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Winds\nlight Low and high at Cranbrook\nM Md 80, Crescent Valley ,35 and\n60.   -\n^ 'J*\/\/**    \u00b0*\nParishioner Threw Furnace Switch '\nAnd \"Everything Blew Up\"; 50 Injured;\nMany Waiting Outside Escape Harm\n- MARION, S.D., April 10 (AP)-^The. St. Mary's Catholic\nChurch blew up today while partly filled with Palm-Sunday\nwotshippers. ' '\nSix elderly persons were killed and at least 50: persons\nwere injured when the roof and brick walls came fumbling\ndown upon them as they knelt in their pews.\nMany more escaped injury because they were in front\nof the church enjpying'IHe sunshine, waiting for the church\nbell to call them to worship. About 75 persons .were in their\nseats. *      , \u25a0*\nIt was just before the 9 a.m. mass\nwas to begin.\nRev. Joseph Zimmerman, 73,\nP,astor lor the parish ot Marlon and\nMonroe, waited In the Sacristy to\nenter the altar, banked with palm\nleaves. ,   \"\n8ome of the parishioners complained It was cold In the church.\nPhil  Wachendorf,  a car   dealer\nwho had helped arrange to get\nthe church a bottle fuel furnace\na few years ago, volunteered to\ngo to the basement and turn It on.\nThe Janitor had gone outside to\nring the bell.\nWachendorf, speaking from his\nhospital- bed In Sioux Falls, said\nhe threw the furnace's switch and\n\"everything blew up.\"\nThe whole building shook, and\nthen bricks and timbers showered\ndown    upon   the   congregation.\nWachendorf, badly hurt and his\nhands burned, managed to crawl\nout of the basement through a\nv?>;\ni cenTs a 65W\nNELSOH. iKim C-gLUMftA. C^AbA-M^bA\"* ^NlNo. AP^lL 11. 1*49\n***,*\nNUMBER 294\nhole; In fhe wreckage.\nThe force of the blast caved, in\nthe roof and blew out the .walls.\nThere was a small fire, but It was\nextinguished quickly.\nThe sound of the explosion, plus\nthe screams of injured and trapped\npersons, attracted \"the attention of\nnearly every person in this farm\n'town of 775 population.' '\nPRIEST INJURED   '   \u201e \u201e\u25a0'*\nThe only part of the building that\nremained standing, was some.of the\nwall around the altiir ahd the choir\nspace,.\nFather Zimmerman had been\ntrapped by debris falling into the\nSacristy but he escaped with a\nbroken rib and cuts. He assisted\nrescue operations. ,\nFound were the bodies of Mr.\nand Mrs. John Marso, Mrs. Peter\nRedding, Mrs. George Bittner and\nMrs. Philip Luke, all of. Marion,\nand Charles McGlnnis, Monroe. All\nwere in their 60s or 70s..\nBITTER ATTLEE\nBLAMES KREMLIN\nFOR WORLD SPLIT\nUnity Only If Reds\nAbandon Plan for\nWorld Domination\nMOST BEHIND PACT\nQliASGOW, April 10. (AP) -\nPrime Minister Clement Attiee\nripped into Russia today with a\ndeclaration that \"responsibility for\ndividing the world rests squarely\n. on the shoulders of the rulers of\nthe Kremlin.\"\nThe usuaUymild Prime Minister\npicked bitter words for use in an\naddress at' a party rally in this\nshipbuilding centre where Communists; are relatively strong.\n: \"Thfeife is no personal freedom in\nRussia; there is the .alli jfervading\noppression o( -the polipe. There is\nno freedom Sof 'election'. Only -the\n\u25a0single list of the single pasrty is\nallowed. There is ho freedom of\nspeech or even of thought.\"\nCommunists, he said, are \"more\n'reactionary than some of.the old\ntyrannies wlnrh w< ,lmew  'is  Ills'\npast.\"\nIn this'city. where'the \"Hampden\nroar\" of \u25a0 football's crowds has. become a synonym for 'vociferous\nenthusiasms, the Prime \"Minister\n.nailed down his point this Way: \u25a0\n\"Even 'the''footballers sriiust te\northodox Maix Leninists. It would\nbe laughable d n were not sss\ntragic.\"\nAtske favf \u25a0ims.tavwl >i>i\u00bboval\nto the Atlantic Pact, saying if is\n, supported by \"the vast majority .pf\nxx the people of this country.\"\n\"' \"The: only ..exceptions,\" in said,\n\"are the Communists and their\nfellow travellers, and a 'few eccentrics whose hostility to*, the\nUnited States blinds, 'them'\".',to\nreality.\"\nHe said Russian Use of the veto\nln the United Nations has stopped\nall action \"which was not completely in accord \"with what the\nSoviet Government wanted,\" sand\nadded: -\n\"If we cannot get an effective allln collective security, we muist get\n' what we can.\"\n\"We should have v-loomed the\ncooperation the Marshall Plan of\nthe countries of Easterns Europe,\nfor we have no wish to have a\ndivided world,\" he said. \"The\nresponsibility for dividing the\nworld rests squarely on the\nshoulders of the rulers of the\nKremlin.\n\"We do not give up hope of re\nuniting the world, but It can only\nbo done If the Communists give\nup their Ideological Imperialism,\ntheir attempt to bring the whole\nworld Into line, to confine every,\nsingle person within the strait,\nJacket of Marx-Lenlnlim,\"\nLAZA.r.i is c -y 3\nHIS PIECE\nLOS ANGELKS, Aniii 10 (AC).-\nLararus, the headless iois u i, tone)\nup in court Saturday and flapped,\nhis wings, *\nLazarus was the; star witness in\nthe Society for the Prevention ot\nCruelty to Animals' suit against Mrs.\nMavtha Green,\nMrs. Green bought the jird minus\nit: head a week ago at'a butcher\nshop. Before the bird hit the frying\npan, it\u00abtopd up and made\\a noise\nlike a live roosters-sswith its: head\ncut off. 11\nThe S.PC.A. charges Mrs. Green\nwith violating the penal code'governing custody of maimed or mutilated animals and birds.\nMrs. Green, who says, she has\ngiven up eating fowl, also has pending a counter-suit against the S.P.\nC.A., asking $2500 or return of the\nroOBter. But Saturday's action dealt\nsolely with the S.F.C.A.'s cruelty\ncharges.\nNo Educational\nValue, So Reds Don't\nPrint Rescue Story\n'   By The Associated Press\nThe plight of little Kathy Fiscus\ndrettr 'heart-felt interest froni\naround the world today \u2014 and a\nsnub from behind the iron curtain.\nNewspaper switchboards all over\nthe United States were swamped\nwith calls for news of the three-\nyear-old who dropped dawn an old\nwell pipe in San Marino, .Calif,,\nFriday. Rescue attempts were headlined in London papers.   ,   **'\".\";\nBut Czechs will not read the\nstory. The Czechoslovakian Government n\u00bbiys agency branded the\nstory as being .without educational\nvalue and purely sensational.\nIn the United States,, the fate of\nthe California tot seemed to be\nthe country's Nq. 1 concern. Prayers\nwere offered at. Palm Sunday\nChurch services. Newspaper phone\noperators said that public reaction\nwas greater than' in any: other\nnews story in recent years.\nThe -Dallas News estimated the\nnumber of calls at' \"a jillibh.\" A\nDenver Post operator said: \"It's\njuSt-sterHfic.'Js^'t-TeifiefHberWfferi\nthere was so much public Interest\nin a story.\"  ,;'     .\nThe Minneapolis Tribune .said\nSaturday night that many callers\nsaid they couldn't get to sleep until\nthey foundsJOut about the i',lr\\\nFloods Threaten\nManitoba Towns\nWINNIPEG, April 10 (CP).-Vil-\nlagers, in Southern Manitoba, continued Jttieir close. watch on rising\nriver waters tonight as Spring floods\nthreatened several towns.\nService-on-one .highway^ was:re-s\nported cut ;off tonight. A half-mile\nstretch of jiroad near Morris, about\nmiles South of Winnipeg, was\nwashed out\nThe threat to Emerson heightened\ndaily. The Red River has risen 15 to\n20 feet where it passes through the\ntown on'the American border. The\nriver was over Its banks in some\nspots tonight but another eight-foot\nrise in its level was needed before\nthe town itself was threatened.\nNo new developments were res-\nported \u25a0 -from Gretna and Altona,\nwherefwater.poured over \"tracks to\ncut off rail communication to the\ntwo icehtres Saturday.\nThe!Government dyke North of\nRosenfeld was washed out \"in two\nplaces at the . weekend but was\npatched up.\n^hleers\nBrush Fire; Another on Pass (reek\nKINNAHtD;,B.C, April ,19 - A\nbrush fire, onfcbf three sssterted in\nthis area in the. past two days, was\nburnig over: 15 to20 acres of brush\nand woodesTland near Blueberry today.\nAbout 28'.. volunteers from Kinnaird sind Blueberry were fighting\nthe blaze by pumping.water from\nBlueberry Creek, but the settlement\nof Blueberry was reported out.of\ndanger,  ' ,        .   , . \u25a0,\nThe fire started as, a grass fire\nthat got out of control at, Merlo's\nplace, Isolated.frbm Blueberry, at\nabout 1 p.m,; Sunday; .\",::\n(x Fanned'bylaiitlff.wfnd, It spread\nquickly.  \u2022      . .\"..     '.':\u25a0.'\u2022    \u201e\u25a0\nBlueberry settlement lies' to the\nNorth of the fire, which is between\nthe Columbia Rtver and the Southern Trans-Ihrovlhcissal Highway.\nVisible \"from CMtlegar and Klnnaird waB -another fire, burning\nover two\/or three acres of thinly-\nwooded mountainside at Pass Creek.\nIt was not known whether or not\nit was being fought.\nA brush fire at Genelle, which\nstarted Friday, was believed to\nhave been extinguished.\n' Tinder-drygrpwth has previously,\nbeen responsible for the spreading\nof brush fire's in this area. Last year\nserious fifes threatened villages in-\nCAR SPILLS INTO\nWATER-FILLED\nDITCH;TWO DIE\n' VANCOUVER, April 10 (CP) \u2014\nWeekend accidents dsiimed three\nlives iri Vancouver' arid district \u2014\none drowning arid two by asphyxiation.\n'. In suburban Richmond municipality early today, two youths were\nfound1 in their overturned car in a\nwater-filled ditch. Police and firemen yanked the two Indian youths\nout but 19-year-old Frank Amu, jr.,\nson of a proriilrient, official ln British Columbia Indian Affairs, died\nln hospitsii]. Mesrvyn Matson is said\nin good condition.\nPolice, estimating only an Inch qf\nair space remained in the vehicle,\nsaid the pair had been inside more\nthsin an hour. '.-,. \u2022 \u25a0;   .\n\u25a0Harold Ussleman, 28-year-old\nCloverdale fisheripan, drowned in\nthe Fraser River when his skiff\ncapsized. Accidental extinguishing\nof a gas burner flame is blamed for\nthe death late yesterday of Samuel\nShawcross, 68,, ih his. Vancouver\nroom.\nReds Launch\nSouth Invasion\nBy 8EYMOUR TOPPING\nNANKING, April 10 (AP) \u2014\nThree powerful Communist arm\nlet hammered hard today at the\nGovernment's thin bridgeheads\n.North of the Yangtze River, yvlth\nthe avowed aim of Invading South\nChlha. \/      \u2022\nThe   Communists   announced\ni they already had boats wsltlhg to\nmake the crossing.\nThey, have set \u00ab deadline of\n- *fbesday ^for\"the \u25a0\"tisjv'Sf tiSefit \"fo\naccept terms amounting to total\nsurrender and thus end .ihe. wai1.\nActing President LI Tsung-jen\nand his top officials were reported\ndrafting a statement they hoped\nwould    meet   the    Communist\ns  ultimatum.\nixxn- As a foretaste of what otherwise may come quickly, Red\nartillery pumped a shell across\nthe river Into the railway station\nof Lungtan,.only 18 miles East of\n'.'.' Nanking.\n(Reuters news agency said\nGbvernment forces claimed to\nhave repulsed a Communist attempt to cross the Yangtze near\nHwayang, Southwest of strategic\nNanking. The Communists continued to bombard the South\nbank of the river opposite Hwa-\nyang.\n(The Nationalist military news\nagency reported fighting at almost all Government-held bridgeheads on the North bank* of the\nYangtze; Reuters said.)\nPEACE TALKS FAIL\nRANGOON, April 10 (AP) \u2014 The\ncollapse bf peace talks between\nKarens and the. army returns\nBurma to a triangular revolt whose\npattern puzzles eVen the experts,\nKaren- tribesmen, Communists\nand members of the White Band\n(leftist) People's Volunteer Organization (P.V.O.) continue their fight\nfor power. Army deserters swell\nthe ranks of the Communists and\nthe P.V.O.\nD-P RIOTERS\nPROTEST CHURCH\nPERSECUTIONS\n10>000 in March\nAgainst Soviet\nMission in Munich\nCOSSACKS IN VAN\nMUNICH, Germany, April 10\n(AP)\u2014Thousands' of displaced\npersons engaged In a riotous\ndemonstration against Russia to,\nday. '*.'    -      .    >   '-,\nUnited 8tates military police\ndispersed the croVvd by using tear\ngas. An estimated 10,000 persons\ntook part In the demonstration.\nGerman police said the crowd\nwas protesting \"Russian persecu\ntion  of churches.'' The demon'\nstrators  marched through   Mun>\nIch'i .streets end attempted, police\ntaid, to  break   Into  a  building\nhousing a Soviet liaison missions\n*    At least five persons were reported. .Injured.  Several  persons\nwere detained for questioning.\nThe marchers were aald to be\nmosstly Ukrainians. The procession\nwas led by seven Cossacks carrying\na Cossack flag. Many -Ukrainians\nand Cossacks outside Russia have\nopposed the Soviet regime jtfnce\nthe Bolshevik Revolution of 10J7.\nSTONE POLICE\nWitnesses    Baid    United    States\nmilitary police with armored cars\nprevented the crowd from breaking\ninto the. Soviet mission. The -displaced persons grabbed stones from\nruined  buildings  ami ,,\u00abtbried,.tHe\nAmericas-is; \"Then^tftb.,.Mn&i8*&\ngpllci!':uied -teat' gas to rout .the\ncrowd,\n,   The demonstrators whipped up\nby two hours of oratory, set out\nIn Mn unorganized procession. En\nroute they spotted some \"known\nCommunists.\". A fight began.\nAfter the melee, the marchers\nwent on to the Russian-mission\nquarters. Two German police\nwere among the Injured. They\nwere In the vicinity but are prohibited by occupation directives\nfrom acting against displaced\npersons.\nSEAMEN CHARGED\nHALIFAX, April 10 (CP) - Fast-\nmoving developments ln the violence-ridden deep-sea shipping\nstrike moved toward a climax tonight, as the strike entered its 11th\nji&y. ' '\u25a0\u25a0%\u25a0'\u25a0, \u2022 '\nR.C.M.P. here laid charges against\nseaman of rival unions: following\nFriday's watesriront riot: between\nthe striking Canadian Seamen's\nUnion (T.L.C.) sind the Seafarer's\nInternational Union (A.F.L.) and an\nattack on two offiecrs of a strike\nbound ship April 8.\nIn the British West Indies there\nwere mass arrests of striking C.S.U.\nmembers.    .\nThree former fitrike-bound Ca<\nnadian National Steamships vessels\nsailed from here Saturday for the\nBritish West Indies and Montreal.\nMore than 60 S.I.U. merribets, re,\nported to be United States seamen,\nwere flown to Halifax late Saturday\nby chartered plane.      .\nHis Royal Highness at 19 Weeks\nHere are two camera studies of H.R.H. Prince\nCharles of Edinburgh, made' by royal command\nat Buckingham Palace In London when the young\nprince was 19 weeks old. The falr-halred, blue-\neyed sbn of Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of\nEdinburgh, was born on Nov. 14, 1948. He was\nchristened Prince Charles Philip Arthur George\nof' Edinburgh, but to the London press he Is\n\"Bonnie Prince Charlie.\"\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\n52-Hour\nTells of Proposed\nScreen Star Cary Grant, stricken with yellow Jaundice two\nmonths ago while making a picture In England, It met by Actress\nBetsy Drake at he returned to Lot Angeles on a cargo thlp. The\ntanned and lean actor told newsmen he has asked Miss Drake to\nmarry him, but she hasn't yet agreed.\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\nAlberta Oil To Change\nTrade Picture Says\nTouring St..Laurent\n\/By DOUGLAS HOW\nCanadian Press Staff, Writer '\u25a0:',\n.ASQAItD, !ltHB*i,PRIMj;j,'.T\u00abIN-\nlSraj^-TMlNi-AeriOtf TAP)\u2014\nPrime Minister St. Laurent headed\ntonight into. Alberta which, he told\na Press conference, could within\nfive years, make Canada self-\nsufficient both ln oil and coal and\nfree dollars to Open up new possibilities of trade with the United\nStates.     .    ,,. : \u2022    .'\u25a0'\nTo 10 reporters accompanying\nhim on his first invasion of the\nWest since taking office, Mr. St.\nLaurent said opinion he values believes Alberta's resources' could revamp Canada's dollar problem in\nthat period.\nIt would not mean that Canada\nwbuld halt entirely her imports of\nU.S. coal and oil. But, he said, it\nwould mean that trade in these\nproducts would achieve a balance\nthat would allow the country's\nU.S. dollars to move into - other\nphases of trade.\nWashington, he indicated, is as\npleased at this prospect as is\nOttawa. Under present circumstances, Canada draws heavily upon\ndollar receipts from other countries\nto finance her purchases of U.S.\ncoal and oil,\nPENSION PLAN.   '   ' '.*\nMr. St. Laurent, rested after two\n\u25a0days aboard the train, and ready to\nlaunch a nine-city, 20-speech tour\nat Edmonton tomorrow, also said:\n1. The \u2022 Government feelri that a\ntoo-attractive system of non-contributory scheme. But ln the mean-\nExpressions of Sympathy From\nAround World; Drillers Find Body Of\nTot in Well 92 Feet Underground\nSAN MARINO, Calif., April 10 (APX\u2014They found Kothy\nFiScqs dead by drowning,\nAfter 52 hours of heart-breaking, back-straining effort,\nweary rescuers tonight reached the end of their search, and a\nhopeful world the end of its vigil. That she was dead was announced at 8:59 p.m. PST.\n.     But. it would have been the same if it had been only two\nhours. \"\u25a0,; \/ *\u2014;\u2014' \u25a0 \u2014\u2014: ;\u2014\u25a0\u2014\u2022\ntime it may be unfair to pensioners\nto maintain- at their cost pensipn\n^ijo^tions-ovhicfeioiihs^be:- shown-lose tinsatisfacttfry. \"Abolition of the\nmeans test would cost the Federal\nTreasury $200,000,000 a year, putting this step outside the bounds\nof the present Abbott budget. He\nwas commenting on reports the\npensions will be boosted from $30\nto $40 a month.\n2. Canada hopes to see the North\nAtlantic Treaty develop into tin\norganization yrtiich will thaw the\ncold wsir enough to allow the\nmember countries to press ahead\nwith peaceful development of their\nresources and care of their people.\nHowever, it won't be known who\nCanada's representative on the\ntreaty council will be until its role\nls made clear.\n3. No one \"thinks seriously that\nthere will be another session of\nthis Parliament\" but he's not giving\nany election date clues right now.\n4. Consultations about the Commonwealth Prime Minister's Conference in London late this month\nhave been top secret, prohibiting\ncomment.\nTO COAST    ,\nMr. St. Laurent is due in Vancouver Wednesday and will be\nback in Ottawa for the post-Easter\nreopening of Parliament April 25.\nWith his is Mrs. St. Laurent.\nHe declined to estimate when\na contributory pension tyttem\nwith no means test would come\nbut said It was \"so. far off that\nInterim aid might be necessary.\nThe child's body was brought up\nat 9:47 p.m. PST. She was to, the\narms of Dr. McCullock as he was\nhoisted out of the rescue shaft by\ncable. The body, wrapped in a gray\nblanket, was placed immediately in\na waiting black hearse and taken to\na mbsrtuary.\nDr. Robert J. McCullock, family\nphysician, said three-year-old Kathy\nhad been dead \"since last heard\nfrom Friday afternoon.\" That waB\nlittle more\" than an hour after she\ntumbled into the weed-hidden narrow mouth of ari abandoned well.\nHer body was found In water,\nwedged in the 14-Inch well pipe\n92 feet below the surface where\nher distraught parents, David and\nAlice Flsous, waited and prayed\nthe two days and nights,\nIt was the end of the line, too,\nfor the 60 or more volunteer rescuers who went almost without\nlleep In the frantlo digging that\ncarried them 100 feet down, only\n* to find water and death.\nNothing had been . heard from\nthe pipa since Kathy's last frenzied,\nfaint cries to her mother about 6\np.m. Friday. But hope had been held\nthat perhaps shock had comatlzed\nher and somehow she would survive.\nThe bereaved Fiscus family, ln re-\n-sponse to the sympathy expressed\nfrom all corners of the world, said\nsimply:',\n\"There ls nothing we oan say but\nmerely thank .all the people who\nhave been helpful.\"\nINFORMS, CROWD\nOver.tha public address system\ncame thevblce'bf Dr. Paul Hanson:\n\"This Is Dr) Paul Hanson, family\nphysician^, .and, ^...glpse^personal,\n'ftierid b'rtfie Fiscus family.\" - .   '\n\"Kathy is dead arid has apparently been dead since she was last\nhear speaking on Friday.\n\"Her family has beentriotlfius\nand we are now notifying:you. ))\u25a0'.\nMcCullock has pronounced Kathy\ndead and is assisting in removal of\nthe body. For tho .vitri' \u25a0>\u25a0 the family\nwho have held sn> -.o gallantly\nthrough this orders! and all the\npeople who havo aided so magnificently, we ask you st6\\ple>se: leave\nthe scene of the accident as a courtesy to them.\n\"If this had bisn your eMld, we\nare sure you would iissi w.-srst a\ncrowd remaining at the scene, of the\ntragedy. I now wish to read a message from the Fiscus family.\n\"'There Is nothing we can:say to\nfully thank the man people- who\nhave helped us so unselfishly. Many\n,-,f tlscr.s., people have gone lir-m---\nto much-needed rest. .Our.heartfelt\ngratitude goes out to them for their\nsacrifices beyond belief.\"'*\n.The doctor said the family is at\nhome.\nHe said the cause of the death was\ndrowning and the body was found\nin water.\nKathy's body was still wedged ln\na curvature in the well casing late\ntonight\nDr. Hanson and Dr.'. McCullock,\nDrew Says Liberal\nTactics Show\nSocialistic Tints\nGUELPH,. Ont., April 10 (CP) -\nGeorge Drew came home Saturday\nnight to accept the post of honorary\ncolonel in the outfit he served with\nduring the First World War\u2014the\n11th Field Regiment, Royal Csina-\ndian Artillery.\nThe Progressive Conservative\nleader drove to his hometown for a\nmess dinner at Guelph Armouries\nafter delivering at Toronto what\nmay prove to have been the opening salvo of a Federal election\ncampaign in. Toronto where he\nspoke before women of the party.\nMr. Drew made numerous mentions of the Impending Federal election and said the on)y issue at that\ntime would involve a simple choice\nbetween bureaucracy and democracy.\nHe declared that only election of\nthe' Progressive Conservatives\nwould guarantee a return to the\nfree' Parliamentary . system under\nwhich elected representatives will\ngovern Canada.;\nThe Liberal Government, he. said,\nwas abandoning every semblance ot\nLiberalism and was daily getting\nclosed to the doctrines of Socialism.\nSuggestions that the Progressive\nConservatives were \"reactionary\"\nand \"servants of financial interest.!\"\nwere examples of- the adoption by\n\"so-called Liberals\" of. the tactics\nformerly used by tbe Socialist and\nCommunists, he added.\n(oast Strikers\nFree on Bail\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (CP) -\nThirty-four 'striking seamen, charged with unlawful assembly, tonight\nwere free on bail pending a'court\nhearing next .Tuesday.\nThe men,were part of a mob bf\nCanadian Seamen's Union (T.L.C.)\nseamen who tossed 10 rival union\nmen off a'strikebound ship to an\nadjacent pier Friday, night. It was\nthe first'major. West Coast outbreak\nof violence in the week-old C.S.U.\ndeep-sea shipping strike.\nAnticipated flare-ups between rival unions did not occur today as\n150 C.S.U. men continued peaceful picketing of the* freighter SS.\nRiverside. Only one S.I.U. man was\naboard, the vessel.\nAs he set bail at $100 cash or $250\nbond each, Magistrate Oscar Orr\nwarned the men the charge against\nthem is \"seripus\" and said ball\nwould not be set if they appear\nagain on a similar charge.\nCOAST PROFESSOR\nRETIRES\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (CP) \u2014\nProf, Basil Mathews ot Union College of British Columbia, an authority on Christianity and world and\nrace problems, ls retiring and leaving for England this month, it was\nlearned today.\nLAST WAR TRIALS\nVERDICTS TODAY\nBy DONALD DOANE\nNUERNBERG,.Germany, Apsil 10\n(AP) \u2014 The last act in one of\nhistory's sgreatest legal dramas\u2014the\ntrial of Germany's war criminals-\nopens here tomorrow.\nA court of three United States\njudges will pronounce judgment on\n21 Nazi diplomats, Cabinet minis-\nters and officials accused of helping\nHitler plot aggressive war and carry\nout his program of mass.murders,\n10 KILLED\nCALCUTTA, April 10, (AP) -\nTen persons were killed, arid more\nthan 50 injured when an\" express\ntrain jumped the-, tracks near\nBenares,\nacting for Kathy's parents, remained long after the announcement of\nthe child's death was read.\nKathy's last sound was about 6:30\np.m. last Friday. She answered with\ncries the questions of her mother\nto say whether she was standing\nup or lying down in the well   '\u25a0\nL08TGRIPON ROPE\nThe tot apparently gripped \u25a0 rope\nthat was dropped to her late Friday but she lost her grip or Was riot\n\u25a0strong enough to hold on and the\nfell back against the sides of her\ndark tomb.\nKathy cried for a while then. Suddenly she stopped. Doctors estimated that this was the time of her\ndeath.\nFrom all of Southern California\nmen came with equipment to free\nKathy from her cylindrical oof-\nfin. The plight of the little blonde\ngirl captured the sympathy of tho\nworld.\nSuperhuman effort to pull her\n. free from ths earth grew to epic\nproportions.' Men worked without\nrest, stubbornly determined to lift\nKathy Into the sunshine again.\nTwo dayt of heroism followed.\nMen risked their lives fer Kathy\nwho lay dead beneath them.\nThe spectators covered every conceivable  place  of, vantage.  They\npressed 30 feet deep against the 10-\nfoot steel mesh fence which bordered the field on the South and East.\nThey strained against the police-\nguarded ropes that marked oft the\nrescue operation on the North and\nWest.\nFew could get a decent look. And\neven those who had the best spots\ncould see little. But as though under a spell the throngs stayed on\u2014\ntQ;t^e, numbing, cllpiax. The crowd\nwas: esthnateir at'bver\" 15,000,\nKathy's father, manager of the'\nSan Gabriel system of the California Water and Telephone Company,\nhad returned from Sacramento a\nfew hours before the child fell Into\nthe well. He had appeared before a\nLegislative Committee in behalf of\na bill which,would require that:;.\nabandoned welis-be cemented shut\nFly Food to\nStarving\n,   By JOSEPH Mao8WEEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nST. JOHN'S, April 10 (CP)-\u00abhe\nspectre of starvation disappeared\nfrom Southern Labrador today after mercy missions by JI.C.A.F. euid\nprivate planes.\nAn R.CA.F. piano, parachuted\nfood to the village of St. Marys Bay\nSaturday. This allayed fears that\nmany persons there, including expectant mothers and babies, would\nstarve to death. \/\nEarlier, a Newfoundland Airways\nplane, piloted by Freeman Fleming\nof# Charlottetown, flew from the\nNorthern tip of Newfoundland to\nLabrador Friday with nearly half\na ton of food. '\nKNOWN FOR WEEKS\nDr. Gordon Thomas of the Gren-\niell: mission .at St' Anthony, who\nflew-with Fleming, reported conditions on the Labrador coast as \"desperate\" in at least three villages.\nHe finished a distress message to\nPremier Smallwood with: \"The\nauthorities knew about this weeks\nago but did nothing.\" .*..,'\nAlthough the doctor did not simplify this point, it was understood\nha was referring to reports made\nby Newfoundland Rangers during\nthe last month Indicating that food\nwas running low along the coast.\nDr. Thomas said the only solution\nwas to send a boat with supplies.\nThe'. Canadian Icebreaker. Saurel\nnow is headed for St. John's tb pick\nup food' tomorrow and will smash\nits way through the Labrador ice\nbarriers if necessary.::\nAnd in This Corner \u2014\nNEW YORK, April 10 (AP) \u2014 You cah plot against a mother\npigeon, but you can't tell her where to lay an egg.\nA mid-town Manhattan building management found that out.\nIt erected a sharp spike barrier about 20 feet over Its main entrance\nto keep pigeons away.\nFriday a pigeon parked an egg on one of the spikes. Today, It'a\nstill there\u2014teetering over the facade of the airlines terminal annex\nfacing Grand Central Station.\nThere'll be ho effort to dispossess the egg. If It topples and hits a\npasser-by\u2014well .. . .\nBOSTON, April 10 (AP)\u2014Maybe you wonder what those pretty\nairline stewardesses think about in spare moments in the sky.\nIt could be \"marry for love,' ' '\n. United 'Air Lines reported Saturday they asked their young ladies\na Jot of questions about the perfect husband of the air age.\nLet him be a homebody, said the girls.\nLet us' \"marry for love and not for money,\" said the girls.\nThey said the Irian they'd marry needs these traits: Understanding,\nhonesty, good disposition, thoughtfulness, dependability and generosity.\n-It would be nice\u2014but not necessary\u2014said the girls if he had a\ncollege education and a car.\nOh, and no moustaches, please, replied the girls.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 11,1949\nUrges Heavy Vole Tuesday on\nInterior Stages franchise Issue\nTr#ii Speaker\nNelson ratepayers were -urged\nSaturday to turn out at the polls in\nforce Tuesday when the bylaw that\nwould give' Interior Stages a\nfranchise to operate buses in Nelson is put to a vote,\nH. D'Harrison ot Nelson, in sin\naddress delivered over CKLN and\ncoordinated with a report on street\ncar. conditions from A. C, (Les)\nHall, Superintendent, appealed .to\nproperty owners that the vote be a\nrecords-breaking one.'\n\"lye  have  reached  the  point\nwhere transportation services must\nbe curtailed or we must have a new\nsystem,\" Mr. Harrison said.\n\"Interior Stages Ltd. has offered\nus this service, with no capital' cost\nto the City of Nelson. Interior\nStages proposes to operate its own\nbusess at tM WJM fWM \" tbe City\nof Nelson would have to ask if it\ncontinued In the transportation\nbusiness. The bylaw apd contract\nwith the Interior Stages gives every\nprotection to the. citisjeps of Nelson,\ninsofar as transportation is con,\ncerned, ,    -\n\"The buses have proven themselves in the toughest Winter conditions. They have proven themselves\neven beyond expectations. They are\npopuljr y\/lth everyone who has\ntried them, Nelson has always been\nconsidered (i modern, wide awake\ncity, Let's modernise now with a\ntransportation system that Is .up to\ndate.\n\"Tuesday Is the day\u2014the property\nowners who pay the tqxes ere responsible for deciding the issue,\nMay I mast sincerely and earnestly\nurge you to get out and vote on\nTuesday\u2014I hope you'll vote YES,\nbut regardless ot how you vote, let's\nhave a record breaking vote, so\nthat we will knew conclusively\nwhat the piajority of taxpayers\ndesire,\"\nMr, Hall's statement follows:\nStreet railway service has been\noperating in t&a City of Nelson\nsince 1800., The present street cars\nhave been in service since 1909.\nThey are equipped with Aiiis\nChalmers motors and controllers.  .\n\"ThiB equipment is out ot date\nand cannot be replaced, as the company quit manufacturing this equipment in 1914. Down through the\nyear.s despite the best efforts of\nthe maintenance department, the\ntracks and equipment have deteriorated to such an extent that early\nClippers Whip\nDynamiters 7-5\n' NANAIMO, B.C., April 10 (CP)\n\u2014Nanaimss All-,'m clipper? Sat-\niiulny- night '.defeated   Knpberley\nDyniinii he, W s H.L.s:M, in\nthe *' s'e'eonil    ol  -two   post-season\ncs'hsliiiiui) hoi! cy ijinu's Thi teams\nbnllJi'rl lo a \"-1 li.  l-.ii'iiiglit   :;  .\nTloih, teams   seen in!   i   In ace of,\n.^goals,'in    Hie    first   pVnod* with;\nN   \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0,\"\u25a0    \u25a0    nils'\"    hsslll       li.l   \u25a0'    Ills\nPll      I '\u25a0'     Hi \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'-,-   'I   II     I'      \"S    .\nI I,ill ' 1,1,-ulU     i        S    nil  ,K\npni I stei   * in it'.I',   llnoe     iss      ilsrj\nNanaimo  i ,s-i   . h.\u201e,   x |,,.i.- ,1,   ,it\nwas  Samfm   ! .ill\" ,  v.sil.    ,   .......\nkavnnngh,   ,Wilw\u00abi., n nil . Biojvii;\nb     'i     Ss,',l   ul,,        I'ss'llslll    ,   ,111    ,'m \u2022]\ni'\" .i'i-'-i  .;\u25a0 Him   \"ii\"  i.-i- ne!\nS>\"  I ,1, ,111,1     ll III        1,1, I    is,   .\nvando   and   Art   Jelferd   PCSL.\nexecutives.        \" ' ,\u2022* ;\\ ' * \" %,1\nThe Weather\n. Synopsis: Maximum' temperatures\non the Southern Prltlsh Columbia\nCoast Sunday afternoon' were much\nlower than the high .values no far\nIhiu year that were reported on\nsWsisy However it( was still\nw'-i.tn in the Southern Jhterlorwith\nIhr* 70 degree-'mark exceeded ,il\niiiiniy- plnri s. Kmnln.ops 'took mi)j:\nlioniiis   lo,    sin    provmci    wills   7C\nMetlujmi    Hal    -i lded^BI'.* The\n\u25a0 oilier   -.-e.'tn,,,    ,'i.iil   in. viil-.\\i 'on\nil, \u25a0   *,-n,i t,       ,ll     -,,,     ,.     \u201e.     ,l\u201e\nomli. i.i    is,I \u201ej.,i    ,   IJ      .     'I..ii,-,\nI   |.n       un!     i   in i   (I     In,   i , ill\ncontinue eves Use Northern nnd:\nI cm \u25a0 i\u25a0! 'i,i \u25a0 lion'  .\u25a0( thi   rinvimi'.'\nWill Sand Poiicd;; \u25a0 <. \u25a0\nTo Oust Strikers\nMONTHEA1,,   yi,,,il   il)   (i I')      ;\n'Hull     fss  '   -ssi ,, Il    Ill'    ' . .1\ndun Seamen',., Union (T Lt*)\naboard' Hie Mnnt \"All is will be\nforced to end their sit-in strike tomorrow, a' rpokcs'ninn fin*, the\nfreighter's owners, Ihe Montreal\nShipping ( ompany, >aid tonight\nThe spokesman said that imleis\nthe men, who Saturday wrn- le-\nported down to then* last, Iual of\nbroad, came off tin ship vnluiil '\"IV\npolice \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0iilil cvii I m -,.. .isi.i ,| ,-,\n-'court Sttyij|;,-*^||i^^||^^|f*|\nTh\" .i.mil. . fu e,l t\u201e -,-iopl\ntin i> pay,In i 1'inlay, .iiles hungmi,\nills' Mont AJi.s In so ili'i't isii'vioii'..\nni: In for\"thi s.ulieat' pni t-opeiiiiig\ndate on reeoul In bad, ilu-y lomed\nthe geneiat C.S.li: Inki- called\nafter ship-owiio.u on tin ll,i I Con s.\nsigned an agreomcnl with Hi, 'ileal\nSenfniei   Inteinational Union.   *\nS.I.U. men, anticipating the evil  ,\ntion onlor, wew reported standing\nby to board tin  Mont Al.a  ii noon\nas police luiil  removed -the < .S.U.,\nii \u25a0\u201e   itnl   ,,\nPHONE 114 FOR CLAtlliriKD'\nNELSON                         30     85\n\u2014\n-\n>^rit&$P&\u00a3l*:$&&.:0te?iBi$'\n\u2014\nToionto'.        . . \/....:., I'd,   5fi\"\n\u2014\n,\\oslli   r..i \u25a0       ' .         .'S    47\n^^\nI,in     sMlilll,     *                   'I.      '.!\u25a0\n\u2014\n.01\nwiTOiifei'ljfASasK*-.;\" ifeasisr\n.01\nBinn.lon           .    .     - 21-.. Ill \u25a0\n%\u00a3\n~\n_\n\u2014\nw~\nNorth Battleford.....    36    72\nSvifl. I'murn,'-         -.ill,-,' VI, ,\n$Bf.\n\u2014\n\u2014\nLi-thliinlgi         \u25a0'.'        '](i   -VI.\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\nI ..inloisp'     '      ..           IV     ''?\n\u2014\nl-.sitieii.ir   .........''\u2022-.' '':'\n\u2014\n.05\n\u2022',,.,.,1                                       *,!       !\u201e.\n.01\n1 i -I  \/    '                   71\n\u2014\n\u25a0 ,. ,,   \u201e.   \"  il ,,,               '1     V-\n\u00ae~\n.!\nJ'.ll.,,   -,, I,,','            ,'\u2022'     ,1 ,\n--\n;Ri^,tlK:=3ss:Mi*^i:#i.j^}%o(ftf\n\u2014\n\"mil i.i.l                             '1   ' 'its\n%~\n\u2014\n, . ,.     '.   ni 1 ,,\u25a0                 11      V.\n\u2014\n\"mi,,,  ,,                              \u25a0\u25a0'     r\u201e\nif\u2122\n1 is         ,,l                          \"       'II\n\u2014\n1\".    \u25a0      '.,.,                                Il       Ills\n\u2014\n\u2022viniel.oi \u201e                    :\u25a0',    .<.;(\nHOCKEY SCORES\nP.C.H.L.   ;.    \\        ,.   >\n.New Vt stnilustt > 0, Han Pirru.7\n(Best-o\u00a3-j.Pvun   'iual tied1 2-2\nMOVING PICTURES\nNature Lovors\u2014Don't miss this NELSON FISH\nAND WILDLIFE CONSERVATION CLUB showing of\nWildlife Picttii- s\u2014To comnici.iorato flic memory of\nJack Miner \u2014 i!*. grandest Consorvationilt Canada\naver knew. Yoi: and your children owe iiii.i your rc-\nipeetl. Bring the family-  ''i' SS V5Z.\nTUESDAY NIGHT\nCAPITOL THEATRE\n8 P.M.\nreplacements are absolutely necessary.\n.\"During the past 10 years it has\ntaken great effort\u2022. to keep the\nwheels turning, end it has been\nonly through the splendid coopers'\ntion of all concerned that they are\nstill in operation.\n\"We have now come to the point\nwhere a considerable amount ol\ntrack and trolley construction work\nis required to protect the old cars\nwe are now operating,\n* \"The estimated cost to operate\ntwo street ears during 1048 was\n$47,000 and the number of passengers required per year, to balance this' figure is '783,333. During\nthe first nine months of 1148 our\npassenger average' ot 47,128 per\nmonth, a total ot 505,530 passengers\nper year showing a less of $13,067\nper year. The operating cost\nestimated for 1949 is .$$W With\nan additional $30,500 fpr track and\ntrolley repairs, a total of $88,043.\n\"Therefore it does npt seem feasible to do-the required work on' tiie\ntracks and overhead equipment to\noperate cars that are obsolete and\nrunning at-a heavy loss when more\nmodern and economlo types of\ntransportation facilities are' available.\nOUTGROWN STRsErr CARS\n\"Our city has outgrown its transportation system and during the\npast seven years a great deal oi\ninformation has been gained in\nregard to the operation and maintenance eoBt on different typos of\nvehicles for City1 transportation,\n\"It is not my intention to cat*,\nany reflection against street rail'\nwsySs Street cars are great vehicles\nand essential ln large, thickly populated cities, but due to the vast improvement and flexibility of rubber\ntired vehicles, many small cities,\nboth in Cariada and the United\nStates, are putting them in operation to avoid the heavy expenditure\nwb'ioh would otherwise be required\nfor track repairs.\n\"I might mention that due to the\nage of our street cars and the severs\ngrades whloh they operate over,\nwe will be compelled to enforce\nthe regulation of tha British Columbia street Railway Act, that the\ncarrying capacity ot a street car, in\naddition tp the seating capacity, be\non a basis ot 50 per cent of the\nseating capacity, making a regulation load of 57 passengers.\nRedeemer Honors\nB. Holiday-Smith\n,B. Holiday-Smith, a member of\nthe Committee of the Church of\nthe Redeemer in Fairvjew and Us\nTreasurer\/for four years,: who is\nreluming to Boswell, was honored\nas    lh(\\,f.iisi>ly    service    Sundaj\n'movsimeisfffSyfiiif f*^vi0^^\nHe urn   nit .c.itid whli i mn, i ifl\nut the Vic.-.r and Chutch Committee,\nby, licv. W.''.l.'bilv('i'\\vi!u!l. .\n-Both Mi'. Holiday-Smith and 1.1s\ni'\u201ei\u201e JVU ,- Ethel lls.lid.y fsisiilh,\nhave been, Chureh'of the Rcdeomei\nniiuiliinue, , ivliilr 'm Tis lsun.,-\n' They hope to return ln the Fall\nROSSLAND WINS\nA EVENT IN\n10-PIN TOURNEY\nTRAIL. B.C., April  10-Rossland\nmil Troll raptured A -nnd H class\n, visih -In -. i\" tin\"! sis? ill pin-\ntomnai.ipnt here today Tot,il-points:\n;i-,ii,tei',. \u25a0\n\u2022 \u00bb'\": \" rati    \u25a0\u25a0 i .\"\u25a0,\nSouth Klosvm, Trail' ond' Holland\nwi M, i nil ml\nkimberley Cpupjc;^\nCelebrates \u25a0'* '\"'   ;^\nSilver Anniversary\nKIMBERLEY, April 10-A most\nfthjoyable party wasfhelsiEat:;'the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs: Ernle:Turher;s\nwhen some M friends and .relatives\npaid them a surprise visit, it being\nihnii Silver Widdlni; Annlvi'ianry.\nit whs also the birthdnto of Mrs\",\nTumor's mother, Ms,\". Blake, mid\nIlu j .1 Wiiililmi Anmveisaiy in\ntholr'dnughtei and ton-in-law, Mn'.\n...id M.s. Jim Scanland.\n* Games, singing and dnnci ij* m n\n. njoyed one, vdilih i butss i \u2022 uji\npi e was u'lvi'd. Wi',', i Gioeli, Mrs.\nBonnie Turner anil Mrs. Blake\nsn-vi'd. \"*\nPilgrims Crowd Rome\nVATICAN CITY, April 10 (AP)\n\u2014A vast throng of the faithful,\nnumbering 40,000 or :more,,;crowded-\nin lis the Basillcn of St. Peters here,\ntally to Ubher in holy week with\ntin liteo uf Palm Bundny.\n: Among the.crowd woreithousiindB:\nof pilgrims froiu many foreign\nlands.   *    , \u2022\nPalm Similar commemorates the\nsolemn enlv.v nt Chrisl into Jerusalem,-when he wn'i greeted sWlth\nhosannas, and palms and, flo'wcrsi\nwen  iili'i'wn befoie Iilm.\nESCAPE;\nSALMO, B.C.; April 10-Whether\nit was the lobby or the dog that\ngot the billy's goat, Salmoltes don't\nknow. At any rate, Mr. Goat got\nout pretty fast , . , through a\nwindow.\nFollowing a group of children\ndown Salmo's main street, he\nwalked into the New Davenport\nHotel lobby. There was a dog,\nowned by proprietor Bill Reld.\nBilly took stock of his confined\nquarters and the dog, and escaped\nthrough the nearest window.    .\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (CP) \u2014\nCSeorge Frederick Uphains pioneer\nVanoouver resident, died today at\nthe age of 87. The former lumberman and rancher had been a\nresident since 1880, a year before\nthe great fire, and was a member\nof the Pioneer's Association.\nJh. MkfhwayA,\n1. Nelson-Cranbrook \u2014 SoftM 4\naiid Borne broken pavement, rf\n2. Nelson-Kaslo\u2014Fair.\n\"3.  Nelson-MonaBhee  \u2014 Difficult\nWest of Edgewood.\n,  4. Nelson-Nelway \u25a0\u2014 Rough1and\nsoma mud, M 0-8, M 20-48.\n>:i5. Nelson-Trall-Paterson \u2014 Construction, at M W. sSome lout'li sections.      , . .\n6. Rnssland-C.-iscade-Clesed.\nMetals Market\nHits Doldrums\n' F?y   JACt   R   r.YAN    \u25a0*,   ,'\nNEW   YORK.   April   10   'CF \u2014\nI1  of both lend   uid.zinc , n ed\ninntKei mm n .poipid lip- week is\nIlls' metals mnrkcl continued 'drift-\ning. iii il\" doldrums.-Copper^ i!\nilimUil', .unehanged,',with tiadiii)\nves'y quiet, ' ^ r\" V \"-.- \"\" , ' \"\n,_ I'lin' ml In Is -ul prices to-!5-conts\n,i pound. New York, brought the\ntotal'reducing tin tho heavy'mctnl\n(n (I'i.ccnt'.hiuci iWaicls C. The latest reduction nnnnunced ou_ Wi'il-\nnepday, -failed io '\u2022.Minul.iln'j ill ,J.\nby the week's end, however.\nSine   W.W   trlniiiicri   a   oent 'a\n' 'pound to 15 cents, East St. Louis,-!\nTuesday, Uke the previous cut\no( V\/j cents March 89, thfs reduction alio failed te revive buying noticeably. Meagre talcs were,\n'mostly on an average-price balls.\n.Major copper produoers opened'\nMay books at 23% cents a pound\nbut reported business virtually at:;a\nstandstill.   Activity   In   Klincd   se-\ncondary'metal   ni  ?,'AVt   cents,  the\nprice held by  the  leading custom\nsmeltei  v;,m reported non-exl.,toni\nCopper at the lov.-c-i price also was\nof'i'ied the exporl trndc\/nnd some\n.'\u25a0ale:: weie made nt 23Mi renin.\nMajor non-ferrous prices:: *\n-Copper\u201423.25-23,30 cents a pound,\nConnecticut Valley; Foreign, 33.35-\n23.50 rents, New York.\nLead\u201414.8 cents a pound. Si.\nLouis; 15;cents, .New-York;-. Foreign,\n10-13.25' cents, Gulf -of Mexico Ports,\nZinc\u201411 cents n pound Eost St.\nLouis; 15.70 cents, Now York; Foreign, nominal, 15.25 cents, .Guli of\nMexico Porf\\\nAlumlnuin\u2014W cents n -pound In;\nigots, shipping points; pigs, 10 cents,\"\nshipping point.\nf Antimony\u201441.73 iintn v pmiiut\ncased, New York;-305 lent',, litilk,\nLaredo, Texas \",, t    ,\nManganese '8 per sent ore,\nnearby contracts, nominal, 70-1)0\nr.-iil a loin ton iinil (22.04 pounds)'-\nC.' I. F\u201e U. S. Ports; Ferromangan-\nese 78.82 per cent manganese, $1.12-\n$17.5 a gross.ton, shipping point.\nNlckel\u201440 centB a pouncf, eleetro-\ntvtic, cathodes, Port Colborne, On\ntario; 42.93 centj, New ork.\nP!atlnum\"*$'2 an ounce, whole\ntarlo; 42,93 cents, New York.\nSilver\u201471,5 cents an ounce, :New\nYork;.43.5 oence,1 London.\nTin\u2014$1.03 a pound, New York.\nQulok\u00abllver-$85-$88 a flask of 78\npounds, New York,\nTungsten Ore\u2014$28,50 a shoH ton\nunit (20 pounds), delivered; Chin,\nese $24-24,50,. New York.     7;V\nWIU, SEEK TO.EASE\nWAR BURDENS\nGENEVA, April 10 (AP)-Dlplo-\nmats of some 50 countries will try\nto find a formula here this month\nfor sparing civilians some of the\nhorrors of any,new war.\nW.J. Macdonald,\nFormer Sandon\nMerchant, Dies\nVICTORIA, 8,C., April 10\u2122wil-\nlam James Macdonald, 88, who tor\n.the past year was a patient in the\nMount St, Mary's Hospital here, died\nSaturday,,:    \u25a0\nMr. Macdonald was born in Or-\nvliie, Prince Edward Island in 1888s\nant.taught school in that province,\nIn 1896 he PlPved to Sandon: where\nhe was a merchant until bis retirement in' 18S0. He later resided, ln\nNelson. , '\n' Re was predeceased by his wife,\nPriscilla, in January, 1047, and Is\nsurvived by one son, j. Vernon\nMacdonald.* and two granddaughters, Louise end Mp of Trail, to?\nbody is-being forwarded to Trail\nwhere burial will take place on\nThursday.\nTells Kimberley\nP.T.I of Value\nOf Report Card\n. KIMBERLEY, B. C\u201e April 10-\nA good crowd attended the monthly\nFi.: ent-Teachers meeting to hear j,\nLukas, Supervising Principal of\nKimberley Public Schools, speak on\nthe elementary school report card.\nA short skit and an excellent film\nwere also enjoyed.\nDiscussing the new type of report\ncard Issued to pupils of grades 4, 5\nand 8 last September, Mr. Lukas\nstated that they gave .much better\nand more accurate information than\ndid the old type cards. 6nly seven\npoints have to be marked against 20\non the old type, and the method, ot\nmarking is more easily, understood\nby the parents,\nMr. Lukas also explained the\nsymbols, used on the Primary report\ncards grades l, 2, and 3. \"The child is\nmarked pn his ability to do a certain\ntask\" he said, \"ndt on a competitive\npercentage as formerly.\"\nMr. Lukas also asked that parents\nlook carefully at the attendance record of their child to fee if the days\nmarked \"absent\" were really necessary: Urging, parents to visit the\nschools to discuss any. of their children's problems with the teachsrs,\nhe empha.'ized that if the child's\nwork w88 unsatisfactory, October\nand November were the months to\ncall on the teacher, not April or\nMay, when it was too late for any\nconstructive heip.      ,\nMrs. A. F. Aifclni, program chairman, intrduced the speaker and Mrs,\nF. Bridge moved e vpte of thanks.\n. At the business meeting of the Association it wss announced that $90\nhad lietin donated io tho--Dorothy,\nCallaghan Mcmminl ,r,tlml,i\",hip\na\"ni\ntin Kootenay's at\" Woidner, shi'htlyl \"Mrs L'H.'Gaibtlu iqih led on the\n' y-oi.te'ss   ot   ihe   Reuuir '(.'ill   ni,,'\nTRAIL, B.C., April 10 - T, W.\nSmith, National president of the\nChemical Institute of Canada, will\nbe in TraU Monday, making his official visit to the West Kootenay\nSection of the Chemical Institute of\nCanada. This organization is the National Professional Association of\nChemists and Chemical Engineers,\nThe West Kootenay Section, under\nthe chairmanship of A, Ws Moore,\nhas a membership,of 68 local chemists and chemical engineers.\nMonday evsnmg Mr, Smith will\nbe the guest speaker at a dinner\nsponsored jointly by the chemical\nInstitute of Canada, The Canadian\nInstitute, of Mining and Metallurgy,\nThe Engineering Institute of Canada, and the Professional Engineers\nof B. C, working through a local-\ncoordinating body the \"Committee\nOf Technical Societies.\" The speaker's, subject will be \"Industry and\nChemists and Chemical Engineers,\"\nThomas Woodford Smith of Montreal, elected President of the\nChemical Institute of Canada, Just\na day before his 82nd birthday, Is a\nnative of Dublin, Ireland, and has\nbeen associated with chemistry for\nnearly 40 years. Since April, 1940,\nhe has been chairman of the Div\nision Managers Committee of Cana-\ndian industries Limited, a company\nwith which he has more than 35\nyears service,\nWater Content ol\nE. Kootenay Snow\nBelow Average\nWater content of tbe snow-pacl|\nis generally above average* over\nmost of the Province, but is below\naverage in the East Kootenay.\n4 .This isaccording to snow survey\ndata as of April 1, released by the\nComptroller of Water Rights, B.C.\nDepartment of Lands:;and Forests.*\ninsr.ni-; March, runoff,of Ihe Co-'\nlumbia l.ii'.i al lilulibnik neal\nTrail waa nlightl '.'loss llirui noimal;)\nabove.\n, 'Me,..) monthly .dischargi pf ilic\n\"Columbia was 1(1,001)* ifri'innt seci,\nconipnivd   with' n  lung .run  mi m\n nilily  diss li.i'i''   oves    .'.Ill y(as\nli'puod ot  I'\/.DOU 1,11, ft,- oi;!)i!-prr\nci'ift.\", -'\u2022 {        r \"   .;,.,\"'\nMaximum   daily   discharge   was\n10,1)110    ,cc.-It\u201e \"consideralily   below\nihe njiiti v, rd of 35,(101) sec -ft:,The,\n\u25a0i.iuimliin   \u2022.-   \u25a0    iii '.00  sir.-.\"!.,   .-. -H,\n '\u25a0   111    '  .\".' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0  Olilili    er.,\n(I     i,   In  I'll',\n\"Tiie \" Kuuti-nay River's mean\nmonthly discharge was 1590 sec.-ft.,\nis, 102 pel cunt ni tiie Juilg-tu-m\nmean nmutlily discharge ol 1500\nlec.-fl, oves ati ye...a.\u00ab     *\nMaiiniuin   runoff was   III,7'!   ,ei\n\u25a0 ft., and the uihiuoimi  I410tsuc -\"fl\nHecord lsirli is 336(1 see tl, e lab\nlished lis 1043. and the low, 600 sec-\nIt., recorded in 1914.\nAt 89 Weds\nAdopted Daugh'-',\nSuffers Attack\nPOULAN, Ga., April to (CP) -\nChase S. Osburii, .tuthor, explorer\nand tnrmei governoi oi Michigan\nwins w,n married Saturday al the\nage of- OH, lo hit. - Cuiindian-bnrn\nadopterl .-'(laugliler,, made ,m amazing lally late tu.il.iy aftiii being ,re\nported,neai death.    -- \u2022 \u2022* j\nDr. J. ,1. Crumley,'his doctor,\nstressed, \"however,*,that*.(Mi'oni ,is\nstill in-grave danger.,The former\ngovernor suffered, a heart .-..attack;\n'shortlyBiter the wedding,ceremony'\nThe physician said vthat excitement,\nwas no factor tin\".: Osborn's decline. *\n; The bride, 56, was Osborn's longtime assistant. The former Stella\nLee Brunt of Hamilton, she met Os-\nporn In 102B, He adopted her in\n,1937 and changed her name to Stel-\nlanova (New Star) OsBorn, In recent\nyears she has been his biographer\njjrid constant companion. >\n: His wife said after the,marriage:\n\"I love the governor and he Jovai\nme,.We thought this over and decided it was the thing to'do.\"\ns \"In the face bf It. ft might seein\nfoolish and subject to much misinterpretation. Rut the governor\nmay not have too many more days\nand it has made him beautifully\nhappy,\"'.   '.   .\nBuy Old Dominion\nCOLVILLE, Wash., April 10 -\n(AP) \u2014 The Old Dominion silver-\nlead mine, idle since 1927,'has been\nsold to Ira M. Hurley and Early B,\nGibbs, it was announced today.\nThe price was hot disclosed.\nHurley and Gibbs,'owners of the\nBonanza mines bought the Old Dominion from Judge W. ton Johnson,\none Ot the owners of the Dominion\nSilver-Lead Mining Company;\nThe Old Dominion, ohe of the]\noldest mines in the State, prbduc\n\"Wm-JiBst-i\nBrown Boots, 5Vi io 8.\nm to' 10V4 \u2014\n12 to 3,\nBro\\*n ppots, p'\/s to \\\\. ^\nWhite Beotlet, V\/% to 5,\nm to 8-t $4.78\nWhite T Strops, 5 to 8..._\n8'\/a to 12 \u2014 M.7S\nPatent Strop, 6 to 8%. _\n\u25a0; .9, to ,12 \u2014 W.75\nRed T Straps, 5Vi to 8. _\nim. to 12 - $4.78\nBrown Oxfords, 5Vi to 8.\nBlaek or brown, 8'\/2tol2\u2014-$4.78; 12'\/2to3\nWhite-Saddle Oxfords 8Vi to 12.\nWith red trim, 1214 to 3... \u25a0\nFINK'S FOOTWEAR\n12V4 to\n12V4 to 3.\nDistrict Over Top in Red Cross\nCampaign; Returns Not All In\nNelson and District has surpassed\nIts Eed Cross quota of $7000.\nBy Sunday $7173.38 had come\ninto headquarters, Alderman N. C.\nStibbs, Chairman, said. Salmo, Balfour and Bobaon had still to bf\nheard from, so tha total was expected to be even higher.\nFrom Kootenay I,ake Points ijs-\noluding KmIo, Ainsworth, MUrer\nLake and Riondel, with Kaslo as\nthe collection centres came $489.55.\nKaslo residents contributed $231.85,\n\u25a0Mirror Lake $28, Ainsworth $41, and\nBlondel $120.\nAmong latest Nelson' organizations donating were the Lions Club\nwhich gave $10 and the Soroptlmlst\nClub of Nelson, $5.\n\"Roll Up Sleeves and Work\" 1$\nJohnson (all for Federal Election\nrtniiiu. and movi il Uint the 1' 'I\" ^.\ngo on record os btilns In support ol\nsitiiJjpl^TOt^-qg!*^\ny   liominatmi! eoinhulb-i   of Mm.'\natf3pAtBijs;^\nMri   '*   \u2022' >' \u25a0 '   ', so,.\", il\nMrs J. Tit,.ne nml Mrs.' Collins\nconsented to looK alter the sale of\nihc_Handkralt.niipl.-iy tickets. ,. -\n, ;Mie .T. Wilson,' chairman of ithe;\nPre-School Committee, said only 75\nI* ui'i! i i i!,i<) trii questionuires had\nbeen leiuined She felt Aril il each\nscclioirol the aly were ranvassed;\nand die leui'i i-'plniiii'*!, ni,m\u00bb more\np.-uent:  would -lie interested.\nlie.onidoii-, whi.'li will be brought\nii)i al tiie iiiiiHuil )'. V. A. meeting in\nVancoir.ei were discussed xmd Ihe\n, \u2022.! -.. li. Mrs. L H. Garstin, v.-,,.-'\ns!a'i^?E i i<sjiril'iiu e li ras*SSf|sM*Ssr::W-iS9s\nI lie su lesoliitions wine)' the By-\nI '; I'oinnvnie had irnily for the;\nMarch meetins wero - unanimously\npassed. ,\nFind Atomic Roys\nCause Damage to\nFuture Generations\n' .SEATTLE, Ap 11 10 (AP)\u2014Fish\ni-sipri-isnenls here have shown ill,.I\n\u2022itomir i\\ carry, dam'aKa in* death\nbeyond the insl generauoii o( it.-i \u2022\ni   id.'ti\n\" I's unslaied Into terms of huma.i\nbeings,\" sad Dr. Lauren K. Donald-\nsiir; director of the applied fisheries\nliiboiatory:: ,at the University ot\nWashington, '\"the researol. thus tar\nIndicates that the grandchildren Ol\nNagasaki and Hiroshima survivors\nwill be less fertile thaA normal par-,\nents and will produce more stillborn or mis-shapen offspring ,if\nthey have any families at all.\"\nDr. Donaldson, who has led tfie\nstudy of the' etfects of the Bikini\natom bombs on marine life, is'; in\ncharge of the radiation research at\nthe fisherisss lab6rstory,\nA special strain of \"super-trout\"\nhave' been used in the heredity\nstudies. Under special cultivation,\nthey attain maturity in half the normal time, thereby doubling the\nspeed of generations,\nIn the experiments, seven groups\nof the fish were bombarded with\nvarying intensities ot X-rays, Dr.\nDonaldson explained they, are similar to the gamms rays from atomic\nexplosions.\n, A fourth generation is currently\nbeing spawned. Dr, Donaldson said\nthe intensive studies of -the three\ngenerations by him and his assistants have shown that the larger the\ndosage of radiation received by \\he\nfirst generation, the mora descendants will die or dovelop abnormalities.\nLONDON   (CP)-!fomiwo*k\nshould be done in school. say\u00bb Sir\ned mora than $1,500,000 worth \"of William   Hamilton   Fyfe,   former\nore. Operations were halted in 1827 Principal   Of   Queen's   University,\nat a depth of 700 feet The mine\nwas located ln 1885,\nJohnson said it is believed there\nare large ore bodies in the lower\nworkings that have not beer) mined.\nKingston, Ont. and Aberdeen Unl<\nvarsity. He said recently that lt\nwas most unhealthy for a child to\n\"bolt a meal and then sit down to\nbooks.\"\nVANCOUVER, AprillO (CP) n\nEfforts to heal the breach in the\nranks of tbe British Columbia Liberal Party may have borne fruit In\na last-minute appeal by Premier\nByron JohnBon.\nJust before the end of a stormy\ntwo-day session last night, Premier\nJohnson called on members of the\nB. C. Liberal Association to:\n\"Boll up your sleeves and\" work,\"\nfor the party In the coming Federal\nelection.\n\"That's the kind ot talk we want\nto hear,\" shouted a delegate from\nthe convention floor.\nWOUUD BACK LAING\nIn \u2022 second surprise move, the\nPremier said be would personally\nsupport Arthur Laing, retiring Provincial President, and .storm* centre\n'Of the conventin...\n\"li he (La(nn) plans to' run in\"\neithei (lit PuH'lnu ii ... Fedei il\nelections J will suppoit him J.Q0\nper sent,\" said Premier, isilmiun.\n.Thi division in iho nnily \u25a0\u25a0\u2022jelml\nis . Iii.III\/. Ill A|, Illlil.Ullll I I. Lllllll    on\nFriday. Mr. Luing Iliad; refused\" to\nm is in usiomlnnil'iu tm tin' Pre t-\ndency and Premlei Johnson made\nii.s. move tn support a dratt-Lalng'\nfor office campaign.\nPremier Johnson sat silent on\nthe platform, flanked by fiv\u00bb Cabinet members.\nMr. Laing's refusal to contest his\npresidency was  interpreted  os  a\nwidening split In the party's ranks\nover the policy to continue coalition\"-,\nwith the Progressive Conservatives.?\nFinally, after a stormy .session,':\nHarry Perry, veteraA pwty wor(t\u00abr\nfrom Prince George, was elected\nPresident The vote was 315 to 279.\nPremier Johnson told the delegates: \"No matter what your differences with coalition, when the Federal election rolls around, whether\nyou like your Provincial leader, or\nnot, roll up your seeves and work.\n\"I believe this Is the finest convention the Liberal party has ever\nhad in B. C. and it ls going to close\"\nour ranks. There has been a lot ol\ndiscussion and a lot of dlsagreeinertt%\n;hore, but it is? typical ofthe LllperalS\n-party view Knit if you Iwvi. iray- '\nthing to say, you sny lt. Thanl: God\nIn this s-rnmirj, yon can still \u2022-.t-md ,\nbn   tliu\" Antic  nml  say   wlint y<u *\nthink.\" . ..\nHe sold endorsemi nt of iiipHilnsi\nby tl ouvenllmi \"win ros my hi ,irt\nveiy much liHlefil.\"'      -        *,.\nPIONEER MOUMT1E\nVISITS SONS\nINKOOTENAYS\nFrank StDennii of Hr [ Is. i,  >, ti i\non oi ilio lluynl Conadian\/Mo.un'ted,\nPolice, lins been vioiiinr aonu Jn\nNelson  T nil J.i.l n(,ilo,liy. He I\n81. \u2022 \"   , :\nj- Mi-.'f'.illrnniii joined (lie Hi'.M.i\"\nin IW)? mui wm: stationed Iss'Wln.il-\npeg nnd Medicine Hal Hi unisullrd\nbetween Fort - Waluh and Fort\nMacleod, mid later, accompanied\nby Officer White Fraser, to Fort.\nSteele.\n..From IMIi io 11110 lie v\/ag patrolling tralnn ivilh the late Sergeant\nAshton on lookout for*.German\n:spies.\nHe had- five sons in both world\nwars. Theywere:Sgt::Leb.St.Derinis,\nos Hit 50th Halialion, 1 lllcd in 1918\nut Vimy Ridge, Corporal Alex\nSIDcnnis, I'\/luli H.m.ilioii, ,u lie\nmoij l'pi. Jt W. SlDrnnis, (.'Ills Tank\nTransport, of Nelson, wlm 'was\nrecently married to Miss Betty'|\nRoberts of Haslemere, Surrey, England, Cpl. John StDennis, 6th Antl-\nTank Regiment, bf Kimberley, and\nSgt, E- R- StDennis, .2nd Anti-Tank\nRegiment, of Trail. AH served overseas.\nWl6 Wins Bowling\nWorld Series Single.\n'-ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, April'10*'\nr(AT')   --  This   A..ieriemi  Liiwllnf\nCongress Tmiiniiisuiiil-world series\nfor (In   on. ulght-a-wpel: jsHilei'*-\n\u25a0ended Satui-dny .night,'.with these\nwinners:\ngmglec   M'liiiiul   lnnelii   uf  St. ,\nBernard; \u25a0\u00bb\u201e with a :i o of 71(1.-     ,\nDoubles \u2014 Donald van Bo:-:el of\nGreenbay, Wis, and rinn- Hoju-\nhardt of Sturgeon Bey, Ws., -1332.-- *c\nAU-events\u2014John Srnall of of Chi-,\ncago, 1041.\n, ; Teams\u2014Jlmmle Smith's of South\nBend, Ind., 3027,\nRusche Jwon sJSOO. Van Bbxell,\nBernhardt and amall each won\n51000,  -,.\nJohn A. Noios-tli, Harold Kelly,\nIl.ulev Lni-liey,  -loe  Czlgany. and\nPete Tatmnn ot the .Tiirunie Smith's ;\nteam'sh noil ;2r.l)0 In |\u00bbl'\/i mims-y.\n. : I,,,,,- i.; ,r ir \":, 'ifi, s\nm\nHITLER PICTURES\nPOPULAR\n* By BIOHARP I'AaihCIII-E. '\nBERLIN, April 10 (AP) - FoUr\nyears after Adolf Hitler Is'believed\nto have died by.,his own hand,in:\nthe ruins of his air raid shelter in]\ncapitulating Berlin, their is a ilniv\ning black market in hi   pioturei\n-Not only are the tuahn .'r plctiui\neagerly sought by Germans, but also:\nthoso of Goerlng, Goebbels, and olhjj\ner high Nazis. Pictures of! the ma's-1\nslve Nazi demonstrations *nro also\nIn demand.\nTshis is a post-war outgrowth sof\nwhat frbm pre-war times has. been\na great- German fetish\u2014the collect-;\ning and exchanging pictures of celebrities,\nBut while the exchange of,pic-;:\nlures of such persons as movie -'stars'\nand sports figures is conducted In.\nthe open, the buying and selling of\nNazi pictures Is strictly an under-\nthe-counter business,\nAnd, although a picture of Mariano Dietrich displaying her legs\nwill fs?toh threa pictures .of Margaret Lookwoods British movie star,\nyou can't get a Hitler picture now\nfor any number of Dietrlchs,\nFor a good Nazi picture you have\nto put up food, cigarettes or other\nvaluable commodities.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n^\nWHAT EVERY\nMiddle-Aged Woman\nSHOULD KN0WI\nWhen teura i iijms lus> onnily...\nwhen you get upset or ptiuhky\n- over the unexpected . . . when\n.yon feel \"all in\" ami jnnt n\nl.nnillo of nervi a . .*. tils   i muv\n\"\u2022111-' signs   nf    lissslily    chilllgeil\n\u2022-viiliii li every  wi.ii.nH i.iunt,\nundergo m hei nuddlii yoisti.\n\u2022 -, I lul ilou'i, be alarmed! Mirny\nwomen pasa through this period:,\nserenely \u2014 by ilBingcommon\nSsense and-taking good &we of\nsthemselves. Extra sleep, plenty i\nof fresh air and wholesome food\nare sound rules. And you'll also\nfiind a good.tonic, such as Dr.\nr Chase's Nerve Food, is most\nhelpful in  building  up your\nvitality and restoring a brighter\noutlook on life. ..   \u2022\nFor over 50 yeafs^Canadian\nI women   have   relied   oh   Dr.\nChase's Nerve Food to help\novercome a tendency towards\nnerves and  hysteria at such x.\ntimes. Containing Vitamin Bl,\niron and other needed minerals,,\/\nDr. \u25a0 Chnse'a Nisirve Food has.'.-'\nhelped so many to rest better,\neat better, feel better\u2014whenever their nerves get on edge\nand they feel run-down, let\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food help\nyou, too! Get the large \"economy size\" today. M.-.\n MM\nBelgian Underground Hero A Free\nMan Again\nTwo Russ Scientists\nAwarded Stalin Prize\nFor Atom Research\nLONDON, April 9 (API-Moscow\nradio said today that the Soviet\nCouncil ol Ministers had awarded\nthe 200,000-ruble Stalin prize for\n1848 to a scientist for research into\nthe nucleus oi the;atom..      \u25a0\nAnother prize was awarded for\nthe study of cosmic rays in the\nupper atmosphere, the . broadcast\nsaid. Cosmic rays are similar tb\nsome rays thrown off when the core\nof nucleus of an atom is split, as in\nan atomic bomb.\nThe broadcast said Georgl Dlml-\ntrk-vich Latyshev, head of the laboratory of the Leningrad Physlco-\nTechr.icol Institute of the tl. S. S. R.\nAcademy of Sciences, won the\nprizes for \"experimental researches\nIn the sphere of the atomic nucleus.\"\nTo Sergei Nikolaivoch Vernov, a\nprofessor at the Moscow State University, went the prize for \"experl-,\nmental study of cosmic rays in the\nupper st; -ta of thu atmosphere,\" the\nb-oad^ast said.   '\n\u25a0'\"\u25a0\"'\".\u25a0 \u2014Central Press Canadian\nArthur Matthys, Belgian underground hero who risked his life\n\u25a0t the handsi of the Nazis many times during the war,- Is a free man\nafter a Toronto court refused to order his deportation to face a\ncharge of killing a Nazi collaborator in Belgium. Shown with his wife\nand daughter, lllona, three,, Matthys Is no longer under $10,000 ball\nIn which'he has been held for many months.\nIndia Wish Not Compatible With\nCommonwealth Concept, Says Smuts\nCAPETOWN, April KMReuters)\n-Jan    Christian    Smuts,    former!\nPrime Minister of South Africa, says\nIt would be far better to \"do away'\nwith   the   British   Commonwealth\nthan to whittle it away until nothing but the word remained.\nI The General, ln an interview Saturday, said India's claim to be an\nIndependent republic, not under the\nBritish crown but ln some association with it, \"violated every concept\nof the Commonweals^.\"\nThere is no middle course between the Crown 'and a republic,\nhe added.\n\"If the Commonwealth concept Is\ntampered with or destroyed and it\nMs still proposed to continue the\n^Commonwealth system,,there would\nhave to be a new basis or asgreement\n'between the.member states with a\nx written constitution on the lines of\nthe League of Nations or the organization of the United Nations,\"\nBmuts said.\n\"It ls assumed that neither India\nnor any of the members of the Commonwealth would favor such a plan.\n\"What India appears to wish is,\n\"therefore, not compatible with the\n\u2022^Commonwealth    and    cannot   -be\n\"t&\nachieved In terms of It.\"\nIf India chose to be an Independent republic outside the Commonwealth, there could,bs> only an external treaty if she still wished to\nhave, any relations with the Commonwealth, he continued.\n. Great care should be taken not to\nempty the concept of the Commonwealth of all substance and meaning\nand not to whittle it away until nothing but the word remained, with\nno real meaning or significance, the\nformer Prime Minister declared. It\nwould be far better to drop the\nname altogether.\n\"But what a loss that would be;\nfor the Commonwealth is a precious\nasset, the product of valuable experience in human association, a\nbirth of time which has made a\ngreat difference to the worliL\n\"In the Commonwealth, a num\nber of nations, great and small, In\nall parts of the world, are freely\nassociated In a little league of na>\ntions which has survived.the con,\nfilets of the past, working, con'\nsuiting, understanding and help,\nIng each other.\n\"In war and peace the Commonwealth has played a beneficent part\nin human affairs and it still remains\nthe bulwark of human advance\u2014a\npointer to perhaps still greater development for man.\"\nIt was a concept of free human\ncept of the King. That concept was\nassociation around the original con-\nthe essence of it from which the\nrest had followed.\n\"Canada Approved\"\nFlour Not Selling\nBy KAY REX\nC-snadlan Press Staff Writer\n' OTi'AWA, April 10 (CP)\u2014\"Canada \"ipproyed\"- flour, ari, enriched\nprbdffit'irecommendedsas tops;iri*\n-vitamin''content, isn't selling in ths\nDominion because Canadian-; pre\nfu- white litPsid.\nDr. l\\ il. ijs.ssldtri, nmnhiloii\nCs>reali-st, .says that the \"our,\nsliss'htly darker In color 11i.ni oids-\nu.ss.v flmsr because of ills wheat\n.germ \"and Isi-.sn it contains, sold\nwt-ll when it was first introduced\nsuits Canada some five years ago.\nflist' sales bave dwindled because\nconsumers generally prefer bread\nmade from the white product-of\nthe modern mill, refined to a point\nthat it loses natural vitamin contra! '    -\n\u25a0 In Dr. iJisulds is'sr unlnlon \"certainly riot, more, than 10 per cent\"\nof 'the population i'j reaping the\nbenefits ol 'ICanada approved\" , at:\npresent.\nThe \"Canada Approved\" variety\ncontains more of the natural products of the wheat grain but Is not\nthe same as 'enriched':flour, which\nis given an extra shot-in-the-anri\nof synthetic vitamins. Baiters do\nnot like the Canada Approved variety as well as the white bread\nflour since it does not keep as well.\nOnly a few hundred of friore than\n:'000,0ll6 species of Insects known\nare enemies of ni'sn.\nGOOD HEWS FOR WEARY SUFFERERS FROM\nBRONCHIAL ASTHMA\na great NEW [antigen development\nOMftro'li'B   NtW    MFMBLt!  of  (lie\nftimouj   llunSifion   loiiiily   nf   Dlsuolvod,\n,Oral VucHnoi osprrttilly prepared:\ns   te f>cfif PrnrSiltil Ailhma duo fo'upperl\nreipiraTori  Im-.,.!- \u2022\u25a0\ntwntitlon ' G\" htik, Urrn .J-cnhipoJ in\nraspunso in tUo demand far'a [ rfpr ra-;\n\u25a0   tion of h nligort     in it \u25a0 Dull1 i.ic   si fiio ;\n*J8r\n-u-\nrequirement!  of  thoie   iufferlnfl   from\n- ibronchla! aithma and .chronic brondisWfe\n\u2022''\u25a0ftihto   to   hypersensitivity   toward   th-t^,\nniimi infecting Ihe ifnuiei and other;)\n^.p^rti  of the  upper  reipiratOsry  tract.\n< (\u00abititlgen \"G\" contalm the .soluble ox\\W\ntegeni    <of   \"rganlimi,  most   frtquoiiily;\n^irtsj usisihsfo   for   thli   condition.     The\n...-strength of the preparation has beeny\nuiljiiited: to'give the greatest pot3il)lo;V\nriifiusure of relief and benefit.\nlinlcal feits have proved the efTI-\nca* \/ of Lantigen \"G\"   If you tuffer th\u00bb\n\u25a0 y and distress of Bronchial Asthma\nor   Chronic    Bronchitis  .start   taking\n* Lintlgen \"G\" today.    Get relief witb\nthis iow addition to the Lantigen family\nof  proven  dissolved   Oral   Vaccines,\nRemember to ask for\nti\nLANTIGEN \"G\nLANTIGEN LABORATORIES LIMITED .mcHMssDti.LToi.onTo.oHi.\nSweden's Experts\nForm Brain Trust\nTo Assure Future\nBy THOMAS HARRIS\nSTOCKHOLM (Reuters)'-A brain\ntrust with experts from the government, the trade unions and industry\nit to be-formed to help recapture\nSweden's dwindling prosperity.,\nPrime Minister Tage Erlander, announcing this decision in the Swedish parllment, stated this brain trust\nwill devise means of stimulating exports.\nAnother of Its important functions\nwill be to Inform the public frankly\nand clearly on Sweden's economic\ndifficulties so that both workers\nand employers are ^encouraged to\nincrease production for export.\nMr. Erlander explained that the\ngap between exports and imports\nis narrowing, but greater efforts and\nsacrifices will be necessary to cjose\nIt\nThe Socialist government Is, however, determined to make the axe\nof austerity fall pvenly on all sections of the population, Prices will\ncontinue to be strictly controlled\u2014\nalthough some firms .complain that\nthe small profit margin allowed\nthem makes it hadly worth while to\nremain in business,;\nTaxation, unpopular with all\nclasses, will be maintained at Its\npresent high'level.' Everything will\nbe done to prevent prices from rising and the purchasing power of\nthe crown falling to a level where\ndevaluation becomes inevitable.\nCritics of the govenment, however\nurge it to reduce the number of\ncivil servants, rationalize controls,\nreduce taxation \"which is sapping\ninitiative,\" and show more imagination in granting licences for the import of capital goods and raw materials necessary to the export industries.:'-. -\n..The trade-unions and the.Salaried' Employers' Organization haye.\nagreed' to the government's proposal that existing wage agreements\nshallibe prolonged iri.1949 arid not\nrenegotiated as usual si the turri of\nthe year. Manual and office workers\nhave also -agreed and the Socialist\nCabinet will now tiy to ps-iui.ide\nother classes ot wane earners is. accept the same sacrifice.\nIndustry has already had lo accept them because the; government\nis restricting investments.\nThis applies particularly'to bulldr\nIng. Firms v.'anting to build new,\npremises will have to make do with\nthe old in all but the most urgent\ncases.- i -.\"'\nThere will be fewer new homes\u2014\nalthough there is now a black market In apartments. Only 43,000 new\nflats will be built in 1949 compared\nwith 55,000 in 1948, which Itself was\na year of drastic housing shortage.\nThey say, too, that, the government is pursuing an unwise monetary policy and point to the recent\nresignation of Alvar Booth, former\ndirector of the Bank of Sweden,\nafter a disagreement with the cabinet on financial policy.\nThe general elections last September confirmed* the Socialists in\ntheir dominant position in parlia-\nHew Method\nOf Forecasting\nCancer Found\nBy FRANK CAREY\nWASHINGTON, April 10 (AP)\u2014\nDiscovery of a possible method ot\nforecasting cancdr ot the womb\nfrom one to two years before it\ndevelops was disclosed Saturday by\na* Canadian doctor.  '\nCancer of the womb ls one of the\nmost frequent of all malignancies,\nIt kills approximately 26,000 women annually ln.the United States\nalone.\nDr. J, Ernest Ayre of Montreal's\nRoyal Victoria Hospital -and McGill University said his new.technique lias been successful in fore-\ncarting womb cancers in nine women.  ' \u2022\u2022\u25a0..'  \u25a0 '.-. -:'\u25a0'\nAyre said that opens up the possibility of tracing the development\nof such cancers in all victims and\nattacking them at the earliest, and\nmost curable, stage.\nThe technique is based on Ayre'S\ndiscovery of a new type of human\ncell\u2014one which he says ;he and his\ncolleagues believe to be a forerunner of an actual cancer cell. It\nhas a peculiar nucleus, or central\npart, that makes it different from\nboth a normal cell and a cancer\ncell.\nThe Canadian declared that the\ncells\u2014scraped from the opening ot\nthe wornls\u2014had been detected ' ln\nnine women who ultimately became cancerous in from one to two\nyears.\nWorld's Writing\nCause of Concern\nSays Geneva Body\nto'NpON (CP) - Concern has\nbeen expressed over the world's\nhandwriting and, at Geneva, action\nagainst, the blotted scrawl has\nbegun.\nAn International Bureau of Ed-\ncation report says one of the 46-\ncountry organization's main 1948\naccomplishments was the adoption\nof a recommendation of the teaching of handwriting. Canada belongs\nto the bureau.     :'.-.\nTwo other recommends tions\nadopted, also .for presentation to\nministries of education throughout\nthe world, are for improvement of\neducation in \"internaional understanding\" and for greater use of\nscientific psychology in schools.'\nStating that \"the rhythm of modern life demands more and more\nspeed in-writng,\" the report says\ncurrent educational advances \"suggest the possibility of methods progressively better adapted to the latent capacity of the child,\"\n, It, makes specific recommendations for the schoolroom, but- holds\nout for individuality of style.\n\"Once ,the.,e{enns2i\\!a1 of VfrlUng\nhave been mastered, & cursive writing combining quality: with speed\nshould be taught, though each child\nshould be allowed to develop his\nindividual handwriting. ;.s:\n' \"For children between 12 .and 16\nyears of age-r-when the Handwriting\nof adolescents changes\u2014it is desirable that corrective teaching should\nbe given, adapted as far as possible\nto individual needs.\" ...\u25a0:\u25a0-:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.--\nMEAN8 OF EXPRESSION\nWriting,,'it says, \"is not only on\neducation technique but also a\nmeans of, expression arid an. art\nwhich should combine a personal\nstyle with the maximum elegance.\"\nOn international studies the report recommends that school life\n\"be so organized as to develop In the\npupils and students a sense of responsibility and social co-operation,\nnecessary- for better understanding\nbetween the peoples, and that the\nvarious forms of social life being\norganized at different stages of\nstudy should be such as to interest\nyoung people in the problems ot\nmerit and it seems likely, therefore,\nthat the Swedish-' people' will rely\nprimarily on the Socialists remedy\nfor their present economic ills.\nGood-Will Aerial\nHitch-Hiker\nCompletes B.C. Visit\nSEATTLE, April 10 (AP) \u2014 BUI\nSimpson, good-will International\naerial hitch-hiker from El Centro,\nCalif., has completed another mission. *'-.'.;\nWith only one concession to commercial aircraft because of la family\nillness in Tacoma, Wash., he sky-\nhooked his way from Mexican, California, to Victoria, B. C. Now he is\nbound for home on an air cargo\nship. .\nSimpson; 29, married and the father of two children, Won' notoriety\nlast August, by hitch-hiking in private planes frbm Los Angeles to\nNew York.\nHe left on his present Jaunt from\nMexican March 31 and made it iri\nfive jumps after ari emergency visit\nWith his parents, Mr. and Mrs, William hi Simpson, Sr., of 'ftcoma.\n-He's returning South with letters from Mayor Percy George of\nVictoria and Lt.-Gov. Charles A.\nBanks of. British Columbia. One,\nfrom Banks to Gov. Alfred Gonzales of Baja California, called\nSimpson's visit \"hands across Am-\n. erica.\"\nSimpson presented Victoria dignitaries with some Maggio carrots\narid invitations to the Imperial Valley Roundup Association's Rodeo\nApril 22-23-24. Banks declined the\ninvitation because of the pressure\nof other business, but asked a \"rain-\ncheck.\"\nSimpson, asked where he planned to go next, declared:'\n1 \"Home to stay\u2014but I hope to air-\nhitch around the world some day.\"\nTito Feels\nSlavs Ready to\nDeal With West\nBELGRADE, April 10 (AP)-Mar-\nshal Tito defiantly has served notice that Yugoslavia feels tree to\ndeal economically with the West\nSun-tanned and dapper In a blue\nuniform, Tito spoke for two hours\nSaturday and 12 minutes before the\nPeoples' Front Congress ln the great\nhall of suburban Topchidar's. tree-\nlined\u2014and well-guarded\u2014park.\nIt was .his first major address\nsince New Year's Eve. Then he\nbarked harshly at the Comlnform\nneighbors who 10 months ago denounced him for pursuing .Nationalist and Trotskyite policies.\nSaturday\/Tito hit back again. He\nwas in an Independent and defiant\nmood. He charged that Russia and\nher Soviet satellites .In the Comlnform (Communist Information Bureau) were attempting to promote\na civil wm in Yugoslavia by attempting to pereuade his country's\nmixed population to throw put his\nregime. . '\n, That ,'polnt\u2014and the decision publicly announced of a plan to trade\nwith'the West if suitable arrangements can be made\u2014formed the\nbasis ot the greater part of his\nspeech.\n180 New Seats\nFor Tories in\nCouncil Elections        '\nLONDON, April 10 (Reuters).\u2014\nThe Conservative Party today\nclaims:! a.net gain of 166 seats In\nlast week's County Council elect-\nIons In England and Wales, against\na Labor net loss of 133.\nTh Conservative central offloe\naald results known so far showed\nthe Tories had won 180 new seats\nand lost 14, while Labor lost 184\nseats against 61 gains.\nMARYFlHtsD, Sask. (CP>-\nPeople pay tribute these cold.days\nto Oscar Dlxbn and his daughter.\nMr. -Dixon operates a door-to-door\ndelivery of water service making\nbi-weekly trips to a spring five\nmiles from town. His method of locomotion is a reliable horse.\nthe world ot to morrow...     ,\n\"Textbooks of different countries\n\u25a0should be re-examined as often as\npossible with a view to eliminating\npassages that would likely lead to\nmisunderstanding among nations,\nand to Incorporating materials that\nwould lead to fuller appreciation of\nworld co-operation.\"  T,\n\"Pupils should not be graded solely on the results of tests; effort\nshouldbe made to determine the\npsychological characterises of each\nchild with special reference to his or\nher social, cultural and economic\nbackground, and to arapt his studies\nthereto.\"\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL tl, l\u00bb4f \u2014 3\nThe \"BAY\"\n\u2022      Invites you to attend their\nSpring Fashion Show\nin the\nCIVIC  THEATRE\nMONDAY and TUESDAY EVEN I NG\n-,       \"April 11 th and ] 2th\npresented  by  the\nWoheloClubof\nSt Paul's United Church\nFashion Show. Continues following the-first\n\u25a0 feature picture of the evening\nWith rid'extra admission    ,\n\u25a0*     INsSORPOsVsTEO '\u00ab\u00ab MAY I67ft\nSuccessful in\nForestry Exams\nINVERMERE, B. C, April 10 \u2014\nWord has been received that three\ncandidates who wrote Forestry examinations at Invermere in March\nweye successful. They \u2022' are \u2022Ivan\nFlint of Nelson, at present of Invermere; Joe Yurlk of Golden arid\nBenny Mitchell of Invermere.\nBeauty and the Budget\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nFashion that offers beauty and smartness for all Is very much\nIn and of the American way. Of course, It Is wonderful to boast a\nhat by one .of the great designers, but most of us have to do more\nthan think about the budget. Happily there's no hardship when there\nare lovely hats such as this In the budget bractiet. Walter K. Marks\nuses pink bal I bunts, I straw for this hat, which surely belles Its modest\n.price tag. A cluster of white violets riser from the green velvet band\nand a mist of green mesh veiling lends softness to the silhouette.\nBuy Tflonwmel Today\nMonamel Distributors for\nEast and West Kootenays\nBURNS\ne   LUMBER \u00a3. COAL CO. '<?\ntuwUluHq fat fk (MMm'\nPhone 1180 602 Baker St\nWOMEN'S\nSHOES\nin the\n\u25a0    Spring shudus of '\n.--. - -,-s    \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-.-.-\u25a0- \u25a0-.. .\",:.-\u25a0\u25a0\nGreen\nKec3\nWine\nBlack\nGrey\nBrown\nWhite\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nYbur Family Shoe Store\n553 Baker St.\nPhone 895 Nelson\nThe future      ~ at the point of the drill\nTlw namt'S of Canada's now oil fields have been -heard -from, coast to\n\u25a0  ^ coa\u00bbl. . . Leduc, Woodbend, Redwater.       -* *\nThey are fields discovered In the .greatest search for ...ti b\\ Canada'o\nJsy-fory. Already they have brought benefits to all Canadians; and ln\n, *  '     tho west where they are turning back the lido ol expansive Iniporlu tho    ' -\n'\u25a0   f     direct uavingd ai\u00ab counted in millions. - -I..-\" \u25a0\nBut before the fullest benefits can reach everyone -,-'..-'. snore oil \\kv.\\ *\nbe found.\nThe successes of the part two-years have been possible because there\nwere people willing to go on risking millions in the search ln spite of\nrepeated disappointments.\nNow, after the barren years that went before, these new fields seem\nI,      , large\u2014and they ate large! But they are far from enoughto make Canada\n^L \u25a0 colf-sufficient. . \"  , ' ..,.'-.  <\nCanada is still dependent on foreign countries::,r mow then 80 p:r \u25a0    ,\nof her oil and so her own resources must be developed. Exploration\n- -        must be continued. More and more wells must be drilled so that markets\ncan be expanded.\nThere is not yet enough oil fo justify the big investments that will be needed\nIf all Canadians are to enjoy the fullest benefits of western resources.\nPipe lines, for instance, cost a lot to build; but over the years they provide\nlow-cost transportation\u2014so necessary to reach out to wider marked.\nThe Edmonton-Regina line planned by Imperial is but. a beginning.\nFurther discoveries are the only means of breaking-through the distance\nbarriers that hem prairie oil with transportation ..costs. Tho iututo lios\n<ii the point of the drilL\nIMPERIAL OIL LIMITED\nIf you're Interested In facts ;::\nWhile it is now esllraaled the known oil in Alberia Is rousjhly equal f\nto our needs for ihe next five yeara, actually this oil could not\nbe produced efficiently In less than 20 years.\nTo meet her present oil retirements it has been estimated 1\n\u25a0Canada needs reserves of Eovoral billion barrels. :-,''?*\nImperial's 450-mllo pipe line from Edmonton to Eegina ls expected -\nto bo In operation by the end of next year. Cost is estimated at\nbetween $35.and $40 million. It ls a step towards wider markets.:*.\nBringing yon oil is a big Job\u2014\nand a costly one.\n . NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 11,1949\nLove ProMetns :\nBy JAN\u00a7 ATKINSON\nHusband's Past Forgiven By Wife\nWho Finds Reward in Happy Home\nIt is a very pleasant thing to haye\na letter come iri once in awhile that\ntells a tale of happiness instead of\none 'of misery. It is particularly\nheartening when a reader writes a\nletter of encouragement to someone\nwho is disturbed about a problem,\nthat seems similar to one that reader\nhas happily solved.\nA few weeks ago, a letter printed\nIn this column described the distress\nof a young girl who had been told\nby her finance about affairs he had\nbefore knowing her. This news had\nmade her hesitate about marrying\nhim, and she wanted to know if\nthis past of his might be an indication that he would not make a good\nhusband.\n' Now I have a letter which is in-\n, tended to reassure this girl. It comes\nfrom a young wife who says she has\nbeen married four years, has \"two\nlovely children and a husband who\nis so faithful I can never thank'the\nLord enough.\" - : \u2022\nThen ahe goes on to say: \"The girl\nwho signed herself 'Confused' certainly had a right to be. I know how\naha feels. It happened to me.\" \u25a0\n\"My husband perhapB was even\nworse than this girl's man. He got\na girl in bis home town into trouble,\nHe was very wilUng to marry her,\nbut things worked out differently\nand better for both. This was net\nhis only affair. He also told me ot\nthe others. The one just described,\nhowever, came to my ears from bis\nmother after we had been married.\n\"I too felt huft, but after all this\nwas in the past. Why, I -thought,\nshould it have any effect on our relationship? He respected me, and\nwas considerate and sincere, and I\nhave never been sorry I married\nhim. The girl who wrote to you wiU\nprobably never really forget- what\nshe knows ot this maris past I\nnever have, really, but I never\nmention it. To her I say: Go ahead,\nmarry your young man if he possesses all the other good -qualities\nyou want in a husband,\n\"And one more thing, My husband came from another state, and\nI never would have known of his\naffairs if he, too, had not been hon'\nest enough to tell\" me.\n, \"Good luck to you, Confused, and\nmay you be the happiest of couples,\"\nThis is a nice letter, end I am glad\nthe \"Faithful Reader\" who wrote\nit was thoughtful enough to do so\nI believe, with her, that under circumstances such as those the past\nmay be forgotten If the man sincerely wishes his future, and that Of the\ngirl be marries, to be happy,\nBeatty 'Hiiits \",\nBy IDA JEAN KAIN\nSwdyback'Entirely Caused By Wrong.\n. Posture,- Is Not a Physical Defect\nSwaybaeg can ruin an otherwise straight,    heals    together,    knees\ngood figure. Actually, it's not .a fig. sUghtly apart. Your weight should\nThe Doctor\nBy HERMAN N.sWNDBSEN, M.D.\nPersistent High Blood Pressure\nRequires Instant Care By Doctor\nHardly a day, passes that some\none does not aisle mo nhout the value of the ii\" 'II' i *\u25a0' <\u2022 lses ot hifih\nblood'^pressure.\nThe effect of diet on high' blood\npressure has been studied for many\nyears. Back in 1944, a diet made up\nfor the most part of ice was suggested by Dr. Walter Kempner.\nThjs diet suppUed about 2000 calories .or heat units daily, with a\nvery small' amount of fat and a\nlimited amount of'protein. In addition to the rice, some;.fruit was\npermitted in tin' dies, and ihe .all\nwas limited.\nThis ls.iof course, a highly limited diet, and there are some who\nhav.o'felt that lt might cause a ser-\nlott's nutritional deficiency, even\nas the blood.pressure was reduced.\nPRESSURE LOWERED\nThis Duke-Unlverslty-orfglnated\ndiet was used: in \"700 patients who\nlived on the .rice diet for from 35\nto 000 days. Of these, 7 out of 10\nwhn.ws'ie careful in following,this\ndii-t '.is-issisl tt! \u25a0<\u25a0 Imml favorably\n;lo,ths Vf.isisii'sn, lhat is, the blood\n,,,       i.i,     !s   .   1011     Us,   I i     'ils.l   \u25a0ill',',\n, ,'iiii,''ini   ',-   ,    'i, i i,  \u25a0\u25a0\t\ns^^fi\u00a3^'i*^S^sp|^riJS|(i!H\nA very complete study of n pa-\ntlrnts ii si btisi , mis,d mn Is\" J*n *\n'   iii.i.'inn   i.-ii.. , ni,i-,    ii,si   ill;    n\nSjTOi&sgt'SiiiliRlllf^lES^iSiS\nHis ,   pntis ul    -,i. fu',1 \u00bbii   linn\no Ins ml il [oi   i mu uli \u25a0 ii 'I   in,\nwen   tiiveri mi ordinary, wcll-ba'l-\nouiTsi   did    '.villi   ns-   Intnl.slum   -\u25a0\"\nBl I,   '\u25a0 \"\"'\u25a0 tl ii nl    ,    ,,   .su, sin\nn   i[)ifl,-sl sll.-l   ,oi  j  dpi ind ill  nil! \"mqst'useful itl Ins pas Urular c.ise'\nless than four'weeks. .Seven pa-\ntleitts were on a diet low In salt\nduring this period. Of these, four\nused the rice diet ln addition, One\npatient had the rice diet elone.\nFour of the seven on the low salt\ndiet had a drop in the blood pres-\nsure. In the other three, there was\nno change. Of the five patients on\nthe rice,diet, three showed a drop\nIn the blood pressure, The effect\nof the rice diet was only slightly\ngreater than that of the 'ow .\"M\ndiet, It was-interesting to note that\nalthough a drop ln tbe blood pressure occurred in five of the patients, their . symptoms, such as\nheadache, were not improved,\nCAUSE UNKNOWN\nThe exact cause of the type of\nhigh blood pressure known. aS essential hypertension that is of unknown origin, has not been determined, \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.,.\nMany forms of treatment for this\ncondition haye been devised, including operations on the sympa,\nthetlc nerves. Thls_pperatlpn seems\nto benefit nome patients ,\nlimit, lcnnwsi. ni thiocyansites\nli.svc also been ii el wills bi iio'il in\nsome patients. The combination nf\nn)ii*i,iii.in and Ihe tliincyanates has\ninrriitly -bi i ii !\u2022 pmte'd \u25a0\u25a0 bi'iiiR\nquits- effeitivu a ln'i iint\" the blood\njn\/ssuio,o\"l n'lowni It vij.\n\\''iy pilii'nl s.'Hi lu.ds lijnuii\npit ,'.uii\"ihduld bV, unds'i the caie\n\u25a0 ss* fphyslci in v.lsis will id \u25a0 ui jiisl\nwlili b oni   nf 1Sji-  ii>ves il form's <s?\n\u25a0r. ,',,u,ii  ,iiiv, .-iiiplsiyiTl  wmuirs.   ,\u201e\nure defect\u2014it's a posture fault. But\nas in aU things, one fault leads to\nanother, and when the small of the\nback swerves sharply In, the front\nline' bulges out. That's the true\npicture of awayback at its worst\nBy putting tone in the -stomach\nmuscles and strongly , contracting\nthe hip muscles, yott ban get your\nfigure baek on the beam.       \u25a0\nHere is a corrective exercise\nroutine'that can work wonder* in\nshort order... \u2022\nLie on your baek on tbe floor\nwith buttocks touching the wall,\nknees bent over chest, soles of feet\nflat against waU. Keep arms down\non the floor with fingers touching\nshoulders. \u25a0\u2022- \u25a0. \u2022 \u25a0\nCLIMB THE WALL\nNow climb up the wall with tbe\nfeet. Climb as high as possible,\nholding   your   legs   and   body\nBest Canadian Film\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-Ronald\nNelson left for Nelson where he has\ntaken up work in the Imperial Optical Company.\nJames Draper, Neil Tattrie. and\nWalter Maybank went by plane to\nVancouver to attend the Liberal\nConvention.   .\nMrs, A. D, Trlckett and son Bruce\naccompanied by Mrs. 3. McDOnaugh\nand son Jimmy, were Nelson visit\nors where Mrs. McDonaugh and son\nare visiting her mother-in-law, Mrs,\nC. Trozzo. .-'\u25a0\u2022,'\nWilUam Evdoklmoff of Perry\nSiding ls a patient in the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital.\nMrs. May CreUin went to Trail\nto visit her son-in-law and daughter, if,\n\u25a0Mrs, Quentln A. Forsythe, Miss M,\nH. Butlin and Mrs. Johnl. Taylor\nwere Nakusp visitors attending the\nMartha Chapter No. 24, Order ot\nthe Eastern Star.\nMrs, Joseph MiMta of New Denver is a patient in the Slocan Community Hospital,\nMr. and Mrs. E. B. Quayle of\nSouth Slocan visited Mr, and Mrs,\nAlex D. \"Trlckett and family.\nMrs. A. L. Blaine and her nephew Dennis Peterson who were the\nguests of the former's uncle, and\naunt, Mr, and Mrs, Joseph Depretto,\nfor two weeks' returned to their\nhomes in Trail.\nTom Nielson of Slocan City ls a\npatient in the Slocan Community\nHospital at New Denver.\nMiss Elizabeth Clifford who visited her father, Norman Clifford ln\nNakusp, and her grandmother, Mrs.\nJ3. Clifford, a patient In the Arrow\nLakes Hospital, returned,.\nMrs. Lenard DeRosa and daugh-\nter*Sylvia\u201e*who were visiting the\nformer's bt\"ther-in-lavji bnS, sister-\nin-law iWi.simlMis E. pejfosa and\nfamily, also Tnlns Cechelero for a\nmonth,.-returncd In their home in\nTrail      '-,,,\"*\nTtIwj\"! Tingls* sit Nsiw iiii'Vi\nis3 n*|sutif sit in ths Slocnri t'onimim-\nluy Hospital.*-- -     .     ,1\nI M\"(>' ii-isi t'.sun who pcnl ,i\n.mouth (villi Dr. and Mrs. S. (.'. liisli-\ninsoii,-returned io hei homo in Na-\n.kusp. ,     ., \"    ' |\nI \u2022 J'. W. Clarke left foi V-usi ouver\nwhne-lis-* will |om Isn wife Mrs. T\nW ri is| s, iiid vlji Thin two.soris,\nL's iwfoid and iii'iiiii.u'l.irky     ' \u2022\nbe resting entirely on your should\nera, and the body should be\nstraight'line from heels to shoulders,\nThen let the feet start to slide\ndown the wall... slowly. Be sure to\nmake this a slow, deliberate movement, so that as you slide down you\ncan feel each vertebra as lt touches\nthe floor. Concentrate on those vertebrae until the entire spine is flat\nagainst the floor again, buttocks\ntouching wSll. Hold this position\nrelax for a ew seconds.... then repeat the exercise...The number of\ntimes depends on your strength.\nStart with 3 and gradually increase\nto 6, later 10.\nNOW ''REST\"\nFoUow this by 'resting,\" back to\nwall. SU with the back against tbe\nwaU, abdominal muscles pulled up\nand in and small of back pressed\nto wall. Stretch upwards pulling\naiim in the midsection. Sit this way\nfor 5 minutes, twice a day. Try to\nfoUow through with this tip-and-ln\npull when sitting ln an ordinary\nchair.     ,\"    ..\nAnd from here on out forget\nabout throwing back your should\nera\u2014that makes for swayback. The\nonly rule- to remember Is UP\u2014up\nwith the top of your head, up with\nthe ribcage, up with the stomach\nmuscles. Try It\u2014what can you lose?\nInches!    \u201e .\nMovie Gossip-\nCeasqf Salads HoilyWobd's Most   ~\nPopular DisK; Anyone Can Make Them\n. By BOB THOMA8       '      lettuce;\nHOLLYWOOD, April 0 CAP)-\nWant to know about HoUywood's\nfavorite dish? And I don't mean\nBetty arable.      >\nI'm speaking of the Caesar Salad,\nalso known by DIcicco, CaUfornla,\nGolden West arid other aliases. It'a\nsafe to say that lt Is the most ordered dish ih any of the fllmtown'a\nswank restaurants,\nOrgin ot the salad Is obscure.\nSome say it was born in an eatery\nnamed Caesar's In .Tijuana, Mexico.\nAt any rate, it has taken the classy\ncafes by storm. It Is usually,-mixed\nat the table with a grace exhibited\nby Jules Munshln ns the head waiter\nin \"Easter Parade.\"\nActually, any fool can make a\nCaesar. I do It often. Many husbands\nmake a ritual of whipping up the\nsalad, even those who can't boll an\negg without burning it. It brings\nout the ham in a man.\nI offer directions for the Caesar\nSalad, as Hollywood makes it.\nWe'U make it for two servings,\nsince you'd better not try lt on company the first time out.\nHave these things ready:\n. ROmaine lettuce, broken Into bite\nto and chilled.       \u25a0\nGarlic oil\u2014drop a cut-up clove of\ngarlic Into a small jar of salad oil\nand let it mellow indefinitely.\nCroutons\u2014cut a couple of bread\nslices (French ls best) Into small\ncubes, douse with the garlic oil and\nbrown in oven.       \u201e'\u2022'\u25a0 \u2022\"\nNow drop these things on the\nA couple of sloshes of the garUc\nill.   i,\nDitto ot plain salad- oil arid ot vinegar (wine vinegar preferred).\nSprinkle of silt, coarse pepper\nand mustard flour. \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\"',      .\nA few drops of Worcestershire\nsauce.  !\nJuice ot half a lemon.\nThree or four'Strips ot anOhovles,\nohopped fine,\nSprinkles of parmesan cheese\n(crumbled Roquefort or Blue cheese,\ntoo, if desired.)-\nA one-minute egg\u2014this holds the\ndressing together.; .... .\nCroutons..:-.'\nNotes: Toas it well and serve just\nbefore eating-so lettuce and croutons\ndon't get soggy. Some mix the dress,\ning in a separate bowl instead of on\nthe lettuce, \u2022\u25a0 .- 'V\nFor all Interior\" and exterior\npainting. Brush and spray work.\nFree estimates given.   \u2022\n-Consult us on our\nEASY..PAYMENT PLAN\nKOOTENAY\nPainters and Decorators\n.PHONES B3 AND 2Q6'L-4\n\u25a0     .    Nelsony B.C.\nKimberley Guides\nVisit Camp Groups\nKINGSTON. Ont tCW-Usually\nthere ere 10 \"lost\" articles for eVery\n\"found\"- one at the police station\n,.,.\u201e,\u2122,m.  v.   \u201e    .    ,.  ..   here. The reverse is now the case.\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, April 10-Ho one has turned up to,claim a\nTwo  bus  loads   of. Guides. and pair of skis found Feb. 27 on a city\nBrownies   of   Kimberley   visited\nChapman Camp groups for an evening of films,  .\nMrs, J. P. Wolverton, District\ntreet.\nCommissioner, enrolled a number\nof new Brownies.\n\"The Leon's Necklace,\" Judged the best Canadian film of 1948 at\nOttawa, Is an unusual story of Indian folklore, told by filming masks\ncarved by the Slwash Indians of British* Columbia.\nFormal presentation of the Canadian award was made In Ottawa\nby Prime Minister St. Laurent to the producers, Crawley Films Ltd.\nThe award was announced March 29 by Canadian Film Awards,\nsponsored by the Canadian Association for Adult Education. This\n.film was previously named among the 11 \"world's most outstanding\"*\n:,non-commerclal motion pictures at tho International Film Festival;'\nat Edinburgh last September.\nHappy that man, who, after a big\nevening \"with the boys\" finds that\nfriend wife has ready for him i\nnightcap of that excellent aperient\n\u2014mildly laxative KRUSCHEN. Kruschen helps nature relieve discomfort\nthat may be caused by \"too much\nparty\" or common constipation.\nKruschen Is a blend of saline minerals sltriilar to those in famous racdi-\ncisial springs), Kruschen offers you\nthese four advantages:\nIASY TO TAM\u2014Dissolves quickly in\nwater, or your morning coffee, tea\nor friiit juice.   Most folks find the\nsmall morning dose is bests\nWORKS FAST-Ususllv- within thi\nhour. Does not spoil your day.\nOENTLB ACTION\u2014Its formula fa\n.balanced to act fiefttly, without\ndiscomfort.\nTIME-TESTED \u2014 Over 300,000,000\npackages sold throughout me worlds\ni Kruschen is a standby-when dopey\nmornings ot \"don't care\" days make\nyou feel low. Start the day with\nKruschen and see how good it is to\nhave that grand \"Kruschen Feeling\";\n25c and 75c at all drug stores.\nCanadian Horsemeat\nMarkets Slipping\nSWIFT 'CJIBRENT, Sask., April 10\n(CPH-There>.lsn't any'doubt 'about\nIt '\"Ills sskl piov mare mil' wh.il\n..lis used lo be.\" She used to lie\nplentiful- but not rosy more.\nThe (situation involves more than\nthe passing of old Bobbin from the\"\nfarm scene: If may have a serious\neffect on a Western Canada industry\nwhich has cut up 2,000,000 horses in\nthe last five years and shipped them\nto meat-short: people, mainly in\nEurope.':- '\u25a0;.\"- \u2022   ,    \\\nThe'future of Canadian Cb-Ope'ra-\ntives Processors Ltd.\u2014known for\nmosts of jits (five-year existence as\nthe HorsesiCo-Operattve Marketing\nAssociation^-.was presented at the.\nfifth annual .meeting, bf .the Asso.cla-:\ntion.        '   \".\nDelegates were told their Co-Op,\nwhich, 'operates horsemeat processing plants: at Swift Current and\nEdmonton, lost $93,603 oh operations\nlast year, and that value of production dropped from $5,384,552 in 1947,\nto $3,832,747 last year.\nAlex Turner, Senior Economist\nfor the Federal Agriculture Department, warned them \"tbe honeymoon\nIs over; most of-the contracts now\n\"are'completed, and from now on, it\nwill be a buyers! market.\"\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\n\"DUILD.B.C. PAYROLLS\nAiwa*.\nTop\nQuality\nl{{\u00a7jjgl\nYou'll firjd extra flavor, extra nourishment unvarying\nquality in the familiar Pacific Milk tins, For healthy,\ntasty meals and for the\nbabies formula you'll find\nit economical and convenient\/   ,\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Packed\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIII\n(&\u00a9 ^ii&iB'\n\u00a9IF   A<S(^\u00aem\\PM\n1889 mr 1949\nIn the years following 1889, the cycling erase swept this continent. Men and women,\nfbotfh young and old took to wheels. For the first time, people began to see the country, and\n\u25a0., a demand arose for better roads. The development oj automobile transportation,\u2122 the;\npresent century was made possible by further expansion of our highway system and (hi\nuse of Nichel alloys for important parts of automobiles. The use of these stronger,\ntougher alloys greatly reduced breakdowns and made the automobile safe and reliable.\nmmum'w\n\u25a0\u2022:.:. ..,.'\u25a0.\u25a0.\"..:..- \u25a0 '    .'.-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ,.v    i'.. \u25a0,'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nHow Nickel Benefits Canada\nSince more than ninety per cent of the\nNickel produced in Canada is sold to the\nUnited States and other countries, it brings\na constant flow of dollars back to Canada.\nIn fact, Canada's Nickel industry is one of\nour chief sources of U.S; dollars so essential\n^at the present time to maintain our foreign\ntrade and make available products not\nproduced in this country.\nThese doll;: s ' \u25a0 1p pnj r c wags s of the\n14,000 Nickel employees, and help provi L-\n-the dollars which make it possibL- ') ,;,\u201ey\nmillions in freight to Canadian railways, \u2022 >\nbuy timber, steel, coalj machinery anc'., n. -\nplies amounting fo many millions each year; i\nThese millions, flowing into all industries\nthrough the .length and breadth of > ., i\t\nhelp create jobs for Canadians\nCanadian Nickei\nFIRST   PRODUCED   IN   CANADA   IN   1889\nTHE  INTERNATIONAL  NICKEL  COMPANY  OF  CANADA,  LIMITED, 25  KING STREET WEST, TORONTO\n'\n uW\n\"It Pays to Buy Quality\"\nMEN'S KIKS\n(By Dominion)\nBrown Gillie tie with -rubber\nsoles and heels.       $\u00a3.98\nSizes 6 to 12, J\nWith crepe soles ___ $6.95\nBOYS'KIKS\n(By Dominion)\nprown Gillie ties,    $J?.95\ncrepe soles i      :J\nBoys' brown blucher oxfords.\nCrepe $P.50\nsoles.       '   \u25a0 b?\nBoys Blucher Oxfords, brown\nand rubber soles. $\/|.9S\nPair\u2014 L_        *T\nBoys 'sizes 1 to 5'\/i.\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1004\nCAPETOWN (CP)\u2014A new salt\nmanufacturing industry started at\nSaldanha Bay, 60 miles North of\nhere, in August, 1948.\nNelson Social\nCLAHK-MIDDLETON\n\u2022 First Presbyterian' Church,\nNelson, was the scene of a pretty\nwedding April 2', when at three\no'clock, Lillian Doreen, daughter ot\nMr. and Mrs. H. K. Middleton, became the bride of Keith Arnold,\nyoungest son of Mr. and. Mrs.' H.\nClark, Vernon, B. C. Rev. A. L. Karris of Trail officiated at the double\nring ceremony. Given in marriage\nby her father, the bride was'lOVely\nin a gown of white nylon marquisette trimmed with pearls. Her floor\nlength veil was Mid in place by a\ncoronet of orange blossoms and she\ncarried a. bouquet of red roses and\nwhite carnations. The only attend-\nant was Miss Alice Middleton,,sister of the bride, who chose to wear\na blue taffeta dress and a corsage of\npink roses and carnations. - The\ngroom was supported by William\nDuffus of Trail and ushers were\nLawrence Johnson and Arthur Nelson. During the signing of the register, Miss Flora Johnson sang \"Because\". The reception was held at\nthe home of the bride's parents. A\nthree-tiered wedding cake embedded in white tulle centred the\nbride's table. For her going away\noutfit Mrs. Clark wore a' grey gab-\nardine suit with grey and blue ae\ncessories and a light blue. topcoat.\n9292\nSIZES\n12-20,40\nr )F1  \\ LUCKY BRIDE\n*'\u2022    doing io \"n linen shower;- Hero\nh i perfect t,if\u25a0' Wjtis-lilu\", nrw\n.os! motifs, arc easy \u25a0<\u25a0 'lo Atlcl the\n-A'lovely crocheted edR'nt*\nif.-.Double   bennty   foi    .ill  .linens!\nPattern SOU: (ins, 7k)I)'\/,; two brKt-\nIncli motifs; rrochi'l directions'. \u25a0-. '\nLaura   Whcclrr's   inipvivs-il 'pal\ninn makes Tinilliwiirk so simple\nwith ilu charts, photos and concise\n^directions. ' -\u2022 A\nf.tmi iwt nty-livr-' centa  f2Drt  ln\nf. 'coins-ittstamps cannot tbe\"; accepted);\nlor this pattern to the NELSON\nDAILY  NEWS, Needlecraft. Dept.,\n,266 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.    Print\n.v.plalnlyJPATTERN NUMBER, your\nNAME and ADDRESS.    , ' ,\nWnhiaiL TttoAlitL\nSUCH EASY SEWING\nBlossom .out in  this.jgay little\nrunabout for Spring arid Summer!\nSc mips insi ruffles soften the deep\nsquare neckline, ruffles tip the cape\nsleeves ,uist sash!\nPattern 9202 comes In sizes 1?, 14,\nl(s, 18, 20; 40. Size 16 takes -1% yds.\n35-inch;  (is y.ud contrast\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, Illustrated\nSew i Ism ihow You every step.\nSend' TWENTX-FIVE CENTS\nC'>i) in coins (stamps cannot-be\naccepted):'-.for this pattern. Print\nplainly\": .SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\n;\/:Sends;your\u00bb order, to Nelsoh Dally\nNewi, railcsn Dept.. 266 Baker St,\nNelsuis, B.s\"\nBanish \"caffein blues\" - Switch to P0STIJM today\nSons, propk gsjITer -.Uns!' siii is, sips vhuhici \u00abjt In-, of de-\nprs.-ssiuis iinsss slrssilsssi^ too sisiis js is*;, sisk! coffee. If you sio,\nSwiss Is to Postum.-7-s sn't upset nerwsor stomach.') lsiifticr\ntoss \u2014 by .iliisnississ-tliiss.il' *\nvosruim\nBy MR& M. J. VIGNEUX\nOut of town guests were Miss.Dorothy Johnson, Miss Lydla Zuccola,\nMiss Helen Duffus, Mr. and Mrs.\nElmer Clark, Clem Frost, Edmond\nTrlckett, William Duffus, of TraU\nand- Clark Procter of Michel, Mr.\nsand Mrs. J.Mucha of Procter, Mr.\nand Mrs. Pagura of Needles, Mr. and\nMrs. L. Jolmson of New Demrer-and\nClaude Stanley, of Spokane. Following their honeymoon at Williams'\nLake, Mr. and Mra. Clark will make\ntheir home in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Chamberlain of Rossland, former Nelson\nresidents, were, weekend' visitors to\nNelson.\n\u25a0'.:# Ernest Riesterer left Saturday\nto spend a week in Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. W. Hogg, Victoria\nStreet, entertained at a farewell tea\nhonoring Mrs. J. W. S. Mansfield,\n822 Baker Street, who with her husband and family will be leaving for\nNanaimo, where Mr. Stansfield has\nbeen transferred. For her table centre, ipreslded over by Mrs. !\u2022 C. Wy-\nlie, Mrs. Hogg chose daffodils and\njonqullls. Mrs. Richartl Norris assisted by serving.\n\u2022 Mrs. & I. Archibald of Vancouver, ex resident of Nelaon, is visiting her son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Gordon Bennett, 608\nSecond Street.\n\u2022 In honor of Mrs. K. A. Clark,\nnee Lillian Middleton, a ahower was\nheld at the home of Mrs. R. W. Mid-\nleton given by her fellow employees of the B. C. Telephone Company staff. After an enjoyable evening the guest of honor was presented with many lovely and useful\ngifts.\n\u2022 Mrs. L. C. Hughes, Baker\nStreet, had as. weekend guest her\ncousin, Miss Mary Kirk of Trail.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, Harry Madda-\nford, Hall Street, have as sguest Mrs,\nMaddaford's mother, Mrs. Sheppard-of Victoria, who arrived in\nNelson Thursday night\n\u2022 Mrs. Frank Day, Latimer\nStreet, and her children plan on\nspending the Easter vacation at the\nhome of Mrs. Dayf parents near\nLethbridge. ,\n\u2022 Harry Whellams has returned\nfrom an extended visit to the Coast\nMr. WhellaiA also visited his daugh\nter in Coleman, Alta. ,\n\u2022 Mrs. F. A. Walker1 of Willow\nPoint has returned from Rossland,\nwhere she visited .for a week at the\nhome of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Gibson.\n\u2022 Mra. Mary Wallace,, Annable\nBlock, who has been a patient in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nfor several weeks, has left for the\nhome of her son-in-law and daughter, Rev. and Mrs. W. J. SUverwood,\nFourth Street\n\u2022 In compliment to Mra. J. W.\nStanfleld, Baker Street who will\nbe leaving shortly to make her\nhome in Nanaimo, V.'L, Mrs. John\nMorey entertained at bridge Friday\nevening at her home, ,713 Josephine\nStreet when Mra. B.F.: Cornwall\nand Mrs, Stanfleld were the winners of the prizes for the games,\nGuests Included Mrs. J. Ridge of\nBonnington. ; i\nMrs. W. D. Goodman recently\nentertained at a surprise shower\nhonoring Mrt. K. A. Clark, nee Lll\nlian Middleton, whose marriage\ntook place last week. During the\nfirst part of the evening games\nwere enjoyed and later the honor\nguest was requested to-search for\nher many lovely;gifts.\n\u2022 -Bs- Is. Jorgenson, Johnstone\nApartments, was in Trail Saturday\nto attend the funeral of his'broth\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, Reginald Haigh,\nSilica Street returned Friday night\nfrom spending a fortnight at the\nhome ot their son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Haigh at\nKettle Falls. '\n\u2022 Word has been received ln the\ncity of the sudden death in Tacoma,\nWash., of Clifford Steeper, a Son of\npioneer Nelson residents.\n\u2022 . Mr. and Mrs. Frank Willis,\nNorth: Shore, have returned from a\nthree-week visit to the! Coast\n\u2022 Mrs. Nlcholls of Procter Js a\npatient In Kootenay Lake General\nHospital.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Hambleton of Vancouver have taken up residence at 713 Josephine Street\n\u25a0 ss  \u2014\nKimberley Society\nPlans Highland Games\nKIMBERLEY, B. C\u201e April 10 -St\nAndrew's Society business meeting\nwas followed by court whist and instructional dancing.\nPrize winners were Mrs. May\nShaw, Mrs. L, Warren, Mra. I. Ure,\nMrs, Archie Flew and Mrs. J, Lindsay. Mrs. A. Talt won a cushion.\n\"Highland Games\" will be staged\nhere this. Summer by the Society,\ncomplete with dancing, piping sind\nsuch colorful contests aa \"tossing\nthe caber.\"\"\nNews of the Day  s\nRATES:-22o line, 27c Una black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest'Minimum two lines. 10% discount' for prompt payment\nFor. Sale\u2014McClary   heavy-duty\nfurnace. Cheap for cash, Ph. 652-X\n'* \u25a0,'\u2022--,. r   .-\u25a0.\nEaster Flowers and Potted Plants.\nOrder now from Valentine's.\nIce Cream Sandwiches are still\npopular. WAIT'S NEWS.\nBoard Companies pay your claims\npromptly. Blackwood Agency.\nOAFPLE   BITERS   AND   8ALT\nHERRING   AT  THE   FAIRWAY.\nWe .specialize ln all washer r\u00bb-\nVialrs. Beatty Service. Phone Skilton\nW.\nSee our large selection of drapery\nand curtains materials.\nSTERLING HOME'FURNISHERS\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable .repairs\nat moderate prices. '\n' -\u2014; \u2014r\n' Little girls' skirts and blouses.\nPopular 1949 styles.\nTHE.CHILDREN'S SHOP\nFree Pictures on Wildlife at the\nCapitol Theatre Tuesday Night,\n8 i.m.      ;    \u25a0\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n'mclited\n\"IMsllHIKII JNII WEDDING RINGS\n\" I.ovily   fur   a   Lifetime\"\n.-,_ Af join |iinltsi'..    ssr on a lady's finger.. .remember,.\n-litue Rivn Dumont! an.I Wedding Rings are Proudly Prcscnted-\n- always.\nBlue River diamond rlngsaresold by better jewellers\nacross Canada \u2014Irom fsyoo to f;,ooo.oo.\nWhy not give us a caU to increase\nyour fire Insurance protection to\ndayje-C. W. APPLEVARD.\nATTENTION ALL NUR8E8\nSpecial meeting will be held in\nNurses'Home at 8 p.m. ,\nWanted: Small fox terrier puppy\nOr pup of similar smaU breed. Must\nbe male. Phone E09-L.\nIIilllllllIIIIIllllllllllI]liillllllllll!lllll[IIIIIII![ll[]|||]||lll':\u00bb!IIl||l||llI!lB\nELECTRICAL CONTRACTING'\nAlterations, New Installations.\n,R..C.;Catton    .,\u25a0     '   Phope,389;\nA . LOVELY SELECTION OF\nWICKER CLOTHES HAMPERS\nNOW ON DISPLAY. COLORS\nWHITE, PINK, GREEN AND GREY\nWITH CHROME HANDLES AND\nLEATHERETTE OR MARBLIZED\nSEATS.  ;'\nMCM,:MC (NELSON)  LTD.\n\u2022 IN.MEMORIAM  :\nIn loving memory of Harry. Oliver\nSmith whodied suddenly April 10th,\n1946.   , \u25a0 ' \u25a0\nHappy memories and a i silent tear,\nIn the passing of another year.\nSadly missed by his Mom, Dad,\nDanny and Muriel.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nDUNPHY\u2014Requiem Mass for the\nlate Michael T. Dunphy wiU be sung\nby Msgr; A ,K. Mclntyre in the\nSacred Heart Church, Rossland, i at\n9 a.m. Tuesday. Prayers will be said\nat 8 p.m. this evening. Burial in\nCalvary Cemetery. Carberry's Funeral Chapel in charge of arrangements. -,,\u25a0\u25a0.\nRobert Main's Book \"Happy\nHours,\" Ideal Easter gifts for boys\nand girls.\nDON'T MISS the FASHION\n8HOW sponsored by your HUDSON\nBAY STORE, Mon. and Tues., April\nl'lth and 12th, at the Civic Theatre.\nLAUX JOINT FILLER - A water mixed putty \u2014 5 lb. pkg. $1.00\n\u2022 1- lb, pkg. 30c.\nBURNS LUMBER A COAL CO.\nForyour Easter Flowers we can\nwire them anywhere in the world\nfor ybu.\nMAC'S GREENHOU8ES, PH. 910\nGive the Pooch a break, we have\nChocolate scented dog bones, CoUar\nLocks and Brushes.\n\u25a0WADE'S   .\nThe Soroptomist Club wishes to\nthahk taggers and all others who\nhelped to make the tag day a suc-\nPhone, write or call for our price\nlist of fruit trees, flowering shrubs,\nevergreens and bedding plants.\n\u2022;, MAC'S GREENHOUSES\n-:;\u25a0\u201e\u25a0   Nelson.Phone 910,\ntfse VIG6RO In that hot-bed or\ncold frame you; are preparing for\nearly Spring seeds. It Works wonders. Available at NELSON.'EARM-\nERS' SUPPLY LIMITED.\n..Everything   for  tho   bee-keeper!\nMedium   brood   wax   foundation;\nqueen excluders,.smokers, \u25a0imbed-\nders, wire, frames, supers, etc.\nHIPPERSON'S\nATTENTION YMIR MOTHER8\nChildren's Clinic will be held in\nPalace Hotel Monday, April 11, from\n2-4 p.m.\nBARGAIN'S AT COLLINSON'S\nLadles' handbags, leather wallets,\nleather-cigarette cases and leather\nphoto frames, all selling at half-\nprice at COLLINSON'S, 661 Baker.\nChimneys, stoves, furnaces, hot\nand cold air ducts cleaned by vacuum, chimneys topped, thimbles applied or stopped, Prices reasonable.\nPounder's Chimney Service. Phone\n1152 between 12 and 1 and 6 and 7.\nBARGAINS AT COLLINSON'S\nAll pens and pencils, \"Waterman's\"\nand  \"Eversharp\".  Also  Ladles'  3-\nplece toilet sets; all being cleared\nout at half-price at\nCOLLINSON'S \u2014 661 Baker St.\nCHAMBER OF MINES\nA general meeting will be held at\nthe Chamber of Mines office April\n13 at 8 p.m. Two moving pictures\nwiU be shown. Reserve this date, it\nwill be worth it.\nKAY CARPENTER,\nPHYSIOTHERAPIST,*\nHAS MOVED TO\n\u25a0   904 8TANLEY ST.  a\nNeedlepoint -canvas is now In\nstock at THE CRAFT CENTRE. Use\nyour pettipoint or cross stitch charts\nto make attractive larger pictures\nwith this.\nNo weeds in your lawn when you\nspray lt with 2-4-D. One spraying\nkills all dandelions, plantain and\nother weelds. Does not harm the\ngrass. In 2 and 6-oz. bottles at .\nHIPPERSON'S\nStudents, we can rent you any\nmake of a standard typewriter. Get\nyour speed up with a little extra\npractice each day. D. W. McDerby,\n\"The Typewriter Ss Adding Machine Man\", 554 Stanley Street.\nIN MEMORIAM\nIn loving memory of Etta Musfelt,\nwho passed away at Claresholm,\nApril'10th, .1947.\nGone from our home, oh how we\nmiss her,\nLoving her deeply, her memory\nwe'll keep.\nNot till life ends shall we forget her,\nSacred to us is the place where\nshe'sleeps.\nEver remembered by her loving\nson, wile and- grandchildren.\nHYTHE, Kent, England ,(CP.)\u2014\nEach\/.schoolboy here is planting a\nyoung flowering tree bearing' his\nname on a metal tag in a half-mile\navenue. Reason's? To check a \"wave\nOf wanton damage\" to shrubs- andj\ntrees ahd to develop the boysV,;\nsense- of natural beauty. \u25a0'  : ;\u25a0:\nCreston Future\nfarmers,.,.-\nEnjoy Banquet\nCRESTON,.-' B.C.i,. AprU \u25a0 10 \u2014\nFuture' Farms of, .Canada, Creston\nUnit, held their annual banquet in\nthe school cafeteria with President\nF, Llndhprst in chair and 48 persons\npresent, , School' Trustees present\nwere M, Leveque,\" Chairman i and\nVC McL. Cooper.:Teachers present\nwere J. Verkerk, F. Martello,* W,\nMarchbank ajidTed Lundell.\nThe banquet was put on by Grade\n10 ahd.ll.High School.girls uiider\nsupervision -of .'fcs. Martin, and\nMiss Locke. Entertainment Included\nmusical selections, by the Buchko\nbrothers; and the High School vocal\nquartette of D\/Wayling; R. Plumb,\nG\u201e Jones and* C. Anderson. There\nwas s'also community, singing.\n. Mr. Cobper,*School Trustee, presented, a shield to 'Mr. Crouse who\nwon the!prize.for,best hog of 1948\nat the; local fair. Mr. Cooper; also\ngave a-Brief history of the agricultural department In the school\ndevelopment.\nW.'A. Marchbapk, .Principal, welcomed guests and students- and\nconcluded his address by stating\nthat \"all movements which start in\na,slow way are usually more\nsuccessful than those, of spectacular\nnature.\"\n. John Verkerk, agricultural teacher, outlined the. school agricultural\ncurriculum, \"which, pertains strictly\nto Creston Valley, and he also outlined prospects of': students and\nfacilities, in : the new agricultural\nvocational school and their use. He\nsaid he felt that Creston had the\nbest equipped farm shop in B.C.\nWINNIPEG (CP)-The explana-\n-H'.on ls simple when residents complain their., Winter hot water .supply isn't'as, \"hot',;as it might be.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 11,1949 \u2014 5\n\u2022 KUALA; LUMPUR, Malaya (CP)\n\u2014Experiments being made in Malaya with a new drug caUed Chloromycetin have convinced scientists\nthat, they now are able to reduce\nthe dreaded scrub typhus to a trl-\nvtal-rlsk.*\nNo More\nHarsh Laxatives!\nFamous cereal brines lasting relief\n. y'f from eonilipatlon\nAre harsh laxatives causing' yon\ndiatresss and unhappiness? Then read\nthis unsolicited letter:\n\"About 8 months\nago, I decided\nto start eating\nKELLOQQ'S\nALL-BRAN.\nAfter a few days,\nI realized that\nregular use of this\nbreakfast cereal\nwas making my\nsystem work\nnaturally. Constipation doesn't\ntrouble me any more. Believe me, it's\na great reliefF P. Leveille, 4465\nRinard Street, Montreal, f .\nYea, if you Buffer from constipation\ndue to lack of bulk in the diet, you\nmay never have to take another\nharah laxative again. Simply eat\nKELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN daUy\nand drink plenty of Water.\nALL-BRAN ia not ajpurgative, but\na wholesome cereal. Eat an ounce aa\na cereal or in muffins for constipation relief. If after using one package\nyou are not completely satisfied, get\ndouble ypur money back aa guaranteed on the package. Get delicious\nALL-BRAN from your grocer.\nMade by Kellogg's of London,\nOntario. \u2022\u201e *\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115 - NEL80N, B.C.\nThe House of Furinture Values\nYour $ $ $ Buy Mora at Freeman's\nBUY\nON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\n10 MONTHS TO PAY\nBRISTOL (CP)\u2014Arrears of rent\nfor Bristol\u2022\u2022 Council Houses total\nmore than- \u00a37000 (528,000) sand are\nrising rapidly.\nJUST ARRIVED\nNew Spring\nCOATS ond SUITS\nMILADY'S FAfHION SHOPPE\nWe Cater to the Larger Sizes.\nt\u00bbVV\u00ab\u00abVWVf\u00ab\nSKIRTS\n$5.95 to $21.50\nFashion First Ltd.\nww wyw\u00bbwi wssjwi\nKootenay \"alley Uaiky\nPASTEURIZED\n\u25a0 MILK\nIS SAFE FQR CHILDREN\nCANADA US1S\n.^.^LSIIITMI 4.\t\ni=ORP TRUCKS P\nthin any oiker\nmake...   ..g\nr-68 Exi-iii^s tiiiic:\n^ecause\nOMS\nwm\n' \"tfRSATtUTyf\nLittle wonder that owners usef\nthis Ford F-47 Pickup Truck on\nfmore kinds of jobs, with com-'l\n, plete satisfaction! It's the leader\nxfitt versatjlity\u2014and in savings r\nrots gas, oil and upkeep.\n;;'',' '* '    \"   '    ''      ':   '\"'\"    '\u25a0'\nMADE   STRONGER\nTO  LAST  LONGER\n* POWERFUL V-S   ENGINES\n... Heavier, balanced crankshafts give\n.extra work reserves.\nf EXTRA  TOUGH  AXLES\nFull Floating Rear Axles for\nlonger life.\nEXTRA   STRONG   FRAMES\nGive a wider range of use in\nall models.\n* \"MILLION   DOLLAR\"   CAB\nFor  \"Living   Room   Comfort\" .  . .\ni . Level action cab suspension.\n'EXTRA   EASY   HANDLING\n'I'\/''-\nHeavy-duty roll action steering\nlinkage . , . \"Feather Foot\"\nHydraulic Brakes . . . Gyro Grip\nClutch for low pedal pressure.\n*BONUS:  \"Something cjiveri m addition to what\nis usual or strictly due.\"\n\u2014Webster's Dictionary.\nExtra-smart appearance       ,\nmakes the Ford F-47 Pane!\nTruck a distinctive advertisement for any business\u2014and\nits low operating costs look\ngood to owners, too. Extra\nhandling ease in traffic and\nnarrow streets.\nsyrutry\/\nThere are dozens of different\nJobs a Ford F-135 Chassis and\n: Cab can do\u2014and do i\u00ab\/\/That's fri,\nwhy thousands upon thousands\nof owners choose the F-135\nsfpr lower costs, longer life , *\nand a wider range ofuse.  :\nOwners who handle some\nof the toughest jobs in\nhauling prefer the Ford\nF-155. Its extra-strong\naxles, frame, universal\nMy. joints and crankshaft \"pay\noff\" in longer service,\nlower operating costs.\nWhen it's a question of bulky\nloads, many operators make\nthe F-155 Long-Wheelbase\nTruck their number one\nchoice. It gives extra load\nspace, extra loading and\nunloading convenience ...\nwith \u25a0exceptional economy 1\nSEE   YOUR   FORD   TRUCK   DEALER\nQUEEN GITY MOTORS LTD.\n561 JOSEPHINE STREET PHONE 43\n iifr hum lailg Wm\nEstablished April 22. 1002.\nBritish Columbia's\nHost Interesting Newspaper\n' Published every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS. PUBLISHING COMPANY, UMITED,\n266 Baker Street. Nelson British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall,\nPost Office Deportment Ottawa,\n\" Member of the Canadian press and\nthe audit bureau of circui^tions:\n.     MONDAY, JPRIL 11,1949\nAn Important Issue s\nTd Nelson Taxpayers\nThe City of Nelson street railway^.\nis an expensive luxury, though the\ntransportation it provides is far from\n' luxurious. ,\nIn 1948, the City's transportation'\nloss was $15,111. This year on\u00abaccount\nol increased payroll the loss is estim- .\nsted at $19,041. In addition to-this the\nessential additional maintainence ex-\n: perises to make the system safe to carry passengers, and to meet the Provincial Government regulations would be\n. $35,000 capital expense.' This $35,000\nwould have to be raised ty a Money\nBy-Law and the City would still have\nan antiquated patched-up transportation system.\nIn addition to this $35,000 tempor- '\nary, repair job the City very shortly\nwould.be faced with the necessity of a\nheavy capital expenditure in. the purchase of new cars and renovation of\nthe trolley lines.\nIn the old days Nelson perhaps\ncould have taken a cash loss of $19,000\nin its stride and could have financed\nthe $35,000 for repair of tracks and the\nat present unknown cost o'f new cars\nand renovation of the trolley line, But *\nthese days have gone, The profit on\nNelson's two profit-producing Public\nUtilities in 1948 was $90,482 but against\nthis its loss-producing Public Utilities\npilid up a deficit of $38,149. Nelson's\noverall profit last year therefore from\nits Public Utilities was only $52,293.\nTherefore Nelsoh literally cannot\nafford to face a loss of $19,000, plus in-'\nterest, plus sinking fund, on the heavy\ncapital investment which would be required to keep the street cars running.\nThere.is another feature in Nelson's\nfinances which deserves the serious\nconsideration of, the voters. Nelson's\nnet available borrowing .power on January 1 of this year was down to $277,-\n000. Against Mud tho City has lis spend\nbetween $70,01111 and'${00,000 to \"com-\"'\npiste the '<Uh unit of the-power plant.'.\nIt also has Us lutiJi*! a new transmission\nline between Bonnington and Nelson\nto carry the power from ths 4tli unit.\nHeavy expense is also involved iii\nthe sub-station \"and distribution sys- \u25a0\ntern. In plain English the.City'of Ncl- .\nson has neithci tbe cash noi tiie bor- .-\nrowing power to enable it to complete\nalll-this work without be'rig seriously;\ncramped. -\nThe acceptance ot Ihe offer ol Interior Stages to install a bus service in\nNelson will  relieve -the- City. of'Jthe '\nheavy load which\" it is now carrying '\nand the still heavier prospective load\nwhich it face$ in the operation of a\nstreet railway. Cities all over the Continent have been faced with a similar\nsituation. They have met it by, the inauguration of bus services which have\nproved popular with the public because -\u2022\nin addition to the obvious saving to ihe '\ntaxpayers, buses give a fastei service\nover a witter area t'.-sn i; po.-sible with\na street railway.\nIn the case cf Nelsen the bus service\nfor which we'are to vote tomorrow will\nprovide ft minimum of 100,000 miles\nof transportation a year, compared to\nthe existing 60,000 miles given by the\nstrpet railway.  .\nThe, direct waste from a taxpayer's\nviewpoint involved in the operation of\nthe street railway as compared to the\noperation by Interior Stages works but\nat 4,42 mills on the existing Nelson\nCity tax rate.\n. Therefore the people of Nelson by\ntheir votes tomorrow can effect a material saving in costs and,gain a modern\nand efficient service.\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nletters may be published over a nam\nde plume, but tb* actual name of the\nwriter must be given to the Editor at evl-\ndenes of good faiths Anonymous letters ao\nin the waste paper basket\nAsks Fact-Find ing\nCbmmittee Questions\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014The lensjth of our street railway la\napproximately 3.81 miles. Our Provincial Government will .eventually become responsible\nfor 9\/10 of a mile (what Mr. Affleck calls \"the\nlion's share) of this 3,81 miles. Nelson's taxpayers will still be responsible for the remainder, Doea he think the Government will\ntake over our streets (as is) when the trackage\nis taken up and its space is temporarily filled\nIn with gravel? The Government wUl take (\nover highways ln all small towns.\nThe taxpayera of Nelson will pay a share\nof the total cost incurred.\nAlderman Ritchie would \"get busy\" and\ndo away with the \"unsightly steel rails\" aa\nsoon as possible. Whenever it is done, the taxpayers will certainly pay the cost of restoring\n2,91 miles and possibly the whole 3.81 miles of\nthe streets affected.\nThe bus franchise provides for higher\nfares, Three tickets for a'quarter, against four\nfor a quarter aS at present.. If this higher rate\nbad been operative in 1947, the revenue would\nhave been Increased by $11,730, and our street\nrailway system would have shown a profit of\n$3633 instead of a loss of $8097.\nThen its patrons would not have suffered\nthe odium of being \"subsidized\" by \"the whole\npopulation\". They are taxpayers as well as\npatrons of our street railway, and help to meet\nany deficit Of its operation, Mr. Affleck should\nremember, too, that \"the whole population\" ia\ntaxed to supply roads for those who own and\nrun private cars. We subsidize many projects\nin Nelson, but if the whole population Is benefited, why grumble?\nThe proposed bus route is about 6,5 miles,\n\u25a0ind approximately 20% of it Is over concrete\nroads,'while 6,2 miles is asphalt, Why does Mr,\nAffleck put so much emphasis on the life of\nconcrete roads?\nI hope the new asphalt roads will last\nlonger than 10 years, but ls It unreasonable to ii.\n; suppose they would lost very much longer, if\nloaded.buses did not make 18,400 trips over\"\nthem In each of 10 years, thus travelling 120,000\n, miles per year?\nt)-.   The SiwaniB Club was told by Mr. Affleck',\nthat the City purchased the street railway sys-\ntem ln 1908 \"at a cost of $10,000\". I bave been ,\nreliably Informed, at the City Hall, that it cost,,,,\nIhe la -paveii $16,000 A', a City service it will\nbe valued in the 1948 Financial Statement at\naround $28,000. If It is scrapped, will the tax*-,?\npayers be losers' If Mr. Affleck was not mis- -\n-.quoted, then lira figures were very misleading,\nas were some \"answers to questions\".\nClause 17 of Bylaw 1118 enables the bus\n\u25a0 company to lease the City's car barns for three '\nyears at a rental of $1 per year, and there is .,\nsnothlng said about maintenance or repairs, Is'.\nit only worth, $1 a year to the'company or to\n-the City? The company takes possession on the:\nsigning of Ihe fi inchise.-, which means that our ;f\nequipment viH have lo lie scrapped, sold, or\n'put out \"on a vacant lot. The car barns will be\na gift to thescompany, :at the expense of the\n: taxpayers!.\nIf the Fact-Finding Committee Btlll functions, I hope they will answer the following\nquestions: Has our City Council evjer been\noffered a number of street cars, said to be In a\ngood state of repair, and at a very reasonable\nprice?\nIf such an offer were received, why were\nthe taxpayers hot informed of it?\n,  Tney oujht  to know, and there Ib still\nlime before voting day for them to bo told.\nThe operating loss on our present system\ncan, be wiped out by: increasing thS fares. The\nsystem can be supplemented by one gas bus\nto serve on extended routes, and the taxpayers\nwould retain full control. The annual loss, that\ncauses such headaches, would be removed. It\n? Questions 7\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not be published..\nThere Is no charge for title service. Questions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL except where there Is obvious necessity for privacy.\nMrs. E. ,S. J\u201e Kimberley\u2014Cen you tell me If\nthere is a finance corporation in either\nBast or West KoOtenay where loans can be\nsecured on household equipment or salary?\nWe ere unable to discover any company,\nthat deals in such small loans.\nE. H,, Nelson\u2014How can one-clean wallpaper\nthat has been soiled by smoke at the\n\u2022.   thimble whore a stovepipe joins the wall?\nA method, recommended by a practical\npainter and decorator is to, take a clean, soft\nsponge, put a handful of new, dry, wheat bran\non It, then turn quickly agssjlnst wall (a little\nis bound to be split In the process), and rub\nthe paper gently and carefully. Never use the\nsame bran twice. One really needs an assistant for thia. job to hold a tray, or wide pan,\nbeneath the sponge to catch any bran that falls\ndown. Another method.Is to rub gently with\n\u2022tale bread, renewing frequently.\nH. P., Nelson\u2014Please tell me how I can remove stains from an enamel bathtub. ' \u2022\nYou do not say whether the Btalns are dua\nto rust or other causes. A perfectly safe, arid\nusually efficient cleanser, ls coal oil and salt.\nDamp a soft cloth with the coal oil and sprln-\nWe salt on It, then rub stsiined portion quickly\nand lightly;- '.,\u2022--\u2022\nWestern Agreement on German\nRepublic Nobble Move for Peace\nBy DEWITT MaoKENZIE\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nAgreement at long last among\nthe United States, Britain and\nFrance for the establishment ef\na German Federal Republic comprising; their three zones Is a\nfurther notable move towardB\npeace and' rehabilitation for\nWestern Europe.\nThis momentouj development\ncontemplates the removal ot Allied\nMilitary Control over Western Germany as Boon as the proposed republic ls established, Allied civilian\nauthority will be substituted and\nwill become mainly supervisory,;\nA defeated, war-torn, dismembered and embittered Reich has\nconstituted a growing menace, to\nEuropean recovery. Only a decade\nago Germany was the keystone of\ncontinental economy, Europe cannot be put on its feet until that keystone Is restored economically.\nUnfortunately   the . Soviet-occu-;\n.-vs*,\nLooking Backwards\n10 YPAR8 AGO\nFrom The Dally News o{ April 11, 1939 '-\n\"At any time the call for mobilization may\nsound through Canada.\" This was the message\ndelivered to the 111th (Nelson) Battery, H.C.A.,\nas Colonel David Phllpot of Cranbrook, officers\ncommanding the 24th Kootenay Field Brigade,\nheld his annual inspection over the weekend.\nEaster's glorious morning was welcomed at\nsunrise by over 300 who gathered In Gyro Park\nfor service which had been arranged by the\nnewly-organized Youth Council.\n(Editor's note: This column ls\npresented as an indication of\nAmerican reaction to major\nworld events.) \u25a0 \\\nBy DEWITT MACKENZIE\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nHaving signed the Atlantic Defensive Pact, we Immediately come\nup against the uncomfortable but\nunavoidable question ot how it ls to\nbe implemented lt there is aggression.\nWe have part of out: answer in\nblunt \"Army Day\" addresses from\nthe United States military establishment, With a jonanimity which could\nonly be Inspired, they made it crystal clear that American troops must\nbe stationed in Europe as long as\nthe cold war lasts\/;\nDoes that shock you? WeUr'Jt\nshouldn't, though' tt certainly is it\n'disturbing thought,;An Atlantic alliance without backing would be\njust so many senseless words which\nwould have the hollow sound of\nhammering on an empty rain barrel. Army Secretary Kenneth Roy-\n\u25a0   2i YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of April 11, 1924\nJudge J. A, Forln will represent the Nelson Board of Trade at the decimal coinage\nand weights arid measures convention to be\nheld in London, England.\nAt a,meeting of tbe Native Sons of fcan-\nada, Dr. W, O. Rose gave a lecture on the history of British Columbias\n40 YEAR8 AGO\n' The steaftier Moyie left'last night for a\nspecial trip to.Kootenay Landing, and will\nreturn today with 250 Doultbobors on board.\nLord Aylmer, late Inspector of the Canadian Militia, and family are leaving Ottawa\ns.lioitly to take up residence at'Queen's Bay.\nPress Comment\nFor all Its usual heartiness, laughter can\niitlll be an ambiguous expression. It most frequently is a spontaneous release of exuberance\nand llght-heartedness touched off hy something innocuously ridiculous. But it can be a\ncruel, cutting weapon employed with derision\n; to injure its object. A smile, too, is not without\nits double edge. While It can show pleasure\nand subtle understanding, It may also be employed to demean. But in a chuckle there Is\nlittle room for malice.\nYour Horoscope'\nA wotieratoly happy and successful year is\n''ahead of you, unexpected gain being indicated:\nAccept new responsibilities with-'confidence.\nLook for the qualities of ambition, hard work,\ndiplomacy and a kind heart In a child who is\nborn today. .;:\"\u25a0\nIt's Bgen Said\nAn honest man's word Is as good  as his\nbond.\u2014Saavedra Miguel Cervantes.\nis up to the taxpayers to decide and vote for\nwhat they want.\nIn spite of what Mr. Affleck has said, my\nprevious argument re costs to our taxpayers\nholds good: they will pay for everything they\nget from a bus company.\nW. H. FOSTER\n810 Victoria Street.\nNelson, B, C, April 3, 1949,\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n.   Isfltfind U. I. fUmf Ottsm\nVk &m vou \u00a3akd you can keep her-)\nDtlMBA eu.'W, QUEEN OF THE Sin\" SHOE\nWO CASSi-'ULLV REMOVES THE PRICE MARK\nFI3QM M\u00bbfc MOST EXPENSIVE PRESET\nB&UT WHEN YOU TW ID SLIP OVER A\n'CHEAPlE'SHE W ONLV OVERLOOKS\nTHE PRICE MARK BUT WRAPS IP THE\nSALES TAG AS WEIU\nBy Jimmy Hatlo       it Happened.Today\n1045--In World War II, tha United\nStates Ninth Army reached the Elbe\nRiver in a 50-mlle surge, while the\nRussians drove past Vienna, Austria.\n(hint Ml\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nI always feel kind o' silly when I\nvote. It's almost like choosin' one\nb\\ four men for a husband, and every\n. one a stranger you haven't even met.\npled aone of Germany remains\noutside the proposed Republic because, of the failure of the tour\npowers to agree. However, the\nthree-power agreement leaves the\nway open for Russian participation,\nand State Secretory Aeheson says\nthat It provides a basls';tor increased hope that the Western Powers\nand Russia may solve their difficulties, : ff'fi'A\nLACK RICH AREA\nShould Russia not see fit to unite\nthe Eastern Zone with its Sister\nStates the new Government would\nlack a rich area which includes the\nbnce-proud.,metropolis of Berlin-\nhub Of communications for the\nivbole, continent.\nStill the three Western Zopes\ncould bo constructed into a prosperous and important Republic.\nThey contain great resources, including the lren and steel of the\nRuhr \u2014' one of the world's most\nImportant industrial areas.\nAtlantic Pact Senseless If No\nUnited States Military Support\nWork on Mew\nOld-Age\nPension Plan\nOTTAWA, April 10 (CP)-Healtb\nMinster Martin is'worklng on a plan\nwhich may involve Increases in Old-\nAge pensions, and some additional\nsteps towards an over-all Social Security program, it was learned\nauthoritatively Saturday.\nIttis expected .thft the Pi\"\" will-\nbe announced before -the session\nprorogues or before Parliament Ib\ndissolved for a general Federal\nelection.\nThere have benn unofficial reports that besides increasing Old-\nAge pensions, the plan may contain\nFederal Government offer to\neliminate the means tests. There also\nhas been speculation that the Federal Government will renew a 1945\noffer to pay the cost of $30-a-month\npensions to all over 70 and part of\nthe cost of pensions to the needy\nbetween 85 and 00.\nTo Start Coast\nLacrosse in May\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (CP) -\nTwo rival New Westminster lacrosse\nteams\u2014Adanacs and Salmonbellies\nwill officially Open the 1040 lacrosse season at Queen's Park Arena\nThursday, May 12, the season sched'\nule, released today, revealed,\nTextile Strike Ends\nPARIS, Onts, April 10 (CP) -ThO\nbitter 12-week-old wages strike at\nthe textile mills of Fenmans Limit,\ned, whioh produced picket lines,\nbloodshed and court eases came to\nan end today.   .'.-\u25a0'\u2022\nD.L. G,'Jones of Hamilton, Solicitor for tiie Company, announced\nin nearby Brantford that he had\nsigned a memorandum of agreement\nfiled with Ontario Labor Minister\nDaley, complying with conditions\nunder which the United Textile\nWorkers of America (A.F.L.) agreed\nto call off the Strike.   .\nMost apple and pear trees are un<\nable to bear fruit unless they are\ncross-pollinated\u2014usually ' by   bees,\nElected\n-^Central ,l*re\u00ab\u00bb .Canadian\nJean Desy. Canadian Ambassador to Italy, who has been elected\nPresident ef the Central Council\nef the International Refugee Organization,\nall put it like this ln Chicago:\n\"We could not win a world' war\nin a matter of days or weeta or\nmonths.' Nor in the foreseeable future could we achieve viOtory, by\nstanding on our shores and throwing rocks or rocketB or anything\nelse across the seas.\" *\nRoyall and other hlsgh mffltsiry\nofficials warned that the United\nStates can't afford to let European\nground forces bear the brunt ot any\nlightning attack on the Continent,\nRoyall saloVthe Atlantic Pact Pow.\ners are banking on an American Army-overseas, and also on United\nStates equipment for their own\nfighting forces, (The supply of\nequipment Is Said to be ohe of,Washington's immediate objectives.) He\ndeclared the United States has the\nbest Army In its lilstojy, but:\n\"If In the first stage of any future\nwar we Should lose aU; foothold on\nthe Eurasian Continent and in North\nAfrica, then victory\u2014if achieved at\nall\u2014would require 10 or 20 years of\nwar\u2014or perhaps more.\"\nGen. Ojnar Bradley, Army Chief\nof Staff, speaking ln New York City,\nalso rejected any idea that, ln case\nof attack, European ground forces\nshould bear the brunt while the\nUnited States devoted its Initial efforts to air strikes. He pointed out\nthat \"at present the balance of military Power iscentred.in the United\nStates, 3000 miles from the heart of\nEurope,\"\n\u2014Central press Canadian\nDr. Robert Broom, 82-year-old curator of the fossils at the Transvaal Museum at Pretoria, South Africa, Is shown with the oast of a\nsmall skull of his \"South African apeman\" and a drawing ef what\nthe apeman looked like. The aged paleontologist, a stormy figure In\nhis field, Is In New York to demonstrate his findings at the American\nMuseum ef Natural History and to trace the age of the bones he'a\ndiscovered In South Africa. It Is hla contention that there existed In\nAfrica a line of pre-men amounting to a whole branch of the human\nfamily.   '\nWomen To Enter\nCoast Chess Club\nVICTORIA, B, C\u201e April 10 (CP)-\nThree cheers and hata.off to the. women, This week they won another\nround, in their age old battle for\nequality with men. At long last\nthey will be able to join the Victoria City Chess Club.\nThe Club bas excluded women\nfrom membership ever since its inception way back in 1930. At the\nlast general meeting, however, It\nwas decided the exclusion rule\nshould be idone away.with.\nCARDIFF (CP)-Clty Council\nhas decided to go on pressing the\nclaims of Cardiff as the official\ncapital of Wales, Some 'opposition\nil coming from other parte ot tbe\nountry.\nCivil Service\nExams Start in\nVictoria April 22\nVICTORIA, B'C, April 10 (CP).-\nThe B, C. Civil'Service Commission\nhas announced that examinations for\nadmittance of typists; stenographers,\ngrades 1 and 2: Junior clerks and\nclerks grade 1 will be held In Victoria On April 22.\nFuture appointments In the Victoria area will be made from those\nqualifying in these examinations,\nCandidates must be. British subjects, not more than 40 years of age\nin the case of females; Junior clerks\n(male) preferably under 20 years\nof' age,, and clerks, grade 'l (male)\npreferably under 30 years; of age.\nAge-limits wil: be waived iri the case\nof ex-service personnel who ; are\nI given preference.\nFAITH is a family affair!\nFAITH is not just for holy days. Faith is for every\nday . .;. at work, nt play, in the quiet times the\nfamily has together. ,\nWe need folth \u2014 ami never so desperately\nas today. Tho world Is filled with voices of confusion. It is easy to feel helpless and alone. Bui fisllli\nin a Power outside ourselves can be a bedrock of\nfamily unity, a-shield for family happiness.\nA return to faith\ncan give men and\nwomen a broader\nview of life\u2014-* sense\nof perspective. Then\nthey are better pre-\npared for the give-\nand-take of family\nliving. The family\nunited.In faith has a\nstrong and lasting\nbond,\nChildren naturully turn to faith when- it is \u2022\ndaily purt of the family life. And when they know\nthe real meaning of faith, they- will be tolerant of\nthose wbo express their tilth in other ways.\nThe home atmosphere is far different when 8\nfamily stops trying to walk alone, when it sees itt\n, place in the bigger scheme of things. It works together for Ihe things it can control ~ and trusts\nIts God for guidance in problems beyond its control. Such a family can't help feeling closer together,\nmore sure of itself, huppier I\nTo keep alive the family's faith calls for a positive plan - just as you plan for your family's mate,\nrial welfare. Hon your family expresses its faith is\na matter of choice. What Is important to you is that\nypu do express itl\nA message from the more than filly Life Insurance\nCompanies in Canada and their Agents.\n-\n uvl\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL Tl, 1949 \u2014 7\nto\nOur Givic\nortation\nIs To Install\nSmart in appearance\nA WIU v^OftCIl \u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nMunicipal\nTwo way convenient entrances and exits\nThese coaches proved without any doubt that they can operate on\nschedule in the worst of winter weather conditions\nThis advertisement ii paid for and published by a group of Nelson business men and\nfirms whose sole interest are in the progressive advancement of the City of Nelson.\nand To Vote Yes on Bylaw 1118 Tomorrow\nWHY Is a Change Necessary?\n\u2022 OUR PRESENT SYSTEM IS OBSOLETE AND WORN TO A PRECARIOUS CONDITION.\n\u2022 OUR PRESENT SYSTEM HAS BEEN OPERATING AT A SUBSTANTIAL LOSS EVERY YEAR\u2014(1948\nDEFICIT $15,111).\n    $    AN ESTIMATED EXPENDITURE OF OVER $35,000 MUST BE MADE THIS YEAR TO PUT THE TRACKS\nALONE IN OPERATING CONDITION.\nTherefore the City Council has deemed it sound\nbusiness to present to the taxpayers Bylaw No* 1118\nwhich will grant a franchise to Interior Stages\nHere Are the Advantages of Bus Transportation\n\u2022 THE SYSTEM WILL BE INSTALLED WITHOUT ANY CAPITOL EXPENDITURE WHATSOEVER\nBY THE CITY OF NELSON.\n\u2022 BUS ROUTES ARE FLEXIBLE\u2014AS A CONSEQUENCE MANY MORE PEOPLE WILL HAVE THE\nCONVENIENCE OF THE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM PASSING CLOSER TO THEIR HOMES.\n\u2022 BUSES CAN OPERATE MUCH FASTER THAN OUR PRESENT STREET. CAR SYSTEM, RESULTING IN A PROMPTER SERVICE TO ALL PARTS OF THE CITY.\n\u2022 THE PRESENT STREET RAILWAY RAILS ON MANY OF OUR CITY STREETS PROHIBIT THE\nBUILDING OF PERMANENT STREETS IN THESE LOCATIONS. . . THE INSTALLATION OF\nBUSES WOULD ENABLE THE CITY TO FURTHER PROGRESS WITH A SOUND STREET IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.\nTAXPAYERS \u2014 The Installation of Buses Will\nSAVE YOU MONEY\ntherefore Tomorrow\nVOTE\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 11,1949\nWhere Lamb Chops Are Really\nHigh}\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\n. This knock-kneed chunk of animated mutton doesn't realize It,\nbut he's mighty close to that celebrated cow that Jumped over the\nmoon. He Is grazing In a lush Alpine pasture: 6000 feet above the\nFraser River Tn British Columbia. There'are approximately 40,000\nmore like him which will become lamb chops next Fall, by which\ntime we hope, they won't be io high. Mothers of the lambs produce\n' some of the fine wool that goes to make up Canada's annual stockpile of 11,000,000 pounds. \u25a0    *\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-:      - \u25a0\nFreak Snows\nBlanket Europe\nJsONDON, April 10 (AP).-lPreak\nsnows blanketed budding blossoms\nand icy winds howled across Europe on the eve of Holy Week.\nWinds and waves pummelled\nshipping from the North Sea to the\nMediterranean. At leasst three ships\nsank and dozens ran aground.\nFive persons were killed and nine\ninjured inthe bomb ruins of Germany as gale-driven snows blanketed Berlin and other parts of thb\nformer Reich,    v   - \u2022\nSleet''and snow were reported\nthroughout Scandinavia and Switzerland had its heaviest snowfall ih\n20 years. \u25a0 -;\"\nk.?i3 to put Northern 'and Central\nCold winds \"swept out of the Bal-\nII- v's temperatures down freezing.\nNorthern JEpgland .reported a\nth.-ee-inch snowfall \"'*- -.\"\nWeather in ijiost of Southern Europe was sunny and moderate.\nAlbania Found;\nGuilty of Mining\nBritish -Destroyers\nTHE HAGUE, A^rll 10 (AP)-The\nInternational Court of Justice In the\nfirst verdict* in its history, has decided. Albania is responsible for the\nmining of two British destroyers in\nthe Corfu Channel.\nThe verdict, announced Saturday,\nordered Albania to pay damages,\nBritain had,claimed \u00a3950,000 ($3,,\n800,000) reparations for: the mining\nof the ships, the death of 44 seamen\nand the destroyers, and injury to 42\nothers. The explosion occured Oct\n22, 1848.\nWESTMOUNT,. Que. (CP)\u2014Mo.\n*>rlsts ,who- perish in. splashing pedestrians son\u201e'thes.streets.'here ..will\nface the police department. A traffic-by-law. to this effect will be enforced''because'of-thai prevalence\nof wet streets and- complaints of,re,\nsidents.-  \u2022\nTHE SAFETY GARAGE\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C.\nOpened under hew management-by\nMR. DAYE HAWKA\nAH ear repairs and body works Including welding.\nWe handle all TEXACO PRODUCTS\nService available at all hours\nNew Ships Will\nMean tower\nFreight Rales\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nEuropean countries which have\ntraditionally supplied the bulk of\nthe world's' shipping should continue to do so, says the current\nMonthly Review of the Bank of Nova Scotia.        ,'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0.-\nThey shduld be allowed to' earn\nmoney that way, the letter adds,\nfrom the general viewpoint of restoring world trade and eventually\nremoving currency ahd. other restrictions.\n\"This is especially true at this\n9ritlcal time.for the world recovery\nprograms, as has been recognized by\nEuropean Recovesry Program officials in their efforts to remove the\nprovision that 50 per cent of the\nrecovery cargoes must be carried in-\nUnited States ships...\n\"It is true that non-European\ncountries have, in varying degree,\nreal interests in matters ol national\nshipping^     .\n\"The need Is to clarify the problem by defining these essential interests and by measuring them in\nterms of shipping capacity and the\ncosts involved itt providing it.\n\"Uneconomic shipping policies increase the risk of a long period of\nexcess capacity in world shipping.\nThough this would mean low rates\nfor ocean carriage, it involves the\nprospect that these rates would be\nmaintained at public,expense by\nvarious direct and indirect methods\nof subsidy and control.\n\"For a country like Canada, with\na strong interest in the economical\ncarriage of her overseas trade and\nconcerned with selling her products\nto countries whose ability to buy\ndepends in part on their shipping\nincome, the problem of deciding\nwhat are essential trade routes for\nher own ships is a difficult one,\n\"Whatever happens, it seems unlikely that Canada can continue to\ncompete on a large scale ln the\ntramp services, and the development of her shipping will probably\ncontinue to be in provision of specialized services over regular routes,\ntogether with the carriage of some\nmajor raw materials like bauxite\nfor the aluminum industry.\"\nThe review says that as more new\nships are completed the general\ntrend of freight rates is likely to\ncontinue downward and the premium on efficient operation will\ngrow. \u2022\nSuspect Red Spies\nIn Disappearance\nOf Auto Worker\nDETROIT, April 10 (At>)-Blood,\nstains in the room of a missing Russ\nian-born automobile worker led police to speculate on whether he was\nthe victim of a Communist spy ring.\nCostan Covaluk, 48, a Ford employee, has been missing since\nMarch 17. For-the last; 12 years he\nhas lived alone in a Detroit boarding house.\nA routine inspection of his room\ndisclosed blood spots on the floor\nand on articles of clothing. Police\nalso found $7,000 in .bonds.\n\"We didn't take much notice of\nthis disappearance at first,\" said\nDetective Richard Miller. \"But Investigation has turned up a number\nof possibilities, including suicide,\nfoul play or some connection with\na Red spy ring.\" \"\"\n, Covaluk's parents are stilly ln Russia. Friends said he had brooded because he was unable to send funds to\nrelatives; They also said he spent a\ngreat deal of time reading Russian\npapers. ' \\\nFord Motor Company reported he\nhad taken several leaves of absence.\nHowever, lt was not known where\nhe went at such times.\nLIVELY HISTORY\nOF HALIFAX BY\nTHOMAS RADDALL\nBy CHARLE8 BRUCE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nGerman failure to mine the approaches of Halifax Harbor remains\na mystery of the war,-says' Thomas\nH. Raddall, the .Nova Scotia novel-'\nist\nSo close did the fringe of the sea-\nwar come to this nerve-centre of the\nconvoy 'system that.merchant ships\nwere attacked near the harbor, the\ncorvette Clayoquot was sunk, five\nmiles oft Sambo lightship on Christmas Eve 1844, and a submarine sank\nthe minesweeper Esquimau within\nsight of it in April, 1845. But except\nfor one \"catch\" of several mines in\nJune, 1943,: the Canadian Navy's\nsweep of the harbor approaches netted nothing but hard work for the\nsweepers.      -   .   ''\nThese and many.ether aspects ol\nthe city's role in half a dozen Wars\nare outlined in \"Halifax, Warden ol\nthe North\" (McClelland and Stewart), Raddall's account of the city's\n200-year history as naval station,\ngarrison town, colonial and provincial capital. Anyone' wro, failed\nto realize that for six: years Halifax\nwas \"in the line\"' may get a slight\nshock from some of Raddall's casual\nunderstatement: \"They (the Germans) never attempted to sink the\nharbor lightships\u2014these were too\nuseful as seamarks for,their operations.\" '\nOBJECTIVE ACCOUNT.\nThe book is an objective account\nof Halifax from the day it was\nfounded as a fort in 1749 to offset\nFrench power,' until today,' when\ncity planning is a postwar problem\nAll through its history two largely\nAt U.N, Session\n!\n\u25a0 -Members of the U.8. delegation to the U.N.\nGeneral Assembly sit In various poses at the Initial\nsession at Flushing Meadow Park, New York.\nFronts row, left to right, are: Mrs. Eleanor D.\nRoosevelt! Philip C. Jessup; John Foster Dulles;\nWarren R. Austin, delegation chairman; and\nSecretary of State Dean Aeheson.; Third from\nright In second row Is Erwin D. Canham of Boston,\nalternate delegate.\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)-\nBallistics Tests\n'To Determine Part\nFebruary Robbery\nf VANCOUVER; April ft (CD-\nChief Constable Walters Mulligan\nsaid' police will make ballistics\ntests to determine Whether Robert\nGeorge Harrison, slain bank holdup\nartist, was responsible for the Feb,\n16 robbery of. a'Victoria Branch of.;\nthe Canadian Bank of Commerce.\n, Harrison died- Friday as he left,\nthe Commercial Drive branch of the\nCanadian Bank of Commerce here\nhe had just held. up. He was shot\ndead~by a motorcycle policeman.\n. Chief Mulligan said the shells -\nejected from the. gun used in \u25a0 the\nVictoria holdup,,: when between1\n$6000 and $7000 was stolen, \"wer.e of\nthe same type as those from Harrison's gun,\" ,'.'. - ...\ns However, he added ballistics tests\nwould \"ijroye\" whether It was the\nsame Weapon and whether Harrison was responsible, for both\ncrimes.. ...\ncontradictory roles: have made Hal-\ncording tb formal pattern. Her world\nposition in wartime strategy has always been at odds with her place as\nthe trading and cultural centre of\nher own hinterland. *,\nHer very ^incorporation .was delayed for nearly IM yearsbecause it\nwould have,restricted the application, of military discipline; .civic development* had-vtb adjust itself td\narsenalsj block houses and barracks\nin ~fhe centre \"of the -town; responsible government for 'Nova.Scotia\nhad to be wonsin a breathing-space\nif ax a city that can't be typed ac-\nbetween wars. \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\nRaddall treats it all objectively.\nThe peqple who had-a hand in-'the;\nbuilding of Halifax move' through\nhis pages with color of life\u2014the\ngovernor honest and corrupt, the\ngenerals sagacious and foolish, the\nmerchants upright and knavlst, the\nladies virtuous and, otherwise; the\nnameless thousands who lived their\nlives within sight of her citadel, the\nnameless thousands who tramped\nher.piers to waitin'ships. \u25a0',.>\nRecover $50,000\nNEW YORK, April'QXsipjs-Fifty\nthousand dollars reported missing\nyesterday at New .York -International airport was recovered early today.\nPoilce'Bald'an-air cargo .clerk -had\nadmitted taking themoney\u2014500 $100\nbills. Ail ofit was-recovered buried\nin a vacant lot.\nIn 1770, firltish law .rendered: null\nand void any Imaftiage:, where '.the\nwife had, captured, hW; 'husband\nthrough' the.use'-df,cosmetics. \\f.y\n\u00a3ASE(iewi\\c\n\\cPAIN\\\n\u2022inuiNI A\u00abM\u00abIH J\u00bb^...\nMAKKIP THISWM\u2014\u2666i**\/\nStation CKLN\nicause it deeps engines\nckaner and better fabricated\nnavoline;ts'Kara\u2014obtainable:from your local MeCofl-\nFronfenac Dealer.' .\". '\nNew and Improved Havollne is more than Just a motor\nlubricant... it's a motor cleanser too. Havoline actually\ncleans as'it lubricates, rids your engine of clogging carbon\nand sludge \u2014releasing more Power for your car.\nDrive In to your McCbti-Frentenac dealer today. Ask him\nio change your oil to Havoline. Then find out for yourself\nwhat a,difference a really clean motor can make.\nTun* Ins TEXACO STAR THEATRE\nWednesday rsighls, CBC. See nowspapor\nfor time and station; '    \u2022\nft AI   McCOLL-FRONTENAC   DEALERS\n6 Powerful Reasons Why It Pays\nTo Use New HAVOLINE Motor Oil\n1. MORE POWER \u2014Wills clogging carbon and sludq.\nremoved, ovary part work mors efficiently...\"\n2. MORE GAS MILES \u2014 A doan motor can do its Job\nsftore oasily, so it sssos loss fuel.\n3. MORE OIL MILES-Oil lubricates better tn a clean\nmotor; more protection from wear. '. \u25a0  s\n4. MORE ECONOMY \u2014Not only in gas end oil but.In .\nrepairs,, through less wear.    ...\n5. MORE PLEASURE\u2014You get smoother, mojede-\npendable engine performance. '\n6. MORE CAR.MILES \u2014Yqu get longer engine lilo, \u2022\neirlra protection against corrosion, too..,-\nChange to HAVOLINE now!\nCOAST TO COAST\n \u00ael'\nFlyers Gain\nEdge Over\nTOLEDO, 0\u201e April 10' (AP)-Spo-\nfcane Flyers won their second: consecutive victory over'Windsor, Ont,\nin the Amateur Hockey Association's U.S.- national senior open\nchampionships last night by beating\nSpitfires, 8-7. Spokane now leads\n2-0 in tbe best-of-seven game series.\nRalph Luke scored the winning\ngoal at 1:51 of a 10-minute overtime. Windsor led 4-3 at fhe end of\nthe first period, but Spokane pushed to a 7-4 lead ln the,next period,\nWindsor tlefr lt 17-7 in the third,- '\nlore Arm Made\nHim Belter\nDinger, Says Dick\nBIRMINGHAM, Ala., April 10\n(AP)\u2014Dick Fowler is convinced\nthpt an Injury* aometlmea can be a\nblessing in disguise.\nThe 27-year-old Philadelphia\nAthletics' pitcher believes that, a\nsore arm last year made him a\n.better hurler.\nOpponents and teammates Who\nhave watched the Toronto-born\nE righthander work thia Spring claim\nhis misfortune has made Fowler a\n\"great\" moundsman. Both Manager\nConnie Mack and, pitching coach\nEarl Brucker expect him to win 10\ngames this year,     i -,'*,-\". '\nFowler .won 15 gamea for the A's\nIn 1948 with a bursitus condition of\nthe right shoulder. The same\" sort\nof Injury has ended the career of\nmany-a pitcher.\nThe six-foot-four pitcher'had to\nfly borne from training camp a year\nago with an excruciating pain In\nhis right shoulder. Dr. Illarlon Go-\n\" padze, team physician, , and Jim\nTadley,.trainer,'used.,to work-on\n. Fowler's arm prior to a game in\nOrder that he.could pitch,.   '\nHow .'did all this make htm a\nbetter pitcher!   \u25a0;\u2022 \u25a0..' ,'.; '.;'\n. .The injury forced him to give Up\n' Iris blazing fast ball. .Three or four\ntimes in a game ho could rear, back\nand let loose but mostly he had to\ndepend on control ahd slow stuff.\nHe became a master with the\nchange-up. pitch.\n\"After winning  three  straight,\"\nJ'ild Fowle>, \"laaked myself,. *ow\nong can this keep up.'\" .\n, It lasted long enough to give him\n* 13-and-B record for the season,\nbest among n better than average\n.group of pitchers working for the\n'.A's.\nThiB Spring Fowler's arm has\nstopped aching. Now he not only\nhas that slow, tantalizing stuff but\nalso his natural speed.\nHe beat New York Y&nkees 8-1\nWednesday, tossing a three-hitter\u2014\n\u2022nd what a, three-fitter! Hereto\nWhet tbe Yankees had to say:\n' \"You couldn't set your timing. He\nsever three two balls at the same\n\u2022peed.\"\nSo. far this Spring Fowler has\nbeen almost unbeatable. He already\nhas worked two nine-inning games.\nI In the other, he* defeated Brooklyn\n1-1 allowing the National Leaguers\nfttee hits, - \u25a0'...-\nVancouver Y. Snares\njunior Hoop Title\n' VANCOUVER, April 10 (CP) ~\nVancouver YM.C.A. Saturday night\ndefeated Kamloops 73-42 to win the\nBritish Columbia Inter-A (junior)\nbasketball championship and a\n\u25a0rack at the Canadian junior title.\n| The game was a sudden-death\nfinal. Vancouver now will meet the\nHaymond, Alta., squad ln the first\nround of the Canadian finals. They\nwill play a best-of-three match.\nSTRIKES and\nSPARES\nLA. TO B. OFT.   '\n14MS\u2014Olga -Chorney 487,' Ivls\nSanders 825, Kay Prltchard 807, Millie Russell 411, \"Kelly' Jones 487.\n.Total 1087; \u00ab\"\nDING-DONGS\u2014Louise Chapman\n450, Mildred Walls 418, Carol Mason\n805, < Jennie Beltner 372, Kay Carpenter 420. Total,2055.\nDITCHUR'3-L, Tarleton 888, S.\nMcLean 495, P. MacKay 881, M.\nStevens 402, A. Sundahl 388. Total\n\"137.\nBOOMERS-B. Hyssop 434, H.\nParker 416, L. Wllks 451, E. Sutherland 404, E. Mclnnis 310. Total 2020.\nHOT-BOXJS-M. Oliver 888, R.\nTowhey 351, Ms Rombough 813, I.\nKelver 288, D. McLean 300. Total;\n1898.    \u25a0 '      -   '-.    s>    .\nTrail Cricketers\nTRAIL,1 B.C.,: April 10 r Along\nwith the tint: robins and green\nblades' of grass, come Trail's\nenthusiastic class of cricketers;\nCricket, unorganized last year\nbecause of flood disruptions, \u2022 was\nrevived at a meeting here, which\nelected James Bairnes temporary\nChairman and Les Coward, Secretary. ' ',\u2022., ;\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.;:     ,-'\"*-\nAn election of officers and final\narrangements will be made at a\nlater meeting.\nTentative plans, drawn up at the\nmeeting, included the raising ot\nfunds to buy new matting and\nother equipment   '-.\nHockey Scores\nSunday\nBy the Canadian Press\nQUEBEC 8ENI0R\nSherbrooke'8, Ottawa 2\n(Ottawa leads best-of-seven final\n3-2, one game tied)\nU.8.H.L.\nSt. Paul 8, Tulsa 3.\nA.H.L       -'-*\u25a0*\nHershey 5, Providence t\u2022 (Hershey\nleads best-of-seven final 2-1.)\nSaturday\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nHershey 3, Providence 8\n(Best-of-seven final tied 1-1)\nUNITED STATES LEAGUE\nSt. Paul i Tulsa 2\n(St, Paul leads best-of-seven\nfinal 8-1)\nU.S. SENIOR OPEN\nCHAMPIONSHIP    '\nWindsor 7, Spokane 8 (overtime)'\n(Spokane   leads   best-of-seven\nfinal 2-0)\nALLAN CUP\nOttawa 6, Sherbrooke S\n(Ottawa . 1 e a d a best - of-seveo\nquarter-final 3-1, one game tied) -\nMEMORIAL CUP\nMontreal 8, Barrie 1.\n.(First game of best-of-seven\nsemi-final) -'- .'.\nCreston Boxers\nSuperior in\nSeven-BoulCard\nCHKS.TON, BsC\u201e .April Hi-Four\nCrebton and two Kimberley leather\nthrowers were winners here in a\nboxing.card Friday night in Legion\nHalls* under auspices of the Canadian Legion, There were 350 spectators. ': \" '.,- ' '  .\" '.\nTwo of the seven bouts ended in\ndraws. There were no knockouts,\nalthough a Kimberley boxer Won\nby a technical knockout.\nIn the 130-pound class, a two-\nround tight between teams of Swain\nand Gfcrtland ot Kimberley and\nBoyd and Smith of Creston ended\nin a draw.':\nPeter McMenn of Kimberley and\nDon Chadwlck of Creston fought\nthree rounds, McMann tatting two\nand the other being declared, a\ndraw. '   . \u25a0 \u2022\nLouis Rota of Creston took two\nrounds oyer Bill Hanson pt Kimberley. In .a three-round' bout' th the\n160-pound class. One round was a\ndraw, ,,\"\nAnother draw match was a three-\nround! battle' between Bill. Huscroft\nof Creston and Vic Burton of Kimberley, ih the 180-pound category.\nSid Gartland of Creston won each\nof the four rounds '.ot bis ring contest aalnat Jack fiat'ulavof Kimberley, Both weighed 147 pounds,\n'Two ot four tounds in the 130-\npound class which featured Lloyd\nMartin of Creston apd Howard Rayo\nof Kimberley went to Martin, and\ntwo ended.th draws;\nEarl Green of CrestOn won by a\ntechnical knockout In his encounter\nwith Herman Nathe of Kimberley\nin the < 100-pound class.'\nIn a specialty bout, Topy Holder\nand Cecil Weims, garbed as clowns,\nhorsed around in the ring,\nOffkiBla were R. B. Staples, announce*; W. Ferguson, referee; Norman Barnhardt, timekeeper; and J.\nLockead and John Holder, judges,\nLegion Committee arranging the\ncard consisted ol Godfrey Vigne Jr.,\nChairmati; Tony Holder, Lawrence\nMacKenzle,' W. LaMorr, W. Bourdon\nand W. Fergusoh.'i\u201e\nHerb. Stanton was In charge of the\nKimberley glovesters.'       -;;\nRoyals in Lead\nTORONTO, April 10 (CP) - The\nunsteady but determined Montreal\nRoyals Saturday night ujlet Barrie\nFlyers 3-1 in a game irihrked with\n20 penalties ind took a one-game\nlead ln their best-of-seven series\nfor the Eastern Canada junior hookey title. :    '-',\nThe second and third games will\nbe played in Montreal Monday and\nWednesday,\nA crowd of 11,239 fans saw the\ngame decided in the last few minutes of play as big Bert; Hlrschfeld\nscored in tHe open Barrie nets, after\nGil Mayer had been tsiken. out; in\nfavor of a sixth forward    jj;    .\nRoyals were ellriging desperately\nto a 2-1 margin when C?ach Hap\nEmms yanked Mayer,'*; ,-\nFor Royals, it was their 13th playoff victory dn H starts,,and prevented Flyers from tying a playoff\nrecord. The Flyers had chalked up\n12 straight wins and,were one victory away from duplicating a performance by .the famous St. Mich\nael's College.Majors in the 1933-34\ncampaign.\nNeale' Langlll, Mariastersky and\nHlrschfeld scored :'toi Montreal:\nRick.Hogg got tbe Barrie marker,\nWIN OPENER 88,40\nVICTORIA, B.C., April 10 (CP);\nCec's U-Drlve hoopsters ot Victoria\nswamped Edmonton Mortons 86-40\nSaturday night, in the first game of\na best-of-three Western Canada\nwomen's ;' senior \"A\" basketball\nfinal.     i.\\v.   '\u25a0'-*':\u25a0  '      }\u25a0'\u00bb\u25a0'\nPHONE 144 POR,CLASSIFIED\nLeafs Wallop Rangers\n' By JACK SULLIVAN .',;\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nDETROIT, April 10 (CP)\u2014Sid\n(Buff). Smith; rookie left winger,\nscored ill Toronto's goals tonight\nas the Maple Leafs, defeated\nDetroit Red Wings 3-1. to take a\ntwo-game lead. In their' best-of-\nseven Stanley Cup finals. .';\nThe ohunky, 24-year-old player\nfrom Pittsburgh, Leaf farm club\n\u2014scored two if the first period\nwlthjn .two minutes and -added\nhis third   near the-end <of the\nsecond to clinch the game fer the\ndefending oup holders.'     ;\u2022\u2022'; .!.\nPete  Horeck, who was in the\npenalty. box on - Smith's first two\ngoals;   got   Detroit's'   10ne , tally\nshortly   after  start, of  the  third\nto gife the Wings ; lift, but they\njust didn't have it to take the game.\nLeafs won tHe opener 8-2 in overtime and the teams meet again in\nToronto next Wednesday and Saturday. *  -\u2022\u25a0-., '-.\u25a0\u25a0\nThe game, played before 14,325\nrabid Detroit fans .\\vh'6 . filled\nOlympia Arena to capacity, went\nat a fast, clip throughout, in contrast to the slow play in the'series\nopener Friday.   *\nSmith was the whole show.\nHe was going both ways. aU the\ntime and proved to the Leafs it waa\nprobably their best move when\n\u2022they called on- him. to help out lh\nthe cup playoffs. It was the second\ngame he has clinched for TOronto.\nThe . black - haired 175-pound\n'winger scored, two : goals and\nassisted in a third when Toronto\ndefeated Boston Bruins 8-1 in the\nfoilrth game of their semi-final\nseries,\n.Tonight's game was marked by\nonly pipe penalties^-five to-Detroit\nand four to tbe Leafs\u2014but Referee\nKing Clancy let go a few high*\nsticks and boarding.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period--!,, Toronto, Smith\n(Boesch) 8:50; ,2. Toronto, Smith\n(Barllko, Kennedy) 0:50.\nPenalties\u2014Klukay, Reise, Gee,\nBarllko, Horetk, Dawes.   .\nSecond period\u20148. Toronto, Smith\n(Kennedy, Mackell) 1*7:88. ;\nPenalties\u2014Stewart, Lindsay.\nThird p&lod\u20144., Detroit, Horeok\n(Stewart, McFadden) 5:50.\n\u25a0 Penalty\u2014Kjinlcki.\nHOCKEY PLAYOFFS\nTONIGHT\n,\"-:  By The Canadian Press\nMemorial Cup:\n\u25a0 East\u2014None. . .\nWestr-Westo^n Canada semi-final\n\u2014At Moose Jaw: Calgary Buffaloes\nvs, Moose Jaw Canucks (Calgary\nleads 8-2 ln best-of-seven series).\nEggs Hold No Terrors\nFor Us!\nBe assured yaur goods, whatever their nature, will be\nhandled with utmost care. Complete facilities for:\n\u2022 Heavy Equipment Handling\n\u2022. Local and Long Distance\n\u2022 Moving      \u2022  Packing\n\u2022 Crating       \u2022 General Cartage\n\u2022 Heavy Equipment Handling\nA|\u00abnti for ALLIED VAN LINES, Ine.      '\nGOAL MlKPsfer WOOD\nMasters Goes\nTo Slammin'Sam\nAUGUSTA, Ga\u201e April 10 (CP>-\nSammy Snead today won the 13th\nMasters s Golf:-Tournament wfth a\nbrilliant 67 on the final round to\ngive him a total of 282 for72 holes.\n\u25a0 The-White (Sulphur Springs, W.\nVi, slugger, exhibiting brilliant\nputting nOsed out: Johnny Palmer,\nthird-round leader, and Lloyd Mangrum. \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0-'\u25a0 ;\"-.-.''\nSnead, noted as a long driver and\nan uncertain puttgr, won more\nthrough hla short game than his\nlong tee shots, After a weak start\nIn the 72-holo masters, ho knocked\noff a pair ot 87s on the last two\nrounds Saturday end today. They\nwere the lowest rounds of the tours\nnament and Snead approached and\nputted brilliantly during the two\nday sprint \u2022'\nToday he started by. sinking a\n20-foot putt and'finished the same'\nwiy. He had, eight birdleson the\nround and was over par three times.\nIt was Snead's third straight tour,\nnaroent yictosry.\" He won<; thi\nGreensboro,\" N.<?i', open In a playoff\nwith Mangrum and, tho Palmetto\ntournament at Aiken, S.C.\nFor the Masters Snead selected a\nnew putter and changed his stroke\n\u2014and apparently the changes did\nthe trick: It has a straight blade\nInstead of his old favorite, a goose\nneck. \".\u25a0;.        '\u25a0',.\u25a0'\u2022\nMangrum, the leading money\nwinner on the'.tournament elroult\nthis Winter, and big Johnny Bulla,\nthe former airlines pilot from Pittsburgh, tied for, second place with\n285's. Bulla, last Of the contenders to\nfinish, had a: last round of 69 and\nMangrum had; a 70, '--j: v.\nPalmer, the steady-going North\nCarolinian who led by a stroke at\nthe; end Of the third round Saturday,\ncouldn't.better par 72 today and\nwound up in a fourth-place tie with\nJim Turnesa of Brim-cliff, H.J.\nBobby Locke, South African, ace,\nbroke par for. the first time.in today's round. His others were 74s\nfor a 72-hole total of 294.\nEQUALS WORLD RECORD\nLOS ANGELES, April 10 (API-\nHurdler (Jraig Dixon of the Univer*\nsity of California at Los Angeles\nequalled the world.record in the\njib-yard low hurdles Saturday with\na time of 22,5. seconds. HO was run\nning in a track meet between Stan\nford University and U.C.L.A. .\u25a0\u25a0'.'\nStanford won the meet 74-57,\nReichler\nGives Red\nSox Nod\nBy JOE REICHLER\nNEW YORK, April 10 (AP)-The\nAmerican 'League pennant race\nfigures to bo a two-team dog-tight\nbetween Boston and Cleveland with\nthe Red,Sox getting the nod.from\nthis corner. '\nPhiladelphia apd. New v York\nprobably will 'prove k bit stubborn\nIn the early stages'of the campaign,\nbut 'they, lack the all-around class\nof the men of Joe McCarthy and\nLou BOudreaui      :\nAs far .astyi'e'reet'otthe.league is\nconcerned, President Will Harridge\nmight as well grant'the clubs a\nSabbatical leave; Detroit, St. Louis\nand Washington .should, rap loudly\non Chicago's' ceUer door,' but the\nWhite Sox ought to have enough\nstaying power to remain entrenched\niri the basement    y\nIn the final, analysis, Red Sox'\ndevastating power, plus improved\npitching, behind the master-minding of Morse Joe McCarthy, ahould\novercome the Indians' superb pitching, airtight defence and Boudreau's\ninspirational leadership,\nHere's hbty the teams should\nfinish: \u25a0     \"''\n1. Boston\n2. Cleveland \u25a0\n' 3. Philadelphia\n. 4. New York\n5. Detroit     ' '\n6. St. Louis\n7. Washington\n8. Chicago\nBASEBALL SCORES\nSUNDAY\nP.C.L. '      i\n'   Hollywood 7, Saoramento 4.\nPortland 5; Los Angeles 8.\nSeattle 5, San Francisco 4.\nOakland 18, San Diego 14.\n, Second games: \u2022\nPortland 2, Los Angeles 5,\nSeattle 2, San Francisco 1.\nHollywood 0, Sacramento 2,\nOakland 0, San Diego 8.   \u25a0,\nSATURDAY\nHollywood 8, Sacramento 18,\nOakland 8, San Diego 9.\nPortland 3, Los Angeles 6.\nSeattle 13, San Francisco 8.\nVANCOUVER; April 10 (CP) -\nSsmcouVer Clover Leajb went into\ne Western Canada senior men's\nbasketball finals for. the third\nstraight year as fheyx squeezed past\nVictoria Y.M.C.A. 40-34 here Saturday,night.\n-L^afs won the best-of-five Berles\nfor the B.C. championship three\ngames to one. They now meet the\nwlsiner of the McGrath-Winnlpeg\nseries for the right to play in the\nCanadian, finals.\nDefroltor\nMelbourne for\n'56 Olympics\nBy MICHAEL GOLDSMITH\nLAUSANNE,. Switzerland, April\n10 ;(AP),-Elther Detroit 'Ot Melbourne, Australia, is expected to be\nchosen as the site of the 1988 Olympic Games at the meeting'*! the International Olympic Committee ln\nRome April,24-29.\nfour other cities, Lea Angeles,\nMinneapolis, Mexico- City and\nBuenos Aires, atao are bidding for\nthe games: Delegations from all'the\ncompeting cities will present their\ncases at the Rome meeting.\nOtto Mayer, Chancellor of the International Committee, recently received a formal invitation, signed by\nPresident Truman, Inviting the '88\ngames tO Detroit and expressing the\n\u25a0\"hospitable hope\" that a city In the\nUnited States would be chosen.\nMelbourne also is pressing its\ncandidacy, having sont each committee member a decorative Invitation printed On doeskin. The games\nnever have been held outside Europe or the'United States, By tradition, they have been held fn Europe three times out of fotft,\"\n. A decision on the site ot the '(8\nWinter games also will be made at\nthe Rome meeting. If tho Summer\ngames ara held In the United States,\nthe Winter games almost certainly\nwiU go to Lake Placid, N.Y. -\nThe Rome meeting also.will consider the elimination of a long list\nof events from future games..Helsinki, site of the next games in 1052,\nis especially anxious to reduce the\nprogram In order to keep the games\nwithin the city's llniited capacity,\nSherbrooke,\nOttawa Split\nSHERBROOKE, Que,-, April 10\n(CP)\u2014A weekend saw-off stretched\nthe Eastern Canada senior hockey\nseml-flnal between Sherbrooke and\nOttawa Senators to seven games as\nthe Senators moved within a game\nof victory ln ihe best-of-seven series\nwith a 0-3 victory in Ottawa Saturday, only to lose 5-2 at Sherbrooke\ntoday. - .';,.\nSenators lead 8-2 ln games and a\nsixth game was tied, The winners\nwill play Toronto Marlboros for a\nberth in the Allan Cup finals.\nStar rightwingcr Tony Demers\nwas missing from the Sherbrooke\nlineup for both weekend games. He\ninjured an ankle In the fourth game\nThursday, The teams meet again ln\nOttawa next Tuesday,\nSenators outplayed- the visitors\nconsistently Saturday night Left-\nwinger Bill Robinson tallied twice\nwhile Lude Check, Alex Smart and\nEmile Dagonais were their other\nmarksmen. ;\u2022''-:'\nQsslo Carnegie, Sherbrooke's veteran centre, got the losers' opening\ngoal in tho first period, teaming up\nwith his mate's on the club's all-\nNegro line, brother Herbie Carnegie\nand Manny Mclntyre.'.\n; Bernie Vinet, who replaced Dem-'\ners, capped an outstanding performance with two. third-period counters.\n\u2022 She Sunday game was closer.\nDagenals and Sherbrooke's Adjutor\nCote matched first-period goals. Osr.\nsic Carnegie gave the Quebecera a\n2-1 lead with the only second period\ngoal but-Hobinson tied lt up early\niri the third,,   '\"\nGilles Dubc scored what proved to\nbe the winner at 8:49 and Ray Barry\nand Cote added insurance tollies..\nEvidence of Violation That Caused\nRing Qeritji, .\n, '\u2014Central Press Canadian\nAccording to law, the padding on a boxing ring floor In California\nmust be two Inches thick, As seen by the camera In the right panel,\nthe ruler shows that the padding in the ring at.the San .Jose-auditorium, where Billy.Cornwoll suffered fatal injuries In his fight with '\nTote Martinez (left), Is only about three-quarters:of en Inch thick,\nWhen Cornwell was floored his head hit the canvas with a thud that\ncould be heard throughout the building. He died 12 hours later without recovering consciousness, \u2022 .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 11,1949 \u2014 9\nBy CLIVE FLEMING\nIn February, Art Chapman, general manager of the Buffalo Bisons,\nof tho A.H.L., sent Rudy (Deacon)\nPilousiout to Sen Diego, to try to\ntame down- tha players, since they\nhad become more night hawks, than\nSky. Hawks, .,  ,\nAt that time, the Sky: Hawks\nwere in fifth spot in tho Southern\nDivision of the P.C.L,, tho cellar.\nFrom then on, the Buffalo owned\nteam climbed into a playoff berth,\nthrough the semi-finals,, and the\nfinal8 of that section, and now into\nthe league championship series,\nThat team: just wasn't supposed\nto go anywhere, but at last report'!\nheard, the series was deadlocked\none game apiece, with San Diego's\nwin a shutout score.\nWELL KNOWN HERE\nDeacon was in Nelson late ln\nDecember with Johnny Walked, arid\nafter ho was sent to San Diego for\n\"a week'or ten days\" he, was to\nreturn through Nelson. He played\ncentre for the Nelson Maple 'Leafs\nin the 1035-30 season, just after\n\"the house-that Pilous,built\" the\nCivic Centre, was constructed. The\nChief Scout sand.promotion man for\nthe Bisons also coached the: Nelson\ngirls Softball reps to the West Kootenay title.     '.-\u2022':''-\nWild Willy Hunter, Saskatoon\nQuaker proxy who said he'll have\na good club next year, ia almost\ncertain of having Nick Metz, who\nplayed for the Toronto Maple Leafs\nfor 12 seasons, coaching hia team.:\nMetz tried to' be released from\nthe Leafs at the' same' time as\nSweeney Schrinqr and Mel Hill,\nboth Regina Caps this season, but\nalthough Schriner and Hill were\neventually reinstated, Smythe de,\nelded to hold.onto Metz, hoping that\nhe'd change his mind. Because of\nthat, ha missed a year's activity.\nSome more news is that Cy\nThomas, who. came to the Toronto\nMaple Leafs in the deal along with\nMax Bentley, and Eddie Cutts may\nhave already been released by\nSmythe ..on the understanding that\nthey'll bo playing for Saskatoon\nthis season, Thomas, one . of ;Spo-\nknno's Eddie Thomas',, relatives,\nplayed qollogiate hockey this year.\nWhen Trail Smoke' Eaters boss\nEd Behson returned to Trail from\nthe Allan Cup chase, 'tis said thai\nhe had \"the addresses of a couple\nof pretty fair hockey players\u2014one\nla Dutch Van Deelan, ot the Caps\"\nsaya the Trail Times.\nIt seems strange that tho Spokesman Review isn't elaborating at (ill\non the fact that their Spokane\nFlyers ore now in 'the American\nhockey finals, matched' against\nWindsor Hettche Spitfires. If a\nCanadian city boasted the Flyers,\nits papers' sport pages would likely\nbe splashed ,with Flyer news; all\nthe time. -'\u25a0--\nFort Frances Canadians staged a\ngreat comeback ln their Western\nCanada semi-final series against\nthe Winnipeg Nationals. The series\nwas originally scheduled as a hest-\nof-seVen affair, and Winnipeg took\na strong edge by winning the first\ntwO games. 8-2 and o-o, when the\nFort Frances club'was tired after a\naeries against Port Arthust, The\nCanucks came back strong arid\nevened up the series with 5-2 and\n7?2 triumphs, \u25a0       - \u25a0>     .\nCanadian Coach Gord Fraser told\nCAHA President -AI Picfara. that\nhis team-would not*#ay games on\nipccesslve nights; '.'\u25a0\u00bb-' the games\nwere schedt'led, ^rice the Winnipeg\nAmphitheatre' had an ice carnival\nthis week. The series waa then\nabbreviated to five games, and the\nFort Frances club finished it with a\n10-8 victory,\nThe Canadians now tangle with\nthe Regina-Caps for the Western\nfinals. . Flaying goal for' Fort\nrFances is Harry Barefoot who\n.played for. tho Leafs in the 1047-48\nseason. \u25a0'\nFourth Year as        \"\nChamp for Burton\nCOLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.,\nApril 10-(AP) \u2014 Dick Button Saturday night easily won his fqprth\nstralght United States men's figure-\nskating championship. ; :\nThe Bnglewood, N. J\u201e skater,\nthree-time winner of the North\nAmerica title and holder' of the\nworld and Olympic championships,\nWent through a dazzling exhibition.\nYvonne Sfiesrman, 18-year-old\nNew Yorker, added the United\nStates, senior women's title to her\nexpanding list of trophies.\nMiss Sherman was the unanimous\nchoice ot the five judges in the\nfissure-skating competition. This increased the commanding lead she\nhad built up earlier In the week in\ncompulsory skating.\nHer victory ended the six-year\nnational reign of Boston's Gretchen\nMerrill, who finished second.\nThe senior pairs championship\nwent for the second straight year\nto Peter arid Karol Kennedy of\nSeattle. : .-'\u25a0\nThis advertisement is not pul>\nllshed or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia..    ..,,\".\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0\nSweet Caporal Clgorollos always reach you r\u00bb*,\u00ab ^\nSo on|oy the eon'ihtent smeothne\u00bb,,mlldnesss) satis*\nfa<jton of Sweet, Copi, the (a*^*) dgarsttw\nClimb on (she Sweet Caps bandwagon.\nIf's Iho popular filing fo do.\nUSTBN TO \"TALKING TO THK STARS**\nBCOQMINION NKTWOHK. SUNDAY AFTERNOONS\n'     WHE:N IN MONTREAL PEE THE SHOW\nWRITK CFCP MONTREAL POR TICKETS\nyum\ncPkPOfty\nC A N A D A'S\nfhd\u00a3>\nG  A  R   E  T   T  E\n.\"\u2022I..\n 'TODAYS News Hetum\nApril is Cancer Month Throughout Canada\ni \u25a0\ni ;:'J. \u25a0-:-'->\"'\u25a0:.       '\u2022\"\".- '\u25a0*..--Central'Press'Canadian,\nDuring the month of April the Canadian Cancer Society Is making*\nnational drive for funds required for research, extension of dlagnoBtlo\n\u2022nd* treatment facilities, educational work, and service to eancer -patients, this1 picture shows a group of voluntary workers making cancer dressings In a cancer dressing station. Hundreds of thousands of\nfree dressings are distributed to cancer patients all over Canada who\nsire being'nursed In their own-homes. ,;, ,. ,-...'\u201e-.\n\u2014Central Press Qahadlan.\nMore than 15,000 Canadian's died of cancer last.year, according to\nthe Dominion Bureau of Statistics. As a cause of death In this country, eancer Is second only to disease of the heart and blood vessels.\nMany cancer victims can be saved If symptoms are recognized and\ntreated In the early stages. Here a cancer patient Is shown receiving\nan x-ray treatment, part of. the many services given by the Canadian\nCancer Society.\nTractors Fulling Britain Out of the\n'V        Red -\n \"'\"\" m\nMrs* Lucy Fang\nMRS. LUCY FANS -\nMrs. Lucy Fang, a decorative and talented member of the Chinese\nSection of the British Broadcasting Corporation's .Overseas Service.\nMrs. Fang was recently the central figure In a radio- mystery, when\nthe Danish section of the BBC European Service received a \"fan\" letter from two Danish bachelors. They wrote to say that they had re- *\ncently tuned In on the 25-metre band and heard what they described\nas \"the world's most charming voice.\" They listened enthralled for\nthe whole of the 15 minute program, which was In Chinese, although\nthey, knew no word of the language, and were so Impressed by the\nlady's voice that they longed to hear It again and for some days had\nhunted fruitlessly all over the short wave band. Would the BBC convey their moat cordial greetings to this lady whose face, they were\nconvinced, must be as beautiful as her voice, and tell them where\nthey could find her again?\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nThis exclusive photo of the ultra-centrifuge machine used at\nthe Connaught Laboratories, at\nConcord, .Ont, Is worth $15,000.\nThis machine centrifuges .viruses at the rate of 60,000 revolutions per minute which enables\nscientists to purify viruses that\nare extracted from affected tie-\nsue. The machine 'Is the only\none of Its kind In Canada.\nArrest Reported\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nAccording to the report of\nU. 8.. Minister to Syria, James\nHugh Keeley, Jr, Syrian President Shukri al-Kouwatly Is under arrest In Damascus after a\ncoup in which the army seized\npower In a bloodless revolution.\nThe revolt, It' was declared,\nwould, not Interfere with armistice talks with Israel,, \"being lo-\n. cal and having no outside Implications.\"\nIsrael's Miracle\n,    '   . Central Press Canadian\nLong lines of evldenco that Britain Is steadily fighting her way\nalong the road to economic recovery through Increased production,\nthese lines of tractors were photographed at Port Elizabeth, 8outh\nAfrica, shortly after they were unloaded from two freighters. Last\nyear Britain produced more than 100,000 agricultural tractors\u2014mora\nthan 10 times, her pre-war annual production.\nCentral Press Canadian\nThis map compares the boundaries of the U. N. decision with\nthe area actually won by Israeli\narms. The miracle of reclamation Is Israel's present achievement and her future, hope. Deserts must be made to bear for a\npopulation that Is Increasing 25,-\n000 to 35,000 each month. Every\nacre Is precious. So, In the war\nJust concluded, Israel fought to\n. hold her desert land, then-pushed back Invading armies In a\nmilitary masterpiece.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\n.'\u25a0\"   ''\u25a0'>   >\u25a0\u2022' '    '   .''*\nOn the Air\nMONDAY, APRIL 11,1949'\nCKLN.\nU40 ON THB DIAL\n7:00\u2014O Canada\n7:02\u2014News Summary\n7:07\u2014Top of the Morning to Ye\n8:06\u2014CBC News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Morning, Devotions\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Western Tune*\n,9:30-i-M6fnlng .Concert\n9:s59\u2014Tliile Slgtaa!\n10:00^-Traln Time :\n10:01\u2014Woman's Program ... Ellen\n'   Harris \u25a0:'\u25a0-,\n10:15\u2014Mid-morning Varieties\n10:45-iThey Tell Mr   ,    '\n11:00-Musical Varietlea\nllslfri-Alr Kindergarten\n11:80\u2014Famous-Voices\n12:00\u2014The Notice Board\n12:15\u2014CBC .News\n12:25\u2014CBC Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\nMtfS-s-Rqdio Kitchen\u2014Five Rose*.\n1:00\u2014Old Favorites\n1:30\u2014Bernie Braden Tells a Story\n,1:45\u2014Commentary\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014The Little Show\n2:45\u2014Don Messer\n8:00\u2014Ethel and Albert\n3:15\u2014Traveller Tales      \u2022  \u25a0 .   \"\n3:30\u2014Divertimento'\n3:45\u2014BBC News\nS:55-BBC \u2022   :\n4:00-Chlco Vaile\n4:14\u2014Train Time\n4:15\u2014Afternoon Serenade\n4:30\u2014Magic Adventures ,\n4:45\u2014Easy Listening\n5:00\u2014Just a Memory\n,5:15-01d Chisholm Trail .\n'5:30\u2014Peerless Newi   .\n6:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n6:00\u2014CMldren's Story.\nOilS-^-Fireflghters - -...\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody  \u25a0-\u25a0\n7:00-^060 News\n7:15\u2014CBC News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Club Date\n7:45\u2014On Mike Tonight\n8:00\u2014Out of the West to You -\n8;30s\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n9:00\u2014Summer Fallow \u25a0\";'-.'.\n9:30\u2014Mortal Music\n10:00-CBC News\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\n10:30-Blltmore Hotell\n10:45\u2014Bob Bain Quartet    '\n10:55\u2014Interlude *'\nU:0OM3ign Off-The King\nCJAT\n610 ON THE DIAL\n6:45\u2014Breakfast Parade\n7:00\u2014Press News   .\n7:05\u2014Breakfast Parade\n7:30r-Press News\n7:35\u2014Fun at Breakfast\n7:40\u2014Breakfast Parade .,   .\n8:00-^CBC News ,\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club '-,.,'\n8:45\u2014Laura Ltd.\n9:00\u2014Music Workshop\n8:15\u2014Lucy Linton\n9:30\u2014Good Morning Neighbor\n10:00\u2014Market Matinea\n\u25a010:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014They Tell Me\n11:00\u2014Mid Morning Melodies\n11:45\u2014Wakely Trio   \u2022\n12:00\u2014Luncheon Concert\n12:30\u2014Press News. '\n12:45\u2014Plantation House Party\nIKK)\u2014Afternoon Recess\n1:30\u2014Bernie Braden\n1:45\u2014Commentary\u2014Cook. School\n2:00\u2014Feature Concert\n2:1'6T-Fa'tnily Favbirltes .'.'.    '\n2:30^Air Kindergarten   \"\n2:45\u2014PenthouBe Serenade'\n3:00\u2014CJAT Goes Calling\n4:00\u2014Guitar Quiirtet\n4:15\u2014Jack Smith Show\n4:30\u2014Pop Bandstand\n5:15\u2014Sportseast,   \u2022\nfi:20\u2014Press News\n5:30\u2014Supper Serenade\n6:00-rLux Radio Theatre\n^'OO^-CBC News     i\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n,7:30-K:iub Date\n7:45r-On Mike Tonight\n8:0O-^Out of the- West To You\n8:30\u2014Family, Theatre\n9:00\u2014Music You Love\n9:15\u2014Memoiy lane\n9:30\u2014Swingtette Orchestra\n9:45*-Canadiah Cancer Society\n10:00\u2014Press Newa\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affalra\n10:30\u2014Muslcale Nocturne\n10:45\u2014Bain Quartette\n11:00\u2014Biltmore Hotel Orchestra\n11:30\u2014Time to Dream\n11:55-CBC News   'i     .\n12:00\u2014Sign Off\u2014The King\nTUESDAY, APRiL 12, 19*49\n.JCHIN\n\"      1240 ON VH& DIAL\n7:00\u20140 Canada '\n7:02\u2014News Summary\n7:07\u2014Top of the Morning To You\n8:00\u2014CBC News ,'-\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club . . . . \u25a0\n8:45\u2014Morning Devotion\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n9:59\u2014Time Signal   ~\n10:00\u2014Train Time\n10:01\u2014Woman's Program, Ellep\nHarris \u25a0    . '\n10:15\u2014Mid-Morning Varieties\nll:00-rMUslcal Varieties\n11:15\u2014Air Kindergarten\n11130^-CBR Presents\n11:45\u2014Lets Waltz '..\n12:00\u2014The Notice Board\n12:15\u2014C.B.C. News       ' '\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n1:00\u2014Old Favourites\n1:30\u2014Bernie Braden Tells a Story\n1:45\u2014Commentary\n2:00\u2014B ,C. School Broadcast'\n2:30-The Little Show\n2:45\u2014Western Five\n3:00\u2014Ethel and Albert\n8:15\u2014Spotlight on a Star\n8^0\u2014Sketches ln Melody\n3:30\u2014Divertimento\n3:45\u2014BBC News   '\n4:00\u2014Al Harvey\n4:14\u2014Train Time\n\u20224:15\u2014Afternoon Serenade\n4:30\u2014Children's Program\n4:45\u2014Easy Listening\n5:00\u2014Loose Leaf\n5:15\u2014Dinah and Frankie\n5:30\u2014Peerless News ,\n6:45\u2014Sacred Heart ' '' s_\n6:00\u2014Children's Request Program\n6:30\u2014Time To Sing\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\nJiOO\u2014CBC News\n7:15\u2014CBC News Roundup \u2022\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square\n8:0tV-Muslc by Eric Wild  '\n8:30\u2014Old Tlms3rs \u25a0 ' > \u25a0\n9:00\u2014Points of View.\n,9:15-Repltal Time\n9:30\u2014Heritage of Music\n10:00-CBC NEWs\n10:15^- Neighbourly News\n10:30\u2014pance Orchestra\nll:00-Sign off-rTho King\nL\nI\n%\nWHUTSTHET, MAH U'L,     .\nVpUT MAH VATCH N HIS\n <M\nPHONE 144\nBIRTHS,\n. SIMMONS\u2014To Mr. and.; Mrs. &\nSimmons of Castiegar, at Kootenay\nLake Gene\") Hospital, April t), a\n..daughter. '\u201e *\n'. BLTOfo\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. \"S. tt\nElton (nee Betty McLeod), of Kimberley, at McDougall Hospital pn\nApril 4,1948, a son. '\"'     '\nHRYCIUJC-To Mr. and Mrs.: Wm,\nHrycluk of Kiinberley atMcDopgell\nHospital On April 3,1949, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED\u2014AGI .'WITH CAR TO\n. cover Nelson and surrounding district with 8 Bl. nian Power too],\n.multiplies man's strength SI ttmeB,\n- 2-miisute demonstration sells one\nto doaenSs to rallfe-ids, transports,\npublic works, shops, factories, pp-\nllce, highway departments, larm-\ners, every auto, bus, truck should\neaiij one. isight, Compact, Low\npriced. Write Bo* 282. Grand\nForks, B.C.\n\" FA1BV1BW BOVS\nNewspaper routes wm be coming\nopen' soon. These are good compact routes and yield good profits\njor capable boyi Apply How for\nVow rente. Nelson Ppito News,\nCirculation Department,\nWanted\u2014working foreman\nlor leed mine pear Nelson. Prefer\n. married man, wife to operate small\nboarding house. Write box No.\n4877 Daily News statin, ages experience, qualifications, and. time\nfor interview,\nfrANTBO-EXsPHRIUNCIiD BPQK-\n. keeper accountant capable pf taking   complete  charge  of garage\noffice in Trail Apply. Box 4885\n' Nelion Daily News.\nWJtEtf-EfcPEpiEtffefcB W-\nmole cook for hotel. Room and\nboard supplied. Apply Manager.\n'  G. F. Hotel, Grand Forks, B.C.\n\"WANTED MMEDIATEMf-'-PAS-\ni, try eopk; alio experienced wait-\n' ressf Qplden Gate Cafe\n..VANTED-WOMAN COOK FOR\n! small camp. No smoker. F.O, Box\n\u25a0-. 864, Phone 827-B, Nelson.\nJVOIIAN WANTED   1  DAY A\ni week. Phone 881-1*\nL ndrboiStrvAc* '\n.    (Section J\u00ab)\nIN HB MATTER OF, Pawel .\u00ab\u00bb''\n(D.D.12172-I) of Bloqk 4, of Lot\n8817, Kootonay District, Plan 884.\nProof having been filed in my of.\nfl.e of the loss of Certificate of Title\nNo, 32460-1 to tbe abpve mentioned\nlands in the name of Agnes Ann\nElwen and bearing date the 0\/8\/31\nr HBREBy GIVE NO*lCB of roy in'\ntention-at the expiration of one oal-\nendhr month from the first publication hereof to issue Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu pf such lost\nCertificate. Any person having any\ninfomstion with reference to such\nlost CerMflMto of Title is requested\nto' osJmmunloeta with the wnfler-\n6ATJE0 AT NEISON, VS.' ttlt?\n7th day of April, xw. - '\nu, o, mans,\n, Registrar.\nPate of First Publication, April 11,\n194;.\n' BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nAUTO COURT AND HOTEL SPEC-\n\".. Jalist  All Jsersoriajly inspected.\nEntire^ province covered. Head office Van, If you have a good court,\nlodge, hotel or business to sail,\nor interested in purchase of same,\nj contact W, Phillips,' Phone Balfour,. 9,\nJrOR<SALE->IN WINDBRMERE\nValley,' General Store and P.O.,\n, twelve acres of land, 4 room living quarters. Electric lights, run-\n, sting water, Imperial Oil agency,\n4 'room bungalow. For full particulars, write Brisco General\n\/Store, Brisco, B.C.\n;#OR SALE -COMPLETE SAW-\nI mill and 2 M ft timber limit Han-\nit dy for logging. Apply N. K. Poo-1\nhachow, Wlnlaw, B,g. '\nf %ANT TO LEI CONTRACT TO\ncut, skid and haul cedar logs Need\neat. s. P. Pond, Nelson.\n_ SITUATIONS WANTED\nfjsttAMSTRESS  WOULD   LIKE  A\nV.Jplj. Write to box 4478 Nelson\nPally News,  '    \u25a0'_   '\nJDDD JOB MAN. PH 256-R. Carpen-\nfter, pipe fitting, kalsomlning.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYER8 AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nft W. wibDOwsOrt & CO. AS-\n* sayers, 801 Josephine St., Nelson.\n% k stsiwis.'iRt)Ssuto,;:B.'c.\n^Assayar, Chepilst, Mine Represnt\n*\u00a7. Q. THOMPSON & CO. - AS-\n,sayers lc Metallurgists. All work\ngiven prompt attention. 1155 Pender St, W-s Vancouver, B. C.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nX C6Lin \u25a0ttoCAtaSj. 6.C., chIrO-\npractlc     X-Hay,     Spiribgraphy,\nStrand theatre Bldg.. Trail, Ph.328.\nDIAMOND DRILLERS\nWmMNAL\" BIAMOnB bftlttlNO\n<X Ltd., Drilling and Bit Service. Box 808, Rossland, Fb. 420,\n.ENGINEER8 AND. SURVEYORS\nSAGGEN AND CURRIE, Bs C,\n' Land Surveyors, Mining sand Civil\nEngineers, Rossland, Kelowna.\n.Grand Forks; Ph. Rossland 348.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.\n',   Nssjlson, B. C., Surveyor, Engineer.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\ns^TcHARDY  AGENCIES   LTD   IN\n\u2022  sssurssince, Real Estate\u2014Phone 188.\nMACHINISTS\n'     .     BENNETTS LIMITED yTf\"\n.. Machine Shop acetylene arid\nelectric weldings motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 '     324 Vernon St\n'STEVENSON'S MACHINE SHQP-\n\"' Specialists in mine arid mill work\n708 Vernon St., Nelsoh Phone 98\nMachine work, light and heavy.\nputtie NOTicr\nProvincs. of British Columbia,\nDEPARTMENT OF'\n' PUBLIC WOWW\n\u2022LOAD AND SPEED\n, KESTBICtlOW'\nThe undersigned being a person\nauthorized by the Mlnlstei of Public\nWorks in writing tp exercise the\npowers yested in the said Minister\nunder Part 11 of the \"Highway Acti\"\nhereby gives notice that from twelve\no'clock midnight April 8th', the \u00bbgifc\njatlon of \"ebriiary ?8th 1949 Is hereby rescinded end, normal trawl? may\nhe resumed on all reads in the\nGrand ForksT-GreenwiJOd BlsWei\nJ. B. MopQNAMJ,.\nGenaral Foremen-\n0*4it House, ,     ..   .\nGrand ; of ks, B.C, \u25a0\nApril 7th, 1948,\nProvince of Britis3h Columbia\nDepartment ot Public Works\nROAD RESTRICTIONS\nThe undersigned being' a parson\nauthorized by the Minister of Public\nWorks in writing to exeroise the\nn were vested in the said Minister\nunder Part II of-th* \"Highway An*'.\nhereby gives notice that from one\nminute after midnight on the morning of April 11th, the regulation^!\nMarch 1st 1949, is rescinded sind\nnormal traffic may be resumed on\nall roads in the Nelson-Creston district with the exception of the\n(Southern Trans-Provincial Highway\nbetween Creston and Goatfell.\nSigned,\nH. T. Mlard,\nAssistant District 'Engineer.\nCourt House,\nNelson, S,C, \u25a0\"       ,\nApril 19, 1949. .-\"\u25a0\u25a0.\nPERSONAL\nDRESSMAKER - MRS. J. IFE, 317\n\\ Richards Street\nSPENCER  HEALTH  SUPPORTS,\nMrs. T. A. Qibson, 110 Ken Apts.\ni\/AWJmsriiamkC'fm-'m-\nsurance, Ca D- L. Kerr, Agent\nTOP   PRjdBsS   PAID   FOR   AN-\ntiqueg. Phono 1032 or 640 Baker St\nOLIVER BARAGBB OB ANYONE\nknowing his whereabouts, pleas*\ncontact C. Emery, 818 East 54th,\nVancouver, aC\nwcww mwcwtm w\nformation and catalogue of hy,\ngienic supplies. Writ* Western\nDistributors. 61-L Ray Building,\nVancouver.\nXttenTOW 'ScflBiit, \"Bb A h 6\nSecretaries, We have a large stock\nof -newsprint, mimeo apd bend\npaper and can till any order Immediately. Dally News Printing\nDept, Nelsdn, British Columbia.\nWE HANDLE A COMPLETE LINE\nof drug sundries. Price range, 24\nDeluxe tor $1.00 to 12 for (3.00.\nWrite for low price list Standard\nDistributors], Box' 72A, Regina,\nSask.\nMEN'S PERSONAL DRUG SUN-\ndries, 19 Deluxe assorted $1.00,\nmailed in plain sealed wrapper.\nFiriest quality, tested, guaranteed\nBargain catalogue free. Western\nDistributors. Box 24RN, Regina.\nHVGIBWC SUPPJT1S (RUBBER\ngoods) twelve samples for 50c\npostpaid in plain sealed, wrapper.\nCatalogue included listing books\non marriage and modern methods\nof feminine hjsglene. General Novelty Co. Dept 'N', 71 Major St,\nToronto. Ont\ni    FULLER BRUSH SALES\nJ) C, McKim     Box 123     Nelson\nBOATS and ENGINES\nFOR SALE-1ST CLASS CABIN\ncruiser,  marine  drive,  Chrysler\n,..- engine, 85 H.P. Fully equipped,\n26 ft. long with 7 ft beam, 81400.\n. Phone 577-Ll after 6 p.m. or write\nP.O. Box 42,. Nelson.\nSTEAL!   STEAL!   BROOKS'   MA-\n'\u2022i rlne  engine,   newly   overhauled,\n. Marine' clutch,  electric  starter;\n. ,*$125.00 cash, Phone 441-R or Doug\n) Bentley, Gen. Delivery. Nelsen.\nW   '\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nMORRHILL KENNELB, REG'D.,\nBox 518,. Greenwood, B.C.\u2014American Cocker Spaniels, English\nSpringer Spaniels,' Irish Setters,\nScotch Terriers..\nPROPERTY, HQUSH, FARMS\n\u00bb\u00abM>'\u00bb'fteiguWt\n\u25a0 +Lfnn0*+mtyM*\n,d) ixeluaiya listing.,A\npast.IIwe home, small i\n-\"-\u25a0--J    *\u2014 tWP.1......\nsno.dln-\nMOTOWYCWJ, BICYCtHS\nAUTOMPTIVB\n\u25a0\u25a0nfli^^^U-USM^W\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nMVESTOeK, fsOUtTRY AND\nette. Lots Of cupboard!)-' 3 piece\nbawroori), Ifitge screened porch\nwith lake: View. Full\" cement\nfoundation under houses drive\nin garage. One level 30 foot lot\nLocation, .fairview. Quick occupancy guaranteed. Soma, new\nfurnttuife, heater and. range\ncould be purchased very reasonably If desired, $2Wp cash re'\n.Utilnl Ml priw   $3950\not housa\nAND\n(8),\u201eTinsinith bustaesi and-\nbuilding, together, with living\nquarters, machines,   $5800\n' A^\u00b0 \u25a0\n(?) Wa are Prepared te. \u00bbur\u00bb\nchase agreements of sale on\nNelson property,\n'   AND ,'.:\n(4) One lovetoewe with ap,\nprox, 104 feet, ExMllent beech\naj-so, \u201e;,...\n(5) Well located property containing 8 housekeeping suites\narid rooms and owner's suite,\nRevenue varies frpip $150 to\n$200 a month, Ask CfiRAfl\nfor details, Price ...: \u00abPO\u00abvv\n1%ls space reserved for your\nlisting.   Bring   it' (n   today.\nC.\\V.A\u00a3pleyiird\nREAL:\nTATO and INSURANCE\nbllshed 36 year?\nEstab!\nIF\nYOU HAVE BEEN\n\" TRYING\nTOSEUYOUR       '\nHOUSE\nor FARM without\n, ^success\n' Why not \u25a0\n\u2022>     LIST TODAY\n\u2022'.\u2014  -      with\nC.WeAppleyard\nReal Estate and Insurance\nEstablijhed 28 years\n302 Baker St\n'bone 289\nFOR SALE-NEW BUNGALOW, 8\nrooms and bath, concrete basement, mahogany cabinets in kltclv-\nen, built-in bath, linen closet, etc.\nFull price $4750,00.-Cash required\n$2750,00. Situated North Shore\noverlooking lake, t minutes walk\nfrom ferry. Additional room could\nbo added economically If required,\nPhone 1, 441-R or Doug Bentley,\nGeneral Delivery, Nelsbn, B,C,\nFOB SALE - 2 P BR MAN ENT\nhomes, furnished. One plastered,\n8 rooms, two storey with one acre\nfruit trees, etc., $4500; the other\n5 roomed bungalow, \"A acre, $5500,\nopposite centre of Nelson, North\nShore, immediate possession,\nPhone 577-Ll after 8 p.m., or Write\nP.O. Box 42, Nelson,\nFOR SALE-IS ACRES FOR $2800,\non Procter Highway, 3 roomed\nhouse can bo rented for $10.00 a\nmonth furnished or unfurnished,\nuntil you build, Apply Box 4480\nDally News.\nFOR SALE-APPR03t3MATELY 5\nacres, North Shore, 7 miles from\nNelson. Lake frontage, spring wat-\ner. Write Box 4894 Daily News\n'THE: NEW.\nAUSTJNAWs\nImmedlfltsPeliv\u00abry.'..,\n1 NEW DORSET COACH\n' 1948'FLUID DRIVE D0t)6B\n\u25a0   . :   SEDAN\n1947 FRASER SEDAN   \"   \u25a0'\u25a0\n,1947. PLYMOUTH SEDAN,\n1947- DODGE COACH\n1948, AUSTIN PANEL\n1946 PONTIAC SEDAN\n1941 DODGE COUPE        \\\n1940 PONTIAC SEDAN  .\n1940'FORD COUPE ,\n1937 CHEV SEDAN\n1937 FORD SEDAN \u25a0\n.1937 CHEV PANEL\n1930 MODEL A FORD\nTerms and Trades\nEmpire Motors\nPhone 1135  .  803 Baker !5t.\nf*.*-*:*-***^**'*\"***:*'*-*''***)*-*'**'*'*\nSACRIFICB- 1931 CONVERTED\nChrysler pickup In first elaiB\nshape. Overload springs, new battery, chains, etc.; $500.00 cash or\nnearest offer. Phone 441-R or\nDoug Bentley, Gen, Pel,. Nelson.\n1935 DODGE SEDAN FOR SALE.\n''7 tires, heater, '49 licence; Body\nend,motor In perfect cond. Good\nbargain. Apply John J. LebodoK.\n(Jlade, B-C.\nFOR   SALE -s- 2^\"FHBSH \" p'AtRV\ncows, one Jersey and other part\nJersey, with calves. P. Patrick.\nSilver King Road  Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE-BALED\" HAY, GOOD\nquality alfalfa and Timothy, $27,\nQuin, Harrop, B-C,\nWANTED-RIDJNG borsrawq\nsaddle and bridle, reasonable, W.\nEvans, South Slocan,. B.C,\nFOR SALE -1047 FLEETLINE\nChevrolet privately owned, run\n8000 miles. Lifeguard inner tubes,\nseat covers, heater. Like new.\nPhone 772-R or Box 238, Nelsen-\nsedan with sealed beam hdlts. end\nrelays; also heater and defrosters,\nPhone 258 - 1105-L.\n1937 CHBY-\" COUPB, WCENCsR,\nheater, condition fair. Trade for\n'87 or '88 sedan and terms, After\n8 p.m., E, Salmon, Thrums ,g,c.\nfOR SALK-ONE BATOV 1948 3-\nton Fargo, gone 14,000 miles, with\n4 to'5 yd, gravel box, Just like\nnew. Apply Box 188. Grand Forks.\n'48 \u25a0\u2022\u2022f'^.V 3.TON W^CK, iJWO\nspeed axle, Good tires, chains,\n:! eater an J Insurance. 749 Eossland\nTrail, B.C.\n1948 'dbsqWWM' 'li'WTMftaS\nAs new. $380 helew new ear ptle*\n$1200 handles, Phone 239, alter six\nPhone 124-Y, ^\nfor sALte-wmiJiSiBH'JrtWtitS,\none year eld. Good condition, $17J,\nWrite Portman, 1432 Pine Avenua,\nTrail, \u00bb,C.\ntruck, just overhauled, for light\ndelivery or car. Apply Box IB,\nSlocan   tyr\nmrwsg~z?mrfflrmm\ndeluxe, Purchased in December.\nGone 1000 miles only, Ph, 1278-L.\nUteW'AND' UBKb\"Js!*,sAlttsSl-l'6\u00ab\nall makes of ears. City Auto\nWreckers Box 24. Granite Road,\ny0R'\"SAL13-VTQN 1W\u00bb\"<5W.\ntruck; A-l condition, John J. Sa-\nvlnkoff. Thrums, B.C.\nFOR S\/ILE -' 0NB-\"c:C.M, 3B0F3\nBalloon tired bike. Excellent condition. Phone 476-Y.\nFOR SALE, MISCELUNEOUS\nFOR SALE-McCLARY RANGE IN\ngood condition, $80,00; barrel butter chums $7.50; cream can, 3-gal\u201e\n$8,00; Ice cream ireeser, 8-at,\n$5,1)0;. weight beam scale, 900 lb,\ncap., $8,00. Apply J. Peachey,\nR.R, No, 1, Nelson.       \t\nsilent film preieatof with screen\nPhone Public Health Nurse's of-\n1 flee, 1214, between 9 a.m. and 5\nn-ni,\nFINDLAY JUNIOR COAL ANP\nwood ranges black with cream\nename' front and warming closet.\nMcKay & Stratton, phone 644,\nV0h SALE-ALL METAL WHEEL-\n, barrow,   first ' class    condition.\nPhone 421-R,\nHIGH QUALITY CHICKS\nR.O.P    Sired.  Leghorns,:. S.O.P,\nSired New. Hampshires and Approved Leghorn-Hampshire Cross\nPhieks. 23 yea's' exparienca. with\nchicks and poultry. Send for our\ncatalogue and particulars, Apply\nour agent Nelspn Farmers' Supply, Ltd,, Nelson, or write direct\nto New Siberia-Farms, N. Ralak\nshin, r,b, 3, (ihiiilwack, B-C\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\n\u2022\u2022 (.Continued!    .    '\nBURNSIDE; CHICKS ABE CUB-\ntomer Approved. Join the Successful Poultrynieris order Burn-\nBide Chicks for 1849, R.O,P. Sired\nS.C. White Leghorns, R.ap, Sired\nNew Hampshlres, Approved S.fe\nWhite Leghorns, New Hampshires\nand Leghorn \u2022 Hampshire Cross-\nb-eds. Write for price list and pars'\ntlculars. Burhside Poultry Farm,\nA.'\/S. Powell, Hammond, B.Q.    .\nUiUfEtt XOUB BABY CHIQUS\nfor 1949'from ibe Appleby Poultry\nFarms Mission City, @. C. speclal-\nUlng Iii the breeding of the large\ntype    S.C.W.    Leghorn?,    New\nHampshires arid White rocks, also\nthe White Reel! end White fceg-\nhorn cross bred chicks, !3pnd for\nptjr price list which ills? contains\nhelpful information on all phases\nof the poultry business,\n.super-quality New Hampshire\nand Rhode Island Red chicks:\n. $4,80 for 28,80 fer 80, $17 tor 100,\n$80 for 800. ,\n'George w. game\nTriangle Hatchery, Armstrong\nFOR SALE - GENTLE \"NANNY\ngoat, milking, Price $6.00. Mrs. H.\nDavidge, Wynndel, B.C.\nMACHINERY\nJOHNS-MANVIllf\nSTANDARP ASBESTOS\nFtexboard'\nThe fireproof structural building board of countless uses.\nIdeal for lining ariy interior or\nexterior where a durable, hard,\nwear resistant surface is desired.\nMakes an Ideal flooring, Easy to\ncut, easy to nail ana can; be\ncurved, -     '    y\nWe stock it tt sites V and\na\/16\" thick in sheets .4' x B'\nplain) W thick in 4'x 4' sheets\nscored to imitate tiles\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n214 Hall St\nPhone 19\nMining, Milling and Sawmill\nMachinery, Building and Contractors' Supplies,\nPIPEAND FITTINGS\n-   Black'and Galvanised,\nVarious Sites in Stock.\n\"if it's machinery you want,\nconsult us.\"\n\u25a0ff\u2014,^\u00ab\u00ab,,>l\u00bb\u00abSS*,\u00abS'*,\u00bbS--,\u00abS \u00bbl^ff ^,F\nFOR. SALsV-5-ROOM MODERN\nbungalow with bath and utility\nrooms, fire-place, furnace, full-\nsize:! basement and garage, 206\nRobston Street.\nl*OR SALE-3 BOOM HOUSE AND\nbathroom in South Slocan, on\nhighway. Apply J. B, Bodgener,\nSouth Slocan,  B.C,\nFOR SALE-SINGLE BED WITH\nspring and spring-filled mattress,\n$18; mantel radio, $io. Ph, 793-Y,\nWILL SELL OR TRADE PROPER,\nty at Procter for Nelson property\nor will take late model cars Apply\nbox 1729 Diiily News-\nMOFFAT? EMPIRIC RAN3E\nfor -ale. 110 volt, in good copdl\ntion. $45. J. Street, South Slocan.\n20 ACRES. STOCK AND KRUIT,\n1 horse, 1 cow, 2 heifers, chickens\nand equipment,' $3000. A. Miller,\nBox 521, Kaslo, B.C,\nFOR SALt^ROYAL WOOD AND\ncoal, kitchen range, 1 year old.\nPhone 821-L4 lp daytlm*,\nmm \"tiAMftrfittj 6nm\nfurniture for sale, Phone -199-Ri,\nFARM FOR SALE\u201448 ACRES, 7\nacres cleared; Irrigation, house\nand buildings, 7 miles from Nelson. Box 4789 Daily News.\ncondition, Apply 812 Third.\nSPECIAL\n8 GOOD USED\nTREADLE SEWING  \u2022\nMACHINES\nSINGER SEWING-\nMACHINE CO.\naaaa\nLOST AND FOUND\nLQST^FAIR BUCCAL OLASSES\nbrown leather ease- Please leave\nat New Grand Hotel or Phone 234,\nLOST $275 CASH IN CASTLEGAR\nMonday.. Reward. Write Box 4671\nDally News.\nLAND FOR SALE-APPLY MRS.\nG. Shykin, Patsmore, B-C\n5-ROOt' HOUSE FOR SALE. AP-\nply 26, Ymlr Road, Nelson, B.C.\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nWALNUT AND FRUIT. THREES,\nrose bushes, shrubs, small fruits,\nperennials, glad, bulbs. Walnut\nGrove Nurseries, Mrs. C. Becker,\n1418 Vancouver Street,\npwciLisr- .;:\npow ready^' Fruit trees, flowering\nShrubs, evergreens, bedding plants.\nMac's Greenhouses, Nelspn, B,C\nROOM AND BOARD\nBUSINESP GlftL DESIRES GOOD\nboard and room, close ln. Phone\nMiss Haslam, 144,\nFOR . ,'\"M AND BOARD PHONE\n337-R.-      - \u25a0\nPhono 144 for Classified\nIScR 'BOVCe 6tW eXchan(jiI\nGuns tor sale and exchange and\nexpert gun repairing.\nPlfB - FI*WNGS - TUBES, SPE-\nclal low prices. Active Trading\nCo. 916 PowellSt., Vancouver.\nRENTALS\nI DOUBLE CABIN OR TWO SIN-\nale cabins, furnished. Central\nMating. Phone 387-M, North\nShore.Mo'\u00bbl-    .' \u25a0'...\"\nWtmm \u00bb6ft IMfftftMAKoi*\nleading tO Suitable 8 room house\nto tout, Apply Box 1998 Daily\nNews.  .\nFAMILY NOW ESTABLISHED IN\nNelson requires fully furnished\naccommodation by May' 31st, 2\nbedrooms. Phone 1048-R.\nOFFICB SPACE FOR RENT IN\nGilker Blk, For Information see\nMr. Gilker.\nWANTED Tb RENT-9 OR 8 RM.\nhouse in city, responsible party,\nPhone iifli-% .      '  '      ,-\n<5Ffttt'SPAy'ETOR RENT OVER\nReibln'e Grocery at 681 Baker St,\nApply. P, It. Reibln.\nt ROOM HOUBB FOR RENT AT\nWillow Point, Phone 461-R1,\nBEDROOM FOR RENT. CLOSE IN\nPhone iOll-Y.\nar\nDiesel Engines\nGenerator Sets\nARE:   DEPENDABLE\nPROFITABLE\nTOUGH\n\u25a0 ECONOMICAL\n\u25a0        LONG UVED\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nOF ALL SIZES FOR ALL JOBS\nAlso some guaranteed used\nengines and generator sets.\nWhen you think of power think\nCaterpillar.\nFinning\nTractor\n& Equipment Co. Ltd,\nNELSON,\nCRANBROOK\nWanted - all or ANY part\nof the\/ following: 1500 feet Of 2-\nlneb pipe lh gpod condition, one\nair receiver 86 x 72 or larger, 1080\nfeet,of 12 or 16 lb. rail, two mine\n' cars 18 Inch gauge. Write box No,\n4676 Dally News.\nship qs your SfliW'Ms1tfAiss\u00abi\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top prices\n. paid. Active Trading Company.\n918 PoweU 8fc, Vancouver, B, p.\nWANTEC- ATWA'FPHPISTBIB-\nutor (or Model T. Apply Box 1797\nDaily New;.    '\u2022'.   '\nWANT'TO BUY 1-INCH ROUQH\ncedar lumber by earlead,'S. P.\nPonds Nelson;\nfftet' STbift JpfAi\u00ab)\"1rbft *tj5s8\nof same. Apply Set 4988' DAity\nNews, . \"'\u25a0:'\u25a0    '   .\nWAlfTEtF-SMASI, -SAFE\/WBITB\nL. Catley.,402*Gore or phone 984X-\nSHIP YQUfc HJD8& TO J, P, W0\u00ab'\ngam Welsori, B, fl      .\u25a0':.-..\nclassified Adyertisiitj' Rites;\nJ5e per line first insertion .and\nnon-consecutive insertions.. \u2022\nHe Upe per, consecutive insef-\ntlsn utter first insertion,\n49e line, tor 8 eonfeeutive isMer-\ntions.   \u25a0\n$1,58 une per month Wd.cen--\nsecutive insertions), Box num-.\nbers He extra. Covers any number of tnserttpps, . -.'.   \u25a0   i\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\ntenders, BtC-ao? per line,\nfirst insertion, 16c per line each -\n\u25a0subsequent Insertion.\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT,\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nSubscription Rates!\nSingle Copy .,,.'. ,....\u201e.., I   ,08\nBy carrier, per week.\nIn advance _._    J8\nBy carrier, per year........   13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month   ..._ :    . 1.00\nThree mpntha .\u201e..,.;...\u201e.....,    2.80\nsix montiw \u2014.--v -   4.bo\nOne'yesw ,\u201e\u201e\u201e ,     8,08\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month ,.,...,\u201e_,    1.00\nThree montha \u2122J     S.OO\nSix montha _.._.\u201e^^    8,00\nOne year \u2022\u201e,., \u201e\u201e,..f. 13,00\nabove rates plus postage\nwhere extra postage is required;\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 11,1949 \u2014 11\nHi$ Picture Out'Lied the hiars\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINKffBO, AprtflO (CP)-Wln-\nnipeg.graln quotations; \u25a0    ,\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nOats;\nMay,,,, ,im M n .\u00ab\nJuly ., .73% ,74\u00bb .78% .74%\nOet? ., ,70%' ,71 .70M ,71\nBwley;\nMay ,,140% 1.10% 1.09% 1.19%\nMy ..1.09% 1,02% 1-01% 1,09%\nOct,  ',,'\u25a0;,9\u00bb%. .98% .99% ,99%\nW!.'tW% 14?% X.Xt 'i.18%\njujy '\u201e 1.18% 1.16% 1.18% 1,18%\nOct. ,.., J.14%  1.18%  1.14%  1.18%\nFlax:\nMay ..4.90%\" 4,00%\nJlto 4,09\nClash prices:7  :,:,   .      ;.\u2022: .   \u25a0.-\nOats; No. ?*e,Wr\u00ab4; No. Ex. 3 C,W.\nend No, 8 Pfiw Ex. I Feed\n99; No. 1 Feed 81; No. 9 Feed 78;\nNo. 3 Feed 73%; Track 78%,\nBarley: No, 1 and 3 C.W. 8-row\n1.98%; No. 1 and .2 CW, 9-row 1,14%\nNo. 3 CW. 8-row 1.80%; No, 1 Feed\n1,14%; No. ? Feeit 1.13%; No. 8 Feed\nl.tott; No, .2 and 3 CW. Yellow\n1.14%; Traek 1,10%.\nRye? No. I and J C.W. 1.19%; No,\n8 CW. 1.14%; ReJ, 3 CW. 1,99; No, 4\nCW. 1-09%; Track 1-18%'.    .\nFlax: No 1 CW. 4,00; No. 3 CW.\n3.94; No. 3 C.W, 3.84; No, 4 CW, 8,79;\nTrack 4.00.\n:. \"Central Press Canadian\nWithout uttering a word, Bartlett Hendricks of Plttsflold, Mass.,\nwon the 1949 Liars' TreShy for -\"telling\" the most eonvlnelns ;flsh\nstory by letting this picture speak fpr him., The picture shows Hendricks catching a \"minnow-In Berkshire Creek\". The Jydglna Committee of the tall tales contest decided that the picture was eloquent\nenough and gave Hendricks the top prize'over three-score of the\nmost picturesque prevaricators pf New England.\nSilverton.-.\nSltVBBTON. 8, C-K,'8s=ott returned from Vancouver wher* he\nsperit a month.\nMrjs J. Traynor returned from a\ntwo weeks visit with he son-in-law\nand daughter. Mr. sand Mrs. K, Livingstone in Nelson; ,\nMrs. T. Ms, Leask, who sperit three\nweeka with relatives In Vancouver.\nhas returned.  \u25a0\nMr. and Mrs, A. M- Kam spent several days In Spokane. On their return they were accompanied by M-\np, MeCullougb of Cshlcago, 'President p( we Western Exploration\nCompany who will be their guest.\nMrs. C towgood and daughter\nBetty left fer Vancouver where\nBetty will receive mesKcal treatment.\nMrs. M. Shannon Is spending a\nholiday with relatives aim friends\nin Vancouver.  '        \u25a0,\nMra. J. Nesbitt is a patient in the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital at\nNelson.  . ,\nj; Steele was the guest ol bis\nbrother, G, Steele at Appledale-\n. The National Film Board, under\nthe sponsorahlp of the silverton\nWomen's Institute, presented itn\nenjoyable program of pictures ln\nthe Municipal HaU on Tuesday\nevening.   *.-... \u00bbv-   _ \u25a0\t\nMrs, S. JtTWSTsOh aritTber daughter Mrs- Es Kynoahs entertained\nwhen bridge and a social time were\nenjoyed.\nThe C C 7: Club sponsored a\nwhist drive in the Miner's Union\nHaU whe^ prizes for high scores\nwere awarded to Mrs, M. Wallace,\nMrs. T. M, Leask. A. Elsmore and E.\nMathews. .    .\u201e\nMrs.. G. Munch entertained at an\nenjoyable children's party in honor\nof her daughter Sbelfa's sixth birthday anniversary. Games were played and delicious refreshments were\nserved Jo the young guests.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nNATIONALLY KNOWN NAME^\nWe offe* complete line ol equipment for Sawmills, Remanufactur-\ning, contractors, Link-belt speeder, Adams, Llttleford, Owen, T. L.\nSmith, Clark. National, etc. FuU\nbiformatlOn from National Machinery Co. Ltd., Vancouver, B.C\nBbstolJiMOmtffi WOMCW\nwelding. Portable welding equipment for field work. Stevenson's\nMachine Shop, 709 Vernon St.,\nNelson, B, C   ,\t\nCaterpillar rd7 equip^BP\nwitb  angfedozer.   RD8 equiL\nwith dozer and logging winch.\nBayes Equipment Co., Cranbrook,\nft em 'VQH Wf OR' 'CON-\ntract. Equipped for excavating,\nroad building, land clearing, eta,\nC. Ross, Phone 1356-L, Nelson.\nFOR SALE-ONE NAPANEE VER-\ntical 3% H.P. boiler in excellent\ncondition. For particulars, apply\nValley Dairy, 'Rossland, B.C.\nj5TFsrsgs,ri5mp?irii33\nroad building, mine, stripping, etc.\nexperienced operators. A, G. Bayes\nPhone 80 or 398 Cranbrook. B.C.\n       -\u25a0   \u25a0    :  \t\nWANTED.  MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED-LUMBBB, POLES, B.R,\nties, fence posts, piling, timbers,\nshingles, lath, Intermountain Sales\n880 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\n18. Win\n19. Receptacle\nfor flowers\n20. Devoured\n33, One's\nfather's\nSister\n8, Cage\n7, Cutting tool 23. Middle\nI. Alloys of     24. State of\naulphur.with    tielng\nUUUL1   Limit'.'\nuauu uuur;\nllt-IFJOO   UOU01!\n\u25a1QQ   UP      HCID\nwu    tiiiuiiauisii\nutiuia kiDuni\nsSjuighii unauti\nlaai-ia qquij\nCJLIMCIUI.II-I      DL!\ntiui:i    uu atiis\nUDUUIU   DUaHssC\nMI2UUI   [JUOI3\nnuiJi.;  uuui:\nTetlerdsy's Aemaf,!\n88. FaiaehiMdi\n85. Notice\n38. Isthmus;' (',:\nSEAala\n39. Short sleep\n40. Eskimo tool\n|     (Continued in Next Column)\nACROSS    I, Harbor\n1. Fragment    8, Congealed\n\u00ab. Scrutinize       water\n9. Veatlge        4, Enclosure\n10, Daises B. Eating\n12. Black bird       utensil\n13,Percolated\n14, A bead of\na rosary\nIB, Leap\n16, Lord\n(abbr:)\n17. A abort-\nlegged,\nflightless -\nbird\n20. Awing'\n21. ConsWla-\ntion\n32. Particle\n33. Rude        '\ndwelling\n36. Conjecture\n37. Ireland\n(poet)\n28, Merriment\n39. Bend the\nhead ,\n30. Kind <Sf fish\n34. Tungsten-\n(eym,)\n38. Exclamation\n36. Cuckoo\n3T. Glacial\nridge\n39. An amah\n41. More\ninfrequent\n42, Fragrant .\nwood (B. I.)\n43. Wife of a\nbaronet\n44, Flat.\n, bottomed\nboat ,\nPOWN\nl.sLongfor\n\u00bbAmT*0BW!IOQUOX8J--Here'8 how to wo* H\u00ab\nAXYDLBAAXR\nb fcONOrBlIsOW\nOne letter simply atands for another. In this exampio A la tlsed\nfor,the thrse L'a, X for the two O'i, etc. Single letters, epos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words aro all hints.\n' Bach day the coda letters aro different.\nA Cryptogram quotation\nLZQZ   SZEJNK   JMXZQ \"NLSiiVtNK  VYOBR\nBZtIN      IBRN.      KIK      VYHJ      SQZBBB\nNA Q Y J C A \u2014 R A E B X R U Z JD Q JS.\nYeeterday'a CrjTtoouotet  WHBN ANY LfflSUBE IS GIVEN)\nME I AMUSB) MYSELF WJTH WKITING-HORACE.\nnissswisi*.^ tsy Kins Fwtuici Byndlc\u00abt\u00ab, lofc^ ..\nRIV.S. PITTS\nOF ALBERNI\n0IESAT78\nWord haa'been received by Mrs.\nH. H. Pitta of Ifolson, of the death\nof her brother-in-law, Rev. Frank E.\nPitts, who died Suddenly at his\nhome in Albornl, B.C., last Thursday, at 78 years of age.. \u25a0\nBorn \\n Woodlands, Ont.; Mr.\nPitts moved, directly to Alberni\nabout 25 yeara ago, where he\npreached until his retirement. He\nlater taught an Indian skhool and\ndid 'some preaching for a number\nOfyeijrs.\nMr. Pitts visited Nelsen a few\nyeara ago., .      ,\nBesides his widow, Mrs. F.Jt\nPitta, he ls survived by one son, Dr.\nChester Pitts, two daughters, Mrs.\nAdams and Lpls, all of Aberni, (our\ngrandchildren, one sister, Mrs. Alice\nBrassard, Wales, Ont., Snd one\nbrother, Oscar Pitts, Woodlands,\nOnt.\nLesson-Sermon Asks\nIs Sin, Death Real?\n\"Are Sin, Disease, and Death\nHealT was the subject .nl the Les-\nsoh^SeiSion in all Churches of\nChrist   Scientist, on Sunday.\nThe Golden Text was: \"Bless the\nLord, 0 my soul, and forget not aU\nbis benefits: wbo forglveth all thine\niniquities; who healeth aU thy dis-\nes; who redeemth thy Ufe from\ndestruction.\" (Psalms 103: 2-4.\nThe Lesson-Sermon Included the\nfollowing passage from the Bible:\n\"Behold, God exalteth by his power: who teacheth like him? Who\nhath enjoined him his way? or whd\ncan say; .Thou, hast wrought n-\niqully?)' Job 88: 22, 23.\nAmong the selections from the\nChrlsUon Science textbook, i \"Science and Health with. Key to. the\nScriptures'' by Mary Baker Eddy,,\nwas the following: \"Are we irreverent towards sin, or imputing too\nmuch power to God, when we ascribe to Him almighty Life and\nLove? I deny His cooperation with\nevil, because I (fcsire to have no\nfaith in evil or ln any power but\nGod, good.\"\nflLJJutfuii\nBring your ear In for\nSPRING\nLUBRICATION\nand change, over to\nWorm Weather\nLubricants\n3 hoists to\nServe you\nPeebles Motors\nLtd.\nNelson, B.C.\n 12\u2014 N8U0N DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 11,1949\n<5s^\nj: \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0\n^1Greeting>s\nEdster . ,' \u00ab. the hap-\n\u25a0plest .season of all the\nyear, with a l6ng,.cold\nwinter-behind us, gldr-\n.ous Spring with us and a lovely, sunny Summer ahead\nof us.      y\nShare your joys and happiness with your friends\nby sending them a bright and timely EASTER GREETING CARD.\nYou will be sending the best when you send a\nCARLETON CARD.\n'...front\nMANNS\nDRUG STORE\nNewcastle Nears Soccer Lead\ni\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nMAKE VOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY.\nPHONE 1175\u2014182 BAKER 8T.\nEE\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n\u00ab. IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\nISO Baker St. Phone 238\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nafft.i     Prescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\n> Med. Arts Bit\n- PHONE 25\nE\nFor\nChildren's Boots,\nShoes and Socks\nTry\nThe Children's Shop\nGURNEY\n\u2022-\u25a0.\u25a0'\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Coal and Wood\nRANGES\n$123,75 and up\nNelson Electric, Co.\nAuthorized GE Dealer\nPhone 260 574 Baker St.\nGranite Road W.I.\nNarks First Year\n! A year of club activities and projects was marked* by 'the Granite\nRoad Women's Institute when 11\ncelebrated Its first anniversary.\nThe afternoon was filled with enjoyment of films, entertainment and\na birthday cake, cut by President\nMrs. E. R. Clark.. .\nAmong the 34 guests at the event\nlast Thursday, were Mrs. R. A. Custer, President of the District Board,\nMrs. C. F. McHardy and Mrs. S. C.\nColman, W.I. President, all of Nel-\nson. Three new members, Mrs. J. C.\nMuir, Mrs. F. Norcross end Mrs. H.\nTownsend were enrolled. '\nTables were gaily decorated with\nthe. Institute' colors\u2014green, yellow\nand white. The anniversay cake\nwas flanked by tall green candles\nand daffodils.\nEntertainment convener was Mrs.\nA. G. Norcross, assisted by Mrs. G.\nPickering, Mrs. B. A. Pickering and\nMrs. E. B. Clark. Refreslunents were\nprepared by Mrs. W. Erickson and\nMrs. G. .Pickering.\nMrs, W. C Halln, Mrs. F Ozey\nand Mrs., Ellen Farenholtz -were contest winners. \u25a0\u2022\n\u2022 On the entertainment menu were\nfour films, shown by A. Llihacher,\nand a congratulatory address by\nMrs. Custer.\nLONDON, April 10 (Reuters)-\nNewcastle United kept their slender hopes alive of winning the\nEnglish League champ lonshlp\nWith 1 4-2 decision over Derby\nCounty Saturday,\nThe victory moved the wlnners'to\nwithin three points of leading Portsmouth who dropped a 1-0 heart-\nbreaker at Blackpool.\nIn the Second Division, leading\nSouthampton slipped, up 1-0 against\nWest Ham United but still seemed\nassured of promotion. The question\nof who would accompany the Saints\ninto the top Division reinalned open,\nhow,ever.    '\u25a0     \u25a0 ;\nBoth second-place West Bromwich Albion and third-place Fulham won their matches by 1-0,\nleaving the Birmingham Club four\npoints behind Southampton and one\npoint ahead of Fulham. Albion topped Luton Town and Fulham turnback Leeds United.\nSwansea Town breezed along In\nhigh gear in the Third  Division\nSouth, winning 1-0 at Northampton.\nIn the  Northern  half of the\nsection the race was still close.\nRotherham   moved   Into   a one-\npoint .lead   by  whipping  Crewe\nAlexandra   30  while   Hull   City\ncould only draw 0-0 at Southport\nThe Fishermen however, have two\ngames In hand.' ,      \\,\nSaturday's games did not affect\nleadership in either Division of tho\nScottish League. '\".'\u2022 \u2022?\nINTERNATIONAL MATCH '\nEngland 1 Scotland 3.\nFOOTBALL LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nArsenal 1 Mlddlcsboroughl.\nAston Villa 2 Preston North End 0.\nBlackpool 1 Portsmouth 0.\nBolton Wanderers 2 Charlton Athletic 2.\nDerby County 2 Newcastle United 4. .    -,- .\nHuddersfield Town 0, Birmingham\nCityO. ', ,        .\nLiverpool 0 Manchester City 1.\nManchester United 1 Chelsea -1.\nSheffield United lEvertbnl.-\nSunderland 0 Burnley 0.\nWolverhamtori Wmderers 3 Stoke\nCltyl.,\nSecond, Division\nBarnsley 4 Tottenham Hotspurs 1.\nI Blackburn   Rovers   2   Sheffield.\nWednesday;, 1,.:...,   .        ,...'; . .\nBradford 4 Bury 1.\nCardoff Clty'3 Lincoln City. 1.\nFulham. Leeds United 0.\nGrimsby Town 3 Brentf brd 0.\nLuton To\\yii 0 West Bromwich\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funefsil Sesrvlee\"\nAMBULANCE 8ERVICE\n515 Kootenay St       y Phone 381\nRELIABLE SERVICE\nAT REASONABLE COST\nSmedley Garage Co.\nReb Sales and Service\nExcessive\nTireWear\nShimmy\nWonder\nHard steering\nFOR TIRE-RUINING\n\u2022STORING W0BBUES\"\nWhen \"stbbrino wobbUss\" goto work,\ntires go fist! They're caused by wheels\ngetting out of alinement or unbalances!\nTheir cose is uneven tire wear, blow-outs,\nloss of control. They're a problem! But\nhere's the answeh Let us correct your car.\nnow with our scientific bbar equipment.\nThank Yoar Repair Matt For\n\"T\/ieAeeWenfT\/iof\nDidn't Happen\"\nWe have a, Bear Dynamic Wheel Balancing thai' balances dynamically and statically.\nALSO\nBEAR WHEEL\nALIGNMENT\nSERVICE\nlUTHBER\nMOTORS\nLimited\nDODGE - DE SOTO DEALERS\nOpposite Post Office \u2014 Nelson, B.C. \u2014 Phone 71\nAlbion 1.\nNottingham  Forest  1  Leicester\nCity 1.\nPlymouth Argyle 2 Coventry' City\n8. - ~ '\nQueen's Park Rangers 1 Chesterfield 1.\nSouthampton 0 West Ham United\n1.  \".'\nTHIRD DIVI8I0N NORTHERN\nCarlisle, United 2 Tranmere Hovers 2.    '   \u25a0 \u25a0'.     \u25a0   '.        .'..*'.,' \"\nChester 1 Doncaster Rovers 2;\nCrewe Alexandra 0  Rotherham\nUnited S. -.    : ','\nDarlington 8 Wrexham 1,\nGatshead 0 Mansfield Town 0.    .\nHartlepools United 1 BsirrOw-0.,\nNew Brighton 1 Bradford; City>0.\nRochdale 1 Halifax Town 0.- \u25a0 \u25a0 '\nStockport County 1 Oldhani Athletic 2. ' -\nYork City 1 Accrlngton Stanley 1.\nTHIRD DIVISION SOUTHERN\nAldershot 1 Torquay United 3.\nBrighton and Hove Albion 2 Brl-\ntol Rovers 1.\nBristol City lWatforSli\nExeter City 3 Crystal iPalaee 1.\nLeyton Orient 1 Ipswich Town 1\nMillwall 2 Walsall 1. ;,\u00bb\u2022:;\nNorthampton   Town 0 Swansea\nTown. 1.  \u2022'\nNorwich City 1 Reading 2.\nPort Vale 1 Notts County 0.\nSouthend United 0 Newport County 1. .'.   .     \u2022\nSwindon Town 2  Bournemouth\nand Boscombe Athletic 2.\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nDivision A ,\n(Following games postponed from\nFeb. 5).\nClyde 0 Aberdeen 0. -.\nHibernian 2 Patrick Thistle 1.\nMortoft.3 Albion Rovers. 0.\nMotherwell:* St. Mirrensl.'\nIWrdlssinMk 8 Falkirk*2. '\nDivision B \u25a0 *\n(Following games postponed from\nFeb. 5).   . , -1,\nArbroath 1 Dundee United 0.\nCowdenbeath 9 Ayr United 2.\nDumbarton- Of Raith Rovers 1.   ,\nEast Stirlingshire 0 Queen's Park\n1.      *' -\u25a0\"    \u25a0'\u25a0    ' '-,\u25a0\u25a0;\nStenhousemiilr 1' Hamilton Academicals 1.          ''-.-. -,-v.\nIRISH LEAGUE \u25a0'\u2022'. 'f\nBangor 2.PortadownS,\nBallymena United 1 Ards 0.. ' ,\nGlenavon 1 Belfast Celtic 0.:\nLnfield? Cliftbnville 0.'\nDerry aty 2 Dlstfflery 2.\nGlentoran 3 Coleraine 2.\nPHONE, 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nNAMED COMMANDING\nOFFICER AT SEA\nISLAND STATION\nOTTAWA. April \u00bb (CP)^- Wing\nCmdr. R. F. Douglas, 38, of Hamilton, Officer Commanding the R.CA.F., station pt Sea Island, Vancouver, has been appointed1 A'r Attache\nat Brussels,-!! was learned Saturday.\nHe will tie attached to the Canadian Embassy there.\n'He replaces Wing Cmdr..-H. M.\nKennedy, 44, oi Winnipeg, who has\nheld the post for about a year. The\nappointment becomes effective\nApril 14.-*        .,.''; . ,\nJohn Cozzetto, well-known\npioneer, District miner and prospector, died. suddenly. Sunday - at\nAinsworth, his'home,for the last\n88 years. He was 78.  ,\nBorn .in Italy, he came to this\nDistrict in 1888 and followed mining and prospecting until about a\nyear ago. \"He. had a' numbers of\nmineral olalnjs in,the Kao\"tenays.\nHe was a member of the Knights\nof Pythias Lodge in, Kimberley for\nmany years,   ''    .'*\/'   ' '  -!'\nA brother, Josephs, died about a\nmonth ago in Spoljane, and his only\nsurviving relative is-a 'sister-irt-law,\nMrs. Teresiria Cozzetto of Spokane.\nSlocan City\nSawmill Again\nIn full Operation\n; slocan crry, b:c\u201e April 10 --,\nThe sawmill of Anderson arid Berg\nIs again running in high gear on\nSlocan City's lakeshore.\nThere are about 12 men employed\nat the mill, sand more will be.hired\nas soon as the planer mill is in\noperation..Finished lumber in addition to the rough lumber will soon\nbe shipped out to various points.\ns: The mill cuts about 12,000 board\nfeet of lumber daily. Last year its\noutput was 2,000,000 board feet of\nlumber, including about 11,000 ties.\nOver 700,000. board'feet of white\npine was shipped to Nelson's\nmatch,;block factory, -\n(At present there ate 800,000\nboard feet of sawldgs in the Water.\nThis is sufficient for only two\nmonths, but additional logs are being steadily purchased from private\nlogging operators in the vicinity to\nmaintain contimious operation.\nManager N.' hetig. ibelleves the\nlumber market will be steady this\nyear and as good as lstst year.\n. SNETITShAm, Ndrfolk, England\n(CP)\u2014-Eleven gold coins believed\nto have feeert mintsjd about 7(1' B. C.\nwere found, here.. They have been\nsehed Jor the crbwh;and wte be\nsent to the British-Museuni.\n^ RELIEVE\nWITH\ncU\/LOA^t   2 I 7\n35:        75'        MS\u00b0\nCliaiie.', d>M\/UiMA & Go\nOPEN WEDNESDAY\n'   .     Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nPhone 34 Box 480\nLooking AheddiinOttdWi, .-j    ,\nTwo Weeks of Doldrums for Ollawa;\nFirs! Income Tax Appeal to Be Heard\nBy The.Ottawa -Staffz;\nOf The Canadian Press \u2022\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\n; OTTAWA April iov(CP'). \u2014 This\ncapital is headed for two weeks of\nthe political doldrums\u2014and it likes\nIt-'        \u25a0-.'\u25a0 -\u2022,-->    ,\n: Parliament was adjourned.Friday\nfor a two-week Easter recess, to\nMonday, April 25, bringing an immediate curtailment of the, many'\nahd varied Governmental functions\nWhich accompany the day-to-day\nsittings of the Commons and the\nSenate.\n-: Prime Minister St. Laurent already has left the Capital on a two-\nweek tour of Western.Canada and\nthe great bulk of the 245 members\nbf the Commons are en route to\nSI tHUUtllt UND tKC HE K K Ti B LO 5 SO M 5\u2014Figures of a boy and girl are\nsilhouetted under the cherry blossoms by.searchlights used for night illumination of.the Tidal Basin,\n\"'-.-*.-     at Washington, D. C. The blooms are out for the annual cherry blossom festival.\ntheir home constituencies for a rest\nfrom .Parliamentary duties and a\nlook: at the political picture afield.\nOn the * Opposition side, George\nfirew,,, Progressive; - - Conservative\n'leader, ls expected to make a flying trip to Newfoundland and the\nMaritime Provinces and both M. J.\nColdwell, C.CF. leader, sind Solon\nLow, Social. Credit chieftain, un<\nthe recess for some political stump\nIW-\ndoubtedly. will take advantage of\nIn the interim; the capital, with\nadmittedly little concrete to go on,\nis preparing itself for possible maj,-\nor developments when the Parliamentary machine begins functioning again. '        '   .\nWith a general election pend\nIng, there have been reports that\nMr. St. Laurent might decide to\ndissolve Parliament and announce\n. tho election date within a week\nor so .following the recess. If this\nshould happen, It would mean an\nelection either In late June or ear-\n-: ly July.'\nOne other possible development\nof major consequence is a cabinet\nshuttle. There have been, whispers\nabout the Parliamentary corridors\nJhat Mr. St. Laurent might switch\none or two portfolios and perhaps\nappoint Solicitor-General Jean and\nPost-Mastsar General Bertrand id the\nbench, opening the way \u2022 for new\nblood from Quebec Province. V\nAlong with these changes, should\nthey develop, might come the\\ap-\npointmerit of Hon. James Marfun-s\nnon,. farmer Resources Minister now\na minister without portfolio; to the\nSenate. He is expected to go to the\nSenate before or at dissolution.\nPOOR MAN'8 COURT\nHailed by officials as a boon to\nthe 'poor man;\" the Income Tax\nAppeal Board will get the acid test\nthis week.\nThe Board, set up last Fall tq hear\nappeals of income tax payers who\nfeel they have been wronged, opens\nits first hearings in Ottawa Tues,\nday. The boturd will travel, across\nthe country, hearing appeals at various points, for an average cost to\nthe appellant of about $16. So far, it\nhas had only 13 applications for appeal.      :   , \u25a0\nLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD\nNOTICE to CONTRACTORS\n-     GOVERNMENT LIQUOR STORE\n-..-:\u25a0\".. Cranbrook,. B. C. '\nSealed tenders endorsed \"Tender, Government Liquor Store, Cranbrook\", will be, received by the under-\nsigend for the erection and completion of premises for\nuse 'as a Government Liquor Store at: the corner of\nBaker Street and 11th,* Avenue, City of Crqnbrooj\u00ab; on\nlands more particiilary described as Lots 1'9 arid 20,\nBlock 87. Copies of the plans arid specifications can\n'be\/obtained on application to the undersigned and on\npayrhent of the sUm of $10.00, which amount wiil.be\nrefunded on return of the.said plans and specifications.\nEach tender must be accompanied by an accepted\nBank cheque on a chartered Bank of Canada, pdyable\nto the Liquor Control Board fora sum the equivalent\nof 10% of the.amount of the, tender.which amount\nshall 'be forfeited if the party tendering declines Jo en--\nfer into the contract or fails to complete the contract\nwhen called upon to do so. Tenders will not be considered unless signed by the actual signature of the\ntenderer. Acopy Of the plans and specifications of\" the\nproposed building herein mentioned can be examined\nat the. off ice of the Vendor,; Government Liquor Store,\nCranbrook, B.C. Contract to include fair wage clause.\nJenders must be in the hands of the Secretary,,\nLiquor Control Board, 525 fort Street, Victoria^ B.C.\non or before 2:30 p.m. on Monday, the 9th. May, 1949.\nLowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nA. H.-WYLLIE,\nSecretary,\nLiquor Control. Board,\n*      *    525 Fort Street,\nVICTORIA,B.C.;   .\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'\nCleaned and RecOred\nRADIATOR REPAIRS!\n301Ward.St.      \u2022        Phorie\u00ab3\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\nTONIGHT-CKtN\nat 6P.M.\nHear\nMayor\nTH.\nWaters\nDiscuss the\ntremendously\nimportant *\nStreet Railway\nBylaw No. 1118\nVOTI NG TOMORROW 8 AM. to 8 P.M.\n: For Transportation Phone\n:- '\u2022:4ti::pr;,164:.;(,:'\nSoropfomistTag\nBrings $303\nSoroptimist Club's tag Saturday\nfor general welfare purposes\nbrought $303, slightly less thm\nIast.yesir.\nTagging was conducted through\nthe day.by about 60 taggers, Mrs.\nW. O. Rosa and Mrs. Thea Gibson\nwere in charge of the. Committee\nRooms in the Hume.\nTaggers were:\nMrs. G. A. Butling, Mrs. Hildred\nHughes, Mrs. Hazel Leeming, Mrs.\nWilina Stern, ahd Misses Sally Butling, Gall Walls, Dorothy Wassick,\nDorothy. Foster, Mary Gordon, Barbara . Lang, Joan Piecash, Emily\nHamson, Pauline Butling, Shirley\nGustafson, Sylvia Butling, Barbara\nTHom, Lorna Craig, Mary Anne Mc-\nFadden, Edith Hughes, Jean Gilker,\nAlma McDonald, Margaret Arnot,\nLenore Withinshaw.\nJean McNlcol, Dorothy Hutchinson, Edna May Dysart, Joyce Bradshaw, Yvonne Varney, HilmasWil-\nford, Dolores Ward; Hellen Sloan,\nBetty. Freeman,* Eileen Webster,\nMary Caruk, Myrna Little, Frances\nJohnson, Lucille Mahegre, Sheila\nPaterson, Louise Pentland, Eileen\nMackenzie, Rose Anne Zabawa,\nLeona Boss.\n; Carol Tickner, Patsy Bird, Patsy\nWalgren, Fay sHu^y, Doreen Ozey,\nBarbara Brown, Joyce \u25a0 McQinniSs\nIsabel Stout, Joyce Carpenter, Carol\nCoventry; Mildred Mansfield, Lynne\nMcKay, Doreen Evans, Rochelle\nCrawford, Beverley Lythgoe, Joan\nStromstead and George Zabawa.\nJust a Rumor\nHepplrtr that-, the three - room\nschool at Obtischenia was burned\nFriday night were groundless,\nauthorities said Sunday. Ootis<\nchenla, a small. Doukhobor community, is across the Columbia\nRiver from the village of Kinnaird.\nSmoke seen from the village was\ncaused by families burning rubbish,\nit was said There were no grass\nfiresln the vicinity. .\nmsnvfmvmmsnfffr\n!  YESs\u2014Your New Wave\nli bound to be MORE STYLISH,\nLAST LONGER and\n'\u25a0  LOOK  LOVELIER\nat the\n<   HAIGH TRU.ART\nJ.A.C. LAUGHTON\nOptometrist\nMEDICAL   ARTS   BUILDING\nSuite 208\nHove the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONEJH5_\t\nELLISON'S ROYAL PATENT\nPASTRYFLOUR\nBEST FOR CAKES AND\n-   ,PASTRY.\nGUARANTEED TO SATISFY\nYour Grocer Has It\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and paint work specialty\nEaster\nYOUR TIME TO\n> LOOK YOUR\"\"\"\"\u25a0\nBEST\nDress up for Easter. We\nare-all ready with crwon-\nderful selection of Suits,\nTopcoats, Hats, Shirts,\n. Neckvyear, in fact, eyery-\nthing'for the well dressed\nman. <\u25a0\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nBELLEVILLE,. Ont, (CD-Highest number of births ever registered here for one year was recorded\nin 1948. Of a total of 1688 births, 838\nwere boys, 747 girls. There were 18\nsets of twins.  ,   .\n'Illlllllllllllllllllllllll.lllll IMIIIIIM\nMURPHY'S\n-     - ' ';',-F6r-\nWallpapers \u2014 Kalsomines\nPaints \u2014 Varnishes\n745 Baker St   .       Phon* 655\nniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiHiiiii\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n:'\u25a0.  at the,.\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\n418 Hall St Phono 144\nSERVICE\nFORTWO\n...'.'\u2022 . or three, or four or\nmore!\nOur efficient facilities ara\noperated for- everyone's convenience. .\nIn Just a. few hours ... at a\nminimum of cost... we dry.\nClean or press your tolled sind\nrumpled garments to look\nlike newi *-      >\n3-PIECE SUITS\nLADIES'SUITS\n' 1-Piece Plain\nDRESSES\n90*\nSPRING COATS\n*I25\nTwo Day Service\nWe CaU\nand\nDeliver\nJUST CALL 288\n.....        ...y I-, ' iy-.l'-'i.\nEMPIRE\nCLEANERS\nThe Hudson's Bay Co.\n. presents\nSpring Fashions of 1949\nIn co-operation with the\n\" *\n^Wohelo Club of\nSt.\"Paul's United Church\nCivic-Theatre'\nTONiGHT AND TUESDAY NIGHT\nAT 8:55\nMen's Dressy Moccasin Toe Sport Shoes\nWith English Crepe Spies\n\u2022Ideal for the Sportsman. Brown only.- Pair'.. $10.83\nTHE BOOTERY\nHIGH QUALITY -MODERATELY PRICED\nPhone 1114 41.1 Baker St\nMall Orders Given Prompt Attention\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1949_04_11","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0425967","@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":"1949-04-11 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1949-04-11 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\/1.0425967"}