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Hall, Vice-President of\nthe Brotherhood of Railway Clerks\n(A.F.L.) who is Chairman of the\ni  Brotherhoods'   \"Joint , Negotiating\nCommittee, x\n.:, Under . the'.' current agreement\naverage' railroad wage Is $1.00 an\nhour. The 48-hour work week prevails. In nearly'all branches except\nthe locomotive shops where a 44;\nhour week is Jn force.\nThe Canadian .Brotherhood of\nRailway Employees (C.C.L.) which\nnumbers .25,000- members, Is preparing formal notice pf its. Intention to seek revision* of the present\nagreement with the railways.\nThe  C.B.R.E.,  whose  numbers\nwork on the same terms' as the\n'A.F:L.-afflliated wooers, alto an*\nnbuneed In May  .hit It would\nseek the'40-hour week and a 30-\np'er-eent. Wage Increase.\n'     The C.B.R3\". Is expected to submit its formal'notice in a few days.\nMr.   Hall   said, the   negotiating\n\u2022ominittee has asked for a conference with' the railways prior to\nnext July io.\nUnions concerned include:*  .\nBrotherhood   of   Railway   and\nSteamship Clerks, freight handlers,\nexpress and station employees; Order, of. Railway Telegraphers; In?\nternational Association of Machinists, and Brotherhood of Maintenance  of Railway Employees.\nArchbishop Under\nNice Watch\nBy RICHARD KASI8CHKE\n\u2022 PRAGUE, June 17 (AP) - The\nCommunist Government today\ntoughened its campaign against the\nBonifcn Catholic Church by putting\nArchbishop Josef Ber on under\nhouse arrest .-.-,-. \u25a0 '-a,.-v--jr '\u25a0\"'\u00a3.*\u00bb'*\u2022\u25a0\n'Wufee well-known Prague-' priests\nalso were under arrest after police\nraided the consistory In the Archbishop's palace to seize' church\nrecords.\nThe 60-year-old Archbishop was\nkept under polke watch.;\nDiplomatic informants speculated\non whether he might- also be taken\nto confinement elsewhere if he\ncontinued resisting what he calls a\nGovernment aim to control Roman\nCatholicism ih Czechoslovakia and\nto set up a new \"state Catholic\nthutch.\"\nOne diplomat familiar with the\nArchbishopric, said Archbishop\nBeran last Saturday discussed with\nsome of his bishops the advisability\nof miming a temporary successor\n\"in case,\" fie said, \"I am soon\narrested.\" \"   '-\nMany rumors were in circulation\ntonight. One was that the Archbishop had got out of the country\nand gone to Rome. This was discounted by a diplomatic source\n.-\u2022close to tho Bishopric.\nPrague Protestants- meanwhile\n, were watching the situation closely.\nOne Protestant churchman said;\n\"Our interest is Intense because we\nthink we're next in the Government's drive to get control of the\nchurches and cut our ties with\nforeign church organizations.\" He\nwould not elaborate.\nREDS MAY LAUNCH\nNEW PEACE DRIVE\nBy WALTER PARROTT\nHONG KONG, June 17 (Reuters)\nrrChlnese Communists may launch\nanother \"peace offensive\" and propaganda campaign to.weaken opposition before advancing into\nSouth China, a well-informed British source said today.\nSome color was given this prediction, by a Communist Pelplng radio\nannouncement last night that news\nbroadcasts In Cantonese, Taiwanese\n\u2022 (spoken in Formosa) and Chaochow\n(spoken in Fukien) would begin\nMonday.\n\u2022There still'was uncertainty\nWhether the Communists' chief objective in South China would be\nthe coastal province of Kwangtung,\nwhose capital is Canton, or Kwang-\nai to the West.\nAll reports reaching Hong Kong\nsuggest that Communist arms are\nstill as powerful as ever but there\nare persistent reports of a deterioration in the quality of the civil ad:\nministration as the Communist-\ncontrolled area becomes larger.\nC.S.U. OFFERS\nSETTLEMENT PLAN\nMONTREAL, June 17 (CP) -\nPresident Harry Davis of the Canadian Seamen's Union tonight offered a four-point proposal as settlement for the East coast* deep-sea\nshipping strike.\n\u2022 The proposal was made in a letter sent to Prime Minister St Laurent tonight , - -...I,\nEXPECTS FEDERAL\nMAJORITY FOR\nCCF. IN B.C.\nParty Chieftain\nUrges National\nMarketing Act\njoint oil Line\nEDMONTON, June 17 (CP) r* M,\nJ. Coldwell, National CCF. leaflet,\nsaid in a radio address here tonight\nthat ''it is obvious the CCF. CBn\ntake a majority of Federal seats in'\nBritish Columbia\" in the forthcoming Dominion vote.\nAlthough results of the 13.C. Provincial election are being called a\nserious setback to his party, Mr.\nColiiwell said they marked a CCF'\nvictory instead. .-, .    \u25a0,\n\"the C.C.F\/polled B0.OO0 more\nyotet than In;1045 and obtained\n35 per cent pf all votes cast,\" he\nsaid. \"The Coalition polled 62\nper cent or an average of 31 per\n' cent for each of the old-line part-\n. les.\" \u25a0 -\u2022' ' ... *\nMr, Coldwell declared that \"ob-\nservers of all parties\" expect that\nthe. C.C.F. will hold a majority\nof B.C, seats after the Federal\neleotion.\nThe party leader, advocated \"f\nNational Marketing Act to enable\n(Canada)- to establish marketing\nboards representative of producer\nand consumer for all-agricultural\nproducts.which enter into Ihter-\nprovinciaror export trade,\"    -\nAs,a means of protecting the\nfarmer \"against insecurity, fluctuations in income and low returns\nwhich have dominated Canadian\nagriculture in the past,\" a CCF.\nGovernment would \"propose a system of guaranteed- or forward\nprices for, farm products.\nSMALL REFINERIES HIT\nMr. Coldwell. earlier at Lacombe,\ncharged that under Liberal Government policy the small independent\nrefineries Of Western Canada are\nbeing shackled with high costs. .\nWhen permission .'nras askei}'.n\nParliament for construction ot an\noil pipe-line fjrom Alberta to East-\nerajGanada,r the ftCA-hSd suggest?;\n:d that the line be a \"common carrier\" which must transport oil <fe-\ngardless of what company supplied\nit.   '\u25a0'    '  \u25a0.\n; The liberals, supported by the\nProgressive-Conservatives ahd Social, Credit, turned down this suggestion, he said, and when the pipeline is built -the co-operative refineries will have to ship by mall\nwhile big companies like Imperial\nOil will be able to use less expensive, methods of\" shipping oil\nthrough the pipe-line.\n\"The Government is contributing\nto further entrenchmentpf a great\nmonopoly and is stifling real free\nenterprise,\" Mr. Coldwell said.\nGRAND FORKS, B.C., June IT \u2014\nGrand Forks district, which has increased Its seed -potato crop more\nthan SO times in-less than a decade, will have its own reiffdeht certified seed potato inspector.\nHe Is Hugh Crockard, a native of\npotato-growing Ireland, who has\nbeen with the 6eed potato certification staff in -British Columbia since\n1046.' '\u25a0'-,-.\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'   .\/' *\nHe wiU also serve the Kootenay\nand Boundary areas- from Princeton to Newgate and North to Gojd-\nMcieliii\nN. Denver Today\nThe Association, bf Kootenay*Mu-\nnlcipalities meets in New Denver\ntoday. 'I -      .\nAttending from Nelson wlU be\nW. E. B. Monypenny, Secretary-\nTreasurer of the Association; City\nClerk W.A. Gdrdon, and Aldermen\nA. G. Ritchie and N..R. Sardich,\nAgriculturists to\nMeet at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, June 17 (CP) \u2014\nThe men who work to lighten the\nburden of Cahadian farmers meet\nhere next week.       '\nThey are technical agriculturists,\nmembers of the Agricultural Institute of Canada which,meets in annual convention, a four-day session\nopening Monday.\nOrganized 29 years, ago, the Institute has 2500 members engaged\nin widely diversified fields of work.\n'It is -their job to develop improved strains of crops, and livestock breeding practices; research\nfor pest control, and search for\nmodern methods' to lighten the\nfarmers work.\nNew Safety Glass\nFor Eyeglasses\nNEW YORK, June 17 (AP) \u2014 A\nnew safety glass for eyeglasses was\ndemonstrated today.\nThese lenses arc sandwlsh glass,\nthe same as auto windshields. In\nthe middle of each lens ie a sheet of\nplastic, . \"\nDemonstrations were made to\nshow that new glasses are protection to eyes of children, because\nthey stop the bullets of B-B guns,\nand arrows and slingshots do not\nbreak them.\nA B-B rifle bullet at 35 feet\ncracked the new lens, but, broke\nan ordinary lens into fragments.\nNo fragments flew from, the crack\nin the new lens.\n<fc\nnS\u00b0\\\n'\" WIATHW WMCAIT\n\"Kootenay^-rClearlng 'Saturday except for some cloudiness along the\nmountains in afternoon, Light\nwinds.. Warmer. Low and, high at\nCranbrook 35 and 70, Crescent Valley 35 ond 72. Outlook for Sunday\nclear.\nS CENT8 A COPY\nti^^Nd Street Car System\nQoes yitt Monday With Btis Service\nNELSON. BRJTISH  COLllMBIA, CANADA\u2014SATURDAY  MORNING. JUNE  1\u00bb.  1040\nNUMBER  47\nBlue Eyes or Br0wnl\nBrown-eyed Rrlsollla Tomllnsoh, 20, and blue-eyed Hugh T\u201e\nGardner, 24, University of Washington students, await their marriage .\nIn Los Angeles, which they-hope will settle an argument oyer\nheredity. The bride contends brown eyes will predominate In their\noffspring; Gardner says It's the other way around. They decided to\nmarry to settle it but Prlscllla stressed \"don't think that's bur only\nreason for getting marrled,\"-*(AP Wlrephoto.)\nResident Certified Seed Potato\nInspector lor Grand Forks, Kootenay\nen. ;'.:...\nHis district Includes 628 acres of\nseed potatoes owned by 152 growers. In Grand Forks section alone\nare 310 acres owned by 104 growers.' .'.., *:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\nGrand Forks produced two carloads of seed potatoes in 1089; and\n80 carloads In 1947.\nThis ,year Grand Forks growers\nhave established a seed testing plot.\nResults are expected to provide a\ngreat deal of information on the\nmerits of each of the seed stocks.\nI.Wi.al Coast\nVANCOUVER, B.C., June 17 (CP)\n\u2014A court .order '. today restored\n$136,000 to the British' Columbia\nDistrict, Council,- International\nWoodworkers'bf America (C.I.O.)..\nChief Justice Wendell Farrls in\nSupreme Court ordered the fufidsi'\nhow held by. the court receiver, be\npaid to the I.W.A., ruling Out a\nclaim of the rival leftist hnlon,..the\nWoodworkers Industrial Union.\nThe\/order ended ah eight-month\nbattle over the funds. They were\nseized by W.I.U. officers last October when the\" former LW.A. executive . brbke away and formed the\nrival union. Most of the money had\nbeen marked for a strike fund.   J\nErnie Dalskog, former President\nof the IM\u201e served 21 days in jail\nfor his refusal to disclose the\nwhereabouts of the strike fund. He\nwas released when assigned to a\ncourt receiver. ,\nThe court order also gives the\nI.W.A.   all   -property,    Including\nfurniture, equipment and records\nnow In custody of the receiver.\nCosts of the case, amounting to\nseveral thousand' dollars, were\nassessed against Dalskog, now Vice-\nPresident of the W.I.U.; Harold\nPritchett, President, and Executive;\nmembers Hjalmar Bergren, John\nForbes, Berthold Melsness and Don\nBarbour. .   -\", '\nChief Justice Farrls ruled that\nthere could be ho further action.on\noriginal claims of the I.W.A. for\nan accounting of all assets of the\nold B.C District Council.   -\nThe I.W.A. still have outstanding\nactions against, former officials of\ntheir union in Vancouver, Duncan,\nAlberni and Mission tot recovery\nof another $60,000.\nThe Judgment today was by con-:\nsent between A. T. R. Campbell,\nI.W.A. counsel, and J. S. Burton,\nW.I.U. counsel,   \u25a0'\u25a0.'...'\nFighter Squadron\nTo Train at Rivers\nHALIFAX, June 17 (CP)\u2014Two\nsquadrons of Navy Sea Fury fighter aircraft will leave nearby H.M;-\nC.S. Shearwater Monday for\" a\nflight to the joint air training school\nat Rivers, Man.\nAt Rivers the planes\u201417 of the\nfastest propellor-driven aircraft sin\nthe world\u2014will engage in an eight-\nweek course of co-operation with\nthe army.\nOn the return trip the planes will\nput on an air show at the Toronto\nExhibition.\nThe flight Is under command of\nLt.-Cmdr. James Hunter ofComo,\nQue., and Vancouver.\nSentenced to Hang\nSUDBURY, Ont, June 17 (CP) \u2014\nGerard Chretien, 23, was found\nguilty late today of the rifle shooting last Dec. 9 of Wpam \"Wilson\nand was sentenced to be hanged\nnext Sept. 29.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiniiiii\n47 HOURS APART\n* NAVAN, Ont., June 17 (CP)\n\u2014Twin babies were bOrn 47\nhours apart to Mrs. Luclen Cler-\n1 oux, Dr. W. C Tweddie of near-\n.by Rockland Bald tonight\nHe said both the babies and\nthe young mother were in excellent condition.\nMrs. Clefoux gave birth to a \u2022\nseven-pound boy at 6:30 p.m, -\ntonight\u2014exactly '47 hours after\nthe birth of a,six-pound girl\nDr. Tweddie sa'   it was the\nfirst case of its kind he had ex-\n.  -.erienced in 29 years of practice.. . .\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nWarn Against\n$100 Bogus Bills\nOTTAWA, June 17 (CP) \u2014 The\npost office warned postmasters today that .counterfeit United States\n$101) bills \"of excellent workmanship\" are in circulation.\nTheybelong! to series 1934 of the\nFederal Reserve Bank of New York\nand appeared in February and\nMarch.\nCounterfeits of series 1934A and\n1934 from the Federal Reserve\nBanks, of New York and,Atlanta\nare also in circulation. The Post\nOffice says they are \"extremely\ndeceptive,\"\nHdwde. Candidate\nIn Federal Race\n\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\n--Central Press. Canadian\nMayor Camllllen Houde, 69, of\nMontreal, Que., has announced\nhie candidacy, as,an Independent\nIn Montreal-Paplnoau constituency. In the June 27 Federal eleo-\ntion. Mayor Houde It remembered\naa the man who spept four years\nIn an Internment camp during\nthe War, then, on his release,\nWat re-elected Mayor o.f Montreal.\n, A transportation system that\nhas. saved Nelson footwear for\n60 yeara. .goes out o<yexistence\nMonday. *A .    ,.,'.'; *<v'\u25a0',-\u25a0\u25a0'.\".\n-Street cars, whloh came In\nwhen the city wat a rough mining\ncamp of the late 1890a, Will be\nsuperseded by he'w}*Interior-\nStages-operated busep\", r,\nlie-citizens first enjbysflelectrlc\ntransportation in 1899 with the procurement by the Nelson Electric\nTramway, Ltd., of a franchise' to\noperate; a Street railway system.\nCaptain' Duncan,, father: of William\nDuncan of Castlegar,; was intru-\nmental ln forming the Company. \u2022\nThe firm was in business until\nIts substation near\" Cottonwood\nCteek burned down (n 1908. Shortly\nafter its car barns and two cars\nwent up in flames.\nThe'City then stepped In, purchasing, the Company's track' and\noverhead line for $10,000.\n\u2022 Iai-910 a number of. enterprising\ncitizens \u2022 organized thei Nelson Street\nRailway; Company, \"i^hich' obtained\na $25,000 bond guarantee from the\nCity, use of equipment and-free\npower and extended the track by a\nloop to serve the Eastern-hill section. But it operated at a steady\nloss.\nWith stock issued to $32,000, the\nCompany 'sold out to the City at 50\ncents oh the doUar, and two\ndebenture issues, one for $16,000\npurchasing the Cjmpany's stock,\nand the other for $30,000 to meet\ndebts, were approved. These were\npaid oft by .1984. \"\nSINCE 1914\nWhen the system \\yent into City\nhands for,the last time in 1914;\nyoung man was beginning a career\nin the business.\nHe was A. C (Les) Hall, Super.\nintendent, who began as a grease\nboy and', worked up to promotion\nas head of the Department in\nNovember, 1932. He Is most closely\nassoclatecl-with the -utility during\nits 35-year City, ownership.\nOttter personnel who have been\nwith,- the Department up to the\npresent,, and the year 'they were\nfirst employed, are;\ni A.' V, Rowley, conductor, 1931;\nJack,, Robertson, serviceman, 1932;\nM. Zetnuck, trackman, 1933; David\nWebster, motOrman, 1937; Al- Man-\nson, motorhian, 1942; W. McCarid-\nlish,. motorman, 1942; Lee .Hall,\nmptorman, 1943; Lou-Blakey, iwlng-\nmaivi 1943; Alex Dlngwail, swtog-\n^^^;F._W^CartWJright,,siKfegr\n'ffiah;*, J9.3; Chailes Biince, maintenance ind spare,\"** 1943: N Cart-k,\ntrackman, 1_44; Bill Leslie, swing-\nman, 1945, and Ken Harlow, spare,\n1947.Y.'-'    \u25a0\"\u25a0; ,    y.\nMany are the humorous Incidents\nthat have revolved around ihe street\ncars since their earliest, days- in\nNelson. '.     .-'.\nTheSr story also contains some\nmatted pages, including those of\naccjdepts in which, two have lost\nlegs 'under cir wheels. The late\nFrank' Ingraham\", conductor, was\nmade Superintendent after losing a\nleg in i\" mishap that probably\nwould not have-resulted had the\ncar carried an air brake. In later\nyears, Dal MacLeod, now of Victoria, a youngster at the time, lost\na leg in a downtown accident..\nIn recent years, the street cars\nran away twice on the downhill\nStanley Street run, in one case\ncrashing into! the Royal Bank of\nCanada asrlt leaped the tracks at\nBaker Street and on the other\noccasion plunging across the Baker-\nStanley intersection and half Way\ndown, the hill towards' Vernon\nStreet before cominis to a halt\nagainst the Hood Bakery wall\n'-*j_ -\u2022\nVancouver Bond\nIssue Cleared Up\n,'' VANCOUVER,-June 17' (CP)-\nA \"misunderstanding\" over a recent Vancouver City bond Issue\nhat been cleared up, Aid. George\nMiller, Chairman of the. Clvlo\nFinance Committee, reported today;\nAid. Miller It with Mayor\nCharles Thompson In Toronto\nconferring with financial houtes,\nseeking a better rate on future\nbond Issues.\nIn \u25a0 telephone Interview, Aid,\nMiller tald; \"There wat tome\nlittle misunderstanding, and this\nhat been cleared up to our\nsatisfaction . . , we are pretty\nsatisfied there wasn't a gang-up\nagainst us.\"\nAt Edmonton latt night, M. J,\nColdwell, National C.C.F. Leader,\ncharged there had been Irregu\nlarltlet In handling the bond\nUtile floated and he demanded a\nFederal Government Investigation.\nHe said six banks and 22 Investment firms had submitted one\n\"low bid pn the $7,500,000 Issue\nwhich the city . wat forced to\naccept,\"\nAid. Miller laid In Toronto the\nInvestment houtet had explained\nIt wat \"quite a big Issue\" and that\nwas the reason for not offering\ncompetitive bids.\nHUNT FISH BOATS\nNANAIMO, B.C., June 17 (CP)\u2014\nR.C.A.F. plbnes, Indians and police\nare searching for two fish boats,\nmissing since June 6 off Cape Scott\nAboard were Louis Walkus, Wilson'\nWallace, and.Abel Dickson,\nA seine boat ln charge of Simon\nBeans returned June 15 after a\nsearch and reported no trace of the\nmissing boats. \u2022      ,-\nRaging Coast Blaze\nEats Into Rich Timber\nHigh Flier.'\nA seven - pound baby boy\n(above) was born 6000 feet In\nthe air to Mrs. Jean Flsoh, Wife\nof Staff Sergeant Barney , Flush\nof the Muroo,, Calif., Air Force\nbase. Mrt; Fitch was being flown\nIn the C-47 to the Long Beach,\nCalif,, Naval Hospital, but the\nstork wouldn't Walt\nWILL CONTINUE\nCOALITION,\nPREMIER ASSURE\nLiberals Won't .\nTake Advantage\nOf Majority\nSPLIT SUGGESTED\nVICTOKlAi B.C., Jun*> 17 (CP)-\n\u25a0Er5t^er\u201eJByr,oa<:'*Johnsoiii-fo'day?,'Said\nthe' British-rCoiumbia Government\nwill continue as a Coalition.\nHe dismissed, a suggestion that\nLiberals and Conservatives might\nsplit. - '       ,* ;\\\nIn a curt statement, hq said the\nGoverttihent was elected as a Coalition and will hold office on the\nbasis of election.\nThe Liberals are in a position to\nform a Government of their own,\nbut.there is no intention of taking\nsuch action, he said.\n; Premier Johnson returned to his\noffice today after the prdyinc?-\nwide.election sweep which returned\nhis Government with an increased\ninajority. in the Leg'sla'taje- .\nWanl Prices\nExplanation\n\\OTTAWA7 June 17 (CP) \u2014 \"The\nhigh prices of meat and bread have\nled the Canadian Association of\nConsumers to seek an explanation\nof the situation. . \u2022' '.'    .'\nAt a meeting of the C.A.C.\nNational Executive.here this week\nofficials decided to seek assistance\nfrom the Industrial and Development Council ot Meat. Packers and\nRetail. Merchants Association, as\nwell as the Canadian Federation of\nAgriculture, to find out the cause\nof the present high price of meat,\nand particularly of pork.  .\nThe.baking industry, trade and\nalso the Government will be asked\nto explain why bread is so high-\npriced. Plans were made during\nthe session for the Association's annual meeting here Sept. 27-28.\n11th Price\nCut for Zinc\nMONTREAL, June* 17 (CP) \u2014.\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited, announced today a reduction of %\ncent a pound in zinc prices to 9Vi\ncents for prime Western in carload\nlot?. y-\nThis latest cut makes a total of Tl\nreductions since the current down\ntrend began and reduces zinc prices\nby: eight cents -from the post-war\nhigh'of 17% cents a pound.   .\nThe general quotation for topper\nnow is 17 cents a pound but there\nare still some primary producers\nin the United States quoting the\nold 2314 cerits price in effect prior\nto the recent break in the market\nFEWER CARLOADINGS\nOTTAWA, June 17 (CP) \u2014 Car-\nloadings decreased slightly during\nthe week ended June 11 to 72,736\ncars from 73,070 cars for the previous week and 75,229 cars tor the\ncorresponding week .last., year,--the\nBureau of Statistics reported today.\nBoatloads of Men and Pumps Rush\nTo Sechelt Inlet; 6 Million Feet\nOf Timber Already Lost; Fear Winds\nVANCOUVER, June 17 (CP) \u2014 A raging fire\" \u00bbtill out\nof control, has destroyed or damaged six: million board feet\npf timber at Lamb Company logging camp, Sechelt ln|et.\n.Flames spread rapidly today through.the ared^ situated\n40 miles Northwest of Vancouver. Already 170 acres of newly-\n'felled timber and bucked timber are affected, with the flame*\nmoying to green timber.  ,      *~\nBC Forest Service officials -expressed, fears tonight that renewed\nWinds may send it rushing into\n'virgin timber. <--\n'Hopes are high, however, that\nwith, an even break in the weather\nthi 70-odd firefighters will-have the\nblaze milder control within 24\nhours. '\u25a0\u25a0\nSix other fires are reported in\nthe Vancouver Forest District, including a Parksvllle fire extinguished by. the suppression crew there:\nAll are under control.\n2 IN NELSON AREA\nElSewhere 13 fires burned in the\nFort George Forest District, 800\nmilesiNorth of Vancouver.\nNine .fires are reported; in .the\nKamloops area, and two in the\nNelson district\nForest   8erylce   crews   and\nequipment have been rushed Into\nthe Sechelt Peninsula to aid the\nfire crews. Boats laden with men\nand., pumps' and   hose   are   en\nroute. **\nIt is estimated that up to 40 per\ncent dt the burned timber will be a\ntotal loss., The remainder is\ndamaged.\nSeveral  bulldozers are  backing\nthe-efforts of seven pump crews.\nWater'supply is plentiful. *\nCause of the fire .Is believed to\n\u2022 be. friction   on   rooks resulting\nfrom * break In a steel-cabled\nhaulback wire. In the sun-dried\nslash   and   timbers   the   flames\nspread quickly. ,'\nThere ia no danger at present of\nthe. fire reaching the camp Itself,\nsix miles from the area. Only Lamb\nCompany timber stands are\nthreatened. ;\nFLEE FLAMES\nFifteen' loggers were forced to\nflee the valley, seeking shelter in\na camp .along a high ridge;\nForest Service officials war*\nflown In from Vancouver.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nAsk U. S. Attitude\nIf Reds Attack\nHong Kong\nUONPON, June 17 (Reu-,\n.tors)\u2014Britain hat asked the\nUnited States to define Its attitude In the event of a Chinese\n. Communist attack on Hong\nKong, a usually reliable source\nsaid today.,    j.\nIt was authoritatively understood , that '.the future of\nHong Kong has peen one of the\n. matters discussed In reoent\nweeks between the Nanking'\nrepresentatives.of Britain, tho\n.^United i-tates^aW' c\u00abrMih'\u00bb'iA*,f 'J\nlantlc-Pact and CommonweaJth\npowers.\n.The defence of Hong Kong\n' was also   understood  to   have :\nbeen the subject of direct diplomatic     exchanges     between\nLondon and Washington.   ~\nReferring to the continuing\ndispatch of British military reinforcements Into Hong Kong,\na Foreign Office spokesman\nemphasized today the British\nGovernment wishes for friendly\nrelations-with the Communist\nauthorities In China If possible.\nUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHII\nCanada Sold Out\nHome Consumption\nNEW WESTMINSTER, S.C, June\n17' (CP)-^Canada's post-war, domestic economy is expanding so fast\nTrade Minister C. D. Howe said today that he Ib \"stuck for something\nto sell\" on the overseas market\nin ah election speech to the New\nWestminster Liberal Association,\nthe stocky Cabinet minister Said\n\"When I was my England for the\nTrade Fait1 I .negotiated, salesr pf\nBritish Columbia lumber and fish-\nthen there seemed no other surpluses to get rid of.\"     .\n\"Aftre some thought I remembered that B.C. had extra, apples and\nraspberries so I peddled those. All\nthe rest of our products are being\nconsumed rifeht in this country.\"\n. The North Star aircraft .equipped\nwith Brlttsh Merlin engines, 'which\nOpposition Leader George Drew\noharged \"inefficient,\" are \"the best\nin the world,\" Mr' Howe said.   ,\nReady to Cooperate  '\nWith Prqviheer-^Drew\nBy Canadian Press Staff Writer\nORILLIA, Ont, June 17 (CP)' -\nGeorge Drew*. Progressive Conservative Leader, today stressed his\nwillingness to cooperate with all\nProvincial Governments.\nMr. Drew, addressing an afternoon politic.! rally here, said that\nas premier of Ontario he cooperated with the Government of Quebec.\nA 'Progressive Conservative Federal\nGovernment would call a, new Dominion-Provincial conference to\niron out social security and other\nmatters. .     \u25a0\nCanada Lumber\nTo M Counlries\nOTTAWA, June IT (CP)-:As an\nInternational lumber saleslady, Canada is on her toes, doing a bang-up\ntrade.-,. \u25a0 '.; '\u2022\u25a0-..,\n' This iyear she: expects at: least 60*\ncountries to buy pwt Of the near-\nrecord B,'000,000lo00. board feet of\nlumber she hopes, to produce by\nChristmas., .. j ,r,..:. | '\n: Domestic and1, foreign .sales of\n-West Coast Douglas fir and Eastern\nspiruce .expect; to \u25a0: total about\n*P.0AnW\/.Wvi^;i.ai.r_-T..^.. \u2022:-....\nTrade i experts' say'that's* pretty\nfair yield, considering that one\ngood customer, the United Xing-\ndom, is short of dollars and another,\nthe United States'Has some lumber'\nproblems.\nAnd , considering,, too, that the\nlumber market for Canada in China\nhas: disappeared and that South\nAfrica is tightening up on her imports and purse strings.\n.- Nevertheless,. trade officials say, \u2022\na world demand greater than supply\ncontinues for lumber and while the\npost-war construction , era progresses, the supply-demand picture\nis not expected to change.\nInternally, there are indications\nthat rather than a falling off of\ndemand, increased consumption is\nexpected this year... ..   ;\nBasing their predictions on the\nconstruction trend, trade officers.\npoint to a general step-up In\nbuilding, o' .\nLumbermen Resume\nContract Talks\n! VANCOUVER, June IT (CP) \u2014\u25a0\nContract negotiations between tht\nInternational Woodworkers of America (CCL.-CI.O.) andB. C coast\nlumbermen were resumed today.\nRepresentatives met to discuss the\nunion's demand for a 15-cerit-an-\nhour wage boost, plus reduction In\nboard rates from $2.50 to $1.50 a\nday. apd guaranteed pay for contract workers.\nOther union \"wants\" include additional paid holidays and an extensive welfare plan\u2014at operators'\nexpense. ,\nThe wage contract comes up for\nrenewal July 16.\nVitamins Discovery\nClaimed By Russia\nMOSCOW. June 17 (AP)\u2014A Russian Medical Journal claimed another first today. It said a Russian\ndoctor discovered' vitamins: more\nthan a.century ago.        ' .\nThe periodical, medical Wbrker\u2014\nofficial organ of the Soviet Union-\nMinistry of; Health\u2014published \"e\nletter from a Professor krasnyanskl'\nof Astrakhan who said Nikolai Lun-\nin of Dorpat University revealed\nthe existence of vitamins in 1800. *\nAnd in This Corner\nSEATTLE, June 16 (API\u2014Four years ago-Jack Hesle bet his,\nniece, Dawn Copeland\u201e$25 that she wouldn't be married before she\nwas 25 years old.    , . '\nMiss Copeland, now; 24, will wed Mllto;i Condry Friday.\nHelse paid off al) right, but In nickels and pennies scattered In a\nfive-gallon bucket ot sand. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0.\nAfter hours.of patiently sifting the sand for the scratch, Miss\nCopeland accused her'uncle of chiseling.\n\"He was a penny short,\" she declared, scraping the grit from\n' underfher fingernails. \u25a0'....,\nBRIDGEPORT,. Conn., June 17 (AP)\u2014\"My hmband hit me in the\nfac\u00ab with the family ;oatr \",-   :'*     ' '.,.',',,,-\nThat statement, made when she was asked what had been intolerably cruel about her husband's conduct, won a divorce today for\nMrs, Catherine Tlchnor Combier, petite, blonde daughter of \u25a0 a former\nDarien physician      -   '     * -\n Mrs. Combier told Superior Court Judge William J. Shea the cat\nwas used as a weapon in a domestic spat'\n _ \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS,.SATURDAY, JUNE 18,1949\nLas. Times Today\u2014Shows ot 2:00-7:00-9:09\nLATEST\nNEWS\nCivic\nCOLORED\nCARTOON\nStarts Mon.: \"THE ACCUSED\" with Loretta Young\nS. ENGLISH WINS\nLEADERSHIP OF\nMICHEL LOCAL...'\n*: 'NATAL, June 17 \u2014 ihe official\nresult of the ballot taken June 13\nfor the President and Vice-President Of Michel-Local No. 7292 show-\n. ed Samuel English of Michel retained his position for another two\nyear term as he defeated Tony\nPOdrasky by a majority of 104\nvotes.,\n- For Vice-President, George Man-\nnibn of Michel scored 85 votes more\nthan his rival J. K. Mitchell,   ,\n\u25a0   At  a, previous  meeting  Simon\n'Weaver was retained as Secretary\nby acclamation, along with James\n'Walsh as recording-secretary, replacing Alex Walker. George Man-\nnion replaces Stan Grocutt of Michel as Vice-President.  ,\nMidgetAH-Stars\nChosen; Meet     '\nMohawks Here Today\nWith-the conclusion of the Nel-\naon Midget Baseball. League, an\nall-star, team has been chosen to\n-play- trie - league-winning Mohawks\nSaturday afternoon at 3:30,\n- The All-Star lineup includes:\nBurns, R. Carmichael, Postnikov,\nJarrett, B. Carmichael, Kennedy,\nLangstaff, Benedetti, Ludlow, Ozark\nMel, Masi, Koehle.-, \u25a0\/\nThe Weather\nSynopsis: The Southern Interior\nof B. C, was cool again Friday and\nscattered showers were reported.\nDense fog banks prevail along the\nWest and North coasts of Vancouver Island. The warmest point on\nthe coast was Cqmox with a high\ntemperature of 77. Hope reported\n80, Higher temperatures are. expected in most regions ot,the province Saturday and prospects are\ngood1 for fine warm weather on\nSunday, ,\nNelson .* \u201e\u201e.\u201e..........   44\nWinnipeg . ..;.    48\nEdmonton  \u2122-\u201e\t\nVancouver  ..........\nVictoria  -48\nKimberley    62\nCrescent Valley ...........   36\nKaslo.,  -.\u201e....   40\nGrand Forks \t\nSpokane   ..........'....,\n61 \"SI\n67   \"-\n46r 72   \u2014\n67   .01\n38   64\nBRLflTIitflSY\nFOR\nASTHMA\nAND HAY FEVER\nMENU\nWHY SUFFER\nthose painful bladder conditions,\narising, from,weak kidneys? -Ban\nthose restless nights. The new\nmagnesian treatment (MAGNO-\nPILLS, is a boon to sufferers.like\nyou. With MAQNOPILLS you will\nfeel vast improvement in your well\nbeing, and will experience quick\nrelief from neurasthenia, prostration, and dejection. Gives you -too,\na decided uplift after surgerj\nMagnopllle are for Sale at all\nDrug Stores.\nU.S.\nCEMENT\nAVAILABLE IN\nCARLOAD LOTS\n$A\"y Quantity\u2014Immediate\nShipment-\nGood Supply ot\nUsed CLAY BRICK\n' Permanent* Cement\nInsuplast\nCardinal Cedarwells\nMexico Refractories\nTlmm aluminum windows\u2014Sash\nDeeks-McBride Ltd.\n\u25a0\u25a0'.;..   1051 Main Street\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nSilver and Gold\nStability Would\nAid Slocan\u2014Corner\nSLOCAN CWV, B.C.. June 17-\nThe need for retention of free enterprise was stressed by Mayor J.\nE, Comer of Rossland, Progressive-\nConservative candidate for West\nKootenay. in the Dominion. Election June 27, ln a speech in the\nI.O.O.F. Hall here today.\nFreedom for and recognition of\nminority groups were essential, he\ntold the audience, among whom\nwere many Japanese. All were entitled to free discussion and opinions, he continued. Socialism would\nlead to control of the actions of individuals, -\nHe emphasized the need for\nforceful representation at Ottawa\nin connection with the silver and\ngold markets and for their stabilization as an incentive to development of the Slocan.\n... James Curtis, Campaign Manager,\nsaid West Kootenay Liberals were\ngiving Mayor,. Corner strong support, WhllfraKsIb-Slofcah'Provincial\nRiding had1 retained the C.CF.\nmember, Randolph Harding, the\npeople should not be discouraged,\nbut should fight harder for free\nenterprise. The Provincial election\nbad handed socialism a \"smothering\nblow.\"\nFire Losers to\nMeet on Thursday\nVANCOUVER, June 17 (CP)\u2014A\n\u25a0meeting scheduled for tdday.ainong\nfirms who were hit by Wednesday's\nfour-alarm, million - dollar False\nCreek fire, was cancelled when R.\nA. Wassman, one of the heavy losers, was called out of town On business. \u2022\nThe businessmen had planned to\ndiscuss the question of taking legal\naction against the City of Vancouver for negligence in the control\nOf sparks from a waste burner in\nthe.area.   .   . -.'\nThe conference no whas been set\nfor Thursday. -\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0.'\nFiremen are still playing water\non th6 two square block area hit\nby the early morning fire.\nKansas Sophomore\nNabs Golf Crown\nCOLUMBUS, 0\u201e June 17 (AP)\nA   nervy    sophomore   from   the\nplains of Kansas  today ,won the\n19.8 women's United States intercollegiate golf championship.\nSunny Marilqnn Smith of Wichita,\nKas\u201e- toppled Grace Lenczyk of\nHartford, Conn, from the college\nthrone 3 and 2, in a drizzling rain,\nInstiiule Plans\nPicnic dn\nThe Nelson Women's Institute will\ncelebrate its 40th anniversary in\nSeptember and will mark the occasion with a. basket picnic at Lakeside Pork Aug, 24, Arrangements\nwere discussed - at. the ' Institute\nmeeting in the W.l. room Ifflday\nafternoon. Invitations will be sent\nto the various.District Institutes,\nA District conference, of Women's\nInstitutes will also be held iri Nelson\nSept, 18..\nIt was decided that Mrs. F. W.\nCartwrlght, Treasurer, would; also\ntake'over the duties as Secretary\nfollowing: the: resignation of * Mrs,\nR. Keffer while Mrs. H. B. Penny,\nVice-President, -will occupy' the\nchair in the absence of Mrs. S. C.\nColman, President Mrs. Cartwrglht\nand Mrs. Penny will hold these\npositions until new officers, are\nelected,iri.tjie Fall.   -.,-'. \u25a0\u25a0\nThe rummage sale held by the\nInstitute in May proved successful\nand Mrs. Keffer reported' that the\n$100 contribution towards the Women's Institute Memorial Fund had\nbeen completed. ,     r\n' Tea hostesses were Mrs, F, Phillips and Mrs. F, W. Cartwrlght, A\nbake table was displayed at the\nmeeting.\nBall Standings\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn.\nSt'LoUls \t\nPhiladelphia\nBoston,,\nNew York \u201e...\u201e:-i\u2122...\nCincinnati    \u201e...\u201e\t\nPittsburgh\t\nChicago\n34\n31\n33\n31\n'23\n23\n22\n19\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew York\nDetroit .\u201e _. \u201e..\nPhiladelphia   \u201e..\t\nCleveland  ........:...-.\u00bb__\nWashington   _...___;\t\nBoston  .\u201e_\nChicago   ..., :.\t\nSt Louis \u201e\t\n.807\n.574\n.509\n.554\n.510\n.426\n.400\n.345\n.636\n.664\n.554\n.538\n.519\n.500\n.404\n.291\nWatch Them GROW!\nAs Your\nChicks Grow\nSo Do Your\nProfits\nFrom 6 weeks to laying stage is a very, important\ngrowth period.\" Make sure your birds get the proper\nbalanced rations that produces good layers.\nTHRIVO GROWING MASH\nIs the Answer\nFeed \"THRIVO\" and Vhey will grow '\nBRACKMAN-KER\nA DIVISION OF\nPURITY  FLOUR MILLS, LTD.\nTo Serve in French\nHospital for War\nCrippled Children\nMiss Ruth McKinnon of the\nD.V.A. Hospital, Saskatoon, Sask.,\nis visitin gher mother, Mrs. Mary\nMcKinnon at 718 Kootenay Street,\nprior to leaving for VlUepatour,\nFrance', when she will be working\nin a Rehabilitation Hospital for\nWar Crippled children.\nMiss MacKinnon, here for the\nfirst time, is a physiotherapist, and\nwas active in. this work with the\nCanadian Army during World War\nIL She served in Italy for three\nyears. In.'prance, ahe .will work\nwith children who lost\" limbs or\nwere blinded during the war,\nteaching the use of artificial limbs\nand so on.   '\nHer mother came to Nelson two\nyears ago from Vancouver.\n, \u25a0'        *T,      ' \u2022    't   '\nRussians Want To\nHear No More About\nGerman Prisoners\nWASHINGTON, June 17 (AP.-\nftussla has refused to tell the United Sjtates how many German prisoners of war she still holds, or how\nmany have died in captivity. Furthermore, the Soviets say they\nwant to hear no more about the\nmatter. ' >\nMoscow's. attitude was disclosed\ntoday when the United States State\nDepartment - published the latest\nSoviet note on the long-standing\ncontroversy. The Department issued with it a statement renewing\nthe United States charge that Russia ' still holds \"several hundred\nthousand\" German prisoners.\nMoscow's note, received June 4,\nserved notice that, the Soviet Government does not propose to carry\non the controversy \u25a0 further. It'as:\nserted that Britain, the .United\nStates and France were .to blame\nfor what Moscow said was a failure\nto work out a four-power plan for\nrepatriation of prisoners. *\nNatal-Michel Band\nHas Busy Schedule\nNATAL, B.C., June 17 - The\nNatal-Michel Band, under the direction of bandmaster Charlie Thoma-\nsdn of Michel, will be a busy band\nduring the next few weeks with\nengagements,\nThe first outside engagement will\nbe the 75th Diamond Jubilee at\nMacleod, Alta.\nJuly 1 Natal-Michel starts lis\nthree day sports Celebration with\nthe band leading the monster\nparade\/Friday morning.\nThe Coleman Rodeo slated for\nSaturday, July 9'will also see the\nwell known'and. popular Natal-\nMichel Band head the morning\nparade and thet opening of the\nrodeo in the afternoon.\n.  Nelson-Cronbrook\u2014Paving Sanca\nCreek and Kuskanook. Construction\nM18-20 East of Creston. Occasional\nrough sections.\n1 Nelson-Kaslo\u2014Fair- to good,**\n. Nelson-Monashee\u2014\u25a0Nelson io Nakusp good. Nakusp to Monashee\nfair.- , ;\nNelson-Nelway \u2014 Fair to good.\nConstruction M33-38.\nNelson - Trail \u2022 Patterson, -r. Construction M6-18. Use. caution, Some\nrough sections M1B-22. Remainder\nfair to good. \/\nRosBland-CascadeT-Fair.\nBig Bend Highway open,     -\nThrong Attends\nRequiem Mass\nFor Mrs. Aurelio\nFriends filled' the Cathodal of\nMary Immaculate Friday morning\nto attend Requiem Mass for Mrs.\nDominica Aurelio,- resident of Nelson for 50, years.      . -    _\nThe Requiem Mass was sung by\nVery ReV, W. J.-Harrison, assisted\nby Rev. E. A. Frank, Deacon, and\nRev. L. J. Smith, subdeacon. Most\nRev. Martin M. Johnson, D.D., Bishop of Nelson, was present In the\nSanctuary. -.- .-'*\u25a0':'.'-T '\u25a0\u2022,'.'\n. There was a large attendance,\nboth at the Mass and at the recitation of the Rosary Thursday evening. Flowers were banked in the\nchurch. ,-','\u2022\nMembers of the Ladies Auxiliary\nto the. Fraternal Order of Eagles\nand the Ladies'Auxiliary to the\nNelson Branch, Canadian Legion,\nattended in a body. After the Mass,\nthe Eagles L, A. formed open\nranks, froni the church doors\nthrough which the casket was carried to the hearse.\nLodge Tites were conducted at the\ngraveside by Mrs, Eileen Lang,\nPresident, and-Mrs. Alberta Speirs,\nChaplain. '\u25a0,'.; .\nPallbearers were Steve Vlngo,\nLouis -Santor, Angelb Volcano, C.\nAcure, L. Freno and A. Arcure, Interment was ln the family plot, Nelsoh Memorial Park.\nNIMSICK STILL\nIN LEAD\n' CRANBROOK, B.C., June 17 '-\nCount on the two remaining polls\nin Cranbrook riding in the Provincial election Wednesday reduced by\nfour votes the lead'held by Leo T.\nNimsick,, C.C.F., over Mayor Clifford Swan of Kimberley, Coalition,\nbut left him still 50 ahead.   ,\n, Mayook gave Mayor Swan 21\nvotes and Mr, Nimsick 11, and West\nNewgate gave' 10* to Mayor Swan\nand 18 to Mr. Nimsick. These figures brought the totals, to 2894 for\nMr. Nimsick and 2844 for Mayor\nSwan, who wiU not concede the\nelection Until the result of the absentee vote is known,.\n\u25a0**\nSays Small Centres\nRetarded by\nFreight Rate Setup\nEDMONTON, June 17 (CP) \u2014\nFreight rates should, be adjusted so\nas to give small communities a\nchance to develop, the Royal Commission on Transportation was told\ntoday.\nA submission from- the Alberta\nAssociated Chambers .of- Commerce\nand Agriculture suggested the bigger centres now get a better break\non freight rates, with the result that\nthe growth of smaller communities\nIs retarded.   '-..-'\u2022\nNamed Canadian\nRotary Governor\nSAINT JOHN, N.B.,'-. T. C, Mac-\ntJabb of Saint John, retired General\nSuperintendent of the New Bruns-\nwfck District 'of the Canadian\nPacific Railway, was elected Canadian Governor of Rotary International\" at New York rally held\nbefore 28,000 Rotarlans representing\n46 different countries at Madison\nSquare Garden.\/ -\nMr. MacNabb is also well known\nin-Western Canada as a former\nsuperintendent of the, C.P.R. at\nRevelstoke.    . \"    .'.\n62 Students Receive Diplomas at\nGraduation; Major Award to A. Hood\nSixty-two young man and women Friday afternoon left the classrooms and corridors of Nelson\nHigh School\u2014a few of them will\nreturn, many will not.'\nThey   were   \"The   Graduates\",\nthe students, honored at graduation exercises each,year.\nThe .value of the1 education they\nhad acquired over 12 years of study\nwould  now  be  -eallzed, Whether\nthey choose to. return : for Senior\nMatriculation Classes or to enter tho\nworking world, Dr. A. K. Gibbons\nsaid in presenting the graduation\ncertificates. Dr, Gibbons was representing the Board of Trustees of\nNelsop School District No. 7.\n\"You know now 'the value of\nbeing able to read and write; soon\nyou will realize the value of being\nable to apply your knowledge to\ngreater things\".\nPrincipal Gerald H. Lee told the\ngathering of students and parents\nin the school auditorium that\n\"there is a feeling that a graduation\ncertificate is something that you\nautomatically get if you stay in\nschool for 12 years. That Is not the\ncase\".   ,- \u25a0 * _\nThe certificate symbolized a grade\nof 80 per cent or better in every\nsubject'.and a course worth 112 credits, he explained. If a student's\ngrade dropped as low as E on any\nsubject, he was not entitled to a\ncertificate.    '....,\n\"You must realize that you are\nliving In an Imperfect world. A\nman-made world is hot perfect and\nnever will be\", he said, urging the\ngraduates to continue their policies\nof good sportsmanship and hard\nwork, * ..-\nOutstanding award winner was\nAlan Hood,.Senior Matriculation\nstudent He won the 1945 Major\nAward, top high school honor, as\nwell as receiving his third bar\nfor his Scholarship Award, first\nbar for his Social Award and the\nathletic letter,A.\nThe-Major Award, J. C. Loomer\nsaid, went to a \"student' winner In\ntwo of three flelds-r-athletlc, social\nor scholarship. The student must\nhave given evidence of his leader;\nship In academic rid sports activities. '  .\n\"The wlnner'this year has repeated these honors; he has won an\nathletic award once, a social award\n.twice and tjie scholarship award for\nfoUr successive years\", i.\nOUTSTANDING ATHLETE\nLast year Dorothy Wallace, described Friday afteriioon as \"one of\nthe: most outstanding girl athletes\nthe! Nelson High School has'ever\nknown\", was presented the Major\nAward. At the graduation exercises\nFriday she was presented a white\nsWeate.* with-the letter ,\"N\" that\nannually goes 'with the award.,\nSchool Burstiry was Presented by\nMiss Wallace,* who was 1948-49\nPrime' Minister, to Eileen Rellly,\nwhile Mrs. Percy Young gave the\nDrama Bursary to Tom- Shorthouse.\nI.O.D1E. History Awards went to\nTreve Roberts'Of the Junior Matriculation class and t > Glovanna -Davis\nof the Senior Matriculation class.\nSHIELD FOR HOUSE C\nRamon Hall, received, the shield\nfor his winning. House C from\nJames Fraser. The shield, presented\nannually, went to the House that\nwon highest honors in'the various\nHouse events, covering sporte, programs, muslcales and debates. \"Famous\" House. D Was second, Mr.\nFraser said. -\nAthletic Awards were handed out\nby Walter Elmeito 11 boys and by\nMrs. Rosa Coleman to eight girls.\nPurpose of the physicrl education\nprogram was three-fold,; Mr.,Elmes\nsaid. \"It is for the production and\nmaintenance of mind,  body  and\ncharacter. To those of you who are\nfirs\". I.i the athletics field, I suggest\nyou continue your good work\".\nFirst year Winners received the,\nletter, \"A\", second winners their'\nfir.. bar, .third winners the second,\nbar and f-urth. winners tbe third\n.bar.     \u2022 *.\u25a0'\u25a0 ,'.-, .';\nAthletic awards were presented\nto: -*.-.-,.' .'\u25a0. *,,), \u25a0\n\"A'1!\u2014Bill Boates, Colin* ^rown,\nArglllo Dozzl, Murray. Harris, Alan\nHood,; Jo Ann Hopwood, Sheila\nKearns, Gene Nutter, Maurice Ren-\nwick, Hazel Simlnoff, Muriel Stuart,\nDorothy Wasslck.\nFirst bar \u2014' Lome Irwin, Mary\nMcGinn, Jim Todd, Jim Wilson,\nSecond batf-Barbara Nield, Bob\nPitts;' \"\u25a0- '* : \u25a0'- \u2022' \u25a0\u25a0'\nDorothy Wallace was given her\nthird bar by Mrs. Coleman for being \"the most outstanding girl\nathlete In Nelson High School tor\nmany years.\" ,\u2022\u2022'.,\nSocial awards were presented by\nMiss. Barbara, Lang-to:     '\nFirst year^Molly AhjeBen, Tom\nDalolse, Bill Ferguson, Lily Gollk,\nRamon Hall, Jo Ann Hopwood,\nSheila Kearns, Ron Monty,. Tom\nShorthoUse, Hazel Simlnoff,' Muriel\nStuart,. Beverley Ure, Dorothy\nWasslcfc ,'(-* ,\nFirst, bar\u2014Ellen i COrbett, Murray\nHarris, Alan Hood, Nancy Idiens.\nSecond batv-DOrothy Wallace.\nScholarship awards, presented\nstudents who, had attained the\ntwo major alms of education,\nwere given by C. R. Mattloe.. The\ntwo principal objectives were the\n\"accumulation of knowledge- ond\nthe acquiring-of special skills,\" he\noald. The award was a small\nplaque with the percentage symbol, showing that the winner was\namong the class's upper 26 per\ncent and had held an average of\nA or. B throughout the year. ' '\nAwards went to: ',\nMary Caruk; Eddie Clark, Anthea\nFoster, Margaret Henrlcksen, Betty\nLawrence, Margaret Leslie, Mono\nLoomer, Frank Schneider, Virginia\nSmith and Florence Wynne. '\nFirst bar-rMary Blazina, Lome\nDyke, Ray Johnson; Brian' Johnston, Ralph Lewis. Leonard Lythgoe, Jofan Macarthur, Treve Roberts.\nThird bar\u2014Alan Hood.\nPresentations were also made to\nthe Cadets and the Commercial\nClass by P. B. Pulllnger and Mr.\nDahlquist ,\nMusical selections were offered\nby the orchestra and by the choral\ngroup. \u25a0 :.''\u2022\u25a0\u25a0   i\nIn the graduation class were:\nDonald Collinson, Alex Csepe,\nBill Dawson, Argllio Dozzl, Bill\nFerguson, Ralph i Gardner, Richard\nGreyson, Victor Grundy;- Duncan\nHamilton; Marie Holmberg, Brian\nJohnston, Ingmar Larsson, Joan\nMacArthur.      .,\nRonald Monty, Lloyd Naess; Jim\nOstlin, Jean Ota, Fred Perasso, John\nPerdue, Paul Poohachow, Elaine*\nSchneider, Noreen Smith, Evelyn\nStaley, Ezra Spray, Frank Turner;\nKay Tsujimura, Adele Zanon.\nGuilford Brett, Owen Brown,\nJane Butling, Betty Dunnett, Sylvia\nFette'rley, Lily Gollk, Mildred Hall,\nRamon Hall, Leslies Hughes, Ly-\nvonhe Johnson, Betty Lawrence,\nKarl Mason, Connie'Mayer. .\n, Gladys fott-r, Ivy PUrdy, Eileen\nRellly, Edna Robinson, JOan Smith,\nDawn Spencer, Beverley. Ure, Helen\nWilson. .\nArthur Barrel-,. Colin Brown,\nTommy .Dalolse, Roland Darough,\nStan Donaldson, Homer Elmore,\nMildred Hawes, Joe Hielscher, BUI\nJackman, Mary Juriloff, Archie\nMcKen, BUI' Morris, Maurice Ren\nwick, LeRoy Strong. '\nNOTICE\nVVe now have regular connections with\nWARD MOTOR FREIGHT\nVia NAKUSP FOR VERNON\nand POINTS WEST.\nJ.R.MILLER\nTRANSPORT\nNelson - Nakusp\nSeek By-Pass to\nTreaty Blocks\nPARIS, June 17 (AP)-Western\ndiplomats today took advantage of\nrecess in the Big Four foreign\nministers' conference to try to find\na by-pass around the. hurdle holding up the Austrian treaty.\nFor long hours they talked with\nKarl\" Kruber, Austrian Foreign\nMinister...\nWhat they wanted to know was\njust what assets Russia is likely to\nclaim as. part of her settlement, and\nwhat effect a surrender to Soviet\ndemands would have on the Austrian economy and Balkan affairs\nIn general.\nNew Alberta\nLieut-Governor?\nEDMONTON, June 17 (CP) \u2014The\nEdmonton Bulletin said today in a\nnewspage story that it ha_ -learned\nJ: J. Bowlen of Calgary, well-\nknown ranchcer and farmer, likely\nwill be the next Lieutenant-Governor of Alberta,\nRetirement of Lteut,-Gov. J. C.\nBowen has been hinted in Government circles for some time.\nCCF. ONLY PARTY\nWITH UNION PROGRAM\nASSERTS C.C.L. HEAD '\n.HAMILTbN, June 17 (CP)\u2014The\nCanadian Congress of Labor is\nsupporting the C.C.F. \"because. it\nis the only political party in this\nelection which is Supporting a trade\nunion program,\" aPt Coproy, Secretary-Treasurer of the Congress,\nsaid tonight.\nMONTREAL, June 17 (CP) \u2014\nPolice here Said tonight they Would\nlook into \"circumstances surrounding the death Of Theodore R.\nFerguson of Vancouver, a member\nof the Canadian Seamen's Union\nWhose body was found in the St\nLawrence River Wednesday.\nG. H. JONG\nChinese\nHerb Specialist\nRemedies   for   all   all*\nments. Skin and female\ntrouble.'\n817A 1st St. East, Calgary\nTO BROADCAST\nKING'S ADDRESS\nTORONTO, June 17 (CP) - An\naddress by the King to mark the\nopening, of; Colonial Month.in the.\nUnited kingdom, will be broadcast\non the Eastern section of CBC.\nTrans-Cana'daNetworkat3:20 A. M.\nJune 21, it wait announced today,\nThe cjeremony WIU take place in\nChurch House, Westminister, temp,\norary home of the Colonial. Office,\nThe King's address will be heard\nlater on the Western section of the\nTrans-Canada Network. -     .   .\"-\"\nTakes Own Life\nPARIS, June 17 (AP)-A, 50-year-\nold Reserve Colonel, Identified as a\nfollower of Gen, Charles de Gaulle,\ntook his own life today In his prison\ncell, an official announcement said,\nHe was held on charges of plotting\nto \"demoralize the army\".\nJustice officials said the man, Jean\nDelore, slashed his wrists and then\nhanged himself at Sante Prlrson. He\nWas arrested June 3 with IS others\nwhen police seized small arms and\nammunition in buses going to Paris\nfrom the Pr,ovlnt_B.\nSUES CHICAGO\nPAPER FOR $1 MILLION\nCHICAGO, June' 17' (AP)\u2014A\nCollege Professor sued the Chicago\nHerald-American, today for $1,000,-\n000, alleging he has libelled in two\nstories concerning Vivisection.'\nThe suit was filed in Federal\nCourt by Dr. Virgil H. Moon, Professor of Pathology in the Bowman-\nBray School of medicine, Wake Forest College,, Winston-Salem, N.C\nHe asked the 'Hearst Publishing\nCompany, Publisher of the Herald-\nAmerican, for $500,000 for each of\ntwo stories printed jiay 2i and May\n29. Dr. MoOn resides lh Bfyn Mawr,\nPa. \"'        ' r'\u201e'       .-<!    :\nRuss Double Border\nGuard To Stop\nFleeing Germans\nHAMBURG, Germany, June 17 \u2014\n(AP). \u2014 The Russians have doubled\ntheir border guards in an effort to\nstop' Germans fleeing from their\nzone to the West, It was officially\nreported today,     \"...       '.\nGerman. police' officials on the\nBritish-zone side, said the border\nnow is so effectively- sealed that\nillegal crossings both, ways -have\nstopped almost completely. Travellers, with valid papers are crossing\nnormally, however.   . ,'\nBritish-zone officials connect tbe\nRussian move with an East-zone\ndrive for forced labor for uranium\nmines. For months past fit young\nGermans fleeing Into the West\nzones have claimed that they were\nescaping forced labor in the mines.\nCHILDREN LEAVING\nSUNDAYSCHOOL\nWORRYING LEADERS\nEDMONTON, June it (CP)\u2014Too\nmany children are leaving Sunday\nSchools \"after they reach the. ages\nof 11 or 12, Miss Lillian MacArthur\nof Toronto said here today.\nMiss MacArthur, national children's work secretary for the Presbyterian Church of Canada, said\nleaders in Christian education are\ngrealty concerned over this trend.\nSaves Chinese\nVANCOUVER, June 17 (CP) \u2014A\nformer AJS.P. officer probably sav\ned the life of a Chinese storekeeper\nheVe today.\nWhen a fire crackled ln Peter\nChan's grocery Store, the former\nA.R.P. man, Bert Halstead, roused\nthe Chinaman from his-slumbers;\nHalstead called for assistance,\nand firemen quickly arrived On\nthe scene to rescue Ch,an. Dam-,\nage to store stock was estimated\nat $900.\n\/T\"\n......;::rSALE#,. .\nSpring Coats and Suits\nGarments as high as $69.50\nReduced to\n$li\u00ab-$29.50 - $39.50\nFINK'S\n\u00abto Wear\nDeaths\nBy The Canadian P,ris*\nWashington \u2014 Frank : Eldridge\nWebb,* 79, twice unsuccessful candidate for the United States Presidency on the Xabqr-Farnler ticket.\nAlpena, Mich.\u2014William A. Corn-\nstock, 71, former Democrat Governor of Michigan. ,, \u2022\n' Buffalo, N.Y,\u2014Alexander' Scott\nDouglas', 59, retired General Manager for Canada of the General\nFoods Corporation.,\nMontreal\u2014Ames, A. Bernard,* 66,\n*rell known' liunber'man- and former managing director of the Canada\nFlooring Company.-  ;   '.\"\":.'\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont, (CP) -\nWilliam G. English, 57, General Superintendent of the Canadian General Electric Company here.'\nMichel Enters Mine\nRescue, First Aid\nCompetition\nNATAL; B;C, June 17\u2014The annual East Kootenay Mine Resoue\nand First Aid Competition takes\nplace at Fernife Saturday, with both\nmine rescue, and- first-aid teams\nfrom Kimberley,-Fernie: qhd Michel\ncompeting. Michel will send along\ntwp -jnlne rescue teams into the\ncompetition with Henry Eberta of\nNatal .captain of the B. Seam team\nwhile Fred Simister of Michel will\ncaptain the A. Seam team ,\nIt'IS also expected that one ehtry\nwill'be on hand-for the Ladies\nFirst-Aid competition from Michel\nW. McKay' of Natal has been in\ncharge of the mine rescue training.\nJR.JOYMAKERS\nWIND UP SEASON\nTILL SEPTEMBER\nAbout 200 Junior Joymakers*i|oin-\ned ih thef inal party of ,the Junior\nJoymakers Club at the Civic Centre\nFriday night to wind up the season-\nuntil September.\nA pot luck supper was first on\nthe program followed by. old-time\ndancing. Parents were also.Invited\nto the party. ,   \u2022\u25a0\nThe club, made up of teen-agers,\nwas first formed last November\napd .has been a continual success.\nDancing parties have been held\nevery second Friday sincet he club\nwas organized and members have\nbeen taught many told-time donees.\nDances were called by Albert\nSmith while Joyce McEwen and\nJoyce Elmore have? also- called at\nvarious times throughout the season.      \u25a0 \u25a0' '\nFriday night's musicians were\nMrs. W. Smiley; piattd, J. Ratklw-\nskl, banjo, Mr. McEwen, violin and\nsaxophone, Joseph Lang, .violin and\nDennis Greenwood and his student\norchestra made of Danny Batchelor,\nipiano, James\/Carney and Pam Duff\nand. Gordon'Linton, clarinets, Spud\nUyeyama, Jack Woodall, and Bruce ,\nBradshaw, trumpets, .Harold Cose-\nmore, drums, Duffy Franklin trombone'and Dennis Greenwood,, trombone and conductbi. \"\"'   -\nThe Senior Joymakers brought\ntheir dancing season to a close with\na party Thursday night     \u25a0\nFIRE OUT OF CONTROL\nVANCOUVER, June 17 (CP) -\nA serious forest fire Is reported\ntonight raging out of control above\nHowe Sound, 28 miles Northwest\nof Vancouver.,\nMMmmm\nDOLLAR UNCHANGED\nNEW YORK, June 17 (CP) \u2014 The\nCanadian dollar was. unchanged at\na discount of 4 3-10 per cent in\nterms of United States funds in\nclosing foreign exchange dealings\ntoday. The fiound sterling-was down\n3-lfl'of a cent at $4.02%.- .:,.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLAS8IRED\nGEORGE DREW\n-...Leader..:\"\nPROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE\nPARTY\nwill speak from Three Riven, Quebec\n-      7:00-7:30 p.m. PDT\nover the Trans-Canada network of the C.B.C.\n\/.     ' \" '\nSaturday, June 18\nStation CJAT\n7:00-7:30 p.m. PDT     v\n'   Publlihod by\n-THE P^ftBESSIVE CONSERVATIVE PARTY-\n\u00bb. \u25a0'.       .' \u25a0 .-\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\nIn Kootenay. Wert, your Progressive Conservative\ncandidate it\nJACK CORNER, Mayor of Rowland\nON JUNE 27th, VOTE FOR FRE\u00a3 ENTERPRISE\nVOTE for CORNER\n Hia\nBlockade of\nShanghai Ends\nSHANGHAI, Jfmei.7' (AP) .rr.\nShanghai's blockade* which turned\nout to be a bluff, ended today, But\nsome shippers were chary of future\nplans.\nOne said the Chinese Notionalists\nrealized now that a feint had been\neffective and that they might at any\ntime steal In at night and mine the\nYangtze Ship* Channel,\nBut moSt shippers were less caU'\ntlous. Tljey were scheduling their\nships back Into Shanghai as fast as\npossible.\nThe: river was thought to have\nmined a week ago. Navigation was\nhalted until yesterday when two\nvessels .dragged the river's mouth\nfor mines and failed'to find any,\n\"Messiah\" Spends\nTime in Jail\n. \"-VOS-ANGELES, June 17 (API-\nKrishna Venta,, self-styled \"Mes\nlah\" who doesn't believe ln divorce,\nSi>ent; a few. hours in jail on a\ncharge-of failing to provide for his\ndivorced wife and their two minor\nchildren.\nKrishna',1 with his long curly\nlocks, his flowing beard, his yellow\nrobe, and bare feet, was arrested\nlast night by Sheriff's Deputies as\n175 of his white-robed disciples\nwatched. He claims 1.5,000 followers. \u25a0\u25a0. .;','\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n. 'He will appear ln court June 27',\nen' the', complaint, signed. by Mrs,\nGeneva Pencovic of San Bernard-\ntod, who divorced him ln Oakland,\nCalif., In 18.1. - .'*\u2022 ,\nFor all Interior and, exterior\npainting. Brush and. spray\nwork.\nFree estimates given\nRoof Spraying a Specialty ,\nKOOTENAY\nPainters and Decorators\nPHONES 63  AND  206-L-4\nNelson, B.C.\nAfter Collisiori at South Shcari\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 18,1949 \u2014 3\nK-B\nMinus us tront. wneeis, this truck, driven ny\nH. A. Thrlng of Trail rests oh Its front end following a head on collision. Note wheels toward rear.\nThe truck at rear was driven by R. I. Stedlle of\n-.\u2014-*Hn\u00abo oy oonsiaoie n. n. cipm^r..\nNelson. Neither driver was hurt, but both trucks\nreceived considerable damage. Tho collision occurred on a curve near South Slocan last Saturday.\nWould Demote CBC\nAs Boss of Radio\nST. ANDREWS-BY-THE-!3EA,\nN.B., June 17 (CP)-i-Canada's private broadcasters want the CBC\ndemoted as boss of Canadian radio\nto the status of a rival with similar\nprivileges..\nDelegates to the four-day annual\nCanadian Association of Broadoast-\ners Convention here yesterday concluded sessions by electing William\nGuild of Radio Station CJOC, Lethbridge, Alta., Chairman. They also\nadopted resolutions requesting a\nseparate regulatory authority and\nseeking confinement of CBC activities to non-commercial public-service broadcasting,\nDESBORO, Ont (CP) \u2014 A Mack\nbear weighing approximately., 150\npqunds was recently shot and killed\nnear here by Roy Flages and Howard' Teschke. Residents Could not remember when a bear had been last\nseen in the district\nChildren Warned\nAgainst\nPSison \"Marbles\"\nLIVERPOOL; England, June il\u2014\n(Reuters) \u2014' Police today searched\nschools In the Old Swan District of\nLiverpool for poison \"marbles\".\nChildren were, warned riot to eat\ntablets, resembling marbles, with\nwhich they had been playing,'because'they consisted of phenob'arbi-\ntph'e.\" .''.,\nA messenger on his way to a\npharmacy yesterday dropped a bottle containing 1000 half-grain phen-\nobarbitone tablets. About six are\nenough to kill a child. '\n, Children returning to school after\nlunch found the bottle and. w^re\nseen using the tablets as marbles'.\n\u25a0A tablet commemorating Basque\nfishermen who* fished along the\nEast Coast, as early as 1565, Is to be\nplaced on the Coast of Nova Scotia\nthis Summer.\nJapanese Fishermen\nClaim Vessel\nSunk By Attackers\nHONG KONG, June 17 (AP)'\u2014\nFour survivors of a Japanese fishing trawler said today their vessel\nwas shelled and sunk in the China\nSea; -.'-,'\nThey said they did not know their\nattackers. The captain and seven\ncrewmen were killed or missing.\nThe four were rescued off the China\ncoast\n, The Japanese were hospitalized\nhere with 14 Formosans who Survived the sinking of their fishing\nboat after it developed engine trouble North of Luzon.\nBRIDGE WATER,' Somersetshire,\nEngland (CP)\u2014D. Rowe, Sotoerset\nAgricultural Executive officer, told\na National Farmers' Union meeting\nthat central Somerset plain's rich\n150,000 acres could produce between\n50 and 100 per cent more food.   ;.\nEnough Phone Wire to Go\nTwice Around the World\n..in Cables\nWe're Installing\nThis Year\nMore than 50,000 miles of wire\u2014enough to go twice around\nthe world\u2014is contained in cable being installed by the B.C.\nTelephone Company this year. The cable program, the largest\nin the company's history, is i. part of the record $7,500,000\nexpansion program.\n\u2022'\" '.   <\"\\  -.':\u25a0'' \"\u25a0''.. ;'.'\u25a0'\nThat's a lot of wire!\nBut, of course, a telephone company'needs an extraordinary\namount of wire. It must make more and more additions to its\nalready vast network of cable to provide for new telephone\ninstallations, and to take care of increased calling.\nIt's still not easy to get enough equipment and material to\nprovide telephone service to everyone who wants it, particularly\nin view of the rapid growth of this province. That's why there is\nstill a waiting list. s\n-..-\"'\" ,'\u25a0;'     \u2022 ''\u25a0       \u25a0'       '\"\nBut this big cable program Is evidence that the company is\npushing forward, that relief is on the way.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY\nMEN!\nDon't Miss\nThis\ni4 only men's worsted, suits-^slngle breasted\u2014brown,\nor blue. Sizes 42. and 44.- Regular to 49.50.   '\u2022\nSaturday Special ~ *2\u00a3)\n0IGUL ,   \u25a0';';;\u2022::,'.;  ,     '\nBoys' Short Pants\n14 only navy, blue shorts with elastic back and 2\npockets. Sizes 6 to 9 years. Regular 2.50.\nSaturday Special\u2014$ \\ *'\nA TIMELY\nOFFERING\nWhitev Flannel Skirts\nEnglish pencil slim Summer skirts to sweeten your\nwardrobe. Sizes 14 and 16. only. Limited '^:A \u2014\nquantity. Regular 6.95. <%95\nSpecial  mM\nVacuuirt Flasks v\nJust the thing for Slimmer-outings. One\npint size. Guaranteed, to keep liquids hot\nor cold. Reg. $1 value Special,\/eacjjj\t\nSubstandard Nylons\nSummer sheer* nylon hosiery in the \u2022 X^sm^stV's\nlatest shades. Substandards of our regu-      ^J D|\nlar 1.25 line. Special, pair .... ........',' # \"\u00a3\u25a0\u25a0 fr:\nWomefi's\nSufnmer Casuals\nOddments and Broken lines of better sandals. Plastics\nleathers and fabrics. All .to clear at one\nlow price. Regular 2.98 to 4.95.\nSpecial ......: ..;..\u201e..\t\n.99\n:JJ\u00a3l.- Terry Towels\nTsidrconi\nTravelHrig Irons\nGleaming chrome finish with fulj range heat control,\ncolorful handle and complete with travelling case. Regular 12.95.           '\u25a0'  -\nSpecial   ....... ....\t\n.White with pastel stripes in a variety of colors. They\nmake ideal hand towels. They\nare soft and absorbent. Size\n34\"xl7\". Reg.\" 3S\u00a3. Special.......\n.-4*?*i\nBath Sets\n995\n12 only chenille'sets in a variety of colors. ,-^^ ~ m -\nRegular price up to 3.95. , ,\u25a0' ^m i\u00a7\nSpecial, set ...L........; ........   Mt-\nPillow Gases\nPlain hem, fully bleached, made for hard\nwear^ Size 42\". Regular pair 1.59.\nSpecial, pair _, .._\t\nFlannelette\n1300 yards white flannelette, soft and fleecy for chil-'\nf A       dren's 'garments. Width 36\". A '__\u00bb\u25a0\u2022 ^ '\n*      gSg]g       J Yds. >l\ntfamtylfcwi $m^m^.\nINCORPORATED   2*? MAY 1670.\nNELSON, B.C.\nMoled Psychological\nStudy of Army\nTraining Methods\nMONTREAL, Julie' IT (CP'-A\npsychological' study ot ! Canadian\nArmy training methods is being undertaken by the Defence Research\nBoard, it was learned today as Quebec Command Headquarters announced, that Dr. H. L. Stein, Professor of Educational Psychology in\nthe University of Manitoba, will visit St Johns Military Barracks\nnext week,    i?\nAn evaluation of the, present syllabus* and: methods oi instruction\nthroughout the Canadian Army will\nsubsequently be made.\nWant Dimitrov\nObituary'in Type\npfcAGUE', June 17 CAP)\u2014Czechoslovak newspapers have been told\nby Communist authorities to get\nthe obituary of Premier Georgi Dimitrov of Bulgaria into type, a\nCzech newspaper man said today,\nDimitrov is in Russia, officially\nbecause of his poor. health. The\nnewspapers were told his condition\nis so critical \"the news (of his\ndeath) is expected to be announced\nwithin two or; three days,\" the newspaper employee said.\nAssure Brazilian\nJapanese That\nJapan Lost War\nTOKYO, June 17 (Reuters) \u2014\nPrince Takamatsu, brother of Emperor Hirohito, today assured six\nJapanese from Brazil that Japan\nlost the war.       * i      -\nThe Japanese, the first to visit\nJapan.from Brazil since the end of\nthe war, said half of Brazil's 800,-\n000 Japanese' still believe Japan\nwon the war or that.the war was\nstill going!on. '-'.''\nPrince. Takamatsu said he hoped\nthe Brazilian Japanese would \"face\nreality.\"\nThree Killed in\nPlane Take-Off\nFORT WILLIAM, June 17 (CP)-\nThree men were killed in a plane\ncrash' at Nakina, Ont,, approximately 160 miles Northeast of here,\naccording to reports reaching the\nLaicehead today.\nReported dead, were Felix Cry-\nderman, a well-known bush pilot;\nSherman S. Scott, about 31, timber\ncruiser; -and Robert Scott, assistant\ntimber cruiser. The two passengers,\nwho are not related, were employed\nby the Long Lac Pulp and Paper\nCd., .'\nMeagre information here said the\nplane' crashed on a take-off or burst\ninto flames soon after lt was aloft\nand crashed'in, shallow water. The\nthree burned bodies were recovered, the reports said.\nSentenced Mother\nPlans To Take1\nChildren To Jail\nVANCOUVER, June 17 (CP)\nMrs, Bertha Sinclair, mother of\nfour children, is prepared to go to\njail for five days. And, she plans\nto take the children with her.\n.A rooming house operator, she\nWaB fined $28 or five days In jail\nfor failing to light the halls of her\nhouse., .'. '-**>'\u25a0\nThe electric current was cut off\nfor non-payment of a bill, and Mrs.\nSinclair claims she is destitute and\nunable to make payment ,\nHer landlord offered to pay the\noverdue * bill but he wahts her tp\nmove. She can't find a place to live.\nHer children ranged in age from\ntwo to seven years.\nRoomers in her house have been\nlighting their rooms with candles\nsince the power was cut off.\nIn recent years total annual landings of the East Coast Smelt Fishing\nIndustry have ranged between 5,-\n000,000 and 7,500,000 pounds.\nNOTICE\n, To oil Nelson and District residents\u2014-You ore cordially invited to visit and inspect our modern locker\nplant located on Front Street, Nelson.* ,\n'\"'.: The strawberry season will hit its peak in a few\ndays and we suggest that you ask us about our special\nprice pn-'berries for locker storage.\nLet ui Kelp you with your frozen food problem.\nFarmer's Market\nand Quick Freeze\n611 FRONT ST.\nTELEPHONE 1218\nLOS ANGELES FINDS MURDER CASE\nRESEMBLING \"BLACK DAHLIA\" DEATH\n. LOS ANGELES, June 17 (AP) \u2014\nAnother in the long series of sadistic sex murders since the \"Black\nDahlia\" slaying 2Vi years ago confronted Los Angeles homicide officers today. ,,,.\u201e\u2022\nThe garroted, mutilated body'of\na \u2022 28-year-old hairdresser ( and\nmother, Mrs, Louise Coulter, Springer, was found yesterday in her husband's sports convertible car; abandoned on a street on the near South\nside, only a block and a half from\n\/wherl the \"Black Dahlia's\" body\nWas found. There was evidence of\nbrutal rape.\nCoroner Ben Brown tentatively\ngave strangulation as the cause of\ndeath. Mrs.' Springer had been\nstrangled with a sash,cord, her\npound body thrown in- the back\nseat of the car and covered with a\ntarpaulin,. Investigators reported.\nThe husband, Laurence G.\nSpringer, said his wife disappeared\nMonday night when he left her sitting in the car while tie went back\ninto the store where she worked\nfor her glasses. In a missing persons\nreport filed then, he said both his\nwife and the car were gone when\nhe returned;       ,-\".;'\nAutopsy surgeons said that Mrs,\nSpringer had probably been killed\nwithin an hour or two after that.\nA resident of the neighborhood\nwhere the car was found\u2014Don Graham\u2014told poll-e the car was parked there by a mart wearing a gray\nuniform resembling that worn by a\nNavy chief petty officer. Two other\npersons said they saw a curly-haired man throw the canvas over the\nback seat\"       \u25a0   ;  '. . i\nThe Springers and their 20-\nmonth-old son had moved here recently from Los Gatos, Calif,\nPolice said the murder method\nresembled the* unsolved slaying of\nElizabeth Short, the Black Dahlia,\non Jan. 15, 1947.\ndeveloping\nprinting\n\u25ba extra prints\n\u25ba enlargements\nKodak Film in popular siies\nOoqusL Studio\n460 Ward        Nelson, B.C.\nCould your business survive\nthe, death of your partner?\nThere's a Mutual Ufa of Canada plan which\nmakoi It easier for tho mrvlvor to moot iht\nfinancial problem* Involved In the lo\u00bb of a\npartner. It alio enable! him to take over the\nbuiin.-i and aiiuret the late partner'!\n' estate a proper value for III Interest.\nCall our representative and let him tell you\nhow to protoct Vour buitnen against the\nfinancial strain created by the loss of partners and key men.\nPrefect\/on at low Cost\nMUTUAL I iFE\n\/  CA NADA\n-       HEAD OFFICE       WATERLOO, ONI.\nV   YOU'LL FIND YOUR LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE HERE \/\nHerbert H. Peacock, District Aoent, Nelson, B.C.\nJas. Sklnner.'Dlstrlct Agent, Trail, B.C.\nDonald J. Brown, Representative, Trail, B.C.:\nGeorge W. Dill, Representative, 176 Howe St., Vancouver, B.C.\nCyril Bell, Representative, Castlegar, B.C.\nG. W. Hertlg, Representative, Rossland, B.C.\nH. C. Webber, C.L.U., Branch Manager. 476 Howe St., Vancouver, B.C.\nA\"\n 4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 18,1949\n1 .- B^J^ ATKINSON\nUnrequited Love Need, Not Prievent\nHapp^f Marriage With Another Man\nMost people who have* gone\nthrough the very .common experience of a, youthful romantic fiasco\nsoon grow entirely .Out of their emotional disaster, The average person,\nlooking back on such an experience,\nis apt to say; \"How in the world\ncould I\/ever; have-fallen for him?\"\n\u2014or her, as the oase may be.     ,\nOnce in a while, however, sOme\n- young man  or woman, for some\n* deep-Seated .emotional reason, Ideal-\n. izes. {in early romance to the' point\nwhere it stands in thp way of-their,\nability- to find happiness later, They\nOannot' let-, go of ..something, -they\nShould quickly relegate to'the past.'\n..'A young woman' of,35 writes me\nthat when' she was 21 she was deeply in love with a man who did not\nreturn her feeling.-iristead, he married someone, else. .   ,\nNow,. 14 years later,.another man\nhas come alongj the first one,. apparently, whom she has been will-,\ning to consider marrying since that\nearly episode. She has been going\nwith him for several years and he\n-is ih her owjn age group,\nWANT8 OWN HOME\n\"Like every other woman, I\nwould like my own home and family before.it Is too late;\" she wMtes.\n\u2022 \"I have a good Job, but I will not\nbe allowed to keep it if I marry. I\nlove this man, I guess, but not any-\n. thing like the first love,\nCO. LTD.\n123  VERNON  ST.\u2014PHONE:  35\nCHEVROLET & OLDSMOBILE\nSALES & SERVICE\nPlay safe, play sure\n-tfelifeGuardway\nDon't let blowout\nftardalarmyou,\nGet your\nLifeGuard tubes today.\nBlowouts then can\nnever harm you.\n\"Would you 'give up a good Job\nto marry a'second-rate love?Wouid\nit be fait to the man to have Only\nsecond-hand love to offer?\"\nWhether or not a girl should give\nup a good job to marry a' man with\nwhom she . is not. deeply In love\nwould entirely; depend, I should\nsay, on what sort of man he was.\nFor if he loyea her; if she found\nhim a congenial companion; if she\nwas sure he would take care other\nand be, good to her; if she' sincerely\nintended to make him the best wife\nshet could; and If,'- finally, having,\nher, oytfl home-and family is important to her,' as this girl suggests\nit i$, then I would' say trading a\njob for such a, marriage would be\na good IBea,. Under such: circumstances,.I ,'feel sure: there'would be\nevery'likelihood that the marriage\n\u2022would turn out successfully and\nthat the woman would find-herself\nresponding, to .'It with much more\ngenuine warmth than she had: pre'\nviously believed possible. In fact,\nI would, think It extremely probable that as 'time' went, on, she\nwould deyolOp a genuine love for\nher husband even though she might\nnot have had it to start with. On the\nother hand, if all the factors enumerated just above were not present\nln the situation, and if she were apprehensive about the man's stability or character so that she could\nnot feel secure in marrying hlfn,\nthen I would stay.with the job and\nlei the marriage go. :\nMUTUAL UNDERSTANDING\nI wish I knew exactly what she\nmeant when she says she would\n\"not be allowed1' to.keep her job\nIf she married. Does she mean that\nthe firm for which she works will\nnot employ married women, or does\nshe mean that, the man in the. case\nwould refuse to permit her to go on\nworking once she was fnarrled to\nhim? The . latter '\u25a0',\u25a0 circumstance\nwould .give' me pause, not because\n\u2022the issue would be working outside\nthe home, but because it is scarcely\na hopeful indication'-of a cooperative marriage if a woman feels her\nhusband will not \"allow\" her to do\nsomething. In the right kind of marriage there Is no \"allbwiijg.\" on either side, bill rather mutual understanding and willingness to see the\nother person's\" point of view.\nAs for the second question this\nyoung woman, asks, about whether\nor not it wOuld be fair to a man\n\"to have only second-hand love to\noffer,\".!! he truly loves her and if,\nas I have already said, she sincere.\nIy Intends to.be agOod wife to him,\nI can't see anything unfair about it.\nFor, as I have also said, if all other\ncircumstances are,favourable, her\n\"second-rate love\" will almost certainly soon turn into the first .rate\nkind. It all depends, it seems to me,\non how much of-tact, 'diplomacy,\nsincerity and.seriousness hf purpose\nshe intends to bring to tho marriage.\ngood\/\u00a5ear\nLifeGuard\nSafety Tubes\nA HfoGuord o|.\nI lowi a tiro to do.\nflatt ilowly ...\npermitting com.\nploi. cor control.\nGootlvcor llf.Guart\/i turn WowouU\nInlo ilow loaki, Thty fit any make of\ntire \u2014 now dr now In lorvlct. Drop tn\nfor wmplett dttalli. '       'fj\u00bb\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO. LTD.\n523  VERNON  ST.\u2014PHONE:  31\nCHEVROLET li  OLDSMOBILE\nSALES 8 SERVICE\nBy IDA IEAN RAUS\nBeware the Three\n.*:  'Disguising Poison\nWhen you go gathering flowers In\nMay; beware of poison ivy.1 As I've\nwarned, this three-leal beauty la a\nlot easier to come upon than a four-\nleaf cloVer, And I am in a position\nto Joiow.In fact-I'm an authority\nOn the subject and can state, Vjithr\nout fear of contraditlon, that there\nis no closed season on this plant\nthat bites like a spider\u2014lHUs just\nas poisonous lii Spring as it is in\nmid-Summer,, and itches just as\nbad; If not worse. .\nDON'T 8T0P HERE\nWalt^dbn't stop reading\u2014this may\nsave you a pretty-.penny,-not to\nmention weeks of agony ,. .-'.',. ','.\n' I know now for sure that the poison is in the roots, the stems,* the\nleaves and the flowers'. And the disguises that plant takes! In early\nSpring, it is a cluster of tiny leaves,\nsoft red In color, very \"innocent\nlooking. By May ' it., has turned\n$reen. Later It' may be a small low\nshrubror.va vine climbing, merrily\nover. bush,.< hedge, stone wall, and\nup trees\u2014whlcji is where I unsuspectingly met It, ..-\u2022 \u25a0 \"v\nJU8T REMEMBER,..'\nAnd don't count on .spotting it by\nthe traditional tiny, notched, bright\ngreen leaflets .The three * leaves\nmay be big, smooth-edged and dark\ngreen. In the. Fall this three-leafed\nvillain turns a beautiful orange and\nlater a brilliant red\u2014many people\nuse it ln bouquets, much to their\nregret. And in Winter look out for\nbare (stalks topped by clusters of\nyellowish,white berries. Just remember: Berries whiter take, flight\nLeaves three'. .' .any leaves three\n...fleet \/'.   \"       .'. <\u25a0 '*  *.\n'\u25a0 Some people boast that they'hav*\na natural immunity to the shrub.\nDon't risk it. It can even be picked up second-hand from contaminated articles \u2014 gloves, shoelaces or\ngarden tools that have been in contact with the plant itnorfths previous.\nSome folks are so susceptible they\n\"catch\" poison Ivy in fumes wafted\nfrom a neighbor's burning rubbish\nIf the wind is in the right direction\n\u25a0Leaf Beauty\nIvydrQafc\n, and even by potting a dog that\nhas brushed against lt. ,'.*'     : '\nEverybody is eager to pass along\nhis pet cure, 'Experts,claim \u25a0that\nwashing with good brown Soap soon\nafter exposure will neutralize the\ncausative* agent and: prevent inflammation. Don't rely on'ltl Out of\nthe 700 or so \"cures\" foj poison ivy\nthat have been reported, hone has\ngiven completely satisfactory results'. .- \u2022\u2022'-'*:' ,'\u25a0\"\"'\u25a0\nDO'NOT TRU8T THEM\nMy experience has been that it\nyou don't do anything for it, it lasts\ntwo to three weeks, and if you do\neverything possible for it, it lasts\n\u2014 two to three,weeksi or, longer;\nScratch it and it spreads. Wash lt\nwith soap and water, and it will\nspread. Rub on alcohol to allay the\nitch, ahd: it spreads like wildfire.\nIt spreads anyway, And lt gets\nworse before it gets, better. \u25a0'.'\u25a0*:-.\u25a0;\nChurch Wedding\nFor Lucille Ball      '\nHOLLVWOOP,, JUne W (API-\nAfter 814 years bt marriage, Lucille\nBall and her bandleader husband\nDesl Arnaz are goln\u00a3 to have a\nchurch \\yeddlngi, .. I';.\n.-\u2022The couple disclosed yesterday\nthat they Will.have.a Catholic ceremony Sunday at Lady of the Valley Church ln nearby Canoga Park,\nwith only** the -immediate, family\npresent,\nThey Were married in a civil ceremony at Greenwich, Conn., Nov.\n30,1040, They have ho children.\nSlocan City. \u2022.\nSLOGAN CITY, B.C.-Jean MacDonald of Nelson Is a guest of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. W, Bertram!\n-Mrs. J. Pinchbeck has returned\nfrom a trip to Trail where she was\na guest of her son, Krnest Pinchbeck, .-,'.      ;   '    . '*:'\nWt, and Mrs. J. McClure of Trail\nhas taken up residence here.\nMrs. R. F. Davis and Mrs. Rosina\nReynolds, both of Thprold, 'Ontario,\nare guests of the former's mother,\nMrs; Mary Rindler.:\nTasty'Recipes\nBy ALICE DENHOFf\nQuick Spring Meals Make Goad Eating\nBoswell..-.'\nBOSWELL, B.C. \u2014 Mr. and Mr?.\nW. Weir, of Saskatoon, are visiting\nMrs, Weir's sister, Mr. and Mrs.\nP. li. Sullivan.\nWhen Spring \"whets appetites\nto a keen edge, and you don't wait\nto make too-big dent In the.budget,\nwork In some sturdy, \"boiled\" dinners'and brown stews,.'using the\noW; tried and- true, favorites garnished with-new twists, arid served,\nnicely. \u25a0-i(\nIf time Is short, you can partly\ncook; them the night before,' and\nfinish simmering just before serving. 'Their slow Cooking brings out\nthe best in them, and so makes them\na good choice for the housewife who\nIs a part-time-worker. V    \u25a0        *\nHere are some Spring combinations that make for mighty good\neating.\n:'Corned, beef chunks between\nsteaming wedges, of hew cabbage\nare delicious in a-new combination\nWith' sweet potatoes.. Good- with'\nthem are squares of corn bread and\na,hearty tossed: green.'salad, with\nperhaps frozen-strawberries for a\nSpring dessert\nTo serve 6,, cover ,4 lbs; corned\nbeet s with water j: simmer 3 to 5\nhours- or until tender...Thirty- min.\nbefore the, meat is done, add 6 pared\nsweet: potatoes.' Fifteen minutes\nlater, add.a medium-sized cabbage,\nquartered.'When finished' cooking,:\narrange on a, chop plate.\n- Corned Beef Casserole cofties up\nnext, the recipe for 6. Using \"6 c.\ncooked rice and 2 c. chopped cooked\ncorned geef In all, arrange In alternate layers of rice' and meat lh\ngreased casserole.' Combine. 2 c,\ncooked tomatoes, one c, water, % c.\nchopped 'onion, 1_ tsp. each, salt\nand Worcestershire sauce and a\nfew grains of pepper. Pour mixture\novei? rice and meat in casserole,\nBake( covered; at 360 F. for 30. mln,\nFor a delicious and different veal\nstew cut 2 oz, salt pork in tiny\npieces; fry ln deep frying, pan or\npot roast kettle until  crisp  and\nAgriculture, Including stock rals-'\nIng and horticulture, Is the most Important single industry of Canada.\nbrown. Cube IH lb; veal breast,\nshank, flank, neck, or shoulder;\nflour lightly.; Brown pieces in salt\npork fat.* When well browned, add 2\ntsp. salt and 2 c. water and cover'\nmeatslowly. Cook, very slowly ..for\nIV, hours. Add one c. cut celery and\nIVi c. noodles; continue to cook until hoodies are tender. Serves 4,\nFor a sturdy .vegetable-chowder''\nfor 4 cut 4 slices bacon Into 1-lnce\nlengtghs. Brown with Vt c. diced onion, V, c. each raw potato cubes and\nsliced,carrots for about 10 min. in;\nbottom of soup kettle, stirring while '\nbrowning. Add One c. cooked tomatoes, one bay leaf and 2 c. weter.\nCover and simmer..for.25.:ihlB.,.or.''\nuntil vegetables are tender. Blend\n2 c. milk and 2 tbsp, flour, add IH\ntsp.-salt and Vs tsp. pepper; combine\nwith vegetables. Reheat and serve.\nShowers for NatalX\nBrides-to-Be\n.NATAL,, B.C., June 17 - Since\nthe ;first of jnonth showers, have\nbeen held for brides-to-be from\nNatpl ahd Michel.-The first was in\nhonor \"of Mrs. H. Barrass Jr. of\nMichel, when a number -of ladies\nwere present at the St. Paul's\nChurch Hall to* enjoy; the evening's\nentertainment.\"\nThe second waB in honor of Miss\nA'da: Pettcello with the entertainment taking place at the I.O.O.F.\nHall.\nVnwdatiWlaJttitL\nSET  FOR SUNSHINE\nThe cutest way to get her Vita,\nmin DI Buttons marching down the\nside are adorable as well as practical \u2014 small bolero buttons on\nwhen she's had enough sunshine!\nPattern .9130: sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, 1Q.\nSize' 6 sunfrock, 1% yards 35-inch\";\nbolero, % yard; pantie, % -yard.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nerfect fit. Complete,. illustrated\nlew Chart shows you every step.\nSend TWENTY -FIVE CENT8\n(28c) in coins (stamps .cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly 8IZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, cafe of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept,, 266 Baker St.,\nNelson; B.C. \u2022\nBEGINNER'8 CHOICE     .\nFor, her Dream-House\u2014charm-\nlug daisy doilies; They're easy\nenough for any beginner to crochet,\nand are a perfect gift!\nBeginner-Crochet \u2014 an expert\nchoice for a gift! Pattern 842 has\ncrochet directions for 3 sizes. \u25a0'\ni taura Wheeler's improved, pattern makes needlework so simple\nwith its charts, photos and concise\ndirections.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS ln\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to, i Nelson Dally\nNews, Needlecraft' Dept., 268 Baker\nSt, Nelson, B.C. Print plainly PAT.\nTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDR58B,. -'   ,:_\"'\nCriminals' on their r way to be'\nhanged- in early England were pre.\nsented with a glass of ale along tbe\nWay.    .'  '     ,'.\u25a0.-'> r'.'\nSummer dresses reduced\nOh Our Clearance\n;   Rack   % -  '.-'.\nas mUch as 50%\nBlouses. Reg. $3.95 and Cl QQ\n$2.95. Sale...--..:...-.-. ?*\u25a0\u00ab\"\u00bb\nSkirts\u2014Wool and Alpine\nand Gabardine\u201425% off    '.'\nAt Special Low\nPrices\nSeersucker night-        C9 49\ngowns. Only ' ::.. *\"\u2122T.'\nNylon and broadcloth   C* QE\npyjamas. Up from , **\u00bb*\u00ab\u00bb\nT-Shirts in smart \u00a34 CQ\nstripes. Only   ... ?*\"\u00ab\u00bb\nJeans. \"Tret-Em-R'uf.\"  CO OK\nOnly'  **\u25a0\u00bb*\nShorts. Drill and cords ln all\nSv\/im Suits by Rose    ' (EC QC\nMarie Heed. Up from   *w\"\u00bb\u00bb\nNylon Hose Specials\nRegular. $1.85.    . $IM\nNow \u00ab|f\u00bbM\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\nRegular $1.65. CI 90\nNow    **\u00bb*\u00bb\nLadies Apparel\nM\nore\nJob\ns\n'More people are working today than in any previous peacetime\n<ty. \\.yy- V*-: .        '\"   :.  '\\\" ';, \u2022''  .   %  '.  ,    '':'-\nperiod \u25a0\u2014 nearly a million more than in 1939. National income is three\ntimes as high as in 1939, is more widely distributed than ever before,\nunder Liberal policies of Reconversion.\nIn British Columbia, wage rates are higher and the work week\nis shorter than in any other Province in the Dominion of Canada.\nProtect jour stake in     .\nOPPORTUNITY \u2022 PROSPERITY \u2022 SECURITY\nVOTE LIBERAL\nPUBLISHED BY THE B. C. LIBERAL ASSOCIATION\n.       .. 'ii   ' -\"\u2014i*~\u00ab\u2014^\u2014\u00bb\u2014.\n\u2022\n Woven\nOxfords\n^ brown woven oxford in, a\nlight summer weight, leath-\nsr sole ahd heel. Styled in p\nidlmoral cqt. D widths. 5Vi\n'oil., $11-80\n'air   *    \u25a0 '\u25a0\n11\nR. ANDREW,\n&CQ.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1001\nFlowers Brighten T~~\nTea and Sale\nFRUITVALE, B.C., June 17 -the\nLegion: Hall in Frultvale was the\nsetting for the Spring tea and sale\nof the W. A, to Canadian tiegion\nNo. 100. The tea. tables as well as\ndisplay tables were centred with\nvases of pink and yellow roses.\nMrs. - Jack Findlay, Mrs. John\nBecker and Mrs-. Don Shorting had\ncharge of the tea tables, with Mrs,\nG. , Rothwell, Mrs. Robert Milne\nSr.,,. and Mrs. E.. Sims in charge\nof the kitchen,'\nMrs. F\u201e i^aluslk, Mrs, Stan Walsh\nand, Mrs. Earl Grieve convened\nthe take table, fish pond was arranged by Mrs. Hazel Osser; novelty table, was supervised by Mrs.\nCharles McKenzie arid Mrs. Harvey\nHiggins, while Mrs. W. H, Goddard\nand Mrs. L. P. ' Angrighon had\ncharge of the sale of work table.\nMrs. Henry Barlock was in\ncharge of -the door prize, a beautiful crocheted basket which Was\nwon by Mrs, Angus MacDonald of\nFernie, B.C. '*'-;'\u25a0\n* Minister:* Rev. A. L. Anderson, B.A., B.D, S.T.M.\nDirector of Music: Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson, BA, A.T.C~-\n10:00 am.\u2014Sunday School for Juniors.ahd older.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School for Primary aim younger. \u25a0 .\n11:00 a.m.-\"FAITH'S LOST .IMPERATIVE.\"\n7:30 p.m.-SERVICE OF MUSIC.    *:.*. -\u25a0\nBy the Boys'and Girls* Choirs,      - \u2022\nThe United W.M.S.\u2014Tuesday, 3:00 p.m. at St Paul's W.A. Tea\nand Bake Sale-Friday, 3:00 p.m. at the Manse.\nChurch Picnic: Saturday, June 25, Camp Koolaree. Tram leaves\nC.P.R. at 1:20. AU Sunday Schools and \u25a0 congregations of Trinity and St. Paul. Adults\u2014one, dollar.\nChildren free. ,-'.'\u25a0.\nSrtttttg Uittt^b ffifturrti\nJosephine and Silica\nREV. GORDON G. McL. BOOTHROYD; B.A., B;D\u201e Minister\nMrs. C. W. Tyler, Choir-Leader arid Organist\n11:00 a.m.\u2014ANNUAL PROMOTION SERVICE.\nCongregation and Sunday School Combined. Awards\n' *  and promotions. Music by- the Senioi*,,Ghoir.!Sacra-y\nof Baptism. v\n7:30 pm.\u2014THE CHRISTIAN \"AMEN.\"\nMusic by the Senior Choir.,\nSaturday, June 24th\u2014United Church Basket Picnic to' Koolaree..\nTrain leaves 1:20 p.m.\nSunday-June 25th 11:00 a.m.\u2014Sacrament of the Lord's Supper.\n-} Stanley and-Sllica Streets\nRev. S., Maier, Pastor\u2014Phone 182-R\n8:20 a.m.\u2014Lutheran Hour CJAT Trail.\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m,\u2014TWO WAYS OF LIFE\"\u2014Romans 8:5-11\nMti. QUjurrij of.\n(Hljriat #mnttat\nA Branch ot the Mother Church,\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, In Boston, Mass.\nSunday School\u2014 9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service\u201411:00 a,m.\nSUBJECT:\n\"Is the Universe, Including Man,\nEvolved by Atomic Force!\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nReading Room open dally 3-5\nExcept, Wednesday\nAll Cordially Welcome.\n(Wjurrij of\n% jRi. toempr\n(Anglican)\nFAIRVIEW\nCANON W. J. SILVERWOOD,\nA.K.C B.Sc Vicar\n11:00  a.m.\u2014Family  Service;\n. Sunday School prizes\nwill be awarded\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer.\nJune 20\u2014Picnic, Camp Koolaree\nitfeBum (Ecu? nattf\nRev: H O. Peterson, Pastor\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday   School   and\nBible Class,\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Service.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Young   People   in\n.   charge of service,\nFriday, June 24, Program and\n,     Strawberry Social\nsponsored by Ladles'\nAid.\nJftrrt\n\u2022Jpreabijtertatt\nKootenay and Victoria Sts.\nGuest Preacher\nK. Hansen\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n^_2(\n.'rilllHH! ,1HI III'IUI irtflII!mnd:HI 1KB I, :)l! \u25a0;;':\/\"' \u25a0 \u25a0:!: sir:\nmmet\nNeO>s of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40o line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two.lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nRotary luncheon Monday, June 20,\nHume Hotel, 12:15 p.m.\nVacuum cleaners and floor polish\ners for rent Phone Skilton, 91.\nWe no* stock office desks, stenographers' desks, typewriter tables,\netc., for immediate delivery. D. W.\nMcDerby,,''Ther'l^ewrite.,'& \"Adding Machine Man\",, 554 Stanley St.\n'DR. WILBERT BROCK\nLicensed Chiropractor.\u2014Phone 969\nKids, your  nickle  still  buys  a\ncone at WAIT'S NEWS.\nOUR SALE OF LADIES' LUGGAGE IS.GOING OVER BIG. GET\nYOURS WHILE THEY LA8T AT\nTHESE: PRICES.\u2014WADE'S SHOES\nAND LEATHER GOODS.\nSHOWBEEF\nFAIRWAY  MEAT  MARKET\nFor   all   painting,   Interior   and\nexterior decorating, phone 472-L.\nWanted\u20141 or 2 men to dig water\nline and septh tank. 90c an hour.\nPhone 584-X2,\nFor Father's Sweet Tooth \u2014 A\nbox ot delicious chocolates from\nGRAY'S.,\nIs your. garden dry7 , We \u25a0 have\nhose,. V> rand Ji-inch, In 50-foot\nlengths, or by the foot Also everything ittr.snrlriklers.for lawn and\ngarden. HIPPERSON'S., :\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch it is on time all the time.\n491 Baker Street Nelson, B.C.\nIdeal for Dad on His Day \u2014 A\nPresto cigarette lighter\u2014guaranteed\na ll-ettme-$6.50 at VALENTINE'S,\nHand-Ued trout Hies in attractive\ncontainers for Father's Day. Jack\nBoyce Men's Shop.\nQuilted satin bedspreads In pastel shades. Sizes 88 x 100. Price $9.75.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nCURLERS,\nPlease open your rock locker for\nthe Summer Bonspiel.. ,  i -'. .\nELECTRICAL CONTRACTING\nAlterations, New Installations!\nR. C. Catton   '  XV-' EhOne 389\nDANCE AT BLEWETT      '\nIn aid of Taghum Community Hall.\n\u25a0: Saturday night .\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSOITS for reliable repairs\nst moderate prices.\nMrs. Kay; Carpenter, ..phystother-,\napist, is-Unable to take patients until further notice,, due to illness.\nMASONITEWallboards ln 4' x 8'.\nx V*\" sheets \u2014 Brown 18c sq. ft. \u2014\nBlack* 21c sq. ft \u2014 Tile 22c Sq; ft\nBURNS LUMBER & COAL CO\nPLUMBING AND HiiATING\nCONTRACTOR\nAlterations and Repairs\nRI Nadeau \u2022 -Phone 1157\nThose Improvements to your'\nproperty\u2014are they covered by insurance? If not, see BLACKWOOD\nAGENCY today.\nExquisite floral designs for weddings of, every type. Leave your\nflower problems with us.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER 8HOP\nCEMENT'      ';!* -\nYes, we have cement in stock.\nNelson Machinery Equipment Co.\n214 HaU St ,    -PhoM-18\nFor tops ln quality and. tops In\nservice, let VALENTINE'S supply\nyou with fresh films and' expert\ndeveloping.   ,     ,\nBamboo stakes for your garden.\n2 It. long 20c doz.\u20143 ft. long 25c doz.\n4V4 ft. long 35c doz.\nMAC'S GREENHOUSES'\u2014 Ph; 910\nFOR THE BRIDE     ,\nFLOWERS OF DISTINCTION\nBY GRIZZELLE'S\nPHONE 187 NELSON\nDon't let these garden pests get\nahead'of yoUl Get ahead of them\nwith, DDT, 2^4-D or Atlacide, from\nNELSON   FARMERS'  SUPPLY\n'      LIMITED      -.-I'\n524 Railway, St FhOBe 174\nBRING NEW COMFORT; NEW\nPLEASURE'INTO YOUR HOME\nWITH COLOUR -DYNAMICS.\n. Pittsburgh Paints\nNELSON' WOODWORKING  CO,\nPHONE 1150 \u2014 OPP. DAILYNEWS\n..\u25a0\u25a0, WOOL 8ALU\nLewista\u20144-*ply Unshrinkable, 2 oz.\nskein 25c\u2014 Kelpie'\u20143-ply unshrinkable, 2 oz. skeins 39c \u2014 Beehive1-\n3;or 4-ply fingering and baby wool,\n340-peroz. - '\">'.- -\nTHE CHILDREN'8 SHOP\nGIVE DAD A BREAK\nFather's Day Suggestions\nSocks,-' Sport -Shirts,- Ties,- Belts,\nBraces;-Tee-Shirts, Underwear,--- in\nfact -anything -that- a man wears.\nWADE  RIGHT IN    .\nTHE 'CO0LE8T 8T0R'.' IN TOWN\nTHE TIMBERS\nWILLOW POIN-T   \u25a0'\u2022\nCHICKEN AND STEAK\n  JJINNERS:;.': .'.''\nFOR RESERVATIONS.   -\n, \u25a0     .PHONE 714-L-4'\u25a0'*': \u25a0\n'      CLbSED MONDAYS\nSPECIAL. ONE ONLY, WALNUT\nFINI8HED* DINETTE SUITE CON,\nSISTING.'OF'TABLE WITH JACK-\nKNIFE EXTEN8ION AND FOUR\nCHAIR8, LEATHERETTE.-UPHOL\n8TERED SEATS. \u2014 PRICED. AT\n$69.50.' Mc &-Mc (NELSON)  LTD.!\n. CARD OF THANK8\nWe'wish\" to'express our sincere\nthanks and appreciation to our\nmany-friends for 'their- kthd words\nand acts of sympathy, extended; to\nus ln our recent sad bereavement.\nSpecial thanks. to .the Doctors,\nNurses.and. Staff of the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital for their untiring care and attention to Mrs.\nAurelio during her illness. Also to\nthe Ladies' Auxiliary to' the Fraternal Order of Eagles'and the La-1\ndies', Auxiliary to the Canadian\nLegion -for their many courtesies.\nDominico Aurelio and Family.\nNelson Social\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 18,1949 \u2014 5\n\u2022 'Miss Alia Johnstone whose\nmarriage to F. J. Bunyan Is to take\nplace July 9, was honored at a miscellaneous shower. Thursday night\nby Mrs. D. H. Mollison at'917 Silica\nStreet. Tea . table was , beautifully\ncentred by a bowl ot all pink Rosen-\nElf roses flanked by tall white tap'\ners. The gifts were cleverly arranged in various suitcases plastered\nwith \"In Bond\", e\\c,, travel Stickers.\nAssisting the'hostess with the buffet\nsupper were Mrs. V; Fink,'Mrs.\nCharles H, Hamilton, Mrs, Reginald\nH. Dill and Mrs, John Erb.\ne Martin - Lanigan of Wilkle,\nSask., Is spending. a , week at the\nhome of his brother-in-law and'sister,'Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lindsay,\nSilica Street. -    , ,' .' .\nt Mrs. Norman A. Brown, Houston Street, has left to spend a week\nin Vancouver where she will, attend\na\" meeting \".at the Eastern Star.\nJ , Mrs. A. H. Noakes of Balfour\nwas in the city en route to Slocan\nCity to visit, h,er son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hird;\n\u2022 Dr. Harry Pitts, Jr., accompanied by his mother and sister\nShary of Vancouver, were recent\nvisitors of the doctor's grandmother,\nMrs. H. H. Pitts,, Nelson Avenue.\nThey: ivCre on their way home from,\nMontreal where .Dr.' Pitts'recently\ngraduated in medicine from McGill\nUniversity.\n;'\u25a0 \u2022 . D, Matthews, Falls Street, left\nKootenay Lake General Hospital for\nhis hoine after receiving treatment\nfor a badly sprained ankle.\n\u2022 Mrs. C. Reynolds of-Vancouver and Mrs, Bradbury of Hamilton, are ,'holidaying ..at Balfour\nBeach Inn. *\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Herman Adams\nBy rm M J. VIGNEUX\ntheir children Donna and Marie.of\nFairfield,' Wash,; were -guests, of Mrs..\nO. Fornelli, Second Street Falrview.\ne A miscellaneous shower was\nheld at the home of Mrs. D. Matthews, Falls Street, honoring Mrs.\nJoe Carter, nee - Joyce Palmer,\nPrizes for the games were'wonby\nMrs, David Lester, Mrs. Carter, Mrs,\nNorman Beresford and Mrs. W. Carter. The hostess was assisted - by\nMrs.'Jackie Horswill-  -.'\n\u2022 -Mrs, S, S.: Simpson, Falrview.\nis   returned   from   a   Couple' of\nweeks ,at Vancouver, Seattle1 and\n\u25a0Spokane.  .' '-';\n(Mrs, John McPhail'and her\ndaughter, Mrs. Charles R. Symon,\nSilica: Street returned from Vancouver where they spent two weeks\nhaving been called by the death of\nMrs, Symon's husband,\n\u2022 Mrs.. J. H. Argyle, Qbserva-.\ntory. Street, is attending an Eastern\nStar gathering in Vancouver.\n\u25ba: Miss Isabell Kay, popular\nJune bride-elect was guest of horior\nat a miscellaneous shower Monday\nat.the home of Mrs, J.'L.*Niven,\nwhen Mrs. Niven, and Miss Gene\nFisher were . co-hostesses.. Games\narid contests were enjoyed during\nthe evening. The many lovely gifts\nwe're presented* to' the honor gueSt\nin' a daintily, decorated basket.\n..EDMONTON (CP'-Estimates of\ncity land sales for this'year exceed\n$1,000,000, Last year a record was\nestablished when city land was sold\nfor. more than $900,000.. City land\nsales for May 1049 are expected to\ntotal'$105,000.\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\n< -Large\". 8lzes In Printed\n,      SILK and COTTON\n,     DRESSES\nPOPULAR PRICES\nPASTEURIZED\n,  '';;:' MILK :\nIS S'AFE FOR CHILDREN\nIvootenay Valley Uaiky\nJANTZENSand\nBEATRICE PINES\nBATHING SUITS\nFashion First Ltd.\nmX?K '\u25a0'\u25a0 '*?\u2022'','\u25a0\nTo Honeymoon\nIn United States\n' FRUI1*VALi-, \/B.Cj June 17 -~\nPhyllls Evelyn, daughter of Mrs,\nA. Downie and the late John\nDownie of Trail, on June 9 became\nthe bride of Arthur Reginald Bath,\nson of Mr. and,Mrs. A. J. Bath of\nFruitvale, The marriage took place\nin Knox United Church, Trail, with\nRev. D.' W. More conducting the\nservice. The couple Was attended\nby Mrs. J. Smith, matron of honor\nand Miss Doreen Downie as bridesmaid, and Albert Bath, brother of\nthe groom. Ushers were John Bath\narid, Simon Mclnnls.\nReception for nearly 200 was held\nin the Trail Legion Hall,   r\nAfter an extended honeymoon\nthrough United States points,, the\nyoUng couple will make their home\nin Trail '.'.- .':.'   ,   \u201e\nHARROP,, B,C. ,- Mrs; W. J,\nMcConHell arid her sister, Miss\nSadie: Mcintosh have left for Nan-\nton, Alta.,: to visit relatives. Miss\nMcintosh plans to stay about two\nweeks. . .    ;.. \u2022   \"      .,\n, Mrs. Tom. Holmes and small\ndaughter are leaving this week to\njoin Mr. Holmes at Riondel.\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED.'\nTW. \u25a0\u2022' Ground eoaeh jolm your way at frequent .nhw.\nval> eveiy Jayl Choose your dopartur. Bine to suit ybttt\ntravel plans. ' , ,\nFor FREE colourful (ravtl. folJan, fan*\nuii lehtdul* loformalioo, .IM. your local\nArilit or vyrllt, ' Tr'avot Buroau . .'.;.*.\nGrayhound Building, Calgary.   '-\u25a0''    -\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHCiNE 115 - NELSON; Bitt\nThe House of Furlnturo Values\nBUY\nON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\n10 MONTHS TO PAY    ',\nYour f 11 Buy More ot Freeman's\nSunshine Bay...\nSUNSHINE BAY, B.Cl-Clarence:\nSewell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nSewell is a patient In the Kootenay\nLake General HospitaL     . ' \u25a0\nMrs. J. A. Peters: has returned\nfrom the Kootenay Lake General\nHospital where she was a patient\nfor 10 days with blood poisoning.,\n' Mr. and Mrs. Albert Fletcher and\nfamily of 023 Mill Street Nelson,\nvisited Mrs. Fletcher's parents, Mr.'\nand Mrs. Jack SeweU. '\nGUARD\nYOUR EYES\nEvery worker has a\nspecific job to do, and\nthat job requires its\nparticular seeing; skill.\nAre your eyes fit for\nyour particular:job? I\nNot unless they can\nfocus accurately 'arid\ntirelessly onyour;w'ork\nrange all day,.every\nday. '\"'\u2022\u25a0  y  yX,\nEfficient \"eyes guide\nus'itt most of- our\nactions ahd achieve'\nments, and assures us\nof accuracy, speed,\ncomfort and safety in\nour work.\nYou, can make sure;\nyour eyes are at their\nbest'. .-,.   .\nCONSULT YOUR\nOPTOMETRIST\nBale Ties Wt ft x 14 Ga. Sgl. loop.\nBlack annealed baling wire 14 Ga.\nWOOD VALLANCE  HOWE\nCO. LTD.\niNttB -Jljrtat of\nSlaltpr Say S\u00bbamtB\n(Mormon)\nEAGLES HALL\n641 Baker 9t\nSunday School\u201410:30 ajn.\n\u00a7aliiattdtt Army\n513 Victoria Street\nLieutenant Austin Millar\nSUNDAY JUNE 19\nLt. Col. Wood of San Pedro,\nCalifornia, will be guest speaker\nat the 11:00 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nservices at the Salvation Army\nYou Are Invited '\nJune Bride Specials! Rogers 1047\nsilverware in chests. Service for 0\nand 8 in latest' patterns, Canada's\nfinest silverplate for the bride.\nHIPPERSON'S.     *,'.\"};-\u25a0\nBrttpi'-Mmiarlp.'\n-i   708 Baker Street\nREV. I. M PRESLEY, Pastor\nSUNDAY      ,\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.    '\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Devotional   Service.\n4:30 p.m.\u2014Bethel Fireside Hour.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic meeting.\nTUESDAY\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study.\nFRIDAY\n7:00 pja\u2014Children's Church.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young Peoples (CA)\nA Cordial Welcome Awaits You\nAt All of These Service!\ntfiral\nStanley Street\nJOHN it: DAYKIN, B.A., Pastor\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Church School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning'Worship.\n\"666\"\n7:15 p.m.\u2014Let's Sing!\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\n'The Garden of Life,\nIF BUTTERFIELD CAN'T FIX\nIT, THROW IT AWAY. PROMPT\nSERVICE, ALL WORK FULLY\nGUARANTEED.\nThe woodcock has eyes set' far\nback in its head so that* it can see\ni its enemies when its longe bill digs\nI deep in the ground for worms.\n$656 FOR CANCER\nCAMPAIGN FROM\nNATAL-MICHEL\nNATAL, B.C., June 17 \u2014 The\namount collected throughout Natal-\nMichel1 during the 1949 Cancer\nCampaign totalled $659.75. Employees of Michel mines donated\n$567. -.','. '..'':\"*''\u2022;\nThe 1049 Fight Cancer Campaign\nwas sponsored by the Fraternal\nOrder of Eagles.\nWed at Invermere,\nTo Live in Alberta\nINVERMERE,' B.C., June 17 --\nChrist Church, Invermere, was the\nscene, of a pretty wedding June 11\nwhen Josie, third daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Chong Guey of Athalmer\nbecame the bride of Charles'Wallace Long, eldest son of Mr. and\nMrs. W. P. Long of Milk River,\nAlberta.\nj Rev. Canon T. D. Procter of Invermere officiated at the afternoon\nceremony .Willie Guey of Trail\nwas best 'man and Miss D. K,\nBodecker was organist.\n1 Given in marriage by her father\nthe bride wore a gown of. ivory\nslipper satin faBh-oned with baclj:\npanniers; The embroidered net yoke\nwas edged with flat satin flowers.\nHer floor length veil, was held by\na silver beaded coronet.* The bridal\nbouquet was composed of red roses\nand fern.\nThe bride had two attendants,\nHer sister, Miss Mae Guey and the\ngroom's sister, Miss Bessie Long of\nMilk River, Alberta.\nFollowing a honeymoon at the\nCoast the young couple, will reside\nat Warner, Alberta.\nAUSTIN SALES\nPACKARD   SALES\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nFirst Choice of the Queens\nand DEFINITELY\nFirst Choice of the Public\nChevron Gasoline - R. P. M. Motor Oils - Tires - Tubes - Batteries - Massey Harris Farm Equipment - Home\nFreezers-Repairs to all makes of ears and trucks -R.P.M. lubrication\nPHONI 1135\nEMPIRE MOTORS\nNELSON, B.C\n803 BAKER ST.\n Sbltimt Jtttlg Wm*      Dark Glasses       ? Questions ?\nEstablished April JS, 1802. m, common habit of wearing dark glasses      *   ^C *\"*\u2022* *J T    -..V.   :r   \u2022\nBritish Columbia's\nMost - interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY., LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second' Class Mail,\nPost Office Department Ottawa.\nMEMBER OT THE CANADIAN PRESS. AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIBCUI-AT.ON3.\n~~ SATURDAY, JUNE J8, 1949\nThe \"All Clear\" for CoaHtion\nNow that the confetti-and-stream*\n.ers first flush of jubilation over the\nsweeping CpalitWn victory has died\ndown, electors may have, a clear view\nof what lies ahead for British Columbia\".    . '\nBy their hearty support the electors\nof tfiis Province have given the Coalition Party the \"go-ahead\" signal to put\ninto effect their proposed reforms and\nto retain what-is best out of the, time-\ntested policies of two stable political\nParties.\nWith 40 Cbalitlon members piloting\nthe Government and an official Opposition of six CCF. members, B. C. is,\nassured of good government for the\nnext four years.\nWhile out of seven ridings Koote-'\nnay-Boundary elected three Coalition\nmembers, three CCF. members and\n\u25a0 one Labor member, the overall picture\nis one of strong Coalition support. More\ncitizfens supported the Coalition Party\nthan supported ajl the other Parties\ncombined.\nBy their confidence the voters of\nthis District and of this Province have\ngiven clear sailing to llic Coalition\nGovernment. * - -\nThe common habit of wearing dark glasses\nIs actually lust nplng a Hollywood performers'\nvogue. Not always are the blinkers considered\nos a real protection for the eyes. They art\nworn because lt Is a fashion. Vet this form ot\nsafety Is a good habit, if considered properly\nfrom the point of health. Dark glasses should\nonly be worn during times of exposure to\nbright sunlight They should not be of a color\nthat will alter the natural hues of the scenery.'\nIndiscriminate use of colored glosses may tend\nto lower the tolerance of the eyes to light\nEvery year, however, Canadian workers\nsuffer damage to their eyes because they neg-\n. letted to take precaution. agaln_t the' harmful effects of high intensity light from welding torches, blast furnaces and arc lamps.\nSafety goggles that offer complete protection\nagainst such hazards to'the sight should be\navailable In every plant Your sight is precious. Don't risk lt needlessly.\u2014-Brandon Sun.\nSave Drowning Victims\nAll drowning fatalities are not necessarily, due only to carelessness on\nthe part of the victims, it is stated by\nDr. Gordon Bates of Toronto In Health\nMagazine. .Too frequently there ia\nlack of knowledge as to proper means\nof artificial respiration on the part of\nonlookers anxious to help.\nDr. BateS is General Director of the;\nHealth League of Canatln and Editor,-\nof Health Magazine.\n,The editorial goes on fo .say:\n\"Artificial 'respiration should always be immediate and continuously\napplied by persons With some knowledge of the procedure. There are misapprehensions, however, which in some\ncases have led to tragedy.-In spite of\nwidespread publicity. about 10 years\nago in the Canadian Press, there still\nremains in the minds of many the idea\nthat a person who has been-under water for more than a few minutes cannot be revived by artificial respiratiop.\nThis is not true. There have been instances of individuals who have been\nrevivded after having been as long as\nhalf to hour in the water.\n\"A committee of the Health League\nof Canada, under the leadership of the\nlate Sir Frederick Banting, in 1938 issued a statement to the effect that artificial respiration should be kept up\ncontinuously for four hours or until\nthere is evidence of rigor mortis in the\n\u2022victim. Yet it has been noticed in not a\nfew cases recently that artificial respiration has been discontinued in a\n>very short time and the victim pronounced dead. This action has presumably been decided on because there\nhave been no signs of life.\"\nThe editorial states that the Same\ncommittee also found that,, \"most\ndrowning victims have no water in\ntheir lungs and that death results from\nInstinct Trap\nOne ot the deep-rooted Instincts ot man is\nto throw nothing away. Cynical, philosophy\nremarks that the stronger Instinct of man la\n, acquisitiveness, and, lt this is so, Its brother Is\nretentlveness. For proof ta a small way, examine the car's glove compartment. That cave\nis an excellent working model on which to\nshow the. practical fruits of instinct.\nThe glove compartment Is, of course, the\nSmall safe set on the dashboard. It locks, but\nnot usually with the same key as the ignition.\nTo open It, therefore, requires not only Intention but the application of more strength than\nWould be required to throw miscellaneous objects bn the floor. Because ot tbe amount of\nthought and labor Involved, It may be con-\nceded.that at the time the objects have certain desirability. The are placed In the glove\ncompartment as a result of thought and perhaps, as the.above synlcal philosophy would\nhave it as the-result of acquisitiveness. That\nthey remain there from week tt* week, from\nmonth to month, and from this year until the\nrtade-in, Is the result ot that other Instinct It\nwould not be physically difficult, one night ln\nthe dark of the moon, to sweep the whole collection into a paper bag and drop it Into tht\n'river, but It would be mentally difficult In\ntact and due to Instinct, that action Is Impossible. Each ot those objects Is tied, as by a\nchain with no weak link, to Instinct And\nclearly-Instinct has either a most catholic taste\nor It has no taste at all. The glove compartment of the ear shows Instinct working ta\nrhlgh geSr and. on the purest gasoline.\u2014New -\n\u25a0'. York Times. -       \u2022' -\nNewfies Prefer Navy\nReqrultlng for the Canadian permanent\nforces in Newfoundland hu disclosed the fact\nthat the young manhood ot the 10th Province\nprefers the Navy. While this may be slightly\nI disconcerting to the other two services, lt can't\nbe considered surprising. In Newfoundland the\ncall ot the sea is strong.\nFor its part, the Royal Canadian Navy ean\n-feel pleased at having attracted a substantial\nnumber of recruits ta tht new Province. In\nthem it has sailors by instinct who quickly\nwill absorb the highly technical training that\ngoes with modern Naval seamanship.\nDuring World War II, in fact a considerable number ot Newfoundlanders served in\nthe Royal Canadian Navy, ta all ranks, and\nmade their own rich contribution to its history and Its legends.\nOne remembered wartime tale concerns\nthe Newfoundland-born skipper of a Canadian\ncorvette who took his craft Into a British port\nand promptly seized upon anchorage reserved\nfor one ot the Royal Navy's mightiest aircraft\ncarriers. Presently the carrier arrived, but the\nNewfoundlander held fast\n\"You are Inconveniencing mt greatly,\"\nthe carrier's signal flags said petulantly. Tht\nNewfoundland skipper finally yielded to\nweight ot metal and brass-bound rank, but not\nuntil his signal flags had answered proudly:\n\"You -are Inconveniencing me greatly, too.\"\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nENFORCEMENT OF LAW\nBoth the Liquor Licence Board and the\nLiquor Control Board would be well advised\nto heed the rising criticism by the publio ot\nthe lax enforcement of the law governing tht\nsale and consumption of liquor in the Province. * .      ,\nspasm of the larynx. It Is therefore\nmost important that one should make\ncertain in all of these.cases that the\nair passages are free. The only known\nmethod of attempting to assure this\nend at'present is to see that the patient's tongue is drawn well out during'\nefforts of artificial respiration.\"\nOpen to any reader. Names ot persons\nttklnu questions Will not be published.\nThere l( no charge for this service. Questions WILL. NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL exoept where there Is obvious necessity for privacy.\nMrs. A. S, Cranbrook\u2014When does the British\nColumbia old age pensioner receive the\nIncrease tp $50 a month? Other Provinces\nj. ta':-. Canada received their $10 Increase\n^om May 1. \u25a0 ' ,   \u201e\nThe increase is retroactive from May 1,\n1MB.\nK. C\u201e Nelson\u2014For what purposes is the wood\ncalled lignum vltae used, and where is it\nfound? ,\nIt Is used for the bearings in 'machinery,\nand also ln bowling alley balls, This unusual\ntree la found ta South America.\nHousewife, Nelson\u2014What part of a measuring\ncup is an ounce of water?\nIt Is one-eighth of a cup, or two tablespoons. .    t\nReader, Fernle\u2014Could you please tell me\n-   when the first story containing the character, Sherlock Holmes, was written?\n* Sherlock Holmes made his first appearance ta \"A Study ta Scarlet\", published In 1887.\nCurious, Nelson\u2014Could you tell me if there\nhas ever been a world's champion checker\nplayer?\nThere has never been an established\nworld's Championship tor the game. However,\nthe latt James Wyllie ot Scotland has been\nrated the greatest master of the game.\nPuzzled, Nelson\u2014To settle an argument are\nzebras black with white stripes or white\nwith black stripes? *\u2022\nThe basic color of n zebra is white, and\nits stripes are black. This haa been proved by\ntho fact that when a zebra is crossed with a\ndonkey the offspring are almost Invariably of\nthe light tan color with heavy black stripes pn\nthe legs and faint black stripes on the neck\nand body. The stripes ln various species are of\nvarying widths.\nCanada Plans\n$30 Million U. K.\nLumber Sale\nOTTAWA, June 17 (CP)^Cana-\nda expects to sell - dollar-short\nUnited Kingdom at least $30,000,000\nworth -.of lumber this year\u2014 ahd\nperhaps more If tilt U.K. can get\nMarshall aid approval.'.\nA trade official said today that\nAnglo-A-merlcan lumber contracts\ncompleted for 1048: call for shipment Of 329,000,000 board feet from\nthe West Coast at an approximate\ncost of $22,000,000,\nThis is in addition to tht 180,000,-\n000 board feet Ot spruce, valued at\n$8,000,000, Eastern Canada mills\nwill suppiy. '.-.\nAt least one further Anglo- Canadian lumber contract Is expected\nto bt completed this year.\nShis Is tor Britain's supply of\nDouglas Fir for the last quarter\nof 1948.,Because ol a \"distressed\"\nlumber area showing up ta the West\nCoast of the U.S., Canada is not\ncertain to get the complete contract\nMAY SHARE       -\nUnder U.S, _Economic Co-Operation Administration . regulations,\nthe- U.K. can buy the lumber in\nCanada if prices complete favorably\nwith, prices in other, countries, Including the U.S.\nWith a surplus development In\nthe Western States, there is the possibility that Canada will have to\nshare the quarterly contract with\nThis also was the reason Canada\nU.S. mills,\nobtained only $6,000,000 worth of\nthe .0,000,000 E.C.A. lumber allocation to the U.K. for the third quarter ot 1945 U.S, mills got the other\n$4,000,000.\nThe third quarter contract was\nplaced with British Columbia mills\na few days ego. For the $6,000,000\ntha U.K. will get about. 80,000,000\nboard feet shipments to start at the\nbeginning Of July, .\nLooking Backwards\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of June18,1989 :\nMr. and Mrs. T. Dolphin, Ward Street,\n*?have as guests -their,:son and daughter-in-law,5\nMr. and Mrs. John O. Dolphin, and their ton\nDanny, of Trail.\nDespite the fact that then was a poor\nentry in the weekly medal sweep at the Nelson\ngolf links, the players still managed to make\nrather an exciting day of it. The winners were\nL, S. Bradley and J. G. Allan, who-tied for\nfirst place, both carding net 86s. L. A. McPhail\nplaced third and Carl Carlson placed:fourth;\n\u00bb Years Ado y.'.v.-;\nFrom The Dally Newt of June 16,1924\nMrs. A. T. Pemberton, Ward Streei entertained a few friends at the tea* hour, honoring\nMrs. O. T. McQulre, who leaves for the'East\nthis .week.  , \u25a0   i \u25a0\n, Mr. and Mrs. James O'Shea and Mr. and\nMrs. J. H. D. Benson left for the Coast by\nmotor, where they expect to spend the next\ntwo or ^hree weeks.   . .    f\nMcDougall & McCharles of Nelson have\nreceived the contract to build the new C.P.R.\nstation at the station point which will be\nknown as Bonnington.\n40 YEARS AOO\nFrom The Dally News of June 18,1909\nMrs. W. B. Shaw and children are .leaving\nthis morning for Moose Jaw on a visit to her\nparents ta that city, and will be absent for\nabout two months.\nAt a meeting of the Sunday School Teachers' Guild of St. Saviour's Church it was ar-\nranged that the annual Sunday School picnic\nwould be held at Prooter July 4.\nRUSSIANS CLAIM\n\"FIRST\" IN STUDY\nOF EVOLUTION\nMOSCOW, June 17 (AP) \u2014 A\nRussian newspaper contended today that Russian scientists \"were\ndiscussing\" evolution many years\nbefore-Darwin. This is the latest\nin a long list of scientific figures\nclaimed by the Russians.\nDollar Gap Main Problem as U, K.\nPost-War Boom Ends Says Guardian\nlondom; June rr <cp> - The\nManchester Guardian says today ta\nan editorial that the post-war boom\nta Britain has ended but advises the\nGovernment not to be stampeded\n\"into fighting a slump before it begins.\"   ;'*\"\u25a0, ,       .   '\n* The main problem still is the dollar gap, the newspaper says, Exports could be maintained to nondollar, countries by freeing sterling\nbalances held ln London for countries such as India, but it this were\ndone \"exports to North America\nwill never bo increased.\"\n\"Manufacturers have to be' left\nto feel the effects ot tightening the\ndemand both ln trade with soft-\ncurrency countries and In the home\nmarket,\" the Guardian says.\nThis'raises the danger of delaying precautionary measures so long\nthat a mild slump and unemployment would develop, the paper continues, but If the Qovemment acts\nttio s60n to stimulate non-dollar\nmarkets \"there will soon be tar\nmore unemployment with drastic\ncuts in imports; bf food and'raw\nmaterials.\"       ' .        *.\n\"The Immediate problem for Britain is not that we are being carried willy nllly towards a Slump,\"\nthe editorial says. \"It is that the\nww to avoid a crash next year, or\nlater Is for the Government deliberately not to use all the weapons by\nwhich it could maintain full employment until then.\"\nMay Be New Indian\nHigh Commissioner\n- NBW DELHI, June 17 (Reuters)\n\u2014Prince K. S. Duleepslnhji, former\nsts* cricket player in Britain, Is\nlikely to, be appointed India's High\nCommissioner ln Canada, It was\nlearned here today from usually reliable quarters. Ho will suoceed\nSarddr Hardlt Singh Malik, who is\nbeing transferred to Paris as India's* Ambassador.\nDuleepslnhji was educated in\nEngland.   . '    ;  , .\nIn Ottawa officials at tht Indian\nHigh Commissioner's Office said\nthey had had no word of any new\nappointment here.,Nor had they\nheard anything of a proposed transfer to Paris of Mr. Malik who has\nbeen stationed. ln Ottawa for the\nlast two' years.\nTo Make 1000-Mile\nVoyage To Vote\nHALIFAX June 17 (CP)\u2014Some\n80 men abroad the Canadian Weather Ship St Stephen, now at Station\n__aker, mid-way between Labrador\nahd Greenland, will make a 100-\nmilo voyage next week to vote lh\nthe Federal election, the Navy announced today.\nSt. Stephen will leave her station\nJune 23 arriving ta St. John's,\nNfld., June 24 and her men will\nvote the next day alter studying\nnomination lists. She returns the\nnext day to Station Baker. Men\nabroad tilt St Stephen cast ballots\nfor the two-member riding of Hall-\nfax. \"'\"\nTo Appeal Refusal\nOf U.S. Entry To\nCanada Entertainers\nMONTREAL, JUne 17 (CP>\u2014An\nappeal against a United States immigration ruling refusing the entry\nInto the U.S. of a Canadian Group\nof Entertainers, the Irving Pall\nQuartet will be launched in Washington next week, Michael Berger,\nMontreal lawyer, said today.\nMr. Berger said the Montreal\ngroup, under contact to open last\nWednesday ta Philadelphia and\nnext month at Atlantic City, N. J.,\nwas refused entry under the U.S.\nAllen Contract Labor Law.\nMAY SUE VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, June 17 (CP) -\nRepresentatives of firms affected by\nWednesday night's $1,000,000 four-\nalarm False Creek fire here will\nmeet tomorrow to discuss the'question ot taking Joint legal action\nagainst the City of Vancouver.\nFire Destroys\nRebuilding\nLEGAL, Alta., June 17 (OP). -;\nFire early today destroyed f\nEmile Roman Catholic Church hei\nreducing to charred ruins all tl\nrebuilding work of the congrog\ntion Slnco their original chun\nwent up in flames nearly two yes\nago. \u2022'\u25a0\u25a0-!   -:\nDamage was estimated at $135,0(\nResidents of this small town!\nmiles North of Edmonton looked!\nhelplessly in the early morriii\nhours as the monument to the\nhopes and labors burned furious!\nThe fire raged for two hOurs ni\nalthough all available' tire fights\nwere called out they could do n\nthing to save the structure.\nThe church also served as a toi\nmunlty hall, in which the towi\nmajor functions were held, ti\nhoused rectory rooms.\nFormerly an air force hMl'ji\nthe building was purchased I\nthe congregation about a ye\nago and wat moved In teetlo\nfrom the Penhold air tratnl\ncentra to the South.     .   -     j\nThe huge sections wen haul\nmostly by volunteer labor oV\na distance of mora than 100 mil\nThe church and hall was officii\nly opened only last Christmas aft\nsix months of construction work,\nAmong the more than 200 volu\nteer fire fighters was the Mayor\nLegal, George Montpetlt, who It\nhis bed to join in the battle agalr\nthe flames. Origin ot the blaze w\nunknown. , '\nFather Berubs ot St Emile's w\nln Edmonton when, the Ure bfol\nout and reached town Just as t\nlast flames flickered out.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLAsSlPIE\nNelson -Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ.C.MUIR\nMiomtt   Nelson 77;  Rowland 171; Tr-H -Ml '\nConnections tot -\nSALMO \u2014 KASLO \u2014 CRESTON  \u2014  NAKUSP\nYouf Horoscope '\nYou may have a pleasant surprise.' For\nyour next year a certain amount of success\nshould crown your efforts. Unusual ability\nprobably will be noticed ta the child born today.\nTor Sunday, June 18: Your next year of\nlife should continue on the even tenor of its\nway\u2014with steady progress inade and happy\ntimes. Many line characteristics probably will\ndevelop as today's child grows.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nLrjcWIRRELYTHEDESK\n^CLERK AT THE HOTEL\nAIARROWBED, WORKS\nLIKE A FOOL TO GET\n-THE MAIL SORTED SO\nTHE GUESTS WILL HAVE\nITEARLy\u2014  .\nIt Happened Today\n181S\u2014Battle of Waterloo, Napoleon's final defeat 1936-^Maxim Gorki, Russian novelist died. 1641\u2014In\nWorld War n, Turkey signed amity\npait with Gehnany.\nIt's Jane's vanity that makes her\ntrust her husband's Judgment. She\nthinks he proved It by plckin' her.\n.'The Canadian built aircraft,\nNorth Star, holds the trans-Atlantic record from Montreal to London, a distance ol 3282 miles, In 10\nhours 11 mimites.\n\u25a01\nCanadians are voting CCF\nCanadians know that they oan\ndepend on CCF National\nLeaderM. J. Coldwell and\nCCF members of parliament\nto carry out the following program without fear, favour or\nstalling:\nIMMEDIATE LOW-COST\nLOW-RENTAL HOUSING\n\"The government's failure to build\nhouses is actional disgrace. We will\nlaunch Immediate large-scale housing construction. Housing subsidies\nwill b e paid to bring the cost of homes\nwithin reach of our lowest Income\ngroup. Government financing will\nreduce Interest rates. Priorities will\nensure the necessary supplies,\"\n.IMMEDIATE NATIONAL\nHEALTH PROGRAM\n\"Canada lags far behind almost\nevery other country'in the western\nworld ... Health Services will be\nmade available to all regardless of\nthe sise of their pocketbooks. People\nwill be encouraged to.eek early treatment. A vigorous program to build\nsound, healthy bodies for Canadians\nwill pay untold dividends in the\nfu\njf     \\.#\nM. J. COLDWELL, CCF Notional Leader\nlife and prosperity of the nation must\nbe brought upder public ownership.\"\nIMMEDIATE MEASURES\nTO PROVIDE JOB SECURITY\n\"CCF economic planning will keep\nthe wheels of industry turning so that\nno one willing and able to work will\nbe out of a job. Private enterprise,\ncomplete and uncontrolled, has never\nyet succeeded in maintaining full\nemployment for more than a few\nyears at a time. Tlie investment arid\nproduction policies of the giant key\nindustries so vital to the economic\n- immediate steps\nProvide farm security\n\"If our foreign trade collapses, our\nfarm economy collapses. Day by day\nthd situation grows worse... the government Seems to have no solution\nto, prevent this drift to certain catastrophe. The CCF Is not afraid of\napplying controls necessary to make\nour economy work. We shall negotiate long-term, bulk-purchase contracts for our exports . . . make\nbi-lateral trade agreements that our\ncustomers want.., eliminate gambling and speculation.\"\n\u2022IMMEDIATE AND\nCOMPLETE SOCIAL SECURITY\n\"In a land of Canada's resources,\nno person should go without the basic\nnecessities of life... A CCF government will inaugurate a comprehensive system of family security . ..\nThe CCF will increase the old age\npension to $50 per month payable at\nthe age of 65 without a means test\nBlind pensions will be increased to\n- the same amount. Fanrjily allowances\nwill be continued for children from\n16 to 21 as they remain at school or\ncollege. There will be established a\nsocial security minimum below which\nno one iri the country will be allowed\nto fall.\"\nGCF\/=CO-OPERATIVE COMMONWEALTH FEDERATION\nPublished by the CCF Nations! Election Committee '.\n n$#\nWO VANCOUVER\niOLFERS ENTER   . \u00bb'\nIANADIAN OPEN\nTORONTO, June 17- (CP) - The\nanadian Golf Association an-\nninced today that two. Vancouver\nrofesslonals \u2014 Freddie Wood' and\nock McKinnon\u2014had 'entered the\nanadian open to be held at St.\neorge's Club here'June 22-25.\nWestern Canada pros announced\nirlier this week they would boy-\n)tt the Open and the Canadian\nrofessional Goiters' Association at\nie Seigniory Club,'near Ottawa, in\njllgust. They protested thevCP.G.A,\nad not arranged its annual tourn-\nment Immediately befOre or after\nle open and took the stand they\nnuld not afford to make two septate trips East.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nDETROIT\u2014Jflke Lamotta, New\nork, knocked out Marcel Cerdan,\nasablanca, 10 (title). \u2022 .-'\u2022 ;\nNEW YORK (Queensboro. Arena)\n.Alfredo Prada, Argentina,, out-\nDinted Willie Beltram, 136%, New\norlc, 10.\nBROOKLYN (Fort Hamilton)\u2014\nihnny Dell, Brooklyn, outpointed\nImmy Warren, Brooklyn, 10.\nThe Queen Elizabeth, launched tn\nctober, 1913, was the first battle-\nUp to dispense entirely with coal\nid to use oil alone,    '\/,   -;!\nYour RONSON     \\\nLIGHTER\npromptly repaired. Only genuine (\nRonton parti used.\nComplete Overhaul \u2014 including I\nreplacement of worn       95(J |\nMINOR REPAIRS'...  \"\u2122*.,\nMall your Lighter to us.   .  .\n>    Promptly returned C.Q.D.      I\nLIGHTER REPAIRS LTD.  |\n671 Granville St, .\nVancouver, B.C. I\nThe Only Authorized I\nRonson Repair Depot in , \u00bb\n. British Columbia !\nUU^\nBURGESS\nFtASHLIGHT BATTERIES\nand,be assured-\u00a9.\nl-O-H-G-I-R LIFE)\nBkl\u00abHTER LI6HT\nthey ar* cliromO protested (\nl and contain\n99.9% I\nPURE\nCANADIAN\nZINC\nmm\nBURGESS\nUNl-CEL\n[fLASHLIGHT\n.^IftATTERYr*\n\u25a0\u2022_\u00a3.\nW*!!$%.\u2122\u00bb\nInn\nII\nBarefoot, Winlaw\nPace Fastball Win\nThe standings:\nPucksters  ..............   4  0  1.000\nKings .v...;.v.;. :  1 2' \u201e\u00bb3\nMonarchs    0   3    ,000\nThe Pucksters again used a\npowerful hitting attack and the\nsteady pitching of- George Barefoot to Overcome ah early Kings'\nlead and rack up their fourth\nstraight victory 16-5 in ah exciting\nsenior men's fastball fixture at the\nCivic Centre groundsI Thursday\nnight before the largest crowd of\nthe season.  \u25a0;   ; '\nThe score was actually no Indication of the strength of' the -two\nteams as the Kings' were always\nthreatening. ,\nBarefoot struck out 14 batters\nand issued only six hits. Ernie Colman, relieved by brother Dennis\nin the eighth inning, allowed 14\nhits while striking out seven Puck-\nster batters. Loose play in the Kings\noutfield was costly and accounted\nfor five of the Puckster runs.\nOutfielder Doug Winlaw was the\nleading-hitter.of the night smash'\ning out a home run and a triple\nln four trips to the plate to drive\nln foUr runs. Mayo,-Vickers, Mc-\nClenaghan, Allen, Seaby and Barefoot also drove out two hits each.\nMac. McMullln- ana Dennis Colman were ihe leading King .litters,\neach connecting for two safeties\nKings' infield turned in a smooth\nperformance and completed a\ndouble play ln the eighth Inning,\nDennis. Colman to Mao McMullln.\nNext game will be Tuesday night\nbetween the Kings and Sam\nBrown's Monarchs, in what should\nprove to be a grim struggle fOr\nsecond place.\nBatteries:\nPucksters\u2014Barefoot' and Seaby.\nKings\u2014E. Colman, D. Colman (8)\nahd Jim Ball.\nUmpire\u2014BUI Nelson.\nMitchells\nCRANBROOK, B.C., June 17 -\nMitchells consolidated their lead in\nCity League softball tonight with a\n9-3 win over' a. badly, fumbling\nSwansons nine. They now have a\nfull game lead over By* g tvhd topped standings consistently until 10\ndays ago.'. \t\nSwanson* \u201e -.... 100 020\u20143\nMitchells \u201e\u201e 1......:. 201 240\u20149\nBatteries\u2014Jim Sherrltt and Eddie\nErickson; Red Stevely and Allie\nHughes.    ' ;    -\u25a0\"    .-,,   '\nLONDON, June 17 (Reuters) \u2014\nYorkshire today defeated the County Cricket Championship leaders,\nWorcestershire, by 35 runs at Worcester,\nNottinghamshire scored a glorious\nvictory: over Leicestershire by fast\nhitting which brought 279 Yuns to\n107 minutes. ' -,.   \u2022\nTonight's scoreboard:\nAt Southampton'\u2014 New Zealand\ndefeated Hampshire by 7 wickets;\nHampshire 129 and 409; New Zealand 430 for 5 declared and 109\nfor 3.\nAt Worcester ,'\u2014 Yorkshire defeated Worcestershire by 35 runs:\nYorksbJre 210 ana 177; Worcestershire 137 and 215.\nAt Nottingham \u2014 Nottinghamshire defeated Leicestershire by 9\nwickets; Leicestershire 292 and 294\nfor 3 declared; Nottinghamshire 208\nand 279 for'.,\nAt Bristol \u2014 Combined Services\ndrew with Gloucestershire; Combined Services 346 and 300 for 7 declared; Gloucestershire 486 and 160\nfor 8.\nAt Lords \u2014 M.C.C. drew with\nCambridge; Cambridge 179 ahd 376\nfot 4 declared; M.C.C. 312 for 8 and\n144 for 6.       '       , .   - '\nLots of Excitement!\nIf They\nAre Big\nand\nPlayful\n\/\u25a0hey  come\nthat way\nwhen you\nuse\nQUALITY\nTACKLE\nTho RIGHT Tackle\nfor Fishermen\nMade In Vancouver, B.C. by.      _\nGIBBS.TOOL & STAMPING WORKS\n__j        ,    __\nBy SAM 8NEAD\nToday, we: print a picture con;\ntaining a world of golfing wisdom',\nThe dotted line at the left pictures\nthe wrong action ot swinging the\nclub ,out ahd around from the top:\nThe dotted line and arrow to the\nright .Illustrates the correct\" action\nfor the hands, which Is, that you\nshould pull them down from the\ntop, toward the right hip and never\nswing out and around. If you will\npull your hands down from the top.\nand sort ot \"gather\" your hip and\nshoulder pivot from a slow Btart,\ninstead of rushing the hip and\nShoulder' pivot, you will come dowij\nsmoothly, accurately, - lnsiderout to\nthe bait Notice the grip of the two\nhands pictured* at the top of the\nbackswing. The important part. to\nobserve, is that the left hand Is\nfirmly closed, that the wrists are\nfully cocked and all the golfer has\nto do from this top position with, a\ngrip like this, is to start , slowly,\ngathering momentum .as he goes,\nswing his hands straight down,\n'^gather\" hlB hip and shoulder pivot\nlowly and .he'll find himself ln the\ngroove, for a beautiful flight\nTrail Juniors\nHere Sunday\nNelson baseball fans will get a\nchancg to , view Trail's. dasBy\njunior baseballers Sunday afternoon when the Trallites clash yith\nthe Nelson Junior Yanks at-the\nCivic ball park at 2:80. ,...'..\nThe Trail club packs a hustling\naggregation of ball tossers on a par\nwith, most senior teams. Last week\nthey tagged the local Yanks with a\n5-1 loss on the Trail diamond in a\nfast nine' Inning pitcher's battle\nbetween'Joey Jankola and Nelson's\nRon Brown. '.'.'. i     ',-'-'\nBrown is slated to chuck again\nthis Sunday, his fourth starting\nassignment, Dune Kennedy will\nagain be back of the plate. The infield, may be shifted around as Al\nHood regular first Backer is tied up\nwith his studies. In that Wept\nJlinmy Todd wlll.rpove from..second to first and Gene Nutter will\nbe brought in from the outfield to.\nfill in at second. Cutch Mclnnes\nwill be at short and Lome Irwin1\nat third. For the outfield Rod Carmichael will be In left field, Wheat\nWhite in centre ahd Don Jarrett in\nright field. Utility fleldels will be\nJohnny Langstaff and Mel Watklns,\nBASEBALL SCORES\nNATIONAL\nBrooklyn    001 OflO 001-2 8 0\nChicago'...'. 000 001 000\u20141 6 0\nNewcbmbe and Campanella;\nHacker and A. Walker.,.    \"\nBoston ,. . 000 000 200-5   7 1\nCincinnati  400 200 Olx\u20147 ll 1\nSain, G. Elliot (4) aBrrett (7) and\nSalkeld; Cox and Cooper.\nNew York ...... 020 100 010-4' 7  2\nPittsburgh ....:. 400 010 10X\u20146   8   0\nHartung, Webb (1), Hansen (2),\nBehrman (7) and Westrum; Bonham and. MasI.:\nPhljadelphl* '.'. 200 000 402\u20148 16' ' 1\nSt Loui\u00ab ,:. 000 000 00OM)   5' 0,\nRoberts and Seminick; Brecheen,\nJohnson (7) Hearn (8)  and Rice,\nGaragiola (8).\nAMERICAN\nCleveland ,.... 800 002 302-10 8 1\nNew York'.., 001 100 200- 4 6 0\nv Lemon, Benton (7) and Hegan\nLopat Marshall (7) Byrne (9) and\nBerra. ;,'\nFirst:'- \u25a0\nChicagos ::.. 300 000 000\u20143 5 0\nBoston : 000 200 001\u20144 9 ?\nJudson and Tipton; Dobson and\nTebbetts.\nSt. louls  020 300 000\u2014B   6   2\nPhiladelphia .. 420 000 00x-8   6   1\nFannin,, ShOre (2), Ferrick (4) and\nLollar; Coleman and Guerra.  . '\nChicago , '. 020 003 003\u2014 8 1  0\nBostOrf 006 220 OOx\u201410 15   1\nWight, Plerettl (5), Shouri (Bland Wheller; McDermott, Hughson\n(8), Masterson (9) and Batts,\nColumbus'4, Indianapolis 1. '\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE    '\nRochester 11, Jersey City 7 ...\nToronto 11, Syracuse 5     '\nMontreal 12, Newark-11. -\nRichards Wins as    *\nAscot Ends\nASCOT, Berkshire, England, June\n17 (CP)\u2014The Royal Ascot, meeting\ntoday ended as lt began \u2014 with\nbright sun shining down as champ-\nplOn jockey Gordon Richards booted\nhome another winner to the delight\nof packed stands,   \u25a0 -\nIt was generally a fat Ascot for\nthe backers and a black one for the\nbookies. Ten favorites scored in 24'\nraces.\nThe King and Queen and Princess\nElizabeth and Margaret attended\neach o* the four days of* racing.\nThe King saw his good three-year-,\nold filly, Avila, scamper home\nWednesday to give him his first\nvictory In a Royal meeting.\nNags to Run fit\n'Peg for $105,400\nWINNIPEG, June 17 (CP) \u2014,\nPurses totalling $105,400rare on the\nline for the 14-day Spring thoroughbred racing program opening tomorrow at Winnipeg's Polo Park\nand the distribution Is,the highest\nfor a Spring meet in thjUMHi history.\nNo purse Is valued - nt m&than\n$1000, with daily handi_a_>M\u00bbfelng\nfrom $1200 to the $50lfl\"-addrf5Polo\nPark Handicap on tbSjSBmHday,\nJuly 4.\nPHONE 144 FOR Cl\nNewccmvers X$ve Reds\n7*2 Win Over Brakes\nBy STEVE ROBERTSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer.\nThis week's trades by the Cincinnati. Reds aria'starting, to pay\ndividends already.      \u25a0\u25a0';:-, .-*\"  .     \u25a0\nThree' .discards, front other National League teams \u2014 outtielde*s\nHarry Walker and Peanuts Lowrey;\nand catcher Walker Cooper\u2014took a\nnew lease on life Friday and presented -the Reds with a 7-2 victory\nover Boston Braves. , *\u25a0\u2022 ;'\nBetween them,,the trier got six of\nthe Reds' 11 hits, batted in or scored five runs, and stole two bases.\nWalker and Lowrey, obtalned-from\nthe Chicago Cubs Wednesday,' each\nstole on .base; and Cooper hit n\nfirst-Inning home run with two on\nbase. The Reds got Cooper, last Monday in a swap with the New York\nGiants. \"Their efforts gave . young\nHowie Fox his fourth pitching victory and sent Johnny Sain down to\nhis seventh: defeat, He has won four.\nBig Don Newcombe pulled Brpok-\nlyn Dodgers out of a minor Slump,,\npitching them, to a 2-1' win pver\nClhcago- Cubs. Newcombe twirled\na six-hitter tor his fourth straight\nmound triumph since joining the\nDodgers from their Montreal farm.\nGil Hodges singled home Duke\nSnider with thO winning run* in\nthi ninth inning,\nTRIBE SCALPS YANKS j\nIn the American League, the rapidly-rising. Cleveland Indians snowed under the league-leading New\nYork Yankees-10-4; whacking out\nfour home runs In the process. Third,\nbaseman- Ken Keltner, recently\nbenched for weak hitting, hit .two\nof the homers and knocked in four\nruns. Pitcher Bob Lemon and Larry\nDoby bit the others.. CUM Mapes\nchimed in with a homer on behalf\nof the Yanks.' -.-.\u2022'.'\nIn the first game of a day-night\ndoubleheader, the Boston Red Sox\nedged out Chicago White Sox .4-3;\nJoe Dobson survived a shaky start\nto go the route.for the Red Sox,\npitching a f Ive^hitter. *.'\u25a0',',   \u25a0\nIn the second gatne,: the Sdx\npounded out 15 hits, including three\nhome runs, to defeat the White Sox\n10^ and sweep the twi-night dou-\nbleheader. * '\u25a0;'\".- \u25a0'..   ,''\u25a0'.'   '.:\nThe advancing Philadelphia. Ath;\nletlcs took the measure of St. Louis\nBrowns-by a 6-5 count in Philadelphia, moving to within -four and\none-half games of the league-leading New York Yankees. The win\nmay prove costly, as veteran second-baseman- Pete Suder was carried off the field with a spike\nwound in the nipth inning.; >' y\n\u25a0Pittsburgh''Pirates- belted Clint\nHartung from the .box in a four-run\nfirst,-ihnirtS and went on to defeat\nthe. New York Giants 6-4. Tiny Bon.\nham was effective in* the clutches\nfor the Pirates, allowing only seven\nHits, Including Sid Gordon's llth\nhomer of the year in the eighth.\nDanny Murtaugh led the Pittsburgh squad at the plate with a\nsingle and triple, a stolen base, and\ntwo 'runs'batted,'in., -,\u25a0-\u2022'\nAt St. Louis, the .Cardinals went\ndown 8-0 before brilliant.flve-hlt\npitching by. Robin Roberts-of the\nPhiladelphia ' Phils. The Phillies\npounded Out 16 hits OM three Cardinal huriers, knocking starter Harry\nBrecheen out of the box in the seventh-lining. -,   *\nWaitkus To Play Baseball Again\nCHICAGO, June 17 (API-Eddie\nWaitkus will play Major- league\nbaseball again\u2014but probably not\nthis season\u2014says one of ithe physl-,\nclans attending, the seriously\nwounded Philadelphia Phillies'\nfirst baseman.1 -\nDr. L. L. Brawv team physician\nfor' the. Chicago Cubs, said it was\n\"Still-uncertain\", whether Waitkus,\nshot' '-early \u25a0 Wednesday near the\nheart by an-Infatuated 19-year-old\ngirl, will be back in the Phillies\nlineup this season.\n' \"But I am aulte sure,\" Dr. Brauh\nsaid* \"he*will be back playingbase-\nball: Just when it will be I cannot\nsay.\"*- '     \\'    \"\u25a0',-\u25a0\nWaitkus,  in  the  major  league\nsince 1946, currently is leading the\nNational. League first baseman * in\nthe vote for the all-star game next\nmonth. -\nThe condition' Of the 28,-year-old\nplayer today was described.*, as\n\"good\"\u2014he has \"taken, a tuSi for\nthe better but was hot quite out of\ndanger.\",'.\"\nWaitkus was shot with a .22 calibre rifle'-by<; Ruth Stelnhagen, a\ntypist who Was secretly-in love\nwith the bachelor ball slayer although she had never met him until\nshe lured him to her room in the\nEdgewater Beach Hotel Tuesday\nnight. She had told him in a letter\nand by telephone she wanted to tell\nhim \"something Important\"\nMINES\nAmal Larder J..........\u2014.......\nAnglo-Huronian \u201e\u2014~..,.\u2014\nAubepe\" \u25a0.\u201e..\u201e...,'. .'..;._._\u00bb-..\nAumwiue .; :. -,~\nAunor \u2014.\u2014-\u2014\nBase.Metals Mining .............\nJevcourt- .....*. '.\u2014\u2014\nBralorhe   -\nBrOUlan     :._i-\u2014\nBuffalo Ankerlte *. ^.,.\nBufadison      ,\nCastle-Trethewey .,\u201e...;.;\u2122.\nCentral Patricia ........ .....:\nCochenour    ......._,.....\nCorilaurutn Mines .,......\u201e\u2122...\nCons M It S .'.........\u201e._.\u201e...,...\nConwest ....,..,..\u201e,., \u00ab~_\nCrOlnor ..._...,\u201e...\u201e..,;.\u2014\nDelnite \u2122:\u2014. .....\nDiscovery ..i,._. \u201e....\u201e.^,\t\nDome Mines , \u2014 .......\nD&nalda  ........^\u2122.~_._...\nDuguesne \u2014..J.....\nEast Malartlc'..,..- ...' \u2122\nEast Sullivan , .~\nElder-.';.......... ,,.., \u2122.,...\u201e.\nEldori^ ...'........\u201e_,..\u201e.\nFalconbrldge, Nickel ~\nFrobisher  ...'. : :r.....\u201e...\nGiant YelloiVknlfe _;.. '\nGod's Lake Gold \u201e \u201e..\nGolden Manltou .  -\nHard Hock, Gold .... \u2122\u201e\nHolUHger .'...- ^.\t\nHudson Bay M & S. ;.^.\nInt Nickel ....:.\u201e.............^.u.\nInt Uranium ...........\u201e:..~.^.\u2122\nJollet Quebec .......:.\u201e..........\nKerr-Addison ._:......\t\nKirkland- Lake  ;.*\u201e._\nLabrador  , \u201e...i..-.\t\nLake Shore Mines _:_..:\u201e....\nLamaque Gold \u201e...\u201e..\u201e.\nLingman Lake. !.:....:'.\u201e.\u201e\u201e.;\nLittle Long Lac . _\u2122..\u2122\nMaCassa  \u201eu\nMacDonald  \u2122i-_\nMacLeod Cockshutt. \u25a0.'..\nMadsen Red Lake ...-.; _.\nMalartic Gold F\\ .'.\u201e......\nMclntyre-Porcupine ..._..._\nMcKenzie Red Lake .......\t\nNegus ...'.I.. ;.....,. \u201e.y,.\nNoranda ......__._.(.\nNormetal   .'. ,\u201e.\u201e.\u201e...:.\nPaymaster .\". \t\nPerron Gold .....-.....:._' is\nPickle Crow Gold \t\nPowell; Rouyn Gold .........\nReeves MacDonald .......\t\nPxgston East Donie  \u201e,.,\nQUeenston....: ,..:...:...\u2014\nQuemont ., \t\nSan Antonio Gold\t\nSen Rouyn  ..........'..\u201e_;.\u201e._\nSherrltt Gordon ,\nEDDIE WAITKUS\nRUTH STEINHAGEN\nSEEDED PLAYERS\nDUMPED IN\nCOAST TENNIS\nVANCOUVER, June 17 (CP) -\nTwo dark-horse entries made their\nmark yesterday in the Vancouver\nand: District Tennis Tournament\nplay, dumping seeded players from\nthe men's singles round. ..\n\u2022 Bill Green, a membe* of the University of San Francisco team, had\nfift^-seeded BOb Dryden on the defensive throughout in taking hiih\n6-2, 6-4,    '     '    ,-.''\nGeoff, Parkinson, who attends\nCalifornia Tech, downed sixth-seeded Ed Kemble 6-4, 8-6,-Lorne Main,\nclassy, junior, advanced easily to\nthe quarter finals as did top-seeded Walt Stohlberg,\nDOUGLAS, Isle of Mart, June 17\n(Reuters)\u2014Harol* Daniell today\nwon the Isle of Man Senior Tourist\nTrophy motorcycle race at an\naverage speed of 86.928 miles an\nhour.\nCALGARY UVKlOCk\nCALGARY, June 17 (CP) -The\nmarket closed out the week today\nwith a fair cleanup and prices were\nsteady \"at the week's decline.\nThere were liberal offerings of\ncattle during the first few days of\nthe week. Deliveries light today,\nand market draggy. Monday's trade\nwas inactive and bidding was lower, By Tuesday sales had settled,\nshowing losses of from 50 cents'.to\nll on butcher cattle and from $l.to\na on cows and medium cattle. The\nmarket closed today on that basis\nwith stacker steers at $18 top.\nThursday's saleable receipts: 18,9\ncattle, 19 calves, 69 hogs, 15 sheep.\nFriday morning's saleable -receipts:\n38 cattle, 10 calves.\nHogs sold Thursday at $32.25 for\nAs at yards and plants. Sows, $18.75\nlive weight.\nGood butcher steers, $20.50 to $21;\ncommon to medidum, $15 to $20,\nGood butcher heifers, $19 to $19.50;\ncommon to medium, $15 to $20.\nGood cows, $14.59 to $14.75; common to medium, $13.50 to $14.25,\nCanners and cutters, $10 to $13.\nGood bulls, $17.50 to $18.25; common to mediUm, $15 to $17. Good to\nchoice veal calves, $20 to $23; common to medium, $15 to $19.50, Me-\nMarket Trends\nTORONTO^ June if (CP) \u2014\nVolume slowed to a trickle in the\nqulestest session since May 23. A\nfew industrials and base metals\nshowed\" weakness -from recent\nstronger sessions and gold tightened\nslightly on small gains. Western\nbits dipped pennies.   '       ,\nNEW YORK, June 17 (AP)\u2014The\nstock market wandered aimlessly\nin one of the slowest sessions in\nyears. Turnover was at a rate of\nonly 500,000 shares or so for the\nfull session. '\n, Canadian Issues were lower with\nthe exception of Distillers Seagrams\nwhich added Vs.        ,\nMONTREAL, June 17 (CP)\u2014Industrial turnover was a weak affair.\nMining trading was light and issues\nmoved downward quietly. Papers\nand metals, led the market lower\nas utilities made, a vain attempt to\noffset the downward movement\nVANCOUVER, June 17! (CP) \u2014\nThe Vancouver stock market remained dormant. Okalta Oil lost 6\nat 1.26 and Royal was off 5 at 6.30,\nIn the mines Pioneer lost 10 at 3.20.\nIndustrials and unlisted mines were\nquiet.\nMONTREAL, June 17 (CP) -\nTrading was generally quiet. Dominions were firm with the exception of the middle term issues which\ntended tq ease slightly. In provincials, the new Nova Scotia's\nexcited the most interest. *\n,. LONDON, June 17 (Reuters) \u2014\nthe stock. exchange was colorless\nwith trading volume small, prices\nwere inclined to drift to lower\nlevel*. \u25a0*\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, June 17 (CP)-rWin-\nnipeg cash prices: ' ,   ,\nOatt: No. 1 Feed, 75%.\n< Barley-No. 1 Feed,-1.15%.\nDOW-JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials\u2014163.78 off .16.\n20 rails\u201442.22 up .11.\n15 utlUtles-i-33.82 o\u00ab .24.\ndlum to good stocker and feeder\nsteers; $16.50 to $18. \u2022\nSpring lambs, $26 to $27. Good\newes, $9 to $10.50.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nSladen Malartlc.... .......\nStadacona ,.\u201e....\nSteep Ropk ,..\u201e.._.\n1:C Resources  .'\u201e...\u201e.,'\u201e\nTaku River Gold Mines ....\nTeck-Hughes Gold  .....\nToburn Gold Mines \u201e.....:...\nUpper .Canada ;\t\nVentures  _.\nWaite Amulet \u201e...\u201e\u201e\u201e\nWright Hargreaves .\t\nOIL8 '\u25a0> \u25a0'< ' ,\nBritish! American' \u201e.\u201e.\u201e,\u201e.\u201e,\nBritish- Dom -  ......\n-Imperial .'. ..:.:;\u201e_,..-.\u201e.\u201e\u201e:_.,\nInter Petroleum ......... .\nRoyalite ;, ,.\u201e_;\u2122_.\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power \t\nAluminum ,,.,,..\u2014\u201e ,._u\nBell Telephone ....,.'\u201e,....\u201e.\u201e\n.12\n8,80\n.10\n.12 \u201e\n3.10\n-    .21\n'\u25a0* .19 \u25a0\u25a0\n.. \u2022 8.70\n: -'W '\n\u25a01,60\n.11*\n1.44\n-..67,\n2,34\n- .17%\n81.75:\n\u20227tfH\n-.50 .\n\" 1.85 .\n,-' .22\n17.35\n.37\n.50\n1.99 \u2022\n. 1.70\n,    .30\n. ,-.43\n,8.25\n1.88\n5.50.-\n'.81--\n1,58\n.17\n9.35\nB9.7B -\n29.88\n..25%\n.26\n\u202217.45'\n1,25\n3.20\n13,15,\n6.18-\n'.,-,80,\n.61 \u2022\n1.99\n2,73\n,80\n2.5S\n2,23\n57,25\n.37 .\n. 2.03\n50,25\n1.80\n.30  .\n- ,60-\n1.78\n' .60\n1.51\n1.35   <\n.12\n12.00\n1.45\n.30\n.42\n1.33\n.55\n.20\n. 2.95\n-,   ,44%\n1.20   \u25a0\n4.00\n7.15\n-  2-12\n23.00\n.20\n16,65\n7.15\n,6.35\n10%\n5%\n40%\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 18,1949\u20147\nBrazilian; Traction\t\nBrewers & Dlst ....i...\u201e\u2122.\nB C Slectrlo Pfd ....\t\nB C Power. A\u25a0'-.'. _\u2122\nB C Bower B \u201e.\nB CPlilp\t\nBurns & Co 'Class A .,\nBurns & Co Class B ...\nCan Brew  *: _\nCan' Celanese ..................\nCan tlement ....,...\u201e\u201e\nCan Ind Alcohol ....\u201e\u201e_\nCan Malting: .....,.\u201e\u201e...;\t\nCan Packers A ;......\u2122..\nCan Pac Railway .\u201e..\u201e..\nCons Paper'.,:..... .\u201e\u201e\nDist Seagrams \u201e..* ...\nDom Textile\nFanny Farmer ;.**\u201e'\u201e-\u201e\u201e\nFord of Canada A ...\nI8V4\n.13%\n89\n25%\n2%\n70\n24%\n15%\n19%\n19%\n22%\n8%\n47%\n29%\n12%.\n.14%\n15%\n11%\n32\n21%\nGatlneau     [ ....\u201e._\u201e.\nGen. Steelwares ...........\nGeorge, Westoii .._;.\nGypsum Llmo ................\nHiram .Walker  ..\u2014\nH R MacMlUan A ..\u2122..\nH R MaoMiUanB -\u2122\nImperial OU :...: ..-\nImperial Tobacco (....-_\nInter Nickel \u2122\u2014\nLoblaw A ............\nMassey Harris.'.'J^^i.\nMcGollFront   ,,- ,',\u201e,:,\nMoore Corp ._..\u201e_\nPage Hershey ... \u201e.\nPowejl River'.. .\u25a0\u201er\u201e.,\nPOwer.Corp , .'.:.\t\nShawinigap ...;\t\nSteel of Canada: ....,.,\nUnited, Steel\t\n17%'\n13%'\n24\n.14%.\n25%\n.8%,\n6%\n17\n18%\n.29%\n28\n'\u00ab \/\n12\n66\n.41%\n35'\n13%,\n,23%\n81\n'6%\nJUNIOR\nBASEBALL\nF.A.C. Junior Yanks\n\u25a0y'i.'y     '*;V8.- ;    \u25a0 \u25a0.,..' .,\nTrail Juniors   ,\nMOVING\nWITH CAM\nEVERYWHERE\nHOUSEHOLD FURNITURE MOVEMENT\u2014Iy VAN to\nand from any point in British Columbia ... Alberta\n... Saskatchewan . . .Manitoba ., . Ontario . \u2022. .\nQuebec and Marltimes.\nINVESTIGATE THIS FAST, UF TO DATE MITHpD\nOF SIMPLIFIED MOVING ... A call to Nelson 1106\nwill bring a traffic representative to you . . . with\ncomplete information. '        ' .\n'.    LOCAL MOVING and STORAGE\nWilliams Van Lines Ltd.\niUViTARbST.   *.       'HONE 1106\n'l?XX     nelson, i.e.'*-.'\n303 Dominion Bank Bldg., Phone TA 4930\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA FOREST SERVICE\nDEI'ARTMINT OF  LANDS AND   l-'ORESTS\nC    O   ORCHARD HON    I    T.   KF\n TODAY'S News Pictures\nKuie, Kuddlie Kinsman Kueens >   *\nm * \u2022\n. But  don't  let them fool  you. They're  Just\nmembers ot the Nelson Kinsmen, Club caught In\na capricious moment while parading on Baker\nStreet recently In connection with the'July 1\ncelebration Queen Contest. From left P. K. Lyman,\nAllan Barton, A. G. Cooke, J. H. Nuyens, W. C.\nHancock and J. E. Keegan. The* driver Is Ft. .C.\nWelton.\u2014Vogue photo.   , : \u25a0 \u2022  -. ;\nMarried 50 Years\nQuick Work\nSaved Two\/\nOhtheAir\nSATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1949\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014Sign'On\n7:05\u2014Top,of the Morning\n8:00-'CBC News\n8:16\u2014Pick of.'the Hits\n8:30\u2014Story Time\n9:00\u2014BBC Newii.\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Melodies for Juniors\n10:00\u2014The Notice Board\n10:4\u00a3t-CBC. News\nHiOO-rFestlval of: Choirs\n12:00\u2014Saturday Magazine\nllOfr-rHighroads of Song\n-liSOr-^Tirtie for Music\n2:0_r-Ballet Club '.\u25a0':\u25a0\n2:4_-^Thi\u00bb Week\n3:00\u2014Piano Classics\n3:15\u2014CBC tiivia.;;\n3:30\u2014Divertimento     ;*. \u201e\n' 8:45\u2014Sports Review\n4:00\u2014News .. \"   . '\u2022   .:\n4:15\u2014Here's to Romance   \u25a0:-..\n' 4:S0-\"-Peerless News'\"\n4:45\u2014Lake Success\n'SjOtt\u2014Sacred. Heart\n5:15\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n5:45-Bpbrts College .        \u25a0\n6:00t-CBC Newa\n8:15\u2014Songs for Slmbne   ;\n\u25a0'6:80\u2014Quintet W  :\".>.\n7:-(h-Politlcal Talk    ~     '..'.*.\n7:30\u2014McDonald All Starr, r\n9:00\u2014Bob Lyons Orchi * -     >\n. 8:00\u2014Red River Bam Danco\nBAtC-Old Favorites    *\n9:15\u2014Meet Gazelle\n-9:30\u2014Quiet Please, A.B.C.\n10:00\u2014Age cf Reptiles, S,\n10:30\u2014Dal Richards' Orch.\nIl:00-Sign Off. 1  * .    ',-\nCJAT\n810 ON THE DIAL\n6:30\u2014News\n6:35\u2014Breakfart Parade - ,\n7:00\u2014News '.'','\":';   '\u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0\n7:30:-News - *  -\n7:40---Breakfast Parade\n8:00\u2014CBC News   . ,\n8:15\u2014Five Minutes of Fine Music\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Parade\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n0:30\u2014Melodies for Juniors * '\n10KJO\u2014Market Matinee\n10:15\u2014Saturday Review\n10:45\u2014News. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\"'.\n11:00\u2014Mid Morning Melodies\n12:00\u2014Saturday Magazine\n1:00\u2014Afternoon ReceSs ,\n1:30\u2014Time for MuSlo: * *\n2:00r-Ballet ClUb '   ..   \u2022\n2:45\u2014U.B.C. Talks. .;.    '.*.*\n3'00\u2014Platter Party\n8:45\u2014Canada at Work\n4:0ft\u2014My SOnfefor You\n4:15\u2014Here's- to Romance\n\u25a04:30\u2014Armdale Chorus\n4:45\u2014Lake Success,\nSiOO\u2014Prog. Conservatives\n5:05\u2014Musical Program\n5:30\u2014Top Bands \u25a0 *,''...\nfi:4S^-Mus'cM Program\n6:55\u2014Federal CCF.\n6:00\u2014CBC News     \".\n6:10\u2014The Mahons\n6:30\u2014Ray Norris Quintet\n7:00\u2014Prog. Conservative 0, Drew\n7:15-:lo Be Announced   :\u201e...:,?\n7:30\u2014MacDonald AU- Start\n7:45\u2014O'Connor. Trio      '-.\"\n,8i00\u2014Red River Bsirri\u00abDancr''\n8:30^-Current and Choice: ;\n9:00\u2014Band, of the Week     ' ,\n9:30\u2014Saturday Night Hayrlde\n10:00\u2014News \u25a0 '>.'\u25a0\n10:15-T-Adventures\n10:30-rDal Richards Orchestra\n10:45\u2014Prov. Coalition. .\nHlOOr-Request Program\nli:55-CBC News \"\u25a0\u25a0\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nA young couple parked at a\nNew York pier watched the sudden plunge of a car over tho embankment, carrying a young boy\nahd girl Into the river. They ran\nfor help, hailed a passing cab,\nand a dramatic rescue ensued.\nThe driver, Anthony Dlejlo, dove\nIn.and brought both to the surface. Here the car Is being pulled\nto the dock.   ,\nSUNDAY, JUNE 19, 1949\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nThe May Queen and her attendants who took part In ga\/ May\ncelebrations at Rcnata on the Arrow Lakes are shown here.'The\nQueen Is Ida- Ulml, and her attendants aro Louise Delorme, Helen\nand Ndrene Prlesen and Gertrude Harms.\nNew Design for Jet-Powered Plane\nmmbMssmm\n\u2014Central Press'Canadian\nA series of tests are being conducted by U. S. research engineers   '\nat Muroc Air Base, Calif., with the Consolidated Vultee Model 7002\nJet plane. The craft, pictured here from three different angles, was\nbuilt to prove the design superiority of the delta wing configuration\nover conventional \"sweptback\"\"wing styles\/Engineers say the triangular wing offers far lest drag ahd therefore provides greater performance during flights made in tho transonic and supersonic speed   '\nranges.\nREAL   FISH   STORY\n\u2014Charlie Hollls, of North East-\nham, Mass,, lifts the 45-pound\nstriped bass ho caught with a\nhome-built cane rod In the surf\nat Nauset Beach, Cape Cod,\nTORONTO (CI>)\u2014A collection of\nBach music has, been donated to the\nToronto pblio libraries by Bruce\nCarey, Hamilton-born musician- who\ngained International famp as conductor of the Bach oholr of Bethle-\nham, Pa. It includes a complete set\nof tho confutes, more than 60 with\nfull score.\nCRAjSBERRY PORTAGE, Man.\n(CP) \u2014 Construction of an aircraft\nlanding strip here for use tourists\nIs being considered -by owners of\nAthapap Lodge. At present nying\nguests must leave their planes at\nthe Pas and - continue to* Cranberry\nFOrtage by road.\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask. (CP)\u2014\nMyles, Charles, 10-yearrold Indian\nboy, was missing one morning recently from,the Prince-Albert Sanatorium. He was 'inally discovered\nhot-footing it down a road, clad\nonly in a white nightshirt and heading for home 100 miles away.   '\n55\u2014Sign On .'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.\n:00\u2014BBC News\n15\u2014World Church\n30\u2014Quiet Music '*.\n:00\u2014B.C. Gardener\n15-\u2014Just Mary *\n:30-tMus1C In Worsfcip\n:45-7Bible Stories\n:00\u2014P.eerless News \u2022   .-'\".'-.'\n: 15\u2014Cheerful Music\n30\u2014Religious Period.'\nOO^CBC Symphony Orchestra\n,30\u2014Churoh bf the Air, -'\n45\u2014Cheerwl Music*\n00\u2014Capitol Report'*\nSO\u2014Critically Speaking\n:00\u2014Alan and Me   -.'\n:30\u2014Harmony Harbour  .\n:00\u2014Weekend Review\n:15\u2014John Fisher\n:30\u2014Les Chansons' de Paris\n:00\u2014Fred Allen\n:80\u2014Peerless News\n:00\u2014CBC News\n;30\u2014Family Theatre\n:00\u2014SUmmer Theatre\n:00\u2014Old Favorites '\n:30\u2014Winnipeg Orchestra\nflO\u2014Classics for Today\n:30\u2014Gospel Choir\n:00\u2014CBC News\n:I5\u2014Trail Tales\n:3b\u2014Sign Off\nCJAT\n610 ON THE E-IAL\n8:00\u2014News\n> 8:15\u2014Melodic Mopds   ,\n'\u25a0 8:30\u2014Lutheran Hour   \\\n9:00\u2014BBC'- News and Commentary\n9:15\u2014World Church Newa\n. 9:30\u2014Fulujess of Time\n10:00\u2014Gospel HaU Hour\n10:30\u2014Kostelanetz Conducts\n10:45-r-News\n11:00\u2014Knox Church Service\n12:00\u2014CBS Symphony \u2022\n1:30\u2014Church of the Air\n2:00r-Capltal Report    ,     ,\n2:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n3:00\u2014Alan and Me!     ';.-'\n3125\u2014Neivs and Weather\n3:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n4:00\u2014Weekend Review\n4:15\u2014John Fisher Reports\n4:30\u2014Les Chansons de Paris*\n5i00\u2014Fred Allen Show;*,\n\"5:30\u2014Les Petites Symphonies\n6:00-rCBC News .    \u25a0\n6:10\u2014Summer Serenade\n6:30\u2014Albums of Familiar Music\n.7:00\u2014Summer Theatre\n7:30\u2014Symphonic Band.\n8:00\u2014Ozzle and Harriet\n8:30\u2014Winnipeg Sunday Concert\n9:00\u2014Sunday Quiet Time\n9:30\u2014Hour of St. Francis    '\n9:45\u2014Cathedral Hour\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Sports Cavalcade\n10:30\u2014Prelude to Midnight\n11:55\u2014CBC News\n12:00\u2014Sign off,, . The ______\n .\n\u25a0\n'\"' ,\n:^(\u00a3>2>\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nBIRTHS\n(3BAHAM\u2014To Mr. and Mrs, Alex\n\u2022aham, of Fruitvale, B.Cr,;at Ma-\n\u25a0 Mlserlcordiae Hospital In Ross-\nid, June,-'16i a, daughter.\nHELP RANTED\nANTED - RELIABLE\". MAN- AS\nlealer in Nelson- Experience not\nnecessary. *A fine upporlUnlty to\nstep into old profitable,business\nwhere Rawleigh' Products'have\nbeen sold, for* years. 'Big profits,\nhodifcts furnished '\u25a0 onA-credit.\nWrite, Rawleigh- Dept. N6-FJ53-\n16...Winnipeg. \u25a0-.-:\u25a0 ... :    \"\u25a0 ,  '\u25a0\u25a0-*\nELS WANTED \u2014 ANY GIRLS\ninterested in learning packing\nind sorting apples and doing so\ntor twoior three months' please\nipply to P.O. Box 430, Vernon,\n3.C. Comfortable clean cabins\nwith water, stoves, beds and other\nlurnishings provided,\n'UDENTS, OTHERS. \u2014 OUT TO\nnake money this Summer? Make\n115.00 and' up a day selling\nPolyethylene plastic ware. Its\ntew, different and selling fast. A\nsustomer In every house. Write\nHoward Willson, 593 Sutherland\na.ve\u201e Kelowna, B.C\nANTED\u20142 MEN FOR DAUtV\nFarm, must be used to milking\nmachines, year round Job, married or single. Apply, S. J. Ralph,\nBox 534, Kimberley, B. C,\nIDGER, KEEPER,' MICHEL, B.C.\n\"kddress applications to V?. Thom-\nipn, Me Crow's-Nest Pass Coal\n3o!, Ltd., Fernles B.C.    ,   '    ,*\n\u25a0PERIENCED WAITRESSES\nranted.,Apply- Standard Cate\nAITRESS WANTED \u2014 ALSO'\nlashier.. Apply Golden Gate Cafe.\nSITUATIONS.WANTED\n)D JOB MAN. PH. 256-R. Carpen-\n;er. pipe fitting, kalsomlnlng.\nPERSONAL\nAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nrarance, Co. P. L. Kerr, Agent\n)R SPENCER SUPPORTS,\nihone Mrs. T. A. Gibson, 1436.\nNentsi birTh control iN-\ntormatlon, and catalogue of hy-\n[ienic supplies. Write Western\nDistributors, 01-L Ray Building,\nVancouver.'\nFREE FROM CORN OR CAL-\nous you'd be\u2014for Lloyd's Corn\nlalve your druggist you must see.\n0C at Heury, Argyle and Mann\n)rug. Stores.\nWS PERSONAL DRUG SUN-\nIries, 10 Deluxe assorted $1.00,\n(tailed in plain sealed wrapper,\nfinest quality, tested, guaranteed.\nJSrgain catalogue free. Western\njistributors. Box 24RN, Regina.\nfully Insured and Guaranteed\nCANADA DEPARTMENT'\n'.'.'; . bF AGRlCULTORi;   \"\nPrairie Farm Rehabilitation Act\nTENDERS\nSealed 'tenders' will be received\nby the undersigned until 2:00 o'clock\np.m. Regina Time, -Monday July U,\n1040, tor the construction qf-flume's\nand' canals, together.with -appurt-\nment structure j necessary for a diversion from Bear Creek into Rose\nValley. The work extends,from lot\n2177 to lot 489, in the Osoyoos Land\nDistrict of British \"Columbia -and\nabout \"ve miles West of Kelowna,\n. Tenders must be submitted on\nthe forms attached to the specifications in the. envelope provided.\nThe .following are the main items\nof work and the approximate quantities of each:*, , *'.''' , ',*\n1. Clearing , 46. acres\n2. Stripping 1500 squares\n3. Backfall 800 cu. yd.\n4. Hand.vexcavatibn       200 cu yd.\n5. Common excavatio: .  \",-\n\u25a0    12,700 cu. yd.\n6. Canal excavation ' 4000 cu. yd.\n7. Rock excavation,.     500 cu. yd,\n8. Timber supplied and\nerected -358 m.f.b.m.\n9. Metal flume, supplied       ,\nand erected ,       8775 Un! ft.\nFlans, specifications -and form of\ncontract are on view at the following P.FJR.A. Offices:\n418 Public Building, Calgary, .Alberta;   ' :    ,'\u25a0 * \u25a0;':'\u25a0\"\nP-FJliA., The Airport, Lethbridge,\nAlberta;   .; *    .' ' '       *',-:.\n910 McCallum Hill Bldg., Regina,\nSaskatchewan;   .* .-. *,   .\nV.L.A. Building, Victoria Avenue,\nKamloops,' B.C.\nPlans, specifications and tender\nforms forbidding, may be obtained\nfroth tha;Undersigned at his office\nin Regina, Saskatchewan, and from\nthe P.F.R.A., Office In Kamloops,\nB.C., upon the deposit of Ten Dollars (fl.), cash or a certified check\nfor the amount, payable to the Receiver General of Canada, which deposit will be redeemable opun the\nreturn Of the plans and specifications in good order .within one\nmonth after tenders have closed.\nAny tenders which are hot prepared strictly in accordance with\nthe \"Instructions to'Bidders\" may\nbe rejected.\nThe lowest or any tr'ndo'- not necessarily accepted.      *    >       * - *\nBy Order ; .\nL. B, Thomson,\nDirector of Rehabilitation,\n910 McCallum Hill Building,\nRegina, Saskatchewan..\n(GIENIC SUPPLIES (RUBBER\nfdodst twelve samples for 50c,\niostpald in plain sealed wrapper.\nCatalogue Included listing hooks\nmarriage and modern methods\n,f feminine hygiene. General'Nov-\nIty Co, Dept 'N\\ 71 Major St..\ntoronto, Ont\nif\niRRIED OR ENGAGED? WoH-\nled or troubled? Then you'must\nead the unusual, virile book\n\u25a0Facts of Life.\" Recommended by\nOlnlcs, doctors, to solve intimate\niroblems. 25c postpaid. Guarantied. Medical: Publications, 87\nStation F, Toronto 6.\nUNWANTED HAIR\nUnwanted hair eradicated froin\nthe human body permanently\nwith Saco-Pelo ointment the remarkable discovery ot the age.\nSaco-Pelo kills the roots' of any\nsalrl\nXOR-BEER   LABORATORIES\n679 Granville St, Vancouver\nINSURED\nAUTO LOANS\n$50 to $1,000\nProtection ahd speed are the\nkeynotes of Niagara Auto Loans.\nAt no extra cost a life Insurance\npolicy takes care of your unpaid loan balance in case of\ndeath. This valuable benefit is\nsufficient reason in. itself for\nborrowing from Niagara when\nyou need money.\nAn Auto Loan requires only\nowner's signature and places\ncash in your hands within a few\nminutes. Vou carr select a plan\nto suit you quickly. In strict\nirlvacy. Phone first for faster\nINSURED loans.\nNIAGARA\nFINANCE. COMPANY LIMITED\n.     Est'd. 1930\nSuite 1, 560 Baker St, Nelson\nPHONE 1095   .       '\nIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nArriving Saturday, 18th June\nCarload\nHeavy, young, well-broken   ,\nHorses;,*'\/\nAT C.P.R. STOCK YARDS\nDick Kleef, RJ*.. 1, Nelsoh\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nMUST SELL-BLUE AND-WHITE\nenamelled cupboard, 5%' x 244' x\n4', glass front 40 sq. feet of shelf,\n4 shelves. Two new blue and\nwhite!'enamelled'chairs and radio.\nBargain $25.00. New youths' bed\nand mattress. Baby crib and mattress. High chair and rug, all for\n$40,00, Dormeyer-mix-master and\nattachments, 2 doz. sealers, elect,\ntoaster, $22,50. Miners' safety toe\nrubber boots. High* rubber laced\nboots, trainman's lamp; bargain,\n$6.00. 618 Victoria Street\nFOR SALE-7-COMPLETE\nequipment of small bakery.\nOven capacity* 125 loaves.\nInventory on application. D.\nSt Denis, Nelson, B.C,\nFOR SALE\u2014THREE PIECE CHES-\nterfield suite; six .piece bedroom'\nsuite; range; tank, etc.; heater,\nkitchen, set extras. 609 Third\nStreet,.Nelson,-B.C. .,, ' ,\nSTANDARD RECEIPT BOOKS, i 4\nreceipts to page with duplicate\nsheets. Nelson Daily, News Print-\nIng Department.\nFOR SALE - BEDROOM SUITl_i\nBeatty washing machine. Apply\n1119 Hall Mines Road or phone\n1250-R evenings,\nFOR SALE\u201416': WOODS* FLOOR\npolisher and scrubber. Hedge\ntrimmer, counter, Whiz Machine.\nBox 5.25 Dally News.\nFOR SALE\u2014KRESKY OIL BURN\ner for pook stove. Used four\nmonths. Also barrels. Phone 936-L\nor,call at Jim's Radiator Shop,\nFOR SALE - McLAGAN \"GRAND\nMaster\" eight piece solid \"walnut\ndining room suite. Phone 820-L\nafter six p,m.\nFOR SALE-I ACRE UNCUT HAY,\nMrs. M,' Sikorski, Innes St, Rose-\nmont See in mornings. -      \u25a0 .,\nJACK BOYCE GUM EXCHANGE\nGuns .tor sale and exchange and\nexfrert gun repairing.\nSTEEL ICE BOX, AS NEW, $40.00;\nsaddle $10.00; creamer cans, F, H.\nChanter,. North Shore, R.R.I.\nFOR SALE \u2014 CORONA PORT-\nable typewriter. Like new. $35.\n214 Silica Street.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\n1. A reolly^nke home, three\nbedroonjs, large, living room.\nWhite modern kitchen, dining:\nroom, living room and'dining'\nroom have coast, fir- polished\nfloors. A-l basement, cement\nfloor. Situate on three beautiful\nview corner lots, lawn, flowers\nand fruit. Definitely one. of the\nbest'locations in Nelson. Unobstructed view of Lake.\nTerms .arranged,'     '.46750'\n2. An excellent Fairview home:\n\u25a0 containing  4  bedrooms,  good r\nbathroom, large living room and  -\nalcove   with. open   fireplace,\nseparate dining room, also extra\nw'asH'room' on   ground  floor.\nLarge  yerandah  overlooking.-\nFairview, with,, beautiful. vl<sw-.,\nof mountains and lake. First'\n\u25a0 class basement, cement foundation, oil furnace, garage. All\nsituated on 5' lovely garden lots,\nlawns, fniit trees- and flowers, r\n-\u25a0' etc. Small attraotive stream adr\n\u00a3^\u201e.; $?500\n3. A very beautiful home Just,.,\ncompleted, fully modern, instil-'\nated. About 16 miles up the\nlake with beautiful lake frontage, several acres with it; Also'-\nexcellent garage, worth, about\n$1500.00.  In  addition to, main \u2022\u25a0\nresidence, there is a new guest .\ncdttage.   All   told, .there   are.\nabout 10. acres with about 800.\nfeet lake frontage. Price and ,\nterms on request-   \u25a0\u25a0\"'-\n*\u25a0 .--\". - . ALSO'. .\n. 4. A small 2 bedroom cottage.'\nHas living room and bright\nkitchen. Toilet and wash basin\nbut' no bath, this could be' installed quite readily. Stone and*\ncement foundation, -small basement. Situate in Fairview on\n1% garden lots Requires about\n$1500.00 cash. If interested come\nin and talk It over,. $2650'\nPrice1 ,.-.T      , :.:,,\n5. A fine, country home and'8\nrentable cottages, Fruit trees\nand   small   fruits,   bulbs   and\nf lowers, excellent water supply, '\nall modern conveniences, located 1% miles from Nelsoh-on..\nmain . highway. House alone\nworth $6500. When houses ih\ntown are so expensive Lsuggesl\nyou look at this property ahd\nprocure   a ' fine   home   and\nS^ice 1 , $7000\n6. A very Ibvely new home,\nbeautiful large living rooms\nand open fire place, oak floors\/\nhot water heating. This house\nis only recently built and\nplanned for owner by an architect See plans in my office.\nfstera,.s: $10,500\n7. Here is another-home, just*\nlike new, all beautiful rooms, '\nand .white  kitchen.  In  other\nwords  an  vp ,to date  home;\nExcellent foundation, drive in ;!\ngarage,   hot   water   heating.\nLocated   on   property' 100x69\nfeet. Lovely flower garden and\ngqod bearing[fruit $(0,500\ntrees. Some terms 'T,\"\u00bb\"\";.\u2022-;\n8 I have just had listed one of\nNelson's   well   known ' homes, j\n-excellent corner in (food residential district Contains 3 splendid bedrooms, exceptionally\nlarge cupboards- and linen\nclosets. A large sun room also\ndining room and living room.\nHot water heating. Open fire-\nPrice .s\u00b0\u2122!...t\"^B:. $8750, -\nReal Estate and Insurance,\nEstablished 38 years    :\nG.iV.Appleyard\nESTABLISHED 38 YEARS \u25a0\n- NELSON, B.C.     ...\nSPORNSALI; \u2014 SUMMER. HOME,\n\\ furnished,. S. rms\u201e 9' acres,* choice.\n\u25a0 lake frontage, 7 miles from SobV\nson on  Arrow  Lakes, Mth or\n, without .cabin launch. ' phone\n423-R Nelsoh,\nSUMMER .COTTAGE .ON. BEACH\n'.. seven miles from Nelson. 3 rooms,\n-stone fireplace, verandah overlooking the lake. \u2014 $1500., TV-.\n'Hulls, 504 Fifth Street Nelson.\nFOR SAIBt-NICE HOME, CLOSE\nth, on 2 lots, with fruit trees and\nlawn,'. 6 roonjs and bath. Price\n$6000.00, vfo'r quick Sale. Apply\nBox 6185 Dally News';\"   \u2022\nPIPE - FITTINGS-TUBES, SPE-\nclai low* prices; Active Trading\nCo. 916 Powell St., Vancouver.\n48 BASE PIANO ACCORDION.\nCan be seen at Morgan's Second\nHand Store?\nFOR SALE \u2014 BELL PIANO, Excellent condition. $375. Phone\n277-Y.\nBELTONK HEARING, AID. PJSR-\nfectly new. Never used. Reduced\nprice. Phone 745-L-3,\nNEW   WINE   GABARDINE   SUIT\nfor sale. Size 18. Phone 703-L.\nFOR SALE \u2014 LADIES' BICYCLE\nahd cardboard closet. Ph. 1321X.\n|R SALE - YOUNG LOGGING\nlorsc, approx. 1800 lbs., or team.\nIVm. Verigin, Slocan City, B.C.\nIW FOR, SALE\u2014FRESH 2 MOS.\nind calf. Apply Paul Osachoff,\nSlocan'Park,, B.C.    '\nANDING HAY FOR SALE NR.\n3'olf Club. Mrs. Luciakl Rosemont.\nFOR SALE\u2014EASTMAN CAMERA\nwith case ahd tripod, Ph, 1378-Y.\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nENROLL NOW. \u2014 FALL TERM\ncommencing September 1st. For\ncomplete commercial course. Nelson Business College, 107 Baker\nSt. Phone'603,\nCIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS,\nPrepare now tor. Summer examinations. Write M.C.C. Civil Service\nSchool, 301 Enderton Bldg., Wln^\nnipeg, Man. .       \u25a0,\nTODAY'S BUYS :\n'\u25a0...   dt.:.\nMODERATE PRLCES\nSIX ROOM HOUSE.:on three\nlots, living- dining room combination; large kitchen,, bedroom, bathroom 'with tub, two\nbedrooms upstairs. Full'basement, cement foundation, central heat With $1000 tAKflfl\ndown. Price .:...... .\u2022Pf'3\"\"\nBUNGALOW on lot 50x120,\nlawn and garden. Living room,\ndining room, bedroom, modem\nthree piece bath, kltehan. Cedent foundation; Hot 4\/1400\nwater heat Price ....   \u00abP'*'*WV\nCLOSE IN    ,\nLarge living room, kitchen with\ncupboards, bedroom, sewing\nroom and large bath room on\nmain floor, all nicely decorated\nand bright. Three bedrooms upstairs. Full basement new furnace. Grounds ln lawn' and\nflowers, garden and fruit frees.\nExcellent $4500\nbuy at \u2014 \u2014. ~.       .\nFor further details phone  -1'\nMISS FRISBY~717\nT. D. 'Rosling:\n: Ward St.\n. Box 283\nFully Modern Home\nGood outbuildings,, lots fruit\ntrees. Good' gor.den. Full\ncejnent.tas^nnertt. Hot-air\nhipting. insulgted. On VA\nacres, oh Nelson-Trail high-\n\u2022way, 1 Vi miles from Nelsoh.\nPhone 186-Y-h       ,--~^.r\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FAnMS\n\u2022\u25a0' .    ;.,',\u25a0\u25a0 (Cbntinuedl ' ;\nFOR - SALB- A.\u201e.-I\u00abVl. ,.;R00M\n, house ih Falrview. district. Stone\nfoundation. Concrete,' flppr'jin\nbasement Piped furnace,' One\nbedroom on ground, floor. Living\nroom. * Bright,; modern > kitchen,\nModern' bathroom,, If wo bedrooms\nup. Glassed .'front porch.' Abput\n4 \u201e lot?. Garden,; fruit trees, - etc;\nGarage. Chicken house. All buildings in excellent condition.' A\nlively View of >lake aifd mouiit-r\nains. -8iu will pass, about one\ntjlOC).,,away. Phone JDH-H..\nftfo SALU lk>I.0S\u00a7LAN-\n. Modern1 flat roof \"house. Newly\nbuilt with' ill,: t'oonjs and '.bjlth.\nHardwood floors, full> basement\ncompleto with furnace and.garage. Near Trail. Road, one block\nfrom Columbia Avenue, Fqr full\nparticulars phone 353 during! Of-\n.flce hoiirs'and. SS-rY^ .after 6:00\np.m. or write Box, 84, Rossland,\nB'G.\" \"\n3 room: siwcco pmqsEm?\n'Ished, attractive, modern,-acre of\nland on highway at Willow Point\n> Close to 7, (Question Mark) stbrei\n\u2022 FuU Price $3600. $590 down, OSvn-\n*r, Q. Petarson; 562.E, 51 Vaacou-\n.'vet,. B.-G,Fraser '1567.    *\nMODERN HOME FOR SALE. -\nImmediate occupancy. 3 corner\nlots; lovely garden .and fruit'\ntrees; Living room, dining room,\n3 -bedrooms, -modern .'. kitchen.\nAttractive buy, Apply P.* E\nPoulin, 682 .Ward Street, Nelsoh\n180 ACRES FOR SALE. 8 ROOM\nhouse yflth Watjr in. 4oth'er.farm\nbuildings. 2'acres orchard, 5 other\nacres-cleared; On main higl>way.\n2 miles E. of Kootenay: Bay* Box*\n.7193 Daily Newu   '\nBEACH PROPERTV FOR SALE \u2014\nIdeally situated 3 miles from Nelson' on South 'Shore. Opposite\nKokanee Lodge.; Apply to P.O.\nBox 41, Nelson,: B.C.\n4 ROOMED HOUSE, -FULL BASE-\n'ment, 2 lots. All'In garden: close\nto schools, $2900 cash, Apply 1207\nCrossley .Avenue.\nFOR'SALF AT BALFOUR-3-RM.\nhouse 'vith large front porch. Nice\nbeach- 'frontage; close-.to: ferry\nlanding. Apply O- Krane, Balfour,\n14-ROQM HpUSE ON CAR LINE.\nFull basement Con.be developed\n\u25a0 into good revenue, producer. See\ns J. ChesJ! 524 Vernon St &\nFOR SAL]E. \u2014 HOME AT KASLO.\n1 acre fruit. Bargain price. Apply\nMr.,'Brett 212\" High St., Nelson.\nFOR SALE \u2014 NICE HOUSE IN\nSouth Slocan. Apply Box 5931\nDaily News.\nT AOoMHousE;.PARTLY' Fur-\nnished, 2 lots, bus route, $4000\ncash. Phpne 75^-H.\nWANTED TO BUY \u2014 SMALL\nmodern house- in town. Phone\n4-7-X.\nFOR SALE\u2014ONE OF NELSON'S\nbest semi-bungalows. Ideal loca-\ntlon.,.903 Josephine St. Ph, 394-X.\nBOATS and ENGINES\n1938 WILLYS ENGINE FOR SALE.\n48. H.P. reconditioned, gqod ,for\npower unit boat or, car. Price\n$125. Transmission extra, - also\nparts to make ,up a car trailer,\nincluding, 6.00x16 tires, $25. Also\na few .used-Willys \u25a0 car parts.\n.Phone 1242-Y,.' '* .*    .*\u25a0'\"\":      '-.,\nWELL FITTED CABIN CRUISER\n'.'Blue Chi_>': for eale. 82' x, 1>k\nbeam, with;2 year old,Universal\nmarine motor. Can be seen at\nKaslo Marine Service or phone\n774-Y-2 Nelson.\nFOR SALE'\u2014 CABIN 'CRUISER\n-with boat house. 24 tt. long'by 5V,\nft. beam. Plymouth conversion,\nfully, equipped.  Snap  for.-caBh,\n\u2022'Phone ,.638-R.\nFOR SALE '-, 19' LAUNCH,~BX-\ncellent condition; Will-trade, ih\non car pr small boat Phohe '580-L\nor vrite Box 7187 Daily ttevis.\n15' INBOARD MOTOR BOAT FOR\nSale. Excellent condition,' Apply\n, to 723.Robson St.        .   r*A'Jf\nFOR* SALE ~ JOHNSON OUT\nboard, two cyllrtder, t.5': H.P. with\nready pull. 'Griffiths,.'\u2022Prottfe;.'\nRENfALS\nDESPERATELY WANTED TO\nrent\u2014furnished suite for July and\nAugust by 'ydung couple 'with\ninfant Phone 19 and ask for. Mr,\nAnderson.\nMACHINERY\np^*-ip^-\u00bb^\u00bb*\u00bb-\u00bb\u2014-*\u25a0 .*^\nADD\n\/;, To YOUR,\nA;;Gdjtipletei line of ciir\nppifr^ssors <3nd.> a i r\ntools you ton rely on,\npXviNjGBIlEAKERS\u2022''*  V* '\nSTO'RERSv     ':'X: .-.'-'\u2022\nORIfTERS\"^'-        V    \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\n.ftO'CtC 0RILL5 -\nWAGON' DRILLS  ,-   \u2022\u2022\nJUMBOS'\nHOISTS^'\nJSCRAPERS\"' :      j?   \u25a0\nBLOCKS\u20146\", r.,'10'!(*1-r\"'\n\u25a0  roller bearings. *\nThe newest sensatloij Is the\nlightweight' AW'60^85 iltjiX\nKpist*..: ,.:;- ;''\u25a0'. , , -.,,;',',.. '\n\\-,\":Mm:niiig;'\ny: l|imctbir*':'; \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'-*\u25a0}';._\n& Equipment Cp. Lid..\/\nFOR JOY M-NING EQUIPMENT\n'Nelson*\nCrahbroor;,\nfe_B_-\nr.fT-1^---\n' '*t(it__be^_Bteii--\n\u25a0' A.teot_o'n\n\u25a0-'  i''- \u201e ')'.* \u25a0 \u25a0 ?.* .* .\u25a0 \u25a0-\n' We Are Distributors for\n.'\u2022.. towVe'nce\nManufacturing Co.\n-':'   '      Products,\n-   Logg.ing Don^y-Hoists\nRood Making Machinery\n.   Fluid Drive Gasoline\nPower Units\n,     Diesel Units'\nLogging Trucks and Trailers\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.   .\n214 HaU St        \": \"     Phone 18\nMining, Milling and Sawmill\nMachinery, Building; and Con-\n-   -,.   tractors' Supplies.\n'    PlPty^ANDTITTtNGS ;' '\"\nBlack and Galvanized.\n'   Various Sizes in Stock..\n\"If it's machinery you want '.\n.consult us.\" r \u2022 \u2022    ,\nAUTOMOTIVt\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n.94? Pontiac Sedqh\n1947 Chevrolet Coach\n\u2022 1940 Chrysler CohVertltyJ  *\n1937 F6rdSedan'\",    \u25a0;,.  ri'\n1 'j&j, .podSe' Coac^^ ft.\n1930 Ghpvl-_let ^Sedan.\nLtifHefiyeries..\n, 1947- Mercury j-'ftn     'v'<-\n1947 Fargo Panel-\n\u25a0 1^46' Ford j Ton     \"      '':*, X\n1938,., Ford-Panel\n1930 \u25a0Dtii'gnt Rickup\n-: -TERMsiiind TRADES'\u25a0:,' ,'\npinptte Motors\nT^i'ne'.*]i'35-''._;  803 Baker\n\u25a0'\u25a0'*, .,,'\u25a0,',, Nelson' '\u25a0'..',\u25a0\nFOR SAl^E - 104BCHEV SEDAN,\nlow., mileage'.1 Excellent condition.\nApplyVNafioh Transfer.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'. -\n'\u25a0\u2014.^.\u25a0r-f\"\"\n\u00abto\u00bb\u00bb ',\n.r;19^TUDOR,S__DAN\nAit-'aajci-int- opportunity to\nprocure one of these hard to\nget, dppendable, economical\ncars in exceptionally fine condi- *\ntion.' Thoroughly reconditioned.\nand driven less than 500 miles\nin the past year.' Flbretex seat\n-dovera';- radio, heavy-duty\nspringa, grille and bumper\n.guards, etc. ,\u2022', \u25a0'\nPriced'to sell at approx. one-\nhalf replacement cost:\n\u25a0-J'     $895.00\nPHONE 1204-L\n1947 Mercury\n::'v>3*Ton   \u25a0 :\nNew motor. 4 to 5 yard dump\nbody; Good tires. In excellent\ncondition throughout. Truck\nnow wbrklng. Apply Box 6190\nDaily News.\nKOOTENAY \u2022MOTOftCYCLE\nSales, Castlegar, B.C., Kootenay\nagents for all British machines -\nJames', A.J.S., Matchless, Panther,\n-Velocette, HR.D. Sales, Service,\nTradei\n1948 \u25a0'-\u201e'\u25a0 TON FOR. 4-SPEED\ntransmission; low mileage, heater.\nReasonable for cash. Apply Box\n7094 Sally News.\n12^i.HABLI!^J3AViDSONJl50 CC.\n$100 worth of accessories. Perfect\ncondition. GY H. Gregory, Creston,\nB.C.\n1935 FORD SEDAN WITH '41\nengine. Gone 4000 miles. Reasoh-\n. ab)y priced. Excellent 6 ply tires.\nFred Maloff,'Brilliant, B.C\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY,; JUNE 18,1949 \u2014 9\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nAUTOMOTIVE\n!%\"'',\u25a0;; (Conunueai \" ., ,\nFOR SALE-19461MBRCCRYJ LT.\n\", delivery, slightly used, looks and\n* runs like hew; Paul Markoff, Slocan Park, B.C.   -     ,:,--.,,, '\nI1U5INESS OPt'OKTUNlTIE?\nF6ft SAL1-. r- FULLY EQUIPPED\ngrocery-confectionery and* meat\n.market' Comiortable.,liYlng quar-\n' tars combined; garden, etc. $18,-\n000,00 cash or terms can be arranged, Write1 Bojt 7286'Nelson.\nDaily News.\nBUSINESS .IN OKANAGAN VAL-\nley* 'for sale. .-Mod^rh ''.rooming\nhouse with meals optional, fully\nfurnished .throughout; - Living\nroom, dining room and kitchen\n\u25a0 with built in cupboards, 10 bedrooms, 2 closed-ln porches, full\nbasement with furnace and fireplace, also 2 furnished cabins..Lot\n.1,05 ft; frontage.sby<23<l ft lawn.\n1 Fruit- trees 'and .vegetable garden. In - best residential'district.\n.10 minutes walk from Heart of\nVelty.. Monthly,, revenue,'. $450.00;\n'For quick sale, $12,600, Apply\nSpruce Lodge, 783 Winnipeg St,\n;. Penticton.      i\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nMORRH.ILL KENNELS REG'D.\n;\u25a0 Box 518, Gteenwoo-L \u25a0 B.C. Ameri-\nl caH Cocker Spaniels, Scotch Ter-\n;rlerSi'J-iogs boarded. .   < \u25a0'   *-'\u25a0' .'\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP V\u00a7 YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. .Any quantity. Top prices\n' paid. Active Trading Company.\n816 Powell St., Yancouver, B. C.\nWANTED- CEDAR. AND LARCH\npoles, fence posts, piling and R.R.\nties. p. J. Hlookoff, 542 Baker'St.\nWANTED\u2014SMALL TENT AND 2-,\nburner Coleman Move, and card'\ntable. \"18 Victoria St, Nelsiin,\nSHIP YOUR HIDES TO J.-P. MOR-\ngan.1 Nelson,' B.-C...\nNATIONALLY KNOWN NAMES-\n: Llnk'V.Belf--Speeder Shovels,\nCranes, Draglines; Adams Road\nGraders; Littleford Bros. Black\nTop ttoad Maintenance Equipment; Owen Clamshell Buckets\nand'Rock-Grapples; T. L Smith\nConcrete Mixers; Clark Forklift\nr.iTrucksi*. Nelson' .Bucket,- Loaders\n\u2022 for ^tockpileTand Sinew,Removal;\nRice.Portable Centrifugal Pumps;\nNational Dragline Scrapers and\nBuckets; National All Steel Gasoline Hoists; .National, Portable\nSawmills; \/National Rotary\nScreens and Conveyors. Full information from'National Machinery Ca -.Ltd., Vancouver, -B.C.\n1842 FORD SUPER DELUXE\nSedan. A-l  shape.  Apply Mike\n. Chernenkoff, Crescent Valley,\nB.C:\nNew, ,'ANDr.usED parts for\nall   mak&   of   cars.   City   Auto\nWreckers. Box 24, Granite Road..\n1-INOERSOLL HAND ANGLE\nCompound- Air\/ Compressor, 790\n-' cu. ft..- capacity, with 150. HP.\"\nEnglish electric synchronous\nmotor,;'3\"phases,,5jl cycle, -2300\n'Volts,-.('willreconnectifor 550-440\nor 220 volts), complete' oswitch.\nboard equipment. Condition like\nnew. Attractive'price; Phpne or\nwrite::'H. KX -Anstie,, Victoria.\nE9864; Vancouver, Marine 5364.\nFOR,SALE-rNEWLY-MADE SAW-\nlng-'outf|t for; firewood;  9; 'h.p.\n,  Fairbanks Morse gas engine, steel\n: -iwlhg*.saw1;frame, .belting,.,,two\ncrosscut-eawsi' 29\"  and  36\",  14'\n\u2022' .carriage,'..trolley,   Price,. $400.00,\n' Applyijqhri Surina,\". Nakusp, 'B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014- GIBSQN TRACTOR\ncomplete with blade, plow and\n. discs,,all in new condition. $700.00\n.or-\"nearest .cash o(fer. W, Fraser,\n\u2022Kootenay Bay..',\nURGENTLY , REQUIRED   rr   BY\n. married couple, 3 or 4 room house\not suite, furnished or unfurnished\nQuiet, non drinkers, no-children,\nfirst class references. Phone 780-L\nFOR RENIVFURNISHED HQUSHi,\nfor Slimmer months' at'\"Willow\nPoint; 4 miles from ferry. Apply\nMrs. J. Gaskell,\nP0R MMT^4 'R05M \"SWMMtb-t\nCabin at 6 -Mile. Apply C. H-\nMurray, R.R. T.near Crystal Hall.\nWANTED \u2014'3 OR'4 ROOMS OR\nhouse. 2 small' children. Box\n6834 Dally News.\nCATERPILL^B TRACTORS \u2014 D7\n, J,and iJ4i;-equipped to suit-, your\nJpb, 35 H-P' Blesel'powei^ tutlt\n'.Ba y e s -'-Equipment   Company,\nCraiibrbok.-\nMASSEY, HARRIS NO. 37 5% FT;\n; mower;, Cockshutt   No.   21   12'!\n\/Slilw; Cockshutt No. ,76 Steel\n_\u00bb,Wheeled \u2022 wa'goh; new two years\n'ago.'Duboia, Harrop, B.C.     \u25a0 :\nJF^R^RENT - WAREHOUSE AND\noffice space on trackage; size 20'\nx }ff, Apply 212 Stanley Street.\nWANTED -^ FURNISHEK SUITE\nby young married .couple. Phone\n691-L' evenings.'\nCOS-FORTABLE BEDROOM FOR\nrent. Phohe778rX'      '   ';   i_\nBEDROOM FOR RENT, -t PHPNE\n371-Y or:call!923,.Vtenon St \u2022\ntOURIST RESORTS\nFOR SALE-3 LOVELY LOTS IN\nFairview, Basement excavated.\nIdeal position. $550.00 cash. Terms\narranged. Phone 449-L.\n(Continued*In Next column):\nSPOT AUTQ CAMP, B.3.' li KEL-\n- owna. Holiday in the sunny Okanagan. Swin. in the tepid Waters of\nWoods Lake. Modern cabins, safe,\n. sandy beach; boats, good fishing;1\nNo mosquitos. Reduced rates for\n''September,,\nROOMS. $1 AND UP, MEALS,\nboat*'Phone*reservaildri, C, A.\n\"Bfady, prdfter.v'.\nCUSTOM MACHINE WORK, AND\nwelding. Portable welding equipment-for field .work. Stevenson's\n\"\u2022 Machine ;Sh6j>, 708 Vernon St,\nNelsoh,'B. C.\nITJF SALE-ON13 FORD FERGU-\nsom.hay sweep, oh trada for Ford\n' Ferguson wood saw, C. W. Mawer,\nFruitvale, B-C.   '\nD4 CAT. FOR RENT OR CON-\ntrabt Equipped for excavating,\nroad building', land .clearing, etc\nC. Ross,, Phone 588-R; Nelson.\nSAWMILL', AND EDGER, FOR\nrent. ' High .capacity\/\/ portable,\nready to go. Box 7098 Daily News.\nA NEW, EIGHTH\u20142 HP, COCK-\nshu( mower. A, Boollnoff, Thrums\nB.C;\nLOST AND FOUND\nWOULD THE YOUNG LADY WHO\nIjicked up my ring in the.lavatory\nnt The Bay kindly, leave It at The\nBay office. Liberal reward;\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n1931 . CHRYSLER   -SEDAN    FOR\nsalfe.; fhone 434-L-4 evening.,,\n(Continued In Next Column)\nClassified Advertising Ratetl\n15c par line-rat insertion and\n. non-coneecutlve..lnsertlons. , <   i\nlie line per consecutive inser-.\ntion after, first insertion.   \u25a0-.\n48c line for 8 consecutive, insertions. \u25a0...   *\n' $1.56 line per month (26. consecutive Insertions). Box numbers lie extra. Covers, any number of insertions.   -     *\n;PUBLIC' (LEGAL)  .NOTICES,\n'' TENDERS, ETC\u201420C P\u00ab' Une,\nfirst-insertion, 16c per line each\n. subsequent insertion.\n. ALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\n- tubscrlptlon Rateu\nSingle Copy ..;.-.. ;.....-.\u25a0......$  -J5\nBy earlier, per -week,\n; in advance .....,......;..\u201e.. ,25..\nBy carrier, per year 13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month ..,...'...,..'.    1.00\n. Three months'        2.50\nSix months  .'.-..:    4.50\n'.One year  ....;.    8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month ;; ..\u201e...:.'..........   1.00\nThree Inonths'..., ..........   3.00\n\u25a0Six  ..onths ..; .'......,.;    6JK)\n'' One . \u00b0ar: .12.00\nWhere extra postage Is reqlured:\n. above rates plus postage,.\nbusiness And    ,\nprofessional directory\nCHlROPRACTtiRS  ;      '\nJ ' COLIN MCLAREN, D.C., CHIRO-\npractlc   . X-Ray,     Spinography,\nStrand, theatre Bldi Trail,'Ph.328,\nASSAYER8 AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES .\nE.  ,W,-WIDDOWSON  &  CO,  AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine,St., Nelson, '\n-jL'ii. -LMES, R-!_SLAlA,\"in5,  ;\n-Assay*''- Chemist Mine' pepresnt\nblAMOND  DRILLERS\nNATIONAL DIAMOND DRILLING\nCO;; Ltd.,' Drllllhg and-Bit Servicer Box.508, Rosslahdr Ph. 420\nENOINEERS AND PURVEYORS\nHAGGEN AND, CURRIE,. ;.B.-C .\nLand-Surveyors, Mining;ana\" Pivil,\nEngineers, Rossland, Kelow,na ,\nGrand Forks. Ph. Rossland 348.'\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE.ST\n. Nelson, B. C, Surveyor, Engineer.,\nIN8URANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nMcHARDY . AGENCIES   LTD- IN-\nSurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nMACHINI8T8, ;\n.... \" BENNETTS LIMITED ^.,\n> Machine .Shop,- acetylene and v,\nelectric welding, -motor rewinding\nPhopo 593 324. Vernon St\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP-\nSpecialists in mine and, mill work.'\n708 Vernon St, Nelson. Phone '98,\nMachine work, light and heavy.\nSALES AGENTS\nFuller Brush Sales      ';\u25a0\u25a0\nJ C McKim   Box 123   Phone 799-R\nPORK PRICES IN\nREGINA INCREASE\n' REGINA, _un\u00bb 17 (CP)-Prlces\nof pork products have Increased an\naverage of about two cents a pound\nin Regina,during the. last 10 days,\nretailers reported today,-\nCooked ham showed the largest\nincrease, rising five cents from 95\ncents to $1.00. a pound during the\nperiod. Side bacon rose from 78-80\ncents top .80-82 cents a pound and\nback bacon from 96 cents to $1.00 a\npound.. Leg; roast jumped from 56-\n58 cents to 62-64 cents and shoulder\nroast from about 45 cents to 50 cents\na pound.\n-V-\nThe alewife. one of Canada's commercial . fishes, is anadromous\u2014it\n\u25a0conies,-into.fresh water streams to\nspawn'-but!spends most of its life\n\u2022iny the sea, ' . .-.. .' \u25a0\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nMINES\nBralorne    .*......._..._..._\n.8.60\nCanusa ; ..:. \u201eT.\u201e-\u2122~.\u2122\n...10\nCariboo Gold .. ...............\n-1.12\njolconda\t\n,25\nHedley Mascot ......_._..._\nMl!\nHighland BeU ...\u201e..._.\t\n.52\nint C & C ;\t\n1.05\nKootenay Belle\t\n.15\nPa? Eastern Gold -__\n' .13 '\nPend Oreille  ~i\u2122\n8.60\nPioneer Gold \t\n1.10\nQuatsino  ...*.\t\n.54\nReeves MacDonald \t\n1.53\nSheep Creek -_\u00bb__\n1.02\nOILS\nAnglo Canadian  .--__.\n2.50\nA P Consolidated.\t\n.15\nCalgary __ Edmonton ;...*_,\n4.10\nCalmont\t\n.31\nCommonwealth    ...\n.64\nDalhousle _\n.37\nEast Leduo   -...___\n.21\nFoothills\t\n2.40\nGlobe     .r\n.44\nHome    \u201e....._\u2122\u201e..._.\u201e_\n8.90\nMercury _....\u00bb...;... .\n.84\nOkalta Com   -.\t\n1.22\nPacific Pete  \u201e y. ,\n2.26\nRoyalite    _\n6.25\nVanalta\t\n.20\nINDUSTRIALS\nCoast Breweries  \t\n8.10 [-\nUNLISTED MINES\nCuyuni \t\n.80 r\nVananda    ,\t\n.15\nPHONE  144 FOR  CLASSIFIED\nIPf\nfissbkL\nLOST1 AMD NO WONDER WITH\ni-rriesE uousy.uohts- why\nDIDN'T VOU 60 BY\n.PONTGOON YOUR TRIP WITHOUT HAVING YOUR\nLIGHTS\nUSED CARS\nW\n* C|iey.iCoa<h-.\nono   owner,   only   gone\n31,000 miles. A rare buy1. :\n\"1940\nChrysler Royal\n'.- 4 dr, heater, radio,\n'A lovely cor\nAS IS BARGAIN\n'37 DeSoto 4 Dr.\nReal buy,    $\/\n;qt -_.:._._..'\nand BRAKES TESTED\nTRUCKS\nNew Fargo\nPanel Delivery\nNew Fargo\nHeavy Duty\nBEFORE YOUR CAR\n\u25a0   is the time to.\nPRESSURE PURGE\nWe clean, the Radiator and\nWater Jackets of the Block\nin less than thirty minutes,\n\u2022 SAVES OA?,\n\u2022 SAVES MOTOR WEAR\n2 ton with T120 motor,\nreinforced frame, ..Eaton\n2 speed axle, ideal for\ngravel haul. Immediate\ndelivery.\n1940 Ford 2-ton\nPlatform...... $895\n19*39 International\n94 ton\nCHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH - FARGO - DUNL0PTIR.5\n(fAoHs\/OW \u00bb~<7U\u00a340*t,^C.\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 18,1949-\n\"He Ain't\nWhat He\nto Be\"\nThat may be\nwhat-Vou think\nabout Dad but\nhe doibsn't want\ncrutches as a\nFather's D a y\nGift-J .\nHe would very\nmuch prefer a\nnieja snappy,\nreadable and\n- exciting book\njilte\n,\"No Wall So HIsh\"    by Anne Pcwers\n\"High Towers\"     by Thos. jEostalh \"\"\u25a0   ;    '.'\"\n\"Prairie Avenue\"     by Arthur Meeker \"t ,..-\n.\"Polntof N\u00ab Return\"    by-John P.Mdrqiiand\n\"Their Finest Hour\" . ..by Winston Churchill\n$3.78\n$3.25\n$3.00\n$3.73\n$6.00\nChange Sea Water\nInto Fresh-Wa^er\n\"LAKE SUCC-SS, N.'Y\u201e.'june 17\n(CP.-r-A'new step.In changing sea\nwitter Into \"fresh waiter today was\nreported to the United Nations.\nA diesei engine -now makes 20\nt'allons of fresh water for a cost,of\none>cent. This is twice \"to \"three\ntimes, more fresh water than could\nbe made for a penny previously.\nThe report.was made by Dr. Abel\nWolftian. of Johns Hopkins University-. It is part of a symposium on\nwater to beheld here at the United\nNations. Conference on conservation\nond utilization of resources, beginning Al.gj'17. -  .'?,-'.. \"-.*. '\/:'*:\n: v New. processes-.-delude, chejnicals\nthat dissolve tne salt out of sea water. But ihe cheapest new method\nuse's boilipg and condensing the vapor to fresh water* The .condensation Is speeded and cheapened by\ncompressing the vapor by diesei engines   '\nDr. Woiman said tbe new process\nis not cheap enough to compete\nwith, most fresh-water sources, but\nthat more economic water evaporation is on the way. :'\nSteel Production iii Australia\nForced to Slop Willi Coal Rationing\n* SYDNEY, . Australia, June 17\n(CP)\u2014' .Australia's steel industry\nmust 'cease* production tomorrow\nunder a drastic coal-rationing order\nissued today by4 the Government\nCoal Board. -'\u2022 '(   :\n. The 'order*, directs steel plant, to\nuse only enough coal to keep the\nfactories in order.       \u2022   - > ',,' '.\nThe rationing directive followed\nyesterday's decision by the\/majority of the Dominion's 24,000 miners\nto call a general coal strike June\n27 unless their wage demands ar\u00abf\nmet The. miners have ,'claime'd p\nweekly,'raise of-.80 shfUirige ($5), a\n85'Bour'v week '\" and long-service\nleave.      '\u25a0'.   ,      .-.  V'      ' \u25a0 ' '*\u2022\u2022\nUnder the Coal Board's order, all\ncool for railways was immediately\nhalved. -'.       '\u2022*,*'\nAs Winter closed In on the fuel-\n.  short   land' below   the   equator,\n. widespread storms dislocated coal\ndistribution. Ten days before the\n'strike.date, Sydney's supplies ef\n- Illuminating    gas   were   falling,\nbringing  a  week's  rationing to\nAustralia's Industrial capital,\nThe. miners'. strike decision,: taken at stop-work meetings in defiance of a Coal-Board ban, leaves\nthe men open to prosecution by the\nGovernment or the mine owners,\nThe offence is punishable by a fine\nof.$300 a man.,'    >    .       ' '\ncoast girl, worried over school\nstudies; Jumps into fraser river\n_W_fl_MPB $\nDRUG STORE\nRELIABL&SERVICE\nAT REASONABLE COST\nSmedley Garage Co.\nReo Sales and Service\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1176-182 BAKER 6T.\nQuadruplets Die\nLONG BRANCH, N, J., June 17\n(AP) \u2014 Premature Quadruplets-\nTwo boys and two girls\u2014all.died\nwithin 19 minutes of .each other\nearly today a little more than 10\n\u25a0hours after they were born.'.\nThier mother.,was Mrs. Raymond\nCaffrey of Union Beach, N. J. Monmouth Memorial Hospital, where\nthe quadruplets were born, said\nMrs. Caffrey had been five months\npregnant She listed Iri \"good\" condition after the births. >\nQuadruplets occur, on the average, one in every 591,271 births.\n>i\nGET NEW ENGINE\nPERFORMANCE\nIN JUST\nONE DAY\nCHRYSLER-METHOD\nREMANUFACTURED\nENGINES ARE\nNEW\nAND -,;\nDIFFERENT\n:   Commit*    ;\nand\nSee Us\nAbout It\nToday\nDON'T OVERHAUL...\nINSTALL!\nCHRYSLER-METHOP y%\nREMANUFACTURED ENGINES\nUTHBER\nMOTORS\nLimited\nDODGE - DE SOTO DEALERS\nOpposite Post Of (ice \u2014 Nelson, B.C. \u2014 Phone 71\nRefuse To Unload,\nCanadian Freighter\nSOUTHAMPTfON, England,'Jurte,\n17'* (Reuters)\u2014Longshoremen today\nrefused to unload the . Canadian\nFreighter Seaboard * -Trader,',' ' the\ncrew of which has\/been on Strike\nfor seven .weeks. Tije ship's crew\nall, are members -of >the. Canadian\nSeamen's Union., .\u25a0.\";.\\%.   '*\u25a0'\u2022\n.The decision not to handle the\ncargo of wheat and t'mbqjrlollpw-\ned an informal dockside-meethlg today. ' \u25a0'-'\".\u25a0 '' '&    '\u25a0;,' ,- '\nThe crew picketed the ship -yes-\ntei'day after chain-lashings over the\nHolds and deck cargo had', been removed. The crew charged' that the\nchains were removed by. scab labor\nand that union men had refused the\njob-        -     ',: y.-. \u25a0\u25a0;\u2022\nA representative of the-ship's\nagent said the lashings had been removed legitimately, the orders coming from a \"high level.\"   '\/'\u25a0 .,,-\u2022\nThe Seaboard Trader has been\nheld up here since April 29 with\n3000 tons of wheat and 7000 of timber, The tie-up costs the ship's\nowners $1600 a day, the ship's\nagents said.\nPHONE  1*44  FOR  CLASSIFIED.\nTry Us For. .\nCHILDREN'S SHOES\n. Topi In Value-   \u2022\nWide Variety\nThe Children's Shop\nNEW WESTJIINSTER, \u00a3. C-, June\n17',(CP)\u2014School studies Worried 16-\nyear-old Be\/nice Gleave,,*,\nShe had Jbeen getting up. e\u00a3rly\neach* morning to study, preparing\nfor final exams.\nFinally, eariy tiaay she, walked*\nthe six blocks from her borne to the\nFrsser. River, waded\" into the.'water\nand plunged from a log boom. She\nwas carried away by the swift cur-\nBAG ECHO.AT  v\nST. PAUL'S;       r\n-ipNDON.-.June 17 (CP)\u2014Scientists finally have bagged the echo\n.that\/made sermons inaudible in St.\nPaul's Cathedral.'. ,-,.-\n.It took four miles of wire and\nseven dozen microphones to do It.\n\u25a0\u25a0 For ijeixs only 10 per cent jot \"fit:\nPaul's worshippers could catch\nmore than' an occasional Sentence\nfrom the - puiiiit. ' Within three\nmonths, the scientists say, 95 per\ncent will'be able to follow the service word by word. . '\nEarlier . use of loudspeakers on\nthe Cathedral, walls merely added\nto the reverberation. But magnetic\ninduction did the' trick. Under, the\nfloor .'of the Cathedral, along the\ncrypt roof, a:network, of wires was\nlaid and connected, with an\namplifier.,  .' *\nPoplars are called the \"whisper-\nIng trees\" becauseone leaf hitting\nagainst another makes a whispering sound.. .* ,     -'      \u25a0'\u25a0-..-\nrent. \u2022\n\u2022 \"She turned' and looked at us,'\nsaid Jacob van pyk, who wlth'i\ncompanion saw the; girl *nter'-the\nwater,\" \"Without a cry, she. threw\nherself into the strong current. -It\nwas too late to do anything.\"\nHer father, Charles Gleave, said\nshe had been in a nervous condition,\nworried over school studies.\nELLISON'S ROYAL PATENT\nPASTRY FLOURS\nBEST FOR CAKE8 AND\nPASTRY-     ..\nGUARANTEED TO SATISFY\nYour Grocer Has 'it\n-YES \u2014 Your New Wore\nIs bound to be MORE STYLI8H.\nLAST LONGER .and \\%\nLOOK LOVELIER\nat the'\nHAIGHTRU-ART\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescription!\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE SS*\nEnd Dispute\nKITCHENER, Ont, June 17 (CP)\n\u2014A, dispute which started Wednesday- with the. walkout.Qf. 18 jweket-\nbuilding workers and later affected\nabout 900 employees of the Dominion Rubber Company Tire plant,\nended today.\nPHONE.144  FOR-CLASSIFIED.\nYOU\nWiU\nSAVE\nBy having your tires\nchecked by the experts at the City Tire\nService.\nAuthorized\nDOMINION\nTIRE\nDealers\nPHONE 1427\nJJASL  S&WtCfL\n412 Koofonay Sit.\nNelson, B. C.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HQMe    '\n\"Distinctive Funeral' Servtet\"'\nAMBULANCE 8ERVICE\nIU Kootenay St Phone HI\n-miiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiimiin.M* imiiiiii\nMURPHY'S\nFor\nWallpapers \u2014 Kofsomines\nPaints \u2014 Varnishes\nMS. Baker St      \u2022    Phone 665\nillllllilliiliniliilliiiii'liiiiinmii\nIF YOUR\nRadio\nOR\nRefrigerator\nIs in need of repairs.\nDrof>itinto\nWELLS\nService\nShop\n615 Vernon XX.\nPHONE 1115 V  :\n.BESSI\nR0SEBALL\nTONIGHT\nFREE ROSES for the pretty\n'girls\u2014since ell our fair customers (from 18 to 60) arc\ncharming, there will be\nroses for all.\nRed Tux Orch,\nCOMING\nFrom America's coast to\ncoast, networks\u2014-recordings\nstudios and top dance spots.\nDick\nBallou\nin person.with his\n13 PIECE ORCH.\nThurs., June 23\n1\nTo You \u2014 The Electors\nof the Rossland-Trail Riding'\n; I \\vot(ld like to express my sincere appreciation for\nthe expression of faith you have given me. I would\nalso like to.say \"Thanks Friends\" to those who\nworked so tirelessly on m behalf. ,.:_.._ .\n,\u2022  Twill wdrk hard to justify your confidence in me.'\nDoug Turnbull\nA VOTE\nFOR\nCORNER\n;\"-means:\nA continuation of'the free enterprise way of\nlife. AAf'f in B.C.. have recently indicated, in no\nsmaiLterms, that socialism is not for us.\n:  Let's-, tell Ottawa the same story. Jack\nCorner;-tis Mayor pf Rossland, has proven\n\u25a0     * '    >'\"  \u2022 ;\u25a0''  '\"'.     ,-' \u25a0: \u25a0   '      '*!\nhimself a capable administrator.\n'* .'  '     \"'  \u25a0'\u25a0'   >': ' \u25a0   *:.       ' !    X'     '     , \u25a0'\nOn June 27th\nVOTE for CORNER\nPitblfshed .J>y the West Kootenay ProflVesiive Cenkervatl.ve' Aim.\nJune 19th\nit's\nFathers Day\nto Show Off\nThof man of yours Wlll.be\nproud: as a peacock on\nFather's Day \u2014 and for many days to corrie\u2014wearing\na spiort shirt and tie! Meticulous tailoring, fr_sh new\nstylfes arid colors in long and short sleeves.\n\u25a0, *\". '\u25a0-,'-' *\nEMORY'S Ltd.\nTHE MAKS STORE    \u00bb\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS IJD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\n: 6.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and paint work specialty\n'llllllllllHllliiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillilil\n, HAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n.'\u2022X    ,  at the\n,   NELSON UPHOLSTERY\n\u00ab13 Hall St Phone 14\u00ab\nlllllllllllllllllllllhllllllllllllllllllllllll\nIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIinillMllllllllllM\nCleaned and Recored\nRADIATOR REPAIRS\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\n301 Ward St Phone (8\n'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPJ.ONE 81S\nCAMPBELL, SHANKUNC\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n660 Baker St .    Phone 23\nJ.A.C. LAUGHT0\nOptometrist\nMEDICAL    ARTS. BUILDINO\n:**j'SUitji?\u00ab^j. iy\nHpve Your   ...\nELECTRICAL\nAPPLIANCES\nREPAIRED\nNelson Electric Co.\nAuthorized GE Dealer\nPhone 260* 674_Bakef-\u00ab\nm\nJUNE\nSunset Sale\nContinues\nMANY NEW ITEMS HAVE BEEN ADDED\nFOR YOUR SELECTION\nListed below ore a few\n\u2022 Loaf pqnp .,...,|.,: - 19e\ne Coffee percs  $1.89\n\u2022 Bath mats. Rubber $1.59\na Telephone Cords,  (non-\nv        twist). S r..........   1\u00abfi\ne. Flowey sifters  B9e\ne   Lawn mowers   $13.95\nO   66-pce. dinner sets $29.95\n0   32-pce. dinner sets $1-1.95\n\u2022 * Johnson Iron Horse motors.\n\u2022 Kitchen Chairs (whitewood)\n\u2022 Lacrosse halls  44*\n\u2022 Taylor night latches $1.98\no Boys' aStes .........\u2014 $1.9*\n\u2022 Household scales ..   $3.95\nO bold pack Cahners $2.43\nO 26-pce. flatware ...... $9.95\no Metal kitchen stools $3.50\nO Folding canvas chairs 3.69\n% H.P. ..\n$52.60\n$2.35\nRADIO REPAIRS\nPromptly attended to\nALL WORK GUARANTEED\ni\nMe & Mc\nNELSON LTD.\nPHONE 1300-1301\nSummer Is Here\nEvery car needs      v\nRenewed\nVitality\nIncluding\nChange of oil and\nEngine tune-up\nNELSbN TRANSFER\n35\nCompany, Limited\nPHONE    35\nIlM\u00ab0.\u00bb0\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab90\u00ab<\n1 \u25a0;\u25a0     l-'^v \u201et\u00bb'!;    .*\u2022'\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1949_06_18","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0425428","@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 Company, Limited","@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":"1949-06-18 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1949-06-18 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Nelson Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0425428"}