— .
i'oiomhi telephone*
Advertising r mpfrt 4114
Buxines* Of flo« C mptre 4114
Circulation B cacao 4201
Job Printing G arden 534)
Kdltorltl Room* Empire 4111
Social Editor Empire 3311
it.o l ABI.IMIt l» m:>si
NO. 1 19 — K!(;il I V-NINTH VKAK
VICTORIA, BRITISH COLUMBIA, FRIDAY, MAY 2. 1917
HEATHER EORU AST
Victoria and ‘Vicinity Cloudy in mnrn- tivtf. clearing ui afternoon; southwesterly winds. 15 miles per hour. Colder Yesterday's Temperatures— Maximum. W. minimum. 44 minimum on grass. 47. Yesterday'# Sunshine — 9 hours 30 mlnutea.
EIGHTEEN RAGES
Search Parly Sees
J
Object on Slope Thai May Be Wing
J C
Men Forced to Return to Base Without Cheeking Litest (due
Hojx' was. rekindled last night that the three-day-old search for the missing Trans-Canada Air Lines plane might! be successful
A nine-man land search party returned late last night to Lake Buntzen and reported sighting “what looked to be an aircraft wing standing straight up.”
( I.ake Buntzen lies some 12 miles northeast of downtown
Vancouver and less than two miter ono mile north with what looked to emit of the north arm nf Burrard t*. a wing atanding straight up, al- Inlet.) — Utough it might have been snow It
• There to *omcthing lunny up to luird to Judge." therr, hut It might only be snow, Ap members were disappointed at Flying Officer Jack Gibson reported having been forced to return ln- he Jed ills weary, stubble-faced stead of remaining overnight on the parly back down Coquitlam Moun- 'mountainside. A helicopter from tain alter falling to contact a party Seattle successfully dropped food to bringing his men sleeping bags and tbe men. but a second ground party tents. was forced by darkness to turn back
E Keith, of Vancouver, another before Contacting the aearch parly member of the party, said. "W* had GlbBon aald no „fe wu
to climb straight up from the snow- . h(|<1
line. We were at 4,000 feet in three ' . . .
^our> Last night, mor4 than a score of
-We lighted a mountain about Co" "tttchfr* lined the North
Machine Guns Blast Parade
Victorians Vote to Retain Present City Hall
Ratepayers Turn Down Proposed City Hall Sale
Finance Chairman Slates Matter Closed — No Repairs Due T his Year
By a vote of 1.803 to 1.216, Victorians yesterday de- cisively rejected the proposal to sell the 72-year-old City Hall building and site to Hagar & Swayne. Ltd., for $176,000 The affirmatives fell 596 votes short of the required three-fifths majority of 1,812 which would have been re- quired to pass the by-law Less than one-quarter of those qualified, or 3.043 of roughly 13,000 persons eligible, cast their ballots Twenty-four ballots were spoiled
Vancouver ahorr In hopes
Ihf ‘gyrating l gTr " which tome of Ratepayers Went to the Polls Yesterday and Decisively Defeated the Proposal to Sell the City Hall Building
and Site to Hagar A Swayne. Ltd., for $176,000. By Their Action. They Left No Doubt That the Civic Ad- ministration Would Continue in the Present Building
Jaunt !>v Bus
w
Unscheduled
litem had reported weeing Wednes day night* However, no lights ap- peared.
Meanwhile, veteran R.C.AP and Trans-Canada Air lines officials held a special meeting to discuss ROME. May 2 < Friday » UD —Six *ulure MV*. • person# were killed and 15 were UloU“nds of n>ln* houn*
wounded near Palermo. Sicily. ,PUt •»' “^craft, the situation Tit ii rads v In craaaflre from machine- wax right back where It «Urted from
guns in a mountain gulch overlook- Monday when the silver air A Utand
lng the meeting place of two col- “ner vanished. bus. Parked near the depot, went on
umna of parading worker* celebrat- Two of the most promtoln* clue# an unscheduled trip last night luu Mny to dale were proven groundless late! With an unidentified man at the
I he firing lasted for 30 mlnutea. yesterday. A tree slash on Coqult- wheel, the btt# crashed into a parked
The workers were shot down at a lam Mountain raised hopes until an car. sped west to Government Street,
truer, mads In the village of Port- Investigating helicopter returned and and then disappeared, rlla Della Paglla In Palermo Prov- reported “nothing there" Provincial Police reported !he In-
line a* their columns converged On Vancouver Island, a two-man cjdent to city police at midnight, from the towns of San Oiuseppe search party struggled 3.500 feet up bringing Constables Alex Nlchol and Jiito and Plano Deglt Albanese Thunder Mountain above Great iGror|e Smllll ^ lhe 5Cene to plck Police who rushed to the arenr Central Lake, only to find that a
were unable W) find out who fired reported ‘strange object" was a
the shots. plane-llke rock out-cropping
Stalin Sees Parade Pravda Attacks U.S .
Aid Edward Williams, chairman ^of the special new City Hall com- mittee. which recommended the sale. »iated Uj»1 week llial if he j by-law- was not approved the city would be forced to spend <50,000 to ; $60 000 in renovating the promt building.
It Is regarded us a certainty, how- ever, that no uch work cun be undertaken this year The city budget passed last week provided a surplus of only I7.0Q0, and included virtually no contingency reserve Reviewing the final budget at that time, D A Macdonald, city comp- troller. stated "I must give you serious warning We cannot go attend and spend money winch U not now authorised in the estimates " i Commenting on the result* ol the vote. Aid Edward William' said lad night:
'The City Hull is the property of
Polling Results
KrsiilU at vair an the by-law to sell the t iij Hall to llagar A Swayne l-td. for $176,600 were: Yea .. .. 1,218
No . 1.103
Spoiled ballot# 24
Total ballot, raat 3,042
Vote* required to pass 1.112
Short if required .... )M
Buyers’ Strike In Vancouver
Labor Mrn S(M‘k Break
With U.S.
Britiwli Mr inhere Issue Manifesto
LONDON. May 1 < Reuters ■ — De- mand# that the British Government should "have no truck w ■\tfr Church- ill" In its foreign jxiilcy and Ihal it xhuuld seek independence from l ha United State* were included in a manifesto published tonight h\ 15 rank-and-file Labor Mr mb r» of 'Parliament.
Listing 20 "thing* the Goveriuuent i should do now." the manifesto fur- ther demanded that Britain'# Labor leader* should “kill the Tory Idea of bolstering up lhe British Empire with American dollar# and fighting America's battle with Britton I soldiers."
The 15 M J* ’* wen* headed btf R H S Cnnsman. leader of th* original labor foreign -policy revolt last Autumn
Although the manifesto In pam- phlet form to titled ‘Keep Left." Ha authors previously have made It clear that they do not belong to
not to sell.
"That verdict to final a* lar a# 1 1 am concerned, and wo must now
Oak Bay Seoul Chosen For Meeting in France
t
up the trail.
[ They followed the bus north on .Government Street until It left the i road at the corner of Bay and Gov- | eminent Streets, bringing down a I section of fence.
| A rallor was arrested
Damages to the parked car were ! estimated more than <26. while ' repair* to the bus will be slight, po- lice said.
Order Loggers
c. V
non o treat, ^ ■ ■
May on Jobs
British Plane
Makes Record
A CAPETOWN. May 1 Reut- Y - ers> — The four-englned RAP Lincoln bomber Arles II today sliced five hours and 27 minute# off the record for big planes flying on the 6 717- mile route from London to Capetown The Arlee II ar- rived a few hours after another R A P plane had made the trip even faster
Judge Murphy
Passes at
VANCOUVER, Muv I <CP» Led by the British Columbia House- wives Consumers' Association, "plc-
the taxpayers, and they have decided . fn‘,n womrn * «r<)Ul» will be the PXtrrmi< jpft W|n„ l)f tjlbor tnd
out in front of downtown stores (hat lhpy arr nM >Cryptt).Co|n.
Ivere tomorrow in a one -day buyers muflto(j ••
Tlte manifesto called for ooa
cnrrv on with what we have he,. , *** riM ln the ct*1 ol world, not hostile bloc*." demanding ‘ itvel ' .U V'ng ,,M* ?ckrL' WU1 end<?*vor close collaboration with the British
I hate no lurther comment lo persuade shopper# to refrain from Commonwealth and with Prsnce to
flight of stair* to the Platform I ~ ^ have buying any artTrie. for one day , that end
• sP°kfn Beginning May 10. lhe MaoclaUon it wanu the Bnltoh people to be
H*«>r- “* ,luk“f 4 SwaynelPUna a *erle# of buyer*' strike "friends, not satellite, of Anterlra." nTtliarto:.Ltd" waa out oI *own ,IU'‘ ,l,*hl *** BR*ln>l * •ln*,e commodity, bul CBiif,d ft,r repudiation of Presi-
was not available for comment It Meanwhile the randy bar strike dent Truman's proptwato for *'col« to considered doubtful, however. Ifi1* in full swing hrre.^Today lecllve necurtty against Commun-
MOSCOW. M#y 1 Prime Mm- Wf can ' totcr Stalin nimbly cilmbi d the long at ^ time — the
Torn
abr»ve Lenin's tomb loday and saluted scores of time' as thousands of Ruvuan .soldier# and marched before him in Red Square
iln the traditional May Day parade., ... ,
! Th* blunt May Day cclabratloh , “»*" <>"'r bulkUn* | lObUJul Mnkar. .tnin, ub two lam
5 since the war coincided with a barbed attack on the United States by Ilya Ehrenburg in Pravda. the official Communist Party news- paper. The Soviet journalist de-
i i
VANCOUVER May 1 <CP».-Mr Justice Dennis Murphy, a former Judge of the trial division of the
Seventeen - year - old Macgregor , dent of the 8coui Agnation, was Macintosh, aon of Lt.-Col. and Mrs 1 chairman.
M. Macintosh, 223 Denison Road, ha# -n»e three runners-up were: Wtl- b>rti chosen to represent the Boy nftm Hurst, 16, 1321 Johnson Street Bcouis or Vancouver Island at a william Hlgglm. 17. world Scout jamboree to be held in street; and Barton Howes
Fr.hw In AuflMt. Cook StmT ' VANCOUVTO, May 1 ICF>
Young Macintosh, a l2Ul grade Acting as Judge# yesterday were Coiumbl* lo^rw today were
■indent at Oak Bay High School, and MaJ -Gen. W. W. Poster, Brig John tnalructed b% u,r International j ~mn
president of the student council, was Rockingham and Lt -Col J. Nel#on| woodworkers of America -C 1.0 t to *
one of four Greater Victoria Bcouis Gibson.
Judged yesterday at a special meet- Macintosh will
mg. Attending were e.ecutlves of gcoUU| to al„nd lhe j.mborw! milling. ,of lhp n.,,, . _ .
tMf r.reater Victoria Boy Seoul As- planer. Others will go from Van-, R V. 8iuart, spokesman ror coast btg tfu.r ,Prvlnf ronllnuou#lv \\urr soclation. Including Major H B rou,„ and TraU A loUl of 32 Boy , operator*, said In * r0ntlnUOU*,y
Hunter, district Bcout commissioner;
will be made
According to previous statement# from Mr. Hagar. local interests whom he repreaented had planneo to demolish the City Hall and erect nounced “American hypocrite*'’ and on A,te * department store spoke of "American gangsters who Council had planned
love to conceal their low affair* by *r,,ctlon of » new city Hall at a cost high word*." • e tlmated at <250.000.
Cheers broke from lhe spectator*! ma.vrd under the brightest May Day , W’l.. / m 4 * I
*4in in ix years for the tradition*! C/l f * C/ J*m a C«
display of Bovlet armed might and civilian support of the Communist , Mate. Stalin, dressed in Id* usual uniform, stayed for the entire parade, tirelessly reviewing the
llle-*lred effigies^);, downtown bill- The group think# that Communtom boardr. Pinned to the chests of the should be opposed "not by allying victim# were placard* with lire outsrrve* with r* actionary force*, strikers' grim verdict: "He bought but by helping to put something an eight- cent bar." better in It* place."
ff
ar
PHILADELPHIA
> lo Effort
Legal Experts Ar<‘ Busy On Transport Agreement
May i .«*). —
Whole show
. Standing on el liter side of the ,l**,ln* M-500 111 »»r aaving* stamp#
BrltUhl^lTl?!^0. B.^h^Un,.b‘a were foreign amlvasaador* #nd •nd ^en ^ »" »6lCh
minister* and their military at- to„?“ *
Utches, attending for the obvious 0 M^y ^ed t n Jh? & - ^ __
, ^ J . . He left the bench in 3041 after 32 Inn!!! n * ^ *n> * took the *tamp* and books and then agreement will be ironed put and the 1 f»rtant bearing on ita future
stay on the job Saturday In accord- Novembe i RUMlam m,fhl ,h°* *urned them into war bomto a. a first formal draft completed early growth ’
be one of three Unce with a recent arbitration board ' rfllrpd from ^ ^ of
died here tonight, tlce Murphy had
He was 77, Jus- been In falling
Legal experts were busy yesterday | Commenting on the effect of the on the task of preparing formal 'new agreement on Saanich. Harold agreements for s Joint transports- , Husband, general manager of tha
Inclusion
Compan) and the Vancouver Island , within the three and One-half-mile Coach Lines. Ltd, AJd H. M Dig- circle of the $1 pass and six and one- gon. chairman of the liiterinunicipal quarter-cent ticket (area to a major committee, stated yeaterday. *lep in the municipality's econornlo
it Is hoped that details of the development and will have an im-
wiui*'?0,,.f'*nchta! *llh^ BC ^^1
1ft weapon# of war
Freeman King, field commissioner; • nd E A. Enlln. George Brtoco, presl-
Steamer Seeks Immediate Aid
HALIFAX. May J < Frida ji re*
will attend from Canada, j Harold with three Iradrr*. They will all leave Canada M>metlme In July.
Born and educated In Marintoah to a leader In Bay Scout Troop. Hto grandtather ; urrias wax the late Sir Richard McBride,
Premier of the province.
He holds many Boy Hcout dre- I orations. Including the imshman# award and the gold cprd. With the The air -sea rescue unit of the three runners-up. he to a thoroughly RCA F report*! early today Uiat|tralned and experienced camper. He the 2 8Ag-ton British freighter Wick- j has been a Scout and Wolf Cubtrnntr*rt low Head, aground near Port Moulnn ■ since he wax *evrn year* old Wand off Nova 8cotla'a south shore. | Huntt and Howes are leaders In wa# taking In water and required the 3rd Victoria Troop, and Higgins Immediate assistance. i# a leader In the Oak Bay Scout
An officer on duty In the unit %ald 1 Troop.
“She I# taking 'in water and bumping Macintosh is also a member of quite heavily In lhe sea She requires the Lion# Own 8cout Troop-a senior axstotance and to In need of a lifeboat! Boy Scout organlsnllon sponsored immediately." ( by the Victoria Lions Club
Fishermen of lhe area had tried! Hunt, a* Immediate
a statement that ]g|7. union president, | Mr
Pritchett, union prmnaiu Mr Justice Murphy wax born In had sent letters to J. Hlggln, secre- Uc u Har(j<. ac \n thf, Carlboo
tary of the Courtenay local, and N dlstrlctitLl»70 He wa# railed to the Victoria, Mad*#n, roast area local. Instructing Bar In 1IM and praettoed ln Victoria the oak | them to keep the men at work Bat- 1 for about a year and later ar. Ash-
Dangerous Gas Delays Entry
local department ' Andy" replied
“I did H to help the war effort
completed early
Ktore. "Little >'ext week, he raid All of those Within the Hirer and
Meanwhile committee official <>n*-.«u*rtcr-mlJe circle now pa)Ur« were endeavoring yesterday lo have M high as eight cent* and some
MALARTTC. Que . May 1* <P> —A lest In the fire-reared No. 4 *haft of
Po»-
The Jurtlce was Liberal member Ea#t Malartic Gold Mine showed to^ I *r“,on of n*rtot,“ brought stiff
JaU term* loday for a young woman and a Chlnf-e. Betty Bondow. 22, drew a 12-month sentence with a
croft, B C, from IBM to !9oq
Earlier. Mr. Stuart had charged
that union local officials had toldj(lf the British Columbia legislature night that It will be at lean two logger* to continue "spontaneous from 1«00 to 1901 for WeM Yale day* before the mine gtvra up Saturday holiday# In protest against Recognised a# an orator, he ended U dead It may evrn be longer -
his political career after holding represent*- Cabinet rank for 4« hour*. He re- 1947 j signed two days after being ap- pointed Provincial Secretary m Merer, mine engineer ''Nobody
In 190« he wa* appointed Judge of "'tln w“''ted to keep alive would go the Supreme Court of British Co- lr* **r,1*r " lumbia. He left the Bench In 1941
l)nii> ('Jmrges Convict Tiro
VANCOUVER. May I CF
thr vote on the achool building by- law set tor June 12 or June 19. In-
of Uinre paying ten cent# will now eome under the $1 pas# and the #1#
a 46-hour work week.
Operators and union live* now are negotiating
' A: thf. very earliesL I think It will be two day# before crew* can enter thr mine," said FitUFrrr, mine engineer.
$200 fine while Mah Pong 8am; wa# sentenced to three year* tn
Edward **’n,,*nU*rY and »1*0 Hn*d
Bmh were arrested in raids by the RCM P
I.oni! Safety Heron! Emleil Builders Here
VANCOUVER, Wash, May 1 OP). | wj V’l 3 1 ILI G
Set New Mark
May
— Vancouver's first traffic fatality since November. 1945, wa* recorded
[ today with the death or Ed Rnren-
to roach in# .hi» k„t ►. .u . runner-up. feld Vancouver, who war slrurk
to reach the stranded «»11p but the now ha* the opportunity of going on a CJIr 8urid#y n„.h,
sex-, were running so high they were a 20-day trip Into the Olympia ^\kt4 alone the
unable to get near her and therr was Mountains with the Seattle Boy
no coastal lifeboat In the vicinity. Scouts this Summer.
The danger now U from gas. en- gendered by the fire In the mine timber* which started one week ago The fire trapped 11 men In the No, 4 shaft where their bodies re main and brought the death of ! twelfth when He succumbed to [fumes on the verge of safety.
Brport Biots in Prison ••With 10 Guards Injured
•lead of May 29. to enable a stmul- *nd one -quarter -cent ticket xatea, (aneous vote on the two Issues. Mated.
Aid Diggon pointed put the com* *n addition, transfer# issued in live miuee need* time to work out re- out*r transit area would be valid mslning detail* and to ensure that w,,bln the entire three and ane- the public has time to digest the half-mile tone agreement in Its final form.
W. C Malnwarlng. B.C. Elec trie!
Hce-prwaldent. said yesterday he ex- pected nearly 90 per rent of the present eyatem could be modernized within a year If Orraler Victoria voter# approve the franchise
NEW YORK. May 1 {*!. - The Arab eountrlea Inat a determined fight In the Untied Nation* Areembly ( tonight for a chance to plead their j ca.se for Palestine Independence at ; this special session.
The Assembly voted 24 to 15 against putting. on Its agenda a pro- PQMl by the Arab Btatea for corwild-
Arabs Unable To Plead Case
way
atoo
The
was a
pedestrian.
SOS. Rocket Tested at Goldstr earn It rings Aircraft lo Injured tinnier
Setting a Canada- wide record In 8hlpvard High- 1 for ‘Wartime Hou»-
November. 1945, victim."* Ud’ v%rUiri» Housing Ltd ha* completed two home* within 59 [working day#. It was diaclOMd yes- terday by Jark BUI, Victoria admin- istrator of the Crown-nkned cor- poration
The two homes, at 1729 and 1724
Labor Croups Nearer Unity
to aid | Columbia Police. J R Johnston, fire ln*
control section. British Columbia Lf^
Ei tending
Simulating a lost hunter with a Game Protective Association fractured leg, Charlie Burr wa* “res- jloet or Injured hunigr*. cued ' from the Oolrixtream area last | Confuting of a metal tube atx night by signalling an R.C A P air- ' inches long and weighing the rquiv. craft with a new emergency rocket j alrnt of three 12-gauge shotgun Although Uie rescue was purel) shell*, the rocke; dtocharge* three tactical, Mr. Burr, had he been Injred flare# at five-second Interval# trouble, would have benn found and more than 300 feet into the air quirkly taken lo safely. Mr. Burr fixed the rocket to the
Expedition ‘rocker wa# staged, to barrel of hto rifle, and. on hearing demonstrate the small, compact, and an approaching aircraft Ignited it waterproof device perfected by Oor- ( with a simple, attached striker
don Sword. 3011 Richmond Avenue Three red flares were thrown well I Government lo hunters a director of the Victoria Flah and aboVp tall fir and cedar tree# ln %P°rtemen they purrhaae
- J the vicinity. The RCAF plane from | •«'<*|-uinlnf a living-room equipped wKh
has not \th
F»re*trv Depamnem . Harrv WoUaa-| hl* C(’ngr*luU",,n to
ton. president, Saanich Angler* As- *nd yM'
soclation; Ocorgg W Beck Jr T w U,rri*>' Mf f,llu they had *et
Hand Firework* Co , George Mann./ ^ ^
vice-president. Chinook Ftohlng ,n panada.
CIub | Fhe home*, renting at $24 a
month, will be occupied by tiro vel-
Mr Sword ha* been working nn famine*. Mr. and Mr* Hugh
U»e »nd Thorburn and two children, and Mr
^ .! Vrll .d,xtr,b:it^ throu«r‘ | and Mr* Hubert Fr.gden and thetr
| family of three.
They are four- room homes
WINNIPEG. May I «CP>.~Rrporla shove! thrown at a wall, rebounded erallon at this session of their de-
of trouble with prisoner# at Manl- ■"*! struck him. manda for termination of the Brit-
u,b» . Stony Mountain ItnUentU/y At ‘ “""il-, mnei ‘•'a "*
penltenUarlea, MaJ -tien R B Olb- ' independence of the Holy Land —heard from time to lime during ^ J|Jtld ^ had hfaJ.d something 71)11 Ar,b <’oontrle* knew from
the last 15 yearw-were revived today had ocrurrrd at Stony Mountain. lhr tl*ri of thw long wrangling to-
WA8HI NOTON. May I — The with unofficial word that ten guard*, but could #ay nothing about It untll|rt*J ,llr|r Hght Wax hopele##
American Federation of LabOf and {had been Injured In NoU on two ** had received Warden Campbell'. b^1 "r*"'d at kn«th
the Congress of Industrial Organ- nirra-lTT days | report. * Ith* 4 ‘i-hoor gnemoMk Mainn
.. Iiatlona held a five-hour aeaalnn to- 0„, . „ The last report of rioting at the
* t u" WPr? oHiclaHy turned dav on-the subject of merging theii ' . . f Manitoba institution
ot *T lo ^ »rttn)r Homing vf1' t/rrigt .£ ,, . m pfn)trnu4rv 1ft mlien northwest of
K. a- , strength and found enough harmony1 Winnipeg reiterated tonight u,^ ; '•-W4. when It wa* aUted that con
regulation* d.d not permit him 4p ^ ?" ^ "* "P
divulge any information regarding ‘")ur,n“ ‘~»niclor
trouble* there ^ /ftsturbance was quelled when
guards threatened rioter* with
Mr. Campbell said earlier that a
JL nUn°" ^bancr. caused when four ^ Apn, |#M dVturbance* were ^ . , ...
from each of the big Ubor organ toa dUrupl_ reported a# the result of the transfer f )f thf* |f (’(if her
toon s. told reporter# they had made •no® ^,Tdrr Uvr Penitentiary, oc of frnn) porUmoulh Peni-
curred Monday. April 2*
Hto etitlmate of the trouble *.• vawr later a riot rtnaiaaA.. a-»n«4 1 ?•*"’*•' n
«r
n
M
.... — • — -—ui «w ">m» 'i Tha
Mounted Follre Police officials said
by
Aid Edward director of
William*.
Victoria
monag-
Housing.
to permit continuation of the talk* tomorrow
President Wiiltan^ Green of the AFL,’ 74. and President Philip Murray of the CIO, to. nerultng unmlttee# of five representative*
afternoon session
T7ie dispute concerns demand# by
cam- Augu.1 Ar‘“ «*
. ... . fhe Auembly to dl#ru*a now a de- mand for termination of the Brlttoh mandate nver Psleatine and inde- pendence for the Holy Land.
Ilighs and Lous
deflnile prngrria toward an under- standing and genuine contribution" toward solving difference#.
con-
TODAY'S FEATURES
f omtrr
t altierthow an Bridge
, Pttiicia Bay not knowing the -porting good* store# He ha* not | firepuce . two bedroom* kltehen act whereabouts of the hunter. ! the rocket and ha# no de- uum
Page 14 spotted the rtg ■ J— *
Page
dtotresa signal
, , -„rrP.. , W ■■ _ room and an-4p-
,m. «>re for per-onal gain He says U»|^de wood storage room ei-, rocket produce# no fire hasard
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heriai |
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log directly overhead and switching | welfha little, to waterproof and will on landing Ughta.
If the accident had been real, the p<r "nt rfflrlency foe three year#
The two homes are included ln a
. w contract for 50 which wa# granted ren with ion , R f „ FtbnMTJ «
plane would have radioed h># lor* Whether or not the rorkrt win he
Two Buildings Are Damaged
A tfooduhed wa* deatroyed and a garage badly damaged by Ore at 1109 McKenzie Street last night, city fire department reported Reported at II M pm. firemen mslved to the blare and MicrredCd
arty in notion Included among
700
this year The contract# were ar- ranged be tweed the city and War- time Housing Under the same ar- tn keeping the fire from spreading n. hot trained riperta on range menl 150 other similar home* and holding damage at a minimum spectator* the arwo* praired the be*t safeguard have been built for veteran# in the
past year —
to be seer
a man could have "
They returned fo the station at I 05 this morning
temlary at Kingston. Ont. and a. of the trouble a# year later a riot ringleader was killed 1 ' minor" was supported by district when struck by a bullet fired from *rt*ar raaidenta and by Royal Canadian the tower a* about 200 convict* at- Th'T'fZ
, lacked guards, tiled to bum down r « they wot lid have received rails for building# and made determined •Id If the disturbance had shown | any Indlcaflmi of becoming serious, but no #uch appeals had been made While reports reaching Winnipeg said four guards had been attacked with above la. Iron bar* and fiats i prisoner* In the stone-cutting build
mg and Ibat at ire* one had been HALIFAX. May 1 CP> city! seriously injured d»«irlct re^dent# faUv^ r„fr unanimm»ly io-
| minim tee«t the Injurre 4my Monday May M a*
Tney said a guard reported struck Queen Victoria s btniwuy mste.d iby a shovel tn the hands of a prl- of May >4. In order lo give eltlsens 1 oner actually wa* hurt »len the the benefit of a long wrek end
War
M
SI
’vrlof.
IfllM
>•
T»»'«
II
•I
#4
efforts to rush the gate#
Set Holiday % For May 26
I ttmrth Haniefer*
1 Hlfl rarrvnl
Nat
t»»hfcrwig*
C*l«»rT esmont^a I Kamlanpa _ !. _
V
l «*
u
n
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THE DAILY COLONIST, VICTORIA. BC, FRIDAY M A >
tan (i Pars
«/
or Damages
Half of IVIen in Professions Face Death by Heart Ailment
\\ FST CHESTER Fa
W Mov 1 ' v m M
Jarvis. founder of Mother* Day. op lebraied her «3rd birthday quietly to<la> at the Marshall Square Sanatorium, where she ha.* been a patient \lnce 1M3
SKIRTS . . .
SKIRTS..
SKIRTS
PRINCE RUPERT BC May 1 •CP' Pilnr» Rupert ana in the
money today with a cheque for % M3, (too received from the Prdrral Government, paid ior damage done to streets b> a heavy military vehi- cle here during the war The cocni>enftuUun had lung been awaited, an estimate ut the dam- age having been made by a cum- miaidoii in lMi>.
LONDON. May 1 <.4*1 —A Qovern- rnenl source »aid today Frlme Min- uter Htalln and Foreign Secretary Bevln agirrd at Uirlr Muacow mret- Ing to rpKuiiw talks be* ween Kuaala and Great Britain on a revUlon of the Anglo-Soviet Friendship Treaty.
The informant, who may not be Identified by name. *ald Stalin also expressed hope that Russia would have a wheal surplus after the next harvest and that Oreal Britain could get Mime if needed, probably • t a lower price than from Canada or tlie United Sin tea
Bevln, who met with Stalin during, the conference of Foreign M knitters,
that although difftcultie.-, emerged in the ulks on treaty revision, these sprang irom Russia s anxiety that Great Britain at no stage
should enter into any form of an anti-Soviet political allium r * Stalin also va.i said to have told Bevln tliat because uf the British coal shortage, Britain sllould inalcr up some of lt« urgent needs from Ruhr mines Stalin was quoted as sayutK it vu right and proper that the German people should work
harder to alleviate aucue of the sufferings they brought upon the Allies
Stalin was said Id liave remained was said to have raised the question nrni on Russian demands for rep- of treaty revision and asked 8Ui!!n | arattous Irom curreol German pro-
w hat amendment* he wanted to the; duction. but gave the definite
30- year accord. I impression that an ultimate com-
clot interfere# with blood reaching heart muscle*, and coronary occlu- sion. where the same arteries get ton narrow but mwi of the serlotu heart troubles __
Dr KiiU advised against tobacco but said a cocktail or two helps relax the arteries supplying tlie heurt AUso vine with meals should be encouraged.
By HOWARD BLAKESI.EF Associated Press Science Editor CHICAGO. May i -A*, —One out of every two men listening to him would dir of coronary heart trouble Dr Louis N. Katz, of Chicago told an audience of more than 1 000 doctors of the American College of Physicians here today Tliat would happen, he said unless something now unknown ts found to prevent such deaths ”
“And." he wiHit on.
Miss Jarvis, blind deaf and i onflned to her bed. estab- lished Mother* l»a> as a day of tribute to mothers a num- ber of years ago ’
(hi (lilies
Assembly Vote
TARTANS'
PLAIDS!
not only
is this true of the medical profes- sion, but It L true of other profea- slons and of the executives, the people upon whose intelligence the welfare of tills country depends to a large extent.
“We don't know why men suffer more than women and why 'brain- trusters' in the broadest sense with- stand this disease less than Uw* monRoi-
average male population. A Cabinet spokesman. Information
Aporently one nf the prices paid Minister Pierre Bourdan, said Ham- by an Individual becoming a pro- adier made his decision after the fessional or executive type is thatCablnrt failed to reach unanimity hts chance of succumbing to enr- on a wage-freezing policy Inau- onary disease la greatly enhanced." tru rated by Leon Blum last Decem- Coronary disease Includes not ber and contioued by Uie present
OLKAN. N Y„ May 1 i/P' -The "St. Bona venture Railroad " ts mating on U.e sci heap today— all 300 yard* ol lb- Llitis ending an era of free pusses lor Very Rev. Ttiouias Plass- man. president of St. Bona venture College.
The ••railroad" was used to Iiaul supplies* from a nearby branch line to th campus boiler room but the "dinkey'' engine t^oke down and now a truck will be used.
Father Plowman, a.* "president’' of the line, used to exchange passes with other American railroads de- dartn. “We aren t as long as other roads but we certainly can match them In width "
CHECKS!
AND PLAIN PASTLLS
Airline Radar Demonstrated
< II 1 It h D E N It I G H S II I K L. Hale*. May l 'Reuters). — Bruce, a Scottish terrier do*, like hi» famou Scutilsh nam sake has ex hibiled that “dogged doe* IL"
Almost exhausted snd with hi* paw* *ore and swollen, he arrived here after walking 3*0 miles from Kippen. Stirlingshire, Scotland, in search of his mlxlrea*.
She explained that *he often \Uited her mother here and was Invariably accompanied by Bruce. Just before Christmas she left Kippen logo is Sutherland. Scot- land, bnt as she was unable to obtain a house. Bruce was sent to the local kennels.
SUBSTANDARD
NYLONS^-
CULVER CITY Calif.. May 1 uP, — Plane Builder Howard Hughen today personally demonstrated what he said so the world'* first sue- Ceaeful application of war-developed radnr to commercial airliner*
In a test flight for newspapermen, a miniature radar device was set to flash warning* when the Con- stellation Hughe* was piloting ap- proached within 2 000 feet of terrain obstructions The range of radar pulse mechanism was reduced to 500 feet for landings
The radar device weighs leas than 16 pound*, and Hughes said It could be installed In any plane for 6130.
He plans to have these devices placed In all plane.* operated by Trans- World Airline, of which he 1* principal stockholder. In four or five weeks. It will be made available to other air lines at ooat. As soon a* air line requirements are met. he said, he will release the equipment to private flyers.
made “a great concession' by order - inquiry into the Glu'-gow
lr.g an dispute
Earlier, the Glu.*gow strikers voted 827 to 672 to eonttnur their walk out. Many abstained from voting and other* stayed away from the meeting
HUNTINGDON. Pa . May 1 <>P> — Four perrons were killed today In a train wreck involving two freights and a crack Pennsylvania railroad flyer Thirty-four were Injured, eight seriously.
A Pennsylvania railroad spokes- man nald that the New York-8t. Loula flyer, Tlie American, jolted
ON SALE TODAY
Platinum and Diamond Pin for Miss Smellie
OTTAWA. May 1 <T)%— A plati- num pin set with diamonds and fashioned In the crest of the Vic- torian Order of Nurses was one of the many farewell gifts Miss Eliza- beth Bmellle has received from grateful member* of the order ahe served so well
Tlie pin was presented to the re- tiring chief superintendent at the V.O.N. annual meeting on behulf of the order’* executive
ni new skirts awaits vamit '•election . . . Prices are right for everyone In mi
SEASIDE, Ore.. May 1 oPi-— Coun- ctlmen are puzzled by tlie legal prob- lem they will have if '•onslrucUon ol an 680.000 public auditorium is up- proved In a sjieciol May 20 election.
City ..ttumey Thocna* Chave say* an erroneous site description on the ballot puts the building In the cen' e of Edgewood Street
No 1200
now with pencil seom
council.
honorary life member* and board of governor*
During a tea yesterday at the home of Senator Norman Patterson, of Ottawa. V.O.N. President Mias Bmellle received a purse containing a gift of money from 103 VON. branches throughout the Dominion Last night Mlaa Smellle received a string of pearls and matching ear- rings from the 500 V.O.N. nurses whom ahe headed for the last 24 years.
Fish With Shovels In Flooocd River
Uole‘-n We Act. 1 In 8 Will 0>« Support th# Concer Food Send Your Contribution Todoy!
CHICAGO. May 1 W»*i— Mabel
Reynolds. 22 taid a man approached her and 'got fresh" lust as ahe
THE PA8. Man . May 1 <CP> - W*T M ‘he sharp edge* of steel Two families in Tlie Pas River through a row of sent*
Basin tonight evacuated their homes '
as the stream * water* backed up RADAR-EQUIPPED PORT by the swelling Saskatchewan River 1 LIVERPOOL, England <CP> This Into which It empties, reached out 1 port will be one of the first In the over farm land*. woHd to utilise radar on a full-
Farmerx hi the Carrot River 1 ucale bast* The equipment will Valley said roads between The p* % enable the port to remain open In and their forms will be under water |»H type* of weather and Installs- in another 24 hour* unless the water tlnn !■ expected to be completed ease* rising. next year
Peculiar conditions followed re- versal of the river. Fish jammed SYDNEY. Australia CPI — Arch- ditches and drainage canals lead- bishop H W K. Mow!], a* president »ng back to pasture land on theiof the Australian section of the opposite side of the roadway and World Council of Churches, recently men and bnya scooped them out by Issued a call to all men to Join In hand and with shovels by the hun- an effort to prevent another world dreds | war
Bristol Honors Man Viliose Voyage Started Lasting Link ^illi Canada
711 YATES STREET
native of Calgary and on authority on Western Canada history, today- told the University of Bristol the story of Cabot, who dreamed of a land beyond the Atlantic where he could gnmer the xplccs of Asia. Later on.- Maclnnes »aid. Cabot *old hi* Idea to Bristol merchants When Cabot came for his CIO from the thrifty Tudor king, the merchants seized on his reports of good fisheries, and fishing craft for hundreds of year* thereafter went from Bristol to the Canadian coast.
BRIh. .. England. May 1 <P> —This historic port, whose shop- ping district was obliterated by German bombs In 1W0. tomorrow will fly It* gayest flags In honor of John Cabot, who sailed from here May 3. 14B7, to explore the unknown North Atlantic.
Fifty-two days later the intrepid explorer landed on Cape Breton Island -and thereby earned 1 10 from King Henry VII for finding “the land of the Oreai Khan " Bristol, which wo* hammered nightly by bombers early In the war. Is using the 450th anniver- sary of Cabotl departure to relterale through It* spokesmen that association with Canada, continued through the centuries to the World War when Canadian airmen aided In Its defence, when Its port facilities handled store* of' Canadian food, and Bistro] people cheered the arrival of ship* carrying Canadian troops
Prof. Charle* H Maclnnes a
' MORE!
THIS NEW BLEND IS WONDERFUL!
n .f harries Its ijiusc Into l .S. Cocktail Lounges
PASADENA, Cal-. May 1 iAV — , "Wealth, liquor and edu Thirty-three white-haired women never made a fool of anyon of the Pasadena WCT.U^ tramping though any one of them ma< from bar to bar In the hot sun. are* a natural -bum fool a broader carrying the temperance cause right 1 and larger audience "
Into the cocktail lounge*. A fellow at the bar «ald.
They gel attention and. with few I really need a drink " exception*, they get respect. Talk was rnbdued for a fei
Their leader. Mr*. Je«le Leeland' Lh*n lhf chalt*r returr Cowle. 87. of Pasadena, a world mla- nornm* T*M‘ ,uhl“ b0*
•lonary of the Woman's Christian ®rlnd'
Temperance Union, who In her T(>d*y ^ wompn move ,nl younger ye.r* campaigned for tem- morf bar* ,n ** ,OU8her »
per a nee through Australia. New # town.
Zealand and th* South Sea I*lan(te.!~
•aid thry hope to hare their method _ _____ 4
aprrad through the United State*. 111 ■ ■" ^
“We are on a peaceful errand. ' Jm
she *ald "We appeal to your better y,
While ahe quoted BcrlpU&w fmm * < '/rw
mcm.-iy. other* nf her band all In.
their 60* or oidci bent m«r women /i > y A
on bar stool* andT'-ated at Uble
%NXM of the men went right on If
talking Damned busybodle* one /
“f plead " Mr* Cowrie be- . /
RADIO
REPAIRS
Take advantage of our modern, up - to - dote tesling equipment ond skilled radio techni- cians
Prompt, Courteous Reliable Service
Just Phone
DIAMONDS
B 4112 J. C. ROACH
HAVE The SETTING RENEWED)!
“Hey, bartender" a youth In a natty brown gnrbardlnr suit shouted, “glmmle a beer '*
A woman with a sign “Bible oi bottle T" brokr Into tears A woman at a table— a bourbon and soda be- fore her -dabbed at her eye*.
A waiter pulled the plug on a Juke box.
'■ The crusader* broke Into “Onward. Christian Boldlers." The woman at the table, still dabbing her eyes, and her girl friend sang as loudly ax anyone And they knew the words Mr*. Oowte and her follower* marched out. stopping to read a legend painted on the wall:
We will mount your valued stone <n o soyjrt. modem setting Bring in that dM -fashioned ring ond let u* sbow whot we con do
sirvici Dirr
S 1 2 YATIS STRUT
BLEND HERE!
1210 DOUGLAS ST
Af »h« Sign of ♦k* Big Clock
SIMMONS
S«€ HOUSEHOLD FINANCE
lhnusxnds of Canadians have felt Chase & Sanborn is ''tops'*. . . that it would be mighty hard to improve!
But now the makers of Chase A Sanborn have created an even finer new blend!
It’» even richer, mellower and more deeply satisfying than the coffee which has made Chase A Sanborn a Dominion-wide success!
It’a going fast— so order a pound from your grocer right away! You'll love it! You'll call it the hnest coffee you ever tasted! You'll pa«a your cup for more!
SPRING FILLED MATTRFSSF.S
You nn borrow from $20 to $1000 without endorser* at Mouse hold Finance, snd you m>< take 12 oe 15 months to rapav. Or even 20 or 24 months on loans n< larger sroonnf*.
Household tians are arranged promptly, with no delsv. )di< decide how much nwmev you need and how Inn) you w»nr to take M repay. Phone hr**, then cnote l». T rvir monev can be read* the sense Slav rmi apply.
OTTAWA. May 1 CD - Affairs ol l hr CanMilan National Rallwayi' rxprya* and telegraph were under examination by the B<«rri of Transport Commissioner* today os the railway presentation In the National freight-rate inquiry neared IU clow
T. H Martin general supertntend- •nt of traffic and transportation lExpresa) for the CNR. tokl the
Board the IlkO.nno * ear exprev rate tnrrea«rv askert by that mm pany were wsight because the ON R did not want It* freight charge* to be higher lhan eypreas tariff*
During the day the Board was fervid by c J BurrheH. associate Msriilm*- ecamael. that all tin re Marttlnie Premier* wo»ild appear at regional hearings In that area
A/EtV, //"PROVED
Sleep in Comfort.
Beautyrext MattTes***, 4' x f>' _
"C.ive to ("nttqtir r L'anrfr
COR VIEW AND DOUGLAS
THli DAILY COLONIST. VICTORIA, B C.. t RIDAY. M \Y 2. 194/
WIN YOUR FAMILY'S. PRAISE/
Plane Returns to Nanaimo Airport After Long Search
Are Shown Parks in Ai
VERSATILITY and VALUE
»t “STANDARD’
First move In a plun to liave ser- vice club* and fraternal organiza- tions sponsor development, of individual parks under the juris- diction of the Victoria -Saanich beaches and parks committee was taken (hit week when representa- tive- of ihoese groupo toured the purk-, with mnnl>eri of the com- mittee
At n luncheon meeting Wednc**- •lav. ReeVe W. C. Wnrren. Saanich, "■ho l* chairman of the committee outlined the plan and expressed the hope that the club* would con- drier p:irk development aa a cormnunlt: ervlte und that Inter-
est of groups woti’d cut down vandalism
W bridge »•••<!, representing the Fraternal Order of Eagle*. said hi* •fif'Up WUJ. definitely interested In development work at Elk Lake He MiKlieaud const ruction of a Dutch oven at Uie south end of the lake which could be used by picnic parties
Mayor Perry Oeorge pointed out the commit tee had already aet aside anme money for clearing bush and enlarging the playing field, and suKKe-sted the club put lu plan In wrltlnir so that there would be no' overlapping.
Mr Bridgrwood urged provision of better sanitary facilities ■
The Vancouver Police and 16- plece li< Ulngham Bands will prob- ably Join the May 24 celebrations here. It was announced last night by the committee.
Aid. George Miller, Vancouver.*, acting mayor, informed the com- mitter that hr was unable to tu> definitely in ihe mayor’s absence, but lu all probability the Vancou- ver band would take part in the activities. The Bellingham band has announced its intention of part IcipaUng.
Joe Mantun, Junior Chamber ol Commerce decora non committee chairman, reported that city stores were well stocked with bunting aud flags He urged businessmen and the general public to "go all out" for the evasion.
Members ol the committee said last night that the celebrations this year have every Indication of being the biggest and best In Victoria's history. It was predicted that the crowds wrtU be larger than they were on V-E Day.
Entry forms for those wishing p enter floats in the parade have been mailed, but others wishing to place an exhibit can receive their forma from the Fraternal Order of Eagles. 751 View Street.
English-Style
Prams
rersmbulai# t *>• prr- riou» earring in alyl* and T * a I cnmlort L*r#» rubber • urad a hrrla Chroma oiud- ■uardf Uraka and •term c«»*r
STANDARD FURNITURE
Cedar
-Colonial PhirU)
A Trans Canada Air Line* I’lane Is Shown Returning to the Nanaimo Airport After Taking Part in the Search for the Lockheed Lodestar Missing Since Early Tuesday Morning With 15 Persons Aboard. Efim is of Search Planes Have Been Hampered bv Poor Flying Condition* The Picture Above Shows Typical Mountainous and Rugged Area in Which the Plane Mav Have Crashed
Chests
HcsullfuUl mstehM trained « a I n U l. ■ a'rrfall dealfn Red Tennvtaer radar lin- ing Airtight leal. U>«r drawer tor •mall article*
Fen Compl About Rise In T
stating
that when his organization had a picnic last year with 2.200 children attending.
omen
' With Additional District News on Faye 17 1
Junior Chamber W ill Launch Cleans Cp Campaign an Ma \10
The Victoria Junior Chamber of Commerce is getting ail set to launch its annual “Paint-Up, Clean-Up" cam- paign. Details of the drive to be held between May 10 and May 24, were discussed yesterday at a regular luncheon meeting in the Strathcona Hotel.
Victoria will be one of several hundred Canadian cities in which the campaign will be earned out. The local drive will be supported by extensive advertising.
Special event* planned for Vic-. - ■
torlas drive are being arranged, and ,1^ for ninmi.aming proper physical
details are to be announced next U1(j mental comfort.
week, it was. reported by George, H_ r Dj,WMm an(i A D jone .
oanltury arrange- 1 mentn were practically non-exlgtent R. W. Campbell, of the Kingman Club, said he would recommend to hw UTohp thut It take over Beaver Lakr. Main development net-bed there, he said, was repair of the oad on the fur aide of the lake where bathing 1* better.
The committee ho* plans to install a new float, diving board arid ramp, Mayor George reported / Reeve Warren suggested the Kiwanla Club might take over Cadboro Huy, the Rotary Club, Gorge Park, and the Gyros and
ares
Venetian
An Increase of more than 15 per cent In taxi fares In Victoria, which carne Into effect yesterday, brought "little complaint" from customers, a survey of cnb companies showed lost night.
"Most of the customers knew It ww» coming, and no didn t complain about the new prices,'* one com- pany official said.
The increase In fares followed an announcement several weeks ago by Darylil Errett, secretary of the Greater Victoria Taxi Owners' As- sociation.
New rates have been based on a tvs tern of thirds of miles to facill- of metres on all
'Die social service department of Jubilee Hospital is seeking a num- ber of boarding homrs fn* convales. cent* and elderly patients who do not need full hospitalization in an attempt to alleviate the shortage of beds. MLss Martha McBride, head of
Support of the drive for legal- ization of hospital sweepstakes wo*, promised lart night at the monthly meeting or the Victoria Ex-Service- J women's Branch of the Canadian j Legion Mrs. Ruih Moore presided The women veterans decided to
Blinds
W# new efter Quick <1cllt#ry on til#*# beautifully 0) • <1 • aluminum *l*t blind* A guaranteed
enter s float m the May ?4
day
. There are now ten such patient* wtio could be released If they could be placed lu home* whe-f they could have washing done, and receive meals with an 'VTnslonu' breakfast in bed, it VU stated Typical of such patient.-. Miss McBride xald. whs an elderly lady who was finally admitted to hospital Imvrusc of mal- nutrition and neglect.
She stressed that until placement can be obtained for many such pa- tients, the. must be kept in hospital, a practice she termed uneconomlca1
In addition. Miss McBilde pointed out, it meant that an 111 person who really needed a hospital bed is prevented from occupying one by a person who would be better off away from hospital environment
and will operate a soft drink con- cession on Douglas 8treet that day
Mrs. Moore pointed out to tfie meeting the importance of the Red Cross campaign for blood donors and members present said the> would co-operate
A bonk drive to provide reading material for the library of the Vet- erans' Hospital shorily will be or- ganized bv the branch
STANDARD FURNITURE
tale Installatli cobs, expected sometime In June, which would lead to uniformity of charges made for all taxi trips In the area.
"Under the old system, one rate was charged for city routes, while another
ROTARY VISITORS
Eight out-of-town member;, were guests at the 1.687th regular lunch- eon meeting of the Victoria Rolory Club yesterday at the Empr«* Hotel. They were:
Dr, Olen Davidson, Kenora. Ont.; William Orant, Salmon Arm, E. E Hyndman, Prince Rupert. Robert Kenmulr, Vancouver; Robin Dick. Vancouver; B. Thomstelnson, Ver- non; J. Donald Hnyder, Staton Is- land. and H. D" Stafford. Courtenay
RAT SPEC IALIST
Fini#Ji«i> blark and #ll*#r »r geld. S(il#n>?l4 v#lu# at nnlj
Paint Up Campaign.'' are being dis- tributed to local bustneu firms. It is hoped every letter sent from these firm* will carry the stamp.
In charge of the campaign ar- angements Is Brent Murdock
higher rake came Into effect after three mile* had been traveled." one owner said last night.
Now. there Is an Initial cost of 25 cent* plus 10 cent* every third of a mile regardlew of how far the call Is "
Under the new system, a ride which cost 55 cents Wednesday would now cost 65 rent*, he added
A conference between Labor imster G. J>c nrson- W. E A Barclay,' Yarrows Paymaster and npresentntlves of Local No. 3 M. «rlnn Workers, Machinist* and RollenuakrrN Industrial Union. CCX. U being sought by T. A. Mitchell, union business agent. It was learned here yesterday.
Mr. Mltehr-ll la seeking to organize •V meeting In an effort to discus* o' lions of possible arbitration of In dispute which was settled Wed- n*Mluy In Victoria.
Beside* Mr. Mitchell. Garry Cul- hane. secretary of the Shipyard General Workers' Federation, tn ex- pected to attend the conference.
Meantime, according to a Cana- dian Press re|»ort from Vancou- ver. Sanctions on Burrard Drydock Ltd. were lifted by Local No. I of the union on the basis of settle- ment terms of the Victoria strike.
Lifting of the sanctions, involving stoppage of overtime and piece- work. hinged on "the settlement bring lived up to." officials In Van- couver were quoted as saying.
Marin* workers' officials said of- ficial word was Received from the
STANDARD- Right Through Yates to View
SCOUT CAMP
Plans have been made for the Summer camp season of the Greater Victoria Boy beaut Asso- ciation. It was announced yester- day by Freeman King, field com- missioner. It 1* expected more than tiOO Scouts will attend i sip Barn- ard In the Sookr llllls. This num- ber will consist of Scouts and Cubs.
Income I ;i\ Mai riieckin<r Forms
TO ATTEND CONVENTION
Lost minute report* on the Rotary district convention, to be held at Seattle May 4, 5, 6 and 7, were presented yesterday at a meeting of the Victoria club held at the Express Hotel
More than 60 members of the local organization will attend the parley, and all Rotary club* of Up- tsland cities will be represented.
Among hB other announcement* President Len Hobo* asked that all members support the "Conquer Cancer Campaign" now underway in the city. •
Clerks In the Income Tax office began yesterday the Job of check- ing thousands of statements turned in by last -minute taxpayers Mailed forms were still being re- ceived and If Ihe envelope was postmarked April 30 no penalty will be assessed.
However, anyone who failed to get a tax statement In the mall by mid- night April 30 will have to pay a minimum penalty of *5. There Is no exception to the rule.
MONTH'S WEATHER The month of April this year was warmer and had more sunshine and rainfall than normal, the weather- man said here last night In hi? monthly weather report.
Mean temperature for the month was 51 degree*, or two above normal, with a maximum of 74 degrees on April 16 and a minimum of 36 on Aprtl 2, with 28 the minimum on the gras* the* some day.
There was 257 Inches of rainfall, 1.37 above normal, but tills was balanced with 327 hours of sunshine, 23 hours above that usually ex- pected during Ihe month.
Total precipitation this year from January 1 to April 30 was 1283 Inches. 2 27 abovr the normal, It was reported
Benefit* of amalgamation of the four municipalities In the Victoria area were stressed last night by Forrest L Shaw, chairman of the Citizens Rehabilitation Council, be- fpre the annual dinner meeting of the Victoria Kinsmen Club In the Empress Hotel.
Mr. Shaw reviewed the history of the municipalities and said that better police, fire and other serv- ices would be obtained through union. Each municipality, he add- ed. would have various assets to contribute to the group as a whole.
"In spite of those opposed tq_the plan, os far os I can see, amalga- mation In Victoria Is Inevitable,” he said, "and should be brought about by co-operative efforts on the part of all concerned "
The Kinsmen Club Is sponsoring the presentation of a massed choir concert, made up of 400 singers from Victoria churches and choral groups, at the Bay Street Armoury May 23, tt was announced The concert will be presented In connection with the annual May 24 celebration, and will be under the direction of Frank Tupman.
CARDIFF Wales <0*1 —A cnal miner found sleeping underground when he ahould have been working was flned £2 'T8> In police court.
NAME MAY Qt LEN Elaine Paquln. of Lampsnn Birret School, La the 1847 May Queen for Eaqutmalt, according to the result* of a poll taken among fellow stu- dents at the school She will high-' light Mav festivities planned by the Esquimau Community Club Three prince*##*, Lois Vidal. Irene Rogers and Marie Klrker, were also elected, with Bonita Tyre as train bearer and Marietta Logan to carry the crown
The celebration will be held in Esquimau Memorial Fhirk. May 14.
SET ANNUAL MEETING
Annual meeting of the Victoria Real Estate Board will be held May 7 at the Qnprex* Hotel, starting at noon. It was announced yesterday by Hubert Lethoby, secretary.
Agenda for the meeting Includes the Installation of new officers and executive commute*, appointment of an auditor, receipt and adoption of anual reports, and ihe president's annual report.
/ SIT DOWH AH0 EAT \ \\Y0t/R A0HT JEMIMAS
(\M0THER! I'LL TAKE\ k\oyer THIS SHOWC
wo ( Hi i I (Iren ie in Blaze
Butter wo* selling between 44 and 46 cent* a pound yesterday la retail * terra, but wo* expected fn increase te from 54 to 56 cents a pound as new shipment* arrived to whole- salers. It was learned here yester- day.
Meantime, in the opinion of some dealers, there would be Increased shipments In the near future al the new price, following the lifting of Federal subsidies yesterday.
“I understand there will be plenty next week when shipment* arrive. ' one dealer commented. Others said Uiey had no Idea whether a more adequate supply would arrive fol- lowing the price Increase.
Tn connection with the formation of a league of housewives boycott- ing sale of producta In an effort to roll back prices of consumer «'*ods. ten women affiliated with the Victoria labor Council, (C.CJ*> yesterday marched through down- town grocery stores carrying slogans protesting against the price In- _< rrase.
Don't Pay 56 Cent* for Butter" and "Help Fight -InflaMim" were signs on several of the posters.
However, butter hungry Victorians lined up as usual for the small sup- pile* of butter I hat were on the thrive* yesterday In spite of the protesting women.
Vllfcndt hO
ibi"!'1* **’
^0f}0hn’l<
,hcy ,« P'°lt
w»x«
The Infant son and daughter of Mr and Mrs Clement Burgher, of I«Jar. near Fraser Lake In Northern were burned to
its
...Kern Ro*1'
REGUl.AK MEETING
The I an Julian National Railways Veterans' Asoclalion will hold It* regular meeting till* afternoon al 2 o'clock In the R of P llall. C*r- morani Street.
British Columbia, death when their home at Ooodwln's Camp was destroyed bv fire at 3 SO pm. Wednesday
Provincial Police headquarters here. Informed bv radio of the tragedy, was told that the bodies of the two children Shirley, aged 214 years, and Oordon, 4%— had been recovered from the ruins.
Reports to police said Mr*.
austing to b* v
uk* 11
k often, itinutn
At a business session held yester- day by the Victoria Optimist Club at the Empress Hotel, the boys' work committee was assured of support In the project of preparing the Tmnderblrd Park at Ollns I*ke for the coming Summer Orahani McCall, chairman of the club's boys' work committee, stressed the Importance of all members giv- ing their whole-hearted co-opera- tion to this work.
The club will hold It* first elec- tion meeting May 23 at the Empress Hotel
NAVAL RECRUITING The naval recruiting office on Government Street near Yates will now be open from 7 to 8 pm. on Mondays and Thursday* for those wishing to apply for entry into the naval reserve division, H.MC8. Malahat, It was reported yesterday.
Cmdr. R Jackson, commanding Malahat. report* two nights a week have been set aside for training They will ‘be Monday* and Thurs- day*. from 7 30 to 9 30 p.m Rare*, sailing trips aboard cutter* and other event* are now planned for the reservist*
MAR/HG 4907 JEMIMA FA 0C ARES IS SO EASY THAT EVER POP SHIRES.
— at in S
Member* will elect officer* for the forthcoming year R. Farrow presented a detailed account of his recent visit to Port- land. and a similar review wax given by Roy Crowley, Just returned from Vancouver
Next meeting of the club will be held Thursday at the Kmpresa Hotel, starting at noon. Oueat speaker will be Brig. John Rockingham, who will 'peak on "V-E Dav."
BREAKFAST A PROBLEM?
SF.» SCHOOL FILM Victoria High Schortl student*, in connection with their guidance pro- gram. _Jh Is week were shown a film dealing with the need for modem school building* with adequate fact-
Enjoy th e flavour 4 out of 5 choote !
You need ■ good hreakfaat for good health D*etihan# teO \m It should mrlurte at Imaat '/4 of th# ncunahment ww need dady t And your «vriv food shmild com# In taery. appetteing fnrm. Thousands rhnoa# Kellogg's Cara Flaks# arith milk and sugar Th«# famous 30 se<nod rarest
IRONIC F ATE
BATH, England «CP» - Chart** Ppurrell. 56. unable to obtain a home any other way. built one with th* aid of two brother* A* he put the finishing teorhea to the home he collapsed and died of a heart attack. The house will be void and the proceeds given to hi* widow
Packers Not Crackers
FOR SHIPMENT OR STORAGE YOUR HOUSEHOLD GOODS RECEIVE "KNOW HOW" ATTENTION
BEWARE TOXIC VAPOR*
Some Insecticide* are teolc If In- haled too freely, and it Is not ad- visable to #ter in then vapor* for long peril via Doctors also sdvlsr protection of the eve* when using sprajo.
year after year Kellogg'# ar# eotsd Sr#f for timeout and they'r# always fresh aa a dawvl Oht th# family Kaltn^g a rtOmtX
CAREFUL SINCE 1800
- 4 --
®bf Sails Colonist
fc.»t ^bht/xo •«.# jj W1j| a|| ^c nffdcd and mott, antf hercir
The Colonist Print Inf and Publishing Conn* thf opportunity ot tin- overseas Dominic Limited Liahmlv . . , .
do (heir pari In a sense tt will only o
Yr,.'vSub*cr,0"°O C'{y C‘r,'“: 5,201. | Paying an old debt
ninthly" ~. — i oo In the early days of Canadian develop
Subscription Kate* b» Mail: British money was an important latte
lo Canada British Empire United Stairs Mexico. occupying the land and developing the
tY/.f.v .»,f — '' " S4hii dustnes Colonial settlements both in
Monthly - .73 | tario and the Red River valley were lai
To All Other Countries ^ the result ol British enterprise or ol |
Monthly ' ‘ yn I anthropy such as evidenced by Lord Sell
A1! subscriptions oavablc in advance Mail sut> which resulted in first showing to the w aenhers should make all remittances direct to the possibilities of prairie settlement
1211 Broa*d sVrVrt^toh. B C Bn,,'h Co,umbl** it was the Royal Eng,.
Subacnber. m ordering chance ol address should | who laid out the firsr roads and town; hr particular to give both old and ne*fr addrr«.r« , thus speeding Colonization on the P.
Friday, May X. IM7 ,
|n addition the colonies had the protec
Nrw I'ruflhil Agrprm«*lll I ol tbc British Navy against foreign a«|
sion. and military help was often lorthc Annuun.cnKn. h« been made ol » n.w ,, WJ, lh, Bri.»b Navy ,ha. w,
aKrcrmrm ,va<hvd bt,»«n lhe m.crmun.cpal |hf (ormJuon of E i]t , nJVJ, , transportation committer and ihr joint offer- RtnumhrJn(,. ,hcst Jnd olh„
,ng von, pan, «. thr B C. L l«,r,c Company >ho(l|d ,Ilmublr nK to lbc
an, I Vancouver Island Coacl, 1 ffi«, on ,h, fw [h( Mjvo[ , m olllrt
ma,o, detail! ,n connect,™ w„h a Great,, forwJrJ Brllain ln h„ „m
Victoria transit franchise, following weeks of ,
negotiation. Several minor points remain to |
be adjusted before the formal proposals are .
laid before the four municipalities concerned. "PU’alfMl
The new plan includes several changes • By decisively defeating the proposal to sell which would appear to remove some of the the City Mall Victoria ratepayers indie objections apparent in the defeat of the yesterday that the plan as presented for i original proposals at the hands of the elec- | approval was not to their liking Rcjcc torate last December I he dollar weekly , by 1801 votes ro 1216 figures that w
pass popular with users ol present transit fa have to have been almost exactly reverse
cilihes has been conceded by the offering secure the passage of the by law may companies within the threc-and-a-half mile hr taken to mean that citizens arc not n limit, which includes Victoria City Lsqui- sarily opposed to the idea of a new civic bi mall, Oak Bay and the urban portions of mg but lhat they do not consider the pre Saanich A special fare is proposed for the the moil auspicious rime for undertaking outlying rural districts to be served a project. Only a fourth of the clq
I he proposed basic larc w ithin the urban voters took the trouble to cast a ballot, w
area remain* at 7 cents, but so does „ not i0 be commended, but which couli the provision that four tickets may be interpreted as lack of interest in the prop< purchased for 25 cents I raxufers would ! One lesson to be drawn from the resui be universal within the whole metro- the vote is that ratepayers cannot be bri poluan area, and the use of them Irom the too minutely in anv matter affecting t rural districts would be extended Routes t financial interests* Only by explaining | would be revised to provide broader coverage l posals in definite terms can the sponsor than previously proposed .According to | 4ny C)VK project hope to arouse the transportation company officials, the new f thusiasm they seek scheme would give Greater Victoria a lower ________
< structure tit™ any other my ,n Canada Elll.„.ror Hjrokilo 1 he cash payment of S' 50.000 to be made |
by the companies to the municipalities for * be forty-sixth birthday ol I mp
track removal and road construction remains | Hirohtto is reported to have passed with li as agreed upon before The percentage of • notice ,n h.s country s newspapers, tho gross revenues winch would accrue to the j was a national holiday in Japan, and n municipalities has been reduced Irom four to ' of them published his picture I h.s it three per cent, but with the stipulation that seemingly ummportant in itself, yet m. minimum payments would remain as m the I * profound change in Japanese sentirr agreement reached last year ; since the war. Before that the Emperor
T 1 IK DAILY CHI ,0X1 ST. VICTORIA. R C., 1K1DW. MAY 2. 104;
i___ ~ i
ns disaster it is gratifying to rFl HTI • I
ord Mayor of London's fund 1 ||| 1 1111 U I itgg
has risen to over $5,000,000 ^ I
rded and more and herein lies f galiittlll 7
... .1, t Vtmin inn In IViUllilllll '
In face of this disaster it is gratifying to learn that the Lord Mayor of London's fund lor flood relief has risen to over $5,000,000 It will all be needed and more an<f herein lies the opportunity of the overseas Dominion to I do their part In a sense it will only be rc i «» to si TAVLOK
I paying an old debt. I* ‘I
In the early days of Canadian development oiht a rhino rill iki.Hn British money was an important factor in We .suppose it sliould be wuh some
txcupytng tit. lend ,nd drvrlopmg the in- utpuuttot, we wwl. .
, . . . . , . topic connected with the kilt, or
dustr.es C olonial settlements both in On U|U> whlchem wa> you prrlfr to
i tario and the Red River valley were largely have it Wr «v uixed uuout throe the result of British enterprise or ol pbil uwJe ekiita bflmr. and Uiphf'a more
I anthropy such as evidenced by Lord Selkirk 4 pc-wibihiy a lot ol
. . , , people »re not Hit least bit in -
which resulted in fir* showmg to the world )n Nor >r, wr (,nxl(,u.
the possibilities of prairie settlement In [ Ula, Uua column «nuuid become a British Columbia it was the Royal Engineers vehicle for recounting .orient e»-
1 who laid out the firsr road* and townsites, (P«wnoe*. and. fiankiy. n admit . ,, D , dial old «)ldlei: can be a Tnghi-
thus speeding colonization on the 1’acilic !Jul
L oast I if ii wen-u t tliwt Victoiia u in*
In addition the colonies had the protection separably bound up with the kill I of the British Navy againsl foreign aggres |lbrou*h na Canadian Beotuah unu.
. i . , i r. i . i uol tu menuou the young unt-u >
,,on. ™d tntltury help w» often lo„h.on,. Vrha|a| IwuW ,1)r 0l
mg 1 1 wjs co I he nritish N^vy th^t w t owf Htfhlftiid diuiciuic hi Uir very a$o*
the formation of Esquimalt as a naval base m»*nt these Hue?, are written, it
! Remembrance of these and other things uiighi be that wed hesiute a bit
. . i . i i . i . _ . .1 .it mure Ilian we're dolliif However,
should help to stimulate response to the call .... , ... , ...
I . ... v , x . What were gelling at really t*
tor the Mayor s fund or any oilier agency for _1U n^m <*,, ui an Ottawa paper.
forwarding relief to Britain in her time of out it happen* to be about Uie I nerd regiment we once served with, hence
tlus maybe unnecessary preface.
I , . 'It seems that Uie Army Council
Sal«* DyO’atfil Min Britain* ha.-- )uat granted per*
, /, ,, tnlwfoti for the Highland Light In-
• By decisively defeating the proposal to sell { fMatry lo discard Uie ircw> i trouser* ! the City Mall V'ictoria ratepayers indicate^! to the uiiiuitiau-d> Utey've worn for ) vcsierday that ihe plan as presented for their | n**««r i> 140 year/ and resume wear- 1 I approval was not to their liking Rejection liscxca a stury behind
L loni nix. . U II Ul*1’ Whr,‘ w* belonged to the
by 1 80s vorev ro 1216 figures that would jHL.,, and .hn.lm, abo u> the
have to have been almost exactly reversed to pbi„ a isvontr mstilt throv.it by
secure the passage ol the by law may also other regiment* w*> mat wed had
be taken co mean that citizens arc not neves |tJ ’ K!l\ ,i,K"1 11 11 ,
. .. graceful Fpbodc or othrr away
sarily opposed to the idea of a new civic build * ,n thr dUu,nl p^(
ing but that (hey do not consider the present inverted AFFEC TION
the most auspicious nme for undertaking such J Tlioi a the -urt or inverted af- ,
I a projetu Only a fourth of the eligible lection one unit displays for un-
voters took the trouble to cast a ballot, which The Canadian Scobs had
. , i , . • i , , , '.similar brotherly feuds when they ,
is not to be commended, but which could be i re Jn Nomiandv
interpreted as lack of interest in the proposal 1 of course, the charge was a libel I One lesson to be drawn from the result of land holly rejected, sincr the truth
1 the vote is that rateoayers cannot be briefed )wa* ,l,ut because the H.L.I ais-
1 ,, . .. tingubslird itself ,. i Corunna ll was 1
too mtnut.lv tn .nv matter alien, ns then promoH,d ,0 „„ Ll|hl Dltlllim Ap.
I financial interests* Only by explaining pro- pgrmtly rhe kilt is a heavywenhfg
I posals in definite terms can rhe sponsors ol .dress- -we don i know personam
any eivit project hope to arouse rhe rn *«lhg that we never wore it— and .... thrre was nrrd In the Penhuulur '
i thusiasm they seek L™„, , ^ ..
m
that When we belonged io the H L.l , and iherdvre. also i« ihr PBI, a Uevorite insult throw it by othrr regiment* was mat we d had the kilt tiikeu uway lor lunic dls- I graceful episode or other away I bank in the distant pash INVERTED AFFECTION
Thai s the M.rl ol inverted af- | leciinri one unit displays for an- * other. Thr Canadian Scut* had 1
similar brotherly feud* when they
were In Normandy.
Of course, the charge was a libel I
was that because the H.L.I dls- I
UnguLslud itNell at Corunna It was '
promoted lo the Light Division Ap- r pgrmtly rhe kilt is a heavyweight's dress— wr doni know personalis seeing that we never wnrp It— and there was ne< d ln rhe Peninsular I Und"1 War for chaiM who could engage in 1 1 ru|1
P>9*1 nm •»»/
j~ OllHIMllioil
^ \ ^ sst 1 ^ ^ Inll.itioi.ul |r.U.»ii U14JUI Him ln>
■ • Recent tlgures showed Umi one
'lllplOMHl t.\ ll, 1,-duoJ U\ r, ii- ill, C'.'<
yvi B’1’ 'here L' lllfle use rrvlng
nhlk Some day there will
strolled «nU» a Yates Srreel garage
— i ■ MBiiiiuil I. j e merited c*n i get delivery ^ 0,1 ■ hew four*doar sedan in 34 hours? He actuallv seemed sur*
: B*r ' prised wiren two salesmen laughed.
. Oh. well, there u nowhere to park
BLOW REAL HARO. NOW" a car in town these daya," he added
hj, he left the premises it would
-■5, r . . _ - . \ '* Inie reeling u- know how much
Plan lor Anfartlic Exploration
1 ron Hill Park u going lo coal lax-
— I Payers . . Sonic day It la going lo
•h» 1931-39 however it was aurveyed One tn thr ailed Ro*a Depend* ijT * ,r“J P***aure u. spied butler from tin air by a German espcdl- cnc embracing narrow stripe of *** *nr*1 thick on a slice of
' Hon named Neu Schwa benland. lerrltorv on' br.lh sides of the Rossll',tt■', r,nr ha' 10 butter bread »n .
' ^
k. • .
BLOW REAL HARD. NOW
New British Plan for Anlarelie Exploration
»* and formally claimed by Hitler ns Sea where ihr Byrd expedition wwa
n.usi One ha to butter bre^d ao Ihln today that ll makes, no differ- V
Kni|M*ror lliroliito
The forty-sixth birthday of bmperor Mirohito is reported to have passed with little notice in his country's newspapers, though
I War for chape who could engage In : bruin" -iih im.. rsarmia.... nurlrira of « propoaed Anlarrtlc bared
a lot of f iiM skirmishing And the ^ H ,nc,udr<1 ^VPral hundrpd loriri
allotted to New Zea- |encp 11 11 sllc* Ml* on the floor.
'skirt was a drawback, or so ll was r"'" - |uniua»iHi square iniirs over wmen mere is a aenmir Ausiruiian
[supposed. Between then and the By THOMAS R HENRY ,‘he German flyers, taking off from claim to a ratlin small amount of I beginning uf the World War history Science Editor North American « seaplane lender, dropped thou- territory directly «out> of that do-
wpuld seem to indicate kilties did Newspaper Alliance *ande of Swastika flags as a basis minion
'some fax traveling when It was WASHINGTON May I —Plans *or tfrtltonal claims asserting dls- The third and by far the largest
needed, just the same In this la*ttfor onc of the moat ambitious Ant- COVPry *nd '»Plf>ration. The reporu Is the Falkland Islands Dependency
'hou>«nd quare miles over which Their is n defUdlr Australian Tiflrn at I ictoriu the German flyers, taking off from claim to a rather small amount of i
rlcnre Editor North American » seaplane tender, dropped thou- I territory directly oout> of that do- u<lf 7 f
Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON. May I -Plans
sands of Swastika flags as a bails minion
!for trmtonal claims asserting dls- The third and by far the larges
it was 4 national holiday in Japan, and none war „ you gnoWi the kilt was de- BrcUr expedmnns yet undertaken *'*rP •mon* German documents which Includes a large atrip of ter-
lt is planned (hat these proposals will be submitted for ratification by the four munici- palities of the area as soon as possible In the intervening period, publication of the agree- ment in it* entirely, together with a map of the proposed routes, will enable citizen* to itudy the proposals at leisure, and also provide opportunity for further review and comment. It may be presumed ample time will be given citizens to become familiar with all phases of the agreement before they are asked again to vote on the transportation franchise.
Older Veteran*
I he placing of older war veterans in gain- ful employment, now being undertaken a« a special phase of the activities of the Citizens
of them published his picture This item seemingiv unimportant in itself, yet marks a profound change in Japanese sentiment since the war. Before that the Lmperor was reverenced as a demi god the Son of Heaven destined to rule the world. He could not be approached without profound salaams, and when he rode through the streets every head was bowed, no one was allowed to look down on him from an upper window or from anv elevation that placed the spev tator above his head.
Though deposed Irom his high estati Mirohito is still nominally Lmperor of Japan Whether from expedience or acquies cence he seems to have adapted himself to his shorn prerogatives, and now walks, among his former subjects much like one of themselves. Although hi* course may have been forced on him. he also proved co opera tivc in making arrangements for peace and seemingly is content with democratic meas ures that place hint in the status of a const i
mode— in art ion, we mean Privately, we uned In think ll a bit peculiar that a regiment with | a Highland name ahould wear i trouser*, but we really shouldn't i have been surprised. Britain Is the 1 home of annmollfs that flourish i with elan For instance, while our j ' unit had a Highland name it was; i a Lowland regiment, and always kept company with other Lowland*!
now are bring formed ln England. il*k'*n "fl*r ,hf w*r r“°G America.
11 has been learned here While these document* have not lnc,ud,»« p»‘«ner Peninsula ;
It will be u joint HrtUsh-Nor- been made public In thU country. It ' 7*“* L',d!/v«1V “rf**'’! I!* >
wegian -Swedish project, with the 1* generally admitted that the Ger*/ Br ,Uh c"ln"‘*1 Gmce. the Palk-i, British share sponsored Jointly by man explorers did a magnificent Job 1*n,u hav,lJJ \ht ,u,u*
the Royal OengrBphlc Society and with the Inadequate means afforded ° “ nmh c" onv r'rp Brl‘lT6 i the Scot i Polar Research Institute I them at Uie Uqie. Among their dU- l»art,p* maintained diirinc i
ol Cambridge University, the world coverle*. aerordlng u> the British re- ["'J"1 of ,hp W*r *nd the latest re - centre for studies of Polar region* Port- wm »* very large area of ice- ,,rf ,>H[,y ''ow b Klflrt(uer1te Boy j
land* Uiemselve* having the otalus tr of a British colonv Here BrlMsh parties were maintained during » moat of the war. and the latest re- !* lief party now L* ut Murguertte Bay 'to
!kept company with other U>wland- Under present Platt*. ** deitribed . ' ^ ' T\7.r~'- mander Finn Ronne Ti
ers As a matter of fact Uie HI I *n the official Journal of the British Knojf coLst discovered ^ ^ fiver! ^ u inp only are. Roberts »
u officially the City of Olasgow Association for ihe Advancement of K 3 *r,tp' ,n the Untied King- \]
ZT'D' “Uh',u‘h d"n'' •* -~»ee.-^ r:l *"> s
TURNED IN I mill (.HAM s Uve wlU be that part of the Antarc- Ppdmon ”7 ^n“h> to launch « hen own mte. n ^
free land -presumably considerably ,M,"r ,hp Ampnpan CBmp of Com-
ers As a matter of fact Uir HLI 'n the official Journal of the British J?®" ,b*n the ‘°**‘*’’ nfT
TURNED IN THEIR GRAVES uvp wiu or inai part oi me aiuarr-
It was clansmen who raised both ^’nn'rwert ‘‘d Ti? mertdiwr^ , wh,ch ,h«> re*^ed only lale In ‘r,l',,ip *'T ^,ia',n ,n ,Pr* i« of the original battailous, which t.“a *ntl WMl ®* "1pr,d,»1> OIIpebnurv rtlory »<W* "‘he Colonial Jl
functioned separately ut»Ul eighty Greenwich aouUi of the *>uthern _ I Office ha* always made It clear that r»
year* ago. when they were linked “P ^ Africa Thu* it will attack thr Th« .New 8outh African „ wlI, %l welcome foreign ro- |^
together to become .he H U. The continent from exactly the opposite and 'Murtraltan Governments aim :op^rB(,on It „ ,mpfW)blf hnw^.rr S 71*t, later the 73rd. as It wm called. from Uve American naval -re considering MprdUtoru whleh (o trrnn^ c^op^rBUon £*•
was organized by a Macieod. and the P*PpdlUon lpd bv Admiral Richard may aUrt next Winter, but definite txpedllltmi wh(rh k lhWr pUru,l^
71th by a Campbell. Bi>th UieseE Byrd lhU Wlntfr WhUh P1"*1* h"Vf n0t yel hefn secret ^ until they sail "
Highland chieftains probably turned 6n the Bay of Whales south In the report of the proposed He continue* referring obviously *> !
face down in Uirlr gravt-s when nf Ncw ^p"*and joint expedlUon. written for Nature, j to uir Ronne exiiedltlon •'The/”''
their pel project berime lowly Gn moat map* this territory I* ofBrial Journal of the British asao- situation when two independent I Low lander* designated as Queen Maud Land, claUon Dr Brian Roberts, director and unco-ordinated nnertition,
uve win dc mat pari oi me niiLarr- i-_ - - — ,h»ir P„i_.
tic continent Ivtnx within 10 drarees n,*hu OVPr ,hp Schwabeiiland area ' without »n> inter- £
uc continent lying within 10 degre s ^rence from London In thl* ter- ”
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— , . , . ... . . a , to arrange co-operation between hiik from !„•
organized by a Macltod. and the P*PpdiU°n Ird bv Admiral Richard ( may .Urt next Winter, but definite expeditions which keep their plans & IT
by „ Campbell. B.>th UieseE Byrd lhU Win,er wh,ch »»*r pll,ro h,,Vf n0‘ yel hefn formu,B'pd i secret : until they sal) - ; .Ms, 1,^.,.,
llnnd chicftaliu probably turned , bn ,hp Bny ol Whales aoutli In the report of the proposed He continue* referring obviously *• in* a^irlimsh^jf! one's* Y'Be.MinT-'
down in Uirlr graves when nl Ncw ^ea*and jolm expedlUon. written lor Nature, to the Ronne expedition ‘*The. ” * ,r" ,h' h,|th' M.a *•••»
r pel projects bertime lowly Gn m»l maps thP territory Is ofBrial Journal of the British asao- situation when two Independent
On moat maps tht? territory
Rehabilitaiion Council, will of course be that tutional sovereign It is possible that as a
much easier according to the sympathetic con- ■ideration extended by employers who may be in a position to assist in fhi* way Re- port* indicate a co operative attitude on the part of many employers approached thus lar which ts probably what might be expected in a community like Victoria I o be suc- cessful the campaign to find work -for several hundreds of these ex servicemen, most of them veterans of two wars, requires thr assisi ance of all agencies able to help
Thu week a delegation waited on the < ab inet to urge that the Provincial Government absorb a number of the unemployed veteran*, and (bus assist both by precept and example The move was well advised Many changes ol personnel take place in the normal course of events in government departments, and it should not be difficult to fit some of these veterans into some of the vacancies. The »ame argument applies to the Dominion Gov eminent service and in a lesser degree to (he municipal services of this area Anv diffi- culties envisaged bs^ reaaon of age in connec- tion with pension schemes could be overcome if the will to do so was uppermost
The. unemployment of some 500 war vet- erans of^rhi* nature presents a challenge which the community should be anxious to accept A debt is owing these men who.se volunteer military service in two wars has placed them at a disadvantage in the labor market. In their ranks are many individuals with qualities of reliability and ipecial skills which should commend them to prospective employer* They have decades of useful work still ahead of them, given the chance to dem onstrate this fact. Governing bodies and in- dividual employers are invited to do all they can to assist the Rehabilitation Council to find suitable Work for the older veterans of Victoria.
Brilnin n !Nr»*«l
The mild and harmless sheep ha* always been a great factor in British sustenance in the supply of meat and clothing, but the worst Winter in 50 years ha* sorely depleted this supply. According to a statement made to the Mouse of Commons by Agricultural Minister Williams one fifth of ihe flocks has been destroyed by storms and Spring flood.
1 he floods covering 690.000 acres of farm land have also seriously reduced (he grau and grain prospeers for (he coming season ' Never in living memory, added the minister. ' Ka. narnre dealt such grave and cruel blowt."
result he may feel happier than he did when isolated from ordinary human contact by the exalted position in which he had been placed
In any event n is not likely hr will ever be called upon to return to it. and he shows good sense by adapting himself lo changed conditions Hi* change in status should do much to hasten the day when Japan may take its place among the democratic nations of the world.
Waiting
Sertnt I told my hixrtdt and wait Nor care tor uAnd or tide or >ca,
J rave no more arnnrt tin* and taie l ot what ti mine ivtll come to me
I shun all haue. I make delay *
I or u’hat mails this eager pace* l stand amid the eternal u, ays ~ T*
And achat is mine shall hnou niy ime
Asleep. oiL'ukv . by night or day I he friends I seek are' seeking me No wind can blow my bark astray Or change the path of destiny
VV hat matter though I stand alone ’
/ wait with foy the coming years M y heart shall reap where it has sown *
And garner up its fruit of tears
I he wateis know their ou’rt and draw
I he springs that rise trotn yonder height. So flows down love m perfect law Unto the soul of all delight
7 he stars tome nightly to the sky .
/ he tides come daily to the sea.
Not time, nor space, nor detp. not high Can keep my own away from nje
—Jons Burroughs
It •«a< Mart I to India not I
- uiuu.1 juui.1.1 U. Uir onu»n «MO- situation when two Indrpandmt designated a* Queen Maud Land. rj*Uon, Dr Brian Roberta, director «nd unco-nrdmated npedttiona are
men wlto went “Mcr HwQurrn ot Norway • Bui It | of Ihe 8eott InaULute atreose* that based within 300 yard* of each NUiiri*P mill SliUMPt
not without
to India not long afl/r they took never ha* been claimed formally by the British Empire ha* three .pe- -outer ij.i . , not without
up a musket and in a jungle march ‘‘6e Norwrglair* In the Winter of jclflc territorial claim* In Antarctica: ! difficulties ” a company under a reriain Captain ‘ “ — _______ - ■=-- ar — -7” —
*" . dr,.*.*. !“t ■" '*« *•*
Duvifi Baird iv xmbu iird Thu, 7- r , * favor of thl* a* hi*torlral fact l». the Prophet Jeremiah wa* ununnu*
*“t 1 1 c rjs (t di 1 0 1 ■ ^ mm rz
!. Z m .. „ , ...r :;x h-p-,
an undenrrnund dunaarm rh.in*d Ur. sad nua«n“ A vut literature and ex- thlngx to happen unlco* the people
underaiound dungn.n. chained ,darfM ^ lftt %MU, rn« m»w mbm> teruuve reaenrch are dally piling up turned to o«d Hi. nrooherier >l- , two and (wo. The epl*ode. by the of no »t,*p,ion «o •««■* annuia w ...... »»/>,,, f
minx r*i Aoiisiira and KFiierally lar because he told the truth, and accepted by most erjlightened because he prophesied nf unpleazanl
:: z zz. itudTO,i A VMt UUrmlure ,nd "• ,hin^ 10 »»ppen umw th* people
way, l« chiefly remembered by the TrxT.T
jcrtmly humorous remark of the
mother of Captain Baird’’ upon ORIGIN OF POPULATION hearing ot her son* fate1 "Lord Sir.- In today's issue Mr Pltv the ni*n that* chained to oor M Kelley dUcusm the ortgli Davie1 n/,nirla(li nl n„r HUHtarn
'LSSHSr ZT, I Ucu 40 **»? c,OM oar eyes? Why ways turned oui to be correct
not admit that Atlantean rolrmuu the other hand Ihe Prophet Jonah
peopled these hemisphere* and are
fall of Nineveh be-
‘ ‘f,e founders of the high culture we mum of tu. evil wav* bul because n
1^7. ! J. Hi Tl ftnd lr*CM p'‘)PC**ll>r »n W«Uco. ‘he king of that city heeded th- |3
,0 w M KpUp> dtoc««* the origin of the Central America. Peru and Brazil! warning. Ninevel
”TP population of our Western Heml- The growth of man U a very slow
T 'TV 2?!L*P’ *pl>prp A*i* ** the generally- nnd complicated procan*, atretohlng
I Wan TuTnrtCIS^f hTi Mr°PUd ,Plmfe °f 0r1'rt,, °l ,nJUl' “W ^ the evolution
'm'r:r ^ sMSITK"?
lh!. rt,. mJTL.' w 1 -Wn1 o#™T!2 •nd fVrn ,hlrd rice man 10 con- W we heap ale to .crept (he fact
was saved
'rn^itr! wh*n 11 ,,;'n ot ^ oonUnenla auch m AUa*iS ^ed. a* hU be.uUful c.y w^de-
mein ring f.l,u«ow nlvrr*U, popy^tlon* for our Mother Earth because of having left no (rare let ,,rny,d *nd hr *pn• blto captivity I.OWT.ANDFR.S- HIGHLANDERS w , very old lady who ha* had aev- remember Thai Mother Nature in lh*‘ bf h*d P*M m°rf *tlPnl,on ,r Wr read acme lime ogo that in eral brood* of various lypea of htt- ord-r to construct must ffrat de.-.troy Jprfm,fth °ur onlv defence today
We could save civilization today n
w-ere we to heed the many warning* • we have had but we would also need v,‘ to repent and return to Ood and H la wajr of life V
Ring Zedrkiali rnunt often have
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VnlifI Ralion Coupon*
Hu Iter— No* HJ& VO Bid tncluruve. Sugar— B49-8A0.
that he had paid more attention in WORsT TRAb»: BALANCE Jeremiah. Our onlv defence today
the new Brltuh Army set-up the manrty our present Aryan stock »nd oomeUme- for good reasoni .he ***,rul .•*om,c bomb* the tame ten Scottish infantry rwgigienia being the youngeat doe. that verv ihoronehlv M ,hBt of fhP K,MB of Nineveh.
.en nemusn inraniry regijpenu being the youngeat doe. that very thoroughly m n n
I **7 fh*n,Pd anrtind ,nU* But whereas It 1* quite likely lhat ALFRED FLEISCHER • J
| both fnoUlogglng and motor forma numbr„ of AallltlM h.rf HUIbank BC April » IM7 ' Tlritc. Il35 F
lion* Thr H U we noted with I (hf ailtJ torU, B C. Ap:
\TT .'T’TL'IJ k »-rp -hi look to /Urt a- Ihr ONLY DEFENCE %
brigaded with (he Seaforths. Oor- onl? ^(rrr „f Inigin of lhe ^ -Prrheos (, h i„ n. no ®r“" U '
dona, et al. The restoration of tire „ .11 I'rmapn uX.. in lu. Ob- lr- Ute world
kilt. then, completes the picture T.u*. <«il. North wcvaUun Car column will dub me | Z
me Highland- d^’“ h ^ ; another Jeremiah a* h* doe- s k I*
era again, which will p!*^ th, ^ burled onr on fop of labor leader at Regina. Bart in this ^CCOrOlT!
!‘had« of Macleod and Campbell _*n®,ner- morning', paper, because apparently' "
But since It wouldn't do to upsei Have We not a aiuch nearer and he fear* that atomic bomba may be'
E W ABRAHAM
DUBLIN April 24 1 Reuter* ■ Eire in 1Mb had the worst trade balarve In her history. Government flgurr»
Tlrllea •• lias Faithful Street Vtc- -howed today. DurtAg the year, torla. B C. April 20 1047 Import* were valued al 171. M3 012
URMS.MIIi while exports were Brazil l* tl * fourth largest tram orjly 1 .1* Zfl ) J DO rrnklng an adverse 17 in the world balance of C33.472J12
. veated ' another
•uin America now bein^ IF another Jeremiah a. he doe. a, A i’ll
literally burled one r>n top of labor leader at Regina. Saak In Ihla ^CCOrfling lO (*111116^8011
mn mine* n»n„ Tm-mu* ,
Never disregard what gour enemies say a>p puU 1,1,1 ■ **ztan skirt with I hey may be uvere. they may be prejudiced. ^ w ^ whltr
they may be determined to see only in one I
direction, but mil m that direction they ser XTHIOFIAN air FORCE dearly. They do not speak all the truth, but STOCKHOLM <cf» — Five civilian they generally gpeak the troth from one point p,•n€,' 14 ,hp B4l*b*Mr" typp of view: .o far 4s (hat goes attend lo (hem „„ Down to Addki Ababa bj — B R Mai DON SwrdWi instructor. They were sc - — . i — rnoipanted by five Kihlnptnn air
But f aith, fanatic Faith once wedded fast •■»<*<* **> had bren wortmt at the
-i _ , I..,. . , ‘tsab plan* to famlltarlae them- ,
1° somr dear faleehood hug, u to the last I with thr flying quality et i
— I Moorf.. me pun**
>hadcs of Macleod and Campbell , - mornmg > paper because apparently 1 «
Buf since It wouldn't dn to up— 1 n*v*« We nut • much nearer and he fear* that atomic bnmba may be'
the anomaly. Uie H LJ . for recruit- morp {lkrl* 'Otm* in the conUngnt dropped on Canada, and he wishes 11 defence on
, tnenl and suppLy. will *tlll belong of AHantU, home of the fourth race to be prepared for them West # part to defeat the game con-
to the Lowland* There* no need m*n’ T*1* scleuunc evidence In, It would be well to remember that trmrt ,n ln***'* ^l
| to wonder at such atrangr goings- South dealer
on — they work North -South rtfm
We were talking u, . member TIT ENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO NORT1
of lhe Canadian Scottwh ve.terday •* a Q |l)
in appear* that while newcomer* '** * 11 . ** M w R g ■
ire turning up fairly regularly. Bridge Expropriation— City Solicitor H 8 Pringle *u author- • 10 • a
, there t* room for many more. But (,r ,,lf Ulty Council last night to formally offer a sum of a k S
the pertinent point t. that It. the »«»«» with interest for Mrs H A Munna Inierkst In lot 113 B. wni
Kilt that'* the lure they want So expropriated by the cltr for uba in eonnectlon with Uie .pt,marne* A 0 7
out ll nn and go ou< to Dougl- °f JoKh*" *lrW* brid«P w j 7 S
Sire .-I for a swagger righf away I ' ‘ • AKQJS7
Probably an old HLI man . FIFTY YEARS AGO * J IS-
shouldn't admit It but u-rwa, _____ I antrrx
_ .. ^ Th* DaiJ« r«it»niM ml Mar X l—v nr»Uil
whether vou wear them a. an * A K J
honor of' not. don't wem to hare The (Hy-Mr J C Vnoa has again resumed management of * * _J
he pull that a tartan »klrt with ,b# '^UP',n'1 *Der a three-month trip to Europe During
-tripea baa Or t* It ihe sporran nu sheenev the hotel was under the management of Mr C J
with it* two or three white brush#* s Harrison wtio made an efficient and popular boat, and who aUo A A Q •
rrlfhl IM1 M fl
4« that goes, attend to (hem B R Mai don
But f aith, fanatic Faith. on<# wedded fast I o some dear falsehood hug' u to the last
— I Moore.
Ill ESTY-FIIE YEARS AGO
re* Dan* ceieniu »f m«* ». i.n>
■ridge Expropriation -Ol> Solicitor H 8 Pringle wa. author- ized by Ihe City Council last night to formally offer a sum of 119 000. with interest, for Mr* H A Munn * tnierkst In lot 113-B. expropriated by the cltr for use in eonnectlon with the approaches of Johnson Pfree i bridge
FIFTY YEARS AGO
'fra* n>. hall* FsleaiM af m»i * |in
The City - Mr J C Vnoa haa again resumed management of ihe Queen’. Hotel after a three -month trip to Europe During hia absence the hotel wa* under the management of Mr C J. Harrlaon who made an efficient and popular host and who aUo established himself strongly as a bualne— man tn the evU/natlon of hi* employer
SEVENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO
r-ow Ths Dali? antwa C«la*\.ai «f Mar 1 Itrj
Cariboo Fled lor. Immediately upon rerelpl of Mr Booth , resignation the Hon Ihr ftp**ker addressed hi* warrant to the Regirfrar oi the ftupremr CViirl for the Isaue of a writ for the election of a new member for Cariboo and we believe *• are rorreri pi saying lhat lh# writ ha» been .anted and l» on tu war to Cwrfboc
II required alert defence on would have been much more atleae-
Weal's part to defeat the game con- Uve Actually. West de.-lded!o con- tract In today's deal j Ilnur with diamond* Declarer
South dealer ruffed, cashed lh* ace and k'lng of
North-Bouth vulnerable .Spade* and three top duba dlscard-
NORTH * 'ns dummy's la»r diamond then l»d
• Q 19 1 I I • U'm hP,rt
, K { i ^ The average player sitting in
i Id I l West s pr— (ion would automatically
* K ft pul tn the deuce of heart* al Dn*
WFBT f.ABT point, but tills particular Wot had
* g7 J 4 a been pwting altentioir' Obrlously,
v J 7 i * A q 10 neither dummy nor declarer I .ad
• A k Q f * 7 * 7 « ] kity club* or diamond* The rtc-
4 j ll a 9 7X413 fender* had taken «»nly one trick If
de« larer had no high heart* ha
* A K J I 4 > would .Imply duck Ihla i*r*»ent lead
v ^ j } ' in dummy, and Eaat would be com-
• I ’ prlled lo return either heart, « tab-
a a Q I Ualilng the king ar another suit that
-p- . i would permit a ruff and discard.
•V uth We-,1 N r Rath— than allow thU Waat mad#
TT TT , . ,T „U, -h, h_, mm.
_ . second hand* He did not export
' ‘ P*“ P“ ^ rfflilt KMl — ouUI th.
Weat opened with the diamond ace. queen, and ten to make the i*< k king and Fact followed with the piav effe-Uve -but surely tt was three -spot Obviously, had Weal bcl'er to h*>pe f or s miracle than ahlfied to the heart Jack, tha coo- to give up
trad would have hewn defeated on A* may be seen, arte? Weal > play the spot but West could srareeiy be of ihe heart Jack, declarer was hetp- ■urt of that ar.d */ a matter of f»ct. less to avoid (he Was of three heart had he oh i f(ed •< sll, a club ohift J trvks and hi* contract
1
Til K DAILY COLONIST. X'lCTORfA, R C.. FRIDAY. MAY 2. 1047
5
Canada May ()|
si on on Palestine l nder ^ av
One Mistake Trips Swindler Fleeing With $17,400 in Grip
Ur Id, one of the raoM in o<lrm in Canada.
There were no detail* available a* to when the move might be made or particulars on ho a ti could b* carrlcdout.
(oiitrnl
OTT AWA, May I 'CP> - Prime Mm- »-nt L« Europe lo nuuninr the iutua- !*■' rr Mtukt-nzlr King i.rflay brought 'lion aiming refugee groujM and take 'he Common* up to dale on govern- slept* looking towmntt the "early, menial thinking on lmmlgraUnu and admission of come Uu>u-.ands of •aid the present policy nct-eaaarily tlielr number “
fulla into two part-* -mroAure* dc 3 An wdi.f Ui rtl..nrii jm* been -tgned for Immediate application pa^ed allowing all married relatives ann * long-term policy. of Canadian* who are admli&lble
While ho greed lh»t Canada UIU|er current regulations to bring ne. .is larger population* if ,he u U^jielr uinlUr* to Canada with them ihrive and retain her hold on a previously, thev could onlv come half-continent, the Prime Minister ..,ng,y nflrr Canadians guaranteed indicated that transportation dtffl- !n,em
eultlen prevent the Inauguration of , _ _
... 3 The government has no tnten-
• general immigration policy for ,. .
lion of revamping lie Immigration
some time and that stress. in the
refugee*
Tl.es, announcement* were liner- * T,M* ««venunent also lnteiwL to «pen,ed through ht* statement b7 * wartime promise that no
I Immigration officer* are being P,*l*‘,r Japanese immigration
OTTAWA, May 1 <P> -The Do- minion Government probably soon wUJ uke over and operate Vancou- ver'/ huge civic airport on Sea In- land whlrh al present u under the Jurisdiction of a manager api*olnted the city.
Report* to that effect have been current in Ottawa and when Re- ennst ruction Minuter Howe was questio ed of these tonight he re- plied without elaboration: ‘flicy haven't been denied "
Thu* the minister lent strength to the belief that Federal authorities
perpetrator of a >17,000 bank twindlc, one of the largest lu Can- ada in recent yean, bursting hi* long-planned dreum of occluded life retirement— and all because he made one mistake
Less than an nour after four Ot- tawa banks reported they each had availed worthless rheque* for *4 350 Ottawa detectives dashed by car to the little railway station of Van Ont.. 35 mile* amithwe'i of here.
There they arrested a well-dressed, elderly man as he looked at his watch, awaiting to board a Mont- real-bound train that. wo* due In a few minute* In a satchel belonging to the man. police said they found >17,400 In cash, and in hu pockets two cheque... one for >4 500. Uke the one* that had been cashed In Ot- tawa and mother for >3.500 And from the man thev got an nmaslng story.
Booked at the County Jail lomght on charges of obtaining money by false pretences — namely cashing worthies* cheque* was Lucius A Partnalee. 5R-year-old former bank employee. He will appear trt police court for preliminary hearing to- morrow.
Police described the swindle a* one ot the most bold-faced In their es- Creek I ixrlence. and one that might have Grand h*-en successful had not the man , >4:#, • made the mi/takr of taking a taxi out of town That was the way they, traced him to Van, arriving Just In' time.
He told them planned vo go to Nova flcoila and retire wITlrTTir' ,monev. And he. told them much more, how hr had planned the swindle For montlis, how he would operate and the method of escape The man cashed the cheques with such a confident air that teller* never quest toned the rheque*. drawn on u firm at Waterloo. CJue . where officer* Mild the man had been liv- ing. He posed as treasurer of the
When the swindle alarm was raised by downtown branches of the Royal Hank of Canada, the Do- minion Bank, the Bank of Montreal and the Bank of Toronto police learned a man answering the de- scription had gone to Van by taxi Detectives raced there in a police car and saw in the nation a man who fitted the description given by thr banks
Detective Sergeant Charles Cavan said: “I identified myself as from the Ottawa Police Department, and when we began to search him the man said,
All right, you've got the man you're looking for.’ or some- thing like that.
"In one of hu bag* we found the cash In bills not over >100, and he aald It aras all there. Irt the other he had some extra clothing The man didn't resist, and on the way back to Ottawa In the police car. Sergeant Cavan aald he "told us how he had planned It. He was going to take the Montreal-bound train, but was going to get off al some wnall nation then take another taxi and another train " “Being a bank employee once him- self. he knew all about the banka." one detecUve said. "If he hadn't
GIFTS ond CARDS
SUMP'N
TO
CROW
ABOUT
GRADUATE
NURSE
SENATOR Warren R Austin jwr- maneni representative to the United Nation* for the United States, wishes Brazil'* Dr Oswald Aranhu, right, luck as he take* over his new position of President of the United Nations special aasembly sea-
WE PAY ^
CASH
FOR
EMPTY
BEER and WHISKY
BOTTLES
Ma.lk her day with on appropriate rord of congratulation ond good w.vhe* for *uccet» Or choose a gitt from our big stock of sou- venirs and noveh.es
• Oir.COMI*M— !»’• MU U iU»‘b ■ ili> Uulb , . , iMlkw •*»«» 1- liar •«•*! P'rk 0 ap
OTTAWA. May 1 fCF.-The Com- mon* today gave third reading to: the Government's main control bill.* the last of the emergency legislation1 submitted for approval at thla ses- sion
The bilL made up of some eight cause* and 57 order* In council, now'
One New Island Finn Inel tided In 34 Registered During Week
GOVT.
*1.
PACIFIC BOTTLE EXCHANGE 1U6 Government Street
Woodward Btores • ll*47i Ltd., capi- talized at >15.0oq.O00 in Vancouver, headed a list of 34 company incor- porations «i the LegiMaUve Build- in** for the week ended yesterday.
Only new registration on Vancou- ver Island w at that o< Albemi iron Works Ltd.. *10.000, Port AJUerni.
Tile weeks total brought to 131 the number of uew company regis- tration* in April, compared with 13* in tlie corresponding month last year. Total for the firs four month* of the year Is 406. as against 636 last year
Other incorporation, during the week were.
From Vancouver— Main Taxi Ltd., >10,000 Pacific Rralt; Co Ltd . >10,- 000. Anglo Fas) Uons Ltd., *25,000; Cheng Ltd . *10,000; Bunnysldr Saw- milla Ltd.. *10.000; Hart A Howes Ltd.. *35.000: Mining Resources Ltd , *250.000; Hedif) Gordon Gold Mint* Ltd , non -personal liability. 3.000.- 000 share*, no par value. Fraser Glass Co. Ltd.. *25,000. Consumer* Finance Corporation Ltd , *10.000. Kiddle Kone Shops Ltd., *10.000; Fortin Apartments Ltd., *30.000; South Hill Publishers LU... *30.000; Pacific Marine Supplies Ltd, >10.- 000: Continental Investment Cor- poration Ltd . *50.000. Albion Lumber & MUlwork Co. lid , *125.000; Ful- ford Lumbar Cn Ltd >75 000; Lynn Gravel Co Ltd. *25.000; Kaglecrest Estates Ltd . *50.000; Thompson dr Co 8heet Metal Ltd.. *10.000; Med o-Vale Estates Ltd.. 100 shares, no
par value. Well:., MorrUey Lumber Co Ltd , >10.000.
Fnrta; CltT Bits Service Ltd 000. Trail; Midway Moiorw Ltd . *35.- 000. White Rnck ; Strut her* Stores Ltd.. *25.000. PlU Meadows; Baker Slgas Ltd . *10,000. Jacques Holdings {Ltd, >10.000. and William Garage Ltd >10,000 Vernon
Onlv extra- provincial regt-vtrauou 1 wa> that oi The Canada Printing Ink Co. Ltd.. *60.000. with head of- fice in Toronto and head British Columbia office m Vancouver.
Registered under the Societies Act were Citizen* Rehabilitation Coun- cil of Grenier Victoria. Victoria The Coquitlam A Fraser Mills Ath- letic Association, New Westminster ; Council for Guidance of Handi- capped. Woodworkers'’ Educational Association, and Vancouver Police Pistol Club. Vancouver
TONS OF JADE STOLEN SEATTLE. May 1 <JP
The theft of more than 10,000 pounds of Jade. bgliemL 1'.' be the largest bulk amount in the United States, from a Seattle storage lot was reported today by the Arctic Circle Explora- tion Company. Officials aald Un- lade. in boulders ranging from 200 to 1.500 pounds each, is valued at between >25.000 mod >30.000. Mined along thr Koluk River in the north- ern part of Alaska's Seward Penin- sula. the Jade was brought to Se- attle last November
COAT SUIT
No Ixchangqs
CASH OR DEPOSIT ONLY
A smart cosual coot for school, business or every doy weor, 4 dj
Drasticolly reduced to I ■ aod 1 w
Two ranges, mony styles •
Reg 29 50 -I 1
ond 22 50. - 1 ° ond I ^
Silk frocks, most of them I 1.90. "T89
To clear at one price ■
SHAWNIGAN
REACH HOTEL
NOW OPEN
Dresses
New Saskatchewan Act On tlaics Discrimination
DICK'S DRESS SHOPPE
VANCOUVER May 1 • <G»>.— Higher lumber ro»ta have bnonted the price of the a'vrrngr flve-room home anywhere from *250 to *350 builder* reported here today.
Lumber price boosts were an- nounced at Ottawa last night, rang- ing from $12 to *26 a thousand feet board measure.
Mlllmen said Increased supplies would be available for home build- era, but contractor* showed little enthusiasm.
“This increase, along with all other advancing labor and material coats, puts a new home out of range of mast people with small Income*." said Norman Hullah, a contractor.
ON BEAUTIFUL SHAWNIGAN LAKE " ft'* tk* Air"
Phone Cobble Hill 48
PHONE E 7552
1324 DOUGLAS STREET
REGINA. May 1 vCP) .-Acts ol duaiinmatton on rcllgtoua. racial or color ground* are criminal offences under a Soskatrhewan law which earner, Into effect today.
'nie "BUI of Right*," introduced by C CJ*. Government at the last ses-l *.i>n of the Legislature and named | b\ Attorney -General J. W. Corman who piloted the bill. Is drslgnrdi ■ within the limited, jurisdiction of j Uie province to give some real pro-' tectum to civil libertie*.."
The bUl re-afflrm* certain basic , freedoms including those of speech. | woralup, trial and association
Peatm » of the law passed by f’anada s only Socialist Government and regarded as Innovations, Include Uioae providing that every person.! IrrespecUte o! race, creed, religion. I color and ethnic or national group, •nail enjoy the right Lo own and occupy property, or aoceaa to public places, hotels, restaurants and Lhc- aliea; to lembershlp in professional and trade organization*, and to edu- ratlon and enrollment in schools and ifttiveraUle*.
A maximum fine oi 1200 or a Jalli sentence may be Imposed on anyone who publishes, display* or broad- casts any tiling which might deprive or restrlei enjoyment of such rlghlS( or In any other way does so Although passed unanimously m the 56-seat legislature where Uie CC’F ha* 47 member*, the Opposi- tion described the bill os “window
dressing," claiming that It gave no new rights They were unsuccessful in attempts to amend the bill so that it might Include "protection to free enterprise "
The 5»-year-old Attorney -General ■aid in outlining the alms of the law. that Saskatchewan— whe£ 33 dif- ferent races are represented in the population of 823.000 U as free from religious discrimination as any rrovmce
He added, however, that alarm Is fell by all freedom-loving Cana- dian* over the order* In council de- porting and denationalizing British subject Japanese, the disregard ot established legal practice tn the espionage rases; the religious per- secution of Jehovah’s Wlr eases in Quebec and by our treatment in Canada of our war allies, the Chinese "
Mr. Corman cited the case of a Saskatchewan veteran who riaifned he had been refused employment be- cause he was not of Anglo-Saxon
What Else
ALet Me Think Was There I Needed From
1 1 II II I II A 1 1 A Al O O 7 7
Mi** Donnie Rix't School of Dancing
_ Formerly
Mis? Virairoo Ryan's School of Music and Dancing
Miis Rt», o Pupil of Mr j Dorothy Wilson, Will Conduct Leworn in Bohef. Chorocter, Tap, Aerobotic and Ballroom Dancing Private or Clow Lesson* May Be Arranged Instruction in Stoge ond Floor Show Technique
73* FORT STRICT. VICTORIA. * C PHONE E o*21
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Mead's Oleum Percomorphum. Mead's Oleum Percomorphum. Drisdol Liquid. 5-c <
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Reid's Milk ot Magnesia. |h ox
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• BABY COMFORT
How Does Christian Science Heal?
Owners of Steam Boilers and Pressure v«**rU which havr not heretofore heen in»perird uhder ihe "Boiler Inspection Act, ‘ are reruyired to report umr tn the Chief Inspector of Boiler* on or before June .10. I'M".
The foregoing refer* particularly to but water heating boiler* and hot water nipplv boiler* with a beating surface of ^over .1ft square feet need in an mduMry within the scope of the Work men's Compen*atiou Act.
CfHIEF INSPECTOR OF BOIt.F.RS AND MACHINKRY 411 Dtinsmuir Street, Vancouver, R C.
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Residents of Esquimalt
The Esquitnalt Taxi lu* at all times endeav- ored to give you the very l*cst in Taxi service We keep our new cars in the very best of con- dition.
Our insurance coverage is complete, fully pro terting our passeng-er*.
\\ e employ < *n I \ the finest t> pc of driver, clean, alert and courtenm at all times.
In order to m. tint. tin a high standard of service and first -class drivers we are making a small ugward revision in onr rates Our drivers will benefit torn this increase in the form of higher wages.
For safe, economical transportation telephone
FREE LECTURE
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CHRISTIAN SCIENCE THE SCIENCE OF CHRIST
Comforting and « o o t h i a g. Apply ireely to baby's »km to relieve fhifinj
By DR. HENDRIK J. DE LANGE, C.S.B
Of New York City
WembeV'tSf the Board of Lecture -hip of The M<: Church, The Pint Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston. Mass.
FRIDAY, MAY 2, 8 P.M.
in YORK THEATRE
E 4717
The Esquimalt Taxi
A mild la* stive for baby. A a antacid Ir* dig»itiy* np«#t m ycmngvtert.
Firat Chareh of Christ, Scientist of Victoria B C
CORDIALLY IS VI IT 5 YOt.!
1351 ESQUIMALT ROAD
4Lmm
Guard Those You Love
To Conquer Cancer
1 DIRECT fWfNGLANP
1105 GOVfRNMtNT ST » G 7 33
FRIDAY, MAY
THE DAILY COLONIST. VICTORIA. BC
ley, divisional oftHMnl»k>Wf Rev.
Girl (iuitlc Notes
Absent*
Jubilee Hospital Graduating Class Reeeives Diplomas
WUlinra Hill* led the
Societies
gruup in pravtix. Mr*. P M MacNaugnton. president, members of Central dla- trlct local association togrUier with the parent* of the Brownies were present
CENTRAL DISTRICT
W .B A No. I a ill meet In the Qn under the IcadenlUp
K of P Hall. Cormorant Blreel. oo of Mr*. Owen Oowa-d. th« enroll- Munday at 8 pm. men. of the fiat Brownie*. 6T the
. . . 1 3rd Central Brownw Pack was he.d
The Afternoon Branch ol St Sav- at her home Woodland.- Mr;, W lour'* WA. will meet In the guild's. teunerton. dlMxIct omraLvMonrr ... . , .. conducted :he enrollment, and a
„,oa. »n Mondljr .t 2 SO p m „,k „„ „v„, ,,y Mr, p w MWsy.
Rockland Park W.C.T.U. will meet at the home of Mr*. N. Philips. 2595 Cook Street, on Monday at 2 30 p m
Personal
Mrs P R Porrltt was a tra- hoatry Wednesday afternoon at the Chrrrv Bank Hotel
the Board of Directors of the Hos- pital were made by Dr Beckett to MLvt Anrut Peden which 1* givrn to the student In her Junior year who stands highest in theoretical work; Miss Hrlt-n Keimer. awarded to the student In her Intermediate year with the highest standing In practical work and Miss Marjorie Kembef awarded to the graduate other than the one who receives the Robert ti and Patience Dnv Mem- orial Scholarship," who attains the highest number of marks In the Provincial examinations.
Miss Norpen Talt was awarded the scholarship presented by the British Columbia Cement Company to the itudent .f the graduating class who stand* highest In theore- tical work Presentation of the Royal Jubilee Hospital Alumnae scholarship of 1250 was made to Ml Margaret Bawden by Miss Margaret Pearl Barbour. R N. 'Hie bur* ary which Is presented by the Jubilee Hospital Alumnae to the student nurse completing the best case study was won by Miss Isabel McKay,
Dempsey was
The flower-banked platform of Mrst Untied Church was the setting lu-.t evening for the Royal Jubilee Hospital graduating close of 1947 who received Vhrlr diplomas and badge- signifying entrance us fully qualified members in the nursing
GARDEN Ol EDEN
Canals from a Euphrates .dam now irrigate the supposed site of (lie Garden of Eden In Iraq
Evening Branch of Si J olio's W A will be held in the guild room on Tuesday at 8 p m.
GRENIER WHITE SATIN
/V//ifiV (winllrs
In 5emi-step-in style iB5
with detachable garters. “
The W.A. to the 8ooke Branch. No. 54, Canadian Legion, Will meet In the Legion Hall. Monday at 8 p m.
Letter* of thanks were reud re- garding work done at Mount 8t Mary and for clothing sent to Preach families when Zet* Chapter, 'Beta Sigma Phi. met recently Eve* [lyn Monks, a aororlty sister from Vancouver, was welcomed by the president Tlir cultural program
p.fiy-one young women in crisp, starched white, each .carrying a' bouquet of red and white carnations, made u striking picture to the au-, dunce of relatives and friends who filled the church. Applause greeted no h nurse as the made her way to tin* front of the platform to receive' hrr diploma from Dr. T W Walker, retired superintendent of the hoe- plUi. and her badge from Mlw A. P. Mdchell, R.N . director of nursing. Royal Jubilee Hospital. Dr. Murley B Beckett, superintendent of the hospital, gave the introduction of graduating claw*.
Mr. O. H Btevi-ns, president ol thi- hospital, who opened Uu* pro- gram. spoke of the desirability of urging young women to take up nursing as their profession, stressing till improved conditions of training with regard to remuneration, hours ol employment, and holidays Hr said that the nuralng profession now compares favorably with other work open to women.
Rev Hugh A Mt Leod. D.D. rend the Invocation, following which Mr John nray sang two solos.
Dr. Norman A MrR. Mackenzie.
of the University of
Mr. and Mrs. T If, Boyle, of Regina, are spending a lew week* in the city, and arr guests at the Empress Hotel
Rear Admiral E Rollo MaUiguy OBE, R.C.N.. and Mrs Valnguy entertained at dinner at Admiral's House last evening
The Woman's Auxiliary, Prince Edward Branch. No VI. Canadian Legion, will meet at the home of Mrs. Henry Pike. MilLrtmim iload. Langford, Tuesday at 8 pm
l ine Program Presented Itv Schubert (dub
fr/rtearieT-/ SfOUff
oTe*. t l
& FUR STORAGE
5? HEADQUARTERS
Mr and Mrs C W Stephens, ol Winnipeg, arrived In the rll . yes- terday to visit the latter's parents. Mr and Mrs. Hubert Lcthaby.. 79 Wellington Avenue
Muts Elisabeth awarded the bursary presented by the Victoria Chapter of the British Columbia Registered Nurses' As- the member of the displaying out- qualities of leadership.
The Schubert Club was heard In a splendid recital Tuesday evening at Oak Bay United Church, under the direction of Frederic KUrg The assisting o/itsLs were Ralph Mr Adam, baritone: Terence Shaw violinist, accompanied by Dorothy Prancls, and Francis Stevenson, or-
Mr. and Mrs. A S. Hleakney and Mr;. Russell Stuart arc leaving shortly for Toronto and Ottawa, to
during
noclatlon to graduating class standing
presentation of which wa* made by Miss Marjorie Baird. RN president of the Registered Nurses' Associa- tion.
FIFTY -ONE NURSES RECEIVE DIPLOMAS Vancouver Island nurses gradu- ating In the 1947 class Included- Mona Mlgnonne Bolton. Viola Birch Anderton. Phyllis Muriel Anthony. Gladys Marguerite Barnes. Mar- jorie Victoria BralUi walls. Doreen
Maude
visit friend* and relative? the Summer
Mr McAdum. wno ponses.*, <a a strong baritone voice, was especially good In Tschalkowsky’ • Pilgrim's Song " Hi* encore was "Through the Years " Terence Shaw, a gifted young violinist, gave a beautiful rendering of three solus and for an encore the haunlingly lovely "Schon Rusmarin" 'Fritz Kreteleri. Mr. Steveiyion'a numbers were warmly applauded, notably the beautiful "Melodic' ' 'Colerldg Taylor)
The choir gave well contrasted groups: "Softly Fall the Shades of Evening.'" "The Butterfly," "Hush Song,” "The Green Cathedral,"
I' 1 1<- furs arc fU<ckiit£ t«< lilt- coi»T comfort and safety of our storage vaults. I lore no ninths can reach them, no thief can touch them, no tire can dry troy them. Your furs need and deserve this Sum- mer protection. The cost is little Tiring them to flu* store.
president
BriUsh Columbia, gave an inspiring address In which V pointed otil the many difficulties facing the young graduate* *x they step Inin the world. He cited the unsettled inter- national conditions,
Seaward
MR and Mrs W L. Irving with their little daughter. Susan, recently arrived in the city by plane from Stranraer, Scotland, and while here will stay with Mr* Irving's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Drew, 631 Harbinger Avenue Mr* Irving, the former Phyllis Drew, is vlsillng the city after an absence of eight
yean. She Is a graduate of the Royal Columbian Hospital, New Westminster, and In 1939 went to India where she was attached to the A.I.N.SR. Mr. Irving served in India with the Royal Engineers where he was In charge of transpor- tation in India and Burma and later In Germany In 1945.
Capt J. C. 1 Edwards and oi- flcera, of H M.CS. Naden are holding a dance In the wardroom tonight. Capt. V S Godfrey, chief of staff, Pacific Coast and Cmdr. E P Tis- dale. execuUve officer, H.M.C Dock- yard will be among t*iw iroMb
pointing out tha' with the discovery of the atom bomb mankind has created a weapon for complete destruction Dr Mackenzie told the graduate? that more happiness 1* gained for those who give unselfishly of them- «riy- for the benefit of mankind, and that through the profession they have churn. such service is upper- most in their duties.
Mayor Percy E. George brought the greeting* of the Victoria Coun- cil and city to the graduating class. AWARDS MADE TO HIGHEST STUDENTS The twenty-fifth Robert S. and Pul lance Dav Memorial Keholarshtp was awarded to Mis* Laura Mc- Donald. of Cnrnduff. Bask., by Mr. W. S. Day.
Three scholarships presented by
Victoria Burnett. Shirley Clark. Daphne Mae Dean. Elizabeth Hunter Dempsey, Joan H i e t Denison, Elizabeth Jean ButOm and
Capital City Temple, No. 35, Py- thian Sisters, will hold a Mother's Day meeting on May 6 In the K of P. Hull. Cormorant Street, at 8 p.m A short business meeting will be followed by a card game and re- freshments.
of Victoria: Annie Sarah Dwmcry. Port Albemi; Vera Shirley East- man. Chemalnus; Mildred Staver- man, Langford: Myrtle Isabel
Norma Thorpe. Duncan: Yrsa InRa Fredrlka Predin, Royal Oak, and Hazel Nnrrrn Talt, Nannimo.
Nurses from other point* In Brit- ish Columbia were: Betty Mane Black and Raphael Catalano. Pen- ticton: Dorleen Bradford, Peach- land. Jean Stella Cann. Nakusp. Carol Edna Hooper. Salmon Arm. Frederica Mary Lyon. Jean Helen Brydon and Shirley Elliaoeth Rennie, Kelowna; Patricia Louise
von. Saak., and Laura May Me Donald. Curnduff, Bask.
1 McClymont and Olga Mathilda 'Saltier, Prince Rupert; Verna May Blackwell. Beryl Mae Calblck and Alice Carolina Perdue. Nelson; Catherine Esther Campbell. Doris Joyce Cromble and Esther Betty
hiirt II prilling
i p
it First l niteri
A quiet wedding took place In the United Church on
Market" anJ "Homing The club accnmpunist, Margaret Darvtll gave adequate background.
Following the recital, refresh- ments were served from a prettily decorated table Dr McPherson thanked the choir and artists for an excellent program. Mr*. Eileen Shears, club president, responded.
After a honeymoon in Vancouver. Mr. md Mr*. Towers will reside a> 2909 Richmond Road
Garrison, Trail; Doris Rublna Plrth, Michel; Elva Annie Agnes Hughes. New Westminster; Jessie Llm. Athalmer.
Others from points outside Bril- Uh Columbia were: Mildred Mary Becker, Moose Jaw. 8a* k ; Anne Irene C. Phillip* and Maxine Rich
vestry of Firs:
Wednesday evening when Rev. HughjUpan McLeod officiated at the marriage Medl of Mrs Margaret Caldwell. 2809 Turn Richmond Road, and Mr. Robert Ing h Towers of Victoria j A. Si
A pearl grey suit with navy acces-i .sorlrs and corsage of sweetheart rose* t r(,tu*r and Illy of the valley was chosen by|]nnd the bride, while Mrs. F. Fuller Mn matron of honor, wore a tourquoisc cnue
Mother’s Dav Tea
Todays Pattern
ASK ABOUT OUR
PERSONALIZED BUDGET PLAN
REPAIR SERVICE
• I - HE Ladles' Auxiliary to the Fra- I terns! Order of Eagles. Aerie No. 12. Is holding Its annual Mother'* Day tea on Wednesday at 751 View Street The affair will be opened at 1 30 p.m. by Mrs Flora Levy, the lodge, and Mrs.
mother
Eleanor Thomas, president, will pre- side at the tea table A large cake decorated in lodge colors will centre the guest table and will be cut by* Mrs. Levy. Mrs. E P Cooper, gen- eral convener, will be aaslslrd by Mrs. E, Harris,
— 1NO INTEREST
* ^ CARRYING
YATES 1^*0 CHARGES
QUALITY IS HERE TO STAY"
ALL MAKES WRINGERS AND
WASHING MACHINES WRINGER' ROLLS IN STOCK
Wvber,
Mrs. M Brown. Mrs. T. Brundson. Mr*. M. Hallam. Mrs. F Wrlgley. Mr*. D Dftlxiel nnd Mr* G Ken- nedy A program of dancing and singing will be presented during the afternoon.
Encasements
LADIES'
Raincoats — Camel Hairs and Harris Tweeds Tailored Suits
A LARGE SELECTION OF SCOTCH SWEATERS
MRS. E. f. COOPER
Murray. Medicine Hat, Alta Olive Marie Wlndh. Jasper, Aha ; Joan Elisabeth Broadhurst Berwyn. Alla ; Ruby May Hall. Dldsbury. Alta ; Thelma Marie Duthle, Calgary ; and Clark, Enid
We iv ill Kinds— New ainl Comfortable
Last year we wouldn't dare say, “Come and take your pick." But selections are complete NOW. and we hope you’ll come early, so that you get what you’ve waited for.
Vivian Mary EUeen May Twldale. Meadow Lake Sask.: Yvonne Merle Yeates. Indian Head. Bask ; Victoria Zabolotny. Ardlll, Bask.; Velma Kathleen Bell. Dona-
Mr. and Mr*. H. Norris. 556 To- ronto Street, Victoria, wish to an- nounce the engagement of their eldest daughter. Joyce Ivry, to Mr Svend Raamusson. of Portland. Ore The wedding will take place at 8t John’* Church. May 28. at B:SQ pm
WROUGHT IRON DINETTE SUITE
MARIAN MARTIN
♦ You'll be smart from dawn !o dark In lhl< stepped-up ahl rtf rock 1 Paltern 9014 cuts *lrrvf* n new way and add* huge pockets to your favorite classic Attention -getting!
• This pattern gives perfect fit. t* easy to UN, Complete Ulust rated
Announ«-ir,-r,u is si>p*«r under UU* h*»<Jln* »lll fc- *| Th«
Cnlenut Advert Utr.| Department Min- imum II to for in llnv* and
l*e tor *»rff addHtnnat J!r*
Thi* t* iu*i one ol the many groups and single pieces to show you why decorators choose it for both indoor and outdoor rooms. The table seals six and has a heavy glass lop. The very pretty chlfrs are upholstered in waterproof fabrics, and you can, if you Wish, put two tables together for more seat- ing spare. Amaringlv rea- sonable in price, it will Iasi for years *91 ?°0
Seven pieces fc I t
th# greatest
Wumleriul selection, - All
Improvement
"hade* and widths
•ver created In lipstick!
GARDEN FURNITURE
■ i aura m airra math sis- I4"*J4".
Trie-, —h .. -
New Soapless VEL
Cleans Without Suds
by Frances Thompson noted homemaking authority ml
ai.cuMNo aui i ha ia I -Ilk »»<••-» 1*4 f— l-r—t.
ImI
rm.mxr. tutnrv tani.i wsn# tu»i «»i» to« um. •in**''
b«k -y- ■ V
Most wnmen hare always looked in lh*> suda m snap for Ha cleaning power Now. however, a new and revo- lutionary w*apHes cleaner lias been dweovered whirh clean* without defending u|v>e» m»<U. At the met of over one million dollars enaplcve VEL
BDRPRMINCL! NO SUDS REQUIRED *LEJ
Snaples* VEL makes plenty o t .
m**l* but the suda are anoe.e«arT rWnr*wnt.n» U< the -Irani i, g acii. n Infn tVl I. | . fi
cleaning pow, ooUnua. long after ,x7 ™
the su>U diw»lv- Another notire-
al.U different from soap m ih the Q ^
acunn Of \M. on water. ^-P ^ rp-irh|in<
eomh,nee w.th waler to make * 1m>v^
eliutdy miilrv -white *ntuti*m- when r , . .
VEL rod. r&wdve. the wa.er ia Mt ^Sian M clear aa •• -ft water in a nun barrel
V |.L make- the water act w»ft, too 1 - u - f-,.. . As a result wm plamlv ree how m*v-h
mve ami grims Vgt. remove. COtCATl fklMOll
\LL PLUS
1400
GOVERNMENT ST
THE DAILY COLONIST. VICTORIA. PC. FRIDAY MAY 2 1047
bottle
Large
buttle
inve#*i in the
Vinegar
D 1 Cm *1 III /I ml* I jKana. pre« rall*nr m«mben MM1| Eaci> of the toiiMn wore a cor-
niivers ^trikp I hms IPiitliiirn rrirej 1%^ i^toiqunoiwhu, gardmu*,^
I J ft Ctir*nt*P%' Recelvlug the gue.'ta were Mrs. J gift of Veterans’ Minuter Mnr-
A It/I ■ ■ • • FI I *■'*'* :L LLslpy, wife trf the Minister al Knuie sent from hi* native UntUh
At \| ll«|X \|lklkt||IO III I *||"L ' irrr A W A May 1 «f*» All the ’uaticr drrnsea in biavk Chilian and Columbia
y 111 1 dill j (Umour of prewar >•"•»» vu revived ( lac*, and Mrs C D. Howe wile ol
. * . . _ * v „ . „ , " _ last night for thr annual Cabinet the ReconhirucUon Minuter, who, Florence Nightingale Chanter,
, P[^Jl "° 'UTUt> *ho wco#,U/* I mlnUteiV wive, reception in the wore a while satin .own Mr* Jam* lODE. wlU meet at headquarter,
buyer.- strike denned to force ,e- Labor Day m September were pres Parl|fl,n„,, Bulld|n|W> gt.endfd by Oairi.ner. wife of the Minister of on Monday at 3 pm. Members -re
ie uni i rpl* prUea o co,n 'i>t in the parade. more than 1.400 guests Including Agriculture, a-ore a beige crepe cos- reminded lo bring donations fur the
^tlea acre ouUlned ytlerday b, 8**ans. carried moaUy by wwacnp^j Mlnbter Kin*, parliament-' tume with gold sequin*. I grocery basket.
Robrr . secretary of thr Vfe- mUtttMff, called for a reduction in ,
torla Labor Council, CC L before pr,rt. n! 1)tJlu.r and othef fo<xl
a May Day mass meeting in Beacon p, m
Hill Park 'Hie grandstand in Beacon Hill'
A meeting will be held next Tues- park which served a* a centre ot day "Ighl at 8 o'clock in the Cnam- the meeting. »** decorated »llh ber of Commerce auditorium lo the Union Jack, the Stars and! form the action committee to organ- Strljjes and the red flag of the I iz* the strike. Mr Mexger stated IKS /*l.
Housewives, he added, will be Mi Merger urged the meeting *toi aMted to adhere Tor three weeks to ! 100(1 Dominion, provincial and a schedule calling for boycott municipal Government* ” with letters against certain coQunoditlee, In an *«d resolutions uiging restoration ol eMort to force prices down From subsidies to raUe consumer purchas- 'd ay 10 lo May 17. housewives will m8 P°»«*r: the belting up of peace-
Stresses Importance of Youth Tr“le offic*‘ RnveiV *striL#* Pltm* Ontlimwi To Future Prosperity of B.C. j
Unpoitauce of youth U» the future years of schooling for a student In. prosperity of BrlUah Columbia wa> British ColumbU totaled about s'ruwrf-d by Harold Johns before an , |
Bluc.li™ W„'» pr^ru,, ot ihr 000 WUh U“" ,n m‘,“1 *d“"1
Rotary Club yesterday - tl.r Era- 11 ** weU u* remember that,
prrsvs Hotel 'he product' of Hrl'Uh Columbia |
,, . _ schools last year coula be valued at
Mr. J oil ns director of educational .... ' ,
and vocational guidance for the
provincial department of education intereating film, shown by
pre.-ented a three-point program !„• Jamea poUork- dr»,,clrd U‘r ,mP°rt* felt .should l* carefully considered anr* ot P,aflnB n‘«' »nd *«»>«» in by all citterns of Brltijh Columbia 1 *at tyf* ot work 1or whlch lhry He lUted the three ixurit* «s fol- ttfr ^ 8UltMl 1'^«r‘*-w(1 low. that such placements are of mutual
1 Brit Uh Columbia caiuiot afford brT1"m lo employers and employees to export Its youth All young people Mr. Pollock hewdr the visual educ- must become familiar with the op- lation program now being conducted pnrtunltles that exUt for them throughout the pro- Ince by the De-
within the province. ; partment of Education w
2 A del* ! mined effort must o« H. W. BRIG 1ITON May 10 to May 17. housewives will power; the setting up of peaca-
n.adr to learn Uie Individual abilt- aj • • Vancouver representative of the be avked to buy no butter, lard or llnu? Prt®r boards lo roll back prices
ties und hlddrn talents of the young i.r. urbanizations foreign trade service. Department of I shortening , from May 17 to 24 noi 10 P?r cent; the rem inding of 10 per citizens . who wli; tx- the leaden andj Trade and Commerce, Mr Brighton jams jelly or marmalade and from <:e,u reot Increases and restoration
bu-suiei. me, i .,ud workers of tomor Following the bit-dries* meeting In hM ftrr|V(.d ln Vancouver to take May 24 to 31. to buy no clothing ^ » 100 per cent excess pioflt ux
row Vocatirmnl training and gulrL the ' Memorial Hall, members or chaJ.Ke ^ (hf flril regional office especially children's wear Ben Seed of the International
»n. < cun do a gr*nt deal loward Christ Church Cathedral A Y P A ^ ^ nUblUhed In Canada He ...» „ . , Woodworkers of America acted a*
'hlS . h"1 ‘X>W‘‘7 PlT U'T h- had a wide backgound with the ^ ^ ‘^nnan. and Alex MltcheU of the
3 mere must be closer co-opera- , ralr were discussed and next week Government service abroad, and l^n? " 4,1 au<1 8“"U M-r ,e Worker* Industrial Union
Urn. between busing, nen and youth a work night for the fair WlU be wUl mp<.t forelgn buyi?rs ^ 0f ,M‘ yeAr* wa«e stru««le
Commenting on hb, first point held. Members are asked to sup- them to Canadian firms away by a deUberalt‘ P"*™® to ; ‘ ^ [rK
Mr. Johns praised work now beltm port the local council dance lo be I Increase coat of living." Mr Mesger 1 Ulr at1*P>»r<1 Deneral Workers
done b\ the B.C. Product# Bureau held on Friday at Col wood Hall . . I continued. Federation. C.C.L., also addressed
of Vancouver, "which is providing | hill DllllCilfl (jOBPCrt “This year, the workers are out ltle rallr~
films, booklet* and otlter tnforma-) After the business meeting of St. *rion Male Vnlre rhnir -mu i„-u» 1 ®pL ®**e increases of 20 cents an
tlon relative to the opportunities Mary's -Ipnlor A Y P.A on Tuesday v«n^v,,*«P TKtnnH nnet , . . ^ hour along with the 40-hoar week." JMnes Bay P -T.A will meet on
that exist for youth In British Co- (evening, a dance va- held ln the d „t t 7-16 Sunday to urea said, "and also to get the price of Tue6l,RS 8 P™. South Park lumbla * I parish hall The next meeting will j ^aconcert^ndeTatLpL^o'f ; "ta“ 1^ -‘d services Lured Hand, work produced at Dr
He noted the average met of 12 be held on Tuesday at 7 M om ... 1 thrn.i m. ty>i> Henrietta Anderson* recrestlonRl
Ministers' Wives \£ZJT ^ “d!
H ear B.C. Corsages SSTJZrZ
T! NEW Si „
Columbia
Records
Kerr Popular Dinah Sharp
away by a deliberate program to ind /UlUm vice-president
Increase cost of Uvlng." Mr Meitger of U,e ab‘P>»rd Oetieral Worker* continued. Federation. C.C.L., also addressed
"This year, the workers are out tl,p r*,ljr'
lumbla" I parish hall The next meeting
He noted the average cost of 13 be held on Tuesday at 7.30 p.m.
“ u“irc "r,n m inc depot at 7:16 pjn. Sunday to praa- pamh hall Hie nex' meeting will , rnt a concert under auspices of
Lillie Stories for Bedtime
a» rHosno* w Bimruui*
A ( Mitts I MAS PARTY IN THE
fling n song of Christens*
Bing a song of cheer.
Bing a song ot gladness.
Thar ChristmasUme Is here
The dear Old Brier Patch was not the only place where there was a merry Christmas. My. my. no. In- deed' It was very merry there In the Old Brier Patch, but If you had happened along there I doubt very much If you would have even sus- pected It. You see. Peter Rabbit and Mm. Peter have no way of ex- pressing their happiness except by hopping about excitedly or Jumping up and kicking their long heels to-
| Knights of Pythias ln the theatre ' lhrou«f‘ tm* system at Dum’an at 0 p m. B. C Brace- 1 *tr*ke* N . well will conduct, and Mias Florence Approximately 00 persons, many of p ■ . p
Smith, contralto, will be guest them women, took part In the par- ^ OFtidlHI nOSf MlOHt
I soloist. ode and rally called by the Victoria (jil^urv Slum
. Labor Council Representatives fiom
OPENH PARKSVI1.LE OFFICE Local 118. International Woodwork-' ^ 0rnr8pWtllu' °r ^ Western PARKS VI LL£. May l.-Dr T W era of America. Local 3 of the Marine ^ Cmn*d* Travel Service at 602 Cnurt-
Buthexland haa fitted up an office in Worker* Industrial Onion and the °e> 8t"*t- h“ P^nn^ an all-ex-
Crayharven Inn and will receive pa- Labor Progressive Party were .in JJ"? °“L^? Port,“" * R^*e
tlents next week. attendance Festival and the Calgary Stampede,
* including bus and hotel accommo-
T,1 IA *1 f* IV1 I Ik 1 latlons and side trips.
I lie 11(11 I Y LTOSS-n Orel lllZZle - • »« ^ moet »ur»cu»f Md
J j reasonably priced tours ever offered
— K — n — r — [j — rj — r- [.■ c — rrc~J Reservations must be made now as
l ***» I i *pace is at a premium for
Of KuI'liVll*.1"' 7i 71 - I — 'hese festive occasion* •••
course will be on display
Forllaml Rose Show,
OPENH PARKSVII.LE OFFICE
tlents next week.
The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle
4. T»L fnrcic u«« ot Au*lr»U*.
| S. Conitellatloo.
13 Mcttlllft coqtatner.
tj V«4rtabl*
1« Clrrlrltlrd paruri*
IS. ftharp-potnuu » r»pon l pi i,
IT Oti »»4.v‘
I It Author of "Thr
get her, and If you hadn't happened Yellow corn and fal hickory nut* „ {JiYi"4 w"»uThi along Just when they were doing were spread ail over the mow- u COunbor tor
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along Just when thry were doing were spread ail over the snow- ** ,ut
some foolish thing like that you covered flal stone. M Your' ••rchaici.
new.r never, would have guessed . . .,
how very full their hearts were of , ,hp °reen forest Blacky came „ Bl>rtrtM4
Joy and merriment this Christmas
mnmlng,
1 over at once. “■'•r. «o»b«o
.. . .. .. _ . J«. IV'wrrf j| duly
Meanwhile, Chatterer the Red j». noli
IX Malay ilbboo
^ k J Squirrel had come raring along the J7 J” “'rune th» —
" 1 r ° d °u:hur<1 11 old »U>ne wall to see what was going » until lyp* ^
verv dlfferenl your ears would on when he came to a great flat 40 r,dM » ^
hs^e old you that It was a very lUinp half way alonR thf old WttU u ooraaej M S
ZZSZ L. *L7,y0U nt*r 'h' ■«wd - «iddenly that he al- U
enough to see what wo. going on moM ti:mhlfd OVPr. YaUow com and .. IT
II was You see. up there there was fal hlrkory nuU Wfrp gprWid al, £ £7^
rr Pn,r,!; r;'i!rrv. j *"**" tha' mpr ,hp n«t stone? « e
,', . r ,b had k,'own 11 Then he added his voice to the « L«hUy .arr..«it
un . afterward which U juat ns happv, pxdtpd fJ,a..er Presently Mu' #< U 5
well for hrene 1* the place of all Ha Jark ^ 0re? «■ u, .
"I "prnd ChrtsUna4' Joined the party, and he found nuts “ SS” L‘ L
ir • n T 1 IT 1° U'r ' 111 *nd w>rn APr**d for htm. Bob White- « To’s# oaiic*d u ”
z.itar r.: « ^7 I K
No we had known that therr didn't quite know where he and his oowv j» Hw»*r qoiaio
was going to be a parly. This had f»mlly were going to get their 1 )«
made It all the merrier. You know. Christmas breakfast When he ! > J L"",ron. of
plensAnt things often are a great b,,ard the merry chatter over ln the « Ceruuuncr «j i)*n:» «up
deni more pleasant when they come old Orchard he flew over Just to , * ,* i J? mnSr4^
a.- n surprise It began when Tnmmv «« If by chance he might share ln I _ ^ ?! »**p*
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laic that morning, ant Brown's Boy was just
T. Tn hit aloft
a. nut
a Rarrymora.
Amarlran actor 10. Vail act
| tl. Unit IS Muilral rotnpaotlnn ta Riant luma
%i Part tn a qlar.
IS ArtlRctal
lancoatc
M Rpa;
ST RrlaMaat atar la aarloua eenitalla- tiaaa.
Mi Card «» m» an Puaa
Si Toaard
- 1S= r rrr ™ ~ « ^7 I R
No rme had known that there didn't quite know where he and hLs M » «*wi t>oiai»
was going to be a party. This had family were going to get their ’ 1,77.*' 'h' « taMt>pacM>>
made It all the merrier. You know. Christmas breakfast When he > M^Tn.mYnT."* «* intrant „t
plensAnt things often are a great the merry chatter over In the * conaisiaacv «j i>.n»* •tan
den! more pleasant when they come old Orchard he flew over Just to , * i Jr
n.- - surprise it began when Tommy ** ,f by chhnce he might share ln I !• 5°°* of ",pi
Tit the Chickadee came flitting over ; tbr •ood things. Almost the first t Tn' hit aloft M Part In a olar
to the Old Orchard He wns a trifle lhln* he w,i*n he got there was J Dm e,r,fmort '* unioa'7
lair (hat morning, and Farmer * little shelter of poles and brush American actor m Rp.-
Brown 'a Boy was Just leaving I <1owT' ,n one comer of the Old Or- u m'l C.X^’Vn.Yci
whistling os he tramPfd through rhVd -™1 ****** all around It " JSSS.u« » c.‘m s.ma
thf snow toward his hduae "Dee, wheat and rye and sunflower seeds <• «'•"« i«*nv «- eu«.
dee chlckAdeer cried Tommy mer- Bob dWn*l stop to pick up so much ' ” *nn’jm _ *J I°*‘fd _ _
rlly, for Tommy is always merry ** or>e tiny seed, but hurried back Dee dee, chick • Tommy stopped for W* f«mily. Joy singing In his Forripn Exchange short His sh^P little eye* had dls- h<,"rt I NEW YORK, May 1 <CW -The
covered something. It was a great Wltb ■ «W»t whirr of stout little r„nMf,Un „„ , ,
lump of white suet tied fast to one w1n*» Mr» B°b *nd all thetr chll- d d P '*
Of the old apple tree> And there1 drpn followed him back to the Old dtacottnt °r 8 3's l*1, f*nt ln t*rm*
on another tree was more suet, and Orchard to Join the merry chrtat- of Un‘trd RUt** fund* to<Uy' Thp
on a third tree was a bone with party m fttl ’"''rllnK WM an^hanged al
shred* of meat clinging to It! No Arid ^ WM #l1 because of Farmei —
wondgr Tommy stopped hb merrj Hro®n’« Boy No wonder that his .. . _ , .
greeting short 4n the middle and own ChHMmoa was very, very f,F KTER ^Hand Islands <P
caught his breath But It was onl> mprry -Mr*. Agnes Unklater. 101, ho/
for a minute. Then hr began to call M — 0ewr ^ 04,1 ^ •«*
excitedly, and he couldn't get "dee N *,0ry: *Chrl"lmi*s the never seen a movie a train or a dees." out fast enough They fairly 0"*n r°r*’t' Un*- But ln 180 * Oerman branber
tripped over each other Here wn* 1 ^ •** 11 v T ^ »u«uiei Smwpm . I *** »ho« down near her onttage.
" f*'1*’-’ s Christ ms* feast, and therr
was enough for everybody! Hr _ 1
wanted everybody to share In H. so he called with all hU might.
Drummer the Woodpecker heard hint and hurried up So did Yank- I vank the Nuthatch Thrir eyes* sparkled when they mw the feast,! tor the), too, love suet They char- tered excitedly as they feasted, and when they ^isrovered a little .shelf'
• Of th> trees And on ~ <• — r —
this shelf a lot of cracked hlckr-rv ^
nuts, their Joy knew no bounds Of
course It wasn't long before Sammy — g **
Jay came over to find out wWat was , i / M
going on Sammy likes met. and he MM i]
like* nuts when they are cracked jjS tkn 1/ »
for htm but when he found a great | ^ g A A /) A
wwssssa
Hlar ky the Crow whom he could «ee V f J I AJ* j f ^
In the top of a tall tree on the edge YJT Zf
or. PIRFICT wi
Ready
Cooked
Kippered SALMON
feed your dog os famous konnols
‘Mfi
® Lighter meal# during warmer weather. e»pe- m ‘-tali' r r ' “ 1 - ■ cor.hne «fr liealtlif.il fr.r
W ,1ir Li n>ih —and ,i j«crirct cmnlunatu n for the xalad is read v-<oriked Tyee Kippered Salmon Merely purchase from votir dealer and verve at Home — no rooking required Other taitv Tyre fish pr'-dticta available for tempting Spring and Summer rneala are Kippered Sable (Rlark Cod) and Kipper (Bemeleaa) Snaekv
A PRODUCT OF CANADA
Dlffniil.KD
WHITE
Vinegar
BLACKHEADS
G« two; ouocts oi pemxin* pow.ler bus vour <vuumIsi Sprtnk l< <m • hot. wet cloth and apply fo the face <K«tly Every blackhead will he dissolved The one safe. »urr and simple way » ae»crve LUtkhrad*
Kl Gt.Nr (IIMSMlI t»m«« Caadailtf
MASTERWORKS
ALBUMS
Hr.hm • KYMPHOVT S. I
Hera u • btanq i.»» brUltanUy con- L-elsad qertnrmanre of Br.Jicn ■ •oq- Orrful Rymphoi.T So 3 In P Motor Op to. hr th* iK--rlr*» PhIU<)e)ohta Orch..- «r« unqrt Euaene Ormandr If your record Uhtarr doe. not vet rnntaln a modern 'minting of Utl. .rmnhotir »ar* he .ailed until thu
tlbranl tire rer.lnn ea. available Calumbla Alham gJ.OI)
Heethaven'a
"PATmtTmrr* sosata
rtir tvkib movie, -The Seventh Veil." renewed Inlere.t In IhU aork. ahleh trom the tlandpolnl at aheer beauty la or»a •! the floret Rrethov.n wrute Aa pertoimed bv Rudolyh Sartln the mu«lr «rrm« alive U) breathe with the ■plrlt ahl'h IU rcint.i^er f.ve to t* ani! to rtlata te the lit la net the thought* that «ere Beethoven . a. he wrote
Colombia Albam a 1.00
Merart’e
OPIHATir AEIAV
Here u I tie happv comblnailoa nf a magriiftreot voice barked hjr a .ratful and litunoroua peraonabtr U«#t flu the U o««rt mu.U pcrlrctlj plue the aut.t- amw of one at the world , be.- mter- prrler. nf Mntart Df Bruno Waller, rohrli.rtliif the Metropolitan Opera Or- rheirra Eight 13-lnrh tide* eontaln .U of the moat (amour Moaart Aria. Columbia Albam RR.OO
The r.*| aad |; W ba Care. What People »af*
Annlveraarv boat fleortache.
Aadnea# aad Tear.
Mr Bel Ami. Ill Ct.ee Mr (ret
Whea Am I OtBla Klaa Yaa Gawd Mamina* Mama. Da I Oaltat And ba tn Mad Aenaei er Later
75C |t(
New Benny Goodman
U-JMCH arroan
When Batit-.p ruta a double-aided 11-Inch rernrtf It ta alarava an event that mate* record hkatory Hu tataat la titled "Oht Rabyt’- and tne!irde», on one aide a vocal rtiorua by the Ol Mbaan hinuei- Rl .OO
It a a Dead Day OIM AKITA LISP A
Roddy Clark and Bar Nabla aoat* IS THI EAth Prankla Carle and Rla Oreheetra
7 of the Latest Records
FRANK SINATRA
Kent's
641 YATES
Victoria's Record Heodquorters"
Self-Serve
Grocery
ooefs
Lower Main Floor
COFFEE.
I -lit. bag
W00LF0AM
Largr
t- I nlri
ANBWra TO TSdTXKDAT'B Pt tTl.r.
Saie^darl* 1
mm
\ flavour 1
,7 ‘ H ili
ECONOMY OPPORTUNITIES FOR TODAY AND SATURDAY GREEN LABEL TEA. NA<- I AYLMER SPAGHETTI AND CHEESE I W00LFI
Mb. pin lO hmali p7^ l
COFFEE. AQf \\ nh Tontttb BMgE lb or. j..r 16
Mb a a u . LI I • C « B BRANS!
inamn «»l».r .hpMb Jdn „„ ..
2 27' Libby’* Sweet Mixed Pickles STRING* BEETE
Pan D/t-re in' Chocolate Cookies ... 33' H0
PEAS and CARROTS
2 27'
ROYAL CITY DICED 4^ CARROTS, ten I U
SUN-RYPE APPLE JUICE
2 25'
EASTERN SARDINES
3 23r
BALLARD’S
CODLO 9 qqr
BISCUITS c II CC
Hag of 3 doa.
BISKIES.
2-lb. bag ...
ch/mpion
BISCUITS
ION A
*♦ if
AIR-WICK
89
1.19
MIXED NUTS. JCt
C 3
KELLOGG S ALL- 4 Qf
BRAN, large Pkt I tJ
BLUE RIBBON
RED LABEL TEA, “7 Ot
I 3
COPFEE. Ilf
*♦ I
ROBIN HOOD
ALL-PURPOSE FLOUR—
£* 75r ;r 1.45
JAMESON'S
TEA. 70F
f o
COFFEE. a*%c
4o
QUAKER
CORN FLAKES. Q Art*
Wot pkl* O for wpW
PUFFED WHEAT. J.ov
'.r*' 3 23'
ROSEDALE ASPARAGUS GREEN CUTS. AQ.
2o i,i tin “O
CLARKS O OQ'
TOMATO SOUP O tin C.O
LYNN VALLEY CUT 4 0*r GREEN RPANS. i n I O
TEXAS GOLDEN GRAPE- FRUIT JUICE, p 4 Qif
£ for I 9
REAL GOLD LEMON JUICE.
J 1 O'
tin* fc for I w
REAVER CLAMS. OC' tin btf
EXTRA LARGE RIPE
OLIVES, Hr- 1 Brand. ^0*"
LIBBY'S OIOPPED RIPE OLIVES. 4 £te
I o
HOLBROOK'S WORCES- TERSHIRE SAUCE. A4r
1 | Or bottle *W I
AYLMER GRAPE-
FRUIT. ir.< » j» LO
OVALTINE—
58' 98
A PTE LI MEJUICE. 4
* OS tin I O
PRUNE JUICE pae
33 -or botilr Cw
SHREDDED p pCr WHEAT ^PVt» CtJ
BRUNSWICK CHICKEN HADDIE, 22'
SCOTIAN OOLD DEHY- DRATED APPLES 21 *
ASPARAGUS
43
GRAPE-
19'
25'
RIPE
39'
RIPE
16'
AYLMER PUMPKIN. t>n» p
at C for
AYLMER PINE- APPLE, If* » tar w- 9 <>t 0 -
JELUO CUSTARD POW. ,4r* 2f„rCO
2^15' O.Q.L. MALT
TOMATO JUICE Fanrv q-»J- l'Um nr hop flavored, 4 CQ
p pQr- I .03
b for £0 PONTIAC MATCHES, large BEAVER BRAND >10** bo*e« A ^Ae
CHICKEN. 7 oy tin HO „ O »w C U
KETA SALMON. p|-v LIBBY'S SPINACH, 4 Qf
_ £w 20-ox tin ... i 5r
CLASSIC p 4 NATIONAL SWEET
CI.EANSER O yin ■ IH RELISH 24 o> jar OD
NATIONAL BABY WEEK
PORATED MILK — Libby's Carnation. p OQ*4
ir Delta and Border*'* tall fin* C fnr k J
r»‘r _ a 2©
2A- o».
27'
35'
POW-
15'
V <l-al
CREAM OF THE WEST
ALL - PURPOSE FLOUR-
tT 75' SL 1 .45
MAPLE LEAF CAKE QCf PLOUR. pkt CD
■l Tina KRANKFORD PEAS and I tm GOLDEN BANTAM CORN. Af%<
mi HU
KLIM
FRENCH'S MUSTARD
69* 2 1.65
sc 49*
CAB BRANSTON OQ«* PICKLE, I m ot . jar Cw
AYLMER SHOE- woe STRING BEETS* tin . II
MANITOBA HONEY, flQe CD
AYLMER PURE RASP- BERRY JAM, af-<
2 lb. Mr NO
AYLMER PURE STRAW- BERRY JAM. xae
.lb jar **0
CROSSE A BLACKWELL MARMALADE,
2 lb. jar OO
HEINZ VEGETABLE SOUP
CAMPBELLS
SOUP
al - *_
25'
MU8HROOM
2 27'
Jtf- lb-
ten
2
1.65
for i r
WINDSOR SALT.
Iodized. p
rartoni C
YELLOW 8PLIT PEAS, per Ib...
I>a*e» oj
v
LIBBY'S SPINACH,
tt ox tin
NATIONAL SWEET RELISH 24 o* Jar
EVAPORATED MILK— Libby'. Carnation. p
f’ai'ift' Delta and Borden'* tail fin* C for CD
1 " r> * — ».20 Conpoei* required
LIBBY’S. HEINZ and AYLMER BABY FOODS S lor *.*»#
NUTRIM. 16-oi. tto 42#
GERBER'S BABY CEREALS, pkt Sfl*
98'
16'
24'
25'
At the Cake Counter
SPENCERS
PINEAPPLE FRUIT CAKE
In' ilabc weighing ahout 4 to 4 4 *■
4 4 Ita. Sjrenal. each ■•10
Wd P*«er»» f4te Right id Limit QomtetlM
DAVID SPENCER
LIMITED
BURNS'
MEAT BALLS. 97 <
C f
CHILI CON CARNK,
C J
VEAL STEW. 29*
CC
WINDSOR SALT. Plain and
Iodized, O i Ct
rartont C f,,r I 3
YELLOW SPLIT 4 m
PEA8. per II, I U
FRY'S COCOA
r- is* £ 31*
OGILVIE'S
ALL PURPOSE FLOUR-
VITA-B aac
CEREAL 3 lh«. CC
TONIK WrfEAT rf%t
GERM, pki DU
PURITY
75 1.45
ALL PURPOSE PLOUR-
Z? 75* Z* 1.45
B. t K r
OATMEAL ** lb* OC
B A K C OOr
DOG MASH ^ 1h* CD
FIVE ROSES
ALL - PURPOSE PLOUR-
l? 75^ 1.45
ALL PURPOSE V I TA - B *
CEREAL e
TONIK WrfEAT GERM. pki.
STONED WHEAT THINS, pki
JAVEX BI.EACH.
br»«tle
BURNS
e Co ltd
Til K DAILY COLONIST. VICTORIA, BC, LRIPW, MAY 2, 1047
fractionally a? tfie close De*ltng»j acre mostly ka.al. nltll flurries. In,
Box. in« 6 Mexican Eagle. 18* 3d
Ltd* 13* 6dl Rant
British Storks
London Market
Mining Trust
the action
LONDON. May 1 <4>. -Stock ^ ^ cenl Con.
dosings Babcock & Wilcox. 81s 3d.,. ^ t95\. Britwn jc. ^ cent War Boot* Pur* Drug. 60s 7Sd; CPU Loan. C105rw: British Funding 4\* £17’.* : Central Mining. £23; Can-; 1960-90. C1I7S solldatcd Oold Fields, 66* 9d . C-our-
tald.V 33s 3d; De Brer* 36a l\»d; A tmoat all of Mexico's vanilla out • Hudson's Bay Company. 104s 4'-.d; put. one-third cl the world s supply, London Midland Railway, £37; Me tal'origlnates In the State ol Vera Crux.
LONDON. May 1 < Reuters'.
Hading was still- below normal vol- ume on London Slock fcx hangr to- day, but as somew hat hear ter than In the last week British tunda were quiet with short-dated Issues pre- dominant The foreign bond market also was slack Foreign railways eased
Selective Interest In oils centred around Twin Eagles Coppers were dull, particularly Rhokanas Indus- but gains pre-
C1*M
sm
ns*.
i Venture* v.
Walts Amulet Wright -Hargreaves Wiu Lake
VANCOUVER. May t DCft.-Mlnes j and oils veered away from their! Fairchild aircraft usual bu v trading pace this after-] noon while Industrials were quiet ford of Canada t
as ordinary
NEW YORK. May 1 ,4*..-OlU today led the stock market on an- other selective recovery push. The direction was upward from the •tart, although there was a let- down at the conclusion of Uw first hour. An active flurry developed around mid-day, but the pace sub- •equn.tiy slowed at Interval-
Most Canadian Issues were (4ulet. but Hiram Walker, with a gain of 1-4. wav an exception. Canadian Pacific, Dome Mines and Diattllero- Beagrams were unchanged
DOW JONES AVEKM.ls
thirty Industrial!!, 171.89, up 1.25. twenty rails. 45.4.1. up .24. fifteen Utilltlea. 34 18. up 2i Nltly-flvr storks, 60.95, up .40. Total sales. 5120,000.
■ tlftgar Iov**tm«nts. Ltd > is Ut sTBlAL limON B d
A*li*»to* - ■ — . J4'
Acedia Afl "A'* *1'
Atftdftvn lids e. "A'- — l*
Ada* Sterl
ItAthurtt — — —
nesi.-r A" O
Bestir *’•" . — . . ■ ■ — 40
■ruck BUt .
Brtsuisn Tractloa — »•'
A»krd
37
s» lew
Track
In the mines. Bra- c«°nVT
lorne -sold for 10 75; Bridge River Oa:m»»u po»?» Consolidated. 6 Denlonla. 22; Hed- qT.T’T'iJIV''* ley Mascot, 1 07. Privateer, 40. and Hanjilton Rrida*
qu.u,„o, is. , SSStW*
Oils to trade were Anaconda. 0. Imuerui Tobacco Home Oil. 3 25. and Mercury. 10 £“**»■.* Coast Breweries went for 299. ,nl
i veragvs
Closing
• Jam?* HIchsrdMMi A Soon
TORONTO
Twenty industrials. 167 96. up 43 Twenty gold. 101.61, down 1.17 Ten base metals. 84.17, down .36. Fifteen Western oils. 34 32. down
trial* were mixed, dominated
So Ini prendre ns
Prod
BC Forei B A. 0.1 BC P**M “A"
Can Brrwwtc*
Can. Car At FwmdrF Can Car A Foundry * Can S-ramehtp*. com Cap ptd.-
cin Canaan “A'*
•~M. rai-.ncr* "B * _
Can. Cannrr*. com
Can, OUr.ru
Can CdlfiH* aid
C P 8
Can*. Palter
Con*. Bit-riser*
Can. Waatcrn t.br tl)!l Armoiiu U"Ui(l H m it* r liotnti Fd r’a IWm.Hlele A Coal "II
TRUTH
OILa
Anarunda
> . Ltd i
Bid Aakrd » 104 10ft
4', M ' , SI
• UK TO
a lto ill
I 105 10«
44 104 10S
1 1M l»» ft 1014 KM
a too
k 104
4 4 >03 104
44 »7 »*'„
S', 109 110
» I OS 4 10«
1 l»»
1 109
5 1014
i io* no
4 M4 101
44 JOi 104
s io2 ter.
4 4 104 4 104
Analo-Can.
The man who is aware that hi* insurance is bring mtelligentlv studied amt efficiently handled ha* .i feeling of security. Businessmen realise that iiisur a nee policies get nut of date, that time* and conditions chance, and new developments m HlMirantx i'1'vertgr tritr, Imt most nl them arr ton boiV tu keep track of these things for tlienrielve* . , hence the fart that the a'rrace survey rrvenl.* the possibility of .ft', more protection at 2J'~c less
Total salt*. 941.000 MOM REAL
Twenty Industrials, 121.4. off 1. Ten utilities. 76.3. up 1.
Thirty combined. 106 4. un- changed.
Ten pulp and p«p4-r, 307 84. off 50 Fifteen golds. 7122. off 04.
Total sales. 1741800 1 ANCOI 1 » H Twenty golds 57 69. off .29 Ten buse metals. 96 32. off 33. Fifteen oils. 96 81, off 149.
h c r;*c
BC Tel Cal* ary Per. Can. Bread Can Indutlrle* Can. Utilities C.W. Nat Oaa Don. Malt lii« Donntcona frelman Oatlneau ti e W a rea .
Holt-Rrnfrew ovilvie Flour . Ottawa Pwr. . . Power Corp. Price Bros.
Blmpaona
Htandard Chetn Oeo. Weston
' Common wealth Dalhou*)*
PooUtlQ*
III* n wood Sarrew Home Oil Mercury
MrDoucal Bexur . Mil City Model
Ofcalta
Pacific pet*
Royal Can. .... Roystite
Vanalta
Misrs
Par nun p Curia Bralnrtte
Bridar River Con. Brttee River e*t Catmce
[»m Tesitle* Rrldy "A Ford nf Canada (lallfleau Power Oen lie eerie* rtpndei'ar Clrpaum
H A H umber, Lid.)
AJ,ied ClierulraL American Can Auierlian T'. Paces Amariran Hmeltai An erlrari Tel A 'I An sen. da Oiuner Air I l»r;ii rnr ei*
H 4.U. JiaUway It*- li Bleat tea -do t t- R
t A O n«ilway
t'hry- 1 * r Con Kdlaun Coni. A’ H-.uthern Don da * AlrrraM Dupunt
Kaitoian Kiatnk *r # U H Oenrral FmhI* i 1* . Sl*rl fir-neral StoUint tlrwidvear Tire Die*' Northern
fm Harvester
till!. Paper 1(11 T A T All XlcXitl Jnhna-Manvllla Keunecotl Corper l-o.'kheed l-neweThaalra Binrlair
MoilUomery Ward Natl. Blacnit Hew Vert Central1 Norfolk Wevlern Northern PanfU Pae. Oa« Eire Pan American Alri Penn Railway Prottor Oan.ile Pub. 8*r. N J Republic Bleel
BrJi*rU*i D.stUJaia Bt.hd Cai'f
Hiram WalS*r
Imper *1 Rank
I in perl 41 o«l — _
fnl I Mrkel
Jn: ; Paper t '! Prlr ileum I ub.uw Ci roe ’A" Lnulaw Orat "H" \frCr,|l Pruntenar MfColl rrontenac. Maiier Mania Mai-ry itarrla Pfd. Montreal Power N'nllanul H:»werle* V*t I 8 tael Car
and let us check without cost or
Call Us today vnur covrragi obligation.
Carl Iron Ootd
Canvreaa
Dentoniw
CAMEROM
INVESTMENTS
LIMITED
INSURANCE BROKERS JUSTIN V. HARBORD 609 Yates St. E 6514
(rears* Copper
Orandrlew
Oriil! Wllikufr He-llcjr MasciU t|l*M*nd Belle taiaftd Mr Mlnto
Par r. Gold Partfle Nirkel Pioneer
Premier Border Privateer Gnatsino Cupper Rad Hawk
NEW YORK. May 1 </P«. — One more free market emerged from war wrappings today when rubber trad- ers were called to meet on the floor of the commodity exchange for the first time In more than five years.
P irll» Flour. rM Btiawlnlcan Hick* Brewerlet Sunpami*. pfd B-.e*l of r?,nada Rirel of Canada. I United Steel Oeu WpvIoii*. con Geo WratPP! Did
Baimnn «r»ecr Creak Callback Prwmler Silver R:d*e Taylor RMd*a Welllnaton I VDt 8T81ALS
Capital Ealale* Coast fiiAweriea
Paints Bright I uture
Store Hour* 9 VM. to 5 P.M Wednesday : 9 A M. to 1 P M.
are talking themselves Into the de- 1 MJiited setTioN previon complex and propliMyini < ]^*N* *H irr that currmt prmpenty “Just cant n *krrv‘nerf lait.” G. Warren Brown, president Hj*r^f'”ni<r> — of Ooekfleld. Brown Ac Co, Ltd.. Brmoi mi Id ot the annual dinner of the ad- cJUSw" BUm,rtnd'r vert islng agency'* staff.
Mr. Brown deplored "caluinity r>r.tr,i ' °*W
talk" und the Idea of loir ninny thnt £nnmt. Comatoek “normal business In Canadit must Federal be slow business " He suggested that aSlm.ied
mure Canadians realise that “Can- item*? Mnuarch nda l* sound right through" und H^To'a'i’d tm*n retrain thrtr true persj>ectlvc of the .future of business in the £kunlnion. Mocma
MetaUmlLh
Ml* Gold _ .
Noble Five
North Anierlr.an ,.~
Olympld
PU«H
Pllirbiavte
Hein! Valley
Slew* rt Canal
Taylor Windfall
Twin J
t'Uca 1*17
VanamU .
Walrin
Werko
Weaiein Ktploiatliio VVhltewa'er
Plastic Shower
Bn! A ukeil
Curtain Sets
'I tiev will add great!) to the attractiveness of your bathroom, they're serv- iceable and easily cleaned. Set consists of 1 shower t iirtaiti. 6 x t> ft. ; 1 pair of drapes* 4 it f> in. long; 1 pair of tie-backs; colors plain blue or green Set
Woclwonh Nat. Dial Uteri
Toronto Stocks
TORONTO. May J ICP>.— Mining Issues dropped off sharply on the Toronto Block Ex<-hnnge today when bid* continued far below offering*, liveries of all grata* were strung on and volume xtrpped up In a mod-|,hc tiAte eeil-otr for sevetal *tock.s. In- ln* dust rials remained firm, nutny U*ur* ,r:>t allowing excellent gain* with only PPUI the agriculture stock* showing wcuk- nrs*. wi
Benlo: golct* were .slow with only , one gain ported and three or lour s,»< likscver, but Juniors were trading on cn five looses to every gain Baa* |
mcUUt I tie up fracUonolly for ®*p«
N!> kei and Noranda. *■ r*o*
Pai»er* held for about an equal rumber’of gains and lowr*. as did a*i*t liquors. AvrJciilturul stock* were ’^h* down. Including a loss of more than M',,'
2 point* fox r> redal Grain prefernd _
Western oil* Inwe* doubled gain? for 14 ( the few 1 >ue« tradlnp |
The following prices are received fp»m the office or the Dominion Government Poultry Product* In-
i portion Service. 32492;
To producer-
Grade "A1 large
Grade "A” medium ... ..... 2s
Grade “A" pullet* 25
Grade "B" pullet* ... JJ(
Wholesale-
Grade "A" large .IB
Grade "A' medium 24
Grade "A" pullet* ..... JO
Grade "B" pullet* ...1 ..... 23
U. A Humber, Lid i
Owen ||i eii t^.w-
3» 364 2ft* '
331*4 3344 M4b 31*4 Jl*‘, 317*
3D4 tic. aic
Plastic Curtain Sets
Montreal Storks
MONTREAL. May 1 iCPb— Prices were alrady to ollghtly higher in only moderately active dealing* up to the final hour on the Stock Ex- change and Curb Market today. Ohaugn were mainly fractional.
Papers were fairly quirt with In- ternational up 14; Great Lakes common. \ ; 8t. LawTence Corpora- tion Issues, 4, and Consolidated. Dotitiacona and M. A: 0 . 4 each.
Stc-lco, Ogtlvle and Textiles ad- vanced a full point In Industrials. Bell and Shawlnlgan gained minor tractions I- utilities.
Alumill' 'm loet a i»olnt and Alcoa prclcrrrd. 4 in metals Smelters was oft 4. while Nickel was up 4. BA wa* 4 better In oils, and Petroleum down 4.
6 ONLY. AT A CLEARANCE PRICE
Shower curtain, b x 6 ft ; I pair tlrapev, 4 ft h i 1 pair tie-backs; pirating ship »lcMt;n*. while on blue ground or green on yellow ground. Set
Striped Homespun
These Values Speak- for Themselves! Drapery Fabrics
• (INfS -Kim*
'I«!*n«l tnre>tmer.' C* M'eh
Auk'll?
AniiA-Fiuronlin Arml»'i-» • **4
Sum sane *1
1t*(*!f ,*
H**e M («l»
ReautMk
a**r F«(>)araMnn »*
ftonrauri *7
nw*».od Kirkland
Bnhln t7'«
e«.,***i
Rr*l«rne
Brniilan Pnrruplne R»Mal» An* niilfau n«.1 I *ke R'll'*''(-»n I**
C * r. W?
e*ne»1i*i! •*,l*mr TH
Cll'lwn 0"M Q’lat1* n»*tl* TreUi 13"
r>nlf*l Pilrlr'i IT*
rni hennt-r W||Une 7«ft
ri>»i,?(,ii'«
rtienm MAH ,
n™*?
\ good weight homespun in attractive plain stripe, In a choice range of contrasting colors
U Inches wide QQC 50 I n* hr - wide 1 IT
. a/0 Yard 1 • 1 0
^s-econd floor
Five-Piece “Durolux Dinette Suite
1 hirnliix table top* that are heat renting and will not mark «>t ■ hairpin legs. Cutlery drawer. Tour heavy-type chronic chairs. Illustrated abov r. Choice nf blue or black ;
RlrharAMfl A Bm .1
JM A*k?il
C*n tnvnl.Fund . _ . « «s
C*n Rank r.f Cum J2 -,
Dniniiilmi Bank . 3S4
InrerUI flunk ..... 30 ‘f
fl»nk nf Mmitrrel , 374 37*»
B*nk nf NH *«•,
Rival n»i,l __ . }* 34'*
n»»k nf TaronUt *3 4
AtllllM. enm . I*'« |k’«
Ah'1161. pM J9’* 3«
Almine Hleel »* 3*4
Aluminum- pM. . . 3*4 3T
Apt>n«!A* Cn rp . 3*4 37
BMhKie* • A" 31 31 ' •
R«'l T")*p|inr>e . . . I*v l*\'»
R'»*'ll«n Tr*rt. . 3t 1 . 314
It- Ante? Oft 3ri4 8*4
BC Pomrr A‘* 3* 2»
ntiiMrn* rr<vi .. 3t» 2i»4
tu T! P Ik Mill* ' 3'
llaloln OoM . . 174 1*4
Can A f>i«n 8<i*ar 33' 1 31*4
Can Mallln* t34 ftft
CSn Not Br»r» V'., *’,
t'»n, Steam-P.p*. mm 13' •
Can Bteam4lilpi, p(d. 4*4 AT1 <
Can. rmnl .-. 1* J««t
Can Brruarlea 3*4 J* .
Chrome Extension Table
Extension Table with chrome hairpin leg* resisting top, will) metal binding oil edge-. I
Spencer’s Reliable Paints Enamels and Varnishes
Five-Piece Chrome Dinette Suite
By Knrchtel Kitchen Kabineis. Choice ni blonde and blue or black an* Extension table with chrome leg -. I-'our e xtra hea\ s chrome chair* A
with upholstered seat-- and hark* »'
Spencer'* Exterior House Paint. Made frnm/pure pig mettl* and oil. Regular color*
Per gallon , R.7A
Unarl 1-70
\t Pint
Vtii.n * A-^nel lm *2
P»"* r Cnron 14
|Co»mri, tnin-r'al Mill* 7*
tr.O M*>at »•.'■. TM l«1
»••*« M»»*l In. I • A an
tohlaa- "* . )0'
X*'Cnll-rr'Tni*i.»r 4* P»d Monlrn#! Lit. A r Con? 94
Mnntrtil fyoromoIlT* Work* W
Munareli KrliUnc Na'lnna! Hti'larr A’ II
N*lla"«| i4-a*l Car 3)
Hum- l| |n4. (j
Hhawuuean w a r ai
8lm [**•■" • "A-* 34
Ain|M*n * *‘B *
Union no* o
t’niud fuel -A " fta. »:
Walker o A w. . «
HtAloTr-n Mmn III
liniliri" roni lo
II !<1»op liar MAH. _! 4t
Ki rr AMImni _ 1)
ktrlnlvr* Pnrnipir.? M
NnraM* Mtnne * *4'
Five-Piece Dinette Suite
rat.«n"r»lae
fra"’ ’-ii' mill** Lake 01*1,1 Yfllo-eki.il? 0.-0 • Lake < Iwlrta*?
(lunnit OtiH Malnnr TtirA R"* k Marker Gold M a rrlrar a M»1I?» Ma»ml M*v**a u«.mn*»r ««•?»
!l.irtv>ir Bay MAS
Toll Kick*)
Jmm
K»tr AA<l»*«i' Klrklaml I •••
[«i ' Pufa<.1«
UVMftnrt
laP'Dil' O
Loti 6 OoM
1 1n*man l*k* -
tji*-imir*
tJIlle t«m* fa?
Mi 4»a
MaA??" n»a lak* MalartW OotdWMia Mtnin* Corpn MrlUMil* k?<l U*» VtWaii'u Mr lour*
M'LenA Cork»hull Mnnela
green
with red tops. Large table with .masonite top and useful Size JR \ 42 tnt lies, Eoux alooLi match
second floor
Can Car A foundry. rn«n Can Celine*?
C*n D.-aJR A Dork Can tnAu? Alrnhol
Can torumotlv?
C P R
Can Vlekerv ram _
Co* k*huu Plow fnsm Atrnhal Cn««» Paae.
CnrvMimrr* Ola?*
Crown Cork A Seal
OlkUOtr* B?aa
Dnrn flrlde> . _
Own Kn*lorerln«
Dorn. P<1r'e* A H'rrl _ Una Oltrloth A Lino tlom Woollen? ,
Dnm Ft'*; A Coil H
Spencer's Exterior Porch
Paint for veranda* and *1e|t*
tutor i, thrre greys and Tur
key red. Per gal B.I’fl
Quart .. — t.BR
r 50#
Streamlined
S|>encer’a Exterior Oil Shin- gle Stain. Cover* like paint on old And new •huigle* and rough hoard fence*. Regular color*. Per gallon 3.00
.S- Gallon ran 14.5<£>
Greens per gallon , 3.80
5-Gallon ran . 17.50
(At lllu*trated>
Naturalistic reproduction* of ft neat wood inlay in tough hum remting top* Strong, heavily- bf at ed hardwood leg* and metal binding on rdget. S if V> ,nr '■'?* *q«)4'e A Q(- Special ^**/D
Spencer'* Tremtred Ploor Vimiih. Hard wearing, high gln»j and quie || drv f’rpe. per gallon 5.50
UMrrrn
IN * E8TW8NT HKCt'BtTIKa
new YORK VANCOUVER
MONTREAL TORONTO
L'ntna BaUfla*. |?a* (,M»nn>nl »!(»(, TM*rt*
Spencer'a Interior Glaiol En- amel. Hull gloM. 4-hour dry. for furniture, woodwork and floor *. All color*. Price, per gallon . . , 7.10
WINNIPBO LOffDON. ENOLAND
T'l'?k**M: R 4171-1-1
Spencer « C.C. 10 Paint and Varnixh Remover. Rrrnovr • paud an<L varnith. no cleamne off before repainting. Price, per gallon 1.99
9M 2.10
N**ii«
second floor
RIptMnf
N Aranda
Normal *t —
Norseman
Otlra*
Otn?f»
Or tar Pam. -O' ratriaru r fend Orollla far run OoM Pickle Craw rtaioear Pow»U Rrin*"
INCOME UP
Attractive China and Glassware
The forthcoming reduction in Income Taxe* mean* that net income from inveatment* will rise. More than ever, it will pay you to keep your money working.
Spencer's Interior Ploor and Linoleum Enamel Hard wearing. 4-hour dry Alt r#»lnr*. Price, per gal_ 8.15
Quart 1.88
V, Tint 55#
At Mogt Attractive Pricea
Dominion, Provincial and Corporation Bonds GILLESPIE, HART & CO.. LTD
Speneer’e Pure Kaleomine
Mi* in warm water. Will not -rub off. All color*. Per 5-lb.
Small aet» in English Dinner ware. "Bloiaom'
pattern: IB
Spencer’a Lino and Ploor Varnkeh and Varniah Stain,
4 hour dry. Per gal. 8.85
I<ove)y Kngluh Celma Teacup* and Saucer*. 1.00 to ... 1.75
I’re**rd Glai* Salad Bowl*. Large *i*e 1.30 Salad Plate* in glai*. Leaf *hape 79#
Fruit N'appie*. Leaf shape 65f
Grape Fruit*. A handled nappy *hap«d a* a hunch of fTape» <m§ ... 3 foe 1 8e
Dvroealed Tnmbler, for Sommer drmV* •«*
piece*
Rtpwr'
Ra*ti Lak*
l»an Aulnel?* #enai*r Rat.i" ih-nW-Owkn
nne?r cra*k
Blew a *1. "•
Hidden Malartla H«arr*<> OUm Hiaett Bar* e^fr?* R
*e
Nv . v an lie T*'k Riigi.rt T«**r»
( « - -a
Flam i»pry *et* of JO piecei 5.50
Bungalow *et> of .U piece*, heavy colored line pattern* red or grren 18.00
view *trret
knt»»a *»• f»ft * n e?*Wa I- H
to* -U*.<k mrrut
California Colored Pottery Set* of 26 Asaortrd color*. Set , .....
Diuner Sel. 66 piece*. Attractively decorated
nappie*
VfMfS
CTO* '
COLONIST SPORTS
i KM AHLIMILD 1856>
VICTORIA. BRITISH COM MBIA, FRIDAY. MAY 2, l‘M
\ ictoria West Lawn Bowling Club to Open Season
lio. v Score
Laigary i rouncea In Third Game, 7-0
Mmlru c JniHn Jli lllltMkri. While rl
' >lani|M*<ler* rail to t.oing a- m>>al‘ Jump I nt«» 2-1 Lead in Mian (up Final*
MONTREAL. M«jr l tCF'.-Mont real Royuls were In a class by them'
Total*
IAI.RM—
i*l>art*r lb Kih lb Mnore rf
Summer* • ■( Kvlblnk, It B»«ril r P»irr»on •* lUrlolonir! Jl Ounnur-on p
Cam (tea u. Floyd Murray, Jlmmv Galbraith. Jlmuv Haggerty ard Jacque* Loco* spill the othrrr ns nearly every Royal tot Into (ha scoring
In contrast alth Tuesday night* iiiimr here, iron by Calgary 1-1 and the first one which Royal* took 7-3 ai Toronto, tonight'* game w*.-, rough and 16 px-nallle* were di-h»d out. Calgary coUected nine and a* the bruising third period neared an end. Galbraith and Art Shoquht tangled in a punching duel that landed them both In the bo* fur the last two minutes of the game.
Stampeder*. bothered by the sticky, bumpy Ice In the find period that made paving attacks impos- sible. neter got Matted, although they showed belter a* the game wore on.
They were woc-tully weak on the attack, a s Royal* time and again broke their rushes with sweeping | cheeks and skated them off. And as Royals penned them In for mln- Ote* at a time they seemed disnr- ranlred and unable to get the puck lout of danger.
On the only two real scoring chance* thev had they were robbed by the break* Bunny Dnme'* close- ' In shot in the third period bounced from pipe to pipe behind Oerry McNeil, and In the second Dune 'Grant lilt the post.
It was the fburth shutout tor the • lossy McNeil since Royals started along the play-off trail thl* 8prtng.
By DOUGLAS AM A RON
MONTREAL, May 1 <CP* —Speed, t* perlm'’ and durability —qualities a hockey coach dream, about lor hi* players— are wrapped up lo the six men named tonight as the Na- tional Hockey League* 19M-47 ah- stars.
The coach -picked team I* domin- ated by the presence of lour mem- bers of the league champion Mont- real Canadlens and unique In Die failure of the Stanley Cup-winning Toronto Maple L^afs to place a single member.
The six NHL coaches mud< li *ur •election* on a three-two-one point basis, naming tliree players for each position but none from their own team*. Tlie maximum for any player selected was 1ft points, and only Maurice Richard of Canadlens got a perfect score.
Here Is the all-star team
Goal — Hill Human, Montreal Ca- aadleru, 11.
Defence — Kenny Reardon, Mont- real Canadlens. 13.
Defence — Km lie Bouchard, Mont- real ( anadlrru. It
Boston
And, lor the first time, a place on the team carried more than glory ond the bonus clubs usually give player* selected. Die league offered 'l.(K fur each player making thr team, an offer extended a* well to trophy winners, whose names will be announced later this month.
Ill RNAN SI TS RECORD HI KOI It Til NOMINATION
In maki. , their choice, coaches folio cd the form line closely and I Uirce men named to The Canadian Press team a year ago repeated this season. They were the great Cana- dlen* triumvirate — Richard the scorer. Bouchard the bouncer and Dun. an tne blocker.
Thl> uai Dunum's fourth appear- ai>ce nn the first team In hUt four ye *.• a professional, a record un- equalled In league history. The 11,000 tie will receive a* his award i* hi* second big money prl4e of the •eason because he qualified for a similar amount by winning the Vetlna Trophy aa the league s best goaltender.
. Richard, the Rocket with the blazing shot who scored 46 goal* in regular play to top all goal-scorers, i was the only player voted the tnaxl- r urn number of points. He has been an all-fctar three years m succession.
Schmidt, acclaimed as probably . the best all-mind player In the game today, picked up where he left off before he went to war He waa on thr first team in 1939-40.
Little Doug Bentley, fleet, shifty 145-poundcr, u another veteran in the rank* of the great, having been chosen for the left wing position twice before. In 1942-43 and 1943-44 HI* brother. Max, who beat out Richard hy a point for the league point-scoring title this year, was centre on the first team a year ago coach of the Maple
selves herr tonight ns they skated, all over » loo*e and Ineffective Team of Calgary Stampeders for a 7-0 b .inking that sent Royals one game up In the best -of -seven Allan Cupl
TotsU **
Urll on «*••** VlclSfU l,,M tuu W'HiU HJB.i.1
In Bsilolonifl Summi H*. rilHe Malansser -we Slaalro Doublr pit) * Virkrr To H»r»Bmsn. H IhcMl UP »Ur*Mnsn i #i>«*tcr to Kfu* Tune I jiu O' Lough Un *
Almost tmm the starting whistle. Royals were obviously Uie team to beat and the 11.294 fans In the rink for the third play-off game were soon convinced as Frank Carlin'* crew sank two goal/ In the first period, were held to one in the sec- ond and then opened wide for four more In ihe final frame.
Tlie trains moVe back lo Toronto for the next three game* with Roy- al-. enjoying a 2-1 edge over last year's cup winners If a seventh game l* necessary it will be plnved in Montreal
Gerry Plgmondon ird the snipers with a pair of goals, while Tod
RigbRtU T« U»f»' Ml-
i]> KrittuM U ■ t *2
Aflrndanrt 1 M‘*
— Colonu: I'tUito
Kay. senior B.C double* Peter Johnston and C K-« Auctunvolr Cup. senior doubles. Johnston and Pea Yarrow Cup. Island doubles. Johnston and Fes Wenger Cup. ladles' Island single* Mrs H Wal- lace In addition to these trophies the club will also br defending the novice ell? open title, won by Dave Stewart
'I HE phpuhu Summer sport of ( George officiating. The club I lawn bowling will get well under grabbed a major share of the Mi- 's ay thl* week with all five clubs in vet ware against outside competition the city commencing activities for, last year Trophies seen above are. the season. The Victoria West Lawn left to right: Cras* Cup, mixed Bowling Club allll hold Its official doubles won by W Kerunuir and opening *1 the club grren*. corner 'Mrs. S Waddinifton. Stanley Cup. of Johtuan and Alston, at 7 pm ladles’ double* Mr* O E Sommer-
Wee Mac-
VERNON. May 1 <CP« Led by the live-goal effort of the pony line of the Bentleys and Bill Moeienko, the National Hockey U« RUo All-Stars defeated the Montreal Canadlens. g-3. In an exhibition game staged here today for 1 600 school children of the Okanagan.
The kids had plenty of oppor- tunity to cheer their favorites as the team* put on « claosy clean exhibition of hookey Players were overwhelmed by autograph- hunting admirer*, witnessing their Unit big* time match.
The honors of the game fell to Chicago Biackhawk ace* Doug and Max Bmttey ana Bill Moe\*nk<* They figured In the first five goaL of the game Max copped the l*o opening counter* unassisted and MoMenkn also tallied twice In the first session with Doug Bentley opening thr waring in thr second period Jimmy Coruuher scored the final gaol for the stars. Canadlen marksmen were Roger Leger, Billy Reny and Rocket Richard
tomorrow
Late Home Hun Downs Seattle
OANQPOINT. Idaho. Muy l ;p —A new world's record rainbow trout, a giant 36- pound Kamloops Rainbow, was hauled from Lake Pend OrelUe today on the opening dajr.of the seoaun.
C L Shepherd, of Oppor- tunity. Wash., w*.* credited by Chamber of Commerce ■fflclnl* with breaking the record art last year when a 32 -pound, elglil-ounre title winner was hauled frntn the lake by Lawrence Hamilton, nf Renrdan, Wash.
Shepherd* new record holder measured 37 Inches long Hr landed the huge trout after * 45-minute struggle Just before nightfall.
Centre— Mill Schmidt,
Bruins, 14.
Right Wing — Maurice Richard. Montreal C anadlens, IS
la ft Wing — D»ug Bentley,* C‘hi- iw(o Black Hawks, 10.
It la a team of o]l-*ur» In every sense of the word With the excep- tion of Reardon. Inspirational Irish-