SMASH FLOOD RELIEF prince Rupert Dsflp J3eto Lta. - Tuesday, July 13, 1048 HAAS RIVER COUPLE WED Russians "Milking" Germany Damaged in n.r Topley ,,n n"' Elk' Lodge at Burns Lake Gets Busy SAWMILL 'nnces of their zone that these ments in the allocation of raw PAPER MOVES Soviet Zone tit in t Exploited On A Grand Scale truck, tow-j LAKE-A driven bv Al- I now were largely dependent materials and labor. A full retinue of bridesmaids and groomsmen participated In iJlrwI- Members of) Len Griffith's sawmill near the Elks' Lodge of Burns 1-hIjp I Hhnmes im the Rkeena River Burns Lake Review Is Re-established trie pretty marrWe Rnt.iirrlnv By RICHARD KASISCHKE BERLIN (API While Marshall upon taxes on alcohol made from Gen. Herbert asserted that large-scale distillation of pota- taxation in the Soviet zone was toes which should be used as 450 reichsmarks ier head corn- Rupert, cui- !)f prince ...dun driven by evening at St. Andrew's Angli- hurried colIeetion for the) was put so badly out of line by run rathi.ri.-ai r.f o ,.,..n ""'"edliite relief of some some of of the the, the the recent recent flood flood water waters which which ; Plan millions are being devoted at the biid - M WCH IlllUWll BURNS LAKE After month. rf t H a la a rt4 viriu1r tirlc Cnh. sul'f(T?rs pared to 270 marks in the Brit- in tne Fraser Vallpv filled it. to a ripnt.h of ! feet Hill.. Both ve- Topley flood area. Contributions so far that he decided to rebuild near- food. HIDE UNEMPLOYMENT In the industrial field, he said, smashed up . i 1 1 , Ish zone (the pre-war value of ' lisher GeorKe 8 of U ! Simpson the mark was 40 cents.. In housing, Herbert said the;Burns Lake Review is one inlured. Both to the economic rehabilitation of western Germany, the Russians are "milking" their eastern Oermany occupation zone on an Increasing scale, according tp official Allied reports. ' . ,. i n mil n more firmly established as hi 1 ""V. V",n. the the Russians were covering up Soviet occupation zone and unemployment in their eone's Soviet sector of Berlin were be-run-down economy by sendin r hind because the Russians toolc 1 1 by at a safer elevation. With the overhauled machinery transferred, he expects to have the plant in operation again by the end of the month. The new mill building, 120 by 20 feet, stands on a site three feet above the Burns ume .,r tO f the Prince r,e ciriv .1 n VIII paruai uui grapnic account thousands of German worker of how the Russians are exacting I lnto their uranium mines i- building had to be moved t make room for the new hotel With a new linotype and fut equipment the Review will greet the public at regular interval in the future. most of the building materials for their own purposes. ,.toiiriiKe rw luiiuug m are as follows with a few members still to be heard ' from : I Harry Small ; $ j 0, F. Hurtsfield ).on! Ted Lovass 2.00' W. ('. S. Simpson l.ooJ J. M. Glaus '... 2.00 Pete Anderson i.oo Sliver Tip Dimdas l oo G II. ti. Simphon i oo A. Moore i nn on the wrong aiui- railway track and Mr, Orifflths Saxony. On the state of industry and their "take" was given recently by Maj.-Gen. E. O. Herbert, British commandant of Berlin, in a meeting of the city's Allied feels assured that he will not again be knocked out by any luture floods. . Kincollth couple in the persons of Miss June' Ellen Barton, daughter of the lute William O. Barton and Mrs. Barton, and Arthur Edward Btewart, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Stewart. Rev. Basil 8. Prockter, the rector, otncUUd at 6: 3U p.m. i The bride was glen in marriage by her uncle, Cecil Barton. She wore a full bridal costume of white. The matron of honor was Mrs. Clarence Barton, gowned In sky blue. Paul Clayton was principal groomsman. Fifteen motor cars took the marriage celebrants In a procession around the city following which a wedding repast took place in a downtown restaurant. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart are spending the summer at North Pacific Cannery and will later proceed to their home village on the Naas River to take up 2 FAMOUS RUNNERS WHEATON, 111. Two famous runners brought fame to Whea-ton Gil Doclds, mile runner, and Red Grange, football halfback flash. Mr. Griffith's residence was Kommandatura. also entered by water but has Herbert made his BLACKHEADS Gt two auneca of porozino powder from your drugmtt. Sprinkio on a. h t w tk and apply to th fac gently. lvry blackhead will b dissolved. The on Baf. auro report In reparations in the Russian zone, the British commandant reported: "Reparations are taken from current production in contravention of the Potsdam agreement. They Include large quantities of goods essential for now been cleared of silt and mud and is habitable again. i R. E. Robison l nn and aunpla way to mowvo I reply to what he termed "wild assertions" and "travesties of fact" uttered by the Russian K- Vj ll i . commandant, Maj.-Gen. Alexan BURNS LAKE BUSY der Kotikov. The Russians had claimed that the standard of living of the German population in the western-occupied areas was below that In the Soviet occupation Germany's rehabilitation us well as foodstuffs and consumer goods. The dismantling of Soviet zone railways is well known." After dismantling many Ger- Building is Particularly Active in Interior Town BURNS LAKE Building is at Burns Lake. Gordy Funnell i rjrj i Barney Mulvaney 3.00' R G. Anderson 1.00 L. C. Curlston 1,00 H. Mellunder 2.00 Verne T. Nixon l.noj P Kaler 1 00 W. Watson 1.00 Y. Cokran 2.00 H-'.mor E.;kkind 1.00 Char!l- O WUson 10.00 Mrs. F. Hurstfield 2.00 M. B. Hunt 6.00 Karl Anderson 1.00 The Royal Bank Is putting on zone and that the "anti-workers man lactones lor reparations a double roof for snow protec- position" of the U.S., British and and carting them off to Russia New Stock of WATERMAN'S Pens and Pencils has just arrived. A fine graduation or going-away gift. DIBB PRINTING COMPANY French authorities was to blame for lowering of living standards. The British commandant Herbert asserted, the Russians seized ownership of hundreds more factories and lumped them into their Soviet Aktiensell- tion. A pite driver is busy driving ' the foundation piles for the new hotel. in-Made THIRD AVENUE BF.SNKR BLOCK quoted heavily from statistics A drag-line outfit is dlgging comply by the Russian zone's! ahaften trust to precede repara- OUVENIRS tions goods. This trust, he said represented one-third of the re me pipe im me mains oi iown. German governments to the village water system, which; t hu aBserUong that the puts the streets in a muddy con- SovieU were conducting larg8. UjTIITI. SHELL li:Mt.M. Verne A. Taylor C. Robinson Sam Turner Mr. and Mrs. Stretch Boh Peebles A Bye Dave Ronmieu Troy M. Jeffrey Charlie Hunter H. V. McDowell Mrs. Frank Mann ... scale exploitation in industrial 2 00, ' 1.00 3.00, 2.5o! 1.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 and 1 manufactured reparations, ASH TRAYS JEWEL HOXES ujMun uwuig bu Heavy lamn. x lie new liquor store is rapidly near-ing completion. Gerow's Island promises to become a popular residential sec- maining Industrial capacity of the Soviet zone. "The Soviet foreign Industrial trust," Herbert said, "not only has a monopoly in many industrial industries but takes priority over German require- IN TERRACE . . . ' A Modern Department Store Nationally-known Unas In Ladies' Wear, Yard Goods, Men's Clothing, Shoes . . . plus a new Self-Serve Food Section with a Free Delivery , Service. 7 n building materials and In public finances. Herbert asserted that the Rus sians had so depleted public lit.- I tion of Burns Lake as all lots on FANCY MOCCASINS AND GUN CASKS Many Other Interesting 8ouvenlrs C. Jannack the recent subdivision have been sold and modern bungalows are oelng rapidly erected. IS: WOMEN WILL VOTE SECOND TIME A lodffe cheque in the amount of Sfi4 50 was forwarded to the relief iuiul. LEXINGTON, Ky. Citation, THE SKEENA MERCANTILE 1 1940 to provincial election. This famous racer, has already won Few Cast Ballots 100 Years Ago But First Recogniied In 1940 $423,700 to rank sixth among the ,l Ave. E. Box Phone Red 400 all-time money winners. Adverti.se in tne Dally News! women's franchise act followed a long campaign In which Mrs. Pierre F. Casgrain, wife of Judge Casgrain of Montreal, was prominent. Women have voted in by-elections in Quebec since then as well as in their first provincial election four years ago. Y F IN THE Seabee Amphibian Plane Non-Schedule Charter Service Commercial Hunting Fishing Sightseeing QUEBEC (P When election day eomcs around July 28 It will be the second time that women in a body take a hand in the choice of a Quebec Legislature though more than a 100 years ago a few of them slip 1LJ JL -JO,"". '""US fy. tciu THROUGH CHEMISTRY lllVINC CANADIANS They still have to elect a woman 1 member to the provincial leg-1 islature. This year no women candi ped in votes through a loophole in the law. Quebec women were recognized for the first time as qual SKEENA AIR TRANSPORT LTD. PHONES Terrace: W. H. Martin, 23; E. T. Kenney Ltd., 35 Prince Rupert-- Prince Rupert Hotel, 406 dates have yet appeared though one or two may be among the list .of candidates, on nomina ified provincial electors In 1940 I... tion day, July 21. However, a few women are on platforms supporting male candiates this year in some parts of the province. In 1944, Mrs. Joseph-Paul Sauve took part in the absentee-campaign of her husband, with Les Fusiliers Mont Royal. Major Sauve, then in Normandy The campaign was a success and her husband, now Brigadier Sauve,, was minister of youth and social welfare in the last Quebec government. FOR THE BEST IN AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE . . See Your ' GENERAL MOTORS DEALER Chevrolet Buick Chey. Trucks Puntiae Oldsmobile G.M.C. Trucks MACHINE WORK A SPECIALTY Terrace Machine Shop & Garage TERRACE, B.C. and they voted In Quebec general elections for the first time four years ago. They boosted the 1944 total provincial vote to more than 1,300,000 from 563,297 in the previous election in 1939. It was the wording cf Quebec's original election law which took effect in 179:2 when the first provincial parliament was elected that let women vote more than a century ago. This electoral law said that votes could be cast by by "persons" with a required amount of property. Propertied widows and some women legally separated from their husbands and with substantial means applied that word "persons" to themselves and a few of them went i i THE SITPREMt. COURT OP IN BRITISH COLUMBIA IN PROBATE n the Mutter of thr "Administration Aet" t And n the Mutter of the Kstutr of Wll- The Popular j S.S. 1 out on voting day Wnn i? cnr.MiSTRY may .wm to le remite, it is actually at your elliow r'ery day, a arienee f TAKE NOTICE that by order of ti,.m Dinrt His Honor Judire W. O. Pulton made r. - " - . ,h - (1.41. .,,. rt. '1 . . 1 oumc '"nu j,.. 1U4R I was ,.'.' . -..'rfr.-i nut. ' PRINCE I RUPERT 1 ' sails For i j t division in 1820. A returning of- appointed Administrator of the estate fleer ulci faced iav.cu " others in Upper of William Attken. deceased. Wain A" Parties having ciurmg against Town division in Quebec in lS-H the n neroby r0qutn-d " and refused them r permission to to furnish ame, properly verified, to me on or before the 4th day of Au?- VOte. iu3t, 1841, after which claims filed unliiniteyl practical lines. Wcfti fng apparel ie voven from chemically crrated yarns. Cliemiiuil fertilizers atlmiilale tilant provtth; inscclicidea First Law Disallowed may be paid without reference to of whlch 1 then hati no The result was a law in 1834 "f OCEAN VIEW HOTEL (Formerly Knoxi A Quiet, Pleasant Place to Live COMPLETELY RENOVATED Rooms Redecorated Spring-Filled Mattresses New Management Proprietor, TOM PESUT PHONE 71 barring women voting, DUt at A1) parties Indebted to the estate luait-u lasted uiui only two iwu years before the -re required to pay the "mount at , ,. . ,. their Indebtedness to me forthwith. British parliament disallowed It, Dated this 35th day of June A D. not in a feminist frame of nana 94s. but because of other features. ROBERT P. JOHNSTON, Official Administrator. Telegraph Creek, B.C. (1B3) VANCOUVER; AND INTERMEDIATE PORTS EACH THURSDAY. AT 11:19 r.M. For KETCHIKAN WEDNESDAY MIDNIGHT ' ; ir Information call or write City or Depot Ticket Oflloaa PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. The question of the women's vote, was settled lor nearly (heck '8t tlestrurtion. The vater wie driuk is purified by cWorinft; t Chemistry plays a vital part in modern medicine and in the tre atment of steel. Salt, soap, paint, nylon, "Cellophane" 100 years by another law in 1849. The effect of this was that women weren't Qualified voters. NEW SHIPMENT OF SUP Quebec women had voted In federal elections for several years before the Quebec Legis ERBLY TAILORED SUITS t h V . 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