{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-08-24","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1947-07-21","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0418377\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" THIRD WATERFRONT TRAGEDY\n. iijiifsijtiiiiyiui. iu .in i ! Jiniium^\nI\n\t\nDrowns at Robson\n21-Month-Old Wendy Harvey Wanders\nFrom Playmates; Accident Delays\nNelson Inhalator Crew Rushing to Aid\nClimaxing a wave of Wset Kootenay waterfront fatalities,\nColumbia waters at Robson Saturday morning claimed the life\nof Wendy Harvey, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. C.\nHarvey of Trail. The latest drowning was the third lakeshore\ntragedy in as many days.\nThe 21-month-old child apparently wandered from the\nyard of the East Robson Summer home where other youngsters\nwere playing. A search started after it was noticed that she\nwas missing, and the tot was later found floating face downward by a neighbor. The body drifted some 50 feet downstream\nbefore being discovered.\nU. S. TO DENY\nAID TO RUSS\nHELD COUNTRIES\nMust Turn Over\nNew Leafs\nTaber Tells House\nPUSH BILLS\nNOT STOPPED BY WRECK\nAttempts at revival were also\nhampered when a Nelson Fire Department Inhalator crew, summoned\nto the scene, went ofi the highway\none mile Eait of Pop Ifin. The accident occu\/red as Fire Chief 0. A.\nMcDonald prepared to bypass a\ntruck approaching on the Trail-\nNelson highway,\nAs the two vehicles were nearing,\na red steer leaped down a 12-foot\nembankment on the right side, and\nlanded on the road some 60 feet in\nfront of the speeding cnr. In an\nendeavor to avoid hitting both oncoming truck and bovine, the chief's\ncar swerved into adjacent brush,\noverturned a couple of times, and\ncame to a halt about 40 feet away.\nUninjured, the Fire Chief and Fireman Doug Griffin crawled out from\nunder the car and carried inhalation equipment to the highway.\nThere tney hailed a passing car and\ncontinued on the desperate journey.\nAlthough the inhalator arrived\nmore than an hour after the drowning ,it was applied for more than\n45 minutes without avail. The\nchild was pronounced dead by Dr.\nV. B. Goresky, District Coroner,\nWASHINGTON, July 20 (AP)\n\u2014Spurred by alarm over strife\nIn Greece and a widening split\nbetween Russia and the ^estern\nPoweri, the United States House\nof Representatives shoved along\nto the Senate Saturday a $1,603,\n199,094 approatloni measure ear-\n199,094 appropriations measure\nthis country's foreign policy.\nHouse passage came by voice\n.vote in Just an hour's time\u2014p*er-\n| haps   a   peacetime   record   for   a\nrs\nVOLUME W\n**,\n'f 9-\n?$C*tt\nt CENTS A COPY\n111 ii in ii i \u25a0 miu 1111Miitur     ' miMiiiiiiiimiiiiiiMiM-mimiiiiiiimiiiiiii\nWHIRLWIND COURTSHIP AND MARRIAGE\n80 YEARS AGO MARKED BY COUPLE\nN. ^RITIffH^liMWnir T nil ADA-MONDAY MORNING. JULY 21. 1947\n\t\nNelson's Golden\nJUBILEE\nAugust 3 to 9\nSTE. MARQERITE, Qua., July\n20 (CP)-Mr. and Mri. John\nJacob Henkel huffed and puffed\nand finally managed to blow\nout all the candles\u201480 of them\u2014\nthat had been burning atop a\nbig cake.\n\"Phew ... I'm glad that'i\nover,\" laid Mra, Henkel.\nThe candles were to mark the\n80th wedding anniversary of the\nHenkels. Actually, they were\npronounced man and wife four\nscore years ago tomorrow but a\nspecial anniversary party was\nheld for them at a Ste. Mar-,\nguerlte hotel Saturday night\n\"Granny\"\u2014she Is 100 years\nand two months old\u2014had prom\nised that she would do \u2022 \"real\nold time walti\" at the party but\nshe had to call that off because\nshe got a \"bad touch of rheumatism during the week.\"\nMrs. Henkel recalled that It\ndidn't cost much to get married\nwhen ahe and her husband were\nwed. Displaying a gold ring\nwhich her husband had given\nher on their wedding day, she\nsaid: \"It was t whirlwind\ncourtship and the day we were\nmarried John had but seven\ncents in his pocket . . . enough\nto pay the parson for his services.\"\nMr. Henkel Is seven months\nolder than his wife.\niMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMI\nQunfire, Blasts\nRock Holy Land\nStreets, Cemetery Battlegrounds\nAs Violence Follows Deportations\nCastlegar  and  Nelson  policemen 'measure of its magnitude and\nalso were at the scene. Iternational   implication\u2014amid  cries\nThe Harveys reside at 7 Murray :f\u00b0r   halting   all   aid   to   countries\nDrive in Trail, and were holidaying |under  Russian   Domination,\nat their Summer home at the time i    Assurance   that such   ban   Is  In-\nof the mishap. jtended came (rom Chairman Taber\n' Thursday and Friday of last week IIR-NY) of the House of Appropi-\naaw waterfront deaths to the East lotions Committee, speaking against\nof Nelson, On Fridav, seven-year-1the background of testimony\u2014some\nold Stella Louise Harry drowned\noff a West Arm beach near Willow\nPoint under circumstances similar\nto ths Robson fatality. She had\nbeen separated from playmates, and\nwas later found drowned near the\nwater's edge. She  was lifted from\nsom-e    public\u2014from    high\narmy     and     diplomatic\nturned into a battlefield at one time\nand a Jerusalem police station was\nembattled when attackers raked it\nwith a small arms barrage from a\nvacant lot. A grenade blast occurred\nwhen a group of men, protected by\na curtain of gunfire, attacked the\nPustashpha Police billet in the city.\nThe Sunday disorders began a\nfew hours after a special United\nNations Investigating Commission\nleft Palestine, and before the night\nhour period of; disorders  started   one  soldier  had\nMID-ATLANTIC\nPATIENT GETS\nAID FROM NAVY\nNootka Speeds\nSurgepns Through\nFog, Heavy Seas\nEVEN CHANCE\nHALIFAX, July 20 (CP)-A 23-\nyear-old immigrant girl, bound for\na new home in Canada was given a\n50-50 chance of recovery from serious Illness tonight after the Canadian Navy rushed medical aid to her\ncabin in an ocean liner far at sea.\nIn a weekend mercy mission\nmarked by pin-point navigation and\nhigh speed through fog and heavy\nseas, the destroyer Nootka carried\ntwo naval surgeons and a load of\nmedical supplies and equipment to\nthe French liner De Grasse 15 hours\nafter the ship called for aid.\nSurgeon Cmdr. C. E. Brooks,\nR.C.N., of Montreal, who held consultation with seven other doctors\nin the woman's crowded cabin, said\nit was decided not to operate on\nher for an acute internal hemmorr-\nhage until the liner reached New\ni'ork tomorrow or Tuesday.\nSurgeon Cmdr. Brooks, who was\naccompanied by Surgeon Lt.-Cmdr.\nR. C. Ower, R.C N. of Edmonton, an\nexpert anaesthetist, returned here\ntoday on the Nootka.\nNUMBER 70\nIndonesian Talks\nFail; Dutch Strike\nBy  CARTER   L.   DAVIDSON\nJERUSALEM, July 20 (AP) -\nThe Holy City of Jerusalem tonight blazed with gunfire and\nshook from blasts of high explosives as terrorist attackers and\nthe Palestine Police and military\nclashed in a climax of Holy Land\ndisorders that left one man dead\nand at least 18 other persons\nwounded during the day.\nDuring a  half\nterror  in  Jerusalem tonight, po-1 been killed and four wounded In 10\nlice reported four British police-[separate outbreaks across the Holy\nmen, four soldiers, two Arab po- Land.\nlicemen  and. four civilians were     The   violence,   police   said,   ap-\nwounded in  the blasting of two I parently  was an  aftermath to the\narmored cars by street-mines and, deportation of unauthorized im- [ tion centre as escape from one of\nin a running gun battle between | migrants who arrived in Palestine the year's hottest days. The mer*\nthe attackers and police. aboard the refugee ship \"Exodus of cury reached 91\n-1047\" n\u201e-,\u201eu    -.\u201e-]    1.\nLARGEST CROWD AT\nLAKESIDE PARK\nIN FOUR YEARS\nINDIA GATEWAY\nPROVINCE TO\nJOIN PAKISTAN\nMany Boycott Voting\nBecause of\nLack of 3rd Choice\nEIGHT KILLINGS\nNEW DELHI, July 20 (Reuters)-\nIndia's strategic Northern gateway,\nthe Northwest frontier province,\nvoted by a majority of 286,370 to\njoin Pakistan, in the \"Pakistan or\nIndia\" referendum, it was announced today.\nDetailed result* of the voting\nwere:\nValid votes for Pakistan 289,244.\nValid votes for India, 2874.\nThe percentage of the Electorate\nwhich   voted   waa ' 50.99  per   cent.\nBullets Fly os Netherlander* Move\nTo Forestall Sabotage; Tuesday\nDeadline to End 2-Year Stalemate\n\u2022 By STANLEY S. SWINTON\nBATAVIA, July 21 (Monday) (AP)\u2014Dutch military operations against the Republic of Indonesia were launched with\nstartling abruptness at midnight Sunday night, but not until\ndaylight neared was any sound of gunfire heard in Batavia.\nHubertus van Mook, Acting Governor-General, announs-\ning the failure of months of negotiation, said Dutch troopt\nhad begun \"police action\" on* '\nundisclosed fronts,\nGunfire in the direction of the\nBekassi River perimeter indicated\nthere waa a clash about eight miles\nEast of the city and there were two\nflurries of shooting near the British\nCricket Club on the South edge of\nBatavia. A Dutch officer reported\nthe first casualty, an Indonesian\nwho tried to escape from a Dutch\npatrol in the Pengangsaan District.\nIndonesian Republic establishments in Batavia were seized without bloodshed and without a shot\nbeing fired. They were under heavy\nguard and sentries were posted at\nnumerous spots throughout the city,\nbut there was no disorder.\nAn ancient Moslem cemetery was ! 1947.*:\nBritish Papers\nCut to Meet\nNewsprint Lack\nsecret,\nrnnkin\nchiefs\nHe  told  the house that aid will\nbe   denied   countries   ideologically     LONDON, July 20 ICP) - British\nand   economically   associated   with: newspapers will  reduce their size\nthe   Soviet   Union   \"   unless   they' and staffs begining tomorrow as the     Forest fires in  Kootenay-Bound-\nturn   over   a   new   leaf  and   show'result of a Government-ordered cut I ary   numbered    29   Sunday    after\n19 Small Forest\nFires Spotted\nBeach and lawn facilities were\npacked with swimmers and picnickers, and a park official reported that the greenhouse was also\ninvestigated by many of the holidayers.\nA trainload of Trailites accounted\nfor part of the heavy attendance.\nthe water by Lee  Phillips, former they are willing to cooperate withjin newsprint imports which a large [several  newly-reported   fires  were\nNelsonite holidaying on the North! Nations which believe in freedom.\" | section of the press interprets as a recorded by B.C. Forest Service of-\nBhore. j    The   fnrpien   funds  included   the I move to stifle criticism of the Labor\nThe girl  was born  at  Rossland, full $400,000 000 perviously author-[Government,\nand had lived at Nelson for the past ize-d to bolster Greece and Turkey\nthree   years   Besides   her   parents, against Communism.\nshe is survived by  four brothers, |   Both Houses rushed work to clear\nAlbert, George, Philip and James,, important   legislation   before   ad-\nand grandparents Mr, and Mrs. Adjournment time next weekend.\nMost dailies now will be, as dur-\nficials at Nelson.\nNearly all the fires were small,\nIthough few reports had\nCongress    Party    leaders    ln    the\nprovince had urged a boycott of the j SABOTAGE FEARED\nvoting on  the grounds that there     An   Indonesian  leader  said  last\nPatronizers of Lakeside Park set should have been a third choice, for!night before the Dutch operations\na record  in attendance Sunday.     [an independent \"Pathanistan\" state began that the Republic had no ln-\nWhat is estimated as the largest [ for the province, and few Hindus\ncrowd in four years, \u2014 3500 people j and Sikhs were believed to have\n\u2014thronged to the Summer recrea- [ Wed.\nFew incidents were reported\nduring the voting which lasted\nseveral weeks.\nIn Lahore today, eight persons\nwere   killed  and   14   injured  in\ncommunal rioting during a visit| ARREI3T VICE-PREMIER\nthere   of   the   Viceroy,   Viscount     0ne   nour   be(ore   action   **,egan\nMountbatten. | troops and police ln Batavia swoop-\nInfuriated Moslems stabbed four ied on RepUblican-held public utill-\nSikhs to death, after four Mos-itie, mi departmental buildings,\nlems had Men killed and 14 In-1   Tj,ey ,rrested, or took into pro-\njured by a bomb alleged to have:tective   custody,   Indonesian   Vice\nbeen thrown by a Sikh. [ prern(er \\ k. Ganl, his guards and\nMoslems  then  set fire  to  three tne   complete   household   of   Dr.\nhouses. Sutan Shajrlr'f Batavia residence ln\nNEW TERROR DATE [which he was Uving.\nBritish   troops   and   police   werei    Dr    sjahrir,   former   Indonesian\n\\ patrolling the not a\"\"*,. I Prime  Minister who  resigned\ntention of contesting complete\nDutch military control of Batavia.\nVan Mook announced that special\nDutch units had struck unexpectedly at key points where sabotage\nunder the promised Indonesian\nscorched earth policy had been\nfeared.\nE. Crosby of Nelson and Mrs. John\nHarry of Rossland. Remains are be\nlng  forwarded   by  the   ~\nFQneral Homa to Rossland, where\nburial will Uke place.\nFuneral services were held at\nKailo Saturday for the other drown\nlng victim\nLardo, who died by an accident ar.d\nfail into Koo'.er.ay Lake on Thurs\nday.\ning the war, limited to four pages'from investigators sent out to sum\nand .the circulation of all papers'up 19 new blazes discovered over\nwill be \"frozen\" at last month's [the weekend. The forestry plane has\nlevel. Daily papers during the last i been kept busy the past few days\nThe House concentrated its atten-j few months have  been publishin.\nCONGRESS SURVEYS\nOF MEANS TO AID\nOTHERS ARE PLANNED\nWASHINGTON.  July 20   (API-\nIndependent  congressional   surveys\ne in of what the United States can and\nChore's citizens, actually nervous\nafter a month's communal unrest,\nshould do to help the recovery of have found for themselves a new\nfriendly powers while bucking -the \"terror date,\" Aug. 10, when the\nspread of Communism abroad are ; Boundary Commission's award of\ndue to be ordered this week. The punJab Territory to Pakistan and\nPresident, Dr. Soekarno.\nThe steel-helmeted troopi, wearing camouflage untforma, struck\nshortly before the expiration ol a\nNetherlands ultimatum to the Soe\u00ab\nkarno Government to end the two*\nyear stalemate over the future ot\nthe Islands.\nThe Republican radio itatlon w\u00abl\nseized first.\nARBITRATION IOUQHT\nProlonged negotiations between\nBatavia and The Hague have broke*\ndown over the Dutch demand tot\nan Immediate cease-fire order to\nIndonesian troops and Dutch pu> .\nticipatlon ln the policing of Re- I\npublican areaa of the Republic t_->\nder the Netherlands crown.\nOfficials of tha Indonesian R\u00bb>\npublic formally asked the Netherlands to submit the Indoneasian-\nDutch question to arbitration by I\nthird power If a final meeting of\ndelegates requested by Indonesian\nlands to submit the Indonesian*\nDutch ultimatum for a full settlement of disputed questions end!\nTuesday.\nLONDON, July Jl (Monday) (AP)\n\u2014 Tha Foreign Office announced\nearly today that Britain had consulted with the United State* and\nthen had notified the Netherlandj\nGovernment Sunday night that bott\npowers were ready to use thete\n\"good offices\" toward the settlement of th* Dutch - Indonesian\nhostilities.\nThe statement aald the British\nGovernment felt \"the keenest disappointment\"   over   \"the   break-\ntlon on the bill to merge .American six-jage editions every oth* day,\n\"\"iarmed   forces   and   came   through!\t\nwith approval of the administration\niplan. The bil! is not quite the same\nas that passed recently by the Sen-\nate, but it is expected that a joint\n\u25a0Murray Tillen ofjcongre\u201eion>,   \/omm[lee   wiI1Jbe\nable to iron out the differences and\nrush a compromise measure to the\nWhite House. Basically, the measure\nseta up a new cabinet post\u2014either\na secretary of national defense or a\nsecretary of national security. He\nwould be in charge of all armed forces- Army, Navy and Air Force.\nSponsors of the plan hope the reor-\n18 Hurt as Bus\nCrashes on\nWav to Calgary\nCALGARY, July 20-Four ambu-\nthe recent lire, being spotted from  ac\"on '.Vciedule.d a,t\" State ,S\u00ab-* India U expected to be kaawn.\nr   ThV .7m,.;   rwV-M  V.   i i \"'retary Marshall tomorrow reviewsi . _\ni   nn\/ belng[once again the dynamite-laden for-\npatrolled daily. |ejgn p\u00abIicy ^^\nReports by Districts follow: *    De(,njte aS!Uran\u201e \u201e, the ltudl\u201e\nFernie-one   new   fire   on   Elk  came   (rom  high-ranking  Republi   ftf DoOS BvlaW\nRiver near Grave Lake. ca\u201e   I(.ad reflecting   legislative T        \"8.   -,~.\nProtest Leashing\ncently after Leftwing Opposition to!down of their ceaseless efforts dur-\nhis \"concessions\" to the Dutch, is | ing the last 18 months to promota\npersons! adviser to the Indonesian a peaceful settlement.\" \t\nLate Sport\nGovernor-General\nWins Baseball\nSouvenir in Yukon\nDawson creek, yt,\n\u2014The   C, vernor  General\nAlexander   has   acquired\nba'.l as a  souvenir  after  de:iverinR\nthe find pitch nf a game between\nDawson Creek  All-Stars ar.d Ponce\nCups,  British  Columbii   The ba'.:\none new one. All are under control.\nCreston\u2014six fires. Three are under control and no reports have\nances and a number of taxi cabs been received concerning the other\nyesterday carried 18 injured persons .three.\nto hospital here after a bus-load ofj Saimo__nne flre near Second Re-\nholiday makers crashed inside the llpf Mlne is in .. rettv good sh ..\nWestern limits of the city while re-j Sr.[0ke from thls bla2P bianke;tpd\nturning from Banff, I neighboring valleys, including N'el-\nThe bus skidded on an oily patch !5on, during the weekend.\nNew Denver\u2014eight new fire.1!\nCanal Flats\u2014three fires Including .concern over the situation in Greece   PfOpOSCQ  Ct  CoOSt\nand the widening rift between Russia and the Western world\nAMERICAN NINE\nBEAT TRAIL TWICE\nConfirm Royali\nAppointment as\nU.S. War Secretary\ne:io.sr was p.tr*.\ntor   the   vlre-re\nThe    Governor\nlong    wsy    nff\nfirst   pitch    Hr\nball.\nTbi,   time.   K,\nblr   CCF.  Ml\nst-'p sod \u2022aai\nTf. b. 1 wai\nar\" AiriAi-ir:\nll   in   h:<   \u2022\u2022\u2022']<*\nf a recep*.\ngal   party-\nGeneral\nr      pUtf\n(ied   for\nitter   Ji\nA. Hi*\nM*ph\nganization will increase the cooper\nJuly V- ation between the various branches I of pavement which had been mad\nViscount of thc military services\u2014and reduce I treacherous by recent rain  The ve-\ns   base- ihe  rhances  of  America  ever suf- n'r'e  skidded   ar.d   rolled   into  the\nfern.*; another Pearl Harbor attack. * ditch at the notorious Dead Man's\nTRAINING PROGRAM corntr.\nThe House A-med Services Com- ,  HosPilal oH'cialssay none of the\nmittee approved legislation request- !lnJurcd '* on lnc daR8\" llst*\ned   by   '.he   While   House   to   put   a      At least seven  of '.hose  admitted\n'.raining program into effect  Under to hospital have since been released\nita terms, each youth would go off Others  wire  Healed  for  fractured\nlo camp for six months at the age limbs\nof IB\u2014or later if he has not finished     The   bus   was   reported   to   havel'ark,  and  fire-fighters .have  been\nhigh school by that tune. Then an- been travelling at only 15 miles an  sent out.\nother six months of duty would con- hour when the driver lost control\nhe!.\nsmall. Four have been checked and\nno information has come in on the\nothers.\nArrowhead\u2014one new fire near\nWhiskey Point. Crews were dispatched to cover the fire Sunday\nEdgewood\u2014three fres. including\nIwo new blazes. The Farron fire,\nreported Friday, is said to be mirier\ncontrol. The new fires are near Deer\nCors-\nshort-\nfirst\n*p;*ch-\n>*   p il\nGRAIN ELEVATORS\nSHUT DOWN WITH\nBOXCAR SHORTAGE\nCHICAGO\n4M    s-uith'.v\n|rj;n rlfva!\n\u25a0\\b-\nStn\ns:st of membership in an B   O. T  C\nNational   Guard,   or   other   reserve  in and  w\nrganization   The Army figures that\n'.he   program   would   train   around\n85O.(K>0 men each year.\n'Hip Senate completed congress-\n\u25a0 or.al actum on the b:ll to permit the\ncashing of terminal leave pay bonds\nafter Sept. 1 A total of $1,800,000,000\nin the form of bonds has been distributed tt> the veterans in compensator, for unused l*ave accumulated\nci ii i ;ng thr war\nThe left side of the lr\nidows were smashed\nped\nRossland -three new fires. One is\nwas caved  under control and nn word has been\nithers.\nSome  t\nf  the   pas-senge\nwhen  tht\ndriver kicked\nthe wir.d\nhielri.\na hoi\nreived regarding the\nCirand Forks\u2014two ne\nmder control.\nKettle Valley-  one new fire\nNO ACTION AGAINST\nWOMAN WHO TIED SELVES\nTO BANK ENTRANCE\nNEW YORK, July 20 (AP)-Offl-\nciaLs of the Brooklyn Trust Company said they contemplated no action againit three young women\nwho chained themselves to the mam\nentrance of the bank building Friday in the first union strike against\na major bank in American hi.'tory.\nThe bank has officially refused\nto recognize the extstrncc of a\nstrike.\nA union spokesman said, however, that -ton ()f the bank's TOO employees bad joined the walkout and\nthat IB of the company's 2\\ branches\nwere \"not operating effectively\"\nThere have been two incidents of\nviolence     since    union    employees\nwent on strike Thursday and Police\nfires, both Commissioner Arthur W  Wallandei\nVANCOUVER   July   30   \u2014   The J\nSociety    for    the    Prevention    o!;\nCuel-v   to   Animal*   Is   Uklng   a\n*   Van-1\nstand   against   the   proposed\ncouver   bvlaw   requiring   dogs   to i\nbe     lAaahed     while     on     public | \u2014\u2014. *, \u2014\nthoroughfares.\nAn SPCA   lette.  has been sent J    Launch All-Out\nto    dty    council    supporting    the, \u25a0 w \u25a0\u00bb\"\u25a0\"\"*\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022\"\u2022*\"\nstanding   bylaw   which   does   not\nrail for leashes on the ground that\nlarge   animals    were    \"very   dir-\nfirult   to   exercise\"  on  a  leash.\nThe bvlaw under consideration\nfixes a specific length of running\nchain   for   tied   animals\nWASHINGTON, July 20 - Tht\nSenate coniirm\u00abd the appointment\nof Kenneth Royali as new Amerl-\nCOEUR D'ALENE, Idaho, July can SecreUry of War Saturday.\n20 (AP) - Th. Coeur d'Alene Formerly Under SecreUryjrf_Wm\nLake.lders* Baseball team today ,foyaU_ was named by\ndefeated Trail, B.C., (-4 after\nbeating- the Canadian yesterday\n11-7.     \u2022\nHunt for Plane\nHALIFAX, July 20 (CP) - A\null-.ee se. and air search fo Secretary of National De-\ntwo   mlaalng   naval   airmen   wa. ^  m^  the >\u201e\u201e,\u201e\u201e.\u201e\u201e   0(  &,\nArmed Forces Merger Bill.\nnamed by Pre\u00abid\u00abni\nTruman on Friday to step up into\nthe top position occupied lately\nby Secretary of War Robert Patterson. The Senate confirmation of\nthe appointment was unanimous.\nThe resignation of Patterron\nleaves only Navy Secretary Jam*\nForrestal as the only wartime cabinet member still at his post. This\nh as increased th e speculation\nthat Forrestal may be be named i\nSask. Banks Moy\nHave 5-Day Week\nSASKATOON\nplsnned tonljht after thick weath\ner  hampered  the  weekend  hunt\nfor a  navy  Firefly  plane  which\ndl.appeared In the Atlantic on a*r . i        g.\nhoming    axercl.a    Thur._ay.    At SpeCrOCUlOr Mr*\nlea.t eight aircraft and two naval\nves.els were expected to go out\n20\n(CP)-A\nprospect\nSaakatche-j\nsaid hr wa.s :;\".'\npnlirr brutality\niigat'.r.g\nJuly\n\u25a0 day work week ia\nfor bank  employees In\n*.vnn\nAn unofficial source said negotla-\nllor.s hsd been in progress for a considerable time snd all banks rxcept\nnne had agreed tn thr propnial If\nIhe shortened w rk  week\ntomorrow, weather permitting.\nLaunch Wallace for\nPresident Campaign\nFRESNO,   July   20-A   group   ot\nCalifornia Democrats gathered here\nRcclametion Asseiation Officers\net :\nIpnkrtmfl'-\n! ts ha*.\n*.ti)\noed\nof Wwhlnjt*\nof the Car\nAssociation\nsaid\ntAt-i \\hA\", t:rr hefi\nEugene W Cuugr*\ntnn. AisiStani Chmrmin\nService Divlu m nf the\n\u25a0nf Amende Riilruadi,\nI: >:vifw here thit the box mr si!\ni;\u00abl:cin In \"vr-y tight\" Hr .ta.d \\r.\\\n![-;\u25a0: ixinv\u00bb!<,U 4*1 eievntorv mn.r'.'\nlr. Kannu an.i I tklthomi, have ih i\nd -.i n rtthe: partially c ent \u2022<\u25a0!'\nriurini 'ht past wr\u00bbk due \\o a a.-\nof ctn\n^ Not fo Press for\n'in Second Slavery Trial\n1 li;h SAN IMBGO, falif, July 20 'AIM\nfM Government prrnecytors in the\nslavery rase in which Mrs Alfrrd\nWesley IngsIIv A3, was convicted I\nSaturday night will not press for;\nmother trial for her hu^bnnci. Hetty'\nin \u25a0\" Marshal ('.ration. United States As-!\nu'an!   District  Attorney,  said  here\nSrr\nm page 3 '\n591 Fires to Date\nIn British Columbia\nthrrly\nairland Further'\nlesiens\not fires m the Prov-\nW. rn|tin\u00ab JJ.inM.\n. costing J.2fi,916 for\n>d  in   lfHfl\nZu  (CPi - Pos\nirated.  hanks   would   open   for l\u00abjt night and launched a campaign\nbusiness from H a n\nfrom Mondiy until T\nall day Saturday\nFollows Freight Wreck\nCHICAGO,  July   20\u2014A   Wabaah\nrailway freight train piled up during\nthe night in a derailment which Injured no one but furnished rural\nIllinois with a brilliant spectacle.\nIt started when one car ln th*\nmiddle of the train left the rallj\nnear Raymond. Twenty-one following cars piled up behind It in a gre.it\n:il  3 om\nVICTIM OF MICMAC\nDISASTER UNIDENTIFIED\nHALIFAX, July 20 (CP) -\nFive men itlll were Ilited \u2022\u2022 mining and one of the ilx dead remained unidentified tonight ai\nnaval and Federal department Inquiries Into lait Wedneiday'i collision between the deitroyer Micmac and the freighter Yarmouth\nCounty   continued.\nAppeal to Truman\n8AN FRANCISCO, July 2^\nfAPt \u2014 One day away from a\nilrlke tleup of Southern Pacific's\nBO00 mllu of railway!, the carrier\ndamped nn new embargo reitrlc*\ntlnm tonight #i appeal* went out\nin, Preildent Truman to \"*Weep the\nt-alni  running.\"\nH'P JarV \/. Ander\u00bbon iR*\nCaM* t*\u00bblegrapHfd Pretidint Tru\nman and ttktd him tn ''lake what\nrvrr action li needed\" to maintain\noperation!\nelect Henry Wallace aa President\nday and cl*TSe,0| the United  States  in  1M8. The\n, meeting  was  convoked  by   former\n!California   Attorney   General   Robert Kenny.\nHe told 3fW Democrats: \"We can\nwin wilh Wallace.\" Virtually\nCalifornia's legislative districts were\nrepresented at thc gathering, which\nwas held in a convention atmosphere A hotel ballroom waa packed with flags, placards, hoost-Wal-\nlace posters and \"Wallace-in-48\"\nbuttons.\ncar Holding inflammable liquid. It\nheap of wreckage. One was a tank\nburst Into flame, and the flamei\nspread.\nThe Tfre Departments from four\nnearby towns fought the blaze for\nl|LO'|two hours before bringing it under\ncontrol. By that time 13 cars were\ndamaged or destroyed. Today Wa-\nba-th wrecking crewa were trying to\nclear the rails of the debris.\nUP OIL PRICES\n}0   <CP>-PHce\nPET BULLIED\nPARENTS\nWESTERLY, RT, July 10 (AP)\u2014\nDennv,   a   IM-pound   Great   Dant\nTORONTO. July 30  (CP -Pr ce ^^  J0P drvot(.d   to  ^-^\neases of two centra gallon tor;yMr_oW ^^ Mui]ro ^ he W1|\nexiled to a farm Saturday,\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Munro said\nthe mammoth two-year-old pup became so attached to their baby\ndaughter  that \"he kept  pushing ui\nound whenever we threatened to\nfurnace fuel oil and from m to 24\ncerts for stove nils were announced\ntoday by  Imperial Oil, Limited.\nContinued high costs for crude oil\nand rising costs for imported finished products wrre rite-Ahy company\n\u25a0fftcials   as\nL<\neasnns   for   the   price  span). her for being naughty.*\n[   prl\no     IS      foll0WI.\nMont;pal   llh   '\n\u25a0er.'ji, Winnipeg\nfor furnace  '\nHalifax,   13\ncrr.t.,   Toron\nents;\n\u25a0ill\n174\ncen:'\ni   13*\ncents,\nPASCO,\nT\u00bb'0 law  *\nwniif.drd,\nJu\nusW\n\u25a0 \u25a0 i AP> -\n';r*\u00bbr\u00ab were\nin a pre-\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 men it-\n'!\u2022,\u00bb Navy\nBuilding\n\/ J1    -\n\u25a0m-..h\u00b1\n\"Vflu d *ad p'<\nhave rrsme arm\"*\nM.|t\u00ab-    a-M**'\nTlmei  V-1\"(   Ad\n\\\\WW\\W    ^^^^\u25a0_*e#vl f,liv,i i,^ iu,n,         v   \/if   (i  r f - riu*\nW-  'tBT-\"  \u00abV^ i-.b'.l'.tT  if (-rest fires in Alberta has\n' \u25a0\/!   ^^>           Tjfl ' rm-h'-d   the   dangeroua   point    Hot\np^tLlTVj \u00ab: I drv wrather cnntinued through-\n1__-   * ^V\u2014--* I I,' \\}\\r Pi 'vince arid ? heavy smoke\nof\nmoM (if thr central\nrial Forestry officials'\nlv  w nrned'ah-mit  'he\n\u25a0 ' \u00bbnun\u00bbt. hol:day\"*g\n-J3M   the\nPictured left to right, Frank Staples, Creiton,\nB.C.; Erie E. Elsenhauer, Deputy Mlniiter of Re-\nconit ruction, Reglna; P. M. Sauder, Strath more,\nAlberta, Manager of Western Irrigation Diitrlct;\nGuy Comtahle, Creiton. B.C.: G. R. Famet, Wlnnl*\npeg, Man., Manager of Ducki Unlimited, named\nProvlilonal Director of Manitoba. Seated, front\nrow: J. A, Cameron, Voungitown. Alberta, Preii\ndent E\u00bbtt Central Irrigation Auoclation; Harold\nW. Tope. KC, Mooie .law. Saik., Tint Vke-Preil\ndent, A. P.    Art\" Bumi. Medicine Hat, A<ta . Presi\ndent of the new Association; A. W. Gray. Rutland,\nB.C., Second Vice President. Mr. Gray l| President\nof the Brltlih Columbia Allocation of Irr gated\nDiitrlcts. These are among the men who wdl\ndirect the activities o' thf Weitern Canada Re\nclamation Auoclation formed at a convent on in\nLethbridge. Britlih Columbia, Alberta and Sai\nkatchewan have already entered the au^c ation\nand Manttoha, which wai r,*pre*\u00bbented it t\"e m\naugural convention, ha\u00ab the matter u\"der ron\nilderatlon.\u2014Lethbridge  Hera'd  photo,\nWash\nnforce\none  s-i\ndawn gun  ha!'!*\" with\nItmpMng   to   hurglan\nHornet     Adtr.r.utntl\nhere\nPoliceman Ardan Palmer, pars-\nIvred hy two shots in the thigh, was\ntaken to hospital but is expected to\nrr rover He iL*o was wounded\nsuperficial!* In the right armpit\nSherff Harvey Huston wai hit in\n!' e >ft hand and '.eft ihoulder.\n\\:r-r\u00abted soon Afterward in rnn-\n... . ,., w \u25a0>, {Kp nb,>oting a; d the\na'I*-mp:ed  burglary were\nJ M l aasin. 45, Northern Pacific\nRa.h >ad  firema\n1*;-*, rents, Calgary, 14li\nVancouver 12 4-5 rents\nNew pricea fnr stove oils are:\nHalifax, lfi rents; Montreal lfl*i\ncents. Toronto lfi*i cents. Winnipeg\n10 cents; Heglna 18 cents; Calgary\nlfl cents, and Vancouver 16 rent.1;\n_rxt Sale Howe\nYoung Drivar Dies\nVANCOUVER. July 20 <CPl\n22-rear-old r.vrr. A'th \u25a0 Wv\nNorth Vancouvrr. R . , died in\npita! her* Saturday today folio\na c llision Friday n.ght in w\nhis truck collided with \u2022\u00bb statio\nvehicle\nponlgn w_m tiken \u25a0 > hospital\nfcr.ng fron. a fractured Hugh\nsevere shock following the ace;\nmar Ladner, B C\nMIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMII\nFive-Day Week for\nBritish Miners\nStands\u2014Shinwell\nN O R P E T H,  Northumberland.\n' England, July 20 i Reuters l \u2014Fuel\nMlniiter Shlnwell told a rally of\nW.000 coal miners here today that\nI be absolutely declined to Interfere\nwith the five-day working week\nIn the mlnei.\n\"I wlll not aik miners to work\ntori-T hoi'--\" he ia'd. \"Even If\n\u25a0h-      -' ;' o   \u2022        hi -ve   ri-re\ncoal wou'd he ocjduced Loner\nhours would only mean more fatigue and ahienteeiim.\"\nCheen greeted thil reply to\ncritics of fie five day week, In-\ntroduced throughout Britain's nationalised coal fie'di  May   t.\nIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIMIIII\n r\nti^^^e^rmm<\u00bb*i\"tii^tm*iim*s\\m*s)imimi t  \t\n.iii.iiuwuiiipppippiie!\t\nm***m#m\n\u2014\u201e ,\u2014mm\nI. NEUON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 11, IMT\nwf*\nr<lloyi><*\n,\/\/\nERROL\nELEANOR\nW\u00aefi\nPARKER &OO0BYZ\nfJlLJ -'\" LUCILE . c , -.\u201e...    PATTI\nff-*1F*S      wiT<;nt*j * S. Z.SAKALL-DDjnv\nWMlV-ft? PlCTUNd\nitiln      WATSON ' S* Z* SAKALL \u2022 Br^ <-\u00bb> =\nVV*^ ^.\u2014r\nComplete Showi at 7:00 and 8:59 tfyfl\/ffl\nCiuie\nSPORTS RIEL\nLATEST\nWORLD NEWS\n\u00a33\n^zsr\nGEORGE MONTGOMERY \u2022 NANCY GUILD\ntot** k, JOHN HAHM - \u2022*\u2022\u2022*\u2022\"\u25a0' fcr KOIEIT lAIUH\n2nd Feature \u2014\nMrs. (.Chapman\nDies Alter\nH Years Here\nMri. Christina Chapman died it\nher residence at 533 Cedar Street\nSaturday morning She was 80 years\nold.\nA native ot Scotland, Mrs. Chapman had lived ln Nelson for the\npast 14 years, and came here from\nNanalmo.\nShe waa the widow of the late\nHarold Chapman, her only survivor\nbeing a son, Fred, at Nelson.\nLardeau Folk\nAl Funeral for\nMurray Tillen\nKASLO, B.C., July 20 - Many\nresidents of the Lardeau attended\nluneral services here Saturday afternoon for Murray Tillen, two-\nyear-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M,\nTillen of Lardo. The child died by\nfin accident and fall into Kootenay\nLake Thunday.\nRites were conducted from St,\nAndrew's United Church at Kasln,\nRev. C. 0. Richmond officiating. The\ncasket was banked with flowers\nand crowdi filled the church.\nA hymn, \"Yea, Jesus Loves Me\"\nwbs nung by the congregation, with\nMrs. S. H. Green as organist.\nInterment was in the Kaslo Cemetery.\nA King in a Cage\nLast Riles for\nKaslo (hild\nKASLO, BC, July 20-Funeral\nservicei for Wayne Bennett, infant\nson of Mr. and Mrs. A. Bennett of\nKailo, were held from St. Andrew's\nUnited Church Saturd.v afternoon,\nRev. C. O. Richmond officiating,    i\nThere were many floral tributes,\nand Mrs. S. H  Green wai organist.\nInterment waa in the Kaslo Cemetery.\nA heretofore unpublished photograph, dlsoovered In Germany,\nihowi King Leopold of Belgium behind the cage-tike wire fence of a\nprison camp at Hirichtein, Bavaria, when he was a prisoner of iht\nNazli during the war. Leopold now Is In Switzerland, but there li a\npossibility that he may return to Belgium following the conclusions\nof \u25a0 Belgian commission of Inquiry.\nSOLDIERS SEEK\nTO CHECK FIRE\nANCHORAGE, Alaska, July 20\n(AP) \u2014 A patrol of soldier fire\nfighters, headed by L. W. Bryson\nof the Alaska Fire Control Servlct, forged today Into the Funny\nRiver valley where it Is hoped\nbackfiring may partially check\nthe huge Kenai Peninsula forest\nconflagration.\nSmoke   forced   the\nyesterday when they attempted a\nreconnaissance of the area.\nRosslander Dies\nHere Suddenly\nHe's Handy\nAround Ihe\nHouse, Too\nBy   BETTY   PROB8ER\nCHICAGO, July 20 (AP) -. A.\nyoung man who'a never done any-i\nthing much except go to school and\nserve ln the army gets asked for'\nautographs wherever he goes.\nSince the auto^raph*seeker\u00ab are\nalmost always girli around 18 years\nold, the young man doesn't mind a\nbit. He considers it his due.\nHe \\s Steve Reeves of Oakland,\nCalif., the new \"Mr. America.\"\nSteve, 21, is a bronzed 215-pound-j\ner, six feet, one inch tall. He has\nsome pretty impressive measurements: neck 17Vi inches; arm, 18;\nchest, normal, 49^; expanded, 51;\nwaist, 29; thigh, 25^. and calf, 17V*.\nEven in street clothes, Steve gets\na tot of feminine double-takes. But\non the beach, he really ahinea.\nThe girls give out with wolf whittles, they yell, 'What say, masculine?' or 'Oooh, da'ddy, buy me that'\nThey come up and ask for autographs.\nThese feminine palpitations are\nnot limited to bobby-soxers. In Chicago, where he won his title June\n29, Steve appearpd on a radio program which catered to women. The\nstudio wai filled with matrons. After\nthe show Steve was mobbed by\nhundreds of tittering women.\n\"They al! wanted to feel my mui-\ncles,\" he said.\nSteve expects to follow the pattern set by several of his Tarzaniah\npredecessors ahd go into the bodybuilding business. He plans to open\na physical culture studio.\nWhen Steve isn't flexing his muscles, he cooks for his mother and\ntailors his own clothes on the sewing machine. His mother taught him\nthese domestic arts.\nGigantic Reductions\nSpring dres.es, reg. $3.95\nto $12.00. Reduced to\t\n'2.95 ..'8.95\n.   Summer Coats, regular to $49.50.\n1-3 OFF\nSummer Suits, regular to $75.00.\n1-3 OFF\nFINK'S Ready-to-Wear\nRossland\nROSSLAND, BC - Tht July\nteeeting of the Past Chiefs Auo-\nrtation of Maple Leaf Trr.ple No\n4 Pythian litters, wai htld at th-\nhome cf Mrs W D Willsor. Mrs\nXmlly Cox, or.e of the charter members of the Assoc'.atinr, who has\nbeen absent from the rity fnr over\nt year was welcomed hick A\niocial ho ;r wan er.jovH, dair.'y\nrtfreshmer.ts being served by the\npoitesB assi-'ed \\ y her daughter,\nMrs. J* Ger.die. Tne ten table was\ncovered wi'h s ch\"tri*i\\ \\;r.*r, r'.yy.\ntnd was rtr.'rtd with i >w b^w!\ncf Miturt turns Th* ;e pr*\"*-\".! were\ntwo gues's. Mrs E M F \"urv and\nMrs- -J. Gend> nrd Y:s B W\nLlttley, Mr.\u00ab F M YsrKr: z\\t. Mn\n0. R. Mason, M-s E C-*x Mr* P\nO* Palmer. Mr. F. C, B:av n:,d\nMrs  W. p   W.I'jon.\nG.n!fery Ma;*\"\". >f' to %;*rrd Vls\nfcolidavj   :\u2022\u25a0    Sr'-<~>-*.    He   \u00ab-\"*t*r-\nToasfTea\nThe Bohemian Girl\nCompleti Showi 7iOO\u20140:12\npanled hli unci* and aunt. Mr. and\nMrt. larl Peddycoart, of Trail,\nformerly of Roislind. Otheri ln the\nparty wtre Mri. S. Goldi*ortny\nand MtM Jemmne Peddycoart\nMra. Anthony gntlth tccompinled\nby her ion Ted ind daughter\nSharon, left for Ir.nlifill, Alti,\nA-b.f, Mm Smith wn railed by the\ndeath of her brother, John Flynn\nThe Women's Auxiliary of the\nCir.idian Legion wig held Thuridiy n.ir.t in the Memorial Hall\nMri. Lei Heigh, an Enjluh bride,\n\u25a0.*..,. pi'*.\"\"-*e-i wi'h a (nft. Three\n'<*\u25a0'. of rourJ whllt were played\n*.*:*-. *:*.e prize* he.ng awarded to\nMr* r; Li'.ydalt fint ind Mrs W\nC-r.'ry . Jr.-.r.i the rnr.so'.ation\n!>*,.*\u2022>\u25a0 refreihmer.ti were jerved\nov :'f. hur'euei for 'he evening\nwho were Mrs P. McLellan, Mrs\n1. M*I ellan ar.d Mrs F. W. Marsh.\n\u00absi5*ed hy *.'-i H Wjor: 0*he-<\npreieil were -.'rt .tick Cox, Mrs\n.' P \u2022. Mus H Da rr Mrs I,\nn.>y. M.'i T G Wr *d, Mrs E I.\nWs'.-er, Mrs 1 Conrov, Mri. S\nMai\".**, and Mri  G   Yarmoluk\nM-   ar.d Mri   S   Calinir.ittl. who\n* v.e resided   in   Ro*s:**nd   tne  lis*\n....   -,\u201e  ,n.  .-.,[.  fnriT.er  brrr at\nVictoria Bowleri\nWin Nelson Trophy\nVANCOUVER, July 20 (CP)-Declared by visiting and* local bowlers\nalike to have been the best and\nsmoothest-run tournament of the 25\nheld to date, the Annual B C. Lawn\nBowling Week wound up on Saturday afternoon after six day* of\nstrenuous competition in glorious\nsunshine each aay.\nPete Johnston's rink from the Victoria West Club carried off the Nelaon Trophy through a 27-22 victory\nover Johnny Walker's loco quartet\nin the final, J. Imrie, B. Dalgarno,\nand C Fea played with Johnston,\nwhile J. Hart. W A Thorburn, and\nW. Hart ablated Walker\nNAKUSP W.A. TO\nAID T.B. UNIT\nNAKUSP, B.C., July 20 - The\nWomens' Auxiliary to the Canadian\nLegion convened for lti regular |\nmeeting, with Mrs. Masson ai Chairman. There were 17 memberi ln attendance.\nThe President gave an Intereitlng\ntalk on her visit to the Zone Council meeting at Trail. She detailed the\nresolutions brought up and adopted,\nand announced that the next zone\nMilton Henry French, employed\nwith the Rosiland Transportation\nSociety before coming to Nelson a\nweek ago for medical attention, died\nat Kooteniy Like General Hospital\n..   h   k j Siturdiy. He wai 41 years of age.\nBorn it Crosby, N.D., Mr. French\nserved in the United States Navy\nfor a short time.\nHe ii survived by his wife, Myra,\nand a lon, Don, both at Vancouver\nThe body li being forwarded by\nthe Thompson Funeral Home to\nVancouver, where.burial will take\nplace.\n$250,000 Damage in\nEssondale Blaze\nNEW WESTMINSTER. B.C., July\n20 (CP) \u2014 Fire of unknown origin\nwhich broke out at the Colony\nFarm it the Essondale Mental Home\nMAY FLY SWARMS\nHALT TRAINS\nPORT DEPOSIT, Md , July 20\n(AP) \u2014 Traffic over the Pennsylvania Railroad's Port De-_\nposit-Harrisburg, Pa, line was\"\nhalted tonight by swarms of\nMay flies.\nOfficials said three freight\ntrains \u2014 two Westbound and\none going East \u2014 came to a full\nstop when they hit the swsrms.\nInvestigation showed the file*\nhad gotten into the motors of\nthe electric locomotives, short\ncircuiting.\nSteam locomotivei were dispatched to haul back the trains.\nTram Fare Increase\nIn Balance\nWARD RALLIES\nTO DEPOSE CHAMP\nSTRANAHAN\nDES MOINES, II, July 20 (API-\nRallying strongly, Marvin (Bud)\nWard of Spokane defeated Frank\nStranahan, IMS champion, in an exiting 36-hole bittle for the Western\namateur golf championship.\nWard finished one up after he had\ntrailed six down through 18 holes\non the morning round.\nYacht Race Winner\nOnly Third\nOf Minute Out\nNANAIMO, BC, July 20 (AP)-\nWlth an all-time low percentage of\nerror\u2014just over one-third of a minute\u2014the Diana, owned by Dr. F. R.\nVan Gilder of the Olympia, Wash,\nwon the 16th annual 145-mlle\ndlcted-log international powerboat\nrace from Bremerton, Wash, to Ni\nnaimo, i.C.\nThe 132 entries from i dozen Weit\nCout ports crossed the finish line\nat Intervals Saturday, but It took the\nNelson Reps Trim\nFruitvale (-5\nNelson Ladles' Rep Fastball ttam\nbatted out its 10th straight win thli\nseison Sunday when Frultvilt went\nown to i slim 6-3 defeat\nFruitvale held \u25a0 9-4 leid ln tht\nsixth Inning of the 85-mlnute gimt,\nhut Nelson clamped on tht deciding\nrun ln the tied ninth Inning whtn\nEdit Pippi, capable third baieman,\nclouted out > homer. Sht alio\ntripled ln tht third Inning.\nNelion gained 10 hiti to Frult-\nvale'i leven, ind Fruitvale pitcher\nLarien itruck out tight bitten,\nwhile Verda Pratt, who ippeared on\nthe mound for Nelaon, finned ont,\nDorothy Wallace slammed thret\nhlti for tha homt iquad, Diant\nChuninow, two; I. Plppi, two, V.\nPratt, two; ind Ball, one.\nFruitvale playen: Campbell, WII-\nmont, Knowler, Shannon, Wigntr,\nLinen ind Patterson figure, on I\nhit tach.\nNtxt Sundiy t pick Trail rip\n11 judges 11 hours'to compute the teim will battlt tht Ntlion glrlt.\nlUndlngi.\nFoils in Fifth\nAttempt to\nReach Sweetheart\nHALIFAX, July 20 (CP)-A 20-\nyeir-old Halifax domestic, Minnie\nHarnish, tonight put away the proipect of an early marriage to David\nBoyei, 21, who braved the wrath of\nthe Roval Marine!, merchint ships'\nofficeri ind Immigration offleiili\nin vain attempts to reach her side.\nMiss Harnish said sht received a\nnote from Boyei dated July 16 In\nNew York laying he wai tilling\nbick to Britain on the Queen Eliza\nThe Weather\nSynopsis: Penticton wu tht wtrm\nspot in Western Cantdt Sundiy\nwith \u2022 high of M with Kamloopi t\ncloie lecond with 99. Continued tint\nwtather la expected ln tht Southtrn\nportion of the province ind cloudy\nweither with icitttred ihowtn lir\ntht Northern portion of tht prov-\nlnct.\nOkinigm tnd Keottniyi Clear.\nContinuing wirm. Wlndi light\nHigh it Pintlcton Vi, Kimloopi\nM, Lytton \u00bb6, Cnnbrook K, Cructnt Villty 92.\nVancouver: Cleir Mondty. Wlndi\nbeth, deported by United States au-j light Little chingt in ttmpenturt.\nthorities ifter his fifth attempt to High it Vancouver 76, Abbotaford\nget to Halifax as a stowaway ended;80| Ninilmo 76.\n'   his capture and detention on Ellis kelson  -    66\nVANCOUVER,  July  20  (CP)  \u2014\nmeeting  wuV'b,   MdTn  New \u2122 h\u00bb\u00ab f\"lyttoday,ca\"s?nd^r A*  E'   lDal>   ?\"\"\"' l^ie% ?\nDenver !flge estimflted at nearly $2.0,000 to the British Columbia Electric Rail-\nIt   was   decided   that   the   W A. I hurildingt and equipment. t way   Company,   said   tonight  that\nwould  lend assistance to the T.B.!   The flre started in a huge barn any  possibility   ol  an  increasa  in,\nmobile unit which will tour the In-j where 200 tons-of baled hay  had streetcar and bus rates hinged on j Llland. I    Saturday      65\nterior ahortly. A canvasser will bejbeen stored. current wage negotiations now be-      The girl, who said ihe had mad\u00ab.Monlreli\nchosen to secure local appointment*. ling conducted between the company  countless attemp^to^find MotMOJ Toronlo\n\\.\"moonlight frolic\" will be spon-|     Phone 144 for Classified  Ada     and Street Railwaymen's Union.\nloMlteVu^usY^ Snd tS *chedul<Ki| iiiiHillllllllllfltlllllllllirillltMllMlllllinttllllllllllllllllHIIIIMIIIllllllliriTirillll\nRefreshmenU were served by hoi-\nMEYER  INJURED\nPHILADELPHIA, July 30 fAP)-\nRuss Meyer, Chicago Cubs hurler.\nsuffered an ankle injury and had to\nbe carried from the field today after\nhf fell while covering fint base-\non a slow roller hit by Jack Albright of the Phillies in the seventh\ninning of the first game of s National League double-header.\ntease* Mrs. Bolstad, Mrs. Haines and\nMra. McCusker.\nNews of the Day\nourt be Ut theb.tTir.c__ of BrltUlr\u2122\nimmigration officials Rn-Hnn\nThey met in 19*14 when Boyei \u00abu'\u2122J\"\u00b0  \t\nhere ln a Britiih cnilatr. ,*a.!i\u201e.    ~ ~\nAfter  the  w.r  h.  deserted  the!\u00abJ|\u00bb\u00bb\t\nRATES: 22o line, !f7c lint black race type, larger type ratti on        Marine, to  itow  .way  on . ah'.p \u00b0 \u25a0       ; hlr( *\"\"\"\nrequest Minimum two line.  10% discount for prompt paymint. bound for Halifax but w.i caught \u00abr\"iu\"p .,] V-d\" \"\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllMMII I II   and   punished    Another   time   he 'Or       ,    eor    ....\nstowed awav but the ahip ended up ?*'\" (-ur\",' \t\nQualltv Fishing Tackle at        I   ACCOMMODATIONS WANTED     in an Egyptian port. Med'.clna Hat  _..\nJACK BOYCE MEN'S SHOP     [For Nelson's Jubilee Week Aug 3*9     In his fifth attempt, he hid on the Lethbridge   ...\nWill any citizens who \u00abr\u00ab willing Queen Elizabeth last Spring but wu Ca.gary\nWrlti-g   atxvr,   t:\nDodgers   In   *.**>;:\nArthur    Da>y.\nYork    Ti*-.*-.     Md\nth.*   th\u00bb:e   ri.K\ndrive   ;,,,-'     .\nfield   a ... '.: i   *.*\ngarr'  : . *\nto \u00bb fi*    **. *.*.*   : .!\nhappT*.- \"      '.   r\nb<rk       -ff. -    *\nbs;**\"   T-**   f    '\ntrd   \u00ab-.   eye       '\u25a0** *\n.Skrd I* r- r-.    .\nB.-V*k'* \u2022*      T    e-e\nRibf   ]\u2022--\u201e\u25a0    , i*\ndr***!   I .\nn.zzy   \\\nClink   I\nIff   a*\nHerrr.-\nt.i\"d T'\nc!\"*id of\nthen*   \u25a0.'.;\n1*\nY:i   F   O   Rrav >r*-*rta:r..\u00bbrl Tri-\n-' \u25a0\u25a0.    r y '.    \\A~zr    'r.~r*    tables    of\nr.  -Tt\n\u25a0 \u25a0  !\u00abc   V-i   P   W   1   \u25a0\u2022>%' wor. first\npr ;t.  Y:t    W    D    W;'.> \u25a0 :\u2022   the   ror.-\n\u25a0 hi'.-r,   pr;ie    Pair.'v   refreshment!\n*,*\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb !.f\\-'.ivi hv tne h's'.u. Othen\npreie: '    v \u25a0*:\u25a0*    Mn     T.     M     F>'irv\nMrs    W    R    ^-T.r.i-d,   Mrs    }{    Q\n-:\u25a0\u25a0.:\u25a0..    Mr<    J     Fr*x.    Mr*    P    G\n\u25a0\u2022 \u2022* .\nhshrf-.   Mrs   A    Tki*.   ,.':.\u00ab    D    T\n\"\u2022 \u2022'\n'.', i  \u25a0\" \u25a0    r-    V-;    t    C,    Wo\"l   M;i\n\u25a0   (;\u25a0\"\u2022! \u00bb irl M:i   W   C .\u2022 r.:rgharr.\n\u25a0 t*\nSEEK LAD'S BODY\nwr -:   *. ANCI EV    Bf     Ji'.v   20\n.   r\nP \u00abei.r.g    * ;.:i* i,-,i    ire\n-Ve-    -.i-.y    f.,-,    f-;     *-f     ondv    O*.\n'  - \u25a0   l-l-     .11      I  '-ri      V.l'.'.e;,      who\n; , *        '*    '\u25a0     .    ' -'\u2022    r*    ill    nigh!\nv \u2022\n::..   .,, ,-   \u2022-.   ,\u201e..   -,.   Mr    ,,-.r\\   Mr,\nt.   ..\n*   * *     **     \u25a0\u25a0-   -a f -   '....   .*-,   *.-,.   t-r'-\n*v*.e   Tr,,rr   R *. er   near\n*U    'nr    C'.Mif'ed    Adl\ntre\u00ab'\u00bbd   *\nti.r'ir-i\nTOOWtAKTO\nDOAHYTHING\nOn   rrmaiM n*V\u00bb' \u00abf MMithf\nTV*   fl-*  tB*rU tn<\u00bb  u   i*-%   e**-tf*   *\u00ab\n,r  . .  ?.-\u25a0\u25a0! -A -A ttrem \u00bbrH  nr*A.  n\u00ab\n, , ,   *.- i.Ke t\u2014\\int*. \"t pi* h  tier*\ni- \u25a0 ' i \u25a0* i* in (*rs\\e\\e futv\u00ab*\u00abftil mnn Ihl f\nritt<irK_iv>*_i   'Ihai\u00ab**\u00bbMi r\u00abT*^' b**n*i*8t'\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger ond Freight\nGooderham-. Worts\nLiMinn\nli'lnlo,   Coooda\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10.3Q nm. \u2014 E.cept Sundoy\nTrail Livery Co.\nM    M    MrlVOR.   Tr.-p\nTrail\u2014Phone 135     Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER. B C. \u2014 Dr. ar.d\nMrs Frank Olack of Vancouver are\nholiday gueitg of the latter'* cousins,\nMr. and Mrs L R Campbell and\n.-ire Also viiitlng Mr. and Mrs. Waller Thring.\nMr and Mrs H A Rose and family, who were vu:t:ng Mrs. Rose's\nfather. J C Hams, and her brother\nand si5>r-m-law, Mr. and Mrs A. L\nKarr:* nnd daughter, Mis* Nanr\\\nHarris, returned to their home at\nPioneer Mine,\nMiu Griielda Gordon returned to\nVancouver after be;nn holiday guest\nof Mr ir.d Mrs  A   L  Harria.\nMrs Eva Dolphin of Nelson waj\nu gueit of Mlu .'nan Green ovc\nthe weekend a' the home of Mr\nind Mm  .Time* Diaper.\nMri Vera R Kitchener has is\nguest her niece, M~si Arler.e Bailey\nof Mich jar., USA\nMrs. Fred Chrntie and f am llv\nHerbie, Mine ar.d Ann, are ipcnoi-\n:rg two months holiday! veiling\n'he former'i parents In Salem, Ore\n['*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ,uh> srd Mrs R R MrKav\nr d rr. Sandr Mr nnd Mn Dave\nM '.rny ir.d M.m Margaret Milroy\n''. Tn,!, who were holidaying I:.\nNew Denver fr-- * week, vi*.:'iri>;\nMrs McKay's brother, Fred Chris-\n':e. and th*;- many friendi, let'\nFr.div f\"r Banff, Alta\nMr and Mrs Will.am T*.th ar.d\ntwo mr* of Trail were weekend\nrjH'.t of Mr ar.d Mri Charles\nth.-:r.|, Sr\nM-s J-rr, H Ta\"-le of Vinrou*\n*\u25a0 \u2022*\u25a0   .- a pa'iep.: m S>can Commun-\n.*.y   U-lf.Ui\nVr A .' \\'-.r,b\\,i b,, his p\u00bbr*r.ts\nMr ar.ii Mr. R V Vf.ihls. ol\nN'l.on. who ,r. ner* f*^r . hfilid.v\nMr .r-1 Mri T T Lir.dJ.y nr\nD..i*'*n M.js A.-.r. !r. N'pu- Dflnvpr\nvm'ir.l llii. '.,tler't hr^'h-T sort ,;,i\nler-r ri*. Mr n-.rt Mri F Van.\n\u2022Vr;- '.-\n'\u2022'\u25a0     i- *.    M-s     R'\u00bb!1>T    Oir.s    n|\nc, a- -' r -^-. a r '-r'An- r. -'---r - i\n'*\u2022    i-s.  M-.<   fl    A   F  -ir-,\nM i NV - T Av'*. \u25a0*, ,-f T-i : *.. i.\n*-\u00bb ; .,' ot -.. *r, >*.-\u00bb- Mri M !\nA y'\\i  r t-rt \"h.r rf 1.' \\ rt\n'.* s*,.,*. i-a,**. -! i|*i Orrh.rd >\ns I\"'.*:' ir 'b* S.nrjn Cnmmiri'v\nH.npllal\nF.n*i\u00bb.t Dnnfv Jr ifl*r two *Ai>pki\nhnlilnvi, rft'.inifd :<- hu hnm. in\nrr.ntim.'k\nII. v Vu*.;, uhn u us s pntipr.l if.\nS! a-,1, ('*n*rn..r llv Hnspi'.il y -11\nii-'e 1. rAir f**r h.s hnnip s( Ihr\nii-.'*j:,1\n'.'\u25a0\u2022 : -I-- I '. .*f SW|\u00ab C \u2022:\u25a0 -.\n\u25a0 \u2022'. \u2022 -| h.r lun \u00bb.f\u00bbr. Ml l\"*l Ml,\nIrh-artwla nd Mr ind Mn S\nChril'nphprinr\nTwo choice building lots 3rd St 'to rent a room or two by ths day captured \u00abnd turned over to .uth- Edmonton\nor week during the Jubilee plesse or'*'*\u00ab ln NfW York* n^   ,?\u201e'\nphone   or   call   the   Nelion   Civic\nEAGLES   MEET   TONIGHT\nB P.M.\n1k\nAT\nPrankster Gets\nTrade Talk Stirring\nrHICAGO, July 20 (API - An\nunidentified msn. who apparently\nhad a handful of nickels, a lease on\na trlephone booth and a fertile im-*     .\nagination, spread a rumor Saturday Fairview. Blackwood Agency\nnight that Chicago Cubs had given' _7~~T_   \u201e\u201e  \" ,, .\nCircmnati    Bill   Nicholson,   Eddie      OLD   PAPERS   POR   SALE\nWai'.kus and HOO.niKI for the Reds*  BUNDLE, DAILY NEWS.\nace pi'cher, Ewell  Blackwell.\nThe man telephoned several news\npapers *hat he had heard a report\nof the deal on the radio. He called* ~\"\nRadio   S'ation  WON   and  said   he     Now  op\"1*  Nelson   Shoe  Repair\nheard the announcement on WMAQ. Shop. 323 Victoria and Stanley\nHe then called WMAQ and laid he kujp Motors until July 2f  Bri.-.i\nheard it on WON. Washer  trouble'   Juit  phone  91, vnur marhinprv  ,anv m,kpl  f*\nOfficial,  of  the  Reds  and  Cubs Beatty repairman will call promptly..i-heckover. Those interested in t'r\nwere   quick   to   brand   the   report' \u2014    \" purrhaae of a  chain  saw . ,Te  ;\nfa:**** '    f*0\"  bark   ln   y 7fy   t^'1-* and let ua \u00abolve ynur cutting pr*-b\nIn   Philadelphia,  Charlie  Grimm. r\"\"\u00ab \"' patirnts. Dr. Brnck, Chiro- ,,m\nCubs' Manager, said: \"There'i noth- Praetor.      \t\n\"^anwhile,   the   prankster   ouit'  \/orget-Me Not    perfect   diamond, SLOCAN WOODCRAFT\nmaH.ng  hi.s  rounds  by  phone   He I1*1?8,   r\npr'.'nahlv had found a ]uke box for\nhis nickels\n3oyes so he could comi\nhere and\nmarry her, expreued fear ihe would\nnever lee him  again  beciuie\nNorth Bay\n.... 45\n_ 49\nk. Port Arthur  60\n\" Kenora  46\n._ 44\n_ 44\n_ 61\nCentre aa soon as possible.\nPhone 118 Vernon St\nThis is your Show \u2014 Thank You\nAttention Chain Saw Operalnri\nMr Ted Richmond, Company Ser-\nFour Drown When\nBoar Capsizes\nVancouver \t\nVictoria     \t\nCranbrook\n' Creicent Valley\nOSGOODE. Ont, July 30 (CP)-Princ. Rupert\nFour person drowned In the iwirl\nng Rideau River r.e.r here late to\nvice Engineer of IE L. Power f h.ln d \u00bb wh,\u201e , rowbol. clpJJMd lhrow\n\u2022 Saws will be in thil district at N\nPrince George \t\nSe.ttle      - -\nPortland  \t\nm\n90\n7(1\n76\n113\n17\ntil\n8.1\nM\nm\nn\nii\n71\n79\n74\nSO\nBO\n75\n77\n95\nM\n78\nTl\nSS\n91\n7-1\n77\nSO\n5S   \u00bb4\nM    79\nBJ    \u00ab1\n81     97\n-     SO\ni\ndiamond.\nCanada's  own   loveliest  diamond rings. Harvey's Jewellers.\nCahi\nKASLO\n20\u2014Mn\nt,  Mrs.\nKASLO HT,\nG: 11 is hn.; as her\nShaw nf Ar-issj-\nMr and Mrs. Gilbert Mervyn and\nfamily nf Kelnwna sp^nt a -short\nholiday a' 'he Kaslo Kabins.\nMr nnd Mrs G Sutherland have\nus 'hrr guests Mr Sutherland1! nl-\n>r, Mrs Quanre of Winnipeg, and\nsister-in-law, Mrs Sutherland ol\nSomerjpt, England\nMr nrd Mrs D W McDerby have\n\u2022e'urr.ed *o their -Summer home at\nMirror Lake from a visit to Montreal nnd other EaVem citiei.\nMr  and Mrs J  Tillen of Lardeau\n|    Koffe.e Kounter open from 7 am. cedar\n1 to  7  p.m.  Lunches,  salads,  s>aks,\nsandwiches, etc. 614 Vernon St. If\nLadiei' Smdali, Clearing \u2014 J2.95 E-.\nChlldren'i  Black  Oxfords 8-13-2.95,\nTHE  BOOTERY\nSLOCAN   CITY,  B.C,\nets. chiffoniers, d^or icreem,\nches'j,    novel tlei   made    to\norder.\nIts woodwork you want -\nConsult us.\nquirlea promptly answered\ning ita six occupan'.i into tha water Spoktnt .. \t\nand  later tht aged  mother of one Chicago   .\n'if the victims collapsed and died at Stn Francisco\nthe telephone whtn  relatives  tele- Lot Angelm ....\nphoned her the newi. New York\nA woman merr.b\u00abr of the Sunday| \u25a0 \u2014\t\npicnic party and only iwuruner in   A -\u2014-*J Tl_lr-4 \\n\n[he   rowbott   group,  laved   herself Armed   1 Hird l?1\nand a young girl by treading water -T;\u25a0 I D;nfljna\nfor 110 mlnutei until help arrived    \u25a0 <\" Ringing\n! Drowned were Thnmu Kiley, 3\u00ab, CHICAGO, July 20 fAPl-Armed,\nof Ottawa; Albert Voiiine, 35, of tht Calumet Firm Geldlni, took\nWlncheater, Ont, and hLa 32-veir-, ^-^ pi\u201ecl \\n ih. Hit of world's\n\u25a0Id wife md their flve-ytar-old wn, >lfiing money winner! Saturday by\nA^red. In eliy victory ln the WflOQ Ar-\n!    Ijittr Mm Thomu Kiley, \"^-yttr-\n[old mother of -.he Ottawa man, co\"\nlapaed and died at the telephone\nnj(ton Park Handicap Armed tamed $37,400 first money.\nWANTED\n \u2014  Nelson   Golden   Jubilee   Cnrr.m:\"\nOUR PHONE NUMBERS ARE 1177 rfr,mrf names of Nelson rv*.,'\nAND 1178. FAIRWAY M E A T relebrating their Golden Weddii\nMARKET.  ^ Anniversary this year. Also  mf\nmation as to the oldest living r**.\ndent of the City and the first p-r<'\nborn ln Nelson. Write T. C   La'\nher home at Egan\ni40 milei Nrrth of\natlvei telephoned\ndeath.\nOrt. ibo:\n-re, when rtl-\nord  of  Kilty'i\nTEEN AGES!\nGetreliel\nfrom PIMPLES\nTor   the   fruit   picker:'   Orrhard\npicking   bss*   now   in   stock.\nHIPPERSON'S\nbert, Jubilee Office. Nelson, DC\nWhy not give us a call to increase\nvour fire Insurance protection to-\nday?-C   W    APPLEYARD\nFotkrw dhtct-uf*. Um\nC\u00abt Inim Itm-p uvt bo4\nwittr. Then applj -mnttk.\nInt. hiillnf ( iit.cira\n('Intmrr.t.   5\u00bbtit(i*r(k%o\nTypewnterr for  rent. D   W. Mr\n,ve guests of Mr _jnd Mn. Gordon Dfr'bv   -Th^ Typewriter it Adding\nBowker for a few dayi Machine   Man\".   538   Ward   Street,\n\u2014  Nelson. B C\nDiscuss Government\nPersonnel Practices\nFLOOR FINISHING\nHardwood   flooring   supplied\",\nlaid and finished\nA H RONMARK - PH 3A9-IJ\nVICTORIA. July 2(1  (CP)-Prob\nVmt ii.d methods of recent Govern-1\nr-^ent personnel prsclires In British Floors smded, refintshed,\n(' .lumbia were outlined by Govern- counters and show windows\n\u25a0rent officials h*\u00bb:*e nt tbe final day machmerv  A   Fotherby, RH. N\nf 'hr annual rnnfererc* of the Civil' Phone 4fti-L-4\n.-.rrw-i* A^emhlv  (Western region*\n' IVit'd Statej drd Cinada VALENTINES\nThe disc'.iinmri wrre designed to Guarantee   fresh   films   \u00abnd   exp*\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-j it'.rd other conference delega'es developing for perfect rejul's eve\n*. th methods used here in personnel time,\nwork   The majority of the (Ml dele-\nixtei rime from  the U   S   Picific\nMr Gordon S'anley, who <j r \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\n:n charge of our type wt: ttr and\nadding machine repilr department,\nwas for 17 years with tht Albtrta\nProvincial Government in tktlr office machine repair departrntnt. Rt\nhas hsd experience on every mtkt\nof typewriter and cm mort makes erf\nAdding machinei and etlculiVrrt\nThe next time your offlee machine\ngivea you any trouble tee ni end\nnote the difference n-hen tou ge-\nvour marhine back tverytninj wr\nilnn do in the way of offlct maehint rr\nNew pain ii strictly guenuitetd. Tou\nlake no chance with a real ea_t>er:\nmechanic D W. MfTkerhr HI.*\nTvpew : ,'er and ArVdini Uathmr\nMan.\" 5.1(1 Ward S'reet Felaoft.\nFAVORITE COMES THROUGH\nVANCOI'VER July 30 (CP) -\nAbout 12.OC0 fans, who poured #\u00bbmie\ny. 70 nno through the mutuils, aw\n'he favored Fort Garry romp to an\nr''^y win in the Michael Wilkinson <* \u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb*r will r\u00bbfiad\nMnghoije Handicap at Lensdownt mr\"\u00bb\u00abT- Catlc^r* eoate\nPark Saturday oo_j a trw ceota. Bo\u00bb\nLavedo wn aecond. Laurel Ledv   \u00bbi p>\u00abr \u00abtn__Biet'i iod_rr.\nthird.   Spangle   C< <-k    fourth   md   V<-_W - C\u2014__.\nKeim'i   Pride,   thf    well-regarded\nPrairn  mare  which   set  the early\npace,  finished  sixth.\n_!__L_!J;r\u00ab!\nFUNERAL  NOTICI\nFuncr\u00ab) iervicei for tht '.*> W*\nAnoiher ihlpmrnt   of |\u00ablvinlz\u00abi chri\u00abtln\u00ab   fhapmin   wlll  b#   hr\nr*iul, \u00abr,r1 Iwn i-nnir from Honolulu   r\u00abn|r boileri   Txlri   huvy  jnujr, (rom tht Thompron Tunrril Homr\nll,?:.ri5*.r*_?\u2122r  ,fu1\"-v  *'  Wfflnriiliy al ipn   Thr Rtv. A\nNo,  30\nCAPTURES   HANDICAP\nEDMONTON. July IB (CP)-Sll-\n\u2022r,i hr.t flvr yrnr old rhrnlnul\n'i.-ir.r from lh' W ,1 Y\u00ablr\u00ab Sluhlrn\n*'  l'i!,*'*!    Sal irrlrv   rnplnrrd   thr\nl:ni\u00bbl   K.I on   Spri-ul   Munrlirip\n':fth nrd frflt.irr r,r. on the rloMnj\nin-1  f,rri  of thr   Exhibition  nrr\nHUTFRSON'S\nT. Anderson will officiate and In\nterment wlll be In the Nelion\nMemorial   1'ark\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nCHOOSE THF. LAWN FURNI-\nTURI TO SUIT YOUR OWN\n-ROUNDS. CHAIRS AND TABLES\nPara your herd reel \u00ab*lth (hr hlindini,\nmini pa in ol Neuraliia? Ara you un\n,U. lo ,lr*ri or w-nfli l*\u00abaiiBr \u201et rtalnf\nt.'i o nrk ufe r'lirf hv lakini T R-C'a\nI It I\", ar* \u25a0pr.i.llv made lo rellava\nS- *,'(*. Se.,, * Vr'tii-li* and Rhe.,\nmahe I*aui.     -   \\i \u25a0::....\u201e\u25a0   i        140\nNELSON CITY BAND\nFirat Concrrt\nTonight at R p ro.\nVernon Slreet Mu.*'* Hn*\nminer;; wanted for poi.ari ;\nTaku Mine Union acala Miner*\ncan contract avera|r honui ibove\nbeaic piy In \u00bbtop\u00ab. W. in drlfti\nfl. In rlliei end box holri. I? ''\nper ihift See M. O Cimeron\n.  he   the   fir.it  lowwlnj  two-Mill     ruiiik eve ri ruirn akicn     \"oom L2lu!!JiJ!t,,,i\t\n,ndrm .iider ever hull\" The dr-     CHIMN EYS CLEANED AND r.fiSr^.TcTtfTTVTjIttmTr Tkt*k\nfin   incorporate!  a  dull   control,  a   TOPPED   STOVES, FURNACES      on   Divlei   Street.   Fairview    Re\n\u25a0r'.r.wheel     u'lderrarrlaie.    dive  VACUUM CI FANED   POUND-      ,v\"r'1     'nder plrajr rill l:\n,:inE    IRS CHIMNEY SLRVICL  PH\n968 X.\nRelieve NEURALGIA a.,:Mar0R\"\u00ab\u00ab\"-.;\nrbr.r\n114   for   Claiailled   Adl\nVI  R'-alh   Sfrrrl\nWANTFII    KFItRY   IN'i l\nl    nickers   Mu   C   Becker\nnrriK\nARMY SURPLUS\nRANGES\nDouble Oven Heavy Duty Rongei\nPolished Steel Tops\nRight or Left Hand Fire Box\nNew Condition\nPRICED FOR QUICK SALI\nCHAS. BERTELSEN\nPlumbing ond  Heating\nPHONE 153\nTimmlthing\nVERNON, B.C.\n \u2014\u2014\n\t\n\u2014\u2014\n20 Arrested in\nBurma Killings\nFormer Premier Among Arrested\nFollowing Assassination of Seven\nRANGOON, July 20 \u2014 Burmese police hove arrested 20\npoliticians, including former Premier U Saw, in an effort to\nget to the bottom of yesterday's assassination of seven high\nofficials of Burma's interim government.\nThe arrests were made in U Saw's home in the wake of a\ngun battle with police in which three of U Saw's political followers were killed. An official announcement said that police\nunearthed a store of arms and ammunition in the home of\nU Saw, who was Premier while the Japanese occupied Burma\nduring the war. \t\nshops and bazaars\nMeanwhile, .... *.,\u201e?.\t\nln Rangoon have been closed as a ory body  to Governor Sir Hubert\nmark of respect for the seven gov- Rance, were wounded.\nernment officials slain yesterday\nduring an attack on a cabinet meeting. One cf the victims was U Aung\nSan. 32-year-old strong man who\nwas in line to become the first\nPrime Minister of the new Burmese\nRepublic. U Sang San was the head\nof the Peoples Freedom League, and\nwas an arch political enemy of U\nSaw.\nU Saw had accused IJ Aung San\nof betraying Burma by giving in to\ntoo many British demands during\nPost-War conferences about Burma's promised independence\nThe Council has been busy preparing to implement Britain's promise of early independence.\nNews of the assassination was\ncabled here by Sir Hubert.\nThe following statement was issued by the Burma office:\n\"When the Executive Council was\nin session a jeep drew up to the\nmain entrance One man stayed in\nthe jeep and five men armed with\nsten guns and two rifles went upstairs to the council chamber.\n\"An armed guard outside the door\ntried to stop them and was shot. He\nwas badly wounded and could not\nLONDON, July 20 (AP)-U Aung;gjv(, any details.\nSan, Deputy Chairman of the Bur- j \u201eThe thre( men armed w*th the\nma Executive Council, and five oth- L,en guns entcre(i tbe council cham-\ner Burmese Council Ministers were ber and Hprayed the occupants with\nilain Saturday in Rangoon by Ter-1 bullets. They then made good their\nrorists who sprayed the Council jescape in the jcep.\nChamber with machine-gun bullets, j    \u201eThe fon0Wing casualties are now\nAn announcement said five arm- j coiiflrmed:\ned men sprang from a jeep this mor-1   .,_   d_\u201e     , s        Deputy\nnng before the coune,  bu ding in |     D\u00abd   \u00ab, i^JlTv X,\nRangoon, ran  up the step    to  the Commerce  and   Sup-\nchamber and loosed a hail of bullets, j ^.^ AMul Bazak member fof Ed.\nRangoon itself apparently was un\nder a censorship blackout.\nTwo other members of the Exec\nutive Council, the Burmese Advis\nGREEK ARMY\nCOMMAND\nSEEKS RECRUITS\nWant to Raise\nStrength to\n180 or 200,000\nJAIL LEFTISTS\nATHEN8, July 20\u2014A call for\nmore recrulta wm luued todiy by\nthe High Commind of thi Greek\nregulir army.\nThe tip-off came from aourcet\ncloie to the Greek Mllitiry Council, which !\u25a0 deicrlbed aa worried\nabout the ability of the preient\nmilitary force to eecure the bord\nen of the Kingdom agalnit Left\nlit Guerrilla.. The Grjek Army\nnow contliti of 130,000 men. The\ngovernment wanti to ralie It to\n180 or 200,000.\nThere are conflicting stories on\nthe present tide of battles in Northern Greece. According to regular\narmy leaders, the Guerrillas are still\nin wild retreat before strafing planes and battle-hardened ground forces. The Communists deny that the\nGuerrillas are retreating.\nGreek police authorities announced that nearly 12,000 Leftists from\nall parts of Greece have been jailed\nin the crackdown on an alleged\nCommunist plot to seize the government.\nURG58 END TO WAR\nThe administrator of America's\naid program in Greece adviied the\nGreek penple Saturday that the\nsooner they stop fighting, \"the easier things can be accomplished.\" The\naid official, Dwight Griswold, em\nphasized that he wants to see the\nGreek Rebellion stopped in order to\npave the way for an early start of\n'reconstruction projects.\n! Griswold expressed his views at\n[his first news conference since arriving in Athens. He emphasized\nithat \"rebel fighting is holding back\nthe reconstruction of Greece.\" A\ncessation of hostilities would permit\nAmerican authorities to start mending that war-torn country as soon\nias administrative details are com-\nThe United States Mission,\nCHERRY DISEASE\nTOUR ORGANIZED\nBY E. C. HUNT\nI. C. Hunt, DUtrlct Horticulture,\nof Nelson wu orginittr ot tht tour\ncompleted lut weak by Amerlcin\nind Canadian Government tnd fruit\norganization offleltli, when orchards suffering from Little Cherry\nDisease were studied.\nThe party visited Creston and\nKelson orchards and Kettle Fills,\nWish., mtln purpose of the tour\nbeing to decide whtt steps should\nbe taken ln Washington State,\nwhere the diseise has been found\nin orchtrds there.\n5000 Deaths Followed\nAttempt on Hitler\n<\u00a7?]\nSEES DISASTER\nIF WRONG\nWORD SAID NOW\nNext Generation's\nChildren Would\nBe at War\u2014Bevin\nSEEKS UNITY\nMORPETH, Northumberland,\nEng., July 20 <AP)\u2014Foreign Secretary Bevin warned today that a\nwrong decision in the relations among the powers now might condemn\nthe children of the next generation\nto war.\n\"There ls no danger of another\nwar In this generation as far ai I\ncan aee,\" the Foreign Secretary\nsaid In an extemporaneous Address\nto a coal miners' picnic here. He added, however:\n\"I feel conscious that a wrong decision, a wrong judgment, or a petulant word now might condemn the\nchildren of 30 or 40 years' time.\"\nExpressing hope that the United\nStates never again would withdraw\nfrom Europe. Bevin declared:\n\"I sincerely trust that even yet\ndifferences and suspicions might be\nremoved with. Soviet Russi aand\nthat we, a powerful nation in the\ncentral arch of the bridge in international affairs, will find a avay to\nunite the United States and Russia\nin a common endeavor for the uplift of humanity as a whole.\"\nApparently referring to France's\nprotest   against   an   agreement   to\n. LONDON, July 20 (AP) - More\nthan   4980   Germans   were   ahot,\nhanged or tortured to death In a\nrelgn  of  terror  which   followed\nthe unaucoeaaful attempt to aaaaa-\nalnate Adolf Hitler July 20, 1944,\nthe Admiralty announced today.\n\"The terror which followed (the\natempt) waa one of the wont that\nHitler  ever  organized   against  his\nown people,\" the Admiralty said in\na report based on German naval document-] captured during the war by\nBrltUh and American intelligence\noff leera.\nThe report traced the beginning of\nthe revolt, led by Col.-Gen. Ludwig\nBeck, back to 1938, when he resigned aa Chief of Staff in protest\nagainst the Intended invasion of\nCzechoslovakia.\nBeck's movement later waa Joined\nby Count von Moltke; Dr. Karl\nGoerdeler, ex-mayor of Leipzig;\nCount Friedrich Werner von der\nSchulenberg, former Ambassador in\nMoscow; Field Marshal Edwin von\nWitzleben; Col.-Gen. Erich Hoepner:\nGen. Fredirich Olbrict and Admiral\nWalter Wilhelm Canaris, Chief of\nthe Intelligence Division.\nThe report said it wis necessary\nto gain the cooperation of most of\nthe Army commanders who were\ncapable of seizing power, \"but the\none great obstacle to obtaining the\nsympathy of the Army was the personal oath of loyalty which all officers had taken to Hitler.\"\n\"For the success of Becks' movement, therefore, the assassination of\nHitler was a sina qua non (necessity.)\"\nCol. Count von Stauffenberg became a supporter of the movement\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, JULY 21, 1947 \u2014 I\nucation and lanning; Mahn Ba\nKhaing, member for Industry and\nLabor; Thakin Mya, member for Finance; Ohn Maung, Deputy Secretary, Transport and Communications\nDepartment.\n\"Wounded:  U  Ba Choe,  member | pleted.\nfor   Information;   the   Sawbwa   ofjGriiwold explained, plans to launch\nHong Kong, Counsellor for the fron- a reconstruction program  for rail-\ntier areas. I roads, highways, port work and the I rai> Vhe^lVvef of^production^in the\n\"The casualties were sent to the'Corinth Canal. 'British and American zones of Ger-\nGeneral Hospital without delay and' A newsman representing a Leftjmany> Bevln sajd the French in ef*\nthe situation is reported to have | Wing paper asked the American Ad- .fect were asking; \u2022\u2022 -=Are you g0~ng\nbeen efficiently handled bv the poi-, ministrator if he expected rebel act- j to rebuiid it (the Ruhr) for a third\nice Ilvltl\" t0 come t0 a halt by ,he *a.v\"' attack against us^' \"\n\"There is nothing in the reports ing of a magic wand. To this Gris- j .-We in thi_ country too must look\nso far received to suggest that the ! wold replied: -'I am certain you have (0 QUr Mcurjty\u00bb he added. \"We can-\nsituation is not fully under control, i more influence in that respect than^^ facp ano!her Germany of that\nFurther  information  will  be made I\" 'character and we are not going to.\"\navailable\" j    Griswold  said  he did   not  know ^    Speaking 0* British-American fin-\nGreek    political    parties    together. _nc|a] relatlonE. Bevin said\nwhen the defeat of Germany be*\ncame certain, and his \"vigorous and\ndashing personality gave an added\nimpetus to the movement.\"\nVon Stauffenberg waa to assassinate Hitler at Raatenburg, Witzleben\nto aaaume command of the\nArmy, amd Gen. von Fromm, as head\nof the Home Army, waa to aeize Berlin. AU communications with the\nGerman High Command were to be\ncut.\nThe plan miscarried, firstly be\ncause von Stauffenberg did not wait\nto make sure that Hitler was dead,\nsecondly because the communication* were not secured, and thirdly\nbecause Fromm, uncertain of Hitler's death, betrayed the movement.\"\n(Witnesses at the attempted assassination said Count von Stauffenberg, a one-armed and one-legged\nhero of the First World War, placed\na bomb under Hitler's chair at a\nstaff meeting. Stauffenberg then left\nthe room and there was a terrific\nexplosion. The Count, looking\nthrough a door which had been\nblown open, saw Hitler covered\nwith blood and lying on the floor,\nand took it for granted that the\nFuehrer was dead.)\nThe revolt ended officially Aug.\n8, \"when amidst the blare of Goeb-\nbels' propaganda those leaders who\nhad not yet been short or tortured\nt death were brought before the\nPeoples' Court and tried for high\ntreason,\" the report said.\n\"Terror raged for the next six\nmonths, and guilty and innocent\nalike were tortured and massacred\nin this, the last and worst outburst\nof the Nazis againat their own\npeople.\"\nFavors Selling City\nInterest1 in Airport\nVANCOUVER, July 20 (CP) -\nThomas Braidwood, President of the\nVancouver Board of Trade said Saturday that the Board was in favor\nof selling the city's interest in Vancouver airport to the Federal Government for $1,100,000.\nMr. Braidwood said that the Board\nfelt that necessary expenditures in\nrunways, buildings and accommodations necessary to meet expectfcd expansion in air travel would be t\nserious drag on the city's finances\nand would divert money from more\nurgent civic necessities\nTells Rossland\nBoard Gov't Aids\nIn Town Planning\nwhat the mission could do to bring\nYou have heard it said that I     ROSSLAND,   B.C.,   July   20\nPhone   144  lor  Classified   Adi     .Most o( that, he said, must be done , ,    (j,    United States  Guest speaker at the regular meet\n'-     --  l_.      .L.      f- 1.      ~.,.~l,      lk.w\u00bbll.nc -        f        r I- .   ,, D .\u201e\u201ej    D\u201e ,        .   ~, ,\nbv   the   Greek   people   themselves\nGriswold did say. however, that he \\e\"nfo7,'^llVl'vanl to\ndoubted    the   United   States   ever\nwould  recognize  a  so-called   \"free\ngovernment\" if one was set up by\nthe Rebels\nMIL TO MEAN\nDEATH FOR WIFE\nSAYS INGALLS\nJury Finds Her\nGuilty on\nCharge of Slavery\nWAIT SENTENCE\n8AN DIEGO, July 20\u2014Callfor\nnla's    sensational    slavery    trla\nfailed to reach a verdict concern\nIng one of the defendants after\nconvicting hll wife.\nA Federal Grand Jury, deliberat\ning in San Diego at the wind-up of\nthe four-week-old trial, late Saturday night could not agree on the\nguilt  or   innocence  of 64-year-old\nformer Massachusetts legislator Al\n(red Wesley Ingalls and was dismis\n.sed. With his wife, 62-year-old Mrs.\nI do not like being tied up to money ;ln8 of the Rossland Board of Trade ] Eijzabeth  Ingalls, he  was charged\nget out ofIThursday   evening   was   Doughty.wlth ensiaving a Negro maid ser\ndollar borrowing because it is un-!DaviM* \". member.of the Regional I vant   58-year-old Dora Jones,\nnatural (or them and unnatural for I Planning Division of the Dominion\nrs. 1 wan, ,\u201e keep the borrowing as \\ Bu^of.^construction^ ,^ ^ they could not reach j ^\nfyt)**i#'B*Q (W|\u00abhj\nINCORPORATE   2t\"! MAY 1670*.\nMEN'S\nPolo Shirts\n\"Cool shirts for warm\ndays.\" Tailored from a\nwashable cotton and\nstyled with crew neck\nand short sleeves. May\nbe worn as an inner and\nouter style and is ideal\nfor beach and sports\nwear. Colors, blue, yellow, white, sizes, small,\nmedium and large. Each\n$1\n.65\nMen's Tweed Slacks\nDressy tweeds to go with\nthat odd coat and jacket.\nSmartly tailored from 1\nlight weight donegal\ntweed and styled with\nthe ever'popular pleated\nand zipper front, regular\npockets and belt loops.\nSizes 30 to 38, color,\nbrown. Each\nno\n.50\nRussians Stags\nBig Sports Day\nThis   was\nn   Russia,\nthe  responsibilities  of his division\nverdict   regarding   Ingalls,   the nltaries. Accordin\nCommissioner\nTo Probe Seamen\nDispute Named\nhv   vniK enercv   tn  turn *uie   reapunsiDUHiea   ui   tus   envision, _._\u25a0\u25a0#      ~a   \\nZ-.   t\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb1i. I\u20147, __.\"\nDy >ou. energy, io ium              f same    ury had found Mrs. Ingalls,radio,   the\nkeen ui wt far as and stated that he had been sent to      .,_     _  j j    * -.\u00bb ijr.....v..._ \\ Z       j   *\nKeep us as iar as         , , i^ \u2022_ .  guilty. A descendant of Mawachus- cheered   t\netts Colonial Governor Bradford,\nMri. Ingalls was taken to the county\njail to await sentence, set for July\n29. Federal Judge Jacob Weinberger\nOTTAWA, July 20 (CPI\u2014Labor\nMinister    Mitchell     Saturay    an- ^\nnounced  appointment  of   Leonard i-?1,', '*'\n-._.!__.__  \u201e# j\"*-,** ...  \u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0 C.rsm.   Dl.saU\nW, BrocVington of Ottawa at Com\nsioner to Inquire Into a depute\nbetween the Canadian Seamen's\nUnion and the Canada Steamships\nLimited of Montreal, and the Bar\nnil and Colonial Steamship Com\npantei Limited, Port Colborn\nOnt.\nMr. Brockingtnn. will investigate\ncharges by the CSV that the companies arr not carrying out terms of\n,, collective agreement signed last\nSept. 3 between thr companies and\ntheir employees, members of the\nTrades and Labor Cnngres*\nThr Union claims the companies\nart\" violating the agreement by hiring ur.licensed personnel, refusing\n:*i allow union officers tn h >ard\nship*, ar.d in their arbitration procedure\nA Labor Department official said\nthe differences appeared tn involve\n{hr Canadian Lake Seaman's Union\nar.d \"may result in a serious duloca*\nlion of communicators \"\nThe Commissioner will report d:\nrertly to the Labor Minister on his\nfinding,*\nLose Race With\nDeath in Trail\nBaby's Illness\nlow as I can, and I call on every\nworkman\nthe stuff o\\it to ...\nyou can out of the money lenders', assist ln sny way he could in town\nI hinds tor years and years. planning. It was the policy of the\n\"It  is hard  negotiating with the'Bureau    of    Reconstruction,    Mr\npeople to whom you are in debt *'; Davies said, to make  the  services\nBevin said that every bit of food of an engineer available wherever ordered her con',*ned desp,te the im\nj grown in backyard gardens in Bn- \u25a0    city    or    municipality    showed ,      , ,      Us tha,     ,\nUln this year \"saved us dollars ov-ldefinlt, interest in town planning. *P J     mean her death. The\nerseas and kept us out of the money'    The speaker described the steps to,     ;> hi h   h(,\nlenders* grip.'* >   followed   In   a   city   where   a \u2122 f\\ation of the thirteenth\n|    Health   Minister   Aneurin   Bevan : voluntary    town     plannm*    c\u2122\" amcndment to the American Consti-\ntold the miners that tf the House of mission is to be se   up by the City ; jn     ,       , $MOfl\nLords, which he described a, \"the, Council    In   consultation   with    he or both\/The United statrs At.\nlast refuge of ignorant reaction\" in commission it w\u00abs the jiuty of the |torney  Gen\u00a3ral  haJ  n0,   *ndical(,d\nimmediately whether the action will\nMOSCOW July 20 \u2014\nPhysicial Culture Day\nand throughout the Soviet Union\nther9 were sports and games and\nmess displays of group gymnastics\nSetting the pace for the rest of\ntrfe country was a five-hour sports\ndemonstration in Moscow's Dynamo Stadium. Premier Stalin put\non his light grey Generalissimo's\nuniform for the event, and oc-\nSix hours before reporting to theicupjed   a   [ront   row   ,eat  In   the\nreserved for Government dig\nSeek Means of\nDealing Wilh\nAtomic Thefts\npearance.\nWASHINGTON, July 20-Charges\nagainst two former American Army\nSergeants accused of taking atomic\nbomb documents fnr souvenirs hai\nset the United States Justice DeparU\nto the Moscow:ment in motion.\ncrowd   In   the  stadium!    n  was  revealed  today  thit  th\u00ab\nthe   Generallissimo's   ap-1 Department's  tAtorneys are  going\nMr. Davies\ngovernment's sonnlist program, it stated, to submit a master plan, to\nwould be stripped of its last remain- gether with a draft zoning bylaw\ning powers\nlhe Council,   In   consultation   with\nnorant reaction\" in commission it was the duty of'the\npersisted in obstructing the Dominion    engineer,\nbe pressed against Ingalls,\nfor the consideration of the council i It was the first outright\nThe plan would be subject to the'caie tried since\nrevisions    which    local    conditions ended, Dora Jones, the alleged vie- ca\nmight  dictate  and  wis not  to  be lim of an enslavement which is said\nconsidered a static program to have lasted for 40 years, was on\nMr     Davies    was    thanked    bv her way to St. Louis. She says she uePanm\u2122l\nChairman G. W Hertig and referred will make her home with a brother,\nto the Hhairman nf the Board Town and that she expects never to see\nPlanning Committee,  A   Snowball\nA  discussion   period   followed   Mr\nDavies' talk and many points were\nclarified   for   the   members  of  the\nBoard\nNEW  BOOKLET\nVICTORIA, B C   Julv 20-Police'    The   Board   ratified   the   recom.\nare holding to lhe theory of suicide mendation of the council that pre\nand  attempted  murder  in  the case ptration  be  made immediately\n*f 17-vear-old Luke Harold Nelson, the publication of a new\nThe   vnuth   a   brilliant   third   ye.r Rossland  fnr statistical  and  publi-\nitudent in High Schoni, was found city   purposes   The   one   published\ndead   Saturdav   and   his   father\n' See Attempted\nMurder, Suicide\nIn (oast Fracas\nover the Atomic Energy Law wita\nlegal advisers to the Atomic Energy Commission They hope to de;\nterm ine- if the statute contains loop^\nholes which need closing or other revision. And they still are scratching their heads over the problem of\nwhat dn with thr two ex-G L's\nThe FBI aays the secret document!\n! removed from the atomic project at\n\u25a0 Los   Alamos,   New   Mexixco.  have\nbeen  recovered,   The  big  queition\n| now  is how to punish alleged of-\n' fenders    without    revealing    atom\nMOSCOW   July   20\u2014Thf   Soviet bomb secrets in court.\nEmbassy   let   it   be   known   today     Officials say that a private trial\nslavery:that Russia  was not  representedat tn protect the secrets Is out of the\n\\s the trial'at the  first   International  meeting question   since   it   :s   forbidden   by\nlied   by   the   United   States   on the constitution, and in trial the evi-\nJapanese    Peace    Treaty.   Th'.s denee must bt presented in court\nwas  confirmed   by  the  US.  State\nRuss Skipped\nFirst Jap\nTreaty Meeting\nfor\nbooklet nn\nMr. and Mrs. Ingalls again\n\t\nR. C. Billingsley\nHeads Trail Union\nmeeting    in    question   wss\nlied   by   Asistant   Secretary   of\nState   John   H.   Hilldring   for   the\npurpose  of  presenting  the  Ameri-\nNATURAL DEATH\nVANCOUVER, July 20 TP> -\nAutopsy  performed  on 63-year-old\nJohn   Donnelly,   Cl.iv hum   farmer\nnan    proposals    for    a    Japanese  who dird in his  hotel room early\nTreaty   It  took   place  nn  July   11. today   revealed   death   was   from\nAt the time, the word came out natural causes.\nthat 11 countries, including Russia.     Police had earlier found a quan-\nattended   the   conference. titv of rat poison In the dead man'i\nAfter   a   week   of   silence,   tlie pn^ets.  The. medical  examination\nSoviet  Embasv   issued a statement attributed death to a s'nmich ulcer\nvear-old    Axel    Nejson,    seriously\n;Ao*,;nded\nEvidence indicated that thp father\nstaggered from his hnme to notify\n.i neighbor to call police, then re-\nturned home. There police found\nthr boy\u2014dead in a pool of blood, his\nwindpipe severed and an eight-inch\n;v]'-her knife under h:< head His\nbody was otherwise unmarked. His\nta'.r.tr was lying semi-conscious on\n~x nearby bed. Wounds in his head\nand hands required 26 stitches\nPolice believe  th\n.-.flirted   while   hr\nThe   on*1\nast  year  received  wide circulation\nHild the edition is now exhausted.\nAfter considerable discussion, the\nmatter of more signs to mark the\nentrance to the city and the highway to Trail was left to the Publicity Committee with instructions to\nact in conjunction with the Junior\nBoard.\nMurray Gibson was appointed by\nthe B\"ard to driw up a brief on\nlocal transportation services Complaints had been received that it\nwas no' possible for passengers\nentering Trail over the Kettle\nwounds were Valley line to get transportation to\ntempting  Rossland  for some hours\nTRAIL, BC, Julv 20 - Results\nof Local 480, I U M M. & S.W. elec-\ntion of officers, the new slate of Department to mnke this\nofficers elected by referendum,'ment: a Soviet representativ\nfollows:\nPresident, R. C. Billingsley; Vice-\nPresident, W. J. Melvin; Secretary-\nTreasurer and Business Agent, D. A\nBerry; Recording - Secretary, K.\nRidgers; Warden, C. McMartin;\nConductor, W Godber; Trustees, L\nHamilton and G. 3rennan; Rossland\nExecutive Member, B. McAuley;\nFruitvale Executive Member, H\nDillmg; International Convention\nDelegate, R. C. Billingsley.\nTRAIL. H\nrare   with   de,\nas   tw '-week\n', Julv ;o\n' h  w u  1 os\n'   old .Gar-\nriled ;n h.-apita, here a\nVancouver so ight to\n(frnm   to   Ihr   victin\nstieam infect-on\nThe babv d.ed us p>\nstreamed their way\n-'.reets   ot   Van \u25a0 ><\\\\ti\nCT'   -\nSaturday\nBellamy\nr.ith* rit:es in\njh anti-toxir\nnf   a    blood\nto word nff knife thrusts. Walls and\n[!oor< of the  dining  room,  kilrhen,\nbedrpom,   fror.!   hall   ar.d   verandah  prpsing   the   disappointment   of  th*\nwere   iplatered   with   blood   Father  Board in the amount of work done\nar.d son had been living alone 6ince  on  thf. Paterson and  Rossland-Trail\nThe Secretary was instructed to\nrite J L Webster, M L A , ex-\nresing  the  disappointment\ndeath of Mrs   Nelson two yeirs  highways this year\nMRS. K. WEBB\nBACK FROM\nWEST.INDIES\n140 Locomotives\nBuilt for\nFrance by Canada\nWen\nOTTAWA   ,\nfur-ones hA'e\nproduced Un\nFrench Rail\nember,    lM-'i\nhe\\\nily   20 Cai.\nannounced thnt\n1,-com \"ive*. foi tl.\navs between Dec\nand    Mav    of    I'M\ned  at  three\nimprmrg   the\nTrinidad.   Sl\nFn  route Mia\ni\u00ab,ted   S'atej  points   in-\nYork ard Florida\nf Denmark. Mn Webb\nus Dist; irt  for iome 24\nng    for    the\noperated      Kokanee\nhuiband for several\nMormons to\nDedicate Monument\nSALT LAKE CITY, July 20 'AP'\n-This is the week that Utah recaVs\nthe words \"This is the place \"\nThe State's centennial celebration,\n! under wav (or more than six\nj months, reaches a climax in the next\n| few days\nKeystone event of the week-and\nfni the first century of Utah's his-\njurv as a home for permanent while\nsettlers will hr Thursday when 'he\nt.isn iwio '\u25a0This-is the-place\" monument  :s dedicated\nThen,   on   the   spot   whee   Brig\nham   Young,   second   President   of |mK\nthe Latter-Day Saints Church, gaz-      Ka\nof silence, tlie\nIssued a statement\ndenying a US. S+ate Department\nPress release which asserted a.\nRussian representative had been\npresent   at   the   meeting\nThis stirred the American Sta'e\nom-\nwas\ninvited to the Hilldring Conference,  but  did   nnt  actually  appear\nWhen his absence bfcame apparent, the department rushed out\na copy of the American proposal*'\nto the Soviet Embassy. Said the\nUS.   State -Department:\n\"It is H<**nr that all fen Government! were consulted simultaneously \"\nWhat Is not clear from any of\nthe statements is why the Russians did not attend the meeting\nwhen everybody else had time to\nge>t tfiere From all evidence. :'\nappears that the Soviets simp'v\npreferred  to  stay  iway\nThere Is speculation whether\nthis Is an Indication of Russia'*\nreaction tn American plans fni\na veto-free setup at the Japane-e\nIPeace  Conference.\ncondition.\nHOME STUDY\nBRINGS  BIGGER  PAY\nDon't be caught\nnapping when Op-\nportunitv  knock\ns   Prepare   for  ad\nvancement   and\nmire   mone*   by\ntraining now f*~r\nth\" ]oh ahead.\nHiKh'r Ac-nui-.tnncv - C 0 A\nCoaching -- TxpT* Bookkwplng \u2014\nSalesmanship I.ax   --   Traffic\nManagtmf-.l - Ind::<*::\u00abl Manag's-\nrrserit \u2014 H'lsirrss M*i\"*s\u00a3\u2022-rr.^r-1 \u2014\nForem\u00bbr-sh:p - r Mr Sp<-\u00bbk*r\u00ab -\nMachine Shorthand\nLA SALLE\nExtension   University   iChlc\nA Ci rresp^rclrr.re lnst!!*i1\nRC   Office   17*15  W   llm,,.!\n1,0)\nChristen Cranbrook\nInfanf at*\nNew Denver Church\nIt C     J'llv   ?fl\nPhc\nH r\nV..\nr R\nline*.\nT*ies\nRnwFN. Mjr   >\nfoi  Arh*..*rJmen\n1 We.-l   nr.lv\nnew nrxvFR\nl   S'ephen's Anjlrvi Ch*i:C* *.. >\n-,   ir.-r   <-l   A-    -firrri'-.fi   rb-   ,\nterm! Friday \u2022\u25a0'hen *).:'\u2022\"]\u2022 II   Em!\nffinated\nen 1\/Tine Dcnev *sas '**\ned across Salt Lake Valley, )ust 100 nam? bestowed on the infer.* -i.>*u*'\nyears eaiher and pronounced the.|f, \u201e| p,tr ,nr] Mrs Ernest 1)\nhistoric phrase M'hich\nthe Monnon pioneers\nhad    reached   their\nmean   that\nn  his party\nnew   Zlon.   a\nback\nited\nloi*\nir, of Cranbrook. BC  Godpaiep*\nwere  Mr   and   Mrs   Archie Rohm\nof   Tacoma    Wash,  and   am*\nE   Avluin of Trul   .\nThry   represent  more  than   18  mil-\nf  hon'   dollths'    worth    **f    contracts\n. p:ared wilh thi Montreal Locomotive Works s-*d the Canadian\nI>'rnniiive Company These pre\nlhe firs.* engines ever to be\nbuilt   in   Canada   for   France    Ai.'l\ncUsJ.   Vn.m'e's  \"\"w'uwd   'in* cZ h.gh  and  Ml  fee.   long  will  be un-   f_m,lv tea was held ...er th, ce\n.da,   except   (or   a   few   minor   dif- veiled mony  at the home of Mis   Done\nferenceis Th\"  monument was designed by sister,   Mr    and   Mrs    (.eorge\nFor   instances   the   French   Rail the    noted    sculptor    Mahonn    M*Teir\nwas-s   in-   diffeienl   iniuphng   de- Young, grandson of Brigham ^oung,     Tho.se   present   weie  Mis   M\nsices    and    bumpers,    and    \u201e*,,teid and ahnvvi in Its central section 17-   Avlwin   Mr   a-d Mrs  F:**\"* P**i\nof  lhe   norma]  Canadian   Bells  and fool    biome   figures   of   President  Si      Bishop   Embling.   Miss   N\nheadlights,   the   engine   aie   equip* Young and hLs two counsellors.,Hetv  Aylwin  of Trail,  Mi    and  Mrs\nad planned on pt(j    wlib    the    French     'Peanut er C   Kimball and Wilford Wood-R    Tipple,   Mr    and   Mis    Fro\n''   whittle'*   eighty   per   rent   of   tl,** ruff  Seventy-five other bronie fig-  poney,   ,'i     ind   daugn'ei    ,'id\nlomotives   \"il'bu-n   oil   and   lhe un*s     show     early - day     Western   pone*.*   of  Cranbrook   ar.d   M:    a\nre-a:rde:   \"i'l   us  r-*a! explorers ' Mrs   George Teir\n,\/TSNfW ANDFVIN>\nMORI IftlCtlVl\niUGHHYPlRfUrAtO\nn Nor sror -\nIFAVfS NO ST4INS\n(5 NON-IRRITANT\nBiRCK FtllS.MOSQUITOfS\n m^mmm\n-umzwww\n\u2014 NIUON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, JUIY V, 1t47\nLove Problems\nBy JANE ATKINSON\nGirls Have Plenty to Say About\nComplaints of Returned Soldiers\nWell ,boys, you* certainly crawled\nwit on the end of a limb when you\nwrote me those letters complaining\nhat the girls you came back to\nifter the war weren't the same ones\nrou left behind.\nThe girls have plenty to say to\nrou about that, and though they\n.ay it very politely. In the letters\nJiey've written me replying to your\njharges, they make it clear that\n;hey think the shoe is on the other\nloot.\nTheir Idea is that you're looking\n,t things hindside too; that you're\nthe ones who've changed, not they.\nthey think if you'd -stayed the\nlame, you'd find the girls just as\nnice and just as companionable and\n|ust as desirable as they ever were.\nBut because you've come home with\nvery different viewpoint from the\nDIM, you had when you went away,\nyou've got yourselves mixed up and\nhave jumped to the conclusion that\nIt'a the other fellow who's changed.\nOh, the girls admit to having\n[grown older and wiser. What would\n[you expect, after several years, and\nhorrifying war, have passed over\n[their heads? They admit, too, that\njin the process of growing up, and\nln the confusion of the topsy-turvy\nworld in which they had to live,\naome of them here and there became bewildered and lost their\nheads.\nBut in the main, they insist, most\n|of them held on to their basic ideals\nland standards, and in so doing, they\nadd a bit sardonically, find them-\naelves at decided disadvantage with\nreturned GIs who seem to them to\nhave their minds on women rather\nthan wives, on liquor instead of\nlove, and on raising hell rather\nthan children.\nI'd like to give you all of the\nmoit Interesting letters ln full but\napace limitations make that impos-\nglble. Here are some extracts, however, from one written by a girl\nwhose age I place st 22 or 23, since\nahe says she was 17 when the war\natarted.\nAfter   txplainlng   that   up   until\nThe Doctor\nthen the had associated only with\nmy own circle of friends who were\nboys and glrli I had known for\nmany years and who had the aame\nideals as 1 have,\" she goes on to\n'say:\n\"Now that the war is over, and\nmost of tha fellows are homt ... it\nseems that no matter where you\nmeet one of them he just doesn't\nhave any respect for you. you can\nmeet them at church dances, in\nyour office, in your neighborhood,\nand it is the same thing over and\nover again. They seem to have lost\nall their ideals while they were in\nservice . . .\n\"There happen to ba a number of\ngirls, too, who weren't itrong\nenough to stick to their ideals, to\nbelieve in them and wait for the\nday when the fellows will realize\nthat they must have ideals or their\nmarriages will never succeed. But 1\nalso know girls who will never forget their ideals even when some\ncharming young man tries to talk\nthem into doing it. But they are\nthe girls who are sitting home\nnights, or going to the movies with\ntheir girl friends.\"\nAs for the charge that girls aren't\ninterested In lads who haven't cars,\nor the money to show them a high\ntime, or husbands who can't buy\nthem everything they want, another\nof my feminine correspondents has\nthis reply to make:\n\"The young man quoted in your\narticle says lhat we girls want\nmaterial things. That's not really\ntrue. I have yet to meet a decent\nfellow who would enjoy going for a\nnice walk as much as he'd enjoy\nstopping In at the nearest bar, or\none who would like taking a nice\nbus or boat ride or just go visiting\nfriends. If there are any such\nfellowi around, I'd certainly Uke to\nknow where they are hiding!\n\"We haven't changed, fellows.\nTake a good inventory of yourselves. You are the ones who\u00abhave\nchanged, and it's about time some\none put you wiseio that.\"\nWell, boys, that'i just a starter.\nBARCLAY ON BRIDGE\nrf*     *     '\u00bb*'\nBy Shepard Barclay\nThe Anthorlty on AuthoritteV*\nN\nW E\nS\n410 3\nf S 7 4\n* A 10 fl .1\n2\n*Q 10 8\nBy HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D.\nEpidemic Diarrhea That Has\nSAVING THK BIO CARDS\nRUFFING THE ttnt or second\nround of \u00ab suit with the see, klnf\nor queen, when your tide lacks\nthe lower honors, would never be\nconsidered In ordinary circumstances, I' Instead you could uss\n\u25a0 email trump. Thoee blj cards\nahould usually be retained for use\nIn trump leads or ln ruffing later\nrounds of a juit, when there is\nneed for protection against a\nprobable over-ruff. But the declarer who does not look forward\na bit ln the eirly stages may Inadvertently compel himself to\nmake such an * unsound play,\nlater *sn.\n+ KQ42\n\u00bbK J8\u00ab\n+J8754\nm None\nIJ 7 6\n\u2022 10 5 J\n4K6\n+ A J 9 7\n4\ntAtll\n\u2022 AQ\u00ab\n\u2666 Q\n+K6532\n(Dealer: East Both sides vulnerable.)\nEast*      South    West     North\nPass        14     Pais       14\nPau 14      Fan       ' \u2666\nPass 4*\nRe all xlng that South waa\n(narked as able to ruff diamonds\nand North as able to ruff clutw,\nWest decided to impa|r the cross-\nruff at the outset by leading a\ntrump, his 6. South followed\nold force of habit by playing the\n2 from dummy before studying\nthe rest of the hand, since he had\nthe 9 and 8. When East put In\nthe 10, he won with the A and\nthen figured out how he should\nplay. Not until now\u2014too late\u2014\ndid he see that he could not ruff\ntwo clubs In the dummy except\nby using the K or <J, which\n\u2022hould be used on trump tricks.\nSo he decided to seek 10 tricks\nhy ruffing two diamonds In the\nSouth. He led to the heart J and\n^ent.ajdjamond^forth to^the Q\nand K. .Wast nturned the apada\n7 to the K. Now the second round\ndiamond waa trumped by tha\napade 8, the club 2 ruffed by the\napada 4 and the third round diamond ruffed by the ipade 9. But\nthat third-round ruit was rliky.\nIn fact, Weat over-ruffed with\nthe J. If that had not happened\nSouth could have scored his heart\nA and gone to dummy with the\nQ to the K. The ipade Q would\nhavt cleared trumps and tha\nheart 8 would have completed tha\ncontract. But with Welti otrar-\nruff his contract became Impossible.\nSouth, If ha had looked ahead,\n(would have taken tha opening\nlead with Die spade K ln order to\nsave the two small trumps for\nruffing. He should then have led\na diamond and won the trump\nreturn with the Q. Then he could\nhave ruffed one diamond with the\napade 9, a flrst club with ths\nspade 2. could have led to the\nheart A and ruffed a second club\nwith the spade 4. Then he could\nhave led to tha heart Q. cleared\nspades with the A, lad to tha\nheart K and scored the J for tha\ntenth trick. Thli way he would\nnot have had to count on Weat\nhaving three cards in each red\nsuit. A doublcton ln each would\nhave been enough to make his\ncontract safe.\n\u2022   t   .\nTame-crow's Problem\n4>K 8\n\u25a0\u00bbKQJ8\n49 8 2\n\u2666 AQJ9\n4Q104   |    N    |   4A97151\n\u2666\/ A 9 6 4 \t\n4> K 10 4 3\n+ 8 5\n4J63\n#10 5\n\u2666 AQ7\n*K7 848\n(Dealer: East East-West vulnerable.)\nWhy should South not take tha\ndiamond Unease alter Weit leads\nthe club 8 against nta 6-Clubs7,\nBeauty Hints .\nBy IDA JEAN KAIN\nSlimming Is Natural in Summer\nWhsn Foods Are Low in Calories\nCalories and fuel are tha same\nthing, and Summtr or Winter, blow\nhot or cold, the heat units must either be burned for energy or stored\nas fat. Some foods are higher In fuel\n(calorie*) than others. More heat*\ning too. And that ls exactly why a\npork roast with browned potatoes\nand rich gravy is not appetizing in\nhot weather.\nAnd it's the reason lt is easier to\nreduce in hot weather. The heat\ntakes the edge off your appetite and\nteh season's foods are low in calories. So, unless you go out of the way\nto get extra calorics, slimming ls\nnatural In Summer.\nBut ln Summer dlihes, the trimmings can pile on calories. If you\nreally would like to end the Summer 15 pounds slimmer, go down the\nline and pare off the main trimmings. Asparagus is low in calories, five per stalk, but Hollandaise\nsauce adds 100 per tahlespoon.Leav\nsauce adds 100 per tablespoon.\nLeave off the sauce, and use a little\nmelted butter Instead . . . one-half\nTasty Rec\nlei about the loss at vitamin A\nthrough the use of mineral oil. The\nuse of vitamin concentrate, furnishing 5000 units of vitamin A, the normal requirement, gets around the\nproblem, for thla form of vitamin\nA is hot particularly affected by\nmineral oil. And when the concentrate is taken immediately after\nbreakfast, or before retiring, and\nthe dressing used at unch or dining wa\nner, there is no danger of the vitamin A being carried off. The use of\nnon-fattening French dressing\ndoes make reducing easier, moreover it heps to promote reguarity.\nThe recipe is incuded on the new\nSummer diet leaflet.\nSummer fruits are now in calories\nuntil cream is added. A scant one-\nfourth cup is 100 calories, thin\ncream at that. One tablespoon of\nheavy cream is 60 calories, and one\nand three-fourths tablespoon of\nwhipped cream adds 60 calorics.\nThen of course . . . there's sugar,\nTry using half as much sugar as you\nordinarily use. The first time you\nteaspoon is only 18 calories. All won't like it, the second time it\nSummer vegetables are low in cal- .an't so bad and before you know\nories, until cream sauce is added to lit beverages and berries will taste\nthe cooked ones, and mayonnaise j better with less sugar! Appetite is\nor French dressing to the salad veg- jjke that _ iL*s iflrgejy habit. By\netables. the way, sweeten iced tea when it's\nConcerning the reducer's French hot, and it takes less sugar. Let the\ndressing, there are many requests small amount of sugar set on your\nfor the recipe for mineral oil dress-I individual dish of berries for an\ning, and an equal number of inquir- 'hour or more; they'll taste sweeter.\nFor Parents\nBy GARRY CLEVELAND MYERS, Ph.D.\nSummer Time Ideal for Giving\nYour Child a Medical Checkup\nYoung children ihould not be fed,\nhighly seasoned or over rich foods.\nThey do like well-seasoned dishes,\nhowever, and their food should always be attractively served, never\nsloppy. Mealtime impressions ln the\nearly years last through life.\nWhile children cannot always eat\nthe foods prepared for grown-ups,\nthe reverse is true. Grown-ups can\nalways partake of a child's meals\nafter said child is past babyhood. In\nfact, a child's diet is healthful for\nthe adult. Take, for instance, the\nfollowing menu, and you will see\nwhat I mean.\nTODAY'S  MENU\nBreakfast\nOrange or Tomato Juice\nWhole Grain Cereal\nButtered Toast   Crisp Bacon   Jam\nMilk or Cocoa\nwith Coffee for Adults, if preferred\nLuncheon\nPoached Egg on Toast\nor boiled  Rice\nButtered Greens\nCarrot Sticks Sliced Bananas\nCookie Milk\nDinner\nPan Fried Liver\nOr Hamburger Patties\nPlain Boiled New Potatoes\nButtered  Young  Carrots\nCabbage  Slaw\nCaramel Pudding      Milk      Coffee\nBETSY NEWMAN\nThere are two schools of thought\n(at least)  oA poaching eggi. Oni\nauthority sayk to Uka three ptntl\nof water\u2014fl cu|s\u2014add 1 tbsp. vinegar and Vt tbsp\\jalt and stir vigorously around ani, iround the edg\u00ab\nof saucepan, using wooden spoon\nheld in nearly upright position\nwhile water is baling vigorously.\nAs soon ai. a well il farmed in middle of water, slip in an egg and lower heat until white is pet. Take out\nwith a skimmer and keep hot until\nthe desired number of tggs are prepared.\nThe other advocates a -hallow pan\nor frying pan. Heat salted water to\nthe boiling point; break an egg into\na saucer, and slip it gently into tht\nwater. Repeat until desired number\nof eggs are in. Remove the pan from\nthe fire, cover and keep hot until\nthe eggs are set to the desired degree. If yolks are not entirely covered, spoon water carqfully over\nthem until they are co;i|rd white.\nRemove with a skimmer ur perforated ladle.\nFRIED LIVER\nCalf's liver.'beef liver, Iamb liver\nand pig's liver are all good. Calf's\nNow is the time to -prepare your\nchild for entering school next September. Thanks to the summer\nround-up program of the Parent-\nTeachers Association, many tots old\nenough to enter\nfirst   grade   next\nCARAMEL  PUDDINO\n1 c. brown sugar\n2 c. milk\nVt c. flour\n2 eggs\nMix sugar and \\Vt c. milk and\nscald in a double boiler until sugar\nis dissolved. Mix flour with beaten\negg yolks and the rest of th? milk\nand blend smoothly. Add to hot milk\nmixture, stirring until it thickens.\n.Remove from fire, and fold in stiffly\nliver is considered   he choicest andjbeaten egg whites. chill and serve\nsome People will take no other, but wlth whippe(1 cream.\nbeef and lamb liver are often tender'\nand have excellent flavor.\nIn buying liver, select meat with\nvery little odor and of a bright red\ncolor. Wipe liver with a damp cloth,\nand if it seems tough, parboil for 5\nminutes before cooking, One pound\nwill serve 4. Dredge liver slices with\nflour, sprinkle with salt and pepper,\nand fry ln bacon fat turning frequently until brown on both sides\nud tender throughout. Cook xk inch\nRegualte the use of the radio and   ljces about 5 minutes; Overcookin\nremediable physical derecls.\nDENTIST AND DOCTOR\nAlso children of school age, even\nof high schoot age, should have a\nkindergarten orot.ee over now by the family dentist\nFall   have   beenj and doctor and such dental and med-\ntoughens liver.\nPOACHED IGG3\nprotect the child from the gory programs on the air. Children of school\nBeauty, Enjoyment Found in Supply\nTrip on Picturesque Duncan\nI  BY MRS, MARJORIE HOWARD  ,up   tht\nj    HOWSER   July   20,   \u2014   Leaving landing.\nI at   11:30   a.m.   Sunday   from   Uie'ha If\ntht   building   of,dock at Howser In a 20 foot boat ment\nriver   we   came   to   the\nWalking inland about a\nmile we reached a settle-\nof   lng   buildings   this   was\ntaking supplies to camp II of the*camp  II.  beehive  or  activity   that\nsue;! Duncan   Lake   Lumber   Co..   is   a mearis real hard work for all who\nStruck Hospital Nurseries\nWhere  hospitals  are  overcrowd-1 ar\u00ab   needed   for\n\u2022d, and under-staffed, as they haveibody  tissue.\nbeen   during   recent   years,   It   is*   Some  physicians have had  _\u201e_, _ .\nnot surprising  that  there  may  be-ccss in  treating epidemic diarrheal weekly occurence on the picture-- take  part.\ntn occassional breakdiwn in proper with   the   sulfonamide   drugs   and sque Duncan Lake and may seem |    We   arrived   ln  ti\ntechniques. Such breakdowns, how-'penicillin.  Each  case  requires  in- of   little   interest   to   one   making'After   wash in**   \u00bb**\n\u2022ver, can have tragic effects. 'dividual attention. Of course. when|the trip regularly\nThis is well demonstrated by the a(n\n\u2022pidemic    diarrhea    which    sometimes has swept through nurseries \"\u00ab\u25a0\u2022-\u25a0>; \u2014- ---       - - ,\nior the  new-born,  and  which  has'we11- In some instances it may be; operations  are in  full swing. root cellar, meat house and stables\n\u25a0   \u25a0   'necessary  to  close the  nursery  in'    On  the East side we first came     **r*\u201e       .        . T       .\n-    \u25a0\u25a0    \u00ab ...     i-..   ,._.     inen   ti   re-turn   home.   Leaving\nchecked physically and their parents! ical care as is advised by them.\nhave been told of any surgical orl    Summer is a good time to build* age should be required to do some\nmedical needs. | uPt with the doctor's guidance, the' regular Jobs about the home daily.\nIf your child has not been reached i malnourished or nervous child. With j\nby this program you should have j ample play in the sunlight, this child ATTITUDE TOWARD SCHOOL\nyour own dentist and doctor exam- also needs regular rest periods and | Build up in the young child (who\nine him at once and give him the sleep. Very excitable children, espe-| will begin school in September) a\nnecessary dental and medical care.cially those who bite their nails or: hopeful attitude toward school. Be\nimmediately. If adenoids or diseased'stutter should be required during the sure that when you have trouble at\ntonsil are to be removed, for ex- Summer to be quiet without radio, disciplining him you do not say such\n.tmple. early Summer is the best'or playmates for a few hours each; a silly thing es, \"Wait till you get\ntime, giving the child ample time for afternoon. For practically all chil-1 to school. Your teacher will make\nrecovery. For many a young child dren, indeed, such rest periods would you mind.\" Also protect him, if pos-\nbeginning school may be strained be helpful, not only to them but to sible, from fearful things told him\nenough  without the hampering  ofi their mothers. 'about school by older children.\nme  for  dinner\nto   one   making After   washing   we   answered   thc\nTo me  tt  was dinner   g<mg   by filing   into    the\nday of exciting events. dininR   room.  The  o.ok  d:d   him-\n,t is important that the sick babies I    On  board  were   six   loggers   re- self   proud.   After   dinner   we   en-\nbe separated from those which are.tflrning  to  camp  II  when  logging joyed  inspecting the  bunk  houa-es\noutbreak   occurs  in  a  nursery:\naused so many deaths among bab\nles   of   war   brides   traveling\nAmerica   in   overcrowded   ships.\nACCORDING  TO   STUDIES\nAccording to studies made under our direction in the city of\nChicago, ns well as the staement\nof Dr. Martin J. Glynn of Cornell\nUniversity Medical College, there\nll some evidence that perhaps\nthose who take care of babi\u00ab in\nthese nurseries may be responsible for carrying  the  disease from\n4q order to check the epidemic.\nTIME TO DRESS\nUP AGAIN SAY\nFASHION HEADS\nto South Bay a cool clear bay\nresembling an Inlet with ita high\nmountain range hugging its shores\nto its 2-mile length. We passed\nthe mouth of the bay and continued on our way. Mountains of\n-considerable height beautifully\nthick with great standing timber\nsurrounded this 12 mile lake, a\nBy DOROTHY ROE 'common sight in this part of B C\nNTW YORK. July 20 <AP>-The From   where    we    were    situated\nRrande dame returns to the fashion. at   the   falls   and   creeks   coming\n*  .    . . -    - ..       ,,,.        ...  .   scene next Fall, swishing her taf- from    snowy    peaks    looked    like\n2?* u^L^\u2122\"!^-,\u2122e\" .K:'^3 Petticoats and tossing her regal ribbons   of   silver   white   winding\ntrain. and  joining  as they  descended  t\"\nShe bears no resemblance to the. lhe lake. As we neared the muu'h\nneat, streamlined North American of the Upper Duncan River we\nwoman of the last few years, who guided   thc   boat   through   a   gap\nthat it may be spread from milk or\n\u2022ome other food which the baby\nmay receive. This infection mav\nbe a serious one but much danger\nwhic   he   lias   found\ntreatment.  Dr\nn   treatm*\niuccessful.\nIn order to control the diarrhea\nthe baby is not given any food\nby mouth unt:! he has not passed\n.a stool for at least 12 hours Thii\nitarvation treatment is usually for\nfrom   W   tn   3fi   hmrs.\nOnce the diarrhea has been\nchecked the biby is offered small\namounts nf water at frequent Intervals The air Mint of water is\ngradually increased Then the\nwater :i repl-cvi by milk. Breafr'.\nmilk Is, of curse, best. If it is\nnot available, a skimmed and milk\nmay r ' hr em; 1 .yed. As the baby\ncon times tn nmvrr. milk uith a\nhigh\": test portent nay then be\ngiver, and finally s*:r.e sugar mav\nbe nddrd tn the milk feeding.\nMUST   RECEIVE   FLUIDS\nOf curse, do: ing the period of\nitarvation snd after, the baby must\nreceive fluid.1 These may be given\nby Injecticn into a vein or under\nthe skin d<*p*\"r*d:\".i' on the preparation employed Sodium lactate and\nbrU solution* as well as i:aic-*se\nlitions   arr\nWh'ilfi     bin\nfluid par:\nUieful 'H\npreparnti -t\nare nUo -<l\nthe miM,,:\ntre m i !*\u25a0\nIn the pauch boom\nFrom there on up\ncareful navigation as the nver\ncurrent ia swift, due to high water\nAt one bend in the river we came\nto a beach channel. The current at that point swerves in that\ndirection, Making it difficult in\ndirecting    the   booms   further   on\nCaptain of Refugee\nShip in Jail From\nShipboard Battle\nBy  CARTER   L.  DAVIDSON\nHAIFA. Palestine, Julv 2H (An\nThe Ameriran Captain of the ref'\nnd beaded lace .dramatic evening gee ship Exodus 1347 wai reported\n:loaks with flowing rape backs, Saturday to be in jail as a result of\nfabulous gowns of gold and silver a shipboard battle between more\nlame, cocktail frocks with com- than 4500 illegal Jewish Immigrants\npletely circular accordian pleated and an Uritiih marine* which left\nskirts. three dead and more than 30 injur-\nKiam achieves a completely new Qfj\nlink  by the use of shoulders that     0np of the dead waj identified by\nare rounded but still padded, vanes a Br,tilh 0II-.cer a, (;ri. Inale Walt-\nthr   silhouette   from   wide,   pleated!..  Bernstein  of  Loi  Angeles   The\nofficer said Bernstein d\nthan over-dressing, who swore by\n'he tailored suit as a workaday uniform and kept her evening gowns,\nif any, as simple as her house\ndresses.\nThe lid ii off this year, and designers are making the most of their\nnew freedom, revelling in the return of 10-yard skirts and imported\nlaces and silks.\nOne of the ringleaders ip the revival of the era of elegance is Omar\nKiam, of the House of Ben Reig,\nwho shows an opulent collection.\nHn theory is that it's time for\nwomen to dress up again and he\nprovides the inducements, with\nelaborate   evening   gowns  of   satin\nthe logging site we bearded our\nboat needing little power down\nstream we entered the back channel to avoid lhe pauch boom\nThis char rel winds its way at\nthe base of the mountain, bringing the falls io very c!os*| and\na lao giving an excel lent view < f\nthe rock formation shewing how\nthis past rugged Winter disfigured\nthe   mountains  by  slides  etc.\nDuck, and geese accompanied\nus along the river char.;.el and\noccasionally a muskrat peered\nthrough '.he tall blades of grass\nn the river banks. After leaving\nthe river, we were once again in\nthe Duncan Lak*1 It was nearing\nsun down revealing real beauty\nnecessitated Small billowy cloudi in a clear\nblue sky iim;.nta.ns changing\ncolor as the sun descended behind\n'hem.   '\nLhe sk\\\nfhen   te\nknown\nhr;\nto\nus\nspa\nas i\nrkl<-s\nita re.\nin\nThe 1\nexcept\nmir   h\nake waa\nfnr   the\nat   was\nas\nV\nde\n\u25a0ur.i\nih\nKigli\n.oth\naped\n:\u25a0\"\u25a0\u00ab\nas  gi\nnp[\nAs\nasi\ndet\nwe\ndrew c\n,oser to\nnur\ndet'; r.n\n'.;  t;\nthe\nlar.dsoa\n;\u25a0\u25a0?  becan\nIC\nmo;\n\u25a0-\u25a0   ar\nd   rr,\nore\nUSt'tf,;\nll'i wondtrlus*\nNO  OVERNIGHT\nBAKINQ-\nMakei Better, Finer FUTon-rai\nBread In *\/, tbe time.\n4 anv.lop.1 p*r carta-, tot'   m-rthtft\nmoat, i Je\u00abv_k\nREX keep* freah for weeks wllfc.\noat refrigeration. Ai Quick Kiting u Freih Yeait.\nI. :\\ I 1 I* M A *, 11\neres bm you II like!\nprovide! other valuable\nfood essentials, too!\nDRAN  you   ncctl,   to  provide\n\u25a0\"\u25a0-\u00bb  natural roushage to help krep\nwaate. moving promptly-plu,\n\"\u25a0\/ov at tlie\nthat's 'POST'S\nircak-\nBran\nTheaa criip, tempting fl.ilci\nbring yoa added wheat nourishment, too, heeanae Po\u00abt'i Bran\nFlakes are made with other parts\nof wheat. Try a heaping bowlful\ntomorrow \u2014you'll be back for\nmore.\nSimple Instructions fnr light,\ntender bran muffins on both Regular and Giant Economy Package*.\nTry them loon.\nBRA* FUKES\nA i*-.*^ of Griirol Foodi\nwith\nHn\no-   skirts   to   pencil   slim    lines\nI'd.   Injecti mi  of  superimposed    side    drapery\na   vi*.n   or   the  cocktail and afternoon rostumei are\nalmost all ankle length, his formal\nns floor length.\nam\n\u25a0 d   are   aU\nnumber    of   go\nn.rids which\nfa hospital of head w*\ner victims were J.w;_\nAir.'\n1111 M 1111 \u25a0\nBUILD   B C\nfrom which pn>fr:n\u00ab\nvt c luri-f, pp'tein*\ni i l i m l . 1111 [ i. i! i ri ii 11 in\nPAYROLLS\nFavorite\nDessert\nArr *,( *,i *-\nirt*,  f   r tl\n4f&fr\n, o(tc.rn n\nM.Ik\nund  tlie  li\nfamilmr  I'\nis easy\nking a little var\nfamily desserts'\nIh Pnc \u25a0 f ic\n*. .mica\ni  every\ntu   Milk  lohal\n\"Flying Immigrants'\nTo Ont Approved\nLONDON, Julv 20 (Ranters*\nM..rf than 850 \"tlyinrr Immigrant'\n;>,issagcs tn Ontario had been ap-\n'r.ivrd by Itun Dana Porter. On.\n:.,:.,, Minuter tor Planning and Development, who arrived bore two\nwr. ks ago He has granted 1400 in-\n|tir\\ i'iai :,t l.i-i:,\\,-.:'r. Ontario Houm\nto Kr.i;i;*h yc- pie anxious to eml-\nji..*r to Canada\n'Ibe Urs-t plane earryiug tbe sur\n* > nt ,'. applications is expected l*\n'...iw* A ,i\nOne Way Ride\nKltlN.\nMcMill.il\nlle\nCC\n;i\u00ab  is\nPacific Milk\nIRRADIAUI) AND VACUUM\nPACKED\niii'inii'iiMiii iii!iiiM;iniiiiiiiniiiiiiil\nOnt . .lulv 20 iCI'i Elmer\nn. H 11 I. Krui. haa hia own\not cily slickers\nppllcd tn an employment\nservice In Toronto tor i (arm\nlaborer The next day the man ar-\nlived hy taxi, tht meter of u*hic>*\nregistered $20 McMillan, glad to gel\n'In heln, pud lht bill.\nOn lha fnllnwlnif morning he\nhand a none In the barn, Investigated, and found hil helprr had\nh'.lrhed up one of tbe farm horses.\n\"I don't like farm work.\" he aaid\nT was Itolr.g to uie tho horse to get\n\u25a0ue back lo Toronto*'\nWhen   last   seen,   lhe   man    uai\ni* i.lKing sin.vlv along Tic Illgh'W),\nCanada Has\nWonderful Future\nSays Alexander\nDAWSON CREEK, II  C , .1 -.'.-\nICPi    A young man Co ild make\nway be'.ler  in  Canada\nother country, Vi\ntold guests al\nHere Fridav night\n**It I was a v., ;;*.\nhealth and ainl.lv\nis ork haul\nli.ui ,:. niak.ng I\nCanada has a u\nTbe  C.nveinl.i\nexai: ie:    and   \u2022';\nwme gieeted b>\nsilting of village\nmemberi of the Hoard of T:\ncount  Alexander   p.tched\nball in a baieball name and inspe* '\ned Canadian legion  memberi,  Ib\nSeoul and tin 1 tjuides\nThe Vlcr-Rcgal par!\nday by   bus ou  the   firsl\nAlaika  Highway  lo  Fc\nand Furl Nelson\nlett  Sa!\nnt    I\nSi   Jo\nEXTRA-SOAPY SUNLIGHT\nGETS EVERYTHING EXTRA CLEANI\nYr.,\nihr   ,\n1.11 I.\nIll\nIII   I gil\nEDMONTON iCPi - M\u00abr\u00ab thj\u00bb\n2,000   antnai   have   bean   received\nIn    Albcrta'a   11. (W   rooking    r*\nleft    Offlclali   a\u00aby   lha!   thev   have\nH'ceivrd   them   finm   varioul   part*\n*.f  Canada   tha   United   SlaP->   and\ni ven  one  fi. in  England\npeeled    about    3 OOO    re,,pes\nlv*   received   l*i    the   Iuue   |bl\n\u2022ir.i   ,|.-.e*.    **,    |   *.;(l\nlerd. muh eitra-suapf .Sunli|hr on\ni.i.lr* K and (leaning worries are\nmer! \\X if.hr. iome < leaner and awoatar\nthan eier before. U\"tx>dwtirk, nle. Upon,\ninamel and win don I .pirk If mort bnghllr.\nroe a coMPterr wash in a ja\nw\/ cmtw mriHH\/r\nIn Uit, Sunlight's quiil -Uihtring \\n~\\\\ nuV\u00ab\nhouitwnrk lightfr! Wuh thfu hiny\nnull on tht |oh th.rt'i nn nttd {\u25a0>[ Iur.I\ntuhhing tnd i-rnhhing. So lixik fint for\ntha blf, long !i\u00bbti*m i'Li- nl Sunlight it\nrour grotrf\u00bb lod-r, tb.o hm for rourttlf\n\u00bbhn i \u00bbh\u00abl# of i difffftnct it mikei\nin ill rinjf witlnng tnd <.leaning.\nBOM SOAPY SUN UGHT!\nT\n ppppp^PWPP\n ^IPPP*_PPPPIPPI\nBARGAINS\nFor Men, Women, Children in Our 43rd\nAnniversary\nShoe Sale\nR* Andrew & Co*\nLeaders in Footfashion\nMICHEL COAL\nMINE CLOSES\nFOR HOLIDAY\nNATAL, B.C., July 18 - Under >\nnew system this year the Michel\nColliery, like' that of all the other\ncoal companys throughout the East\nKootenay and Crow's Nest Pass,\nWill close the mines down for a\nperiod of two \\yeeks in order to allow the miners to enjoy their two\nweeks holiday with pay.\nThe Michel Colliery will work its\nlast shift on Friday, August 8 and\nwill remain idle to August 23.\nIt was expected that the layoff\nwill not hinder the By Product\nPlant which will operate as usual.\nThe other mine of the Crow's Nest\nPass Coal Company, the Elk River\nColliery is at present enjoying a\ntwo week layoff.\nOn, iht Oih,\nMONDAY, JULY 21, 1947\nCKLN I 2:30\u2014Songs lo Remember\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u20140 Canada\n7:02\u2014Press News\n7:07\u2014Sunrise Serenade\n7:30\u2014Music for Monday\n8:00^CBC Newa\n8:15\u2014Just for You\n8:45\u2014Hebriw  Christaln   How\n9:00\u2014 BBC News\n9:15-The Breakfast Club\n9:45-Three Quarter Time\n10.00\u2014 Women's Corner\n10:15\u2014Music for Everyone\n10:45\u2014 Waltrcs 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\u2014 Notice Board\n12:30\u2014 Press Newa\n12:45\u2014Ethel and Albert\n1:00\u2014Old Favorites  *\n1:30\u2014Afternoon Recital\n1:45\u2014Women's News and Commen\ntary\nl:0O-Feature Concert\nCJAT\n810 ON THE DIAL\n7.00\u2014Hebrew Christian Hour\n7:15\u2014Press News\n7:3f>-Mclndy Ranch\n7:45-Fountain of Faith\nB:0O-CBC News\n8:15\u2014Holiday Time\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\nfl.OO\u2014 Musical  Programme\n6:15\u2014Breakfa.'t Club\n9:45\u2014Lucy Linton\n10:00\u2014 Musical Programme\n10:15\u2014 U. &,Navy Band\n10:30\u2014Merv Griffin\n10:4,5\u2014 Tune Shop\n11:15\u2014 Mid Morning Melodies\n11:30\u2014Easy Listening\n12:00\u2014 Luncheon Concert\n12:30\u2014Press Newa\n12:45\u2014Luncheon   Concert\n1.00\u2014Tourist   Parade\n1:30\u2014Afternoon Recital\n1:45\u2014Commonetary and Talk\n: On\u2014Feature Concert\n2:15\u2014Family Favorites\n2.30\u2014For Women Only\n3:00\u2014Cowboy Troubador\nS 15- Serenade to America\n2:45-\n3:00\u2014Cowboy Troubadour\n3:15\u2014Serenade to America\n3:30- Serenade\n3:45\u2014Jimmy Dorsey\n4:00\u2014Chilo Valle and Los Cubanos\n4:15\u2014Modern Musicians\nTo Start Diamond\nDrilling at\nRambler, Near Sandon\nSANDON, B.C., July 20\u2014Resum\ning work at the Rambler Mine,\nDon Messer and His Islanders j which was halted last Autumn,\nGedrge MacMillan of Fort Coulogne,\nQuebec, and Frederick Durocher of\nToronto. Ont., arrived this week in\nSandon. The Rambler, considered\none of the best mines ln the dis*\ntrict, is situated directly above San\n4:30\u2014 Especially for You\n4:45\u2014Children's Program\n5:00\u2014Sacred  Heart Programme\n5:15-Bob Eberly with John Bait\n5:30\u2014Peerless News\n5:45\u2014 Organ Reveries\n6:00\u2014Your Hit Parade\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n\":15-CBC  News  Roundup\n7:30\u2014Recital Time\n745-Jack Scott\n8:00\u2014Tonight at Timber Lodge\n8:30\u2014Press News\n8:45\u2014Moments of Devotion\n9:00\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:30\u2014All Star Dance Parade\n9:45-1.ean Back and Listen\n10:00\u2014CBC News\n10:15\u2014Neighborly  News '\n10:30\u2014San Francisco Radio Theatre\n11*00\u2014God Save The King\n3:30\u2014Serenade\n3:45\u2014BBC News and Commentary\n4:00-Chicho Valle and Los Cubanos\n4:15\u2014Modern Musicians\n4:30\u2014Slim Bryant\n4:45\u2014Music By Cugat\n5:00\u2014Your English Maestro\n5:30\u2014Let's Waltz\n5:45\u2014Carl Trevor\n6:00\u2014Tales of  Imagination\ni  6:30\u2014Moonlight and Shadows\n6:45\u2014Rhythm and Romance\n7*00\u2014CBC News\n7:15\u2014Matthew  Hal'.or. Reports\n7:30\u2014Recital Time\n7:45\u2014 Jack Scott\n* !:00-Tonight at Timber Lodge\n8,30\u2014The Gypsy\n9:00\u2014Frank Parker Show\n9:15\u2014Music in the Miller Manner\n9*30\u2014Memory Lane\n9:45\u2014Danger . . . Death at Work\n10:00\u2014CBC News\n10:15\u2014 Bridge to Dreamland\n10.30-San Francisco Radio Theatre; 2'^\n11.00\u2014Random Rhvthms\n11.15\u2014Milton Charles\n11 30-Peerless News\n11:40\u2014Sign Off-The King.\ndon at an altitude of about 6000 feet.\nDiamond drilling Is expected to be\nstarted next week.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIONEUX\n\u2022 Mr. and Mri. Harold Lak_i,|Mr\u00bb. R. E. Johnstone of Ethelton,\nHosemont, have at guests the for-|Sa\u00abk. The wedding wu performed\nmer a  aon,   Larry Lakea   and   hisi_,    .       , ,    \u201e T.  .    '\nfriend of Santa Monica, Calif. Monday  July 7  During the cere-\n\u2022 The Misses Marian, Roberta J\u21221-' Verdun D-wrough rendered\nand Evelyn Rleeterer and Mlaa Vil- Through the Yeara. The bride, who\nerle Cutler, J. RleaterC Sr., and Rob-lwaJ,.8iv.en.!n.*1?a.rrla*e **\u00bb f\" \u25a0?*\u25a0\u25a0**\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CITY,  B.C..\u2014Ladies Aid\nof the Presbyterian Chureh was\n! hold at the home of Mrs. Caniff.\nI After the business meeting tea\nwas served by the  hostess.\nMrs. Anderson and her two\nchildren of Nelson are visiting\ntheir grandmother Mrs. J. Life Sr.\nMrs. J. Graham of Nelson was\na  guest of Mrs.  H.  C. Mye.\nMrs. G rosling and her two\ndaughters are visiting their grandfather.\nMrs. Schenaeble and daughter\nnf New Denver are guests of her\nsister Mrs. J. Life Jr.\nert Riesterer returned from a visit\nto Wenfttchce, Wash., where they\nwere guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph\nJannl. -\n\u2022 Dr. and Mts. Ray C. Shaw\nhad as guests at their North Shore\nhome, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Holton of\nBelllnghani. Wash., who returned\nSaturday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Duffy, Victoria Street, left for San Francisco\nCalif., where Mr. Duffy went as\ndelegate to a B^of L. T. and E. Con*\nvention.\n\u2022 Miss Ruth Fath of the staff of\n.Kootenay Lake General Hospital re\nturned from Champion, Alta., where\nshe apent hw vacation.\n\u2022 . Mrs. R. W. Slye( and daugh*\nter Meredith of Cranbrook are\nguests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. R. McLanders, Innes Street.\n\u2022 Wesley Calbick, Government\nMilk Teater with headquarters ln\nPafksville, V.I., is visiting Mrs. Cal\nbick, who is spending the Summer\nmonths in Nelson,\n\u2022 Mrs, Annie Hafner, who spent\na few weeks in Nelson, having come\nto arrange for the funeral of her\nsister, Mrs. John Hamilton, ex-resi\ndent of Nelson, has returned to\nClinton, Ont.\n\u2022 Mrs, Frank Phillips, Johnstone\nApartments, has as guest her daughter, Mrs. Atkinson of Natal, who\nformerly resided in Nelson.\n\u2022 Miss Dorothy Cooper and Miss\nMurlal McDonald left Nelson Friday for Whitehorse, Y.T., where they\nill visit the latter'* brother-in-law\nand sister.\n.TOHNSTONE-McALPINE\nA profusion of Summer flowers\nformed the setting in the First Presbyterian Church at Trail, when Rev.\nA. L. Farris solemnized the marriage of Wilma Ernestine, 1469\nBay Avenue, only daughter of Mrs.\nE. F. McAlpine and the late P. J.\nMcAlpine of Nelson and Archibald\nRussell Johnstone, son of Mr. and\nEmerald Lake\nResort Progresses\nNATAL,    B.C.,   July    18 - The\nmaking of Emerald Lake, or better\nknown as Grave- Lake, into a suitable resort is steadily progressing\nunder the guidance of the officers\nand members of the Natal-Michel\nRod and Gun Club.\nRecently the coal company\nthrough the efforts of the Rod and\nGun Club, leased a total of 74 lots\nat the lake which were quickly\ntaken up by the residents of Natal\nand Michel. The leasing of these\nlots is for the building of cabins\nfor private use on this beautiful\nElk Valley lake,\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C,~Mrs. T. Steenhoff and Mrs, J. Olson were joint\nhostesses at a chain tea. The funds\nraised were to supplement the United Church building fund, During\nthe afternoon several musical numbers were enjoyed. Mrs, Steenhoff\nand Mrs. Olson were assisted in ser\nving tea by Mrs, O. Ellison and Miss\nMargaret Olson.\nMrs. A. Barrow was a delightful\nhostess  to  horior  her  house  guest\ner, Hugh McAlpine, was attractively\nattired in a formal white gown, the\nbodice fashioned wtlh a loke of net\nwith silk embroidery trim, and tiny\nself-covered buttons fastening down\nthe back. The neckline was high and\nround, while the long sleeves eded\nin lily points over her hands. Her\nfloorlength veil was held in place by\na coronet headdress of pink and\nwhite rosettes, white sandals and\ncarried a bridal bouquet of pink\nrosea. Matron of honor was Mrs. Hil\nda McAlpine, sister-in-law of the\nbride, She received as a gift from\nthe bride, a gold chatelaine. Brides\nmaid, Miss Dorpthy Johnstone, sis\nter of the groom, also received i\ngold chatelaine. Officiating as best\nman was Elmer Clark of China\nCreek, while acting as ushers were\nAngus Murray and Ellis Lypps, all\nreceiving gold tie pins. Immediately\nfollowing the ceremony, a reception\nwas held in the manse, 1482 Cedar\nAvenue, which was adorned for the\noccasion with Summer flowers: Assisting the bridal couple at receiving their guests were the bride's\nmother, Mrs. E. Lypps, sister of the\ngroom, and uncle of the bride, E. W.\nMcQuade. Acting as serviteurs were\nMiss Enid Latornell, Mrs. Florence\nJeffs of Nelson, Miss Louise McPherson, Miss Agnes Swanson, Mrs.\nDaisy Manson of Nelson and Mrs.\nMargaret Harrop, also of Nelson.\nThe bride's table was centred with\na three-tiered wedding cake, topped\nwith miniature white doves beneath a heart-shaped archway, and\nembedded ln pink tulli. The cake\nwas flanked on their side by pink\ntakers in silver sconces and sur*\nrounded by pink rosebuds, The toast\nto the bride was proposed by Mr.\nFarris. the groom responding suitably. The bride's gift to the groom\nwas a leather initialed billfold and\na letter fold, while the bride receiv\ned from the groom a set of travelling\nbags. Mr, and Mrs. Johnstone left for\na months' honeymoon trip through\nthe States to Detroit, after which\nthey will go North to Toronto and\nreturn to the city through Canada\nThey plan to take up residence al\n1496 Fifth Avenue. The bride donned\nfor the trip a black and white shep*\nherd check dressmaker suit, with\nwhich she wore white accessories\nand a white hat with gardenia trim.\nMinister Takes\nOver Nakusp\nUnited Church\nNAKUSP, B. C, July 20 - Rev.\nAdam Crisp from Golden waa inducted Into the Nakuap pastoral\ncharge on Tuesday evening In Robertson Memorial United Cnurch. A\nrepresentative gathering of the Na*\nkuap congregation was present\nThe impressive ceremony of Induction was performed by Rev. G. G,\nBoothroyd of Nelson, assisted by\nRev. A. L. Anderson also of Nel\nson. Mlas R. Hamer presided at the\norgan.\nMr. Anderson in hia addreu to the\nMinister stressed the wonderful\nheritage of the Christian Church\nand ita marvelous vitality through\nthe years.\" Mr. Boothroyd in his\ncharge to the congregation emphasized the need of mutual cooperation\nand understanding between Minister\nand people. During the service i\nduet \"Abounding Grace\" waa.ren\ndered by Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Oxen\nham-\nThe congregation adjourned to the\nSunday School rooms where a social\ntime was enjoyed with refreshments\nserved by members of the ladies of\nthe congregation.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1947 \u2014 S\nNakusp W.M.S.\nHears Report\nNAKUSP, B. C. July 20 - Women's Missionary Society of the Nakusp United Church heard Mrs. W.\nC. Aston of Trail, Presbyterial President report on the 60th Diamond\nanniversary of the work ofthe Society which was held in Vancouver.\nThe Dominion President In her remarks, the speaker said, stressed the\nimportance of closer fellowship and\nunity of spirit into which women of\nall races and every church could\nenter.\n\"If we want peace we must learn\nto live together, Canada must be\ncome friendly if she would become\ngreat.\"\nAfternoon tea was served by Miss\nAllan, assisted by Miss Fawcett,\nFifteen members were present.\nSANDON\nSANDON. B.C. - E. t. Radar and\nRay Humphrey ot Spokane apent\nleveral dayi in the Slocan DUtrlct,\nguestsi while In Sandon ol Mr. and\nMra. Robert M. Humphreya.\nMra. John Lamb, who haa been\nworking tn Sandon aince the beginning ot May, haa gone to the Coast.\nOn hia return he will be accompanied by Mn. Lamb and baby.\nMra. Chrlatlanaon had aa her\ngueata her daughter and three\ngrandchildren ot Nelaon.\nMiaa Virginia Pearson of Mia-\naoula, Montana, ia ipending a\nSummer vacation ln Sandon.\nR. A. Grimes returned to Nelson\nalter visiting in Sandon.\nNakuip Prepares\nFor X-Raying\nNAKUSP, B.C., July JO - A\ngeneral meeting of the tuberculosis Association representatives\nfor tbla locality waa attended by\nMrs. R, J. Armstrong, aa chairman,\nMrs. R. Jordcn President of the\nWomena i Insltltute, Mra. Bedard\nSecretary Mra. G. R. Mcintosh,\nconvener of ponvaaalng committee\nMra. E. C. Johnson publicity convenor and Mra M Stanlforth and\nMiss B. White.\nPhamphlots and posters are to\nbe distributing by canvaaing com\nmlttees and full preparations are\nbeing made for August 22 and 25\nwhen the mobile X-ray unit will\nbe ln Nakuap.\nll'll'lllllllll'll'I'lllimilllll'lllllllllllli\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nThe Houie ot Furniture Valuei\nPHONI 115 - NELSON, B.C.\nTrade In your old furniture on\nnew,\nBUY ON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN PAYMENT\nStore open tll!_9 p.m. Saturdaye\nlll'llllllll'll'lll'llllllll'llllll'llli'lllli'i\nNo Argument, Please\nMONTREAL, July 20 (CP) -\nWalking on the grass Ib bad enough\n\u2014 but to argue about it . . well.\nTwenty-one-year-old Robert Rous-\nsil found but about that today when\nin court he was sentenced to 24\nhours in jail tor walking on grass\nand arguing with authority when\ntold to get otf.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. Herman A. Nicholson   announce  the   engagement   of\ntheir   youngest   daughter,   Patricia\nMrs. A. Matheson of Calgary. The i Beatrice, to Dr, Thomas John Speak-\nreception   rooms   were   beautifully j man, younger son ofJMr. and Mm\nFilly Leads Field\nKDMONTON, July 20 fCP> -\nShore Star, two-year-old chestnut\nFilly owned by Mrs. M. Johnson of\nEdmonton romped home to an easy\nenRth victory to capture\nthe SflOO Kindergarten Handicap\nfifth and feature race on the fifth\nday's card of the Edmonton Exhibition race meet.\n1 QUICK-EASY\nWith Certo there's no long, tedious\nboiling and stirring. Certo j.tms\nneed only a tint Us lu ominute lull,\nrolling l*x>il . . . jellies only a htll*\nminute It) a minute.\n2 MORE JAM OR JELLY\nThe Certo boil is so short very\nlittle juice has time to boil away in\nsteam. So you get up to 50% more\njam or jelly from your fruit.\nQOOOOOO'IOOOOOOOO\n3ENDSGUESSW0R\nI.ml, for h.Hiliol Till-    I\nmV Hrrip., umA.r lhe\nUW ,\u2022\/ urn  I \"I\"\nfv.nl.\n4M--M-M\/\nSo ilt hcious! So spark-\nling! lhe short (xrtu\n\u25a0Soil docs not spoil the\nfresh fruit taste or dull\nthe n_icur.il colour!\nk mmt) nr jam or july mot with cirto counts m\nMORI SUGAR THAN A POUND MADC THI 0U, LONG BOIL WAY\ndecorated with ferns and roses and\nthe table, from where Mrs. J. Parent Jr., poured tea, was covered in\nwhite linen and hand-made lace,\nwith a silver center bowl of white\nroses. Mrs. Barrow was assisted in\nserving by her daughter Mrs. D.\nMcCusker and Miss E. M. Harvey,\nThe invited guests were Mrs. Matheson, Mrs. W. L. Maxwell, Mr?. Harry Vaughan, Mrs. J. Harris, Miss K,\nFowler, Mrs. R. Baflow, Miss Betty\nWhite, Mrs. Harvird Hiltz, Mrs.\nN. Wetterstrom, Mn. J. Parent Jr.,\nMisa E. M. Harvey.\nR. Islip and W. L, Maxwell returned from a holiday at the J. Harris Camp at Galena Bay.\nA. E. Fowler, Miss Kay Fowler\nand Miss M. Staniforth, P.H.N.. returned from a holiday at Pingston\nCreek and Big Ledge Mountain.\nThey were accompanied by R. A.\nFowler of Trail.\nMrs. J. Parent Sr., accompanied\nby her grandson Milton, left for\nSeattle where she will attend the\nmarriage of her granddaughter Miss\nEdna  May Russell.\nMrs. J. Parent Jr., and daughter\nJudy, left for Penticton where they\nbe the .guests of Mrs. Parent's\nsister and brother-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs.  Herman Ackerman.\nMrs, A. Aston from Trail is the\nguest of Miss A. A. Allen.\nRev. Gordon Boothroyd and Rev.\nAnderson of Nelson attended the induction service in the United\nChurch of Rev. A. Crisp, who recently arrived from Golden to take\nover the Arrow-Lakes field of the\nUnited Church.\nCathie and Stanley Howitt nf\nBrouse are holiday guests nf their\ngrandmother Mrs. Ada Howitt.\nMrs. H. Keys and young daughters\nGlenda and Susan who were the\nholiday guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Keys left for Trail.\nMrs. M. Cassidy of Vancouver\nwho had been the holiday guest of\nher sisters. Mrs. C. S. Leary, Mrs,\nW. G. M. Hakeman and Mrs. Murphy, returned to thp Coast.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Picard of Klamath Falls Oregon, who were holiday\nguests of Mr. Picard's parents. Mr.\nand Mrs. Ed Picard returned Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs E. W. G. Allen of\nMedicine Hat, are holiday guests nf\nMiss A. A. Allen, Dr. F. Allen and\nMiss Jean Fawcett.\nA. B. S. Stanley returned from\nVancouver where he attended an\nexecutive meeting of the B. C. Division of the Canadian Division of\n.Weekly Newspapers Association.\nJoseph Speakman of Field, B.C. Thc\nwedding will take place August 18th\nat the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate, NeLson.\nDESTROYER TO CARRY\nAID TO LINER PASSENGER\nBOSWELL\nBOSWELL, B.C., - Mrt. Warren\nand daughters Doreen and Myra\nof Oalgary are spending the school\nholidays at their ranch home, Mrs.\nWarren was accompanied by Mrs.\nHowie of Calgary.\nRalph Shell ot Trail ls spending\nvacation   at   his  home   here.\nDr. and Mrs. Douglas Creighton\nof Saskatoon were the guests of\nMr. and Mrs. Paul X. Sullivan.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Cell of California are visiting Mrs. Cell's\nsister and Brother-in-law Mr. and\nMrs. C. H. Bebblngton.\nMrs. J. Borysowich and son\nBilly of Trail are guests of Mri.\nF. Johnstone.\nPeter Home of Vancouver ls a\nfuest   of   Mr.   and  Mrs.   Paul   L.\nullivan.\nTwo Natal\nFamilies Move\nNATAL, B.C., July 1\u00ab - During\nthe past two weeks Natal-Michel\nlost the services of two well-\nknown families who left for the\nInterior of B.C.\nMr. and Mrs. James Jenkins and\nsons, left Michel for Penticton,\nwhere Mr. Jenkini has accepted a\nposition. Prior to his departure he\nworked for the coal company and\nwas one of the few veterans still\nplaying football on the Michel\nEleven.\nMr. and Mri. Bert Jennings and\nfamily also left for the Interior. Mr.\nJennings worked for the coal company at Michel as a truck driver.\nYanks Like Canadian\nMeat, Butter Prices\nVANCOUVER,   July   20   (CP) -\nMeat is the number one food attrac-\n.,., \u2014 ...   , ,    \u201e  ,\u201e\u201e ... 'ion for U.S. tourists in Vancouver\nHALIFAX, July 20 fCPi - All .wording to dealers who declare\nnaval ratings were called aboard]that Americans are buying heavily\nthe Canadian destroyer Nootka and 10f hams and smoked meats,\nnaval operations said tonight the one large retailer said that trav-\nship was getting up steam to carry | ellers from the South are \"fiscinat-\nmedical assistance to the French >d\" by Canadian retail prices, and\nliner De Graise which reported a'are buying smoked items which will\nwoman passenger suffering from ] keep well on their trips back home,\nacute Internal hemmorhages. The| Butter, which retails at 85 centj a\nships will meet 350 miles from this; pound in next-door Washington, can\nport. Ibe had here for 55 to 58 cents.\nValley Ua\nVootenay Valley I\/airy\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\nJantien \u2014 Beatrice Plnei \u2014\nCole of California\nBATHING SUITS\n$6.95 to $11.98\nFashion First Ltd.\nLarge Size Dresses\nfor the ityltih itouti\nSize* to 24^ ln cottons and crepei\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\n'IIIIIIIIIMMllimilllUIIMIIIIIIMIIMMIIII\nWATCH FOR\nLIBERTY SPECIALS\nTOMORROW\n\u25a0 it 11 ii 111tm mi it11i11 it11 ii ri111lit\nConsider Closing\nCoast Leper Colony    j\nVANCOUVER. July 20 'CP> -\nFederil health officials ire con-,\nsidering the possibility of closing\nthe leper colony on Bcntmrk Island,\nStrait ot Juan de Fuca, hut it ls\ndoubtful if such action will br\nordered, it was learned heie today '\nj The isolated colony has three patients \u2014 a Chinese, a Japanese and\na woman missionary, Closure would\n| mean transfer to the century-old\ncolony   al   Tracadia,   N.B.,   where\n| there are seven patient*.\n|    Heavy maintenance costs were be-\n, Ueved responsible for a suggestion\ntha  colony  patients be transferred.\nICosU total about $11,000 annually.  ,\nTO SEEK TO SALVAGE\nII  MILLION CARGO\nVANCOUVER, July 20 (CP^ - A\nsalvage firm, Vincouves Salei and\nAppraisals Ltd, has proposed that\nsn expedition iponiored by therti\nattempt the salvage of an equipment-laden barge on the belalt Aleutian chain, and carrving a reported\n$1,000,000 worth ol valuable cargo\nWILL SEE US THROUGH\nLast year, in one of its several published statements, The\nHouse of Seagram said,'\"Canada's great record of price control was made possible by the wholehearted co-operation of\nthe Canadian people with their Government's anti-inflation\nmethods. This fine record should be maintained ... by\nmoderating our pleasures, by controlling unessential spending, we continue to serve our Nation and ourselves best.\"\nThat statement we repeat today. We need only\nmarch steadily ahead . . . with continued emphasis\nnn those habits of moderation, self-control and\nrnmmonsense which are so happily\u2014and fortunately\u2014characteristics of Canada, and Canadians.\nThen this Nation will stand\nsecure on the road to its\nvet   greatest  opportunities.\n. sfc* aik Pi&kA'1\/'Fctmirw\n&krrti>t \u201e fadmtticn ffcrfaf.'\n(        THE HOUSE OF SEAGRAM        )\n  9mm\t\nSMarm lath; Wtm\nEstablished April 22. 11)112\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED. 268 Baker St.. Nelson. British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall.\nPostolfice Department. Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE  Al.'DI'l   BUREAU  OF  CIRCULATIONS.\nMONDAY, JULY 21, 1947\nFor Those Who Died\nWestminster Abbey has added yet\none more glory to the many historic\nshines and treasures it already encloses.\nThis is a memorial which will commemorate for all time the self-sacrifice\nand the devotion of the young airmen\nof Britain, the Commonwealth and\nother lands whose skill and valour\nalone checked'the German onrush at\nthe height of its initial success. This\nmemento of those who died in the Battle of Britain was unveiled recently by\nthe King in the presence of the Queen,\nthe Princesses and the distinguished\nassembly.\nA small chapel in the most historic\npart of the Abbey has been set apart for\nthe memorlal-and enriched by a superb\nstained-glass window^ of appropriate\ndesign. This new window takes the\nplace of the one shattered by a German bomb, which destroyed the House\nof Commons. As long as it endures it\nwill give an unfailing artistic delight\nto those who examine it. It ls composed\nof 48 lights and extends across the entire East wall.\nThe lower lights contain the badges\nof the 63 R.A.F. squadrons which took\npart ln the Battle of Britain and the\nflags of all the countries from whence\ncame these young men who, in Mr,\nChurchill's words, \"went forth every\nmorning to guard our native land and\nill that we stand for.\" A heavenly ser-\n\u00bbphim fills the upper portion with blue\nand wine colored splendor while the\nfour panels depict the typical British\nairman. At the foot is the most perfect\nquotation for the occasion, chosen from\nthe works of Britain's Immortal poet,\nShakespeare, \"We few, we happy few,\nwe band of brothers.\"\nIn addition, the chapel has been\nadorned with a carved walnut altar,\nwith furnishings and candlesticks of\nsilver while the lettern carries a beautifully illuminated and bound Roll of\nHonor. Its hundred pages record the\nnames of nearly 1500 pilots and aircrew\nkilled during this most crucial 'battle\nof history.\nThis book has been carefully and\nlovingly made in the tradition of those\nmissals and psalters prepared centuries\nago by the monks of Canterbury, which\nnow hold so high a place among the art\ntreasures of the world. Of the finest\nvellum, in letters of scarlet, gold and\nblue the names are recorded for posterity to see and revere. Each day .a\nnew page will be opened for this is no\nmere file or register but thc symbol of\na proud though sorrowful memory.\nlng whether the community would be\ninterested in offering hospitality. If\nthe reply it affirmative, the Mayor sets\nup a committee of local citizens whose\nduty it is to select those homes which\nare most suitable, and to be responsible\nfor the children while they are in residence. The children are divided lntar\ngroups of 10; an adult accompanies each\ngroup from its own country, and keeps\nher charges under benevolent supervision throughout their stay. In general,\nthe children visit prosperous working\npeople, the local committee doing what\nit can to see that a child is received at\na home fairly similar to that from\nwhich it came.\nThe purpose of the project is to remove the children from scenes of hardship and distress, and to receive them\nas members of the family in homes\nwhere affectionate care, rest, and good\nnourishment will restore them physically and .emotionally. Strictly rationed though Britain is, her fare is abundant by standards in the homes of many\nof these young war victims. A month\nin the quarantine camp and two months\nwith a family in Britain have, ln the\npast few years meant much to thousands of yoyng Europeans. Nor have the\nbenefits been one-sided. The hosts have\nbecome quickly attached to their guests\nand firm friendships have sprung up\nduring the visits.\nThe British Way\nHundreds of families in Britain have\nvolunteered to open their homes this\nSummer to children from war-devastated countries in Europe under a\nscheme which began in thc middle of\nthe war. It is the program of the Reception Committee, Young People from\nOccupied Countries, an organization\nrecognized by the Government hut not\nsubsidized. I'nder its sponsorship 15,-\n000 private families have given temporary homes to young Europeans since\n1942 in an attempt to provide a few\nmonths of relief from tlie miserable\nconditions of their homes in countries\nthat were occupied bv '.he Nazis\nTin* Reception Committee h a s\nlaunched a fund-raising campaign in\norder to continue Ihe piojoct. The\nmoney is needed nol to support the\nchildren while living with their temporary families, since the youngsters\nare gnosis in these I* toes, i*1:' chiefly\nto finance a n *nl!*.'s ,'.iv m 1*1,0,0*':*ie\nramp \\*. hi n '1 * *.  fo -'\u25a0'. ,m :\\ e in il: itam.\nI.a.! Snn,nn : the }\u25a0':<:., h ,i:,.| Czechoslovak anil: .1 iln*., aske 1 lhe Committee to arrange f**r the too*],'.on of children from those counti ies. even though\nthen* (loveinmenl*. wen* n *| able to\npay for lhe ijuaianloe expenses\nCommitter decided l!*.i' ;' . n! ! t\nfuse lln* 1 1 *|ile -I lie 1 *i:',,i: <\u25a0 \u2022:\nbrought o\\e!*. ,01,1 lhe I ' :'\u25a0\u2022\u2022 i*l\nClltfe,I  ronsl lel.lKe    ieh*    *.', i ,cl*\nyet  lo l',,|iu,l,ili\nIn sole, ling snil.il'ii\nchildren tin* I' *m:n:*!'\nMavot 1 f a i;:\\ en town\nTl\nLance H.\nWhittaker\nRELIGIOUS   FREEDOM   IN   RUSSIA\nIn lomewhat oblique reply to my assertion that \"Communlim Can't Lait\" I have received many letters, both approving and disapproving. Of all thli correspondence nona\nhai been mora interesting and enlightening\nto me than a itatement of the Preildium of\nthe United Council of the Baptiit and Evangelical Christiana of the U.S SR., Issued during the second half of IMS. It is signed by\nChairman Y. Zhidkov and memberi of tht\nCouncil, and reads, in part, as follows:\n\"(The Protestant group) hai complete religious freedom to carry out ita activity day\nafter day. Because of thu freedom we have a\nflourishing iplritual life in our churches.\nThere ii a great fire that burm ^n the hearts\nof our believer*. The Gospels are preached\nfreely, and thouiands of sinners repent and\nturn to Christ. There is not a iingle church\nof ours which doei not havi its. conversion*.\nWe have Information that during the first\nhalf of Summer 10W already 30,000 souls\nwere baptized,\"\nEqually ai significant (either ai an argument for or against my thesis; I am not sure\nwhich) was the recent declaration by Patriarch Alexei, supreme head of tht Russian\nOrthodox Church, that hii church would\nform a united front \"to fight against all hot-\ntile action.\" Without defining the \"hostile\naction\" he went on to say: \"Until now we\nhaven't taken into account the serious dangers\nin nur way. Who kYiows but that these dangers\nmight provoke a new war, possibly greater\nthan the last one\"\nIt seems hardly conceivable that tha Patriarch had refence to the Communrst Regime\nwhen he i\u00bbpoke of \"hostile action,\" but if this\nwas not hii meaning, what was if!\nOn the other hand the itatement of the\nProteitant Presidium can be taken to mean\nthnt there ii no persecution of the Christian\nfaith ln Russia.\nAs with most other Information of thii\ntype which leaks through the official leive,\nyou can take your choice and form your own\nconclusions.\n? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOptn to any reader. Nimn ot ptnoni\naiKIng qutitlom wlll not bt publllhtd.\nThtrt It no charge for thil lervice. Quel-\ntlom WILL NOT BC ANSWERED BY\nMAIL txotpt whtn thtrt li obvltui motility for privacy.\nRtader, Fernle\u2014Through the medium ot your\ncolumn could I htve the correct wordlnj\nJor a wedding Invitation?\nAn etiquette book glvei thli example ior\nwording an Invitation: \"Mr. and  Mn. John\nThomai  Taylor  requeit  the  honor  ot your\npresence at the marriage of their daughter,\nHelen Marie, and Mr. Raymond Mitchell on\nFriday, the fourth of August at six o'clock at\nthe Preibyterlin Church, Boston.\"\nM. W., Trail\u2014How did \"guerrilla warfare\" receive Its name?\n\"Guerrilla\" Is the diminutive of Spanish\n\"guerra\" (\"war or \"fighting\"), and therefore\nliterally means \"little war.\" Strictly speaking,\n\"guerrilla warfare\" signifies \"little-war warfare.\" The true meaning of \"guerrilla\" ls not\na person but a type of fighting.\nF. G., Nelson\u2014Would you publish the Horoscope for July 14?\nWith your sincerity and straighforward-\nness you cannot tolerate or understand anything different in others. You are optimistic,\ngenerous, confiding and idealistic, and would\nsuffer terribly lf an ideal wert ihattered,\nYour love ll pure, and to* be happy you must\nhave the understanding of your mate. You\nmay be blocked today, actually or psychologically, if you try to rush, or slacken your\npace. Chooie to read a light and entertaining\nbook thii tvenlng If you want lome form of\ntntertiinment. Tht moon enteri Aquariui at\n8:18 p.m.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS  AGO\nFrom Thi Dally Newi of July 21, 1937\nTeams skipped by J Rail nn up a\ndouble victory over thoie skipped by F T.\nWheeler Friday night in the Argyll Cup\nCompetition of the CPR Rowling Association, each by icorei of 13-fl\nMrs T. A Wallace tnd her daughters,\nDorothy tnd Dttnie. Cedar Street, have returned from a two weeki holiday spent at\nC<vnr d'Alene\nPress Comment\nPRIVATE CONTROL OF CREDIT\nOf all the Government controls placed in\neffett during the war, the regulation of instalment buying caused the least concern among\nmanufacturers, wholesalers, jobbers, retailers\nand the buying public. Goods being generally\nln short supply, the Increase In the size of\ndown payments worked little hardship on merchants or manufacturers. The buying public\nheld greater amounts of cash and few citizens\nfound lt difficult to meet the stiffened credit\ntermi impoied by tht Government through\nthe Wartime Prices and Trade Board.\nThese regulations have now been abolished, but Saskatchewan and Quebec propose\nto place them in effect again through provincial legislation. Their resurrection in peacetime poses a moot question.\nThe dollar down and a dollar a week plan\nwhich became so widespread in prewar days\nwas in some respects a menace to the economy\nof the country. People by the tens of thousands were loaded with debt they could not\nhandle when business slowed down and unemployment rose. Common sense dictates a\nmore intelligent control of consumer credit\nWe believe, however, the control ahould\nbe exercised by business houses and not by\ngovernments. In view of the vigorous effort\nrequired to shake off government controls\nlince the close of the war, it leems foolish to\nhand them back to provincial governments in\nso far as consumer credit Is concerned. Such a\ncourse would open the way for more government harness on business which needs above\naU Its full freedom to maintain the high standard of general prosperity which now exists.\u2014\nFort William Times-Journal\nBAD SWIMMERS SAFER\nThere is an old English proverb which\nlays, \"Good swimmers are oftenest drowned.\"\nAt the riik of insulting the intelligence of our\nreaders we will interpret this paradox thus:\n'People who think they are good swimmers\nrun foolish risks.\" The really pond swimmers\n- the champions\u2014 never take risks; they never\nihow off, they never tax their powers to the\nfullest, and they have a great respect for\nitrange water. For people whose ability is no\nmore than average, we thing It is better to say\nto themselves and to others, \"No. I'm not really\na good iwimmer.\"\nAi in every holiday season, we have reported\na jfreat many drownings already this year, and\ntrie swimming season is barely begun. People\nhave forgotten how cold, how treacherous, how\nweedy our lakes can be, and tbey have realised\ntoo late that their swimming prowess was less\nthan they thought. They have drowned, and\noften they have endangered the lives of others\nwho have tried to save them\nDon't tell yourself that you are a cood\niwimmer and take risks Re content to rail\nyourself a bad swimmer and enjoy yourself\nIn itftty,\u2014Peterborough Examiner.\nM YEARS AQO\nFrom Thi  Dtlly  Niwi of July 21,  1922\nFl  C   Hunt, AaiUUnt Diitrlct Horticulturist, leaves thii morning to attend the meeting of the Nort hw _#t Horticulturists. Etnmolo-\ngists ar.d Plsnt Pathologists at Yakima\nAfter  n  dav   nf heavy   artillery   fire,   I.im-\ner:r. Ireland. trZ, to the Nationalists, yesterday\nCBStlegar  !\u25a0  now  heavily  populated   with\nnmpTi tnd their eanvu tend\n40 YEARS  AQO\nfrom  Th,  Dally  Ntwi of July 21.  1M7\nS   .'   Ti .' r -*d  hn  Imied  \u25a0  challenge  to\nZ\".e   N. Linn   F * it hn] I   team   nn   behalf   of   the\nriv:l\"i 'ri\"-,  tor tx game it Kaslo during the\nFr ii'   F,i:r\n,1 A Frairr has been glutted Mining\nRec >:drr nf Roulind\nThe I^i'lata Mine manager hti beei un-\n\u25a0-,*\u25a0\u25a0> tn pv\u00bb'*m necenary ttt mi to hiul ore\nfmm  Ihs! mine ,\nTest  Yourself\n\\l-A-  \u201e 'lir capital nty nf Ssvitmlinr]'\n,*   Whs*  .  :-.   :i lhf rap.tal of HulBPiri\u00bb'\n1   Win!  is lhf rapital of f.rffrr'\nPedals 100 Miles\nDaily iti Cross\nCanada Adventure\nOTTAWA, July 20 (CPl-AjtrWtl\na 17-year-old French bicycle, a thin, I\nwiry Montrealer rode Into Ottawa I\ntoday with more than 1350 bicycle '.\nmiles behind him on a cross-Canada\ntrip that will take him trom Hall. \u25a0\nfax to Vancouver.\nThe eyejist, Romeo Morln, 89, let\nout from Halifax two weeks ago.\nHe hopes to reach Vancouver by\nthe end of September. Morln hai\nbeen averaging 100 miles a day,\nand intends to stick to Canadian\nroads all the way, a feat which he\nbelieves no cyclist has ever done\nbefore.\n8TOWAWAY8 HELD\nVANCOUVER, July 20 (CP) -\nRaymond Schwartz, 21, of Enum-\nclaw, Wash., and his 24-year-old\nFilipino wife, Sally, today were\nheld by Immigration officials here!\npending decision of United States\nauthorities whether Mrs. Schwartz '\ncan enter the U.S.\nThe couple stowed away on the\nSS Lake Cowichan at Tiwan Island,\nFormosa, and landed here yesterday\nafter a 19-day voyage.\nMEMORIAL TO BRITISH HEROE S \u2014This stained slus window In Westminiter\nAbbey, London, ia a memorial to bravery o( 1,500 Royal Air Force men who helped win Battle of\nBritain. Left: A sergrant-pllot kneels before Christ crucified. Right: Our Lady with dead Christ\nacrou her kneei symbolizes sacrifice of mothers and widows. A flying officer-pilot kneeli before them.\nCHURCH POINT. N. S, (CP) -\nFor 20 years Louis Gaudet has hitched up his ox-team to his wooden\ncart to deliver mail to farms along\nthe 1^-mile route between here\nnnd Concessions.\nMovie Gossip\nSusan Peters Back in Movies in\n''Sign of the Ram\" as Pretty as Ever\nTRADING DULL\nOTTAWA, July 18 fCP) - Slow\ntrading and little change In thp\nmarket were reported today by the\nDominion Agriculture Department\nin iti weekly livestock report.\nthe   Cower   Street   Lot.\nSHORTER   HOURS\nProvision has been made for\na shorter working day. Instead of\nLhe usual nine-to-iix routine, she\narriveb at 10:30 and leaves a-\nround   four.   Makeup \u25a0 people   ire\nBY   BOB  THOMAS ithe camera was in front of me\nHOLLYWOOD, . July 19 (AP)\u2014 the time.\"\nIt was a long, hard pull, but Sus* I    Virtually nothing ha.3 been overall Petera made it, she is making looked to safeguard Susan's health\na movie again. |Her aunt, a nurse, ls with heT all\nLooking pertly beautiful, Susan'the time, and her brother wheels igent to her home in the morning\nhas started \"Sign of the Ram,\" | her around and acta as general !so her preparation for the camera\nIn which she plays a mean woman, j guardian, Because Susan Is sub- will h*1 more comfortable.\nI found her as excited as a girljiect to he_.t rash, her dressing Arid so another step has been\nat her first high school prom. [room and the whole set are es-'taken by Susan in her erteady\n\"Oh,  they'vs been  wonderful  tcpecially cooled |fight   against   the   paralysis    that\nme,\"   she enthused. |    Even   some   of   Columbia's   herd gripped her from waist down after\n\"Everything has been done to Und fast rules have been overlook-la hunting accident 24 years ago.\nto make me comfortable. I'm notjed- No star, not even Rita Hay-1 Although there Is scant hope that\neven conscious of the camera.: worth, has been permitted to drive [she will walk again, she hasn't\nWhen I did my first scene, Lon the lot, but Susan's hand-con-1 let that limit her activities. Anvmg\nwas worried because I thought i trolled car is now admitted. She to j other things she has learned to fly,\nthey were just shooting the back permitted to have lunch in her,adopted a Iwby and invested In a\nof   my   head.  Then  they   told   me I dressing   room   n    precedent   one dress shop.\nThe latest news ibout Susan\nis that she he* severed her connection with M.G.M. she has a\nrespect for the itu din, hut it\ndoesn't permit players to partlci-\nIpato in picture profit*.\n\"So   I   asked   for   my   release.\"\nshe   said,   \"because   the   only   way\nfor me to make pictures Is with a\nBy TIM DICKSON lopments  are  held  up   fnr  lack  of [percentage.    My    lawyer    has    ir-\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer       I money. In mo.sl countries less thaniranKed   ll  *\u00b0  '  wU1  *>e  paid  over\nWHITBY, July 20 (CP)\u2014Thou- half the Christian constituency sup-|a  Pm\u2122, af  10  >'enrs*  It's  like  an\nisndi  of  missionary worken an   ports the  work  of  the  world-wide i,nnuit.v\nneeded for minion fleldi and mil- church. The churches must wake up     She    sald    sh\u00ab\"    w\u2122ld    like    to\nlloni   of   Bible*  ire   required   to and awaken their members to take,\u2122**   another   film    right   away,\nmeet .a world-wide ihortage, tho;in the reality and the demands of,then  follnw with -^ne a year\nInternational   Mlnionary   Council the ecumenical situation.\" \"\n\u25a0aid today In _f provlilonal itate-i ijUt night Bishop S'cphcn C\nment issued at the cloie of two- Meili of Cambridge, Eng., assistant\nweek lenloni ofthe full Council. , to  the Archbishon  nf  Canterbury, ar\ncrcular children  will  be equipped\nThousands of Workers, Millions\n01 Bibles Needed in Missionary Work\nSTOCKHOLM   rCPi-A   sanitarium near Nice, France, for 500 tub-\nhad\nThe statement wa* agreed upon in told a press conference there\nsubstance by the 120 delegates from'been   \"an   astonishing   measur\n41 countries. It is to be referred to aunanimity\" among the 120 delegates\ncommittee of the Council for final from 41 cuntries.\nrevision next week.\nDealing with resources and equip- EASIER NOW\nment, the report said: !    Asked  about  the   prospects  mLs-\n\"We have scarcely begun to meet .sion work offers 85 a vocation at\nthe need for 'missions1 literature, present, Bishop Ncill said in many\nThere Ls a famine of books, both for; ways the tajsk of the missionary was\nthe edification of the church and for easier now than in the past. When\nuse in evangelism. , he was  a  missionary   ln   Indii   25\n\"The world shortage of Bibles Is years ago, tension between mission-\nreckoned by millions of copies.! aries and nationals added to the dif-\nYears must pass before the Bible so- ficulties hut now missionaries went\ndefies can overtake this need. ! tn foreign fields hy  mvita'ton and\n\"Radio, audio-visual aids and other were aided  by  Christian  churches\nmodern techniques are available but in the foreign lands,\nonly a beginning has been made in     He said that in the past some mls-\ntheir use. ' sionaries had tried to change natives\n\"Christian Councils which exist of other countries entirely to a Euro-\nare hampered hy lack of staff and pean way of lite, but the trndencv\nfunds. Others need to be established now was lo irt the natives keep all\nas soon as possible i that was good in '.ht :r old \\v;<v<,- .vi\nLACK OF MONEY j let   them   choose   European   habit*\n\"These and other necessary devel- they wanted\nflwith furniture, linen, blankets, med\nical and surgical equipment from\nSweden, reports the Swedish Red\nCross. The sanitarium has been\ngranted $.55,000 for furnishing snd\nequipping.\nHer \"trip\" wasn't necessary but our Accident\nPolicy IS for complttt\naccident coverage,\nBe Protected\nMall coupon below for further\npirtlculin.\nCITY\nF. A. Stuart\nBox 209\nS77 Baktr St\nPhor.d WO\n, Ntlion. BC.\nwhat do\nyou\nmean. \u2022 \u2022\n\u25a0 \u25a0__\u25a0\u25a0___\u25a0\nWARNING!\n*. f\nTEST  AN1WER8\nI *  Ihr\n111 .i k\n:   llf*;r\n.1    A'h':.s\nToday's Horoscope\nYou ire i self-sufficient person, and Intellectual, ind you like to assume i lending\nrole You ire adventurous, and like to travel;\npre robust and participate in many sports.\nYou have the power and courage ot your\nconvictions and will yield a point only when\nit is proven to you This is a good day in\nconnection with Joint finances, the possessions\nof another, bills, payments, insurance, offers,\nlegacies, contracts snd derisions You will\ngun much In many wnys nnd happiness will\nhe yours In your next yeir Tiavel ar.d hrr.r-\nfir'al rhar.gr.i w.'.l rventun'r, but al.so some\nunexpected annoyance, perhaps thro igh a\n(\u2022ranger or Indisposition Born on this date i\nrh'ld will he endowed with fine qualities and\nexceptional tnlent. the intellectual faculties\nbeing well developed On'.standing succe\u00abi\nnnd undoubted popularity seem as.ured\nWords of Wisdom\nIronnmv IS hilf Ihr halllr of lift; [I\nr'l s-i hnril In r*trri nv>nry. as Iii sp'T.rl\nfll     Spurnon\nEtiquette Hints\nul fir it and stands i\nxi   the  nin\nissiit the la\ncobac\nPick of Pipo Tobaccos\nIndications still point to a shcutage of\nroal next Winter\nThc lietter grades, especially, are not\nbeing produced in sufficient volume to\nmeet thc ever increasing demand\nPHONE 33, and place your order now,\nwe can make delivery of the following\nimmediately\nGait Lump and Stove, Newcastle Lump,\nCrow's Nest Cobble and Stoker, Three\nHills Lump, Canmore Briquettes.\nWest Transfer Co.\n\"Nplvn \u00bb Purl NrUrchonti t -r A' *t c-)**\u25a0.'\nPhone 33 719 Baker St.\nk\n 11\n.\n , , , _ .\t\n\u2014\u2014\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0     \t\n<U5\nSPORTS\nynamos Short Circuit\nelson in Tight Play\nly virtue of Al Laface'i\nierb ret minding and tha oc-\nIon of a Leaf's off night,\n)kane Dynamos humbled Nel\ni lacrosse crew 11-6 at the\n'lc   Arena   Saturday   nlflht.\nLaface was called to task\n,t: first two periods of tightly\n\u00abted, stringent play that saw\nbeats pour almost a plan-\nl of rubber at the Spokane\nB. Laface handled the bom-\nnent with cool ease and was\nf instrumental in keeping Uu\nj down to 7-2 at the end of\nlecond quarter.\nB efficient passing plays of\n.laface brothers was one of the\nighLs of an otherwise dull\ni, On several occasions thres passed almost floor-lengtn\nid a ready player in a knot of\nts.\nfty Frank Jones of the Leafs\nid one of his better games\nallied two j^il.s and was in\nin assist. Jones was a contin-\nplaymaker and when the o_-\nn called for speed, Frank\ndied his 200-odd pounds down\nfloor  with   inspired   accelera-\n?  first  quarter  produced   one\nie  lowest   crop  of  goals  seen\nie Nelsnn  floor to date. Only\nshots caused the red light to\nover   the   Nelson   net.   Rah*1\n!o   and   Bishop   scored   from\nefforts   to   put   the   visitors\n2-0  lead   after   15   minutes\nard  fought  lacrosse.\n\u00bbes   tallied   the  firs  t  Nelson\ner at the start of the seond\nLaface   Ftymied   a   Cooper-\n.0   rush.   He   picked   up   the\nind   and   slapped   it   behind\ninsuspecting gillie.\nile  the  Dynamos  were   short\n4 the Leaf's moved their big.\niry   into   their   territory    in\nTort tn beat the Spokane net\n;r.   The    power    play    back-\nwhen    Joe    Laface    slipped\nthe floor unnoticed to plant\n:lf   in   position   for   Jim   La-\npass from  thc Spokane goal\n1.   Joe   had   little   trouble   in\nig Graves who was left alone\nn  the Leaf defence.\nite   and   Al   Sitton   combined\nthe    next    Spokane    counter\nminute later tallied again\nie visitors after several  Leaf\ncs   failed   tn   produce   results\nthe close  of the  period   \\.-\\-\ne  scored   from  Jones  tn   end\nirst half of the  game  at  7-_\nhe  Dynamos\nSon was in fnr only one nf\nix goals scored in the third\nWassick    registered    from\nja   break   at   the   first   faceoff   to\nmark up the third Leaf tally.\nThe    Spokane    counters    were\ni divided among Sitton, llabe Laface,\nRobertson   and   Zokal.\nj With forty-five minutes of lacrosse, marked by loose playing\nand    regular    attendance    in    the\n(sin   bin,   the   Leafs   trailed   the\n|Dyn*amos   10-3.\nThe Nelson crew pulled together\n! harder   in    the    final   canto    but\nj their three goal spurt was of little\nconsquenct against the imposing\nlead.\nI    Mayo   registered    at   the   two-\nI minute   mark   with    one   of   the\n.fastest floor-length breaks seen\nhere   to  date.   Baldy,  who  Is  also\nI known as Rabbit- made tracks to\nthe Spokane crease in mass production and banged it home with\na  vengence.\nj Jones of the Leafs scored from\na three-way play that saw LaPointe  and   Cooper   set  up  Jones\n1 for   his   backhand   time   shot   on\n[goal.   Robertson    replied   for   tho\n1 Dynamos seconds later as the\nLeafs were irpening up on the\ndefensive   in   an   effort   to   send\n'\u2022 more   strength   into   the   Spokane\niterritory.\ni Fans, who had been loudly voicing their dUaproval of the refer-\neeing all evening, let go when\nJoe Laface checked the Nelson\ngoalie in the crease. Vic Graves,\nwhn came out to snatch a lose\nhall, was checked heavily by Laface. When he sought refuge behind   the   white   line,   Laface   fol-\n| lowed   him   into   the   crease   and\n| continued   to   hack   away   at   the\ngoalie   until   thc   play  was  called.\nReferee   Max   DesBrisay   let   the\naffair go without a penalty, muct\n.to   the  consternation   of   the   Leaf\nfooting   section.\n,| LaPointe and Townsend pooled\nresources to mark up the last and\nsixth gnal for the Leafs. Townsend\n'flipped a pass to LaPoints who\nmade  no  mistake   with   Laface  at\n; close quarters.\ni Lineups with goals and assists\nin  brackets follow:\n\u25a0 Spokane\u2014B Laface 2, '2), K.\nRobertson 3 0), Sitton 1 (1), Zokal\n2, Bishop 1, Joe Laface 1 (li,\nWhite 1, Jim Laface, R. Gibson.\nPie Laface, J. Ma lley, L Torreson*\n'Al  Laface.\nNelson-Jones 2 fl), Lapointe 2.\nWassick 1. Mayo 1, Townsend 1,\nA. Choquette, L. Choquette, Mas-\nilo, F. Graves, AppeJ; ' Krisan,\nCooper.  Thompson.\nJack Houston chose Al Laface\nand Ken Robertson of thc Dynamos and Vic Graves as three stars\nfor the evening.\nSpokane's Tiger to fight Here\nTiger Jack Fox, duiky Spokane fighter who li\nto take part In the NeUon Golden Jubilee boxing\nshow, Is shown above at left at he took part In an\nVictoria Runner Captures Mile\nAl (oast; 11 American. Place\ntxhlbltlon recmtly with Joe Louli, heavyweight\nchimp, at Spokane. Fox knocked out Bill Petenon\nIn thi fifth round.\nEdmonton Legion\nWins Final in\nDominion Soccer\nCALGAHY, July 20 (CP)-Ed-\nmonton North Side Lesion defeated\nCalgary Calliei hen Saturday evening 2-1 ln the Alberta final of the\nDominion soccer championship at\nMewata Stadium.\nA steady downpour of rain kept\ntht attendance down, and made tha\nground treacherous. Legion adapted\nThemselves to the conditions better\nthan Calliei, and crossed over with\na 2 to 0 lead.\nYear-Old rPeg Rower Regains\ni. Title When Champ Overturns\nBy JOE KARSHNE\nrROIT, July 20 (AIM- Then\nj of the Winnipeg Rowing\nwho at .'lfi, was rated a con-\n\u25a0 with too much seniority\n; oaismen nf top-flight caliber,\ntured the United States singles\ntitle Saturday in the 73rd\nnal rowing championship,\nregaining thc title he won in\nDubois triumphed on the De-\nRiver course by stroking pait\nnal Champion John I). Kelly,\n\u25a0vho \"caught a crab\" at the\nermile mark _nd overturned\nly, winner two weeks ago of\nlid's coveted Henley Diamond\nand l.i.=er in only twn of his\n3 starti, spilled ai his left oar\ni too deeply into thc water on\naver stmke, fully two lengths\nof the field\ndnd him trailed Joseph Angyal.\nt the New York AC, Dubois\n'oseph Mclr.tvre, Kelly's team-\nfrom the Phibiriclphia club.\n:ntyre, tiy *.:*.% to avoid a col-\n1 v:;th Kei'y'.s overturned scull,\niace and dropped out and Du\nbois began hU slow, steady sweeps\nmward the finish of the 1 L4-m:ie\ncourse. \u25a0\nHe was fully two lengths ahead of\nAngyal. who collapsed a. the finishing gun fcho boomed in h:s ears\nIt was Angyal's third race of thf1\nafternoon. He had won the 145-\npound single sculls and the senior\nl-i.l-pimr.d single sculls quartcr-\nmile dash.\nFor lanky, square-jawed Kelly the\nriefcat was a grim disappointment,\noot only because he was heavily\nfavored but also because \"catching\na crab\" sometimes Indicates an oarsman's lapse of technique\n\"I'l was stupid dn my part\" he rfe-\nclrtrci \"I caught a couple little\nrrab.s bc?<,re I spilled, but I figured\nI was doing all r.ght after that I\ndon't know what cauied it Everything happened so quickly\"\nJohn Ii Kelly. Sr. the Philadelphia star's father, coach and keenest fan, shared his son's disappointment hut had onlv this tn say1\n\"A champion has to stay m bil\nboat \"\nVANCOUVER July 20 - Small\ncontingents from Victoria and th-\nUnitcd SUitc-s held the spotlight\nin the Canadian Senior Men's\nTrack ond Field Championships\nheld In Vancouver Saturday before  more  than   10,000  persons.\nVictorians placed in seven events\nwhile the Americans, headed by\ntwo students from thc University\nof   Oregon   placed   in   11   contest;,.\nCliff Saimond of Victoria captured thr- featured mile open under a scorching 82 degree heat,\ntouring thc course in 4 28 2 Ken\nMcPherson of the University of\nBritish Columbia was second and\nAI  McKinnon  of  VVictoria.  third.\nOregonians George Russmussin\nand Rill Pirkins were outstanding\nAmerican entrants \u00ablon*K with\nWayne Mann of the Colleg* nf\nPudtfet Sound and Mike Scanlan\nof  Seattle.\nRusmusfin held the far,* attention when ho made a determined * assault on Canadian pole\nvault rec rd of 13 feet 3-H inches\nThe bar was measured to 13^\nfeet. Do his first try he just\ntipped trie bar over with hit elbow, hot on the other two he\nwas  well  short.\nScanlan was second and Pirkins\nthird Ra-mussin's official mark\nwas   11   fet t,   lPt   Inches\nMann also mad-p a serious bid\nat h Canadian Mark -the running\nhigh jump. A fer he had disposed\nof all r mpetition at the six foot\nmark he FT.terr.p'.rd unfoccessfullv\ntn break the. record of fi feet 4*i\ninches Doug Blair nf Vannuvtr\nwas t 'cond nnd G I. Farrar of\nRr emer tnn, Thi'd   Man's mark wai\nEast Dominates\nNel Trials;\nTo Vancouver\nScots From\nPrairies Winners\nbby Locke Captures Canadian\nento Top Money Winners\nCARBORO  GOLF   A N D al*.   thp  way   through   the   four   '.\u00ab\nUNTRY   CLUB,  Toronto,  July hole rounds.\n-Bobby Locke, the South Af r I - Th<*    low    Canadian    amateur\ngolfer,   now   hai   taken   top IhiiuKh he nnw p'.ays nut <-'. Vsrlro-.:\nley in six of the 10 North Am- Mead.iwbrooke, was  Nick  Wisnurk\nan  tournamrnti.  Saturdiy,   he *.s:'h  T,2.  \u201e::r  stroke  nff  :b.r  C*ir.s-\ns  the  Canadian   Open   with   i dun Open record  Wnnrwk ssbj* ln.s*-\n>rd breaking 268\u2014two itrokei scoring   amatf'ir   wilh   2HH    i'   '.-:,\nId   of   Ed   I Pork y I   Oliver   pt * r.irnamet.t   las*   year   al   '.he   -\u25a0(-\u25a0:-\nmlngton. Delaware. ';<,-,! Rcn'onsfirM C'.f.b\nkes yntnrv  | ut   hint in  f.rsl I. >. ke shut n f.'iir under par (17 nti\nm lilt* V: i'.i* I S'.i*.**s pro cir- Ihr* final nnn* 1\n\u25a0nonpv   'Ai'.nt'ij   li.*  ',   tk   f.rsl l,,*,'ke *.s,is ;:*. '.he 60s a'.! '.'r.r was\ny  uf  $211011   and   the   Sea*ra:r, w.lh minds nf tM 06-(CI 17  erlu'ima\nCup hark  In  him  h* *i.r  .Mi lhc   rr,   rd    \u201e!   La***.. -.-.    I.ittle   if\nUlllieiii.ilk' Cli'v, land, si' in :*<:iti al T I'.to Sl\nke said. * I*. is lhc li .r.r-: Ihri'l Ai dicwi vs.Hi 271\nr tf King i..nr:  and  I hupn l, I'd   \u2022Vnri-r   (liivrr   - '.   W.lm \u25a0 t\nVar.cnr.fr I* defend '.lie t.t'.r t,,tt   I'rl    win cij.ialr I  *.**.p  r . .rsc\nrar\" Ol.vrr f.: ...hH with 270 rer.nil ,.f fill un Th ir.hv   sn ; a M\nbelli..*   lhc 271   s*t  hv   Uw- aiiil *.*.   | a:   71   t    I.,*.    *     f. .is.il   I' *\nUie  i '  l :. *.* i.i: d   it*   IUM  a! sir  \u00ab... tul..: 1 I.,** if   **  I  a* ;r,:- I\n.:- ,i, T ntu ', i*,.n  of  ta* : t  ,-\u25a0     d  ii   * r>   . '\nt*'i    if, In    *! r fi\". $ Hiul\n.*:\nBy NORMAN ALTSTEDTER\nCinad'in Pren Stiff Writer\nV1CTOHIA. J i!v 2*1 'CPi- Laden\nw;*.ii i.iii'.s nf lhe Eait-Wut\nuillc'nes y.,..\u2022\u2022-\u25a0: imni.s sLari muvesl\nnver l\" Vairn.vrr tonight to prepare ? ,:* pl.iy it*, thp I)u*n. r.mn rham-\npinnsi*:; .** '. lowing nvcrwheltning\nviclurifi on Ihe grioj c . ir'.i ol the\n\\'.fl  : s   1 awn Ter.till Ci ih\nTr*.,* K.i.s'.s pxppnenced sqiad gar-\n\u25a0prril 2.1 * f the .Tl p ;:it.s awarded\n:*i L\"p '* \u2022'.' ri*.si'.*.i if which w.ll\n:\u25a0' i -:-.-.'.-.:- I ii-*i*.g w.th tvi se at\n'.'tip i. ,*.., :. ,ii Ju'.y 21-26, ;*. jc'.ec*\n:..*\u2022    f a |i.*.*..s(**iplritr.\nA: * t*.* : i i it; sw, cp nf even'.'\nwa.s in ide Saturdiy tiy the Fasten*\ntip*.s,*-'..,*,*..\u25a0> >d lv Ilr**:, Rn-\nrr,-. fir s.in*. datk-haired IM7 dr.*\n*,s*:i a* I Q irticr chimpii.il whn\n>' pprrt Vim r.rr'i jailer Stohi-\nDcrij  fi 0. fl t  fi I\nHrendan Ma.ki r the N\" 1 plaver\n.:*. f.,* F..s* . '|*n '\u25a0 h \u2022* * t'kr I firs'\n:: Lie i.'.t Car A I. iu I st, i! wnri!\nVan,      *., . i   At*,   .'rf!. : *.    It    t \"\nf   1        I !*,P     s.     \u25a0tip.lW     I'l.   VP1S.1V     1^\nIlr.*.'1: C.n.'r! , s' . :\u2022 * t c * iii n **\nn alili In,* : ra- prrfp.'t 'f.lr * f 'hr\nM,.*,'-i*\u201e,rr    wl.i     wai      .: .Icfra'.f'l\nSTOHI BERG  HANDICAPPED\nSl ,:     .   \u2022 , '-.*. ,* I w it'*, tin i* f'.anifl\nEntries lor\ne Tennis\nK\nI    \u25a0     I*\nSSr\ny norm AiTSTioTEit      Second Boxot Dics\nnadian    Press   Slatf   Wnlrr   I\n\u25a0JCorVHI    .' .''     IT* '*!'\\'.F   A\nIh.m   I'll  ,*\u2022*...      .   .   . '   *\nL.sl.s   .*.   '**\u2022       .1    i      *   *\u2022\u25a0\nUll    '.A i :,     tr   i   s    '    a*l\n!*\nlj r iit'a.i 'c.l l .,*, l'*\u00bb I asl s team\np.,t i ,- a s'* .*\u25a0 ' *- t* s flil'r- , li.il\n'-It t j a . I t - g A ns ( r i r | r p, - -\nEn sr , Nealf l*'d San I 'r I* tn\n..I  I'   -'ia***!    Ore , 6 I. 8 3\n0 n Mil) ar-ni'l lh\" \u25a0'ead, ot\nta.sa ,,l\"l*i all i wn\" '\" straight\nsell a.thou*]\" **a\" onvif'i .1 *-.\nB.etto\" hilt \"H I\"*- lo I \u2022. I I. * *>\nI\nit   li   .sn. *\u00ab h*^ :   ..n    .\nil   f.ail ha* .   is\n1 is i    tt'ftl    'fa*     f *\nrh;' I   ii ii  f,|n*,i*.j   ttr.'- I\n-I\nwere i*;i* !l ;...  '      |   *\ntor npc i-s  t *   \u25a0 f  f \u25a0\nI even'   i\"ia.'.: i :.'\u25a0-.  t:   -\nountnei\n\u00abnd M* s   1'  M ;es  lm ,    I int   ,   ,; \\   a   ' 1,1\ntin.    Aik      *.*ll;rg    t'i'wr.ii r.glll   1*11*. I   1*,     ll   f.    ni   K'l'll   F   1\ninur  nf  thp   f . i* an     I   i' \u25a0    , r;    ani    '    i    nras   ,1     * *    k    J   *   *\ntlpj, will il* I  nil   **,*      I,       *. * i    I\nCham) :   i .:   |      I     *   * .    1 ll     *                             I    *     ,    '   *\nLess -     .i    I, ...      ....;*   \u2022 , .   ;   . I ,    il     ,\n\u00bbli'\u00bb    S.l  if   *    >\u25a0 .   i   i  k      \u2022     '\u25a0 .. Ii.       v\nPaha     ' **'*! *   *\ni    -.,<\u00ab :r       ,-    .,;:i    \u2022\u2022 .'    ll.\nh'.'ii an . \" \u2022 ed thi    * .*:   \u00bb 'tin .:\nappirmt   rffJ  '\nHten iat* , *' i,,: fit \\*i*.Rger\nbrn'ha; Tin pllsrd \u2022 headier gime\ni-s* uki Ilu* Hour. U.f.is, ind\n\u25a0    ,   *    ,    v   , * -n*.   *n wh . |..iw|jl\n.' i.niil nl tu th\n\". * * ... i a: \u2022 i (ar\n\u25a0   1-      *<   i  .   ai   is din.e.l\n6 feet, IH Inchej.\nAmericans cleaned up In 120\nhigh hurdles, with Jack Burke of\nSeattle first. Rasmussin iecond\nand Herry Widener of Bremerton i\nthird   The   time   wai   154.\nScalan captured the hop, iklp\nand leap even at 41 feet, lLa inches\nwhile Carl Fiiyicnman of Seattle\nwaa third. Finnettman won the]\nJavelin event, w*ith a heave of\n143 feet. 3 Inches.\nVictor Y men's relay team was\nthird in the mile relay event bc-\nnind the University of British\nColumbia and the Owls Club of;\nVancouver, Harry Mitchell, also of\nthe Victorii Y finished second behind Chlch Turner of UBC. in the\n22(1 dash anrl Roger Wellman of\nthe Owls Club in the 100\nBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian Pren\nSUNDAY\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nPittsburgh lfll HO 200-9 lfi    1\nBoston 000 100 000 -1   5   1\nOstermueller and Klutts; Spahn.\nI.ar.franconi   '5',   Sim.in   16,,   Karl\n3i  and Camelll, Mas:  ifit\nSt   I>  i.s 020 OOO OOO -2   \u00bb    1\nBrooklyn 000 000 0O3--3   8    1\nHearn.   litazie   i9i,   D.cksnn   '9i\nP.iliet   (9i   and   Garagiola;   Taylor,\nCaiey (91 and Edwards.\nChicago 000 400 00O-4 11    0\nPhiladelphia      000 Id 000-2   7   1\nErickson, Meyer (6i, Wyip fit, and\nMcCuUough; Heintwlman, Srh.it.z\nHI. Jurl.iich (7), Donnelly 18' and\nSeminick.\nChicago 000 000 02O-2   \u00bb   1\nPhiladelphia      000 000 001-1   fl   0\nLade, Rnrnwv '9i and Scheffing,\nH'iKhPs and Lake man. Seminirk (9'\nCincinnati 010 000 201    4 10   2\nNew York OOO 000 001-1    i    1\nBlarkwe'.l   nnd   Lamanno;   Knsin\nBeggs 19*. I*)*.t id' and Cooper\nCincinnati 0O0 200 103- \u00ab   7   0\nSew Ymk 2011 004 30i-9 10   0\nHulk:   i7    ir.d   Mueller;   Hartung\n9*. Van.de.-meer and Lombard:.\nAMERICAN   LIAGUS\nB<_tnn OOO OOO Jlft-S   t    1\nSt  LouU 004 000 OOj-4   B   3\nHughJnn, Dnrilh i7i and Tebbetts,\nKramer, Moulder '8* and Moss.\nBoston 103 200 000 -A 11   2\nSl   Loti'J 0113 004 OOx   7 13    1\nGalehone Ferrji i6i. Murphy\n(6*. Dnri'ti (J' and Tartee, Muncrief\nand Ear'.v.\nIlr -wr. (4*. Zn'.dik '4', Sanford (7\nPhiladelphia 010 200 oo:- 5 *,o 2\nChicago 3TO 002 nix -<i   8   r*\nMarchildon, McCahan 1T\u2022 and H .*\nsir. Ruff.ng, (Ir '. e \u25a0 f\u00bb \u25a0. Harrjt '9\nand Tresh\nPh'ladplphu      400 :no oni   7   J   I\n(*l*,,,*ag , on*. 030 000-4   \u00ab   c\nScheib   Sasigi   ifi*   and  Guerra\nP.ipuh. Gerbnan ifli and Dickev\nWaahington       on oon 00O-1   \u00ab   0\nCleveland 000 OOO 000   0    1   0\nHaefner a - .! F.var.i. Feller. Klip\nnil'*, i9i and Hegln. R uknwikl '8'\nWaihington Mo 1 no noo 1 \u00ab 2\nCleveland 100 WO 20i   I 10    1\nMasterion    S.arpornugh   181   and\nFerrcl.,   Harder  and  laipet.\nSew York IWl 010 OOO- 1    3    '\u2022\nlift .,;\u2022 0(0 10il Kl< - S 10   0\nBeveni   Newjoni   *7i   and  H* ik\nSewl*.v.utr and Wagner\nNew York    100 307 000 00    11   18    1\nI'r'.r   I i:*1 032 0O4 0*.    12 18    I\nPage.    Has.lii    (*'.   G linpert    (Iii\nHevr.'Idl  'i1'   Aft  Berra, Overnire\n1: , ks   .4     He :  n   'fl'.  Wl; li    '\u2022\nV,    i   a     ' *     H '   t'einan    \u25a0 '\u25a0\"-    1   i\n, *.  '*    Waa* cr   1 if\nSTfnNATIONAI    LI A C. UI\n!*,.' '\u25a0      p   4    1    .'flif*.   (' **.   fl    I\nT      '    *  *   4   Nrwa-k 4\nR     \"p.*..   7    1    H.tffa   . 9   ft\nAMERICAN  AI80CIATION\n'     ..as.'ie !   Ki* nt C.l)   I\nI* deal *  2   Mill'P'i   1 >  1\nI'   1   11 tl 11 4   St    IVT   1\nP\/ CIFIC COA\u00bbT  I EAfll I\n11,.; .wood 5   (inland \u00ab\nSicritr.intii II  San Hugo 8\nSaait'i i   ^, Porlland 0   1\nSan FiinriK** t. Loi Angaias 4\nSATUHDAY\nAMIRICAN   AMOCIATION    '\nI.oiuivillt I. Ksuai City 1\nTcdplo t. Minnaipolll .1\nIndianapolis ll. Mllwaukei 4\nPACIFIC COAiT LIAQUI\ntliK.ar.il 1], Hollywood >\nI xs Ange'es V San Francucn 3\n\u2022-,,---r    'I     |'-.'1>-,|    1\nVANCOUVER, July 20 (CP) -\nHighland lads and lassies from the\nPrairiei matched strathspeys and\nreels with their Pacific Coast brothers and sisters at the 61st Annual\nCaledonian Games here today, and\nwhen the last fling had been flung,\na good deal of the booty went East\nof the Rockies.\nFollowing are the piping and\ndancing results of Prairie contestants:\nPiping, strathspeys and reeLs, novice, 11-2, Fred J. P, McLeod, Winnipeg.\nPibroch (amateur) \u2014 1. Albert\nDuncan, Edmonton, 2. Fred J. P.\nMcLeod. Winnipeg.\nF^eel,,U\"de,r lirl MariI_n Ritchie,\nEdmonton; 3. Helen K. Smith Edmonton. '\nReeliUndM   lsy   Joan  Bryan,\nTrail Noses\nOul Nelson\nJuniors (-S\nTRAIL, B.C., July 20 -Trail\nJuniors nosed out the visiting Nelson Juniors 6-5 In an exhibition\ngame at Butler Park Sunday afternoon.\nWith the temperature well in the\nnineties only a handful of fans were\non hand to witness a really fine ball\ngame between two well-matched\nclub.8 The game was almost from\nthe first a pitchers' duel between\nBurch cf the locals and Kraft for\nthe visiting Nelsonites. Burch\nstruck out 13 batters, gave up four\nhits and allowed five walks and hit\none batsman. Kraft for the Lake-\nsiders hurled his best game of the\nseason, striking out 12 batters,\nyielding six hits, walking two and\nhivting one batter.\nIn the hitting mpai-.ment Ray\nGarriepy drove out a beautiful\nhomer over the 300-foot mark in\nthe third inning for Trail's only\nextra base hit. Herb Pitts, starry\nfirst sacker, drove out Nelson's only\nextra base hit, a two bagger in the\nninth inning. In fielding, Soligo at\nsecond for the home boys pulled off\na neat catch, while the efficient\nJimmy Todd in left field for the\nNelson Club * pulled off two fine\ncatches, one being a beautiful shoestring catch of Peebles' line drive\nin the sixth inning. The Trail runs\nwere scored by Soligo, Garriepy,\nGerananzo, Burch, Caputo and\nZanier. Th\u00ab visiting scorers were\nTodd, Bob Koehle, Red Koehle,\nKennedy and White.\nBatteries were:\nTrail \u2014 Burch and Gerananzo.\nNelson \u2014 Kraft and Bob Koehle.\nUmpire was H. Beckett.\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 21, 1947 \u2014 7\nRuffing Wins 271st\nChicago Downs Phillies for ll\nTime; Brooks Take Protested Game\nBy STIVE ROBERTSON\nCtnadian Prtu Stiff Writer\nTha National League-leading\nBrooklyn Dodgers put on t itormy\nninth Inning flnlih Sunday to\nwhip St. Louli Cardinal! 3-2 with\nthree lut-lnnlng rum against four\nof tha Rod Birds' bast pitchers.\nTha Cards played the game under proteit from the top of the\nninth, claiming that Ron Northey'i\ntriple off the centrefleld wall, on\nwhich ht was thrown out at home,\nhad actually gone into tht centrefleld seats and bounced back on\nthe fitld.\nFor eight Innings, the Brooks were\nhelpless under the spell of rookie\nJim Hearn's shutout stuff. But when\nPete Reiser and Dixie Walker opened the eighth with doubles, Hearn\nwas replaced with Alpha Brazle.\nBrazle was replaced later by\nMurry Dickson who allowed another\nrun and Howie Pollett came to pitch\nNakusp Squares\nRound With IM\nWin Over Nelson\nEdmonton.\nPiobaireachd (amateur)\u20141. Albert\nDuncan, Edmonton; 2. Fred J. P\nMcLeod, Winnipeg.\nHighland fling, under 13\u2014W. Joan\nBryan, Edmonton.\nSailor's hornpipe, under 10 \u2014\n1. E. Marion Clay, Calgary; 2. Marilyn Ritchie, Calgary; 3. Helen A,\nSmith, Calgary.\nIrish jig, under 10-2, Iveagh Foreman, Winnipeg.\nHornpipe, under 13\u20141. Joan Bryan, Calgary.\nto   plnch-hltttr   Ed   Mlkali   who\nsingled home tht winning run.\nUHITS\nAt Boston, PltUburgh Plrtttt, rattling off 16 hits Including nine off\nAce Warren Spahn, walloped the\nBraves 9-1. Meanwhile Soutelpaw\nFritz Ostermueller limited the Tribe\nto five hits.\nIn two doubleheaden, Chicago\nwon   both  gamei\u20144-2 and  2-1\u2014\nfrom Philadelphia Phillies to run\ntheir string of triumphs for tht\nseaion ovtr tht Phils to 12 vie-\ntorlei In 13 gtmu tnd New York\nGianti, helped by Bobby Thomp*\n\u25a0on'i two homo rum, fought back\nto win tho aecond game 9-6 from\nCincinnati   after  tht   Reds   captured the flnt as Ewell Blackwell\nregistered   his   16th   consecutive\nvictory tnd 17th of tht tetson.\nIn the American League, the leading New York Yankees dropped two\ngames   to   the   revitalized   Detroit\nTigers.   Tht   opener  went   to   the\nBengals 4-1 on the strength of Hal\nNewhouser's three-hit pitching. The\nnightcap went 11 free-swinging innings before New York lost 12-11 as\nEddie  Mayo's double scored Hoot\ni Evers from first with the winning\ntally.\nMickey Haefner allowed only five\nhits and otithurled Bob Feller who\nwas touched for six in eight Innlngi\nas Washington Senators edged\nCleveland Indians 1-0 in an opening\ngame Mel Harder held tht Nats to\nsix hits in the nightcap as Cleveland took a B-l decision.\nBase hits soared with the temperature Sunday as Nelson F.O.E.\nseniors and Nakusp All-Stars teamed  up  for   their  second  weekend'22 6AFETIES\ngame   with   Nakuip   evening   the     Cleveland outfielder Dal* Mitch-\nseries   by   whipping   Nelson   12-8.! ell hit safely ln both contests to\nSaturday Nelson trimmed the vis-1 run  his  consecutive gamt\nltora 4-1.\n(See also story on page 9 >\nA week hence both squads will\nhold a similar two-game series at\nNakusp.\nKen Highland, Nakusp manager,\nhitting\nstreak to 22.\nAt St. Louis, ttie Browni icored\nall but two of their 11 runi on homers as they routed Boston Hed Sox\n4-3 and 7-6.\nPaul Lehncr's lnsidt - th* - park\nhomer in the first with tht bises\npitched the full nine innings for his , d d wa5 malched_|\u201e th. ucond\nteam and though nicked ftr con- by a three.run horaer hy Jeff Heath,\ns.derable hits, was able to keep formerly o( Fort William, md Walt\nthera sufficiently scattered to earn Judnich*r, lw0.nm r0und-tripptr.\nhimself   a   win.   Southpaw   hurler\nSteve Scott started on the mound for\n2718T FOR RED\nOld Red Ruffing won hil J71st\nNelson. Steve pitched seven Innlngi ., ^^ victory in tht\nand gave up eight runs. Towju-end ^ g| th, mi\u201e\nrelieved Scott in the eighth frame g      \u00ab k    ,.5 decUion ,rom phlla-\nand finished the game for Nelson.   | d , ..   Alhleticgi The A'i took the\nTwo big Innings accounted for nlXcap 7.4 wlth the victory going\nover half of Nakusps runs. In the* 6\u201e -J itcher j*^ fiavage.\nfifth the visitors reached Scott for Th feran Rul(*ng btsttd Phil\nfive baae hits to score five runs. ] March,1[Ion 0I Penetanguiihene,\nBarron for Nakusp rapped out aL , who wa5 bidd|ng for his llth\ndouble to start the bal rolling in L , ' h , the opener. Th, b|g A*i\nthe   seventh   inning.   Three   more] ,i\u201ehthander  now hai  10 victories\nsingles  by  his  teammates  pushed   \u00a3,   ;   defeaU \t\nfour more big runs across the plate.  .._ .- \u2014\u00ab\nNelson scored twice in the first j*\ninning, added two mnre in the third,\na singleton in the fifth and finished\noff with three in their last inning.\nBatteries:\nNakusp\u2014Highland and Miller.\nNelson\u2014Scolt, Townsend (8) and\nNash. |\nUmpires\u2014Tozer and McDonald.\nWHIZZER MOTOR BIKES\nLightweight Motor Cycles\nSAM BROWN\nGun, Lock, Sift 4 Cyelt Worki\nPhone 1045 737 Btkir 8L\nNo Matter Where\nYou Go for a\nVacation\nYOU'LL\nWANT\nthe \"NEWS\" from home!\nYou moy be 5i:nnii*g yourself cn a pleasant bench, or perhnpj\n\"k'-Cj*'*1') f i*i s me secluded c.uncr of Vacationland but you\nw '\u2022'. none ttie less watt the ness from h me . . yes, ALL lha\nne*s about y-.ur family, your friends and acquaintances, your business associates . . . you'll want to KNOW what's going on in tha\nold home town And Al I this news can be so easily supplied at trifling cost, bv merely phoning 144 and giving your Vacationland address to the Circulation Department uf\n25c per week\n$1.00 per month\nby mail.\nN?km Batlg tan\n \t\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NiWS, MONDAY, JULY 11,1947   i\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nHaving a Whale of a Time With 700-Pound \"Baby\"\nWnnhnif .shore on the beach near Neponalt, L.I.,\nNew York, a aerlously-lnjured 16-foot baby whale la\ntha centre of attraction for a group of youngster!.\nCoast-guardimen later fired 40 bulleti Into the dying animal to put It out of Hi mlaery, then towed It\nto deep water, where It lank when cut looie.\nLatitt Portrait        To Succed       Recovering From\nOf Pope Pius XI        Qen, Ike ? Bullet Wounds\nLieut.-Gen. J. Lawton Collins,\npictured at hli desk In Waihlngton, hat been appointed at Deputy\nChief of Staff, U.8. Army. He wlll\naitume the new position on Sept\n1. Hli appointment has spurred\n\u25a0 peculation that he may succeed\nGeneral Elsenhower ai Chief of\nStaff when General \"Ike\" returns\nto civilian life early next year.\nMayor Faces\n9109\nSIZES\nMO\nWlaJiian, THwdbt\nTWO IN ONE PATTERN\nTwo beguiUlng little frocks for a\nmerry little moppet. Pattern 9109 JJJ\ndesigns one with a wide yoke forJQ\nSundays,  the other,  pinafore-style _r\nwith angel ruffles for aunny-diaya. I q\nThis pattern gives perfect fit, is!j\neasy   tn   us.   Complete   illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step\nPattern  9109 sizes 2, 4, 8, 8,   10.\nSinze ii, with puff sueeves. I-M, yds\n25-in   H   yd.   contrast:   other,   2_\nyds.\nCharge\nTrt\\t> li the latest posed portrait\nof Pope Plui XM. It wai made recently at the Vatican In Rome\nwhen Hii Holiness sat for an American photographer.\n\\nother Eva\nc\nc.\nHERE   IT   IS\nDesign   for   vou   at   you\nI Now  you  can have d\nall-over     filet    crochet\n1 match vour nnrM \u25a0; \u25a0\u25a0\nshnuT.' Pattern .W,\nchar'f.\nMayor Graydon Kohl, of Collingwood, has been charged under\nSection 161 of the Criminal Code\ndealing with municipal corruption\nand li now out on $5000 bail. The\nMayor Is charged with agreeing to\naccept remuneration for voting on\na reiolutlon before the town council.\nAuthorities checking reporti that\n\u25a0 girl named Eva Bra^n wai caih-\nIng cheque! In various itorei In\nBolrano, Italy, found ihe wai Eva\nBraun Coppolo, above, and not\nAdolf Hitler's girl friend. This\nEva li an Italian of Hungarian\nparentage happily married and\nliving In the city of Milan.\nCANBERRA (CP)-Fixed hours\nof work for horses \\s an objective of\nthe Society for the Prevention of\nCruelty to Animals in Australia.\nHorses at riding-schools are\n\"shamefully over-ridden,\" the soci-\netv claims.\nPatrolman Daniel Murphy of\nNew York, lies in hospital recovering from woundi Inflicted by an\nalleged jewel bandit with whom\nhe itaged a revolver duel in a\nNew York bui. The bandit, Joseph Fernandez, wai killed and\nMurphy badly wounded,\nMn. Fernandez, wife of the al\nleged Jewel thief, li pictured at\nthe moment ihe identified her\nhusband's body in a New York\nmorgue. Mrs, Fernandez knew he\ncarried loaded weapons, had tried\nto persuade him to give up crime, j\n__\u2014    .        _\u2014   _\u2014\nLLANDUDNO. Wales (CP) - Aj\npair of pants fl wn as a dist re* s\nsignal of five men adrift in a j\nrudderless sailing tw>at in th-\"\nMenai Straits failed to bring re*-1\ncue. But fishes from a pocket\nmirror used as a heliograph were\nwen here and a lifeboat went out\nand towed  the craft  to safety\nSend TWENTY FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be acceptedi\nfor each pattern to Nelson Daily\nNewi, Pattern Dept, 266 Baker\nStreet, Nelson, B.C. Print plainly\nPATTERN NUMBER, your NAME\nand   ADDRESS,\nAUNT HET\n,    By  ROBERT  QUILLEN\nThey'll Do k Brerf Time\n\u25a0*\u2014\u25a0\u00ab.       By Jimmy Hado\n7^:\n6 0\n^^(5      i^f\u00a3k~^z~\n,$2\nTHIS IS A CL-AR TITLE\nT'CHICAGO.TM'MAN\nSAID.T   PURTY\nWRITIN', HAIN'T IX\nLONESOME POLECAT'!\nr\ntofyfig'\nYEP\/* JLOM FOLLOW*\n> ME   \\\nVOUR TRACKS\nLIKUM **\n>.SO 1 CAN f\nPITCHER\n]  LAUGH   )\nOF\n\/>  ALL   \/\nSQUAW,\nMOVER   >\nSTANDlKI'\nr you- \u2022*-\nON\n\\ LONESOME\nHEAD.?\n) POLECAT.'*.''\nW$4\nNOV(   I   EXCUSE ME IF\nMINNIE \\ I LAUGH ALL OVER\nMUSTACHE,) YOU, AGAIN TT\nSHE     \/FATHER MUSTACHE\nMINE.' \/GET BETTER\nOFFER. SO MINNIE\nMUSTACHE IS NOW\n'MRS ROAMING SKUNK -\nAND YOU UP CREEK,\nSAME AS\n(, *^  ME\n\\n\u00bb \u00abmini\t\nHELLO\/l CaACK\nDEAR,* \"       ,\nWW DO HUSBANDS LOOK\nin the cook-pot tu see\nwhat they're going to\nhave for supper, before\n, THEY KISS THEIR WIVES ?\nTHEY KNOW WHAT THE Kli\nIS GOING to BE LIKE, BUI\nTHEV DON'T KNOW\nWHAT TWE SUPPER\nIS GOING\nTOSE\nJK3GS-MXI SHOl\nHAVE SEEN HC\nPITIFUL. THE CAT\nLOOKED WHEK4 ]\nSAW UER BY TH\n\\A56 SHE BROM\nTHE 04RHJS- TC\nyr\nA\u00ab THt\nFlood\nwater- are\nABOUT TO\nEN4ULF\nKIN*,\nA LAR6E\nHILICOPTEB\nHOVERS\nOVIBHtAD-\nTHM\nSUDDENLV\nBf5l>M<\nIT< CCURM\/\n\"->_\nc\nCz.\nLUCKY Hlti\n\"SUrVM\nMOUNT It.'\nIHOPCHlDiWr-\nI 600P LOOK AT\nJXAFTf\nBut The deduc\n\u25a0flows-Wow\/\n\/ NEW TAX\nLAW JUST fttSSED j\nVESTERPAy. HADDA.\nVJORK ALL NJaHT\namxVE i\nVOUCHERS\n7 Xj   fm\nin\nQC\nUJ\nJennie it alwavs ttY\nr' wha\n* sh.d  \u00a3\nin if .>.he  u .s :r.  s\"-a\nnd-s^\nThe tr \"ible i< she r.r\\\nrr kn\na'**. Ihr  <\nsmart Ihing in dn u\\ 1\nrr  nw:\nyi-Ai-r   \"*\nGOOD   \\ mw, WHAT I\nv,A5 Ai?our to\nBUT HOW   \\ ASK NOU.   N\n-\\ WILL \/SOME FART5QP\nTT tTlSEf\/NEW ENGLAND\nSALLY'S SALLIES\nR\u00bbtiitrr*l I*. S   !*\u2022(\u00bb\"' tlm-..\nIt's a ht-it iNltr, but tstettr Hnn't\nnsl,  nir  \\sK*\nOne of orape-eye*; ViENTueN*\nTl   FLEE,  BUT   PM'L-     [\t\n IT\u2014\n( ME AIN'T\n\/ TAKIN6\nt,     Mt -\n\u25a0Meanwhile, orape-E\nLUCKV   I   *A*>  IN Tl\nBARN  WHEN 1 SAW *\ntOP !   IWt LANE   Wl\nBRINfl ME 001 ON *\nCOUU1Y ROAD\n I'. I    llllppll. Jlllll\n\t\n \u2014. 1\t\n \"\u25a0.\u25a0T'riiwiwi, \u201exK,l.,mrm,,r . . \u2014 \u2014  \t\n:lassified\nPHONE 144\nBIRTHS\n_DEAU,\u2014To Mr. and Mra. Rod-\nNadeiu, 815 Victoria Street, at\ntenay Lake General Hoapltal,\nson.\nJNZA\u2014Tn Mr and Mrs Thadeuj\nNelsnn, at the Kootenay\nGeneral Hoapltal, July  13, a\nhter.\nNCLAIR-To Mr. and Mrs Ar-\nSlnclair, Strathcona Hotel, at\nootenay Lake General Hospi-\nluly 14. a daughter.\nNGROSE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Jo-\nRingrose. 703 Third Street, at\nCootenay Lake Genera! Hospital\n15, a son,\n_LDIE-To Mr. and Mra. Robert\ne o( Robson, at the Kootenay\nGenegal Hospital July 15, twin\nUl\nli.\nLKER\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Colin\n1022 Bealby Avenue, at the\nitnay Lake General Hospital,\n15, a daughter.\n)YD\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. George\nI, Nobel Hotel, Baker Street nt\nCootetiay Lake General Hospital,\n15, twin daughters.\n'AINTON-To Mr. and Mrs. LI-\nStainton, Appledale, at the Koo-\nLake General Hospital, July\naughter.\n)LE\u2014To Mr. and Mra Howard\nB18A Victoria Street, at the\n\u25a0enay Lake General Hospital,\n15, a son.\nJRELIO-To Mr. and Mrs.\niny Aurello, 510 Railway Street,\n! Kootenay Lake General Hos-\nJuly 17, a daughter,\n)ULD\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. frank\n, 715 Cedar Street, at the Koo-\nLake General Hospital July 17,\nighter.\nMB\u2014To  Mr.  and   Mrs.  John\nof Sandon at Vancouver June\nion.\n)PP\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. George\nof Edgewood ln the Arrow\nHosptlal, Nakusp, July 11, a\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS   AND   MIM\nREPRESENTATIVE*\n_.   W   WIDDOWSON   _  CO   AS*\nlayeri   301 Joaephlns St.. Nelson\nH. S   ELMES,  ROSSLAND, B.  6.\nAasayer, Chemiat, Mina Represnt\nA. J  BUIE, Independent Mine Rep*\nresentalive  Box 54, Trail, B. C.\nW~G THOMSON k CO - AS-\naayers k Metallurgists, All work\ngiven prompt attention. 1155 Pander St.. W    Vancouver, B.C.\n\"CHARTERED   ACCOUNTANT\"\nROGER M. HOYLAND\nChartered Accountant\n815 Victoria St.    Trail    Phont J3f>\n CHIROPRACTORS\t\nJ COLIN McLAREN, D.C, CHIRO-\npractic X-ray, Spinography,\nStrand theatre Bdg TralL Ph. 328\nDIAMOND  DRILLERS\nNATIONAL DIAMOND DftlLTJTTG\nCo, Ltd, Drilling and Bit Service. Box 508 Rossland   B.C.\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEYORS\nR W, HAGGEN, MINING AND\nCivil Engineer, B. C. Land Surveyor, Rossland and Grand Forks.\nd\nSOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST\nNelson, B C, Surveyor  Engineer.\nTIMBER  PROPERTIES\nf. A. cLAftkri, FORfcST ENGI-\nneer and Forester, 425 Baker St.,\nNelion, Phone 1306. Timber\nCruised, Appraised and General\nTimber Management and Administration.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTID\n\u2022 Mine Offica, near Nelson:\nLI OrriCE ASSISTANT.\nIS TO 15, EXPERIENCE\nESSENTIAL,   BUT   MUST\nOOOD TYPIST AND QUICK\nACCURATE   WITH   FIG-\npoiltlon ls permanent, with\n\u2022ttnctlve commencing aalriry\n. young man desiring a a'.art\n. offlct career.\nmiy In your own handwriting\nOX 10481 Daily Newt.\n(TED - CHEF OR FIRST\nll cook for resort operations\nod wages, excellent accommn-\nHon. Write qualificittoni to the\ntes of SL Leon, Upper Arrow\n.\u00ab, B.C.\t\nSES WANTED. 1120.00 PER\nIth with full maintenance, 6-\nK weak, 8-hour dty. Good living\ntrteri. Write SecreUry-Treai-\nIT, Macleod Municipal Hoipltal.\n)TED - CAPABLE GIRL OR\n__ for poiltion u cook, tnd\nfor general housework. Appy\nS. G. Blay'.ork. R. R. 1, Nel-\nFK.URANCE ANP REAL  E8TAT1\nCHAS F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReil Estate -  Phone 135.\nMACHINI8T8\nBe^neWs LiMiTffl\nMachlna Shop, acetylene tnd\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 593 324 Vernon  St\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL TIRE IN*\nturance Co, D L. Kerr, Agent.\nWrfEN 11*1 VAtoCOtJVtR StOP AT\nAimer Hotel  Opp  C.P.R. Depot.\nS^OT CASH FOH USED GOODS\nof til klndt   Phont 1081   Chess\n524 Vernon.\nMATTRESSES AND PILLOWS\nrenovated, spring filled. Crib met-\ntreaiM. Nelaon Bedding Co, 301\nBiker** St, Phone 1314.\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nsecretaries. We have a large ttock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can ftll any order lm*\nmediately Daily Newi Printing\nDept, Nelson. British Columbia.\nMEN'S PERSONAL D^UO SUN-\ndries: 24 samples, $1 00, or 19 De*\nluxe assorted, $1 00 mailed In plain\ntealed wrapper Finest quality,\ntested, guaranteed Bargain Cata*\nlngue free. Western Distributor!,\nDept. RN, 85 Ray Bldg, Vancouver\n29tf\nLIONS   pHOTO\n29.?\nP 0. Box 434. Vancouver. B.C.\nAny 8 exposure roll developed\nand   printed   29c.   Reprlnts-4e\neach   Giant  size\u20147c   each\n5x7 Enlargement Coupon with\neach order\nLADIES! DELAYED MENSTRUA*\ntion Why worry? Smart women\niay new, improved, triple-strength\nDelaye Pills give prompt effective\nrelief for overdue, painful or irregular periods. (Regularly $5 00. i\nOur price, $3.00, postpaid via Air\nmall In plain, sealed wrapper (C\nO.D. if you prefer). Women should\nkeep a box on hand at all times\nOrder yours right nnw! Western\nDistributors, Dept. ACN. 85 Ray\nBidg, Vancouver.\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP-*-\nSpecltlUtt In mine tnd mill work\nMachine work, light and heavy\n708 Vernon St, Nelson  Ph 08\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGl\nWhat have ynu? Ph 534 Ark Store\nFOR SALE. MISCELLANEOUS\nWater Hose\n%** with  or without couplings\nSuitable for gardens\nAny length\nPEEBLES MOTORS LTD.\nNELSON\nINSURED\nAUTO LOANS\n$20 TO $1,000\nProtection and speed are the key-\nnotet of Niagara Auto Loans At\nno extra cost a life Insurance policy takes care of your unpaid loan\nbalance in case of death. This valuable benefit ij sufficient reason\nin Itself for borrowing from Niagara when you need money.\nAn Auto Loan requires only owner's signature and places cash In\nyour hands within a few minutes.\nYou can select a plan to suit you\nquickly, ln strict privacy Phone\nflnt for faster INSURED loans.\nNIAGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY LIMITED\nEst'd   1930\nSuite   1,  560   Baker   St.\nPhone 1095 Nelson\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIB\nFOR SALE - THE EQUIPMENT\nand business of the Rote Cafe it\nCtttlegar. An opportunity for the\nright ptrty. All tint clue equipment and sold ib t going concern.\nFor appointment write or phone\nCyril Bell, Caitlegar, B.C,\nfrOft sALe-nSW tkm CAMF,\nopposite C.P.R. Shipyards, S acres,\nall cleared, crop planted. Cabtnl\nInsulated, fireproof and fully furnished. Beautiful beach. Con Cummlni.\nfroR sale - IN m_-N. fi.C.',\nSmall fully equipped cafe, t good\nopportunity at bargain price. Box\n10455 Dally Newa.\nFOR SALE-SIX SUITE APART-\nment house, 711 Vernon St,\nFOR SALE - SANDON HOTEL,\nSandon, B.C. 1212 Hall Mlnei Rd.\nMACHINERY\nWE OFFER FOR PRIOR* SALE-1\n1946 Model D4 Caterpillar standard gauge. Ser. No. 2T9036. Rtd.\nguard, llghti, meter reading 693\nhours. Le Tourneau cable dozer,\nD.D.P.C.U. unit. Hyiter rear\nwinch. Also Caterpillar D6 1946\nmachine wide gauge. La Plante\nChoate angledozer. New GMC 6x6\nU.S. Army heavy duty trucki,\n$3500. International half track carriers, new $2300, Columbia logging\ntrailers, I.E.L. power saws. Nakuip\nMotors. Nakusp. B. C.\nFOR SALE-1946 FORD TRACTOR\nand cultivator, hydraulic lift,\nstarter and lights. Also 1940\nChevrolet 2-ton Truck with box\nand trailer, hitch. Good tires. Apply A. Willms, Pincher Creek,\nAlta.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, PARMS\nNEW WHITE STUCCO DUPLEX,\nunfinished tttlc, 3 rooms, toilet.\nIhower In etch, plastered. Ideal\nfor tuto camp, 350 feet frontage\non mtln highwiy ThU is t corner\nacre. No clearing to do, Just start\niddlng cabins tnd watch the cash\nroll In. Snap it $3800 caih, or\ntermi $4500. Apply one block East\nof property RRl, to A. Fotherby\u2014\n600 yards Eaat of Coffee Shop at\nWillow Point, NeUon. B.C Phone\n462-L-4.\nFOR SALE - 41 ACRES, GOOD\nland, 10 acrei cleared. Some apple\n2 pear treei, 4 room log house, Irrigation, ihlngle mill with 3 engines In good running order, ma-\n\u2022chlne shed, 2 Implements, 1 mile\nto school bus 8 miles from Creston. Price $3500 cash. Mrs. H. Dav-\nIdge, Wynndel, B.C.\t\nWHY NOT CHANGE YOUR FIRE\nInsurance on Household Effects to\na FLOATER ALL RISK POLICY.\nThli protect! you against Fire and\nTheft and many other hazards,\neither at home or travelling Aik\nui for particulars. C W. Apple-\nyard & Co.\nFOR SALE - 5 ROOMED HOUSE\non corner lot, near achools and on\nitreet car line, basement excavated tnd partly finished. Ctll. 824\nCarbonate Street or phone 1221-R.\nPrice $3100.\nFOR SALE - 8 ROOMED HOUSE\n,  on IV, lots close to car line and\nichoola. May be used as family\nhome or 2 apartments. Good revenue. Phone 123-L.\nLONDON CONCRETE MIXERS\nSizes 2s, 2V,s. 3s, V\/,s and 6s\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nFROM STOCK\nPURVES E. RITCHIE k SON LTD.\n658 Hnrnbv St        Vancouver, B.C.\nCUSTOM MACHINE WORK AND\nWelding. Cordwood Saws and\nmandrels. STEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP, 708 Vernon St,\nNelson, B. C.\nSAWMILL, WOODWORKING AND\nContractors equipment of all\nkinds. National Machinery Co,\nLtd, Vancouver   B  C\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nRENTALS\nOTD\nitw   mill   to   taw   lumber,\nInning Immediately. P.O. Box\nKttlo, BC.\nSL8   MaTT\ntij   work   If  satisfactory.   0\nactn. New Denver. Phor.e 19-F\ner 12 noon. ^ ^_\nWANTED - FIRST CLASS\nchinlsts and carpenter. Ken-\nla Gold Mines Ltd, Box 190\nphone 189-R-l.\nITED   -   SKIDDERS,   WITH''\nhorse, to contract logi. Ap\n\u2014- JIB Kootenay St.\nfTED - WOMAN COOK T6l\\\ntil camp. S. P. Por.d, NeUon,\nITED -\"TTftSf CLASS MA-\nnlst, also t bookkeeper   Apply\nVinson's Machine Shop.\nifED - DR1VeS~for STALL\nIvery in town Apply Con Cuni-\n206 Vernon St.\n~to5fl and pA.s'Tr'y cfiSk\nted. Golden Gait Cafe\nStress wanted bV JOK\nCleanrra  Nelaon. RC\nITUATIONS WANTED\nTPEG  WIDOW  WITH   TWO\niren alx. ar.d one and one halt\nold,   dtalrei   houiek-eepirg\non by end of Auguit. Would\nfter home fnr e'.rferly couple\n _lld.  Can   furnish   best   nl\n^rencei   u   to   character   tnd\nUty. Box 10181 Pt^y_New>      i\n\"STEWARD WOULD LIKE\nlitlon In veterans or gtn'.ltmtn'e\n. Flrat class mixtr. well up In\n_J tnd club routine. Good rater-\ntnd the best of referenrei, or\nId consider a poiit-ro ai chef\ncountry h te! W I, S**\u00abln.\novernmer.t Rd . Nelson. 11 O\nIENCED PAINTER WANTS\nnba French polishing. Inter-\nleeora'.ing. painting. Ap; y\nrasij'hona 4UO_-\nF.D COUPLE. 3 nilLPHFN\n8 Can take cha-ge e,!**o\nil or farm. Box lO'.SJ Daily\nFOR SALE - BEER PARLOR\ntable tops only. No stands. 7 oblong topi 14\" x 35\". 12 circular\ntops 26\" diameter. 2 circular tops\n22\" diameter. All maionite finish\nMadden Hotel, Nelson. B.C.\nFOR' SALE - DEWOLD PORT-\nable radio ln good condition\nPhone Mri B. Reefer, Royal\nHotel.\t\n1946 MONARCH HEATER. DE-\nfroiteri, 9000 miles New ear condition. Spotless. 302 Robson St,\nNelson.\nFOR\" SALE - GURNEY RAtJGE,\nlike new, hot waUr front, also\nsmall gas itove. 308 Observatory\nPIPE - WTOM-TOMs. SPF\ncial low prices Active Trading\nCo,  918   Powell   SL,   Vancouver\nAPPROX. 14 TON HAY FOR SAI.E\nAt $20 per ton. Applv  A.  Wapl,\n_T,ighunl, BC\t\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nHURRY - REAL HOME COM-\nfort. Log fireplace and lounge.\nRefined business folks only. Kokanee Lodge opens three large\ndouble guest rooms from August\nlit for Winter. Rates weekly,\n$7.50 each sharing. Fieetline bus\nto lodge, 10c,\n30,000 POUNDS OF LIVE\nFOWL, 4 POUNDS AND\nOVER\u201420c PER POUND.\nF.O.B.\nSmnnyside\nPOULTRY FARM\nTrail, B.C.\nWANTED TO RENT - SMALL\nhouse or apartment. Henry Stevenson. Phone 98.\nWANTED TO RENT - SUITE OR\nsmall house, couple and one child.\nPhone 432 or after 5 pm. 680-X.\nURGENTLY NEEDED - HOUSE\nor apartment by August 15th. 3\nrooms or more. Phone 653-X.\nWANTED - UNFURNISHED\ntuite for builneis couple. Phone\n1195-L after six.\nBEDROOM     AND     BREAKFAST\nfor quiet gentleman. Ph. 284-R.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nWE OFFER RAISED NEW\nHAMPSHIRE PULLETS, past\nbrooder stage. All pullets raised\nfrom our finest R.O.P. sired pullet chicks. All birds are running\nout on our free range.\nNEW SIBERIA FARM3\nN   Balakshin, RR2. Chllliwark\nWANTED TO SELL IMMEDIATE-\nly, 2 acres of land and five room\nunfinished house. For further\nparticulari Inquire Box 10165\nDaily News.\n2 ACRES RIGHT IN TOWN, 5\nroomed house, furnished, electricity, own water, barn, chicken\nhouse, garage, cow, chickens.\nSteve Masura, Ymlr, B.C.\nNORTH SHORE HOUSE, NEWLY\nbuilt, not quite finished, 5 or 6\nrooms and bath, fireplace, furnace,\nhot and cold water, 2 acres, $6000,\nOwner Box 10173 Dally Newi.\nFOR SALE-MODERN 5-ROOMED\nbungalow on 6 lots with chicken\nhouse for 75 birds, large garden\nand several fruit trees. Early occupancy. Phone 342-L.\nONE LOT AND PARTLY CON-\nitructed houie for sale it 819\nHigh St. Apply 507 Rallwiy SL\nApartment 3,\nFOR SALE OR RENT - 4 ROOM\nhouse in Ymlr or will exchange for\nhouse In Nelson. Box 508 Dally\nNews.\nFOR SALE - 3 LOTS. 1615 WARD\nSt. and building material. Apply\n507 Railway. Apartment 5\nFOR SALE - Wi ACRE ON R.R.I,\nBeach and lake frontage, 3 min\nwalk from ferry. Con Cummlni.\nFOR SALE-5 ROOM HOSE. $2000.\nCash. Write Mn. D. Webber,\nKaslo, B.C.\nFOR SALE - LARGE FURN1SH-\ned cabin, newly decorated. Apply 48 Ymlr Rd\nRough Lake\nCrossing for\nRail Testers\nDETROIT, July 3(h-Th\u00ab owl ind\nthe pussy cat who went to lei have\nnothing on the 43 army O-I's who\nset out in rubber Uie rafts for a trip\nacross Lake Michigan,\nTheir odyssey came to an end this\nmorning, Of the 11 power-driven\nrafts which set out from Sheboygan\non the Wisconsin side of the\nLake, three made the final goal at\nLudington  Harbor, Michigan.\nIt was a rough trip. There wu a\nhowling wind, and the storm-tossed\nwaters bounced the life rafts around like corks. The men were\nsoaked and dead tired when they\ncompleted the crossing. It's sixty\nmiles across the lake, and the fastest\nrubber craft made it ln little leu\nthan 18 and a half hours.\nThe idea ww to try out the new\nmotor-driven rescue rafts developed\nby the Army. The Army wanted to\nfind out how much fuel the engines\nwould burn, and how the rafts\nwould stand up under sea-going\nconditions. They also wanted to test\nthe accessory equipment\u2014Army\n\"E\" rations, radio sets and even nun-\nburn lotions. Army officers have\ncalled the test run a success.\nTwo of the rafts dropped out early\nin the race. Five were picked up\nnear the end of their journey by an\nArmy P-C boat. One raft made it all\nthe way across but landed two miles\nNorth of th* pre-arranged destination. The skipper of the fleet, A. L.\nRadlein of Milwaukee, was aboard\none of the three rafts which completed the scheduled Journey.\n\"It was awfully rough and quite\ntough going,\" he -said, \"but the motors worked well and the rifts were\nseaworthy.\"\n<W\\\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY Jl, 1947 - \u00bb\nU.S. Takes Over\nPacific Islands\nTo Break Precedent\nWASHINGTON, July JO - Uncle\nSam today assumed a new and precedent-breaking role ln the Pacific.\nFor the firat tlmt ln American hlitory, the Upited States haa taken\nover the administration of former\nenemy territory under an Interna*\ntional agreement known as a truiteeihlp. The territory Involved is\nscattered over thousands of miles of\nthe Pacific Ocean, embracing hundreds nf islands, big and little, which\nWere wrested from the Japs during\nthe war. The island* are clustered In\nthree main groups\u2014the Marshalls,\nthe Carolines and the Marianas.\nPresident Truman put the plan\ninto*effect Saturday by aiging enabling legislation. The President named a veteran of tbe Pacific war,\nFleet Admiral Louis Denfleld, as\nAmerican High Commissioner for\nthe Islands.\nFARM FOR SALE - 43 ACRES. 8\nacres clear. Buildings and lrrlga-\ntlon. J. Gerkoff, Blewett.\nFOR SALE - 2 GARDEN LOTS.\n8th. St. Fairview.  Box   10478 or\nenquire at 918-5th St.\nLOTS FOR SALE. APPLY D. MAG-\nlio. 1019 Latimer St, Phone 808-L.\nHOUSE ON THREE LOTS. AP-\nply or phone 1024-L Gyro Park\nSMALL HOUSE FOR SALE. 814\nSixth St.\nFOR SALE - SADDLE, PACK\nhorse, gond worker. Harness, pack,\nriding saddles, complete outfit.\nBox 10484 Dailv New\nId\nin\niti\nk i\nl:.v\nA MOTOR FOR\nYOUR BOAT?\nWe carry Ir. stork a large selec-\nl:on ol motors\nFor '.he ryi'bosrd bon*. we rerr-\ncommend '.he famoui Fvir.rude\noutboard motor.\nT-r the Inboard best where\npower up to fl H P s required\nwe suggest yo*i irr ib., Bcc-Llnl\nS ryrlc er.glr.es\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n;*,\u00ab Hs'.l St Phor.e 18\n\u25a0.lr-r.it.    Milling   ir.d    Si win ill\nMach.:*.(*:>*.   II ;'.'.:: g   a:*.d   Con-\ntrs-:**:s' Supples\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company\n818  Powell  St.,  Vancouver,  BC\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags, buttons removed. 7c lb\nBring to Daily  News.\nSHIP YOUR HIDES TO J. P. MOU\"\ngan. Nelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE-50 YEAR-OLfc, hSAL-\nthy New Hampshire laying hens\n81.50 ea Gray, Beatty Ave , Nelson.\nONE JERSEY COW FOR SALE!\nfresh in May, Jick Nechvolodoff,\nPass Creek, Castlegar, B C.\nEOR SALE -\"ONE MILKING\"\ncow   I. E. Lang, Hall Siding.\nMONTREAL (CP)-Fifty-slx per\ncent of the lelephonei used In Canada In 194! were on automatic\nswitchboards. Ten years earlier\u2014 In\n1B38\u2014 exactly Ihe lame percentage\nwere on manual switchboards\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nDOWK\nJ. Colt\nt. nghttaM\n\u20222f'\nIt's   n-.a\n'.Inery j\no*.i   want,\n\u2022\u2022 Step .\n4. Oty (PaO\n(.Evening\n(poet.)\nt. A wit\nT. Neat aad\nMj\nt. loaerted Up\nornament\n10. Pack\n12 Rent under\neontract\nIB. Weep oon.\nvulatvely\n18. Frlendahlp\n19. Any flower\n\u2022X). Jtiptuieae\naborigine\n(var.)\ntl. Nobleman\nIS. Editor\n(abbr.)\n14. Wound\nmarks\nM. Country,\nN. Europe\ntfl Northeaat\n(abbr.)\nM. Girla\nname\n13. High temperature\n14. Malt kiln\nM.Back\n17. Covered\nwtth dew\ni-iauiia minu\nMHIilin   UUiJ'JH\nm~.Vi.~li   UMDUU\ni'lu ubia nno\n__  HUUMbl  (SQ\nWli-H   HPJUrJIJU\n\u25a1oa uuu\nUi-li-l-lU   1.-IUU\nrlU   HUODL1   19U\num u-iu -iiiu\n..uiiuu autiuu\nnuuu uimnj\n\u2022\u2022tarter'* A_i-\u00abe\n88 Edge of a\nhat\n40. Vex\n41.81m of\ncoal\n48. Oatrlohllka\nMrd\nind\nFOR SAI F. ONE 18 FT VFF.\nbut*, .n*. speed Hydroplane, with\nf.-x- -* *i Evi'irude Speedi Twin\nmotor ir.d trailer. This boat do*-\"*\n\"b nr; b or bet'er Anyone want-\nlog p:.:\u00bb or irforir.a'.on write\nII-\u00ab 71, C-a-.bro k   I) C\nFOH   SAI.F 19   FT    4 6     BOW,\nSper.ion  Boat   Nta* Gladden nr-\nr *   led      \u2022\u25a0: g.Uf       All* >       A        W\n(',.-\"..\u25a0   Hi'.'vir\ny *   H  sM y       i'FIFIilMltoroH\ni\u00bbg\u00bb\nw.;;\nLOST AND FOUND\nUNO TROM KOOTENAY HAV\n7th. 10-ft Clinker Built R \u25a0\u2022\u00bb\nIt, almoit new, built by Ginli-\n. Reward for information tor\nun.   Kootaniy   Bay   General\nrr\t\n'-SILVER ANT BI It I'UT.i\nI on Ymlr Road ?brr: fc* X S i\ni k ty'i\nM^AtDVhTiTlAljk any\nPFRFICT   SOIL   rirsviil\ngarden    ta-it-h   and   farm    M-\nUlall'l Earthworms   1791  \"Third\nTrail  RC\nSUMMER RIJORT3\nCRESCENT REACH AUTO CAMP\n1*1 rr.'.'.ri Fa.'! on H ;**, * .v. M \u2022**.\n,::-. fu lv fu:nV'\u00bb* ! , .,:\u2022 f- .1,' ,1\nbal'iing Sea.'1 IV.a'i for f.-h 1-.\u201e\nI'*, or ST. Y 1 o: * \u25a0 -r : all f *1\nla*es l* I rraenat.nr. H H\nNe'.. n,  BO\nriNFWOiiO loCIUS'l ( A M I*\nChriltlni Like. BC 118 Ofl * k\nBring bedding Pillowi nppilad\nH.t   Boi 3H   Prop   A    V gin\nmum t'AhADibirrhvr.r.\nQ iee-*\u00ab Biy. boat\". m*itor>   rah\n:\u25a0\u2022\u00ab   1*  1   rr.lall   Completi   \\ A- at or;\nfi*    'i-i   Ti>rh*T,t Bill   it\nKING   OF'lTlOK Tl'M'f.l.\n\\        i .;. f .*\u25a0*, a I*.  \u2022  di\\\nI\"   rr 8    K\u00bb\u00ab; *   ll   '\n|.* M      M11 i'.IMi in \\ ' 1* **;\n.      g   !a   .I.' r,     ]**1 -~r    1 .** I   I.\nACSOM\nl.Obeae\n4. Conlferoua\ntre\u00ab\n7. Trip\n8. ElhptloJ\n10. Male duck\n11. Royal\n18. Trouble\n14. QuMtloa\nle.Exlat\n17. Badhalor of\nMedl etna\n(abbr.)\nlt.Tu-i\n10. Am&aon\n\u2022eluary\n11. Type\nmeaaura\nM Mlir-ap.\nraaenta\n14. Country,\nSW Europe\n17. Italian poet\n15. Spanish\naonqueror\nof Mexico\nM. Greek letter\ntl. Confederata\n81 Often\n(poet)\n14. From\n88. Run god\nST. Scotch\nriter\nSt. Obstacle\nie. A marah\nb(rd\n41 Laft-hand\npage of a\nbook\n44 Hauled\n4\u00ab Send forth,\naaraya\n48 Girl 1\nnickname\n4T. Alcoholic\nbeverage\nCTTTKXjeOTS-A twff~**tl*e* \u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb'-<>\u2022\nIT1C    KM    KT    lAPZPACKPT    CP    CET\nSJTC    PO    CAVT    NTPBQYBD T-M C T A T I.\nSaturday's t?rjtiaaatitn  BUT iTIU, BBLJEVE THAT STORY\nWRONG, WHICH OUGHT NOT TO BE TRUE-SHERIDAN.\nEXPERT RADIATOR\nREPAIRS\nand\nBOIL OUT SERVICE\nQueen City\nMotors Ltd.\nChamp Bealen\nIn Women's\nTennis al Paris\nPARIS, July 20\u2014 A new women's\nsingles champion will be crowned\ntomorrow lr. the French International Tennis Tournament.\nThis became a certainty today\nwhen Mrs. Pat Todd of Hidden Valley, Calif.. c\u00abme from behind to upset defending champion Margaret\nOsborne of San Francisco In the\nsemi-finals. Scores were 2-8, 8-8, 6-4\nLater Misi Osborne teamed up\nwith Louise Brough of Beverly\nHills, Calif, ln the women'i doubles\nand they retained their crown with\n1 7-4, 7-2 victory over Doris Hart\nof Miami, Ell., and Mrs, Todd.\nMri. Todd will meet Misi Hart\nfor the singlei champlonihip round.\nMiss Hart giined the finali yesterday when ihe defeated Mm Broug\nin straight leta.\nThe Tood-Oaborne singles match\nwai begun yesterday, but wn halted\nby rai nafter Miss Osborne won the\nfirst set.\nToday, Mn. Todd came back from\nan overnight rest a revived contender and she out-gamed the defending\nchamp with a nifty exhibition of\ntextbook tennii\nIn men's llnglea. Budge Patty advanced to the third round as he defeated Jack Barry of New Zealand\nin a torrid five-set match. Scores\nwere 3-6. 7-5, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4.\nF. 0. E. Seniors\nDrop Nakusp M\nA smooth five-hit pitching chore\nby their new rlfrht-hander. Fred]\nTownsend, put Nrlson F.O.E. Senl-i\nors bick onto the wing wagon Sat- J\nurday as they edged out Nakusp\nAll-Stars 4-1 in a seven-Inning ball\nfixture at the Civic diamond In Nelson.\nTownsend displayed 1 lot of\nmound clan In winning his first)\npitching assignment and his addi-1\ntion to the local squad add* consid-!\nerable weight to their chances of\ncopping the Jubilee ball tournament.\nNelson gained an early lead on\nthe visitors by collecting a pair of\nruns in first inning play and followed up with singletons in the\nthird and sixth frame, Nakusp's lone\ntally came during their iecond\nround, at the plate.\nRoy Anderson, Nelson manager,\nbroke into the scoring column for\nthe homesters' first run when he\ndrew a walk off Del OL&on, Nakusp\nfllnger. Roy worked hU way around\nto third base and scored on Bob\nMcNabb'i iqueere-play bunt. The\nNelson club's itrlng of successes\nwith the squeeze-play ended here.\nFor in the fifth inning it wai tried\nagain bu tfailed vhen the Nelson\nbatsman missed his bunt to allow\nNakusp's catcher to tag the incoming runner from third base. Alec\nAbrosimo singled home Spence\nTatchell for the iecond counter,\nBarron Uchida saved his team\nfrom a whitewashing when he singled and scored on Bud Aklolama's\ntwo-ba.se blow. Akioiama turned ln\na smart fielding performance at first\nbase for Nakuip and also had a fair\nday at the plate as he mastered\nTownjend's offerings to belt out two\ndoubles and a single in three turns\nat bat.\nShortstop Tatchell scored again in\nthe third frame to put Nelson ahead\n3-1 until the sixth when Krlran, at\nbat for the first time, singled, and\nlater scored on an overthrow to\nthird.\nR   H   E\nNakusp 010 000 0-1     ft    2\nNelson J01 001 x-4    8     1\nBatteries: Nakusp\u2014Olson snd T.\nDeirochiers; Nelson\u2014Townsend and\nNssh.\nStymie Wins\nGold Cup;\nAssault Third\nPhone 43\nNelson, BC.\nNOW ON DISPLAY\nNEW TRAILER\nCan be ui\u00bbd fnr cartage or for\nboats.\nAlio\nUSED BICYCLE\nUSED POWER CHAIN SAW\nDefoe's Super Service\nJ13 Bsker St Phone 1234\nFOR SALE - 2 CHEVROLET DE-\nluxe model 4-dnor sedin at S11 nn\neach 1- 1942 Chevrolet Standard\nModel 4-door ledsn at I130H Coo*!\ncondition. Apply Fruitvale Co-Op\nTransposition Society, fruitvile,\nB C\nNEW YORK, July 20 (API -Mrs\nEthel D. Jacob's Stymie won the\nfirst running of 'he Empire City\nOoM Cip today as the fivored Assault ran th:rd\nMrs Walter M Jetford'i Nitcher.\nleading virtually ill through the\n-Aft- until the 'tre'eh, listed for iecond place, a held hehir.d Stymie and\nfour lengths in fron* of Alsault\nPhalanx, ony three-year-old In the\nrace, was fourth\nThe Pouth American Inviden\nEndeavour and Ensueno. made eirly\nchallenges hut faded In the s'oppy\nRolng and finished fifth lnd leventh, respectively,\n.Stymie, putting on hli usual\nt-raihing itretch cim-. from fir bic'<\nat ore time more thir* 10 lengths\na-a,-.- tm-o -be leideri\u2014to hit the\n:i:rr in ? 4? 3.1 for the mile end\n'ive eighths node- the r.dmg of lit-\n*> Conn McCreiry\nThe victory '.sal worth $13,000 to\nStymie and wi'h it he boosted hli\nlifetime einungl to M7S.S10 to wm\nhick 'he wnrld money winning title\nhe lost to Asiiul1 \u25a0 '-seek \u00abgo Third\nmoney of 110,000 moved Alsault'l\nearn.ngi up to 1^311,1110\n!\\Trlfliut Dntli! ^piuf\nCabinet Changes\nRumored\nOTTAWA, July 20 \u2014 prorogation\nof Parliament has robbed Ottawa of\nits number ore conversation piece.\nThe fertile field of Politic* hai luddenly become barren and empty.\nThe lawmaken havt gone, leaving their great green Commons\nChamber^ a ready target for the\n^lear.lr.g crews who *v>nn will give\nit an annual going-over. Tha long,\nroo! mrridors sre row dominated\nby the curious s'.eps of the tourist.\nWith the disappearance of pressure from Parliament Hill, '.he Civil\nService has relaxed and working\nho'irs have hrtr. shortened Or tha\nhi!! there is talk nf future government plans in many fields. These\ninclude immigration, price con'f'.l,\nnr.r! subsidies tn mention nrly a\nfew. The chit-chat even reaches Into 'hr Prime Minister's office w:t'n\na revival nf rumors of pouibie Cabinet rh-ir$tt necessitated by the !'.'\u2022\n.ness nf Resources Minister Glen.\nSays Mongolians\nUsed Red Arms\nTlirwA. Northweit China. Julv\n20 i API \u2014 OuUr mongolian troopi\nit'acklng PelUihaf In Sipkllr.g\nProvince July 4 uied Oerman ird\n<V*v:H weapni, and soma hid\ngold medili embroiled with\nR'jI \u25a0\u25a0'< profile. \u25a0 22-yetr-old de*\nfe-drig cavalrymin Mid Thuri-\ndav\nTh\" cavalryman give hll nam**\na*- Cherrilma ind i\u00abid he wa\n\u2022 It i. \u25a0\u25a0 rt a Ksnk chief In *\u2022*\u25a0\nPr-A-t-A\".   q-oa    Hr   (rave   this   ver-\nChiang Gov't\nRotten Says\nMissionary\nTORONTO July 20 (CPWame*.\nO. Endicott, back home ln Toronto\nafter 22 years as a professor at Weat\nChina University, Chungdu, said t-\nday Chiang Kai-shek will last only\nto the end of the year as Chinese\nPresident.\n\"There is ample reuon for getting\nrid of Chiang Kai-shek, for his\ngovernment is becoming increasingly dicatorial, oppressive and rotten,\"\nsaid Mr. Endicott In an interview.\nThe United Church mljsslonary\nwho was Chiang's personal adviser\nnn social problems said the Chinese\nGovernment was \"using political\npower simply as an instrument to\nenable Its members to get a stranglehold on the wealth of the country.\"\nThere is no such thing as fre* enterprise in China and tne country**\nwealth has been gathered Into tht\nhands of four families, \"represented\nin the Government,\" he said.\nMr. Endicott claimed 3,000,000\nyoung army conscripts \"were starved to death ln military training\ncamps because administrators and\nhigh-ranking army officers were allowed to steal their rations and pay.\"\n\"It beoame such a scandal that In\nthe Fall of 1944 the famous Christian\nGeneral, Marshal Feng Yu-hslang,\nwho was nominally in charge but\nhad been deprived of all political\npower tn clean up conditions, said\nChina's military training prgram\ncould be described as one of four\nsta cea.\n\"These are his exact words: The\nable-bodied recrlut becomes the thin\nsoldier, the thin soldier becomes th*t\nslck man and the sick man becomes\nthe dead one,'\"\nHe said he visited Marshal Feng\nin San Francisco three weeks ago,\nwhere he ls vlsitLng ostensibly to\nstudy water power development but\nactually in exile because of hll opposition to Chiang. Mr, Endicott\nsaid he learned the Marshal U organizing an antl-Ch!ang wing of the\nKuomintang and is working for a\ncoalition government which will Include the Kuomintang without Chiang, the Democratic League and the\nCommunists In equal parti.\nU. N. Council\nIn New Session\nLAKE SUCCESS, N. T., JuW ID -\n<CP)\u2014 The fifth session ot ffl\u00ab Economic and Social Counoll of tnt United Nations got under way SaKir-\nwith delegates from IB oountrijf, Including Canada, confronted with an\nagenda of 39 Items,\nCanada was represented tar her\ndeputy delegate, Dr. Georgt Davidson of Ottawa Deputy-Mnlftw <rf\nHealth and Welfare. Hon. Paul Martin, Health and Welfare Minister,\nCanadian delegate, ls expected Monday,\nOf the 89 w#oTutlo\u00abJ pm ttt\u00ab\nagenda, fur ara \u00abrp#d*_l Jp iklrt\nmuch intention br the caiiaman\n'team.\nTht Items ar* nibrntttad, **-\nspectively. by lhe American FWertr\ntlon of Labor, tht Oovemmmt ot\nChile, the U. N. Economic and fcn-\nplnymer.t Commission and by un\nSecretary-General of U. N.\nThe A T L. reiolutlon, of tnt*\u00bbit\nto Canada because of the rtcetit Jm-\nports'lon of displaced persona Itno\nQuebec Province and the Ontario\n'Government's mass eir-lnynlgratlpn\nscheme, embraces proposals \"fnr ttie\nprotection of immigrants and migrant labor.\"\nCampbell Tests\nBluebird Again\nLAKE CON'ISTON, Eng. JuW 10\nS'.r Malcolm Campbell cruised today over \"\"he mile course on which\nbe hope* to break his own wpte^\nboa* record this week.\nCampbell's reco-d is 141 7'lfl\nr*:)t*e per hn'r In June, when\nCimpbell tM>d h'.i ]rt-englned\nflheh:H the Third for a try at his\nr.xn 't rd, 'he Bluebird swerved\nbid!v *' speeds nf around IM miles\n;\"\"\u2022 u~--.r Sir'\"\" *rT. however, an\nr.dTwaW fin ard smaller nidrler\nh.ve h'-i-r. ^called nn the 26-foot\nh rrhwrod craft.\nA* *.' \u2022 hw a'Vmpt this week,\nCrr;'\u25a0'\u25a0*\u25a0'' wr.\u00ab, \"I wa\"'. to g\"t thil\n\u2022 h ,.\u00a3 nVf.~ \u201e., rj'i.rk'y ni possible,\nh-,' I ic-nx \u25a0\u2022 y:\" '*\u25a0. fl question nf\ntrml A-d errnr We may havt to\nmake m '<* \"- \u2022d't *\"-.\".\u25a0\u25a0\u2022:*\u25a0 before I\ncv. a*\"* '\u25a0 \"\" Lht r^crd,\nCommunists\nMass in China\nFOR SALE-ENGLISH BICYCLE, .i     ciaaiified Advertliirg Rtttti\nspeeds, 2 huh brakes, spttdometer,\nlight   anrl   generator    Like   new\nnu.,\u201e.   it\\* v   ..^   ,..'!   i\nPhon- 49J-V or Clll G  Clirk, \u00ab12\nLatimT SI\nmi WKXsTcfit'Tt. iom fnrH *.*\nloo trurk, 2 wheel hlK-Mn Iri.le-\n1929 Pontile Coich A Ford rr***: .\ndltiomd tm- motor App'.y NV.s* \"\nAuto Wricking ir.d Gsrig?\nNtW AND L'SSD PARTTrSI All.\nmlkM of cin. City Auto Wrick*\nir,. Box 34. Onnlli Road\nWILL   sn.l, 7JR~TRXnr   f55ti\nWlllvs,   list-it   dfllvry   truck   (or\ncar    William   Kibiloff    Thrums\nFor sale ~im noTiSJ SKDan\n(I    tlru     City     Auto    Wrrrkcri\nCrinite Roid\nfnfSAlK - bttt i5Si\"J-Ti?N\nFord truck with flit deck   Apt'.y\nPO Box Hi Nikuip\np.-I\nlie pe- 1'r.e per Insertion. 44c\n1're prr week itt rnr.ier itlve\nf.i. %'. SS per line per\nm-'-i'h '2S consecutive* M.r.l-\nmum, 2 ll* cs per Inier'.on Roi\ni*,*;oV**e-s Vr es'ri. eov.r, icy\nnumher of '. met\nITH! If 'LEGAL' N\"T1'*IS,\nT?'.\\PENS ETC- 10c per line,\nflnt irjertion. l*tc per Lm eich\nlubiequent  miirlion\nFDR PROMPT PAYMENT\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nV    lv*'e\nrjppe -* I \u25a0\nMor.r-'\nOTTAWA iCPi - About Thrtf\nquirtiri of Uii hirdss-iri* floor\nInf produced ln Clr.ick li nnd\"\nof birch, iccordlng ro the Dominion bii!*e;ui of Itltlltici Twi'y\nprr coil Is rnnde of miple end Ibe\nremainder **f led oak beech, ash\nplm, chert v And butternut\nSuhicrlptlcn   Rltel!\nSiriile ropy\nHv   c.urirr,  per   week\nI      0J\nIt\nRv carrier, prr ynr\n\u2022 | on\nMail In Cinidi. outlldl\nNiUon:\nOni month\nThru n-.on'hi\nSly monlhjs\nOne year\n1 100\nJM\n450\n(00\ndried S*,s!e,<, Cnltld K\nnf dom\nPer yeir\nSix   monthi\nJ1200\nBOO\nThree monlhi\nson\nOm month\ni DO\nWhere rx'-A p  s'Afr is :\nf-l'iirrd.\n10 ,ve   ralci   pt i.s  p *s*\n>i'\nx-i-nu'tn    M.-r.fnlii    border,    i\n!->r*)jol C mo-ncdind officer, idtr.t- \u2022\u25a0>\ned a\u00ab a *!'\u2022'.   SAir-.-t   wsi wouni ('\n!.   capt'ired    and    tx*r-\/r >     |(r s:\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022:r   t   St-o. <*\u25a0'.   Ap*-* mi; r   f->r   a-\"- 1\non   aftlmt   thr   Japanese T;\n.'KlN'f\n,T ,'v ?0 (APi  -Chin-\n'-\u2022<;  \\Aff  reported  to-\n,    Kf.    \u25a0\nv- \u2022 i  ' -  a\"a-\"ks on\n-\u00a3'<-..\nVt...l..;*-- ,          Hr,rl        tht\n\\'\"'.'.l\ntv' vi   1 -ingtao, but\nrt.ipj'c\nhr% ' '\u2022'. '\u2022** government\n,,,    -.-\nseveral f-r.M\nc; :,:-.r\n\u25a0\u2022 dtrv-hts mid 10.OOO\n\u25a0:\u2022\u25a0..<'J\n,Af.r p.,\u201e, t ^n to 40\n.\"  of S;\u00ab-; .it'* ii.  lm-\n< \u2022    j, i. i    \"z a 'ch.iT're\n\"* \u25a0   .'   <)\u25a0-\u2022 \u2022\u25a0 rt nf tht\n\u25a0 f*  '\u25a0\u25a0 ,- Ha   \u25a0-*. iv, whlrh\n\u2022;   d n   t^r \\.\n.*\u2022;  *;\u25a0    *\u2022'*\u25a0 'red   ihat\ni\n,-     ,    \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 i-->r  nf  tb*\n, \u25a0 *   ^   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 a   4'h   Arrr.v.\ncor.tt;\nllft    ,v.'h    n-her    Red\ni*   'f*\n.v  K i \u25a0\u25a0 '   :\u25a0'\u25a0  Fas tern\n' i    V\nfrs \u25a0\u201e\u2022  \u25a0 \u25a0*' *.i M irchtnn\n\"  ASM\n,\u2022 \u25a0[\u25a0,). i;m1,i n2 r.i;!road\nRecord Surplus\nFor(anada\nTi\nOTTAWA,   July   V*\nlu-piis of j\u00abio.s3e.:ne\nn.er.tal    fiiiAncii'\n'he f.-st i] ;arter of\nfiw .' \\-emr il rep rtesi 1\u00bbT ]l C, p\nMrlntoe rninv'P Per nf 'he Iron, u\njrv,   in   hll   Apill-Uu'iug June   a,\nailrl    11.11 l'i* - \"    n_tin.it    revenue\n.- ;;,-,*\u2022    * s    , '    1721.7 tl 1211\nThe f.t'.rs' rjuar'eris rirplul In\nClr.i.U'l fuel'. h:i*'*s the* ex-\ner name within \u00bb*li\\l\u00ab'lW nf Uie\nrecord >.150.000 000 niiplim piled\n\u25a0ip  fir  ill of  Uit  vear   Thlt un*\n;,   rrM'IlW      *-*   *P    l<      bought      !\u00ab*<\n,.-* r(   *\u2022\u25a0    \"-.,.   se,,*,   |\u201e:,lt,t   wort*\nnfrat*or,\u00ab     for   |:f, i iW nno\n,*:,-'     ri-r    %\u2022 *\u00bbt. r- oe,\nIP\nIM.fll\"\nF.I *\u2022:*,',  '\nf*\n\u25a0I.\nI\"\ni\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 21,1947\nNot Since Early Wor Yeara Have We Been Able to\nOffer ai Wide a Selection of\nWaterman's Fountain\nPens and Pencils\nAi We Con Today\nAt $3.57   $4.16   $5.95 and $10.11\nWttermtn Is diving you in honest, reliable pen that wlll perform is well as any and belter than most $16,1X1 and $20.00 pens.\nWe also have their Tapewrite life-time guaranteed\npens at   $10.41 and $16.00\nAi Well et Pencils and Pen and Pencil Sett\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\nU. S. Universal\nMilitary Training\nBill Approved\nWASHINGTON, July 20 (AP)\u2014\nA Houte of Representative. Armed  Servicei 8ub-Commlttee  Saturday approved a unlvertal military trilnlng bill for the United\nSUtes following cloiely the plan\nadvocated by Preildent Truman'i\nspecial commiulon.\nIts action is subject to review by\nthe full armed services committee at\na meeting next Tuesday. Houfle Republican leaders said It will not be\nacted on by this session of Congress.\nThe  bill  approved  by  the  subcommittee calls for six months of\nbasic   training   for  qualified   male\nyouths between their 18th and 20th\nbirthdays, followed by six months\nof membership in a reserve component A youth would be ollowed to\nhave  his  induction deferred  until\nhe- becomes   20   or   completes   his\nHigh School education.\nTrainees would receive $30\nmonthly during their basic training\nperiod, regardless of their dependency situation. They would wear\nuniforms bearing a distinctive insignia and would not be subject to\nmilitary service except in cases of\nnational  emergency.\nPRESTON, Ont, (CP)\u2014A young\ntouple tried verse in an effort to\nIHIIIUIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllMIHIIHMI\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL  HOME\nAMBULANCE SERVICI\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nJ18 Kootenty St Phone J61\ntiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiii\nRELIABLE  SERVICE\nAt   Returnable   Cott   tt  tht\nSMEDLEY\nGARAGE CO.\nNtxt to Poet Offlot\nBlair, has anyone some rooms to\nspare?\" We've set the date\u2014We hate\nto wait.\"\n1\/4 OFF BATHING 8UITS ard\n8undrenei. Slzei 12 to 16. Ross\nMarie Reid original! tnd Regent's Hollywood style.\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP\nPhone 1209\n862 Baker St\nPHONE 258\nSMITH\nELECTRIC\n645 BAKER ST.\nLadies' brown calf OXFORDS, new       lj   IF\nmoccasin toe, sizesAVi to 8 J .\\ J\nLadies' triple E width black calf\nOXFORDS. Town Talk, sizes 5 tn 8\nGirl's red calf OXFORDS, sires\n5 to 8  \t\n\u20223.85\n\u20224.95\nLadies' SANDALS, hi-wedge, colors of $2   PA\nbiege, green, white           -r tj \\J\nTHE BOOTERY\nPROMPT\nEFFICIENT\nTIRE\nSERVICE\nPhont us when you hov\u00ab\ntir\u00ab problems \u2014 We spe-\ncializ* in keeping you tire\nhappy . . .\nVULCANIZING\nREPAIRING\nBy masters of the. craft.\nRoad or shop service\nEvery job guaranteed We\nlave you money.\n_ Reco\"\nUTHBER\nMOTORS\nLimited\nDODGfc - DE SOTO DEALERS\nOppoiitt  Poit   Office -  NeUon,   I.C. \u2014 Phone  75\nIDENTIFY BODY\nCALGARY, July 20 (CP)- The\nbody of a man, reported found near\nthe Big Horn Ranger station 40 miles West of Turner Valley, Friday\nhas been identified as that of Steve\nYskiw, 21, of Kirkness, Manitoba.\nCause of death has not yet been established and it is not known\nwhether an inquest will be held.\nGraduates as Nurse\nNegotiations at\nCalgary Nitrogen\nPlant Deadlocked\nCALGARY. July 20 (CP)- Attempts at conciliation between the\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany Ltd.. Nitrogen Plant official! and the union representing the\nemployee*, broke down Friday It\nwas learned here Saturday.\nThe meeting was called with\nClayton Adams, Edmonton, Chairman of the Board of Industrial Relations actinj as Chairman. The dispute is over a wage increase and a\npension plan. The union has already\ntaken a strike vote which authorized the calling of a strike.\nAccording to legal procedure in\nthe province the next step in the\ndispute would be to appoint a Board\nof Arbitration. The Union oolicy\ncommittee had no statement to\nmake on what their next step would\nbe. D. D. Morriss, plant manager\nwas out o( town and not available\nfor comment.\nt      stm ^*s\u00bb..     -v-mmmm.-!.. sutmmf. mmmmmmmm.mamm.-m\nMln Bette Rasmussen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rasmuiien,\nformerly of Willow Point, who graduated as a nune from St. Paul's\nHospital at Vancouver last April. Miss Rassmussen It well known\nIn Nelion, where she attended public and high schooli.\nVELVA LEG FILM\nSUN BEIGE, light     . . worn\nwith black and dark shades.\nSUN   BRONZE,  medium  .  .  ,\nworn   with   all   bright  shades,\nalso white and pastels.\nApproximately 20 pain In the\n$1.00 bottle.\nSLEEK ... the fragrant cream\nthat   removes   hair   and   leavei\nthe legi utln imooth ... .85\nSold only et your Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nPhon* 34\nBox 460\nMANSLAUGHTER\nCHARGE AFTER\n\"DRUNKEN BRAWL'\nTORONTO, July 20 (CP)-Harry\nJohn Letby, 27, of Toronto, was\ncharged with manslaughter Saturday when he appeared in court following his arrest after the death of\n23-year-old William Morris in a\nfight. Letby was remanded to July\n25.\nMorris, father of three children,\ndied Friday of injuries after a fight\ndescribed by police as a \"drunken\nbrawl\" on King Street, West.\nMicmac Radar\nWas Not Working\nOTTAWA, July 20 (CP) - Reconstruction Minister How, commissioning a ship for radar experimental work in aiding marine navigation, said today the radar equipment\nof the Destroyer Micmac was not\nworking when she collided with the\nfreighter Yarmouth Count off Halifax this weeic.\nHe told a group of National Research Council officials, as he commissioned their vessel \"Radel\", that\n\"we have all been shocked\" by the\nMicmac tragedy and expressed the\nhope the new shin would help erfect\nradar. Once perfected, he said, it\nwould be of great usefulness to all\nforms of navigation.\nSLACKS\nfor Summer\nGet yourself a pair o\nthese slacks for Summe\nwear. Pleated with zippe\nopening. Gabardines\nFlannels, Worsteds an*\nTweeds.\n*Q.OO\nto\n17\nto\n$1-7.20\nEmorys Ltd\nThe  Man's Stor*\nBy the Starting Gate\nPerhaps 25 years ago, there was\nan article in the Saturday Evening\nPost that depicted a parade of\nWashington correspondents carrying banners with mottoes and shouting lustily a sort of \"college yell\"\nin welcome to Wu Tin-fang, new\nChinese ambassador to the United\nStates. I've forgotten the opening\nlines of the yell, but the last half\nwas as follows:\n\"Ching, Chang!\nWu Tin-fang!\nGlad to see you,\nWu, Wu, Wu!\"\nNow, Wu Tin-fang, in hia first\nresidence at Washington, when he\nwas Chinese minister, was probably\nthe most popular minister ever to\n: be numbered in the Washington\n\u25a0 Diplomatic Corps. He was always\nready to give interviews to the correspondents, in the guise of an innocent Chinese amazed at the wonders of the Western world. He was\nthere for years and years. Then.\nalong came the revolution, and the\nChinese Republic, and he became\nChinese foreign minister. A few j\nyears ifter World War I, the Chin-!\nese Republic raised its ministry at\nWashington to an embassy, and to\nthe delight of the Washington cor-i\nrespondents, the eminent, smiling!\nand flowery-tongued Wu Tin-fang\nreturned to them.\nAuthor of the Saturday Evening\nPoit article wai Samuel G. Blythe,\nthat Journal's political correipondent for yean unnumbered. If the\nparade described by Blythe act-\nuilly took place\u2014I'm itlll uncertain ae to the bona fldei of the re-'\nported occurrence\u2014then Blythe\nwas In It up to the hilt. Blythe\nat that time weighed around 300 ;\npoundi, and he may even have led\nthe parade. He muit at iome itage\nhave been dean of the correipondent*.\nIn the article I have quoted from,\nBlythe portrayed Wu Tin-fang as a \u25a0\n.statesman ofthe highest ability, who '\nby his pose of ignorance of things j\nW.*stern contrived to be in a perpft-\nuai statt of wonder and amazement, j\nHe would ring up correspondents to\ngive them interviews and tips\u2014and\nyou'd better watch out if you gave\nhim less than a column!\nSaturday's Daily News recorded\nBlythe's death at Monterey, Calif,,\nat the age of 79.\nThe Associated Presa layi he was,\nan intimate of every President from1\nGrover Cleveland to Franklin Del- *\nano Roosevelt.\n1 do not remember Blythe's political sur vey j as far back, a*\nCleveland, nor in connection with i\nMcKinley. but 1 remember turn\nwhen Theodore Roosevelt was in his\nsecond term 'his first elective one),\nand I recall Blythe's summaries on\nTaft vs. Bryan. Roosevelt vs. Taft\nvi Wibon, Harding vs. Folk, and\nso nn through the Coolidge and\nHoover eras Me called thc political\nturns with great accuracy.\nCALLED TURN ON TAFT\nI remember when Taft was still nt\nthe height of his popularity, before\nhe broke his party in twn by signing\n[hr tariff revision hill that raised\nlhe tariff instead nf lowering it,\nBlythe gave a word picture of Taft's\nsloppy political methods, in which\nhe always made lhe choice that gave\nmost offense. He certainly carried\nthu practice to the extreme la'er\nwhen he declared the tariff bill embodied the revision the Republican\nconvention   promised.\nBlythe  also  used   tn tour  Europe\n'or   the  Saturday  Evening  Post   \\tr\n\u25a0x a<\\ among  the  America:)  war  mi\nrespondents shown over th- flagship\n>! Admiral .Irlliroe if>: the Amen\ned Press' foot has slipped, and that\nit has made a wrong deduction from\nthe fact that Blythe wrote on the\nmatter,\nIt was after the war was over,\nI am pretty sure, that Blythe, finding he was missing many old familiar faces at places of convivial resort, made a survey of his old cronies, and came to the conclusion that\nhis face would soon be among the\nmissing too if he did not cut down\nhis fluid consumption. He told all\nabout this in the Saturday Evening\nPost. One result was that he dropped 100 pounds or more in a short\ntime, and when he made his next\nworld tour, which took him to the\nOrient, he had just an ordinary\nwaistline, which was the first thing\nWu Tin-fang noticed and commented on, when Blythe showed up at\nthe Peking foreign office.\nThe  way   Blythe   reported   the\nmatter was a soream. The two old\nfriends   shook   handi,   and   then\nstood back and stared at each other, and each'made a series of comments on the other's appearance,\nInstead of answering questions.\nIn   the  course   of   the   interview,\nBlythe brought up the matter of the\nJapanese   ultimatum   containing   21\nsecret demands.\nThis ultimatum, you may recall,\nwas sprung early in the war, and \u25a0\nwas a secret demand. China violated the condition of secrecy by revealing that it had received such demands. Japan was Britain's ally, and\ncarried out its treaty obligations to \u25a0\nBritain, but thought Britain's pre-,\noccupation with the Central Powers\noffered it its opportunity to put\nsomething over on China.\nWU'S VERSION TO  BLYTHE\nWu Tin-fang, in answering\nBlythe's question, told him that\nthough China protested to the various powers about the Japanese demands, only one power gave any\nlead. Britain suggested that China\naccept under protest, and hope for\nobtaining a revision in the future;\nadvice  which   was  acted   upon.\nNow I jannot conceive of Blythe's\nrelating such an incident, or of the\nincident happening, if he in fact was\na consultant of the Chinese foreign\noffict' at the tune the Japanese demands wer*' made, and \"assisted in\nf rare ing\" China's rejection which\nwas not a '\u25a0ejec'ion but an acceptance under protest.\nOLT) HOSS\nAirmail Service\nBetween Vancouver,\nPrince Rupert\nOTTAWA, July 20 fCPI - Air\nmail service between Vancouver\nand Prince Rupert, H C. will he\ninaugurated Aug !, the Past Office\nDepartment announced Sa'urdav.\nThe mail will he earned dailv except Sundavs hy Canadian Pacific\nAirlines\nU.N. Can't Go On Long As a House\nDivided Against Itself\u2014MacKenzie\nBy DEWITT MACKENZIE\nAssociated Press\nForeign Affairs Analyst\nEighteen  monthi ago the  League of Nations wai laid at rest In\nj    its $10,000,000 marble  mausoleum\non the shore of Lake Geneva, and\nman's   first   attempt to   maintain\npeace by means of a world-wide\norganization was written off as a\nfailure.\nBut that wasn't the death of hope.\n\u25a0The United Nations, brand new and\nfull of grand resolutions for the\nwelfare of humanity, already had\n! swung into action. At long last we\nI were to have peace. The Big Five-\nRussia, Britain, France, China, America\u2014brothers-in-arms who had\n:bled together in the Hitlerian upheaval, sat dowh in brotherhood,\nsurrounded by the smaller states\nwhich looked to the powers for guidance.\nREVAMP U. N.\nLast week ten United States .Senators sponsored a resolution which\nproposed that the United Nations be\nrevamped. Senator Ferguson, who\noffered the measure, told reporters\nthat he and others were coming\ngradually to the conclusion that, if\nRussia failed to cooperate, it might\nbe necessary to reorganize the United Nations without the Soviets.\nThe significance of this move is\nthat the United Nations thus far has\n(ailed in the main, and it has failed\nbecause it hasn't lived up -to its\nname. It is disunited\u2014split after the\nfashion of unhappy Europe, with\nRussia and her satellites on the one\nside and the democracies nn the other. The will of the great majority\nhas, in almost every important instance, been nullified by Russia's\nemployment of a veto power which\nhad been accorded in the charter to\neach of the Rig Five.\nMOLOTOV TACTICS\nGradually it has become evident\nthat this Russian obstruction is a\npiece off the same cloth as Molotov's\ntactics in international relations at\nlarge, Notable examples have been\nMom* iw'.s methods of securing domination of Eastern Europe, the disruption of the conference to make a\n('. rman peace treaty, and the refusal to join in a unified program for\nthe rehabilitation of Europe.\nVery gradually, too, it has become\nclear that these tactics have been\npart of the general strategy of world\nrevolution frn- the spread of Communism. It has taken a long time\nfor this truth to soak home with a\nlot of folk who couldn't bring themselves to believe that such a thing\nco*.ild happen. But happen it has,\nand   observers   have   rm  doubt   that\nS'ops along the wav will give sim-\n\u25a0'..!\u25a0 M*:v;ce to Sandspit, B C, and\nPort Hardy, B. C,\nthe campaign will continue just so\nlong as Moscow is able to keep the\nwheels turning.\nSCRAP U. N.?\nThus we have arrived at the point\nwhere important people\u2014and some\n, of them are attached to the United\nI Nations\u2014are wondering if, after all,\n.the U. N. must be scrapped so that\n! a fresh start can be made. That veto\npower must be controlled so that it\ncan't be used as a bludgeon for obstruction. Unfortunately there is no\n| way of amending the charter, because the present veto power could\nj be used against amendment, and\n\u25a0Russia might be expected to employ\n'*\u25a0'\u25a0\nIt's safe to say that most members\nof the U. N are appalled at any Idea\nof throwing over the present organization and creating another, which\nlikely would be without the Russian bloc, thus widening the breach\nwhich already exists. They still hope\nthat if the Western democracies take\na firm stand on vital matters, Russia\nwill see the folly of her present\ncourse, especially when it becomes\nclear that the United States is not\nheaded for a tremendous economic\ncollapse, as Moscow has been claiming.\nOne thing is certain, however\nThe U. N. can't long continue as a\nhouse divided against itself.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFY\nHave the Job Done Rig)\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE  81S\nBritish Steamship\nRuns Aground\nHONG KONG, July 20 (Reuters>-\nThe 1800 Chinese passengers of the\nBritish steamship Hong Kheng,\nwhich ran aground this morning 80\nmiles North of Hong Kong, arrived\nhere late tonight abo aboard two\nUnited States destroyers and the\nBritish naval sloop Hart.\nDespite the fact that the warships\n:were unable to approach the strand-\nled 6167-ton ship, owing to heavy\nseas, all passengers and crew were\ntaken off safely and without Injuries.\n\"ELLISON'S BEST\" FLOUR\nFor All Your Baking Needi\nGuaranteed to Satisfy\nYour Grocer Hoi It\nFurnieeund Air-Conditioning\nLES BROWETT'S\nTINSMITH   AND   SHEETMETAL\nBHOP\n810 Kooteniy St Phona 1153\nROSCOE\nAND\nFOURNIER\nGARAGE-MEN\nSKY CHIKF AUTO SERVICE\nPhone 122 Nelson, B C\nCruiser Casualty\nIn Powerboat Race\nSEATTLE, July 20 (APi-Wreck-\ned in the night on Puget Sound, the\n37-foot cruiser Dorothy became a\ncasualty of the 1947 international\npredicted\u2014log powerboat race frpni\nBremerton, Wash , to Nanaimo, B.C.\nNone of the seven persons aboard\nwas injured.\nAs a result of the accident, nine\nrace officials will not be on hand for\nthe finish of the 145-nautical-mile\nevent in which 1,12 power cruisers\nare competing.\nThe officials were bring taken to\nNanaimo on the coast guard cutter\nNaugatuck, which turned aside to\naid the stricken cruiser.\nThe Dorothy rammed a barge off\nPossession Point just after turning\nit new leg on hpr course, her ov\nW. T Coy nf Whu,- Center, said Saturday when he and Ins party returned to Seattle aboard the Naugatuck.\nCof said the night was dark ar.d\nthe weather not ton\"clear, and he\nwas not certain how trie accident occurred.\nRescued from the Dorothy were\nMr. and Mrs. Cox; their son, Garv,\nti. Mrs W T Watts, her son, Charles\n'4, and daughter Etta Marie, 5. and a\nman identified only a.s a Mr. Peter-\n'son.\n4 TAXI\nLlcemed to Go\nAnywhere.\nDay or Night 8ervlc\u00ab\nLOUI3 CHOQUETTE\nai  AM..Tr\n,- f>ct heram.t*\nhe  s:\n<*h\n\u2022rjia U'-r <\nf Mir Grand Flee\n. ar.d\nhr\n:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 :rd    s I\nM'.e    ir.n: viMliKi\nS.          Sf!\nft\n\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0 :,;*-' <\u25a0.\n'i rv     were    .'.In\nWII\nHr\n'i \u25a0 r n 11' * f' r d\nthu! nomi\" timr\nirvu\nI.s-\n!v  Jrl;:o\u00bbr\nhad  hrrn  angrred   u\nIfll\nan   i'r-r.   f.\nr-pt  into thr  Bi i\nuh p\nip.\nrrt   ab'-ul\nbu   airptarif   flv\nng   fr\nim\n\u2022hr dr >  <>\na H;r:.Mi \u00bb\u25a0 a rah\np. wl\nirti\nhn 1    gun\na w a v    a    vt w\nminting\nitra''*(v\n^f\\<   Mis*\nA*\u00ab<M-:atH  Prt\nSS    nh\nt'i-\nBU-he\nhelped   rrakf   h\nSt*TV\nm\nIBIS wh#n\nh* collaborated\nwith\nthe\nChir.M#  Ci\nnverrimen'   at   P\neking*\nIn\nf riming   \u00bb\nrej-pctisin   of   Jt\npan s\n21\nUmATidi f\n-t  a \u00abMong hold\nnn M\nsn\nHARD TO\nCREDIT\nTho ab *\nr .stalpinenl. wh\n,-h 1 1\nu.ii\nit  hard  tu\n(!rdit   furnish**\nIlr rna-\n*; if     u \"v\n'\u25a0..v-   lakm    B\n*, ll*.*\nf-T\n!   brl;. *.,    'W\n\u2022s^i '\n.it\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmllllllll\nELECTRIC\nLAUNDRY\nPhone 1170 \u2014 180 Baker Sl.\nII'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUI'IIIIIIIIMII\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& I MR IE\nChartered Accountant!\nAuditors\nM0 Baker Sl. Phon! 23.S\n.\"   iiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiMiniiiiiiiiii.il\t\nCaih on the barrel head, all\nclaimi p,iid without fun or\nfeathen ty an auoclation that\nhaa paid over 1100.000 00 in\nbenefiti in the last 6 monthi.\nPhone 980. Stuart Salei Agen\nclei, 577 Baker St.. Nelion, BC.\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\n[Prior    Broil\nI'NDER  NEW   OWNERSHIP\nPHONE I 75 -  182 BAKER 8T\nllllllllllilllllllllllimillllllllllllllinil\nFLEURY'S  Pharmacy\na  a Preicriptiom\n\u2022'[  lOn       Cnir.pour.iled\n1  >r\\\\\\ Amiralrlv\nV\\yJ      Mwl   Arts Fills\n-     PHONE 25\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nHast   Tour   rurnltura   r.xrier'.'.-i\nReroven-d   at    tha\nNELSON   UPHOLSTERY\n413   Hall   St Phont   Ht\niiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiimiii *\nRADIATOR REPAIRS\nCleaned and Rccored\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\nMl  Ward BL                   Phont 81\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuii* hi  in\nJ. A. C. Laught\nOpt\nometrist\nSuite 205\nMEDICAL ARTS BUILDIN\nSILVER KING TRANSFI\nGENERAL   HAULING\nOwned and Operated by an\nEx 8ervlceman\nPhone 606-R2\nSTAN BACHYNSKI\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\nPORTABLE RADK\n(ulf charging)\n$139.00\nNelson Electric C\nGenera! Electric Appllane*\nPhone 260 874  Bikt-r\nREADYINC   NEW   L\nhr   hull!   In   Ihr   I     .*-    linre   lhe   s\nFor all your floral requlremtnta\nleavi  your order  at\nOVERWAITEA\nPhone   707  or\nI N E R _ The 2.1,0M-lon SS Pruldent f'lrveland. hlneit liner In Walkden'i Fiorina, Phon.  IW.\nir  li \u00bbhnssn nnrlnt rompleiion In the ahln-ard? if tUrnedi  Cillf.     |_\nUP-TO-DATE\nMETHODS\nThat Make Your\nClothes Like New\nNew life for your\nclothes \u2014 that's what\nour quality cleaning\nservice \u2014 our up-to-\ndate methods and\nequipment\u2014bring you.\nYou not only cut clothing costs but you improve appearance when\nour experts restore and\npreserve your present\nwardrobe   Phone 288.\nSummer Coats\n*115\n2 Day Service\nMen'i 3-Picce Su iti\nLadies 2-Piccc Suitt\nDrciict, 1 Piece Plain\n90e\nHave your Sleeping\nBagi cleaned\nCurtaim and\nDrapei Cleaned\nAGENTS\nSalmo\u2014E. Johni\nSlocan City \u2014\nJ.   B.   Hacking\nMr.  Peachey,  Bui\nDepot, Silverton, B.C.\nKing George Hotel,\nKailo, B.C.\nEMPIRE\nCLEANERS\nWE CALL FOR\nAND DELIVER\nPHONE 288\nk\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1947_07_21","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0418377","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1947-07-21 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1947-07-21 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0418377"}