh, Bronchitis, Slnui\nC tor    Rheurrtatlc. Neuritis and\nSciatica *\nD for  Boils, Carbuncles.\nE for Hay Fever.\nF*  for  prevention ot Whooping\nCough.\n$8.00 per treatment\nCity Drug Co.\nBox 460\nPhone 34\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nTouchwood is the wood ot willows\nand some other trees softened by\ndecay. Amadou is also so called. It\nis used as a tinder, from the readiness with which a spark ignites it\nRELIABLE   SERVICE\nAt   Reasonable  Cost  at  ths\nSMEDLEY\nGARAGE CO.\nNext te Post Office\nSTRAW\nHATS\n1\/3 OFF\nClearing the balance of\nour straw ond Panama\nhats ot 1-3 OFF.\nReg. $3.00\u2014Now $2.00\nReg. $6.50\u2014Now $4.28\nReg. $3.75\u2014Now $2.50\nEmorys Ltd.\nThe  Man's Store\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiihi ,       _     , \u25a0\nradiator repairs J. A. C. Laughtoj\nCleaned and Recored\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\n301 Ward St. Phone 63\nIHII l!H II ltlllMMMIIH!IMH'l'IHI \u25a0*>'\u2022'\u25a0!\nOptometrist\nSuite 20S\nMEDICAL ARTS BUILDINO\nEXTENDS CONGRATULATIONS\nTO THE CITY OF NELSON\nON ITS QOLDEN JUBILEE\n1897\n1947\nWE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE of\nFUEL      LUMBER      SHINGLES      MOULDING     PAINT     ROOFING      BRICK\nCEMENT    LIME    PLASTER    WALLBO^RD    SASH and DOORS    INSULATION\nDONNACONA HARD BOARD PRODUCTS PLYWOOD\nDISTRIBUTORS\nSali*  A-g^Mi fir\nCANADA ROOF\nPRODUCTS LTD.\n\"Tha Aca Ta. Line\"\nWHOLESALERS\n*mr^p\u00bb\nsLUMBEIU COAL CO;\nPMONt       i \/\u25a0 fl    \u201e    \u2022\/* i\n602 B4KER ST- NElSON Bt.\nRETAILERS\nGENERAL PAI^T CORP.\n\"Mon...lfl*   and   Industrial   Panta\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_04","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\/1.0418399","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":"1947-08-04 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":"1947-08-04 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]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}