th r enrt.H . t?tlme Uupttt " Wednesday, Dailp J3rtof Ito. June 8, 1948 new arrivals are willing to believe tUere is a place called Waikikamookau,' although actually it Is merely a phonetic ver RECALLS PYJAMA GIRL'S MURDER mitted Agostini for trial for the murder of his wife. ! Agostini was acquitted on the ! murder charge but found guiliy, of manslaughter after a 10-d;iu CFPR ROYAL FAMILY STUDIES MAORI FOR N.Z. TOUR "By C. J. GRAHAM Canadian Press Correspondent AUCKLAND, N.Z. O) The King and Queen and Princess Margaret are reported to be learning Maori in preparation janci abbreviated out of recog-for their visit to New Zealand nmon by the local inhabitants next year, and their studies willjTnus Kohukohu is usually call-doubtless Include Instruction in ed Coke Dy people of the district the Dominion's place names. It ailcj Whenuakite is pronounced is a wise precaution as New Zea- ' Fenooket. land has some very odd Europ- fjew Zealanders as a whole can names as weir as Maori ones which at first glance ap- pear to defy pronunciation. than three or four phrases of Many British Immigrants the language and their attempts have difficulty in pronouncing at pronouncing the place names even the names of the places of their own country are usually where they live. Some claim It as far away from the Maori or-nceds hands and feet as well as lgirial as are those of visitors mouth and tongue to do the Job from abroad, proper. j The general rule is to pro- The Royal Family wi:i find nounce every vowel und give it some names more than famil- its full value, with equal em-iar, for New Zealand has aphasis on each syllable. Windsor , a Balmoral and a' . Sandringham, as well as place ., names from every part of the ALAOfkA 1 Kir iriai. mc was scntcnneti t,. years imprisonment but thrmiin. bikiu oenavior ana a year's re- mission given by federal government to all -'Isoners when Stow on it f -vir...ni ELECTRICAL Radio Dial 1240 Kilocycle (Subject to change) WEDMESDAT P.M. 4:00 Eamund boctrltrgt i.lo Stock Quotations and Int. 4:30 Music by Goodman 4:45 Maggie Muggins 5:00 Rendez-vous Room 5:30 Rosa Linda 5:45 Supper Varieties 6:00 Current and Choice 6:30 Musical Varieties 6:45 Plantation House Party 7:00 CBC News 7:15 CBC Roundup 7:30 Frank Wenner Holme 8:00 The Trojan Women 9:30 Biiset's Symphony 10:00 CBC News 10:10 B.C. News 10:15 Eric Nicol 10:30 Solwyn String Quartet 11:00 Fish Arrivals 11:05-Weather Forecast and Sign Off THURSDAY-AM 7:30 -Musical Clotk 8:00 CBC News 8:15 Morning Song 8:30 Music for Moderns 8:45 Little Concert 9 00 BBC News 9:15 Morning Devotions 9:30 Transcribed Melodies 9:45 Modern Musicians 9:59 Time Signal 10:00 Morning Visit 10:15 Morning Melodies 10:30 Roundup Time 10:45 Scandlnnvlai. "M"l"dic 11:00 Bemie Braden Tells a Story 11:15 Songs of Today 11:30 Weather Forecast 11:31 Message Period 11:33 Recorded Interlude 11:45 Let's Waltz P.M. 12:00 Mid-Day Melodies 12:15 CBC News 12:25 Program Resume 12,30 B.C. Farm Broadcast 12.45 Recorded Interlude 1 :00 Symphony Hour 2:00 Sheila Presents 2:30 Commentary and I Learned Late 2:45 Western Five 3:00 Ethel and Albert 3:15 Spotlight on a Star 3:20 Sketches In Melody 3:30 The Trooping of the Color 3:45 BBC News 3:55 U.N. Report former palace of Prince Toka-gawa and is driven around by a former Japanese army col onel. Although wages of Japanese seem ridiculously low by North American standards, Col. Han cock says a person living in Jap an can do nicely on "10 bucks a month." "The first thing tnat scared me was driving on the left side of the road and the traffic that must be dodged kids by the thousands, oxcarts, honey wagons, bicycles with every kind of trailer, rickshaws, gasoline and charcoal - burning automobiles and street cars if you can call them such. "The city is huge and one finds magnificent buildings side by ' side with shacks. "The United States Army Air forces did a wonderful job of precision bombing, picking out just the spots they wanted to hit, leaving the show places untouched. "It sure looked good to see the Japanese war office, navy building and all office buildings in that area including the German embassy gutted and the Imperial Hotel left intact. "The United States Army is doing a wonderful job of control and Gen. Douglas Mac-Arthur is tops with everyone. "The Jauanese police look i like something the cat dragged in, but the funniest thing I've seen so far is the Tokyo fire brigade in action. "The engines are very antiquated and hurtle down the street at top speed regardless of traffic. One chap stands on the running board grinding a siren and another frantically waves a huge red flag. 'At the fire they run out a length of hose and then stop and bow to each other." SHIPS AND WATERFRONT White and native salmon fishermen arc to meet in Prince Rupert this coming Saturday when a report covering price negotiations will be submitted for hearing and general discussion. United Kingdom. But It also has McrrijlKS, Peep oday. Eureka. Ho Ho, A Port Hardy couple were Yncyca Bay, and most express-, married quietly at First Uni-ive of all a mountain called the ted Church Monday morning, Biimit named by exasperated sailing shortly afterward on a Italian Arrested 10 Years After Crime To Be Deported' SYDNEY. Australia & A government announcement that Antonio AgoUlni, 45 - year - old Italian, Is to be deported recalls one of the most headlined crimes in Australian history. On Sept. 1, 1934, the partly burned body of a woman dressed in pyjamus was found under a culvert on the Albury-Howlong road In Victoria. There were no clues to her Identity and she became known as "The Pyjama Girl." For years all missing persons" In Australia were checked. Police throughout the world were asked to co-operate. Forcn.lc medical experts built up a plastic face fo rtlie girl and circulated photographs of it in all the world capitals without results. In February 1944, police ar rested Antonio Agostini and charged him with the murder of the girl, who, they claimed, was Linda Agostini, his wife. 23-DAY INKIEST At the 23-day inquest that fol lowed a woman came forward I and jClaimed the dead woman (was her daughter, Phlloinena (Morgan. The woman employed a well-known doctor who tried ' to prove by means of tracing the features of the deud girl with those of photograph of Philomcna Morgan that rtw could not be Linda Agostini. Coroner Tingatc sitting uf, Melbourne ruled that the body was that of Linda Agostini, formerly Piatt, of Llttlehamp-ton, Sussex, England, and com- Zj''lklX TW WITHOUT A ill JAPAN IS DESCRIBED When Tokyo Firemen Rcath l ire. They Stop, Bow To Each Other EDMOiJTON, -0, A Canadian's picture of conditions in Japan is given by W. F. W. (Bill) Hancock of Edmonton, former chief of the R.C.M.P. in Western Canada, in a letter from Tokyo. , Mr. Hancock, now Edmonton representative of the vice-presl dent in charge of the Orient route of Northwest Airlines, is in Tokyo on business. I He wrote he is living in' the m BLOVSES j Priced Right And Styled Right SHEERS CREPES BROADCLOTHS AND THE FAMOUS TOOKE TAILORED BLOUSE. S RUPERT PEOPLES STORE 1 . sion of a question in plain Eng lish. Even short names like' bue and Oio have their pronunciation problems. Residents of Pe-tone (pronounce Petoer.ee) delight in persuading new arrivals it is pronounced Pet One. Even more confusing are Maori names which are habitually Anglicised know remarkably little Maori. Most 0f them could not say more FOR NEWLYWEDS honyemoon trip to Alaska on the Princess Norah. The bride was Miss Marjorie Jones and the groom was John Renneman. Witnesses of the rite, pertormeo. by Rev. R. A. Wilson, were Mr. and Mrs. L. Dakin. The couple will return to Port Hardy on the Princess Norah this week. WASH YOUR UMBRELLA Oil silk umbrellas can be washed with mild soap and water. In cold weather they should be handled with care because they stiffen and crack easily. WHAT' 15 HOME lU5T4 b h r1 TOMORROW FIXTURES APPLIANCES CLEANERS SERVICE 0,"y 'hree 'nimtlis nj II'' .has i .. . Pyramid. J. high. b,1M" 0 mi?' YOUR BESlt EATING PLA1 1. 1 !.!.-( Ill 'USE It H.tli. t ' . tTwi-ltKONK, D'H AND rARH CIIINtSB PS, BROADW CAFE J . .... w rw" tp ArTOR p.0. B SEE PHONE WRITE: RUPERT RADIO & ELECTl IMIONK (.14 313 TIIIKI' AVfM I M I VI' B"S 000 -W-it-f MUST EE RAISED FOR. FLdDdDUD EMERGENCY ELELEEE I J ' Ji'-tlT I r 1 'V ; i.r climbers struggling up its slopes ' and unchanged in spite of pro- tests by those who consider the name undignified. But Maori names are the real traps for the unwary. Mimi may conjure up visions of some French charmer In the country's early days, but it is a Maori word and the wise do not ask for a translation. In fact it is usually inadvisable to ask for meanings unless they are prof-ferred, as some of them are extremely frank. TRY THESE TOCKSELF It is enough of a problem to ! learn to pronounce them at all. !Try yourself out on these tongue I twisters: Taumateotewhatui, ! Whakarewarewa, Kaulwhenl-jwha, Paraparaumu, Rangiwhak-iaoma, Whangaparaoa, Waiarik-iriki, Kucranga, Te-pai-o-tu- rawaru, Ngaruawahia, Poro-o- taraou. It is not surprising that many 00 $25,000 V, w Prince Rupert Objective is .y I (f. Father's Day June 21) A Nice Selection of VATlll-MfV FATHER'S DAY HAY CARDS Now on Display ut mil - I . ., OCEAII VIEW HOTEL (Formerly Knox) A Quiet, Pleasant Place to Live COMPLK T F. I- Y RENOVATEU Rooms Redceoralrd Hpt Ins-Filled Mattresses New Management Proprietor, TOM PESUT PHONE 7J ONE INCH OF WATER EACH WEEK NEEDED BY GARDEN Here's a guide for setting; up a payroll deduction plan. (1) On your next pay day deduct the amounts pledged from your payroll and deposit the total collection in your bank to the credit of 1J.C. Flood Emergency Fund. (2) Prepare in triplicate a list of the name and individual contribution of each donor. Retain one copy and give two copies to the bank with your deposit. 0') The bank will issue a receipt for the total amount. (1) Individual receipt forms are being designed by the flood conmiitlce. When you receive them, prepare individual receipts for each employee. (r) Send these receipts to the bank to be stamped as official receipts. They will be returned for distribution to the individual employees. THE SPACE FOR THIS ADVERTISEMENT HAS BEEN DONATED TO THE FLOOD EMERGENCYY RELIEF COMMITTEE BY: JMSS if upon a board which scatters It and prevents washing out a gully; or use a canvas hose which leaks all along Its length and serves as a portable irrigation ditch. But let the soil dry-out be tween drinks. A good soil holds both water anl air at the same time, he said. These are held In space between the soil particles, called ''pores." When there is an excess of water, air is driven out, and the plants suffer, for the lack of It. This occurs in gardens when water stanus on the surface and is the reason -why quick drainage of excessive wut-er is so important A plant will make the best root growth when it Is drying the soil down. When the soil is soaked, and the excess drains away quickly, fresh air enters the soil to take the place of water. The roots reach out for water as the supply diminishes, and vigorous growth results. ' Many amateurs find that by sinking a tile Into the ground near each hill before the seed Is sown, they can simplify the task of watering. Water poured into the tile is carried immediately I down to the deepest roots, and 'this often results in exceptional growth. Canvas Hose Which Leaks Through Mesh Spreads Water Evenly Over Garden j At least one inch of water every week should be available to garden plants, both flowers and vegetables, to -obtain vigorous growth. If this quantity does not fall In rain, it should be made up by watering with the garden hose. Water from the hose does not seem to go as far us rain, so more than an inch is actually needed during dry spells when most of the water is supplied artificially. This probably has a simple explanation. In dry summer weather it Is hot and sunny, so more water evaporates than in cloudy weather, when It rains, thus making the rain . more effective. j If this is the case, then it makes all the more important the need for getting water down Into the soil as deep as possible. This minnot be done by sprinkling a brief period every day; that is bad watering practice because it moistens only the top few inches of soil and encourages root growth near the surface where the soli dries out quickly. Let the .hose run without a sprinkler, so that the' water falls m: GREER & BRIDDEK PRINCE RUPERT FISHERMEN'S CO-OPERATIVE GORDON AND ANDERSON KAIEN CONSUMERS . CO-OPERATIVE BUILDERS AND t tfvi B.C. PACKERS Kepain wntuw Floor Sandinp a Sialt NORTHERN B.C. POWER CO. Phone RED 561