 azis Again Raid
ritain's Coasts;
Attack New Areas
■.
British Bombers Again
Strike qt Nazi
Centres
TOUT
ATTACK
LONDON, June 20 (Thundiy)-
(CP).—War In the aklet over England raged again todty through
sleepiest houn from midnight to
diwn to the accompaniment of the
thunder of bombi and the Incn-
i«nt barking of antl-alrortft guns.
The Naxl ralden came at Irregular intervals, wave after wive,
and ranged from the Southeastern
cont North Into Scotland.
Slreni thrilled warnings In some
lectlom of Northwestern England
never before threatened from the
•air.
And again, as yeiterdiy, Brltlth
bomben ilmultaneoutly itruck
blow after blow with attacki on
Germany.
Roaring fighter planet and antiaircraft gum that banged away
at dark shapes picked up by
searchlight beams brought down
at leaM one of the German aircraft
and sent two othen teaward In
difficultly, barely clearing the
houietopj.
Townspeople stayed in their
houses or scurried to air raid shelters. All civil defence units stood
by their stations until dawn and a
spell of quiet that indicated the raid
—or the wont nf (tr*wai ovtr.
The raid in Northeast England
lasted five houri, but no clvialian
casualties were reported.
Bombi exploded near a Northeast
coastal town, and anti-aircraft and
fighters battled off other raiders
trom Scotland to South of London.
The air-raid alarm on the East
coast of Scotland was lifted after
halt an hour.
The first alarms were sounded
Just before midnight. Wednesday,
afid a-m*i_f__tft*«ter midnight
the Bremen and Hamburg radio stations went lilent, probably Indicating British airmen had been detected on their third successive night-
covered visit to Germany's busy
Northwest Industrial and shipping
section.
The sound of machine-gun fire
went for a considerable time after
British tighter planes took the air,
and the raiders also encountered
heavy opposition from ground
batteries.
-A powerful searchlight caught
one raider In' lta beam and the
plane made off toward tht sea
with tighter planes shooting tracer
bullets ln its wake.
The all clear signal was sounded
ifter three hours and a quarter in
one town ln Northeast England
were one German raider was
brought down.
High flying planes were heard re.
peatedly in Southeastern England.
The thunder of bombs was heard
again and again. Searchlight beams
criss-crossed ln the sky. The antiaircraft fire was Intense.
Sometimes the searchlight! picked
out the dark forms of high-flying
planes Bursts of shellfire were seen
around them.
FLASH
LONDON, (una 20 (CP) —
The Air Mlniitry and Ministry
of Heme Security announced
today that aix civilians were
killed and aome 60 Injured in
German air ralda during the
night. At least three Cerman
aircraft* were shet down.
British Soldiers Are
Kidnapped at Belfast
BBLF,\ST, Northerh Ireland,
June 19 (CP)-Troops armed with
machine-guns were stationed at
all -.treet corners in Belfast tonight after two British soldiers
had been disarmed and kidnapped
The kidnapper! iplrlted the
soldiers away in an automobile.
Other troopi were stopping all
cars and a house-to-house search
wai made for the stolen firearms.
Late Flashes
LONDON, June 20 (CP).—The
Royal Air Force bombed military objectives and communication! lit the Ruhr, Rhineland and
Wett Germany lait night, the Air
Ministry announced today.
TOKYO, fane 20. (Thwraday. •
(AP). - m,Fgreljn Office an;
noupetd 1l«inj>6f the Tientsin
blockade effective at noon today
(7 p.m. P.S.T. Wedneiday) following the signing of an agreement with Britain and France.
BORDEAUX, June 20 - (Thursday) - (AP Via Radio) - An undetermined number of persons were
killed and wounded last night as
low-flying German planes bombed
Bordeaux, provisional capital of
beleaguered France.
NEW YORK, June 19 (AP). -
The Italian radio tonight, In a
broadcast heard here, reported
Mussolini's return to Rome and
Hitler's arrival back at his Western Front headquarters from their
conference in Munich.
BUCHAREST June 20 - (Thursday) - (AP). — Government circles
received reports today that a large
number of Russian troops are being
transferred from the Bessarabian
frontier with Rumania to the German-Russian borfler.
BLACKMORE BLOCKS FAST PASSAGE
OF THE COMPULSORY SERVICE BILL
Nelson Visitor
ARNOLD McGRATH, M.L.A.
of Cranbrook, who Is in Nelson
ln the course of a trip through
Weit Kootenay, accompanied by
J. S. Drummond ol San Leandro,
Calif.
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP)-John
Blackmore, leader of fhe New Democracy group, headed off in the
House of Commons todsy what
looked like a speedy passage of the
Government's compulsory service
bill.
He delayed passage In spite of
a plea for Immediate action (rom
Prime Minister Mackenzie King,
lupported by leaders of the Conservative and Co-operative Commonwealth Federation groups
amid clamorous demands for
speed from private members.
Just before the House adjourned
at the customary Wednesday hour
tot rising unless by unanimous
consent or dsoption of a resolution
to the end, It has been decided to
continue the sitting. Mr. Blackmore
said he desired to discuss the measure.
He prophesied it would take until 8 p.m. even if the House sat
through the dinner hour by unanimous consent.
Mr. King said the Government
had hoped the bill would pass yesterday when it was introduced, or
today it the latest. He could not
attend tonight because the Cabinet
was irteting on essential matters
and had planned to take action
tared on powers contained in the
bill.
AHhou.h the Conservative leader, Hon. R. B. Hanson, said M. I.
Coldweil. acting leader of the
C.C.F. group, said they were prepared lo rush the bill thro->h at
ence, sitting pa^*t 4 o'clock for the
last formalities, Mr. Blackmore
persisted. Further discussion went
over until tomorrow.
Members from all sides shouted loudly "Let's do it now," and
the Chamber wra in considerable
uproar when the Committee of
the Whole, which had the bill before lt all afternoon, rose to "report progress and ask leave to
sit again."
, The House had been enlivened
earlier by a full dress division,
called by the Prime Minister snd
his colleagues to place on record
the exposition to the compulsory
features of the enabling legislation
giving the Government wide powers to mobilize manpower and re-
sc-urces, compulsory manpower to
te used only In Canada.
This resulted In a vote of 202 to
two in support of Committee
Chairman vien's ruling that an
amendment nullifying the com-
fi'lscry feature of the bill was out
of order.
There was a sharp Interchange
when Mr. Hanson charged that the
Justice Minister, Hon. Ernest Ls-
cointe. in a broadcast last night,
nad given an impression of the
Government's intention! under
this till contrary to that he gave
in the House.
"You cannot ride two horses at
the srme time," Mr. Hanson de-
clarcd. He s;:d Mr. Lapointe,
speaking in French, had given
the impression to his radio audience that there was not great
necessity of passing the bill.
The Air Minister, Hon. C. G.
Pcver, vigorously declared there
was no ruCh intention and that a
proper trfnslatlon of Mr. La-
pointe's speech, delivered on the
air in English by the Finance Minister, Hon. J. L. Ralston, indicated
clearly It was an attempt to allay
any fears that might arise over the
possibility of immediBte seizure of
savings and create a run on banks.
The Government! mobilization
bill drew fire from a handful of
Quebec Liberals who insisted the
Government had not yet exhausted
possibilities of voluntary effort.
An amendment to the bill proposing a "free voluntary and moderate" war effort was ruled out ol
order for technical inaccuracies.
The Justice Minister. Hon. Ernest
Lapointe. and Works Minister Hon
P J. A. Cardin made impassioned
pleas to Quebec members to support
tha bill.
McLennan Tells
Brotherhood ol
Banking, Money
An Interesting address on banking and the use of money wu given
to the St. Paul'i Men'i Brotherhood
Monday night by J. R. McLennan,
Manager of the Canadian Bank Ot
Commerce.
The function of money offered
a useful means of purchasing good!
ai It wu not the source of purchasing power but rather the source
of production of purchasable goodi
or exchangeable goods. Money wai
the means of bringing goods to
marketable centres; in other words
it was the facilitating machine.
Money could be likened to the ojl
that wu put into a machine. The
machine needed loti of oil at a
iteady flaw to keep it running
smoothly, but it was the ga_s (hat
wai. the motivating power.-Money
allowed the machine to run to produce the goods.
Some gained their money by estate or sweepstake, but ln that way
nothing was added to the wealth of
the community, for it was not new
money, Mr. McLennan explained.
Germany, France and Italy went
on a self-sufficiency basla in 1920
and. 1930. Thli meant that they produced much of their own wheat,
thereby, bringing the price of Canadian wheat from $1.32 a bushel
to 78 cent! per bushel from the first
five years, to the second five years.
This resulted In a total loss of export wheat "from Canada to the extent of 85,000,000 bushels or $250,-
000,000 per year.
"It can be imagined what the loss
of the wheat trade meant to the Canadian railway system alone, which
would not take into consideration
the farmers not being able to pur
chase goods," the speaker stated.
NO MONOPOLY IN
BANKING
There was no monopoly In the
banking system, he said, yet the
Banking Act was rather stringent
in order to safeguard the Canadian
people or depositors. One hundred
i and seventy directors and 48.000
people held the shares of Canadian
banks. These shareholders Included
widows and trust companies, with
insurance companies being the largest shareholders. The largest holder
had about 30 shares of $100 each.
Banks operated on a 10-year charter,
he said. There were seven depositors
for every borrower, he said.
A vote of thanks was given Mr.
McLennan for his address. President
Leo S. Gansner was ln the chair.
Last of Canadian
Troops Get Home
SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,
June 19 (CP Cable)-The last detachment of the spearhead of the
Canadian 1st Division which reached a point within 25 miles of Paris
only to be ordered to start an immediate withdrawal without engaging the enemy arrived in the divisional camp today.
They returned without a single
battle casualty but minus some
of their transport and stores
which they had brought a dis
tance of 330 miles to the port of
embarkation only to discover
there was no available transport
to take it off. The material was
destroyed to prevent It from falling into the hands of the advancing foe.
For 12 days the troops had been
on the road, moving toward the
Canadian assembly area in France
ahead of lhe main body of the division, and then exerting every
ounce of energy and goile In the
task of extricating themselves and
their valuable stock of war material.
They snatched off moments of
rest whenever possible, never Uklng off their clothes and subsisting
on iron rations and food they were
able to purchase from peasants or
in towns through which they
passed.
The Canucks came into camp itill
smiling. Many of them had lost all
otrsonal belongings.
RUMORSDECLARE
MAJOR TERNS OF
NAZIS REJECTED
Indication Is France
May Try to Fight
on to Finish
BORDEAUX, France, June 19
(AP). — Reporti were widely
circulated tonight—without official confirmation — that Germany'! major peace terma are unacceptable to the French and that
President Lebrun and other leaders have gone, or may soon go, to
Algiers, to preserve the frame-,
work of a fighting Government -
Lebrun, one report said, waa or
- would be accompanied to Africa
by the Presidents of the Chamber
of Deputiei and Senate, respectively, Edouard Harriott and Jules
Jeanneney.
The general tenor ot all reports tonight seemed to be that
France may try to tight on.
Although lt was itated officially
that the Government ot Premier
Henri Philippe Petain la still waiting to hear from lta envoys about
the German terma, tonight's reports
iaid the main demand! had become
known and were Judged to be too
harsh.
Officially lt wu stated the French
Government hu submitted the
names of iti negotiator! to the Germans and Is awaiting an aniwer.
(A Britlih radio broadcut picked
up tonight by N. B. C. laid three
French representatives, General Ed-
mond Huntziger, Foreign Minister
Paul Baudouln and Leon Noel, former French Ambassador at Warsaw, had left for an undisclosed
destination).
Latest German pushes apparently
were aimed at a quick cleanup of
France's English Channel cout, and
the cutting off ot France's third
city, Lyon.
The French Government accepted the first German-Italian condition for an Armlatlce—that plenipotentiaries be tent to hear peace
terms—and rebuked a recent Cabinet member for having urged from
London continuation of resistance.
The rebuke wu addressed to General Charles De Gaulle, the Under-
|^K_»__-i4^W«<*hlchf
resigned Sunday.
The Cabinet, with Spanish Ambassador Jose Felix Lequerlca, the
axil intermediary, reported lifting
in, appointed plenipotentiaries to
go to whatever place is designated
by Germany and there to learn the
price fixed by Hitler and Munollnl
and to accept or reject it.
Kootenay Recruits Off te Ceast
Wishing luck to Arthur Chimben of Fruitvale, a recruit, Is Bob
Smales of Rossland, member of the Trail Veterans' Home Guard. At
lett ls Tom Mathews, of TralL See Today's News Pictures for more
Trill and Nelaon scene!, page 3.
First Nelson Recruits Leave for
(oast and Kamloops; "Fight Good
Fight, Honor King, Trust in God"
23 to B. C. Regiment
and Two Go to
the R.M.R.
Recrulti who left Nelion Wedneiday, 23 of them going to the
Coast to Join the British Columbia Regiment and two en route to
Kamloopi   to   Join   the   Rocky
Mountain Rangers, were:
For B. C. Regiment—R. F. Ball,
R. O. Bowei, C, B. Browne, E. L.
Chambers, R. M. Clayton, II. Don-
nolly, Peter Dunn, F. Endsley, T. M.
Heslop, Konrad Hessler, Nick Jud-
iakoff, H. E. Mayberry, A. V. L. McNicol, H. G. McNicol, John Robb,
E. D. Rogeri, R. A. Rutherglen, T.
J. Rutherglen, Thomu Wallace, E.
T. Woods, H. S. Elliott, G. R. Framp-
ton, and Edward P. Hogan.
Rocky Mountain Rangen — A.
Graves and H. Lisk.
-    | tWf1/" —*_   ,,
Frost Hits Crops
WUJN_P_D. June 19 (CP) -
Frost nipped at the ears of Weitern Canada'i growing crops today, leaving market gardens in
some sections slightly damaged
wheat and coune grain fields
were reported unharmed by the
below-freeiing temperature.
New Governor General
Speeding to Ottawa
EARL OP ATHLONI
HALIFAX, June 19 (CP).—The
Earl of Athlone, his secret voyage
to Canada completed and hia simple welcoming over, rode swiftly
by ipecial train toward Ottawa tonight to ba sworn ln u Canada'i
16th Governor GeneraL
After a reception that had no
vice-regal parallel ln stark simplicity, the 60-year-old Earl and
his lady, the Princess Alice, headed late today toward the national
capital for the Installation, little
more than an hour after touching
foot to Canadian soil at the end of
an eight-day transatlantic crossing.
War's stress had cut the traditional brilliant ceremony to the bare
matter of a few handclasps and salutations.
A few dozen welcomen who were
permitted to stand at the foot of his
liner's gangplank managed to transmit some of 'the Dominion's spirit
of welcome for Its viceroy. A spontaneous burst of applause echoed
through the great, cavernous freight
shed into which the couple disembarked.
Dr. E H. Coleman, K.C, Undersecretary ot State, met the viceregal pair on behalf of the Federal
Government. Lleut.-Gov. F. F.
Mathers of Nova Scotia sworn in
only a few dayi ago. and Highways
Minister A. S. MacMillan, for the
absent Premier Angus L. Macdonald, acted for the Province. All the
fighting services were represented
To the applause of thoM uhore
wu added that of hundred! of
United states-bound refugeei who
lammed the rail of the liner. Persons who came off the ship iaid they
were residents of Czecho-Slovakia
PRINCESS  ALICE
and other countries under the Nul
heel, seeking new homos on this
continent The Governor General
gave them a farewell wave of the
hand as ne debarked.
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP).-For
the fint time in Canadiin history
a new Governor General will be
officially welcomed and sworn in
at Ottawa Friday when the Earl
of Athlone officially takes office.
Customarily a Governor General
Is sworn ln at the port of debarkation.
State Department and Government House officials here had long
since drawn 'up plans for the
ceremony to take place with his
arrival In Ottawa.
The Earl of Athlone Is the second Governor General to arrive in
wartime. The Duke of Devonshire
who came to Canada in November,
1916, was sworn in at Halifax. Canada's last Governor General, the late
Lord Tweedsmuir was sworn in at
Quebec.
When the vice-regal train reaches Ottawa Union station Friday the
Administrator, Sir Lyman P. Duff,
and Prime Minister Mackenzie King
will go aboard to greet his excellency and Princess Alice, Countess
of Athlone.
The wir hai done away with gold
braid. Hli excellency will wear
morning dreu and her royal highness afternoon dreu with a hat.
The Prime Miniiter and Sir Lyman
also will be dressed ln morning
clothes.
Tbe Installation ceremonies will
take place In the Senate-with the
oath ot office administered by Sir
Lyman.
Home Guards Parade
Them to Train;
Many Gifts
"Fight the good fight
"Honor your King.
•Trust In God.
"And may you all come home
lately."
Thli wai the menage given to
a drift of 25 recrulti from Nelion Diitrlct who boarded a Westbound train at Nelson Wednesday morning, two of them going
to Kamloopi to Join the Reeky
Mountain Rangers and the remainder going to the Cout to
join the B. C. Regiment
The message was given by Major
A. C. Sutton, D. S. O., M. C, ot
Rowland, Recruiting Officer for
Kootenay Wut, a few minutei before the recruit! boarded the train.
They had marched to the station-^
tor many of them their tint parade
—behind a "vanguard" of the Veterans Home Guard commanded by
Lieut. M. K. Harrison, and with
the Canadian Legion Bugle Band
leading.
STATION JAMMED
Friends and relativei followed
the parade and Jammed the station platform to see the men
leave. Many of them carried parcels of cigarettes, candy, orangei
and so on and distributed th|lr
gifts among the recruits. Prorh-
inent imong them were Canadian
Legion officials, Mayor N. C.
Stibbs, representing the City,
and memben of the lllth Battery Womens Auxiliary. The Joy-
maken Club and othen also
presented cigarettes and so on.
Major Sutton told the men they
were going to Join one of Britiah
Columia's famous regiments. They
must be prepared to^pRe the good
and the bad equally with a smile,"
and they must remember that "a
smile will take you through a lot
of difficulties."
A. E. Thain. a Captain ln the
First Great War, now Secretary-
Manager for Nelson Branch of the
Canadian Legion, declared ex-
servicemen would understand how
the recruits felt
"Many of us are congratulating
you, but we envy you too," he asserted. "If we could come we'd
be with you now."
FINISH IT THIS TIME
Glorious Britain had given Germans an opportunity to be comrades
after the last war,
New Line to Make
Desperate Stand
in Rhone Valley
May Defend Lyon by Fresh Troops From th#-
Maginot Line; "New Battle" Given
Nazis on Middle Loire
GENEVA, June 20 (Thursday) (AP)—Reports reached the Swiss border early today stating that French planes
and French troops from North Africa had crossed the Mediterranean under a French-British naval convoy to help check-
the Cerman drive in Southeastern France.
BORDEAUX,   France,   June   19   (AP)—France   an-;
nounced tonight that her troops had delivered a "new battle"
against the enemy on the middle Loire River before withdrawing to "establish themselves on a more favorable line."
Armies in Lorraine, withdrawing from the Maginot
Line through German motorized troops and mechanized units,
were said to be resorting to the famous square formation used
in Flanders.
A French military commentator declared that although
the French armies now weref;
fighting   as   isolated   groups,
"eaeh nevertheless has conserved its cohesion of manoeuvre in retreat."
he said, but
they spurned lt.
'This time,' he declared, let's
finish it. We will finish it"
Amid shouts of "No mercy" from
war veterans standing by, Captain
Thaln urged the recruits to take
their toll of the enemy for themselves, for the Empire, for the Canadian Legion, and for him.
Mayor Stibbs wished the mm
"Godspeed and a happy return."
"All honor and glory to you
boys who are going out to defend
democracy," Hu Wonhlp asserted.
Recalling a similar occasion 29
yean ago when he left as a recruit,
James Spencer, Legion President
told the men "you are starting on
their great adventure, not knowing
where they are going nor when,
but adventure will be youn." He
had spent four years In the army,
Mr. Spencer said, and he was proud
of it
Speaking for the recruits, T. M.
Heslop voiced thanks and asserted
the men would do their bit
French Warplanes
Move to Africa
MADRID, June 19 (AP)—A heavy
movement of French military planes
In llight Irom France to Africa was
confirmed late today.
The crew of one forced down in
Mallorca said Algeria had been their
destination. They were Interned.
At Almerla, a cralt of the Leto
type landed, Its pilots saying they
had left Marseille with 11 other
nlanes tor Oran, Algeria.
In Valencia, two French hydroplanes came down. The crew of one
aet It afire and was interned, the
other resumed its flight for Africa.
GENEVA, Switzerland, June 19
(AP).—German mechanised armies were reported tonight to have
sent advanced elements down the
Aln Valley to within 20 miles of
Lyon. ,        ,
Reporti brought by refugeei Indicated  the  possibility  that  the
German machine wai io near exhaustion that the French might
successful   defend   Lyon,   their
third largest city, a manufacturing centre with a normal population of about 570,000.
The defence ot Lyon fell, ln part
to comparatively fresh troops from
tbe Maginot line. The last skeleton
garrliQlfr of tbe -greet fortresiei on
the Rhine North ot Baiei withdrew
Weit toward Belfort today.
The fort at Belfort guarding the
Burgundlan gate, apparently still
was manned, however, for sounds
of artillery and machine-gun fire
could be heard from that region.
The German thrust Into the Rhone
Valley seemed to be a matter of
life or death for France, for a German grip on the Rhone would mean
cutting off France's Alpine army.
The Alpine line ls composed ol
mountain fortl designed only to resist troopi coming from Italy.
The Germani approaching Lyon
forced rectification of the new
Southern defence line, facing North
Inside the Jura Mountains.
The French held the numerical superiority with land forces at that
point and had plenty of small arms.
This, combined with a depletion
of Germany's mechanized strength,
might halt the German advance.
But the Germans held the whip-
hand in the air making up for the
lack* of tanks and armored cars
which were reported worn out and
abandoned. German bombers dived within a few hundred yards of
improvised French barricades,
splattering them with bombs and
machine-gunning   troops.
Refugeei ind a few French loldlen who surrendered arms at
frontier polnti near Geneva reported German bombing planei
were making frequent attacks on
the French fort at Bellegarde—
"Gibraltar of the Rhone."
German land forcei had outflanked the Bellegarde fort to threaten
Lyon. The fort itself, however, was
still holding out. There was no indication that armored units had
been able to pierce the line which
former Maginot troops were holding
North of Bellegarde and West of
Geneva.
Apparently small French forces,
sniping with small arms and using
dynamite, checked German progress
down from St. Claude, 25 miles
Northwest of Geneva, toward Belle-
grade. Attempts to smash into Bellegarde from the West were stopped
at NantJa, barely 10 miles away.
Bellegarde Itself is ot great importance if the Germani expect to
shove down to the Italian border to
loin Mussolini's troops in the Alps.
The town Is a sentinel West of the
bulge of Switzerland at Geneva into
France Just North of the French-
Italian border.
Farther North, German motorized advances cut off more French
territory—but left lt far Irom conquered. According to refugees and
soldiers. French troops continue iso
lated operations in the cut-off sec
tlons, striking repeatedly at German
units left behind to guard strategic
points.
The real Job of policing such sections apparently has been left to
German planes. In twos and threes
they patrol the rear guard area,
bombing and machine-gunning.
Britain May Buy
Russian Munitions
LONDON, June 19 (CP).-The
Government ls studying the possibility of negotiating with Soviet
Russia for purchase of tanks, guns.
airplanes and other war weapons.
Richard Butlei. Under-Secretary for
Foreign Attain, told the House of
Commoni today.
Britain Creates j
Board to Send
Children Overseas
LONDON, June 19 (CP)-Great
Britain created today a "children'! reception board" to handle
"balanced migration" of Britlih
children to oveneu havens, Including Canada.
Announcing establishment of
the new organization in the House
ot Commons today, Clement Attlee Lord Privy Seal, told tha
nation removal of part of Britain's child population is a "mat*
.ter of the utmost urgency". .
"'The'Bkard Ii headed by Geoffrey
Shakeiptare, Parliamentary Under*;
Secretary for the Dominions. It proposes to send—possibly as permanent residents—as many of Brit* ,
ain's 6,000,000 school-age youngsters
a parents will part with for the sake
of their present safety, as many aa
available ships can carry and overseas reception areas would be prepared to take.
The phrase "balanced migration"
li used because it is planned to
select the children carefully—all
must paas physical examination!—
and place them with due consideration to standards of living, type ot
schools, climate of reception areaa
and so on. Each area would get a
cross-section of British citizenship..
Clothes will be provided through
money granted to the receiving Dominions. Children will be accompanied by experienced escort staffs.
including doctors and nurses—but
not by any parents—with the possible exception of mothers who ara
soldiers' widows. Migrants will go
to individual families rather than
institutions.
62 Blankets Given
for Refugees From
Nelson and District
Sixty-two blankets for refugee!
have been donated to the Red Croia
Work Committee from Nelson and
district in response to an appeal for
new or nearly new blankets, Mri.
C. D. Pearson, Convener of the Commute, reported Wednesday night
More blankets are being received,
she said.
Besides these 62 blankets, the Nelson and District Work Committee
has forwarded another shipment of
hospital supplies to Provincial headquarters at Vancouver.
Weapigr
Min. Max.
NELSON     57 89
TRAIL  _..   65 85
Victoria     53 64
Nanaimo     _   60 75
Vancouver   —  54 70
Kamloops    58 92
Prince George -  46 83
Estevan Point    52 57
Prince Rupert ,.  48 60
Langara  48 57
Atlin  _... -. 35 56
Dawson, YT _ 40 72
Seattle      53 75
Portland, Or   60 75
San Francisco -. 57 69
Spokane     65 97
Penticton  56 —
Vernon       57 —
Kelowna ..._  51 M
Kaslo         56 -
Cranbrook      55 90
Calgary    46 79
Edmonton     56 79
Swift Current  _  44 73
Regina  37 '5-
Prince Albert   37 70
Winnipeg     43 82
Forecast: Kootenay: Fresh Northwest winds, partly cloudy and cooler with light scattered thunder
showen.
Nelson water level Wednesday,
7.90.
	
	
 ■A*-^
.,   ■
lAO.  TWO
-NILSON DAILY NIWS, NELSON,
Rossland Rector
Loses His Father
ROSSLAND, B. C, june'lt—Bev.
NEW
Room Rate
POLICY
NOW IN EFFECTI
2 tor 1
RATES FROM:
(Detached
Bath)
(With
Bath)
$1.25
$2.00
For Either One or
Two Persons!
Two In Room for
Single Rate at the
Hotel
SPOKANE, Wn.
■Bring  Your Wife—It  Coits
No More at the Coeur d'Alene*'
Home of the Dutch Mill
D. S. Catchpole, Sector of St.
George's Church, Rossland. received word ot the paulng of his father
Arthur E. Catchpole, who died at
tchp.
Nia
his borne at Niagara Falls, Ont..
Wednesday morning.    -
Mr. Catchpole reilded with hli
family at Hatiic, B. C, from 1907
to 1932, later going to Niagara Falli
to reside. In addition to hit wife,
he li wrvived by three ions, Leilie
at Niagara Falls; Basil, ln England;
and Rev. D; G. Catchpole of Rosiland.
DETECTIVE GETS 7
YEARS FOR PERJURY
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP).—Convicted by an Ontario Supreme Court
jury yesterday of a charge of perjury arising from a divorce case,
Charlea P. McCarthy, private detective and former Chief Constable
for Carleton County was today lentenced by Mr. Justice E. R. E. Chevrler to seven years in Kingston penitentiary.
TRUSS FITTING
LIMBS    •    BRACES
P.F. RIESSEN
Paulsen M. d I. Bldg.  Spokane
Weak, Nervous
in tm  nbjnl  t*  fn-
4_W£ «HBl dliu apflli, nerroui
t_W^ ond eaillr BpietT Chlnst*
r*V'        Hwfcl    M    nature's     own
J0 ^ coirr. c tl. ei. Try then**, —
jVntht.'H  help  yei  bi  ther'**
JW ■*■" he hwl bnirtii «t womb.
WING WO a
Offlcs Hours: 10 to I
N 1261/s. Wall St. near Main
SPOKANE,   WASH.
Italian Asking
Naturalization
Needs Sponsor
ROSSLAND B. C, June 1»-Kx-
amination for Canadian citizenship,
of Odilio Dozzi of Trail, by Judge
W. A. Nisbet ln Rossland County
Court Tuesday, was adjourned until the applicant can secure character vouchers from a British subject. This ruling was made by Judge
Niibet, who, ifter questioning Domi
itated that under present international conditioni he felt that iuch
recommendations were necessary for
Italian applicants.
The applicant wu born in Italy
In 1902, and came to Canada in 1923.
After raiding in Alberta for about
two yean he came to Trail and secured work at the Smelter, and has
remained In Trail since that time
Dozzi claimed to be a member of
the Italian Canadian Society, and
denied any association with the
Fascist Party. He Is married and
has three children.
Applications of Andrew Walter
Johnson, of Rouland,  and  Seres
(Pete)   Mattson,   of  Trail,   were
approved,
SWEDES RECOMMENDED
Johnion, who wsi born in Sweden
In 1892, arrived at Montreal with
hli brother ln 1909. For about 19
yean he varied hli reiidence between Canada and the United Statei
and finally came to Trail and then
to Roisland, and has lived ln thli
district since 1925. His brother
served In the Canadian Forcei during the last war and waa wounded,
ilnce which time Johnion hai not
heard from him. He is married and
has one daughter.
Coast Plane Fund
Drive at $30,000
VANCOUVER, June 19 (CP) -
Vancouver's Air Supremacy drive
to purchaie 10 training planei for
uie ln the Empire Air Training pisn
rose to more than $30,000 today, officlall lh charge of the Campaign
announced. Goal has been iet at
$80,000.
Beiides three $8000 checks received a $2000 donation came from
the Sitka Spruce Company and
other subscriptions from individual
given, ranging from $500 to nickels and dimes.
McKenzie Tells
Rossland Board
Can't Cut Staff
.THE CRESCENT
Msls2M(  WVHUIDE'MAlN'WAa  Sim Heart yJ.'oMO
A Complete Store for
MEN
Everything a man wean, from
ihoes to hat, il to be found at
The Creicent... ln dependable, well-known qualities, at
(ilr pricei. Society Brand
Suits, Enley Shirts, Johniton
ti Murphy Shoei, Interwoven
Bose .. . theie are but a few
of the famous names to be
found here, in complete assortments.
Be sure to itop In the Men'i
Ston when you are at The
Creicent.
The Creicent absorbs 6% ef the
current discount on  Canadian
currency.
THE CRESCENT     SPOKANE, Wash.
JeiftftymMttSetmet/
• Don. form, your "lll-i
oitly Arm"* of Kr_K_.m BtlU.
MiUloanwMrbjit. Ithelpi
mn ta*. ten— eau* el
■■PI haftlAn, rhea-
initio pans, an ttiwMfti,
Eur to tab tnmornivco-M,
Wjwaih^uSwrtwlltj-
•Mspmlva "ttwif eft md 75c
Guide for Travellers
NELSON'S LEADING HOTELS
Hume Hotel Nelson, B.C.
GEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.
SAMPLE ROOMS      EXCELLENT DINING ROOM
European Plan, $1.50 Up
ARROW LAKES
SERVICE
SPECIAL EARLY
DEPARTURE
S.S. MINTO
FROM NAKUSP JUNE 29
TO ARROWHEAD
Leaving    Nakusp    2:15
a.m. Instead of 8:00 a.m.
FOR THIS TRIP ONLY
Leave Arrowhead it regular
time, 12:M p.m. for return to
Nakuip. Steamer cspselty fer
■utos fully taken for tMi trip.
V. J. Lowei, C.T.A., Nelson.
G_)AyuJt_U_
$4c
ROSSLAND, B. Ca, June W-Wei-
ley McKenzle, Principal of the Rossland High School, went on record
as opposing any further reduction
ot Uie preient high ichool staff, at
the meeting ot the Rossland School
Board, Tueiday night
Principal McKenzie itated that ln
view of the brief drafted by Trustee
A. T. Snowball, recommending the
reduction of the high ichool teaching staff, which had been adopted
ai a ipecial meeting of the Board
last week, he wished the Board to
know that, ln opposing iuch > reduction, he wu stating hit position
as principal. It was not poiilble to
conform with the standards of education let out by the Government
with a imall itaff, he iaid. With a
poislble enrolment of 275 puplli
next Fall, he waa entitled to a staff
of 12 teachen. At present 11 teachen were employed, and, although he
wai satisfied to continue with that
number, he was opposed to any further reductions.
He also reported that the industrial arts room had been broken
into last week and a number of
tools and suppliei taken. Estimated
loss was less than $5, he aaid, and
he expressed the opinion that the
deed had been done by a youngster, fueling from the type of material taken. The theft had been
reported to the Police Department
and an investigation wai under way.
MACLEAN GROUNDS SOWN
Trustee Snowball, as Chairman, ot
the School Ground Committee, itated that the puplli of the MacLean
ichool had helped rake over the
ichool groundi, and that a proportion had been town with lawn aeed.
The main need now was for lufficient water.
The Board agreed to aik the City
Parki Board for the loan of sufficient hose to carry out the work.
HUME — B.  C.  Bracewell,  H.
five, Ian MacQueen, Mr. and Mrs.
J. Pendray, Victoria; Mr. and
Kn. _ Waeltl, Rev. H. J. Crelg, L.
I 8. Davidson, T. Renwick, Vancou-
I ver; Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Day, Prince
dbert, Sask.; Arnold McGrath, M.
L. A., Cranbrook; F. C. Wasson,
Kelowna; R. L. Foster, U. B. McCallum, D. J. McAlmon, G. M. Thorn,
Penticton; J. H. Lewis, R. Steedman,
Medicine Hat; .C. B. Munson, Illinois; J. H. Drummond, California;
G. W. Taylor, Catte Rock, Wash.
NEW GRAND HOTEL
MR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, PROPS.
In our new wing you may en]oy the finest
rooms In the Interior — Bath or Shower.
ROOMS (1 UP—SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY RATES
OUTLET HOTEL
JCABINS, BOATING, FISHING
20 miles from Nelson.
Take the Harrop Ferry.
Procter, B. C.
Rates reasonable.
ADVERTISE YOUR HOTEL,
LODGE OR TOURIST CAMP
In This Space
When Thousandi Will-Read It
VANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS
"YOUR  VANCOUVER HOME"
Duff erin Hotel
900 Seymour St. Vancouver,  B.C.
Newly renovated through-
cut Phones and elevator.
A. PATTERSON, late ot
Coleman, Alta., Proprietor.
SPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS
When in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the
410 Riverside   «• m.A.m__ \Ti\t IIVV       Opposite
Avenue       tlOICl V U_LIjl___ I    Paulsen Bldg.
EVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUESTS
RELAX
at the GALAX
Canadian Money at Par
Roomi $1.00 to $2.50
FREE GARAGE
25. M_ln Ave
Spokam, Wn
W. 814
Flnt
HOTEL
RIDPATH
The Hotel Canadians Like to
Call Home.
IN  SPOKANE
196 Outside Roomi and
Apartments
ALL AT MODERATE RATES
JOIN THE
mm
Seres (Pete) Mattson who changed
the spelling of his nsme to Metson,
also came from Sweden, where he
wai born in 1900. He arrived at Quebec ln 102], and hai lived ln Brltiih Columbia for 10 years, coming
to Nelson in 1934. While at Nelson
he was In the employ of the West
Kootenay Power lc Light Company,
and was also employed by that company at Creston for a snort while.
He ii now employed at the Consolidated Smelter. He Is unmarried.
Trail Rotarians
Name Committees
lor 1940-41 Term
TRAIL, B. C, June l»-CommW-
tees of the Trail Rotary Club for
1940-41 were announced by the directors at Tuesday's meeting.
Group Chairmen are R. C. Crowe,
Vocational Service; R. J. G. Richardi, Club Service; Aid. M. L. Brothers, Community Service, and w. J
Rutledge, World Service.
Committees follow;   i
Vocstlonal Service—
Rotary Educstion—S. 8. McDIarmld, Chairman; Dr. J. B. Thorn, Donald MacDonald, Rev. L. A. Morrant, W. A. Curran and H. C,
Caldicott.
Business Ethics—H. R. Laurlente,
Chsirraan; J. H. Toting, W. G. Ternan, A. R. Buchan, H. S. Gamble,
E. W. Hazlewood, W. E. Marshall;
R. J. G. Richards, G. G. Rennison
and R. M. Hoyland.
Public Relations—Fred Matthewi,
Chairman; Robert Weir, H. C. Caldicott, R. C. Crowe, E. L. Oroutage,
Jease Kemp, 0. H. Nelson, Rev, L.
A. Morrant and A. M Gibson.
Club Service-
Program—Fred Edmundi, Chairman; Hayor Herbert Clark, O. O.
Cumming, S. S. McDIarmld. H. R.
Laurlente, A. J. Ballour. S. G. Bliy-
lock, Donald MacDonald and Aid.
M. L. Brothers.
Attendsnce-J. D. Seuthworth,
Chairman; W. E. Marshall, Fred
Plester, J.H. Young, Jesse Kemp,
J. M. Doughty and Jamie Devlto.
Fellowship-A. J. Balfour, C|»ir-
man; F. A. Lee, T. J. Mtjir, Jamei
Buchanan, A. P. Levesque, J. A.
Miliar, D. S. Moynes and J. D.
Southworth.
Muiic—B. A. Stlmmel, Chilrmin;
E. L. Hodge, G. G. Rennison and
Frank Pennoyer.
Catering-W. E. Manhall, Chairman; D. Dalolie, Fred Plaster, R.
W. Diamond, A. R. Buchan, w. J.
Rutledge, W. A. Porteoui and J. M.
Doughty.
Claasificatlon-F. S, Willis, Chairman; W. A. Curran, L, F. Tyson,
Jamei Buchanan, A. M. Gibson, A.
H. Hopklm, Frank Penoyer and Aid,
M. L. Brothers.    •
Sick Vlsltlng-Hev. L. A. Morrant, Chairman; Dr. W. A. Coghlln,
D. Dalolie, A. P. Leveique, W. A,
Porteous, M. M. O'Brien and S. G.
Blaglonl.
Community Servloe—
Crippled Children—W. E. Newton,
Chairman; W. C. McKensle, Dr. W,
A. Coghlln, R. W. Diamond, E. W.
Hazlewood, Fred Matthews, Robert
Weir and A. M. Gibson.
Playgrcunds-M. M. O'Brien.
Chairman; H. R. Lauriente, Fred
Edmunds, James Devlto, T. J. Muir,
P. F. Mclntyre, F. S. Willis, Mayor
Herbert Clark, A. J, McDonell and
S. S. McDiarmid.
Fresh Air Camp—F. A. Lee, Chairman; J. A. Millar, A. R. Buchan, D.
S. Moynei, W. E. Newton, Fred
Mathewi, A. J. McDonell, J. C. Alexander and Mayor Herbert Clark.
Carnival—P. F. Mclntyre, Chair-
man; Mayor Herbert Clark, F. S.
Willis, A. H. Hopklm, O. H. Nelson, A. J. McDonell, Fred Edmunds,
G. G. Cumming, Frank Pennoyer.
World Servloe—
Inter-chib and Conference—J. C
Alexander, Chairman; E. L. Grout-
age. A- Laurlente, M. M. O'Brien, H.
S. Gamble, Robert Weir, L. F. Tyion,
R. M. Hoyland, B. A. Stlmmel and
Fred Edmunds.
Canadian Adviiory—Donald MacDonald. S. S. McDiarmid, W. O.
Trnan, R. C. Crowe, W. A. Porteoui,
W. C. Mackenzie and R. J. G.
Richardi.
>0«M«»O>S0)MOiO»>»t00O>iKtttt
New Extra Sunday
Service Between
Nelson and Trail
EFFECTIVE JUNE 23
PROVIDING TWO TRIPS
EACH WAY DAILY
Thli new lervice will allow you
to ipend Sunday in Trail with
your friendi.
Lv. NELSON
10:05 ajn. 8:80 p.m
Lv. TRAIL
10:00 a.m. 8:25 p.m.
N.). LOWES, C.T.A., Nelion
Qjuiyfr
Pleads Guilty to
Carnal Knowledge;
Sentenced 2 Years
ROSSLAND, B. C, June M —
Gordon Paul, charged with having
carnal knowledge of a girl between
14 and 18 yean, pleaded guilty be
fore Judge W. A. Niibet in Rossland County Court, Tuesday, and
was sentenced to two yun less one
day, with hard labor. A. G. Csmeron
ot Trail, acted for the accused, and
Donald MacDonald of Trail, represented the Crown. Paul will serve
hli sentence ln Nelaon Jail.
Oakalla Inmates May
Join Canadian Army
VICTORIA, June 1» (CP).-6hort
term offenders in Oakalla Jail who
wlih to Join the fighting forcei may
be granted mitigation of sentences.
Attorney-General Winner iaid today the Government wyuld give
consideration to leniency for any
sentenced for Provincial offences.
OF THI
In exquisite Alpine country
southweil of Banff...
at Egypt Lake,
Aug. 2-5
ft Trie ieveni+1 annual tant camp for
outdoor lovtrs, wi* dally hikes, b
at a central point from which radiate
f nteinating traili gay with Alpine flowen.
Trout fishing. Nature guides.
$20 rate Includes tant occomrnoda-
don and meals for lh* four days as welt
as packing of duffle from and to Banff.
For further particular, apply Room
318,   Windsor   Station,   Montreal,  or
DAN McCOWAN, Banff, Alberta
or any Canadian Pacific Agent
TUffiL -ARGAIH.
^   i to tho. PiailiQS
RETURN FARES FROM NELSON
To Coach      •Tourist 'Standard
JILT
4
to
7
fnrli.iir.
Caljary .....  ... 111.48
Edmonton  16.85
Saskatoon   24.70
Moose Jaw  19.56
Regina  20.7B
Winnipeg  80.45
Port Arthur .... 42.10
35.95
49.75
ITCH
22.85
33.45
20.50
28.05
41.35
57.20
•   Plua regular birth chargii.
Holiday In the Rockies
Stopovers permitted at all points.   In to ipend ■ few
days In the mount.In.. Yor will enjoy the change of icene.
It fan h* as Inexpensive as yon wish.
Proportionately lower Fara* from Interior Point*
Children 5 Year, and Under IS, HaU Fare.
Inquire about .pedal tarn te Calf ary Exhibition and
Stampede, inly S-U end Idmenton _»hlM t Ion, J uly ll-M
LaMoSkm uocijjtc
.. .
"■: ».. i ii   i ii   oi a i
FINK'S
—\ "i..'i".
■.x*e»»>wei'MJWi»HiwiNWi''>»s*'
:x*m%i7'i
TlsiW SummiUL (bhAAMJL
GUORY PRINTS-TABBY WEAVES - STRIPES — SHEERS
FABRICS EASY TO LAUNDER — FABRICS COOL FOR HOT
- WEATHER
Every new leading style will be found in this Jarge collation.
Siiet 11 ta 44. A dreu to suit you snd year budget
$1.95 $2.95 $3.95 $4.95 $6.95
gkMchmL 0a&_jj___
Cotton   Prints   with
loads of style and color
Sizes 1 to 14 years.
Floral prints, border
prints, new novelty
Summer dresses. Guaranteed colors. Special
price at
95<
Better
Values
*, nnu««"u L
Burns Block
New
Styles
Women Liberals
Plan lo Buy and
SellWarSlamps
Nelson Women's Liberal Association will purchase War savings
itamps with Anoclatlon funds and
sell them to memben, making iuch
money as ls already ln hand available to the Government and repeating the process ai quickly as stamps
are sold.
This wu the plan arranged by a
meeting of the Aiiociation Tuesday
night at the home of Mn. E.
w.
Widdowion. Organization within the
Anoclatlon  to  put the plan into
!iractice was completed. No ob-
ective was let, the plan being to
uy itampi and sell them as rapidly
is possibly and then to buy mon
stampi and sell them.
The meeting enjoyed a discussion
by Mrs. Leo Gansner of the refugee
problem, and her description of the
accomplishments already recorded
by Europeans who had found homes
in Cantda. A number of Industries
were established, providing employment and new wealth.
A vote of thunks wu tendered
the speaker.
A social hour, during which refreshments were ierved and teacups
were read, concluded the meeting.
Co-hoitesses with Mn. Widdowion
were Mn Nelion Winlaw, Mn. Nel.
ion Murphy and Mn. E. H. Patenon
CASTLEGAR
CASTLWIAB,  B.p. - Mn.  L.
Bourdon end daughters, l_y tnd
June Rote, left tor Onnd Forks to
vlilt Mn. Bourdon, parenti,
Mn. L Parent vUlted Rowland
Miu Beatrice McKinnon visited
NeUon.
MUl Beatrice Data left to visit
her grandmother at Sl6can Park.
Martin Pattinon has returned
from a viiit to Waldo.
G. Jorgensen li spending the
weekend at his home th Rossland.
C Appleton hu returned from
Merrltt accompanied by hii wife,
who will take up reiidence here
fof th* Summer.
Mr. and Mn. Preorri ot Trail vis
Ited CssUegar.
SERVE
BY
SAVING!
Now You Can Do Your BU
Through the purohue of WAR 8AVINGS OTtT-FICATES
every patriotic man, woman and child In Canada, regardless ef
itation, is afforded an opportunity of making a personal contribution to Canada'i War Effort.
When you buy WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES you i*ve money
for the future aod supply "dollar ammunition" to back up th*
men who are fighting our battle* oveneu.
WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES tre sold through all branchei
of this Bank. Backed by the Dominion of Canada, they ere the
•afest kind of Investment you can make. Held to maturity, they
era worth _5SK mora than yoh pay for them. For every M.(K>
you invest now, you receive 15.00 leven and one-halt years hince.
Buy your first certificates to-day — then add to your investment
regularly by purchasing at leut one certificate every month.
WAR SAVINGS ST.AMPS
c«U   you   ctn  mAAtm
kMiy.T!1«o»lo«!,lSo«_,.Wx^jJU»p.
"tttltm
II yog cinnOUffofdlo
UftcaU you cm purd
STAMra.TI«rt«*lo«l
G8
ttttffluwrasaj
cu
Par-
THE ROYAL BANK
OF CANADA
NELSON BRANCH S. A. Maddocki, Manager
A___-,_-fj
 I IJiV. II.IUIU ^Jl|.iiip,W*f^l',y^llf ^f^'^ip
■ ■
i^^aui*<i^i|Msi'i4iJ^iifc'i»*iyiiiy;')i
-NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B. C.-THUIWDAY MOBNINU. JUNE M.19W-
Yfest Kootenay Recruits leave Nelson and TraU for Coast
A crowd like that which said farewell to Uie 109th (Rouland-     at Trail ai the train backed out carrying Trail recrulti on their way
TraU) Field Battery, R.C.A., jammed the itreet! at the CI*JR. itaUon     to join the B. C. Begiment at Vanoouver.
There were tears and smiles as the recrulti broke ranks at the
Trail station before leaving. In the centre of the picture is Jack Pur-
Mr ot Rossland bidding fareweU to a friend.
Lively and cheerful, a quartet of the TraU detachment chats with
friends from tho coach window. From left to right Bob Gerace of
Rossland, Ralph McNeil of Trail, Arthur Hlscock, of Rossland and
Leslie Murdoch ot TraU and Rossland.
On parade for the first time since being mobilized, the Trail Pla-      Bay Avenue u it escorted the TraU detachment to Uie railway station,
icon of the West Kootenay Veterans' Home guard stepped smartly up
Home Guards Lead NeUon Dist rid Recrulti to Train
Parading for the first time, Nelson Platoon of Uie Veterani Home
Guard formed Uie "vanguard" for the first draft of Nelson District
fecrulti when they marched from Uie Armory to the C. P. R. itation
Wednesday to leave for the Cout Leading the Home Guards ire
Major A. C Sutton, D.S.O., M.C, of Rouland, Recruiting Officer for
Kootenay West in uniform* and Lieut M K Harrison, Officer in
charge of the Nelson Platoon,
R, F Ballot the North Shore, one of the recruits, lost his father Edward P. Hogan, oft to serve his King and Country, had his
when the British aircraft earner Courageous was torpedoed, and        daughter in his arms and his wife by his side when farewell! were
mnk in the early months of the war. said at the itation. i«ewcus were
AU photo! by Daily News
Germans Claim Numerous Advances
Capture of Cherbourg and Nancy
BERLIN, junt 19 (AP).-The tot
Ot tht German high command's communique followi:
"The French armies are dissolving
more and more. Fait troopi have
taken Cherbourg In Normandy.
"Le Mana wai passed through to
the South. Between Orleans and
Nevers the Loire was crossed at
many points.
(Last night's French communique
■aid Cherbourg had faUen and that
the Germani had established bridgehead! on tht Loire.-Thli morning's
communique iaid there were no
essential changei In the lines overnight)
"In Burgundy fait troopi already
are pushing forward- in the direction of Lyon. Weit of Mulhouse
armored and motorized divisions,
coming from Belfort were about to
unite with troops which attacked
across the Upper Rhine and deeply
advanced by way of Munster Into
the Vosges. ,
"Farther North Nancy was taken
and the Rhlne-Marne Canal, East of
Nancy, crossed on a broad front. In
the Maginot line on both sides ot
ThlonvUle the enemy was stUl resisting. Fighting snd diving bomber
units cooperated in breaking the resistance of Uie enemy, encircled in
Lorralni, by attacks' on fortifications
field positions, rail linea and troop
concentration! and columni.
(The French tn Alsace and Lorraine wen reported to be "holding
tht enemy.")
"Ott Cherbourg ont merchant
vessel of 10,000 toni wis sunk by
bombs.
FIRE OIL TANKS IN
BRITAIN CLAIM
"In England, German fighting
plane units bombarded numerous
airports al well as big oU' tank
centres on tiie Thames Estuary,-setting tanks afire. Flying units commanded by Major-Gen. Coder es-
Seclally distinguished themselves ln
lis action.
(Thirteen civilian! were killed ln
these raids but little damage wai
cauied to military objectives.)
"British airplanes ln the course ot
the night of June 18-19 entered
North and Western Germany, as
usual dropping bombs over non-
military targets. About 18 dead were
counted among the police and civilian population, among them a number who bad not entered air raid
shelters.
"The opponents' total air losses
yesterday were six planei five Ger-
manplane i are milling.
"Lieut. Dietz of a iharpihooters
regiment brought an important
bridge into our handi by a courageous performance."
Chicago Tribune Advocates tl. $.,
Canada Military Defense Alliance
CHICAGO, June 19 (CP). - The
Chicago Tribune was revealed today
as an advocate of a military alliance between Canada and the United States, partly on the grounds
they are the only two countries in
the Americas which have demonstrated they can fight modern warfare.
In an editorial today the Tribune
said ln part: ,
"The American people have long
accepted the proposition that the
United States will resist an invasion of Canada as quickly and vigorously as lt would an attack on
Iti own territory. The time has come
to Implement that policy by making a former military alliance with
Canada for common defence of our
countrlei. Thli ihould be done at
once.
"Our maintenance of the Moneroe
Doctrine demands that we have
common defence arrangement! with
all the nation! of the Weitern hemisphere, but Canada stands as a special caie. Among other reasons, there
is the fact that It ls the only American nation besides our own with
a demonstrated capacity for waging
modern warfare."
"Canadian induitry Is further advanced than our own in the change
over from peacetime to wartime
production."
The editorial mentioned Canada's
present extensive war efforts and
United Statei vital Interests in the
Caribbean and South America but
said these Independent interests "are
not conflicting and they are lew
important to either of us than the
defence of our shore! against invasion."
It said a defensive aUlance ihould
"be allowed Immediately by conferences between the Canadian general
itaff and our own on the joint operation ot our armed forces."
Beaten Nations
Have Risen Before
Recalls Cooper
LONDON, June 19 (CP)-^Aifred
Duff Oooper, Minister of Information, declared In a broadcast today
that the defeat of the French "was
not the first time a great nation
had been defeated" and returned
to victory.
The rrench defeat wai a great
blow to Britain, he said, but she retained the good will ot France as
well as of other nations that have
fallen before the Nazi regime.
"Bombardment and Invasion of
this bland will be the next phase
of the war," he added. The defence
task was simpler because the line
of battle was shorter. On one side
was the Atlantic, which he said was
a bulwark for the British Island.
He also pointed to Uie Dominions
Including Canada, and referred to
President Roosevelt's promise of
help.
"We have therefore, an Inexhaustible source of supply," he said.
"We must only beat off the invader for two months and British sup-
lies will increase while Germany's
decrease!."
Change In Excess
ProfitsTax Likely
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP) .-Canadians will be asked Friday by the
Finance Minister, Hon. J. I.. Raliton, to pour their money into the
war chest in larger quantities,
through new and old channels of
taxation, to meet Uie ever-increasing costs of national defence and the
war effort abroad.
One feature believed to be a foregone conclusion Involves changes in
the excess profits tax Imposed last
Fall to take effect on corporations
whose fiscal years ended after
March 31,1940. There was a demand
In the House of Commons that this
be made 100 per cent as has been
done in Great Britain. It now ranges
from 10 to 60 per cent on a graduated scale.
The corporation Income tax on all
profits ls 18 per cent and the excess profits tax goes on after that
Troops to Islands
All From Canada
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP). - The
Canadian troops sent to Iceland,
Newfoundland and the British West
Indies were all despatched from
Canada, lt was learned today from
a reliable source.
The 1st Canadian Division and Us
ancillary forces remain in England
where they are assigned to home detence.
COL. CUNNINCTON NAMID
CENERAL STAFF OFFICER
CjUjGARY, June 19 (CP).-Ap-
pointment of Col. D. G. L. Cunning-
Ion, M.C, V.D., as General Staff
Officer (2nd grade) for Military
District 13, was officially announced
today.
He succeeds to the vacancy on
the heaquarters staff caused by the
departure of Major C. A. Lyndon fbr
oversea! eervice. Col. Cunnington
will revert to the rank of Major...
Kenya Troops
Damage Post
NAIROBI, Kenya Colony, Africa,
.Tune 19 (CP).—A raid on Uie Italian
Somaliland frontier by troopa of the
King George's African Rifles, lupported by the Southern Rhodesian
continent ahd the Royal Air Force,
wai reported today in a military
communique.
Although full detalla were not
available, the itatement iaid, an
Italianpost was considerably damaged. Tne raid was made yesterday.
"The enemy was obviously surprised and later counter-attacked
our troopi who, after completing
their task, withdrew over the border.
Our reported casualties are two
African ranks.
"On withdrawing, our troops were
bombed by two Italian Capronl aircraft but so far no damage whatsoever is reported.
"On the rest of'the front all was
quiet on Tuesday."
Papers Acclaim
Churchill Speech
LONDON, June 19 (CP). - The
Morning Press commenting on Prime
Minister Churchill's speech yesterday, was unanimous today in Its ac
claim of his expressed detenpina
tion to fight on.
','We fight for the freedom of
France and the freedom of all peoples enslaved by HiUer," said The
Times.
The Daily Herald said: "The British people will continue to hope that
the present French Government or
any that succeeds it, may even now
resolve to honor its obligation (to
Britain) however and wherever it
can."
The Daily Express said: "After
reading Mr. Churchill's speech our
mood will be behind the great
leader. We will never yield one
blade of grass of this green Island.''
The Daily Telegraph and The
Morning Post said: "Our island is
now the one armed fortress of freedom. Mr. Churchill gave solid practical grounds for confidence in the
Battle of Britain now at hand."
The News Chronicle said: "Now
two more men are planning to di.
vide the world. Once again the harvest of their eventual failure seems
distant. But we shall reap it."
•»»«# T^nti
THE "BAY'S"
THREE.DAY
Bicycle Sale
Thurs., Fri., Sat — June 20, 21 and 22
'■■ ,
MEN'S, BOYS', GIRLS' WOMEN'S
Bicycles Now Available
On "Bay" Budget Plan
ii
INTERN  FRENCH   FLIERS
PALMA, Mallorca, June 19 (AP).
—The crew of a French hydro plane
which landed today at Puerto Cristo
said they were en route to Algeria
when their gasoline became exhausted.
Spanish military authorities took
possession of the craft and Interned
its crew.
2000 French Cross
Into Switzerland
LE LOCLE, on the French-Swiss
Frontier, June 19 (AP).—Two thousand French soldiers, Including a
General, two Colonel!, four Lieu-
tenant-Coloneli and _J other officer! of the aviation staff for the
Dijon region, itumbled ' wearily
across Col Dei Roches Ridge Into
neutral Switzerland today.
They surrendered to Swiss army
border guards and without a murmur tell exhausted to sleep on the
grass.
The steady flow of refugees continued acrou thii -part of the Jura
frontier — the old and the young
In the dispirited masses.
They said many of their number
were killed by bombing. In towns
ot the Doubs VaUey, Southeast of
Reiancon, France, and that others
met death when they were caught
helpless between the German and
French lighting forces.
One woman brought her dead
child across the mountain! with
her. The child had been kiUed by a
bomb fragment near Besancon.
RUPTURED?
EXPERT  TRUSS   FITTING
HINDLITR   ARTIFICIAL
MB   aw   TRUSS   CO
MANCHESTER (CP) - 31 _
Priestley, Britlih novelist has gfl
gested cheaper brands of toba.
be exempted from high war ts_t<
that poor aged men might not]
deprived of their "last co_iolat_l
DODDS
KIDNEY
:  PILLS
WOOD SAW H
WORKING        FILING
Reasonable Ratal
Kootenay Saih & Door Worl
801 Ward St Opp. City I
UNDERWOOD
TYPEWRITERS
Sunditrand Adding Machln
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Underwood Elliott Fiiher Ltd.
631 Wird St Phone #
=
Plumbing
REPAIRS and ALTERATIOf
B. C. Numbing fr Heating
Company, Limited.      st
Thli advertisement li not published or diipliyed by the Liquor Control
Board or by the Government of Britlih Columbia.
■..___-•" "JIBMIBf
,'        a. a
	
 !  FOUR  ————i-—
oratory Doctors
imlnation Is
Hecessary lor
Good Diagnosis
.OGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
|w a picture the other day u _•
j_e Doctor of the Future", lie
In a dark room reading X-r-iy
k and heart tracings and labur-
t teste. How close is it to reel-
Mi that a doctor can tell about
(lent this way without seeing
wtienlv
by opinion, It le far from clew.
Have that 95 per cent ot all
ible in formation that a doctor
for purposes of diagnosis nn-i
inenl comes from talking with
latient and examining with tho
and hands and the stethoscope,
act, I gave a clinic to some
•grade doctors not long ago, in
Jl I told them all about the
ratory findings and did not
1 the patient, and asked tfiem
NEI SON DAILY NEWS  NILSON. B. C.-THURSDAY MORNINO, JUNE ID. 1940-
NOW Utider-am
■eam Deodorant
safely
ops Perspiration
1. Does not rot dreisei—does
not In irate skin.
t. No waiting to diy. Can be used
right ifter timing.
S. Instantly stops perspiration lot
1 to 3 days. Removes odor
from perspiration.
4. A pare white, greaseless, itiln-
less vanish ing cream.
I. Arrid hu been awarded thl
Approval Seal of ihe American
loitimre of Laundering, fot
I   being harmlest to fabrics.-
IS MILLION Jen ei Anid
km beta sold.Ttya.tr today!
ARRID
ilASAmrnmammUtm..*,
(ga__j__aBio
___£
_] Aad yoa will never forget
l.lba wonderful tang and
^distinctive flavour
. French's Prepared Mustard brings out In sandwiches and cold meat
Take it oo yonr next
picnic.
to make a dlignoila. There wain't
one diagnosis that waa within a
thousand par cent of being right.
When the patient walked In lt wai
perfectly evident that he had a
form of nervoui dlaeaae called multiple sclerosis.
Please give a list of liquid foodi
which would represent a well-balanced diet with adequate caloric
and vitamin content
Thii lort ot of feeding la often
necesiary with people who have to
uie tubei and for convslscents.
From th efollowlng list the menu
can be planned. All food In solid
form must be pureed and strained:
Acid milks, albumin fruit iunces,
albumin water (1 or 2 whites of
eggs to a glass of water), almond
milk, Applesauce, apricots, barley
water, lima beans, beef Juice, beets,
bemax, black coffee, bouillon, butter, buttermilk, carrots, cereal waters, chicken broth, chocolate, clear
and creim soups, cocoi, cod liver
oil, and cornmeal.
Also cream, cream of wheat,
dextrl-maltose, egge (raw) farina,
fruit juices, glucose (10 per cont
solution), honey, corn syrup, powdered milk lactose (10 to 20 per
cent solution), maple syrup, malted milk, cow or goat milk, oatmeal gruel, olive oil, orange albumin (1 or 2 whites of eggs with
juice of an orange in equal parte
of water), parsnips, peas, peptone
aolution (20 to 40 per cent), peptonized milk, plain milk, potato-
boiled, sweet or white prunes, pum-
kin, cereals, breakfast lood. rice,
salt, spinach, strained cereals, sugar, strained fruiti, strained vegetables, tea—clear, tomato juice, turnip, vegetable soup, whites of eggs.
QUESTIONS AND  ANSWERS
F. H. L.: How may one fumigate
to rid a room of cancer germa?
.*_iswer—There  are  no   cancer
germs. Cancer ii not contagious.
C.C: Is trichomona! an infectious dlaeaae? Can it continue over
a period of five years? Is lt a disease of females only?
Answer—Trichomonas is an Infectious diieaie due to a small animal parailte. It affects different
parts of the body—sometimei the
Intestine, sometimes the female reproductive tract. It may be very
stubborn and can last as long as
five yeans. Intestinal infection occurs both in men and women.
Friday longest
Day ol Year
SUMMER SOLSTICE, 1940
By W. O. C. LANSKAIL
Friday, June 21,' will be the longest day this year, for then the Sun
will reach furthest declination
North, will make momentary halt
at 5:37 a.m'. and at once begin its
journey South.
Between now and the end of June
there will be little change in the
length of days, and singularly
enough, the sun will continue to set
a little later each evening unUi
June 27, but it has also been rising
later eech morning now for some
dayi.
Thli aomewhat complicated apparent motion of the sun is due
to the elliptical orbit of the earth,
and to the inclination of the earth's
equator to the plane of this orbit,
termed "the obliquity of the ecliptic".
It la Interesting to note that out
four seasons are not of equal length.
When it ls Summer in the Northern
Hemisphere the earth ia further
from the iun and ls nwving a little
slower in its ott.it—as defined by
Kepler's iecond kw of planetary
motion—end takes a few days longer to go from the Summer solstice
to the Autumnal Equinox, than
from the Winter solstice to the Vernal Equinox.
In the Northern Hemisphere the
approximate length! of leasons are
as follows:
Spring, 92 days, 21 houn; Sum-
mer, 93 days, 14 hours; Autumn. 89
days, lfl hours; Winter, 89 days, 1
hour.
It will thus be seen thet combined
length of Spring and Summer is
appreciably greater than Autumn
and Winter. The reverse obtains in
the Southern Hemisphere where
Winters are longer and colder and
Summers shorter. These conditions
are made more extreme by the sun
being further from the earth, by
about three million miles, when
Winter begini ln the Southern Hemisphere.
pJfV * Delicious Dr. Jackson's Kofy-S
Delicious Dr. Jackson's Kofy-Sub
supplies the rich satisfying flavour
and atoms of coffee ... but none
of the caffeine that upsets nerves,
and digestion in so many people.
Make Kofy-Sub exactly as you
mtke coffee ... ind note the low
cost per cup! Produced entirely
from Canadian grains, soya beans
ind honey, Kofy-Sub is rich in
alkaline minerals ind can be
given safely to young children.
Buy Kofy-Sub today and drink it
freely for health as well as
enjoyment.
'OVER 500,000 COPIES ALREADY SOLDI
of Dr. Jackson's famous 458-pige book "How To
Be Always Well". Send $3.00 for this invaluable
guide-book to vigorous heilth.
ID C C |   Oi- Jackaon'i booklet en Food and Health. Addrw ieq»esb to
*-*-*-*        Dr. Jiction Foodi Limited, 382   Vint Avtnu., Toionto
Nothing Left in Life..
Appreciate Life's
Beauties lo Gel
Most of Living
By CAROLINE CHATFIELD
DEAR MISS CHATFIELD:
I have reached the point in life
where I agree with a line in the
book, "My Son, My Son": "Thoie
who try to do right and play fair
haven't much chance while others
break all the laws and get what
they want, regardless of whom they
hurt." Everything I have ever
wanted has been snatched away
from me Just as I put my hand out
to take it. You have frequently
said a woman should look her best,
keep fit and be cheerful and she
would hold her husband. It isn't
true. A man is like a child with
toys. He gets tired of one and wants
another. Yet society leems to think
that men are goda to be looked up
to. Now tell me what is the use ol
marriage lawa when they aren't
respected?
I am writing because I have no
one to turn.to and it eases my mind
to write. I know your answer. You
will say keep on doing right, re-
?;ardless of reward which will come
n the next world. Quit feeling
sorry for yourself, get interested in
a hobby. Thanks for reading my letter anyway and I will try to hold on
to my little bit of faith in spite of
the fact that there is so little decency in the world.
LOUISE.
.ANSWER;
Far be it from me to recommend
that you wait for the reward in the
world to come. On the contrary I'd
recommend that you begin to collect right now and here's how. Suppose the men are scoundrels and
unworthy of women's devotion. Forget them and lavish your devotion
on those of your own sex. No use
to spoil your life by scolding scoundrels. Skip 'em and pretend that
they aren't existent. The men won't
mind; you'll be infinitely happier,
and you won't have to fret about
the marriage laws.
Second, maybe there is a small
amount of decency in the world,
but you can get immeasurable comfort in the thought that you are contributing your small bit, setting a
good example to those who see you
and going to bed nightly with a clear
conscience. A tiny candle flame of
faith can light a big expanse of territory if it isn't hidden by bitterness and gloom.
Third, hobbies are good medicine
for the unhappy. But I would add
what a distinguished neurologist
tells his patients. "Find a hobby and
be sure it isn't a-purely selfish
hobby. You can't get the best results thinking about yourself, acquiring aomethlng for yourself."
It comes to me with renewed force
all the while: Life goes on just
as it has always gone on. There's as
much beauty and interest and hap-
piifess and thrill in it as there ever
was. But it is our awareness ol
these things, our ability to appropriate them that count!. The sun
rises and seta in glory. The grass
and trees green and grow. Men and
women rise to heroic heights. Little children love and laugh and
play. What sort ol lenses do we turn
toward this loveliness?
Not Always Right . . .
Doctor Amused
by Movie Errors
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.
I am very fond of the movies. I
attend them about as regularly «s
I do anything. So my opinion is
often asked about the authenticity
ol the medical scenes that are portrayed in some ol the production.
The movie studios have set themselves a very high standard as to
accuracy in the portrayal ol details.
Especially accuracy in historical
scenes as to costume and every other
detail. It is all the more amusing
to find them every once in a while
lapsing into a trivial error.
An instance in point was a scene
In Gone With the Wind. The Confederate Army had been thrown
back on Atlanta and the wounded
were lying in the streets, in churches
on porches—everywhere. The nurses
and doctors, as many as could be
found,, were moving in and out doing their best to attend to them.
And every Once in a while a nurse
would produce a nice little clinical
thermometer and take a soldier's
temperature. The only trouble about
that is that the clinical themometer
had just been introduced and the
Confederate Army didn't have any.
Disputed Passaged is very accurate so far as details of operating
room technique are concerned, But
I have yet to sec a teacher In a
medical school act In anything like
that sarcastic and smart Aleck way
to a group of students, It was a little
strange also to find the new students sent right into the surgical
amphiheatre to view an operation
their first day in school: they usually are not prepared for that until about the second year.
And for the benefit of the eminent nerve surgeon who operated on
a colleague's skull and was sitting
by the bedside waiting for consciousness to return, muttering,
"The presure is relieved, he should
be regaining consciousness," I may
say that relief of pressure in a
brain injury is not the only factor
in recovery.
Dr. Elrich's Magric Bullet is wholly
good—and a thrilling and wholesome drama. It may give a some-
whet weird picture of the relations of the superintendent of a
hospital to the staff, but Its review
of the life of Paul Ehrlich is true
and moving
What a wonderful record of accomplishments for one man—stain
ing of blood cells, perfection of dioh
theria antitoxin, discovery of the
method of staining tubercle bacilli.
lhe side-chain theory of immunity,
the beginning of specific chemical
therapy agaloat infections—and a
hundred others too technical to
mention.
SERIAL STORY . . .
By Oren Arnold
WOMAN REPORTS BELIEF
HUSBAND IN SPY RINC
ST. LOUIS, June 19 (AP).—Police received what they said wai a
new high in tipi on "Fifth Column"
activities. A woman telephoned to
report she suspected her husband is
connected with a spy ring for a
foreign Government
HAPPINESS, C. O. D.
SYNOPSIS
THE CHARACTERS:
BENJAMIN MERRIFIELD. aged
capitalist, hires
GAYLE DIXON to make love to
his grandson,    -
JEREMY TUCKER, a ihy itudent
of archeology, while
BILL BAILEY and six pretty girls
are employed to help bring life and
youth to the Merrifield mansion.
CHAPTER 17
Gayle slept but little that night
. She barely remembered eeeing tbe
party break up although she hoped
she had shown presence of mind
enough to iay gracious good nights.
Most of the last courtesy was directed at Jeremy Tucker, anyway, since
be was the honored one.
She was awake at dawn and she
dreesed at once and went downstairs. But she didn't get her hoped-
for chance to think alone.
"Good morning," Mr, Merrifield
spoke heartily, surprising her from
behind a stone column on the porch.
"You'll have breakfast with me?
In juat a minute or two now."
She had to agree. And it was
pleasant, really, eating with him
and enjoying his kindly courtesy.
He pulled out her chair for her,
and said grace for the two Of them,
and served her from the big bowl
of cereal that wae placed before
them, and poured cream for her,
and otherwise was courtly. She
couldn't help loving the old man.
She wished he were her own grandfather. She had neve, haa one,
and could barely remember her
own father, in fact.
She went to Bill snd the butler
to pledge them anew to secrecy
concerning the robbery.
"After all, it was only a thousand dollar loss and there was Insurance," she said. "The Twayi are
well to do. Don't upset Mr. Merrifield or dear old Mr. Weems."
"Right," said Bill. "But I've been
thinking. I've got some ideee."
"What, Bill?"
"I think I know something. Maybe not, but I'm going to play my
hunch, on  my  own."
"Tell me!"
"Not now. Wait'll I'm sure."
"Bill Bailey. I hate you! Last
night you said you were in love
and then you «hut up about it. Now
this!"
He smiled back at her, toiled
her hair and ducked to avoid a
1 low she aimed at him.
They hadn't much time for teasing and cutting up, however, because preparations for the play
had to be completed fast. First it
was neceasEry to prepare the theatre itself. Folding chairs were
rented, and this Wednesday morning Bill super vised placing them
in the two big ballrooms even while
rehearsal was under way.
Bill had arbitrarily re-written
the plsy in small measure so as to
include just one main male part
and two lesser onee. One of the
lesser he hod forced on Jeremy.
The other he would play himself,
doubling after playing the male
lead. And he had written in two
minor feminine roles so that all
Ilx ot tht girls, ln addition to Gayle
could be accommodated.
"We've got to keep in mind the
tact that theie glrli ue hired to
do Little Theatre work," BiU .told
Gayle privately. "Mr. Merrifield
ordered me to keep them busy. He
ordered you and me to draw Jeremy out ot hli shall, and a crowd
ot girls around htm is the b* '
way to combat bis shyneli. He'
get uied to feminine -beauty in
time. I hope."
"Surely, Bill. We're making progress already. He enjoyed the party,
"Did you?1'
"Yei. Until ther-the-"
"I know. It's a ihame."
"Where'i Jeremy now?"
"Out on the lawn—guess what
doing?"
"Meditating?"
"Wooing!"   '
Gayle stopped her work—she had
been memorizing the last of htr
play script and ihe laid it wide
how—to look excitedly at BUI.
'Tell me!"
"The Tempe person. Four eyei.
She likes him."
"Sol Well, Jeremy's not bad, really, BiU. I can understand how Tempe feels."
BUI didn't aniwer that. He looked
at hii associate.
"Listen Gayle, you—" But he
halted abruptly. After all, a man
can't come out and say be loves a
girl, but wants her to wait a year
to diEciui it. He was tied up with
promises. His promised talk wai, ln
fact, to make Jeremy fell for Gayle
herself. He had all but forgotten
that!
"Surel" he changed hit tone. "Jer-
emy'i swell. Gayle—I think he Ukea
you. Don't let thli Hyde girl overdo
her act. You're supposed to—to—"
"I know. Mtke him woo me. But
I've been awfuUy busy."
"Scram right now, and (lve him
some _ttr_fction."
That seemed advisable. She had
not talked to Jeremy aU morning,
and tbe hour wai almoit noon. She
went outside and broke Into his
chat with Tempe.
Gayle threw herself into the
mood of surface gaiety nnd did
manage to edge Jeremy away— but
when she turned back le stick out
her tongue at the smaller girl, purely in a gesture of teasing and comradeship, she saw that Teraje's anger was aroused.
This foot was startling. Shs had
never seen Tempe angry. Tempt
voiced no objection now; Indeed,
she smiled quickly and her expression changed but there had been a
tell-tale moment ln which ber eyei
revealed much.
"I'm jittery trom last night and
am imagining thingi without real
cause," she told herself. The a) parent flash of meanness ln Tempe's
eyes and face was purely Imaginary, she insisted now. She turned
determinedly to the shy young
man.
She had lunch with Jeromy,
alone, and they talked pleasantly
if without excitement They lingered for an hour or more atter lunch.
It was cheerful and they were not
interrupted untU nearly _ p.m.,
when Bill Bailey drove up In ont
oHoiJULQWWflL
By BETSY NEWMAN
TODAY'S MENU
Fruit Juice or Fresh Fruit Cocktail
Swiss Steak Boiled New Potatoes
Banana Salad
Sour Cream Pudding
Coffee
SWISS STEAK
Top cut round steak, % green
pepper, 4 green onions. 2 stalks celery, % cup canned tomato soup.
Flour.
Wipe sleak with damp cloth, rub
with salt and pepper and sprinkle
with Vt cup flour, pounding it
in wilh » blunt instrument or the
edge of a plate. Treat both sides
alike, then melt 2 tablespoons bason fat in heavy skillet and brown
the steak all over with a rather
low fire. While steak browns, prepare vegetables, cut pepper in thin
slices, ditto onions, dice celery.
When steak is well-browned, pile
vegetables on top, add tomato soup
and cook over low heat, covered,
until meat is tender, which will
take about 2 hours. Serve with
vegetables on top of meat. Look at
meat rather frequently and add a
little hot water if it is inclined to
burn.
SOUR CREAM PUDDING
Three tablespoons shortening, Vt
cup sugar, one egg, Vt cup bran,
1 cup milk, 2 cups flour. 3 teaspns.
baking powder. V, teasp. salt, 1
teasp. vanilla, 2 cups light brown
sugar, 2 cups thick sour cream.
Blend shortening and sugar. Add
egg and beat well. Soak bran n
milk. Sift flour with baking powder and salt and add to creamed
mixture alternately with bran and
milk; add flavoring. Pour into deep
baking pan and spread evenly.
Sprinkle brown sugar over top and
pour on cream. Bake in moderate
oven (350 degrees F.) about 45
minutes. Serve hot in upside-down
squares.
Summer time is open season
for refreshments in most households Summer entertaining, however simple, can be fun.
Iced Coffee is a Summer standby. Prepare coffee as usual and
chill quickly. Before serving, add
to each quart six tablepsoons finely powdered sugar and three teaspoons vanilla, all stirred well to
dissolve   sugar.   Pour   into   glass
about quarter filled with cracked
ice. Omit vanilla, and crush fruit
mint leaves with the sugar, add to
coffee snd stir well for another
coffee drink.
FOR NON-DIETERS
For those who don't have to diet
a scoop of vanilla ice cream in each
tall glau of iced coffee add! flavor. A drink mide with two tablespoons of whipped cream placed in
bottom of a glau and topped with
a scoop of. ice cream, the glasi
filled with freshly made coffee that
has been chilled quickly, ii a pleasant variation.
The successful Summer hostess
usually has a supply of carbonated
beverages on hand to lerve u is,
or to use at an Ingredient tor iome
concoction. She fill! ice-cube trayi
with a fruit-flavored loft drink,
snd these she uses for color and
flavor for tall glasses ot Iced tea,
tastefully garnished with a sprig
of mint A drink made with a cup
of grape juice plus four cupi of
ginger lie, well blended and chilled,
ii refreshing. So li raspberry iher-
bet with lime-flavored cirbonated
beverage poured over it
Just ai potables may bt glorified,
food can De given a lift. A canape
or a cookie or a piece of cake have
kept company with a cold drink
for years, but how about dressing
them up a little? A pudding made
with 18 graham crackers folded Into
a cup and a halt of applesauce will
make a snack to serve six. Pour
mixture into pudding dish ind
chill in refrigerator 2 or 3 houri.
Serve with whipped cream. If you
want to make an Impresiion, lerve
original tid-bits. Color iweet butter pink with paprika, ipread it on
canape diamonds and top with thin
smoked salmon. Or main ripe avocado and blend with salt pepper,
onion salt and chill powder to taste
without any one flavor predominating, for a ipread.
For a substantial snack do deviled eggs this wsy;
Cut six hard-boiled eggs Id lengthwise halvei. Remove and mash the
yolks. Drain oil from can of amdk-
'er sardines and add sardines to
egg yolks, with two teaspoons prepared mustard, salt and vinegar to
taste. Stuff egg whites with thli
mixture.
TRY IT THE "SALADA" WAY
Infuse 6 he.ping teaspoons ol Salada Black Tu in I pint el freih, boilinj wlttf.
Altar 6 minutes strain liquid Into 2-quart contains!/ while hot, add 1 to 1 )i cups
of sugar arid juice ol _ lemons, strained/ stir until sujir ii dissolved/ All conUlritr
wilh cold water. Do not allow tea to cool befort adding cold water or liquid
will become cloudy. Serve with chipped ict.   Thl abovt mik.s 7 toll glutei.
SSSsW TEA
|. i>*i|_i aiV ■>    l    (i   i.l
Foot Health
Fancy Shoes for
Special Events,
Not Dally Wear
By DONNA GRACE
Feet art tht moit piUent things
in tht world. Thty put up wtth til
our fadi and conUnue to mpport ui
even though nature hu to pad thtm
(hem wtth callouses to offset tht
pressure of either tht too-small or
loose covering, But there wlU come
a time when they wUl rebel against
abuse, and it'i a good thing, as thli
li about the only Ume they receive
the action they deitrve.
Fancy shoes art a temptation tor
aU of us and Wt UM to Wttr thtm,
but fo* toot cdmfprt we muit depend on a ihot that offers good
supply and ls correctly fitted. Foot
speclaUsts say one mty indulge In
tny ot tht trivoloui Ityles provided
Uie good sensible kind are worn
most of the Ume.
Wear comfortable shoes for day-
time walking. This applies to Uie
woman who worki In the home and
to thoie who walk a great deal.
Business girls who stand ihould be
sure to wear comfortable shoes all
day. Sven those who sit in an office ihould be kind to their feet by
wearing the fancy shoes out at the
office and having others to put on
while they are at work.
Ntxt ln importance ' to correct
shoei ii foot exercise. The feet are
.strapped in one position moat of
the ume and need to be relieved
from tht strain. With plenty of
exercise and bathing there WlU be
very lltUe or no toot trouble.
Sensitive teet ire likely to be
more Irritated during the war weather, especially if one walk! on hot
streets. When possible, one ihould
take tbt time to either bathe or
sponge them weU, then dry, powder, put on freih hoie and change
shoei.
Walking on the toes and at the
lame Ume stretching tal will relax the strain caused by the shoes.
Rotate tht ftet on the anklet, first
the circular movement then up and
down. With these exercises, use
resistance at tint then do a let easily. Tha resistance will bring all
lei and foot muscles Into play.
When the teet are swollen and
hot, don't plunge tham Into cold
water. It will feel good, but tint
bathe them in hot water, to which
you add epsom salts (] heaping
tablespoonfuls to a toot tub). Hold
thtrt tor a ftw moments, thtn under
a cool ihower. Do thli several times
and when dry use plenty ot dusting powder.
Leopold's Children
Cross Spain Border
IRUN, Spain (On The French
Border), June 19 (AP). — The three
children of King Leopold of Bel-
glum entered Spain lut night by
automobile en route to Portugal.
Former Belgian Premier Paul Van
Zeeland and other Belgian officials
and diplomatic and consular officer! ot several nations alio creased
tbe border from France.
AU said that conditions ln France
wert chaotic, with refugees jamming Spanish consulates seeking
visu.
Former Empreii Zlta of Austrii
and her ion the Archduke Otto, arrived ln Madrid today en route lo
Portugal. Otto is pretender to tbe
non-existent Austrian throne.
Tht Grind Duchess of Luxembourg alio wu expected.
of the Merrifield cars, left it In
the side driveway md came Dinning to her. \
"Kid, every ticket Is sold! he exclaimed. "Even those at the Jewel-
try store. We'll have a full home
for tiie play, at a dolltr and a halt
a seat! The whole town's talking
about us!"
Sht could only smile up tt him
appreciatively. Then ww something fin—something endearing ln
Bill Bailey when he was ln a w liter ot enthusiasm. For the reminder of the day ihe quite forgot to
worry about the robbery last night
To Be Contnlued
vvotmsomsootMooetMmsosooott
*
RED
CROSS
NOTES
HWMeawaaawwawwewsewsgtttg
Windermere Red
Crou Neti $108
.WWDBRMBW!. B. C. - Tht
bridge-whist-bingo party held at
the Legion Hall ln aid of the Windermere Diitrlct Branch ot the Red
Crou wu the largest gathering of
ltt kind seen for many yean. There
wu a splendid representation from
every ptrt ot the valley trom Edge
water to Canal flat!. There were
20 table! ot bridge, levtral of whist
apd t largo number ot bingo cards
tn pity. A delicious supper wu
served by the Committee near midnight, atter which cskss were sold
by A. Ritchie. Winners at bridge
were Mrs. A. Dobbie and J Peters,
and at whfit Mn. Blackburn and
Q. MirplM M»ny of the bingo playen won several prizes during the
evening Proceed! amounted to
over $108.
Red Cross Seeks to
Make Preserves for
ees in Schools
Refuge
EDMONTON, June 19 (CP). - A
delegation from the Edmonton
branch, Canalan Red Crosi Society,
today will leek Provincial Government approval of a plan to uie
school facilities in preserving fruiti
and vegetablei for war refugees
The fruits and vegetables that
otherwise would be destroyed or go
to waste would be gathered from
wholesale firms and taken to school
kitchem where volunteer diet!
tians would direct tile canning oper
aUoni.
District Women's
Institute Rally
Planned, Nelson
Over 90 representatives ot Nelion
and district Women's Institutes are
expected to gather at Nelion Tueiday for-a district rally at Lakeside
Park, Mn. F. E. Wheeler, Nelson
Institute President stated Wednesday. AU Institutes In the diitrlct
are to be represented by at leait
two delegate!.
The raUy will take the form ot
an aU day meeting and discussion,
wtth a basket lunch st the park st
noon. It will get under wiy when
buses carrying delegates arrive
trom district polnti.
Mn V. S. McLachlan of Victoria,
Superintendent of British Columbia Institutes, will address the rally.
Similar rallies will be held at
Nakusp and Grand Forks for their
surrounding diitrlct! late this week
or early next week.
TIM! I
WORK!
ONETS
Mental Ills...
By Garry Cleveland Myen, Ph.D.
In tht United Statu, than ar*
mort people mentally lick than tht
number, "physically" sick. Mora
than <t million children now In our
public schools in tht United Statei
wUl break mentally during their
life time, at the present rat*.
Moat experta -In mental heilth
believe that mental and emotional
illness could be reduced to in enormous extent If our children grew up
ln a more serene home atmosphere.
Alio doing thlngi with the hands
for pleasure ll being widely recognized for prevenUvt and curative
measures In reipect to mental
health. Both public and private Institutions for the mentally ailing are
offering Increasing opportunities ,for
craftsmanship, especially for mild
cues.
Some monthi ago I visited a hospital in Philadelphia to which scores
of people with worries and anxieties come tor ihort or long periods
of Ume to ipend one or several
houn a day doing thingi with their
hands for mere pleasure. It may be
with a loom, lathe or easel. It may
be to uie cutting, shaping or mold*
ing tools, with clay, wood( metal,
yarn, paint crayon-craftsmanship.
And many get temporary or permanent relief, or cure from such procedure
If the mentally ailing can be helped or cured, how many more might
be kept mentally well through similar means!
MO.'8.
Efu/ter-Af-r-isA rrctires
■Men rfie first spoonful
mokes you wonffo SING
They'll really give you fhe "lift" you need
dSr The busier you are, the more vital Is a breakfast
that does three euential thingi; (1) rouiei your
sleepy appetite; (2) givti you the quick energy
yon need; (5) help! luittin you through houn of
driving work.
Proven firit io flavour, rich In energuing "carta,
hydratei," Kellogg*! Corn Flakei help keep yoa
going for houn. Timi-tAving, too — 30 lecondi to
serve... no pots to clean.
Get Kellogg'i Corn Flakes—ttrertl packages
— tomorrow! When yon breakfast out, insist on
tht wax-wrapped ind'ttidutl package! Madt by
KeUogg'i in London, Cinada.
"KWIom'1 flvt fooni."Mj hmiliM across
Cmidi. Vis, wkla honitwlvii in every
pMtiatt laswtrsd this queition: "Whit
ttldy-to-lltctmlllfaTOurlttl-yourfamllyr
fiti liOM ii auy Mid "•KetloggV' u laid
ANY othtr kind of corn laku. Thi iraimd
eilttti of Jnour tip«rtJ, rtiting ill foot
brindi of corn tikii, back op tba houiewirci
TOM. One of miny 16 tiki this ImpirtUI ten,
M. (Ml Biu|ird, Chef of tbe King Edwird
Hottl, Toronto, styi: "This coro-tike taiee-
tut definitely prortd IO IM thai Kellon'i
ui.iujioiwr.
COR
s
r*M
■CONOMKAll A few pennies provide
the fimily'i brtsktut or lupner when
yoa ier-e fresher, criiper Kelloll'l
Corn Fltkis. Aik your grocer for thi
new family-Ill package tomorrow.
i"_'.1 n!*.'aa,i
IH«|*   H,i I'aitfi    '.   ,if.l    ,   H   li
__. ■__-_- .      ._....
 For Summer Fun
Moccasin cut and platform
I soles will keep you on your
toes. Cool, cottony lightweights in gay colors to
i your pity clothes. Trim fitting
.-easily washable.
R. Andrew & Co.
Leaden in Footfashion
[Wealthy Olympia
.        Man Is a Gunner
[ VANCOUVER June 19 (CP) -
Gunner George C. Stephenson
knocked oft his duties with the
15th Coast Brigade here today long
enough to pose with his chauffeur
(beside his custom-built limousine
lor a photographer.
. The former Sales Manager of the
fiiSet Sound Power and Light
Company at Olympia, Wash., 6aid
be had enlisted in the ranks because "every little bit helps." He
dcame to Vancouver from Olympla
|fci December-, He is British by birth.
Nervous Restless
f|* I    Cranky? Restless?
lllFICl Can't Bleep? Tire
llll 10 a easily? Annoyed by fe-
.^"" "     mala functional dia-
orders and monthly distress? Then take
I lydia — Flnkham's Vegetable Com-
Lpound, famous for over JO yean ln
I helping tuch rundown, weak, nervous
1 eondltlons. Made especially tor women.
I wm. WORTH TR.INQI (Advt.)
SLACK SUITS
For Summer Sportswear.
Sizes 12 to 18.
Prices $3.89 to $6.93
Fashion First Shop
| 486 Baker St, Nelson, B. C.
ASK FOR 4X
I Dr. Jackson's
Roman Meal Bread
RADIO AND APPLIANCE
SERVICE
[Nelson Electric Co.
1 674 Baker St Phone 260
Italians Claim
Jink Sub, Burn
Planes In Raids
HOME, June 19 (API-Today's
Italian communique:
"Our naval reconnaissance planet
sank an enemy submarine. In the
Northern Africa sector tbe situation is unchanged."
(In operations against the Italian North African colony of Libya
the British Army in Egypt captured one Italian senior officer, 12
tanks, six guns and seven trucks.)
"In East Africa Brirti.h columns,
supported by tanks, which attempted to infiltrate our lines by flying
the Italian flag, were effectively
counter-attscked and dispersed."
(There was no word of fighting
here from the British source.)
"Our air force attacked enemy
bases, burning three planes. Enemy
& lanes bombed a farm village, kill -
lg three women and several children. (The R.A.F. In Egypt said
that in one riid on Italian Eritrea
a hangar was hit and probably destroyed.)
"The enemy carried out air attacks last night, dropping several
bombs on centres in Ligura and
Piedmont. There were no victims
and very little damage."
Trail, (ranbrookr
Nakusp, Kaslo,
Students Passed
VICTORIA. June 19 (CP) -
Terehing diplomas were awarded to 145 students of the Provincial Normal School whose
regular session closed June 14,
it wes announced today by Hon.
George Weir, Minister of Education.
Among those receiving pass
rating were Harold Francis
Rurks, Kelowna, B.C.; Isabel
Marian Crowe, Trail, B.C.; Florence Annie Curie, Cranbroek,
B.C.; Elsie Doreen Curran, Trail;
Evelyn Ethel Davison, Nakusp,
B.C.; Joyce MacDonald East,
Keremeos, B.C.; Kate Doris Riddell, Kaslo, B.C.; Vera Elizabeth
Schoening, Penticton, B.C.; Robert McClelland, Kelowna, and
Ruth Myrtle Palmer, Trail.
100 AMBULANCES
TO GO TO BRITAIN
TORONTO, |une 19 (CP)- Dr.
Fred W. Routley, National Commissioner of the Canadian Red Cross
Society, said today that it is planned to ship more than 100 ambulances to the British Isles Just as
soon as transportation can be arranged. Blankets also will be sent.
The number of ambulances promised the British Red Cross by individuals, business firms, and clubs all
over Canada has reached more 'han
130 and more than 58,000 blankets
have been collected.
--NELSON DAILY NEWS  NELSON, B. C.-THURSDAY MORNINO, JUNE 20. .1940—
The Victims
—Darling ln New York Herald-Tribune.
NELSON SOCIAL
By MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX
Firearms Belonging
to B. C. Aliens Seized
by Provincial Police
VICTORIA, June 19 (CP). - A
wholesale roundup of all firearms
and explosives in the possession of
aliens was launched in British Columbia today.
Attorney-General Wismer a n-
nounced that, on authority of an Ottawa order-in-council, instructions
have been sent out to all Provincial Police officers to see that weapons are picked up.
The Ottawa order covers all aliens
in the country, and persons of German and Italian origin who have
ben naturalized since Sept. 1, 1929.
It is illegal for them to possess
any sort of firearms, ammunition,
dynamite, gunpowder or explosive
of any kind.
LOWEST PRICE
IHJHST0
Mr. and Mrs. A. Wigg, 418 Silica'
Street announce the engagement ot
their daughter, (Jane) Helen Elvera,
to Jesse Albert Seaby, ion ot Mr.
and Mrs. George Seaby of Stettler,
Alta., the wedding to take place
shortly.
• Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Pruves ot
Calgary have arrived on an extended visit to the latter's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. F. J. Donkin of the North
Shore.
• Mrs. J. Martlndale wu In the
city enroute to Fruitvale to visit
for a few days prior to leaving
via Great Northern for Stewart
• Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Leigh, who
have returned from Cranbrook, left
yesterday for Vancouver.
e R. V. KenUsh-Rankin ot Vancouver is spending a tew days in
Nelson.
• The home of Mrs. William
Brown, Victoria Street, presented a
jolly scene Tuesday evening, when
she and Mrs. Norman McLeod, Hall
Street, were co-hostesset at a bridge
in honor of Mlu Winnifred Borthwick, whose marriage takes place
in Vancouver in July to Dai McLeod, former Nelson youth. Peonies,
foxglove and roses graced the living rooms, while the table where
covers were laid for 20 was centred
by an oblong white .bowl of orange
blossoms and roses. The honoree
was presented with a book of recipes, the favorite of each guest The
prizes for the bridge were won by
Miss Eileen Mackenzie and Miss
Leona Boss. Other guests included
Miss Georgia McKeown, Miss
Blanche Beatty, Miss Dorothea Coles
Miss Gertrude Hudson, Mrs. Mona
Meagher, Miss Alma Smillie, Miss
Elizabeth Carrie, Miss Nancy Dunn,
Mn. H. M. Whimster, Miss Doris
Hoskyn, Miss Patricia Campbell,
Miss Enid Etter, Miss Othelia Olson
and Miss Edith Lawson.
• Mr. and Mrs. Harry Burns,
Carbonate Street, have returned
from a few days in Spokane.'
• Mrs. W. D. Haggart of West-
bridge returned yesterday atter a
few days in Nelson.
• Mrs. F. Nelson and Infant
daughter left Kootenay Lake General Hospital Tuesday for their
home near the Mountain Station.
• Mr. ahd Mrs. Vincent Fink,
424 .Robson Street, have as guesta,
Mrs. Zulu Andrews and daughter
Betty Jane ot Spokane.
• Mr. and Mrs. William Marshall and son Frank, Nelson Avenue,
lett via Great Northern yesterday
to visit Mr. Marshall's mother in
Chicago.
• Commander Burrard A. Smith
and Mrs. Smith of Longbeach visited \own yesterday.
• George Murchison wae In the
city from Trail yesterday.
• Mr. and Mrs. G. Monro Grant,
who spent a few days with Mr.
Grant's mother and sister, Mrs. J.
Glen Grant and Mrs. J. H. Long-
worth, Silica Street left yesterday
tor their home in Edmonton.
• E. E. Beckett of Sheep Creak
visited town yesterday.
• Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Burdette,
5820 West 12th Avenue Vancouver, announce the engagement of
their younger daughter, Mildred
Emily, to John Crofton Hall, elder
son ot Mr. and Mrt. R. D. Hall of
Nelson. Both parties are ex-graduates of University of British Columbia. The marriage will take place in
Capetown, South Africa, in the late
Summer.
• Miss Priscilla Gelinas, accom
panied by her brother Elmer and
net slster.in-law, Mrs. George Gelinas, are spending a few days in
Spokane. They were accompanied
by Mrs. Gelinas' mother, Mrs. Lolland and her sister, both of Spokane
• Miss Eva Wright of Trail visited town Tuesday.
• Charles F. McHardy has returned from a few days in Spokane.
• In compliment to Miss Florence Hoare, popular bride-elect ot
the near future, Miss Eileen Dill
entertained at her home on Mill
Street Tuesday evening at a bridge.
The guest of honor received a gift
from those present, who included
Mrs. J. A. Ballantyne, Mrs. R. B.
Morris, Mrs. Monte Lock, Mrs. A
E. Murphy, Mrs. Harvey Wallace
Miss Gladys Ewing, Miss Grace McDonald, Mrs. G. A. C. Walley, Mrs.
R. H. Dill, Mrs. Alfred MacD. Noxon, Miss Carmen Horton. The prizes
for the bridge game were carried
off by Mrs. A. E. Murphy and Mrs
J. A. Ballantyne. A profusion of
white carnations, pink columbine
and roses were the flowers used
throughout
• Mrs. L. S. Bradley, Josephine
Street who Is a patient ih St. Lukes
Hospital, Spokane, is progressing.
• Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Doelle and
daughters Shirley »nd Dorothy ol
Sheep Creek visited town.
• Mr. and Mrs. H. McDougall
of Bonnington and the former's
mother shopped In Nelson yesterday.
• Mrs. Turner-Lee of Bonnington spent yesterday in the city.
• S. A. Williams, who spent a
few days in town, has returned to
Vancouver.
• Rev. J. G. Holmes, Ward
Street, who was operated on for
appendicitis at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, is progressing
favorably.
• R. E. Horton, Oak Street, has
returned from a few days in
Spokane.
• George Porteous of Queens
Bay spent Tuesday in Nelson.
• Lee Phillips has returned to
Calgary after a couple of weeks in
Nelson and vicinity, Mrs. Phillips
and baby, who accompanied him
here, remaining with Mrs. Phillips'
mother, Mrs. H. M. Heath, Silica
Street, for a few weeks.
• Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lakes
and son Arthur returned to Spokane last night Mike, their youngest son who accompanied them
here .remaining with his grandmother, Mrs. George Johnstone,
Kerr Apartments, for a few weeks.
• Mrs. Shea was in town from
Castlegar yesterday.
e Mrs. Eugenie Petersen of Sandon passed through Nelson en route
home atter visiting her daughters.
Mrs. Davey of Kellogg, Idaho, and
Mias Gunly Petersen ot Spokane,
for three weeks.
• Mrs. O. E. Jorgensen. 808
Mill Street left Monday for a three-
wek holiday trip to Portland and
Salem, Ore.
Open Scenic Highway
Because of Demand
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP)-Tour-
1st demand tor permission to use
the new Banff-Jasper Highway,
which connects Canada's two largest national parks, has been so
neat that the highway was unofficially opened June 15, in was disclosed here today, by Hon. T. A.
Crerar, Minister of Mines and Resources.
Official opening ceremonies tor
July 1 have been abandoned because of the wet but the road ts
now open for travel and will continue to be open during the balance of the season.
Creston Women
Plan to Raise
Red Cross Funds
CRESTON, B. C, |une 10 —
Thirty-six per cent of the money
raised during the national appeal
in November by the Canadian Red
Crass has already been spent for
supplies, according to a letter read
at the June meeting Thursday afternoon ot Creston Branch of the
Red Cross Society. The President,
Mrs. A. J. Gilroy, was in charge,
and there was a fine turnout of
members.
There was a donation of $10 trom
Mr. Orchard of Kitchener." Mrs.
James Cook had donated dresses
for four refugee children and Mrs.
R. R. Roebuck had made them up.
Mrs. Hills has presented a rug, to
be disposed ot to augment the
society funds. Mrs. C. Fransen had
remembered with a crochetted runner for the same purpose.
It was announced that the ladles
of Porthill, Idaho, have arranged
a Creston Red Cross Society dance
for June 29 at Porthill. It is expected there will be a considerable
attendance from Creston and Valley
points.
Other plans for raising, funds
were submitted and will be discussed at the July meeting,- the
ladies accepting the otter of Mrs.
Frank Celli to give a spaghetti dinner in aid of Red Cross effort. Mrs.
Edmondson has offered some geranium plants which will be disposed
of to augment the chapter's funds.
To HAVE TAG
Consent ot the village authorities has been obtained for a tag
day on July 5. Mrs. H. H. Wilks
heads the Committee in charge of
this effort.
A letter trom headquarters at
Vancouver asked that all made up
work be sent in, and that immediate
steps be taken to secure funds for
the purchase ot further supplies ot
material. Money will be sent to
Vancouver each month, as before,
and each branch will be credited
with funds that It sends in for this
purpose. Mrs. H. K. Legg, who
heads the Work Committee, re
ported both as to quantity and qual
ity of the work sent in has been
all that could be desired.
Before adjournment a fern don
ated by Mrs. W. K. Brown was sold
for $3.20.
REPUBLICS WAR
SESSION SOON
WASHINGTON, June 19 (AP>-
The United States has initiated a
former move for an early session
of the Pan American republics to
consider Western hemisphere problems growing out of the European
war. No date haa been set but the
session will be held soon.
Sumner Welles, Under-Secretary
of State, disclosed at his press conference today that the 20 other American republics were advised on
Monday that the United States be-
believed present conditions made an
immediate session advisable.
DONT KILL
YOUR BEAUTY
By Suffering Monthly Paint
 . .-___—_ __ JIOa«_
dure eech perlod?T_«nthisinee»eie_tor.'_i.
Pot om 70 mart, ecnmtleee _■■_■ et
women who itiflered fontUoBcl monthly p_lo»
Ue* liken Dr. Pterce'e Frrorito Prescrlptloa
ete*t t period of time md hafe boos Ofor-
toyed to tnd tint tut faunoui remedy tas
helped them wird ofl ranch of the monthly
 h tin destroy yonr beauty.
IM s_l_afctl.lt tfioatWo remodr.lonnn-
»ted by a preeUtlnf phplciu, ia (united
to coatiln no harmful druse—no narcotics. In
■ truly edentISc wit, It tapcorea nntrltlonil
esslmllstlon; bona build you up end so In-
___;- ^^AhrtUtiywiatlait
 fooctiooud polos* Lessens
nerroueness during this trylns period.
Dont alio* yourself to become " '
lob* before your time because..
■uch BBHf discomfort. Got Dr. Pierce'a
Feroritt Prescription from your druggist. _4s>
eorer bow it heipe relieie yoa
robbing 'te|ulai' pains.
'iip
Creston W. I.
Gives $25 for
Red Cross Work
CRaESTON, B. C.-Pledged to give
a lull measure of support to Creston Red Cross activities, Creston
and District Women's Institute
m_de an initial donation of $20 at
the June meeting Friday afternoon. President Mrs. Charles Murrell was in charge. The meeting
wes at the home of Mrs. J. G. Connell.
The correspondence notified that
Mrs. V. S. MacLauchlan, of Victoria, Superintendent of B.C. Institutes' who is on a tour of the Province, will be at Creston June 24,
when an Institute rally will be
held.
The three-day vocational school
featuring domestic science largely,
requested for early in the Fall,
was offered for June 24, 25 and 2f3,
but due to the entertainment
planned for the superintendent and
other pressing June .business, it
w„s agreed that it would be impossible to have the school this
year.
The Institute acknowledges with
fhenks a donation ot $5 from Mr.
and Mrs. N. Wolfman for Institute
activities. Notice was also received
that publication had oetsed of a
monthly bulletin previously sent
out dealing with institute work.
Because of an unexpected call to
Lethbridge, Mrs. Gordon Thorpe
Wes unable to attend and give a
talk on the work of the two-week
rural vocational school in April,
which the Institute helped sponsor.
The meeting concluded arrangements for its annual garden party
at the home of the Vice-President,
Mrs. C. F. Hayes.
There wes a half-hour social at
the close, ti which Mrs. Connell
was assisted by Mrs. M. Young,
Mrs. Hayes, Mrs. A. S. Partington
and Mrs. James Compton.
Children Tear Phone
Off Wall Empty House
City Police reported Wednesday
that   several  young  children   had
Indo-China Bans
Shipping to China
HONG KONG, June 1» (AP).-
The Government of French Indo-
China was reported today to have
banned the transit of goods Into Chinese territory, ruled by the Chungking Government In an effort to
eliminate a source of fraction with
Japan,
The ban applies to the Yunna Railway, one of the main arteries for
the supply of war materials to General Chiang Kai-Shek.
The highway and rail route
through British Burma remains
open.
Kiss Ruth Jones
Head ol New Red
Cross Auxiliary
Miss Ruth Jones wu elected
President of the newly organized
Nelson Junior Red Cross Auxiliary
at a meeting at the home ot Miss
Annie Laakso Tuesday night. The
Auxiliary was organized three
weeks ago to work In conjunction
with the Nelson Branch ot Uie Red
Cross Society. Meetings have bten
held at the homes of Miss Annie
Bird and Miss Eileen Collins.
Other officers elected were Miss
Annie Bird, Vice-President; Miss
Kay Anderson, Secretary; and Miss
Frances Jones, Treasurer. Plans
were made for a garden party to
be held on the lawn at the home of
Mayor and. Mrs. N. C. Stibbs early
in July. Others present at the meeting were Miss Beth McKinney, Miss
Patricia Collins, Miss Eileen Collins
and Miss Helen Wigg,
Prisoners, Aliens
to (ome to Canada
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP)— Canada
has agreed to accept responsibility
for Interned aliens and German
prisoners of war from Great Britain, Prime Minister King, told the
House of Commons today.
The British Government he said
asked that aliens and German prisoners be accepted in Canada as well
as, but in preference to, evacuated
British children because of their
potential danger to the United
Kingdom. The Canadian Government was attempting to meet the
British Government's wishes in the
order of their preference and arrangements were being made for
the shipment of the prisoners to
Canada and their concentration and
custody here.
Defence Regulation
Committee Names a
Steering Committee
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP). — The
special House ot Commons Committee to study the Detence of Canada
Regulations for security of the state
and make suggestions for revision
appointed a steering committee at
the first sitting today.
Revenue Minister Ilsley, Committee Chairman, was also chosen to
preside over the steering committee
comprising Sam Factor (Lib., To-
ronto-Spadina), J. Gray Turgeon
(Lib., Cariboo), M. J. Coldweil
i C.C.F., Rosetown-Biggar) and A. J.
Brooks (Con., Royal.)
The steering committee will meet
tomorrow to discuss the trend of
preliminary inquiries of the committee and what witnesses should
be called.
entered the vacant" house of Mrs
"   '              "•   "Silica '
Monday, and had torn the'elephone
P." H"sheffie_,""924 "sIYiga "Street
off the wall, it was apparently the
only moveable object they could
find or reach. A neighbor phoned
the police when she saw the children entering the house. The police
responded and the children were
apprehended.
The house has been vacant for
several weeks. Mrs. Sheffield resides in Vancouver.
OCCUPATION OF FRENCH
INDO-CHINA IS URGED
TOKYO, June 19 (AP).-The To-
hokai, influential political party, today passed a resolution asking the
Government to carry out a "protective" occupation of French Indo-
Chino on Uie grounds that collapse
of the French Government leaves
the areai without effective control
and that it has been an avenue of
munitions supply tor China.
SURVEY OF FARMINC
AREA TO OPEN SOON
PRINCE GEORGE, B. C, June 19
(CP)—Survey work of possible agricultural production areas In the
Plneview and Salmon Valley Districts near here will begin soon, It
was announced today by C. C.'Kel-
ley. In charge of soil survey work
for the Agricultural Departments ot
the Dominion and Provincial Governments in British Cqlum^ia.
PAOI  FIVE
Ford to Manufacture
for U. S. Defence Only
DETROIT, June 19 (AP).—Henry
Ford re-emphasized today that It his
plants get into the production of
war materials it will fee for "defensive purposes only."
Asked about an announcement
from London yesterday that the
British Government had contracted
with his company for 6000 Rolls-
Royce Merlin aviation engines, Ford
said:
"We are not doing business with
the British Government or any
other foreign government If we
make 6000 Rolls-Royce Merlin engines it will be on an* order from
the United States Government.''
He said no such order had been
received.
Mrs. Penson Tells
ol Church Meeting
to Three Churches
CRESTON, B. C. — Considerable
practical information ai to what
transpired at the annual conference of the United Church in British Columbia, was passed along to
the congregations at Creston,
Wynndel ana Canyon by Mrs, R.
G. Penson, delegate to conference
at Vancouver in May, snd who was
Sueet speaker at the Churches
unday.
Mrs. Pen-on advised the conference had to bear and dispose of
comprehensive reports from 31 different committees, which took up
the morning and afternoon sessions of the eight-day meet The
evenings were given over to open
sessions at which various speakers
were heard.
She was particularly Impressed
with the report of the Laymen's
Association of the church, which
stressed stewardship and the part
the ordinary member should have
in developing church activities and
usefulness.
She emphasized the good work
done by the missionaries who serve
points along the coasts of B.C. and
Vancouver Island with mission
boats, of which thty are engineer,
captain and crew. For several years
Rev. George Knox, Pastor of Creston up to 1925, served on one ot
these, but poor health forced hla
retirement. He now has a (Siurch
at Nanaimo.
The value of the Church publication, "The Observer," was stress-
(id ami tribute was paid to the
work of the missionaries in the
foreign tield. The increase in membership was gratifying, and one
lady was amongst the class of seven
students ordained into tte ministry. She is to serve temporarily
in Northern B.C.
The conference named Rev, H.
J. Armitage, pastor ot Trinity, as
a member of the central executive
of the denomination which ls the
business menaging unit of the
Church in Canada.
Mrs. Penson reported that Rev. J,
W. Herdman, Pastor from 1925 to
i|)'8 at Creston, had joined the
Y.M-CA. for military service. He
is a veteran of the Great War.
R.A.F. Bombs Sub,
Italian Colonies
CAIRO, June 19 (AP).—An "extremely successful" dive-bombing
attack on an Italian submarine in
the Mediterranean was reported today by the Royal Air Force.
An R.A.F. communique said, two
British fighters sighted the submar-
ine while on patrol yesterday snd
signalled to their base.
A Blenheim bomber was sent out
and dived on the submarine while
the fighting planes machine-gunned
the Conning Tower.
The tommunique added that ln a
British attack yesterday at Tessenei,
Italian Eritrea, a hangar was hit
and believed to have been destroyed.
Rahelta, also In Eritrea, was twice
raided and bombed.
The Southern Rhodesian air force
carried out a "most successful" offensive and reconnaissance over
Southern Ethiopia, it was said,
these airmen bombed a military
post
Pilot Training to
Start, Regina School
WINNIPEG, June 19 (CP)-Train-
ing of pilots will start within one
month at No. 2 initial training
school, Regina, second to be established in Canada under the Commonwealth Air Training plan, Wing
Commander H. J. Burden, R.C.A.,
will be in command of the school,
stated when he passed through Winnipeg today en route to Regina.
COOL DRESSES
A beautiful selection of target
and half size dresses for the
woman who has trouble in getting a good fit. Choose from
these Summer cools. Sizes are
18'A to 24 Vi and 36 to 44.
$3.95 to $10.95
j) $*rm-n7lunt (§)
Phone 200
Baker St
TORONTO DENTIST TO
HOLIDAY IN ARCTIC-.
TORONTO,  June  19   (CP).-Dr.^^
R. J. S. Tickle, Toronto dentist, will.',.I
spend his Summer vacation ln thes -
Arctic  Circle among Eskimo  and"'" '
Indian   nomads,   in   the  Anglican11,,'
Arctic Diocese. He will fly North-   \
from Edmonton in July. Miss Mil- 9
dred Rundle of St Catharines, Ont, •
and Miss Doroty Chapmen, Tramp-
ton, Ont, both nurses, will travel to
Aklavlk on the same plane to serve
In All Saints' Anglican Hospital    v |
ILK
Contributes more to good nutrition than does any other single
food.
PHONE 111
Kootenay Valley Dairy
FRESH SHEERS. GAY PRINTS
So Cool for Hot Weather
Navy and Black. Sizes 14 to 21*4.
$4.95 to 912,99
Milady's Fashion Shoppe
449 Baker St
Phone 174
WATCH REPAIR
ll a Job for experts. Our work
assures your satisfaction.
H. H. Sutherland
S45 Baker St
Annable's Condition
Unchanged, Hospital
Condition of J. E. Annable, Nelson pioneer, a patient in Kootenay
Laake General Hospital, was reported Wednesday as unchanged. He has
been in hospital since June 8. Dr.
R. B. Shaw is his attending physician.
Urges Mobilization
of Medical Resources
TORONTO, Jne 19 (CP).-Complete mobilization of Canada's medical resources and adequate preparation for urgent future requirements
should be effected without delay,
Dr. Frank S. Patch, Montreal, retiring President ot the Canadian
Medical Association, said today In
his valedictory address at the C.
M. A. convention here.
The Association, he said, started
a registration of members after the
outbreak of war so that doctors
would be easily available for emergency work. A questionnaire had
been sent to all members and BS
per cent had completed the forms.
On the basis of that information a
complete register had been
prepared.
DELAYED SHIP LOADS
CARCO FOR RUSSIA
TACOMA, Wash., June 19 (AP)
—Ending nine days of mysterious
idleness, the Swedish motorship
Ecuador began this morning to load
a cargo destined for Vladivostok,
Russia.
An offlcall of Shaffer Termlnil,
agents for the Johnson Line, said
the ship would load two-thirds ot
tbe 193 carloads awaiting shipment
here.
"The remaining one-third is being held for the United States
Navy," the official said. "The entire
cargo was examined by the Navy.
It was separated into two lots, the
smaller lot is to be held pending
further orders."
The dock official said the cargo
being lotded wis known to terminal enyoloyees only as 'machinery."
SHEERS
Polka dots (Black, blue and white)
Also pastels. Come in and He them.
Sizes 14 to 20:
BETTY ANN SHOP
Opp. Capitol Theatre     Phone 1047
f*MARYHADAf
UTTU IAMBI
♦...It didn't
AGREE
with her...
. . . net surprising becouse Mary hoi tm
y ton been a martyr ta 00.1 "after-eotinc.'*
ilomoch pains. Porlc, veol, rich gravies and
fancy sauces meant stomach torture la ber.
She'd DM It Dial way HI hadn't toM her my
Mcrtt off pffftct traiMih hsolfh • I • ImmImb
.      . sohlihlyrecemmenae.       g
by leading dodors and stomach specialist!
lor odd slomoeh, Indigestion *»t fottrHlsl
• e .
le |eod lo yew thmoch-tole Motloo
SMmech riwdec end mt w_H yo. like
MACLEAN lii in
Stomach Powde
I
psi.»» «.m.|».4H.f e e> .»f.e e l •♦■ see i»^
KOOTENAY PEOPLE f
&SKW
afflsiLvi:. c..ii
Quality
Supreme
"YOU'LL   LIKE
THIS   HOTEL"
A Cordial Welcome Awaits You
at the
Spokane Hotel
W 509 First Street
Across from City Ramp Garage
MODERATE RATES
From $1.50 with detached bath
Tram $2.00 with  private  bath
FRED H. ROHWER, Mgr.
*
'•■   I
 PAGE SIX
Mm Battg HtM
j_rta.llll.ed AprU 22, 1902.
British Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper
Published every morning «SJtfL_.?Hn__!3L_!6?
the NEWS PUBLISHING COM*ANY UMITED.
268' Baker   StreeL   Nelson.   British   Columbia.
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND
THE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATlONa
THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 20, 1940.
EVERYONE BEHIND THE GOVERNMENT
IN THESE THINGS
The Government of Canada has risen to the emergency
in which Canada finds itself as a result of the practical
elimination of France as a major factor in the war, and
has announced a large number of war measures, every one
of which should have the whole-hearted support of the,
entire citizenry of the Country.
Even the most skeptical now can realize that invasion
of Canadian soil Tay an armed and ruthless enemy is im-.
minent, and in fact, a reasonable certainty, considering
that, after the British Isles, Canada Is the member of the
Empire most accessible to the enemy. Canada's turn will
surely come in some form, even if the enemy has to move
his forces by air.
Conscription of man-power, for the defence of Canada,
is both fair, and necessary, for a force of a large number of
divisions must be found, and no delays owing to tardy
recruiting can be permitted to endanger the Country's
safety.
But this system is.also the fair and equitable one, for
it is not just that the burden of defence should fall upon
some and not upon all.
It is equally imperative that Canada's Expeditionary
Force in Britain be effective and be constantly reenforced.
There will never be volunteers lacking for that force if
the Government will equip the divisions. And without
question it will.
Everything else that the Government had decided
upon, and that Parliament is now authorizing, where authorization is necessary—the control of industry for war
purposes, the national registration, the plans for enlisting
the Country's resources and the Nation's capacity in the
production of munitions—should have the siu>port of every
citizen.
Let us hope that the Government will put these various
activities into being, and set the feet of each upon the
course it is to run, at the earliest moment possible in each
case.
Speed of the recent recruiting at Nelson and Trail,
once the Government permitted it to be opened, is sufficient
indication of the feeling of Canadian youth, for no doubt
every part of the Country has had the same experience
since the Belgian debacle resulted in the scope of Canada's
war effort first being enlarged.   .
All Canada will be working in one way or another to
further the war, if the Government will show the people
how and will organize the national effort.
CONTRACT..
CREATING AM ILLUSION
SOME OP the neatest caprices
ln the game are those whereby an
opponent ls deliberately coaxed
Into believing the situation entirely different Irom what lt actually
Is. An odd characteristic of [playi
Involving iuch a principle la that
tome ot them will work against
a fine player and not against a
run*_f-t_e-ml_e one. The truly
skilled cardsman will make the
logical Inferences which cause him
to build up a picture of the iltuation, thereby causing him to faU
victim to a trap prepared by a
skillful adversary. The non observant, not-thinking, lackadaisical,
careless performer, playing his
cards almost "any old way," may
thwart the finest play of this kind
srithout knowing why.
4 A Q io 8
fAKItSI
♦ Q10
-<,__-._-.,•»* 1 t t
IS,
♦ orris 8,
♦7f    • i
* A'J 10 8.
\l -^—
-*t.
2
♦ 0«48
47 E «
*_9t
•9*
♦ AK.T8B2
_,*KQ6 	
(Dealer: East North-South vulnerable.)!'
East
Psas
Pass
Pass
vibls
South
i*
-X
»♦
Weit
1»
»♦
Pasa
Pass
North
Dbl
«»,
tt
„ Weit led the club A, then made
a bad switch to the heart Q, when
hs ahould have led the 6 of the
epade suit which had been doubled by his partner. Declarer, of
course, won in dummy, then ran
four, diamonds, West discarding
By Shepard Barclay
two clubs and a heart
Clearly the band depended on
prevention of a losing trick ln
spades. Alio the finesse wu
marked as virtually certain te
lose, by East's having doubled
that suit. The wily declarer studied a while, then nw a way to
create an Illusion. He led his ipade
J to dummy's A and returned the
8. East thought plenty. Finally hs
counted South sa having held a
singleton ln spades, two hearts,
four clubs and six diamonds, and
his partner three spades, four
hearts, one diamond and five
clubs. If that was right playing
his K on the spade 8 would get lt
ruffed, then the rest of the suit
would bt good. So he played low
on the 8. South then put on the 3,
letting the 8 win, and he now discarded his spade 9 on the heart
A, clearing his hand of everything
except mt* winners. Had East
been a len skillful card reader, hs
might have beaten the contract
with a careless play of his
spade K.
48764
«A82
♦ Ail 1.4
+ Q2
4>KQ.
VJ 10
♦ J87B
4.KJ10 5
N.
♦ •153
»«5 4
♦ K
+ A9 87«
♦ A 10 9
VKQ978
♦ Q10 8 _
North.  Neither
aide
(Dealer:
vulnerable.)
If Weit leads  the  spada  4
agalnit South'! 3-No Trumps,
why should the declarer seek two
of hli tricki ln dub* Instead of in.
diamonds?
Oistrnratcd by King Featoru Syndicate In.
LOOKING BACKWARD
TEN YEARS AGO
From Daily News of June 20, 1930
An official donation of a 17-acre
tract ol land to the Nelson Boy
Scouts Association across the lake
up the Vest Arm wes made by P.
E. Doncaster.—Tenders will shortly
be called for the erection of a covered rink at Kimberley— C. Harford defeated Lawrence Simwon
in straight sets to win the Nelson men's singles title at the lower
courts— The concrete foundation
for a two-story concrete building
to be erected on Baker Street next
to the Simpson Block by Thomas
Lawson is   nearing completion.
25 YEARS AOO
(From Daily News of June 20,1915)
Chief Savage of the Grand Forks
City Police is a Nelson visitor.—The
business of N. Murphy on Baker
Street has been sold to Curtis W,
Lester.—Captain L. E. Borden. M.D.,
has been instructed to resume recruiting at Nelson and to forward
the men to Vernon in batches.—H.
K. Cramer of Vancouver, formerly
of Nelson, is starring in trap shooting at the Coast, in two recent shoots
outshooting   outstanding   amateurs
and professionals.
FORTY YEARS AQO
From Daily Miner of June 30,1900
A. H. Kelly returned to Nelson
from an inspection trip of a few
claims on Forty-Nine Creek.—M. S.
Davys, former manager of the Silver King mine, and David Bremner
connected with the Wakefield mine
have relumed from a trip to the Old
Country.—A new journal, the Canterbury Outcrop, devoted to mining
ind development of the Windermere and Golden district, hss been
launched at the shoot of the Nelson Gun Club. H.W.F. PoUock and
Clarence Goepel made 12 each.
WAR—25 YEARS
AGO TODAY
By The Canadian Press
JUNE 20, 1915-Germsny began
heavy offensive againit the French,
in Argonne. German-Austrlsn irmy
started battle for _,emberg (Lwow),
and captured Zolkiew and Rava
Russka. Germin line bent back
Northwest ot gpucher.
OjfL.JkL (ti)L
THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1910
CKLN AND
CBC PROGRAMMES
MORNINC
7:00—0 Canada
7*>J-Toait and   Coffee   Club
(CKLaV)
8*0—BBC News
8:30-Al Gilbert'! Trio
8:45-The Newi
9:0O-Keybosrd  Capers   (CKLN)
9:15—It'a Dance Time (CKLN)
9:30—Pelham Rlchardion'! Orcheitra.
10:00-Blue Network Varletlei
10:30—United. Statei Marine Band.
10:45—The Newi
11:00—Accordian Artistry (CKLN)
11:30—U. B. C. Muiic Hour
12:00—Club Matinee.
AFTERNOON
12:45—Song! from  the  Sagebrush
(CKLN)
1:00—The Newi
l:15-Talk
l:30-Closing Stocks
1:45-BBC Newi
2:15—Concert in Miniature
2:30—Talent Parade
3:00—Reflectloni ln Song
3:30—Southwestern Serenade
3:45-Talk
3:57-News Bulletin
4:00—Piano Recital
4:30—Leon Buckert's Orch.
5_K)—Summer Symphony Concert
EVENINC
8:00—To be announced
8:30-Talk by Fire Chief MsDon-
ald (CKLN)
45—Moodi ln Muiic
00—The New!
:13-Talk by Vernon Bartlett
:30—Dave Dyck in "Songs oi the
Range" (CKLN)
.tt-Stag Party ■   ■
57-News Bulletin
00—Geoffrey Waddlngton
Presents
30—Choral Music
.00—Jack Avison'i' Orcheitra
30—Talk
:48-.olnt  Recital
15—The Newi
30—Matty Malneck'i Orch.
tt-^-Ernie Heckther'i Orch,
;00-aHarry Owena' Orch.
30—Reverie
57—News Bulletin
12:00-God Save the King
C|AT — TRAIL
MORNING
7:00—Church In the Wildwood
7:15—Breakfast Club
8:30—Wake Up and Sing
10:00—Voice of Memory
11:30—Dance Hour
AFTERNOON
12:30—Sunny Side Up
12:4aV-Melody Time
1:15—Song Recital
4:00—TheJtre News
4:15—Organ Reveries.
4:30—Hits and Encores
4:45—Ranch Boys
EVENINC
«:0O—The Melodeeri
6:15—Aloha Land.
11:30—Midnight Matinee
12:00-Sign OH
Other  Periods—CBC  Programmes
•WMJMMMMiMMM.WMWtWIMMM'i
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Utters may be publlihed over a nom de plume, but the actual
name ot the writer muit ba given to the editor ai evidence of
good faith. Anonymous letten go In the waste paper baiket
*»»««$»$»•»*«•»
xsetimtMstessssosesss&szMSsetssio*
Hitler's Appraisal
of British Nation
To the Editor of the
Daily News.
Six—It may be a comolition to
some in these dark days to learn
what Hitler thinks of the British.
In dealing with the matter of alliances, in hit book "Mein Kampf'
he states:
•TOR AN ALLIANCE IS CONCLUDED NOT WITH WEAPONS BUT WITH MEN. Thus,
THE BRITISH NATION WILL
CONTINUE TO  BE CONSID
ERED AS THE MOST VALU-
ABLE ALLY IN THE WORLD
AS LONG AS THE WORLD
LOOKS TO THE LEADERSHIP
AND SPIRIT OF ITS PEOPLE
FOR THE RUTHLESSNESS
AND TENACITY WHICH IS
DETERMINED TO FIGHT OUT
A STRUGGLK, ONCE BEGUN,
BY EVERY MEJVNS AND
WITHOUT REGARD FOR TIME
AND SACRIFICE RIGHT ON
TO THE VICTORIOUS END."
Herr Hitler may find that his
opinion will be amply justified before the end of thus conflict.
NELSONITE.
Nelson, B. C, June 18,1940.
WWSttS$S»S«S«3»MM«*»>Stt»S»;
J? Questions??
ANSWERS
Open to any reader. Names of
penons asking questions will not
be,published.
_M_____«_____aS___KS5S«SMS54«
AUNT HET
By ROBERT QUILLEN
ootysssosss&os&oso&o&x
3. V., Rossland—What is the approximate area and population
of Tunisia, British colony mentioned in recent news stories?
Tunisia is a French colony, 48,300
iquare miles In area, and wilh a
population of about 2,410,692.
D.F.L., Grand Forks—What ii the
flag of Naii Germany?
The Nsil flag has a swastika in a
white circle on a red background.
L. T., Bosweil—What ls the best
wsy to mend a rip in kid gloves?
Buttonhole around the rip with
cotton thread to match the gloves
and then draw together the edges
of the buttonholing.
R. N., Ymir—May jam tins be used
in putting up homemade jams or
marmalades?
Yes, but care must be taken to
hsve them absolutely clean and it
is wise to use some kind of seal
to close the tin.
KILL BORER IN
HOLE ON PLANT
i jy&K
,
wi**HOLrw
\ ll    STEM
CCVUUL
Mot* or
outsort
DlMaMlOl
4.-1T S
Stalking the italk borer
When the top portion, leavei and
twigs of columbine show signs cf
wilting, carefully examine the plant
for the stalk borer and then be
prepared to stalk it to its lair.
The whereabouts of the borer will
be revealed by a nest hole in the
stem of the plant. Once the hole
leading to the borer's lurking place
has been discovered the borer itself
can easily be killed by sqirting a
few drops of carbon disulphide into
the hole with a medicine dropper.
Immediately after the injection
plug the hole tightly with chewing gum or putty.
The columbine borer is.similsr
to other italk borers. It is about
1. Inches in length and s salmon
brown ln color.
Luicar Citizens to
Donate $1200 Month
LUSOAjt. Alta.. June 19 (CP)-
Citliens of this mining town, 200
miles Southwest of Edmonton, at a
mass meeting held during the weekend agreed to donate to the Federal Government three per cent of
their wages to further Canada's
war effort
At the present pay-roll rate this
will amount to $1200 a month. The
town's population is 500,
"Cousin Jim can't appreciate anything unless it costs money. He used
a sun lamp all Winter, but this
Summer you'll never see him out
of the shade."
BOMBAY, India (CP)-Mathur-
adas Tricumje, leader of the Congress Party in the Bombay Municipal Corporation, has been elected
mayor of the city.
REJUVENATE
Your Lawn
STIMULATE
Your Garden
By Using
"PRESTO"
Fertilizer
The fertiliser with an organic base
with added potasji and ammonium
sulphate.
4c per Ib. er   50 Ibi.  $1.50
ELLISON MILLING
COMPANY
Phono 238      Nelson, B. C.
illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
"Build B.C. Payrolls"
COWS
MUST
HAVE
GOOD
WATER
The water of some places is
such poor stuff cows can not
stand it. Not so in British Columbia. Cood water is one of
the reasons of the fine dairy
herds and because there are
such thriving herds here Pacific is really choice milk.
Pacific Milk
Irradiated and Vacuum Packed
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii
j_2A£     yOWmmJllfm
«s)ttttittimtt<>ssmifit^itm)mt
ONI MINUTE TUT
1. Where is Lapland?
2. Into how many time belts is
the United States divided?
S. What city is known as 'The
Pearl of the Desert.**
HINT* ON ITlQUEtrB
When you write a letter In long
hand be sure to write legibly. It is
very Irritating to receive a letter
which you are eager to read but
cannot do so easily becauie you
nave to puzzle over many csrelenly
scribbled words.
WORDS OF WISDOM
Courage consists not is hazarding
without fear, but being resolutely
minded in a Just came.—Plutarch.
TODAY* HOROSCOPE
A year of conilderabie good fortune awaits those whose btrthdayi
are today. A foreigner benefit!
them. Tbey should, however, guard
against extravagance A fair measure of success is predictedfor children born on this date Their natures will be reierved. dignified,
economical, reliable, patient, persistent and very conventional
ONE MINUTE TEST ANSWERS
1.' The northernmost part ot Europe, extending acrou the Arctic
edges of Norway, Sweden, Finland
and Russia
2. Four-Eastern, Central. Mountain and Pacific, not counting Eastern Daylight Saving Time, which
lasts only from Spring to Autumn.
3. Damascus, in Asiatic Turkey.
COAST CAMPAIGN CONTINUES
V-JTCOUVEH, JUne 10 (CP).-Al-
though it reached its ?200,000 goal
yesterday, Vancouver's United War
Work Fund will continue its campaign until Friday, officials announced today.
SUPERIOR COURTS HAVE    .
EQUAL JURISDICTION IN
TERRITORIES DECIDED
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP) —Super*
Ior courts of all the Provinces shall
have equal jurisdiction ln civil cases
throughout the North Weit Terrl.
lories at well as surrogate powers,
according to an amendment to tha
North West Territories Act adopted
by the Senate Banking and Commerce Committee today.
The Committee also reported ••
bill to amend the Yukon Act in-re.
sped of fur sales regulations, and a
bill to make minor amendments to
the Agricultural Products Coopers- ,
tive Marketing Act so as to provide
better administrative machinery, j
attf
■fces
tot*
uotv
intend v* Go
c4
fte*
J&
i So***
wIVIo<*'^0to^ot
M *»   a* v^-m*-*
•0e».
\&
?att'
co*8*
Dr. Cowen
Credit Dentist
Don't put off needed dental work
limply becauie you cannot pay caih.
You ara welcome to avail yourself of
my Credit Plan. Coma In and let ma
explain how you may arrange to have
your work completed RIGHT NOW,
and pay later, weekly or monthly. Take
ai long ai Five, Ten or Fifteen Monthi
to pay, whichever ii moit convenient.
... in other wordi, maka your own
termi for payment, within reason, of
coune. You ara invited to consult with
mo regarding your dental problem! by
writing, phoning or penonal call.
No Discount on
Canadian Money
You will not have to pay
on* oent discount on Canadian Money at Dr. Cow.
en's and you may exchange Canadian currency
fof United Statei Currency In reasonable
amounts to help pay expenses while In Spokane.
'• The relatiomhip you establish between
younelf and your Dentiit ii ona of the
moit important In life,
• Rare indeed it the penon who can hopt
to maintain good health without consulting a Dentiit at leait twice i year.
Dentistry ti no longer a luxury, but his
become a downright necessity of modem
living, to why not coniider your Dentiit
at one of your beit friendi? Take pride
in your teeth not only becauie they
enhance tho beauty of your facial features, but becauie they ara tha outward
reflection of good health, your most
precious human possession. Unfortunately we ara not all granted tha birth*
right of beautiful teeth, but practically
everyone can acquire a pleasant, healthy
mouth condition through regular visits
to their Dentiit. Wa ara all primarily
judged by appearance . •.
An appointment with your Dentist
will be the first important step toward maintaining lustrous, healthy
teeth, and a pleasing smile that will
impress your personality upon all
you meet.
Ml
CASH
0£titaL
pjfokL
Coma in and let ma help you
ulect the stylo of dental platei
beit suited for your individual
requirements. Enjoy wearing your
platei while paying by taking
advantage of my Credit Plan. I
will gladly ihow you samples, including uppers, lowen, psrtisli
and roofless dental platei.
Out of
Town
Patients
.... are Invited
to un the facilities of either my
Spokane or Yakima offices. If
you desire work
can ba arranged
by appointment:
otherwise come In
at your own convenience.
Credit gladly
extended, no
matter
where   you
live.
CREDIT
ON BRIDGEWORK, CROWNS/
PLATES, FILLINGS,  INLAYS
TAKE FIVE, TEN
OR FIFTEEN
MONTHS to Pay
NOTICE!
PRESENT   DENTAL
PLATE   WEARERS!
Dr. Cowen will reset
your preient teeth in
tho NEW, BEAUTIFUL
TRANSPARENT MATERIALS at a fraction
of tho coit of new
platei.
\\
# t .
OPEN
UNTIL
9PM
PEERLESS DENTISTS
JAMIESON BLDG.
CORKER   WALL  AND   RIVERSIDE   AVENUE
:.'... ,      -   ■ ■     ■
	
 mm
-NELSON DAILY NIWS, NILSON, B. C.-THURSDAY MORNINO. JUNI 20, 194.
PORT
eveland Beats Washington to
Gain on Boston; Yankses Beaten
■y The Canadian Praia
Johnny Allen hurled iteady ball
uterday for a 4-1 victory over
'athlngton, helping Cleveland In-
Ml drive within a half game ot
a American League-leading Bos-
in Red Sox. Cleveland's nine-
t attack Included Hal Troiky't
lth heme run of the season.
lie Browns beat Boston Red Sox
In and they did lt the hard
r, Overcoming a four-run handi-
, the lighting Brownies scored
I in bursts of two and passed
league-leaders, 6-4, for their
md victory over Boston and
I fourth In a row. They took a
bleheader from the Yankees be-
i the Red Sox came to town,
rtrolt Tigers swept a double
ler with Philadelphia Athletics,
ning the second game 9-4 be-
Lynwood   Rowe's   effective
pitching. The Tigers took tha
opener 5-4 In 10 innlngi, Louis
(Buck) Newsom hurling his eighth
consecutive victory.
Thornton Lee outlasted Marius
Russo in a lefthanded pitching duel
to give Chicago White Sox a 1-0
victory over New York Yankees.
It was the world champions' fourth
consecutive setback and the second
straight by a Southpaw.
Heavy showers interrupted the
Pittsburgh Pirates tor 45 minutes
as they moved Into sixth place
in the National Baseball League
by drubbing Boston Bees 5-1.
The surge of the St. Louis Cardinal* collapsed under the strain
of seven errors in a night game
at Brooklyn and the Dodgers
fought their way to an 8-3 victory
thtt lifted them into a virtual tie
for first place in the. National
League.
A Picture of Open-Mouthed Awe
irocher,Owen
Carry on Feud
JBBTS FIELD, Brooklyn, Juno
(_P).—The flaming feud between
iklyn Dodgers and St. Louis
llnals broke out again in their
e at Ebbets Field tonight when
Durocher and Mickey Owen
iged In a fist tight,
wen, Cardinals' catcher, waa
Id at second base In the third
n| and as he started toward
ugout he and the Brooklyn
ager-shortstop exchanged words
lb brought them together, fists
l|, near second base.
ittty player on both teams rush-
0 separate them and It looked
1 minute as though a riot might
i out of the incident, which ob-
ily dated back to the "beaning"
rooklyn's Joe Medwick yeiter-
q and the hard feelings that rc-
len the field was cleared, Ow-
_ s banished from the game but
cher returned to his shortstop
lon. Don Padgett took Owen's
in the SL Louis lineup.
>ogman's Down
Senators 6-2
SSLAND, B. C, June- 19 -
man's downed the Senators,
n a Rossland Softball League
I at the Rossland ball park,
lay night The lineups follow:
ragman's — CUH Clelland, If;
WUde, cf; John Gidinski, lb;
Neal, 3b; Clyde Nyman, c;
McDonell, _Jb; Jim Georgeson,
IW Wright, p: Ray Gendle. rf.
nators—Jack Tongue, 3b; Nor-
Zanussi, 2b; Mike Welycochy,
low Sdao, ss; Austin Bathie, rf;
I Johnson, cf: Don Camozzi, U;
freney, p; Harry Beaulieu, lb,
|Orge Chiga, former Regina
finder, has received his debt agriculture from Oklahoma
araity.
Stejfe
AMERICAN
Jills. Harry
UIRICH
lis v MN AVE. aiv.?....'•>
ipokane, Wash.
.. .   ■-.'•
%?_y
BOOKIET THAT EVERY
5TH SHOULD HAVE
> Canadian shooter, young
)ld, whether interested in
• or Shotgun, should hares
'thisFREE DOMINION
SMIN Booklet
■fUs'ii
I How to build a rile range,
I trap or skeet field
I How to get tbe most out of
Ifour rite or shotgun
[How to organize and operate
|a shooting dub
low YOU cm join  thii
union-wide, 25-year-old
dy of sportsmen without
.AND
Bw you can win crth-activ-
fixes with lh» rifl* or shot-
i you now own.
re Is sbsolurelr ao chsrie, so Ut
|end mil the coupon TODAY.
.— COUPON—-—
05
10, Montml, Quelwc.
W L Pet.
Boaton       31 18 .833
Cleveland   34 22 .607
Detroit    „  32 20 .615
New York  27 26 .509
St. Louil  25 30 .455
Chicago    25 30 .455
Philadelphia  20 33 .377
Washington    21 36 .368
NATIONAL
Cincinnati   35 18 .660
Brooklyn  33 17 .660
New York - 31 18 .633
Chicago     29 27 .518
SL LouU  21 30 .412
Pittsburgh   18 30 .375
Boston .-  " 30 .362
Philadelphia   17 31 354
Training for his forthcoming bout with Arturo
"klss-me-again" Godoy, heavyweight champion Joe
Louis lays a right on the whisker foundation of
sparring partner Joe 0*GattI—to the very obvious
chagrin of the latter. Mr. Louis and Senor Godoy
will meet in the two-man blitzkrieg at the Yankee
stadium, New York, tonight.
Frick Takes No
Action Yet on
"Beaning" Play
NEW YORK, June 19 (AP).-An
early decision by Ford C. Frick on
charges that the "beaning" of
Brooklyn Outfielder Joe Medwick
by Bob Bowman ot St. Louis Cardinals was deliberate appeared remote tonight as the National League
President declared he would take
no action until the results of an investigation by District Attorney
WUliam O'Dwyer. office were
known.
Hinting that baseball could keep
Its own shirts clean, and that he
C.A.H.A. Donates
$10,000 lor War
TORONTO, June 19 (CP).— A
grant of $10,000 to aid the Government in its war effort was approved by the executive of the Canadian
Amateur Hockey Association today
and the Individual branches will be
asked to endorse it. The executive
also decided to approach the Government to determine in what way
the C. A. H. A. can best play its part
in the country's prosecution of the
war.
The Association will operate as
usual next Winter and every assistance will be extended to any military units that desire to sponsor
teams.
The Allan Cup and Memorial Cup
playdowns yielded a net profit of
$28,000—somewhat less than that realized In previoui years. The reduction was due in part to the lack
of patronage in the senior finals
here which Kirkland Lake won
from Calgary.
Sports Roundup
NEW YORK, June 19 (AP) -
Even Arthur Donovan's best friend,,
can't see how they can let him work
Louis-Godoy tomorrow night after
that magazine story in which Donovan picked Louis to win. . . .
Up to yesterday, Dodger hurlers
had been nicked  for an even 50
homers lack  D_m,p«ey and
Mike Jacobs sre supposed to have
buried the hatchet, but one paper
reported the first conference Dempsey held in his new offices had to
do with plans lo bust the Jacobs
boxing combine wide open. .. . Edwin Puck, pitching star at Iowa
State College, ended the season
with a stretch of 50 innings without a walk.
THE CREPE HANGAR8:
Mike Haslin of Ihe San Diego
(Coast League) Club, drove t
hearse last Winter. . . . Paul Greg'
ory of Seattle Rainiers sold tombstones. . . . May combine their talents this FaU.
May be a coincidence, but Umpire
Bill Summers' name hasn't appear-
ed on the Comiskey Park scoreboard since he was beaned with a
pop bottle there two years ago. . . .
Whitey Armstein, one of the tops
when it comes to conditioning boxen, will handle Galento in the Max
Baer fight. . . . Visiting baseball
writers will bet you Curt Davis
turns out to be more valuable to
the Dodgers than Josephus Medwick. . . . Sammy Angott puts his
N.B.A. lightweight title on the line
against California Jackie Wilson at
Los Angeles Labor Day
ONE-MINUTE  INTERVIEW:
Joe McCarthy: "The owners of
the Indians should have packed up
Oscar Vitt with a new two-year
contract ... Do you know what's
wrong? . . .
Catholics Take
Softball Lead;
Massacre Cycles
The Cycles took it on the chin
for the sixth consecutive time of
the season, and C. Y. O. cllpibed
into undisputed possession ot first
place in the Nelson Men's Softball
League with a one-iided 36-3 victory at the Recreation Grounds
Wednesday evening.
The Cycles had one of their average days in the field, committing
14 misplays, and to make the rout
complete the Catholics really had
their eye on the ball, smashing out
something like 26 hits, including
five doubles, two triples and lour
home runs.
Clarence Heighton started the
game on the mound for the Cycles
but he lasted only one inning as
the Catholics landed on him for an
even dozen runs. John Worthington
took up the burden from there ln
and he met with a bit better success. T. Maglio, A. Selinger, M.
Prestley, A. Maglio and DeLucrezio
each belted out two-baggen, T.
Maglio and DeLucrezio triples and
DeLucrezio, E. Maglio A. Maglio and
Kuntz round-trippers.
Joe DeLucrezio, right.fielder for
the Catholics, added four singles to
his coUection of a homer, a triple
and a double in seven trips 1° the
plate for a new refidrd for th. Va-
son. The lofty gardener came to
bat in the seventh inning with ilx
straight hits, and then popped up a
fly between first and second. Scott
and Ball pulled one of the Brooklyn
Dodger specialties, both went after
the ball and neither came up with
it after crashing into each other.
Meanwhile Ernie Beland, making
his season's debut on the mound,
hurled effective ball for the Catholics, permitting the minimum of
18 batters to face him in the first
six innings. Three men got on base
on singles, and one on an error,
but they were quickly erased by
a snappy double play, Involving the
Selinger brothers, two rifle throws
by Kuntz to first to catch runners
off the bag, and by the fourth one
leading off.
Score by  innings:
Cycles    000 000 300— 3   8 12
C. Y. 0  1264 004 100-36 26   3
Lineups follow:
Cycles—Gordon Nelaon ss, rf, cf,
2b, Al Brown cf, If, Bill Brown rf,
ss, "Corky" Ball 2b, cf, Jim Tarling
If. cf. rf, Dooley Scott lb. Barney
Preitley. c, Clarence Heighton p, 3b,
ind John Worthington 3b, p.
C. Y. O.—Pete Kuntz c, Lawrence
Selinger ss, Andy Selinger lb. Armando Maglio 2b, Joe DeLucrezio
rf, Mickey Prestley cf. Eugene
Maglio 3b and Tom Maglio If, Jack
Fisher and Ted Bialkowski
pired and Georgie Eberley
score.
Coaches Redmen
CECIL PITT
Newly-appointed coach of the
Rossland Redmen of the West
Kootenay Boxla League, Cecil Pitt
has had lots of experience In sport
fields, having served as manager
of the Rossland Junior Terriers
and the Redmen, and having been
connected with Rossland hockey.
Trail Cricketers
Beaten al Forks
perls of the case, Frick said:
"Even if I do make up my mind,
I would not make any announcement under the circumstances. Suppose I should suspend Bowman.
That would be taken ai proof of
bis guilt"
Frick spent four hours today Interviewing everyone who might
throw some light on yesterday's incident, when Medwick was felled
and suffered a concussion.
He said he had asked only Leo Durocher, Brooklyn Manager; Bowman, Johnny Mize, Cardinal fint
baseman; Pepper Martin, Cardinal
outfielder, and Larry MacPhail,
Brooklyn Club President, to tho
hearing, but practically the entire
Cardinal team trooped to the league
office and before the length testimony was ended many other players, as well as two or three Brooklyn fans, had been called in.
Bowman obviously was nervous.
He was called in twice. He later
reiterated an earlier statement that
Medwick was his friend and the
beaning was unintentlal.
MacPhail was as emphatic that
the beaning was Intentional. ,
BattirvA
Leaders
By Tha Aisoclated Preia
Batting  (three leaden in each
league):
O AB & H Pet.
Raddiffe Browns 52 202 28 74 .366
McCosky, Tigers .. 45 186 45 67 .360
Finney, Red Sox .. 44 202 34 72 .356
Danning. Giants . 46 181 27 64 354
Moore, Giants  46 183 37 63 .344
Walker Dodgen _ 40 146 24 50 .342
Home runs:
American League—Foxx, Red Sox,
16; National League—Mize, Cardin
als, 18.
Runs batted ln:
American League—Foxx, Red Sox
was not Interested ln the civil as-, 56;     National     League—Danning,
Giants, 44.
— PAGE  SEVEN
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GRAND FORKS, B.C. - Grand
Forks cricketers turned the tables
rather emphatically on' the Trail
club at the Ci^r Park here Sunday
afternoon when they won with a
margin of eight wickets and nine
runs. This was done in spite of
the absence of Captain M H. Ashby,
an outstanding player, but his place
was ably filled by W. J. Pearson as
skipper.
Trail went to bat first, making a
score of 27, to which the Forks replied with 42, A. J. Cleeton scoring
19 not out and Jimmy Lawrence
eight not out. In the second innings Trail got 43 runs and the
home team took 37 for two wickets.
Following is the score:
FIRST INNINGS
Bouchier Sr. b Whittaker _  1
Whitehead c Pearson
b Whittaker   2
Chambers c McNevin    '
b Whittaker ._   12
Balnes b White  , 2
Taylor P.O.W. b Whittaker  0
Benson P.O.W. b Whittaker  0
Manson Sr. c Grey b White  0
Colls c Pearson b Whittaker  0
Santano not out  - — 2
Stiles c Grey b White   3
Manson Jr. c Pearson b White...™ 0
Bouchier Jr. P.O.W. b White __. 1
Extras      I 27
Blairmore Wins
13-lnning Game
NATAL. B. C-After playing
scoreless baseball for 13 innings the
Blalrmore Columbus Club came to
bat in the last of the 13th ahd scored
a run on two errors and a safe hit
to defeat the Natal-Michel Buffaloes
1-0 in a tight pitcher's duel at
Blairmore Stadium June 16.
Both starting pitchers went the
route, each allowing three safe hits
for nine Innings and only six safe
hits, during the 13 innings. T. Krall
of the Buffaloes struck out nine
Blairmore batters while allowing
not a single walk while Herman
of Blairmore struck out three Buffaloes and issued three walks. The
game was the tightest seen ln the
Pass for many years.
The game was umpired by J.
Josay of Natal and C. Decoux ot
Blairmore.
Natal-Michel   Buffaloes   ...    0   6   3
Blalrmore Columbus Club   16   2
um-
kept
Pro Baieball
Western International League
SPOKANE
vs. Vancouver
June 21 it, ]un« 22.
Doubleheader |une 23
FERRIS FIELD PARK
SPOKANE, Wash.
Rotary (amp al
Robson lo Open
Early in July
TRAIL. B: C, June 19—Trail Rotary Club's Fresh Air Camp, which
increases ln popularity each year,
will again open the first week in
July and close Ihe first- week in
September.
Persons attending the camp enjoy
a two weeks' outing, the two Summer months thus actually providing four camps. About 35 persons are
accommodated in each camp and
already application for the first
two have been,made and accepted
according to Frank Pennoyer, Rotary Club Secretary.
Owing to the war, the Rotary
Club did not put on a carnival this
year, and therefore had no funds to
carry on development at the camp
which has proceeded each year
However, a few weeks ago the en-
tire Club spent an afternoon at the
grounds putting things "ship-shape"
for the camping teaaon.
Mrs. Herbert Johnson, .who has
been in charge of the camp for the
past two Summers, again has been
appointed Supervisor for the 1940
Season.
AMERICAN
Washington „ —   18   1
Cleveland     4   9   0
Chase, Haynes, Krakauskas and
Early; Allen and Hemsley.
Boston  _    4   12  0
St. Louis -....'  6   11   1
Hash, Hevlng and Desautels. Peacock; R. Harris, Lawson and Swift
Philadelphia    4   10   2
Detroit     5    9   2
Potter and Hayes; Newsom and
Sullivan.
Second:
Philadelphia - -  4   10   3
Detroit    9   12   0
Caster and Wagner; Rowe, Benton and Tebbetts.
New York - -   0   7   1
Chicago ._    1   8   0
Russo and Rosar; Lee and Tresh.
NATIONAL
Pittsburgh        5   9  0
Boston        1   9   2
Bowman and Lopez; Errickson,
Salvo and Berres, Mast
St. Louis  -   3   9   7
Brooklyn      8   9   2
McGee. Lanier and Owen, Padgett; Wyatt and Phelps.
INTERNATIONAL
Montreal    9   14   1
Jersey City -    6   13   3
Grissom, Macon, Lucas and Beck
er; Henshaw, Cassaway, Harris and
Blaemlre.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Indianapolis  -.   1    8  0
Kansas City    4   13   0
Logan and Pasek; Carnett and De-
Phillips. •
Toledo     7   12   1
St. Paul     10   14   4
Whitehead. Wirkalla, McDougall
and Spindel; Taylor, Himsl and
Schlueter.
east...u/est...UDi s best
This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor
Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia
Grand Forks:
Cleeton declared   r  19
Grey Sr. b Baines  0
Clapp b Baines    4
White, run out  3
Whittaker, b Chambers  0
Pearson b Chambers  - 0
McNevin c Chambers b Balnes . 6
Lawrence not out    8
Sorrell b Chambers  0
Waters b Balnes   0
Onions b Benson     0
Scott b Baines  0
Extras 42
8ECOND INNINGS
Trail:
Bouchier Sr. b Whittaker .
Whitehead run out 	
Chambers not out	
Baines b Whittaker 	
Taylor b Whittaker 	
Benson b Whittaker .
Manson Sr. b Pearson .
S
1
1
2
3
12
4
Colls b Whittaker _..:..  0
Santano run out     9
Stlesl run out    3
Manson Jr. b Pearson  :.    0
Bouchier Jr., b White  _    0
Extras*      3
43
Grand Forks:
Qeeton b Colls ,  9
Grey Sr. c Santano b Cols  6
Clapp not out   9
White not out   12
Extras  ....*.    1
37
Five Tie for Low
Score (oasl Goll
Kootenay-Belle
Humbles Salmo;
Returns lo Form
SALMO, B.C., June 19-Koot-
enay Belle softballers snapped
out of their three-game slump
here tonight by banging out an
8-2 victory over Salmo, the team
that itarted the three-time champions on their losing streak.
This verdict toppled Salmo out
of e first place tie with Second
Relief into a tie with K.B. for
the runnerup spot
Ernie Oliver returned to the
K.B. lineup to do the twirling and
he set the Salmonites down wilh
eight hits. Alfred Cawley doubled
home an unearned run ln the
fourth and Rusty Gibbon homered
'in the ninth for the last Salmo
tally. Oliver whiffed three batS'
men, compared to the one strikeout
and one walk by his opponent, Gor.
don Moir, who allowed 12 hits.
Laurie Henderson was the bis
fun (or the winners with a pair ol
cue runs, each with a mate on
base, in the fourth and fifth
frames, lt was ln these innings that
K.B. scored 6even of the eight
runs. John Nygard, leftflelder,
singled and tripled in the same
innings.
The next game is scheduled for
Friday night when Second Relief
will have to defeat Gold Belt to
retain sole possession ot first place,
Score by innings:
Salmo    000 100 001- 8
K.a    100 430 OOx—1!
Lineups follow:
Salmo—Gordon Moir p, C. Anderson lb, Rege White of, Nicky
John Zb, Rusty Gibbon ss, Alfred
Cawley 3b, Elmer Gibbon c, Eddie
Hearn If and 3. Bush rf.
Kootenav-Belle—Jack Titsworth
cf, Cliff Dorey 2b, Jack Hale c,
Ernie Oliver p, Laurie Henderson
lb, John Nygard If, Frank Postle-
whaite ss, Fred Thompson rf, and
Ron McLaren 3b.
Umpires-C. Sadao and N. Best.
Scorer—Sadie Hamberg.
Les Mann, organizer for amateur
baseball, wants Canada to enter a
team in the international tourna-
ment at Havana in September.
SEATTLE. June 19 (AP).-Five
players — three amateurs and two
professionals — tied for low score
today at the end of the opening IB
holes of play in the 27-hole Pacific
Northwest Open Golf Tournament
being played over the Sand Point
Country Club course.
Marvin "Bud" Ward, of Spokane,
United States amateur champion
and defending Northwest open
titlist, shot a 67, three under par,
to pace the opening day round along
with Harry Givan, Seattle, former
U. S. Walker Cup player, Bud Haskell Olympla amateur, and two
professionals, Chuck Congdon, Tacoma, and Ken Tucker, Everett
Wendell Wood, Eugene, Ore., professional had a fine 68.
At par were Eddie Hogan, Portland pro; Freddie Wood, Vancouver,
B. C, pro; Sherman Ellworthy, St
Louis, Mo., pro; Harry Miller, Seattle amateur; Ralph Whaley, Seattle
amateur, and Al Zimmerman, Portland professional.
REMEMBER  WHEN?
By The Canadian Praas
Charlie Grimm was released by
St. Louis Cardinals ot the National
League to Little Rock of the Southern Leakue 22 years ago today. He
was sold to Pittsburgh in 1919 and
after six yeara with the Pirates wss
traded to Chicago, becoming Manager of the Cubs Aug. 2, 1932, succeeding Rogers Hornsby.
Rossland Goes to
Northport Sunday
ROSSLAND, B. C, June 1_-The
Rossland senior baseball team are
playing a return game against
Northport. at Northport Sunday.
The states team wai defeated 4-1
when they played Rossland, at Rossland, on June 9.
Jack Fisher Signs
as Cycles Pitcher
Deiperately In need of replacements, the Cycles have signed up
Jack Fisher, a likely pitcher, for
services during the rimainder ot
the Nelion Men'i Softball League.
Still without a victory in ilx itarts,
the Cycles spotted Fisher, regular
outfielder oi the Nelson Senior
Baseball Club, warming up on the
sidelines Wednesday night before
their game with the Catholics, and
showing lots of speed.
He was unable to participate in
the game because, according to
league regulations, he had to be
signed up at least 24 hours before a
time.
Rams and Bombers
Play Boxla Salmo
on Friday Night
SAXMO. B.C, June 19—The third
game of the Salmo Valley box lacrosse season Is billed for Friday
night and it will Involve Second
Relief Rami and the champion
Sheep CTcek Bombers.
The Bombers defeated the Rams
10-6 in the first game, but then bit
the dust themselves a week or so
later when they met a picked team
from Second Relief and Salmo.
This time they ere eager to hit the
win column again, and will present
a strong lineup.
Lacrosse officials have had a
tough row to hoe this season, but
despite adverse conditions have
come through with entertaining
lacrosse, and a bumper crowd il
expected Friday night Jimmy Allan will guard the hemp for the
Bombdrs and Dick Hambly for
Second Relief.
Doubleheader Church
Softball on Tonight
A doubleheader ls scheduled In
Nelson Church loftball thii evening
at the Junior High when the Baptists and Senior CY.O. clash in I
men's division game and Junior
C.Y.O. and Baptist girls meet.
Raptitts  will have
for a
to  pull  out
the
layoff berth which Senior
with a victory to remain in the hunt
pi.
C.Y.O. has already clinched in the
men's lection. Playoff arrangements
for the ladies have not been settled.
Gutta Percha Tires
For Perfect Grip and Safe Driving
Shorty's Repair Shop
714 Baker Nelion. BO
Louis Favored lo
Wallop Godoy
NEW YORK, June  19  (AP).-
Faclng the most dangerous foreign
challenge to the world's heavyweight championship since Max
Sohmellng and Primo Camera won
it Joe Louis makes the 11th defence
of Fi-tiana's richest prize tomorrow night in Yankee Stadium
against rough, tough Arturo Godoy
of Chile.
Some 30,000 are expected when
the shooting starts at 6 p.m. P.S.T.
They'll contribute to an anticipated
gross gate of more than 1150,000..
Of the net, Louis receives 40 per
cent. Godoy will get 17 Vs tot tha
tussle ot 19 rounds or less.
From the "just before the battle,
mother" statements of both men,
it appeared there would be two
winners.
Nevertheless, the Broadway bookmakers and the "experts wars
virtually unanimous in picking
Louis to turn the trick again. Tha
Bomber was 1 to 5 to do lt any
way, and 1 to 2 to do it the hard
way—chilling the Chilean before
the 15 rounds were up.
Natal Plans a
July (Program
NATAL, B. C-flWal-Miche! W-.
hold a monster sports celebration
July 1. A total of $1000 will ba
given out ln prizes. This will be
sponsored by the Michel Local No.
7292 of the United Mine Workera
ot America and will take place ln
the Natal sports grounds.
Final arrangements were made
recently when the officers and
Sports Committee met and drew up
a two day program, commencing
on Sunday, June 30, which as ln the
past few years hai been a children'*
sports day. Monday, July 1, the preliminaries and finals of both the
baseball and sottibell tournaments
will be run off with $125 going to
the wlnnen in baseball and $85 to
the second place winners. In soft-
ball the winners will receive $35
and the second place winners $20.
It ls expected that the amount of
entries In both the baseball and
two softbail tournamenta will surpass that of last ytar as already it
is assured that entries will be in
the baseball tournaments from Coleman, Fernie, Cranbrook and Blalrmore.
Many other events are planned.
SPOTLIGHT ON
OGDEN'S
Hume Softball Team
Regains Bicknell,
Fires Bialkowski
Aftermath of the oft-disputed
thriller between the Catholics and
Hume Hotel of a week ago, Ted
(Scrub) Blalkowskl has been handed his release by the Hume team.
The outfielder dropped a fly, with
two men on ln the ninth inning and
the Catholics behind by two runs,
to enable the score to be tied up and
pave the way for an eleventh Inning
victory for the Catholics.
"Any guy that says he doesn't
care whether he wins or loses isn't
going to play for my ball cub," said
Coach Bill Freno. Bialkowski demanded his release, so he says, and
the management say they fired him,
but the fact remains he has been
cut from the Hume roster. It Is believed that the Savoy Hotel ia angling for his services.
The latest development ln the
Hume-Savoy softbail row is the
apparent reconciliation between
Pitcher Len Blcknell and the Hume
team. Bicknell threatened to quit
after the last game and the Savoy
Club was hot on his trail.
"He's with my club and he's gonna
stay with my club," said Freno.
Both clubs are still after Art Ross
of the Kootenay-Belle nine who returned Wednesday from a trip to
Spokane.
RACING CEASES
LONDON, Juna 19 (CP)-Cei-
•atlen of hone racing In England
"until further notice" wai announced today.
AL MORSE
CLUB AND CYMNASIUM
Spokane, Wash.
Spokane's Sporti Headquarters
Boxen Train Daily
EVERYBODY WELCOME
ADMISSION FREE
mm ,	
_________
____.
 »AQE   EIGHT
R. A. F. Takes Heavy Toll
Oil Supplies, Munitions
Trains in German Raid
LONDON, June 19 (CP)—Oil
•upply centrei, railway marshalling yardi, power stations and
rail communication! In many
parts of Northwest Germany and
the Rhineland were attacked
Tueiday night by Royal Air Force
heavy bomber squadrons, the Air
Ministry announced tonight.
Targets near Hamburg, Bremen.
Frankfort, Essen, Caltrop, Sterk-
rade and Hanover were reported
heavily bombed. At Bremen more
than 250 bombi were dropped
with 30 minutei, causing heavy
explosions among oil tanki and
itarting numerous flrei, the announcement said. ^
BLAZE SEEN 80 MILE8
The Ministry's statement follows:
"Hamburg was subjected to a
series of raids which began shortly
after midnight and lasted until near
dawn. Salvos ot bombs repeatedly
straddled a large oil depot near the
docks and fires kindled by earlier
attacks became so widespread that
the blaze could be seen by our
Jtotneward bound aircraft as they
crossed the German coast 80 miles
distant.
"At Castrop, to the Northwest ot
Dortmund, high explosive bombs
fell on a petroleum refinery. Flames
were immediately seen to break out
and after one raider had left the
target, the tail gunner, looking
back, aaw a high explosion take
place.
MUNITION TRAINS BOMBED
"Storage tanks st Mlsburg, close
to Hanover, also were systematic-
ally bombed. A direct hit on a large
building in the centre of the target,
believed to have been a power
house, resulted in an explosion
which wes felt by the crew of the
aircraft flying 10,000 feet above.
Here, too, fierce fires which broke,)
out could be seen by raiding crews
long atter they had left the target
area.
"Another power house ii thought
te have been destroyed in the j
course of an attack on oil tanks at
Sterkrade, North of Duisberg, I
where   British   bombers    pressed I
home their attacks despite Intense
fire from powerful ground batteries
round the target. Shell iplintera
pierced the wings and fuselages of
several of our aircraft. One bomber, badly hit and with fabric stripped from the upper surface of both
wings, nosedived several thousand
feet before the release of lta bomb
load enabled the pilot to regain
control.
"With sections of railway communications in Rhineland and Ruhr
as their objectives, night raiders
attacked marshalling yards, railway junctions and supply trains
Direct hits were registered on railway junctions at Gladbach, Wesel
and Arsbech, near Rheydt, and fires
were started in crowded marshalling yards at Schwerte, South of
Dortound.
YARDS BURN
"At Dusseldorf a. series of attacks
was launched against the principal
railway yard. Twenty-one separate
fires were counted wjthin this yard
by the rear gunner of one of the
last aircraft to leave the scene.
, "Two goods trains standing in a
marshalling yard at soest were both
hit with heavy calibre bombs and
the yards itself was left enveloped
in a pail of black smoke through
which numerous small explosions
could be seen. . . .
"Another train, believed to have
been loaded with munitiohs, was
caught in a cutting near Cologne
and struck by three heavy bombs.
Erplosions, accompanied by great
clouds of smoke, at once broke out
among wagons. Machine guns,
mounted on the train, opened fire
on a British bomber which promptly retaliated by coming low and
machine-gunning the full length of
the wrecked train.
"Other military objectives attacked during the night included the
power station at Schilau in the environs of Hamburg, where direct
hits resulted in vivid zigzag flashes
which lit up the whole of the target aria, and a large munitions
works at Cologne which was set
alight and left with flames blazing
several hundreds of feet high."
—NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-THURSDAY MORNING. JUNE 20. 1940 —
BJ|I!_!_IPIP«1'.1;||1^P;
1/ It's Really Wanted....!. Will Sell Fast on This Pag*
'    . '      ■  '       • ■     . >.  ■     ■    •.'     ' '      ..     :     '   •    ' .j* ;•-.; ,, ■■■ ■,
I. I —mmmm ■ ■ ■ ' I ■ I. ' i i il —___B
**m*
e
Telephone 144
Trail: CaU A. IX. Joy
Rossland: Call K. Lowdon
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BOATS AND ENGINES
C. W. WALTON St SON, BOAT
Builders. Boats tor rent Briggs
St Stratyon sir-cooled inboard and
Johnson Outboard "engine agenti.
FOR SALE - CABIN CRUISER,
22 tt 7 tt. beam. Heavy construction. Splendid condiUon. Particulars on appUcation to Box
2792 Daily News.
Nazi Plot to Seize Uruguay
Shown in Committee Report
MONTEVIDEO, June 18 (CP.-
Havas) — A widespread German
plot to seize Uruguay waa described ln the first sections of a
report by the Congressional Committee investigating Nazi activity
made public here today.
The committee claimed to have
proof of the existence of a large
and powerful military, political
and economic Nazi network.
The German Legation was declared to be directly implicated.
Evidence produced by the committee was stated to prove that Otto
Langmann, the German Minister,
had engaged in subversive activity.
The report charged that Uruguay
has become the centre of Nazi organizations throughout South America, excepting Brazil and Argentina.
CRITICIZE MINISTER
The charges came officially to
light today with publication of the
proceedings of the first two secret
sessions of Congress which heard
the report of Julio I. Tur-Ide, Secretary of the Investigating Committee.
In his report Itur-Ide criticized
the   attitude  of   Interior  Minister
Manul Tiscornia, who for a long
time had denied the existence ol
Nazi organizations in the country.
The committee came to 51 separate conclusions Irom the facts its
investigators had gathered. Most Important were:
That a plan exists for the mill
tary occupation of the Republic
with distribution of troops of the
active army and of the reserve,
placement of German officials, division of land, repression of attacks by enemies of Nazism, and the
conversion of Uruguay into a colony of German peasants;
That the German Legation ln Uruguay is participating in the political leadership ot all the Nazi organizations in Uruguay, with Julius
Dalldorf, the Nazi leader, functioning in the Legation and enjoying
diplomatic immunity;
That the German Legation has
been bringing contraband into the
country in the form of abusive posters, propaganda injurious to countries friendly to Uruguay, films and
radio sets, all in quantities far in
excess of the needs of the Legation
personnel.
U. S. Warns Germans, Italians, Will
Not Permit Interference in West
NEW HAVEN, Conn., June lg
(OP)—The Marquess of Lothian,
British Ambassador, today warned
ihe United States not to count uj»n
any part of the Royal Navy beitxg
available for its defence if Britain
is defeated.
He told the Yale University
alumni luncheon that he was not
pessimistic because there "are
forces fighting on our side of which
Hitler knows little," but the facts
of the naval situation should be
stated bluntly so that the United
States could never say that it had
not been warned. He spoke after
receiving an honorary degree.
The first line of defence of the
Koyal Navy has to be based on
Europe itself, to command the exits
to the Atlantic, through the North
Sea, the English Channel, the
Straits of Gibraltar, he said.
"Only if we are beaten down and
the greater part of the fleet has
been sunk in action will the remains of it leave home to assist in
the defence of Canada, Australia,
Now Zealand, South Africa and
other distant parts of the commonwealth."
Britain Erects
Blockhouses as a
Defence Measure
LONDON, June 19 (CP)—Britain
,_as adopted early North American
anti-Indian defence tactics with the
orection of blockhouses over the
countryside to combat an expected
German invasion attempt, it was
disclosed today.
War Secretary Anthony Eden, in
a written answer to a question in
the House of Commons said the
following measures had( "been
noted."
1. Erection of blockhouses or elevated armored machine-gun posts
in various parts of the country, especially flat areas
2. Provision of rockets to spread
■the alarm of enemy parachute descents 'with a view to possible in-
■terruption of telephonic or telegraphic communications."
3. Protection of buses and trucks
with bullet-proof armor, arming
them with Bren guns and holding
th.m at strategic points to guard
nfainst parachute landings, troop-
c rrying planes £Tid speedboats.
4. Supplying arms to railway
signal posts, especially In isola-
tfd areas, and adequate steps for
<he protection of locomotive shede;
Pius Asks Prayers
While Forces of
Deception at Work
VATICAN CITY, June 19 (AP).
—Pope Pius, addressing an audience of pilgrims today, appealed
to the Italians to be generous.
The Pontiff asked his hearers
to pray for their country, "asking
that their sons be generous in
serving Him."
He also requested them to pray
for the church "which weeps for
so many of its sons who are no
more and for many of its destroyed
temples, Its priests prevented from
carrying out their ministry, and for
innumerable poor souls straying
among the ruins of their destroyed
folds or in exile, while forces of
error and deception are seeking to
push them further from their divine pastor."
Caucus Supports
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP). -
Unanimous support of the Government's compulsory service legislation was voiced at a Liberal caucus
of the House of Commons knd Senate members today. Prime Minister
Mackenzie King said there was not
a dissenting voice and that he believed there would be no further
opposition from any in the Liberal
ranks.
IRISH MINISTER QUITS
BECAUSE OF INACTIVITY
BELFAST, June 19 (CP) .-Colonel Alexander Gordon. Financial
Secretary to the Northern Ireland
Finance Ministry, resigned today as
a protest against what he called the
Government's inactivity over war
efforts. It was the second resignation of a junior minister in a fortnight.
This was the first, serious outbreak within the ranks of Lord
Craigavon's Government since it
took office in 1921, A fortnight ago
E. Warnock, Parliamentary Secretary to lhe Ministry of Home Affairs, relinquished office for reasons
similar to those given by Col. Gordon.
Neutrals Believe
Peace Terms May Be
Rejected by France
BERNE, Switzerland, June 19
(AP).—Neutral travellers reaching
here from France today said there
was a conviction in the Southern
part ot the country that the axis
peace terms would be hard and a
growing feeling that the French
Government might reject them.
ThU haa been the reaction to Premier Marshal Petain's order to
France's armed forces to continue
resistance and to the decision of
Great Britain to fight on alone.
U.S. A. Provides
for Sale of 20
Ships lo Britain
WASHINGTON, June 19 (AP).-
The Navy disclosed today that it
had cleared the way for the Electric
Boat Company of Groton, Conn., to
sell to Britain 20 high speed submarine chasers and motor torpedo
boats originally ordered for the
United States fleet.
The Navy Department changed
its contract with the boat company,
officials reported, to provide for a
delay in delivery of 20 vessels or
dered by the Navy,
The manufacturing company thus
will be able to sell that number of
craft to Britain.
Some members of tha Senate Na
val Affairs Committee, meanwhile
demanded an investigation of the
navy'B action.
Senator Harry F. Byrd (Dem.,
Virginia) announced that he would
ask that the committee be given
full details of the transaction.
Navy spokesmen emphasized to
reporters that no ships which had
been delivered to the navy and bo-
come its property were being released for sale to the Allies.
They declared also that deferment of deliveries to the United
Statea would result in increasing
the Electric Boat Company's capacity for production of the high
sped warships.
HELP WANTID
WANTED - CAPABLE WOMAN
to look alter sick woman. State
wages. For further particulars
apply to A. Keer, Marysvillc.
B. C, East Kootenay. .
WANttSb - eXp . mSBSS cou-
ple for mixed dairy farm, per:
manent position if satisfactory.
Age, nationality Box 88 Cranbrook
WANTED - RELIABLE HOUSE-
keeper. G. Thomas, R. R. 1,
Summerland, B. C.
W'AnHSD t BOV TO WORK ON
Farm. Can milk. Apply to Box
2784 Dally News
WANTED - MAN FOR DAIRl
Must be good milker. Apply Box
301, Fruitvale, B. C.
WANTED EXPERIENCED TAILOR
able to handle steam press. Box
2722 Dally News.
WANTED EXPERIENCED Gliiia
for housewk*. Box 2773 Daily News
AGENT8 AND 8ALE8MEN
A GOOD BUSINESS PAYING
.good income and with future
possibilities. Selling Familex
Products men and women all over
Cinada have found the secret of
success. Why don't you get In on
it too? NO OBLIGATION. Ask
for FREE catalogue describing
200 necessity products and plan.
FAMILEX PRODUCTS, 570 St
Clement St., MONTREAL.
SITUATIONS WANTED
Special Low Rates for noncommercial advertisements under this classification to assist
people seeking employment.
Only 25c for one week (6 days)
covers any number ot required
lines Payable in advance.
ENGLISH TRADESMAN WANTS
.'work. Painting, paperhanging.
kalsomining, signs and show cards
No job too small or too large.
A. Woods, Rm. 11, Annable Blk.
CAPABLE WOMAN DESIRES PO
sition as hotel housekeeper or
chambermaid. C. P. R. Hotel ex-
perience. Box 2465 Daily News.
AN ALL ROUND HAND? MAN
wants work by the hour or job
calcimlnlng, painting, carpentry,
or genl. house repairs. Ph. 1024R.
WaANTED HOUSE KEEPING PO'
sition in B. C. Small child. Mrs.
Lacy, Coleman, Alberta.	
FOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS
PIPE, TUBES, FITTING
NEW AND USED
Large stock for immediate shipment
SWARTZ PIPE YARD
1st Avenue and Main SL
Vancouver, B. C.
PIPE-FITTINGS, TUBES - SPE-
cial low prices. Active Trading Co.
915 Powell St.. Vancouver. 6. C.
LAWNMOWER, WOOD, YATT. Al
cond, 14 Inch. H 524 Gore Street
8 FT. WINDMILL $15; AUTO KNIT-
ter $15. J. Peachey, Ballour, B.C.
LIVESTOCK,  POULTRY
AND SUPPLIES. ETC.
WRITE TO GEORGE GAME, TRI-
angle Poultry Farm, Armstrong,
B.C., for prices on R. I. Red Pullets
FOR SALE TEAM HORSEsTt YRS,
weight 3700. Mare 9 yn., weight
1300. John Ziuchkovski, Erie, EC.
WANTED — YOUNG COW FRSsH-
ened this year. C. G. Bowker,
Mirror Lake. B. C.
PERSONAL
MURPHY BROS.-.OR D_F!ND
able work. Wallpapers, and did-
dens Time Tested Paints.
HURRYI HURRYI 5 FOR 25c POR-
trait special at Vogue Studio now
on. No  appointment  necessary.
25c - FILMS PRINTED. POSTAUE
paid. He-prints 3c. Lions Photo.
P: Q. Box 434, Vancouver B. C,
BEATTY SHALLOW WELL PRES-
sufe pump with tank. 3. Chest.
524 Vernon St, Nelson.
HOTEL MARTIN-ROOMS >1 AND
up. Quiet. Central. 1176 Granville.
Vancouver, B, C.
SALVATION ARMY - IF YOU
have old clothing, footwear, turai-
ture to spare please Ph. us, 818L
PURCHASE YOUR FRUITS AND
vegetables at The Star Groc. Al-
ways fresh in modern refrigeration
A PORTRAIT BY McGREGOR IS
a Portrait ot Distinction, Phone
224, 577 Ward Street,
HAVE YOU ANY ANTIQUES!
Top prices paid tor antiques at
The Home Furniture. 413 Hall St
CHOQUETTE BROS. **MOTH"_R*S
Bread" helpa.build healthier boys
and girls. Ph. 258 for daily dlvry
WHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT
Aimer Hotel. Opp. C. P, R Depot
•IN SPOKANE MAKE VOUR HOME
The Empire, 108 N. Division St
The friendly hotel tor Canadians.
WHEN THE TOURISTS ASK
where to stay; give them an intelligent answer, say "Kokanee
Lodge."
ANY SIZE ROLL FILM DEVEL-
oped and printed 25c The most
modern Photo Finishing Plant in
the West Established over 30 yrs.
Kryslal Photos, Wilkie, Sask.
MEN'S SANITARY RUBBER
goods, send (1 for 12 samples.
Plain wrapped. Tested, guaranteed, prepaid. Free Novelty price
list Princeton Distributors. Box
61, Princeton, B, C
WRITE FOR FREE PRICE LIST
on. Hygiene and Sanitary Supplies, or send $1.00 for special
sample assortment of 27 best
quality latex, postpaid under
plain sealed cover. Western Slip-
ply Agency, Box 667, Vancouver,
MEN - REGAIN VITALITY, VIG
or. pep. Try Vitex, 25 tablets 11.00.
60 tablets $3.00. .Guaranteed. 24
personal rubber goods $1.00. Free
price list ot drug sundries. J.
Jensen, Box 324, Vancouver, B. C,
MEN PAST 40! RUNDOWN. PEP-
less feeling? Try Ostrex tablets
for stimulants, tonics, oyster elements as aid to recovery normal
vim, vigor. Get package today. 11
not delighted, maker refunds its
low price. Call, write Mann,
Rutherford Company and all
other good drug stores.    	
B. C. HAD ONE FURRIER IN THE
Great War (on the Allied side);
Munro, the veteran furrier (1914-
1918) allows a full 10 per cent
discount to relatives ot Service or
Ex-Service men; this applies to
remodelling, storage, relining and
genuine cold storage as well as
on new furs; furs sent to your
Express Office on approval.
Munro Fur Store, 505 Granville
Street, Vancouver, B. C.	
PETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.
FOR SALE 10 HVY. WK. HORSES,
saddle horse. Ellison Millg. Co. Lta
FOR SALE  14  MOS. OLD AYR-
shire bull. Eli Slacko, Ymir, B. C.!
FOR SALE — PED. LIVER SPAN-
iels, six weeks old, make excellent hunters and companions. Ap-
ply Hirst, Queens Bay, B. C.
PETLAND - W 241 RIVERSIDE,
Spokane. Dogs, Birds, Goldfish,
etc. Full line supplies, accessories
WIRE HAIRED FOX TKKiMEU
pups.  Harding,  Nelson, Ph.  110.
Niagara Struck
Mine—Fraser
AUCK_AND, N. Z.. June 19 (AP)
—Prime Minister Peter Fraser told
Parliament today that an enemy
mine had sunk the Canadian-Australian liner Niagara, which went
down yesterday 20 miles off the
New, Zealand coast. This was the
first official indication that German mines had been sown in the
Paci/ic waters.
As Mr. Fraser spoke, rescue ships
and planes were, aiding the 146
passengers and 203 crewmen of the
vessel who took to their boats following the explosion which sank
the-liner. All were declared safe
and proceeding here.
Mr. Fraser told Parliament that
minesweepers despatched to the
scene early today already had found
one mine, removing all doubt as to
the cause of the sinking.
GOVERNMENT TAKES OVER
TORONTO ITALIANS PLANT
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP).-The
large enterprises of James Franches-
chini, Toronto contractor, taken Into
custody atter Italy entered the war
have been taken over by the Dominion Government. These enterprises include the Dufferin Shipbuilding Company of Toronto which
has been working on minesweepers
for the Government and the Duft-
erin Construction Company.
BRITISH "PERFECT GIRL"
GIVES BIRTH TO A SON
LONDON, June 19 (CP).-Lady
David Douglas-Hamilton, formerly
Brunella Stack, Britain's "perfeci
girl" and founder of the Worhen's
League of Health and Beauty, is the
mother of a nine-pound son. Lord
David, brother of the Duke ot
Hamilton, is a pilot officer in the
Royal Air Force.
FOR WANT AD
SERVICE
PHONE 144
WANTED, MISCELLANEOUS
SHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS
or Iron Any quantity. Top prices
paid. Active Trading Company.
916 Powell St, Vancouver, B. £
PUBLIC NOTICES
CORPORATION OT TBE
OTV OF NELSON
NOTICE Is hereby liven that
"City of Nelaon Barber Shops Regulation By-Law, 1940" No. 999 comes
into torce and effect on the 26th day
ot June, next and provides that:
(Section 2)
"All barber shops within the
Municipality of the City ot Nelson
shall be closed and remain closed
on' each and every day of the week
in every year from and continuously
after the commencement of any
such day until thirty minutes after
the hour of eight o'clock In tho
forenoon ot such day and shall be
closed and remain closed on each
and every day ot the week except
Wednesday and Saturday and any
day immediately preceding a public
holiday in every year at and cohtin-
uously "after thirty minutes after five
o'clock in the aftcrnon ot any such
day, and on each and every Saturday .and any day immediately preceding a public holiday ln every
Sear at and continuously after the
oul of nine o'clock In the afternoon of any such day, provided that
the provisions ot this Section shall
not apply in respect to the seven
days immediately preceding Christmas Day ln any year."
By Order,
W. E. Wasson, City Clerk.
FOR AND WANTED TO RENT
FOR RENT JULY 1 6-RM. STUCCO
house with furnace and garage.
Comer Nelson Avenue and Chat-
ham Street. Apply 520 Mill Street.
FOR RENT NOW -.6 RM. HOUSE
with furnace and fireplace. 207
Behnsen Street Apply 109 Kerr
Apts., or Phone 694-L.
FOR RENT - COTTAGE ON LAKE
front at Willow Point, 3 bedrooms,
Apply H, Rosling or Phone 717,
FOR RENT LARGE COOL FURf.
house. July and Aug. Apply Box
180 ore all at 617 Carbonate St
POR RENT FIVE ROOM COTTAGE
Cement basement. 1011 Hall
Street. Phone 495L.	
FOR RENT - 4 RM. SUITE WlTTl
bath and 3 rm. suite with bath, 1
blk. from Baker St. Ph, 441R
newly bfiCORATEC HOUSE-
keeping rooms and suites Star
Rooming House, 705 Victoria Alley
FOR RENT 3 ROOM FURNISHED
house. Mrs. T. Bell, Govt Road.
for rejto^T_5_¥r5'5H"Fi!5n.
flat. Phone 752R
2 room'tornMH) WOT FC*
rent Stirling Hotel
SMALL I'URNlSttUO B6U__ K*
rent July, Aug., 614 Kootenay St.
FOR RENT-_Urt_8'Atffi SlNGI!
housekeeplng rooms. K.W.C. Blk.
FM"FJ_NT-.tt(tNl_aE_rHOTSE.
Apply 618 Silica St. or Ph. 690R.
[ _:o._-ia__l*i}Jc_ SMMs
Prvt home. 804 Stanley, Ph. 158L.
FOR RENT, 2 ROOM APT., FURN.
$10 month. 507 Railway Street
FOR RENT FURN. SUITE. APPLY
607 Silica Street. Phone 440X.
WE HAVE SEVERAL HOUSES
for rent. C. W. Appleyard.
FOR RENT, JULY AH- AUGUST
small turn, house. 101 Chatham St.
For rent, furn. single hskp
rooms. Strathcona Hotel,
JOHNSTONE BLDG, MODERN
Gen. Electric equipped suites.
TERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern
frigidaire equipped suites.	
" SEE KERR APARTMENTS
SUMMER  RESORTS
HOLIDAY AT CEDAR CABINS,
Appledale. Rates by day, week
or month. Fully furnished. Apply
Appledale General Store.	
An Ad Here Is Your
Best Agent
AUTOMOTIVE.
GOOD TRUCR BUYS
•37 G. M. C. %-l ton        $700
•37 Fargo »4-l ton . $700
"37 Chev. %-l ton, 4 speed
transmission $700
■32 Ford V, ton, Al $325
'34 Heavy Duty 2 ton International long wheel base $700
'35 International, lt deliv.
long wheel base like new $525
CENTRAL TRUCK te
EQUIPMENT CO., Nelson, B C.
'29  DeSOTO SED. THE ""FIRST"
DeSoto from the famous Chrys.
family of cars. Almost new tires
and motor is in beautiful shape
If you're wanting a car for "almost nothing", this is yours for
only $225. Nelson Transfer Co. Ltd
Trailer for sale or rent. Roomy
(14' 6" by 6' 6"). Ideal living or
batching quarters. "Factory custom built  with one double and
one single bed.
SOWERBY-CUTHBERT LTD.
Opp. Post Office lc Hume Hotel
'29 STUDEBAKER PRES. 8 SED,
with trunk. Special 6 wire wheel
job with only 8000 miles on tive
Heavy Duty tires. Deep luxurious
uphlsty. that truly reflects the
painstaking care it has had. Hurry,
it won't last long at $225. Nelson
Transfer Company Ltd.
BATTERIES - GRTD. $4.50. RE'
charging, repairing and servicing
on all makes and types. At Sky
Chief Auto Service, 206 Baker St.
FOR SALE—1939 DE LUXE FORD
V8 Coupe, heavy duty tires and
heater. Cost $1123.00, sacrifice for
less than $800.00. 41m Latimer St.
TRADE IN .OLD TIRES ON NEW
Nelson Auto Wrecking, 613 Vet
non Street, Nelson. Phone
PUSS MOTH AEROPLANE FOR
aale. In first class condition. Ap-
ply P. O. Box 11, Creston, B. C.
W OLDSMOBILE, FAIR SHAPE
Cheap tor cash. Box 10, Castlegar
FOR SALE '29 ESSEX COUPE, GD,
cond. Cheap tor cash. Ph. 1069-R,
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
RANCH 10 ACRES, 5 MIXED
fruit, rest timber. Flower garden,
good water, near highway and
lake. Good fishing. Nice 7 room
house, light and phone. Packing
house equipped store shed! A
snap for quick sale and get the
fruit. 2224 Riverside Ave., Trail.
FAIRVIEW PROPERTIES, IDEAL
Home sites. Easy terms to suit
Tie-up one of these sites now for
later building. R. W. Dawson,
sole agent, Hipperson Block,
Phone 197.
GOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE
on easy terms ln Alberta and
Saskatchewan. Write for lull information to 908. Dept of Natural
Resources, C. P R, Calgary. Alta.
2 HOUSES FOR SALE, VERY
close in, $1800 for the two. Kitchen ranges and some furniture
included. Terms arranged. Phone
Appleyard, 269.	
6 ROOM, FULLY FURNISHED
house, hot and cold water, electric light, garden plot, 2 lots, $750.
Must sell. Box 411, Cranbrook
LAKE FRONTAGE OPPOSITE
Nelson. Terms. Johnstone Estate.
Box 198, Nelson, B. C,
FOR SAL? 4 RM. COTTAGE AT
Pilot Bay, partly furnished, $300
Jess Sanders, Nelson, B. C.
FOR SALE OR RENT-4 ACRES
of cherry orchard. Kaslo. Apply
C. Brett 212 High St., Nelson.
FOR SALE, COUNTRY HOME, 20
acres land. Apply 1002 Hoover St.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
AND SUPPLIES, ETC.
Band and Orchestra instruments,
strings, repairs. Webb's, 806 Baker.
(Next Scandinavian Church).
FOR WANT AD SERVICE
•PHONE 144
LOANS, INSURANCE, ETC
LOANS - MORTGAGES WIT
good Improved property as yo
security ln our opinion is 1
best Investment you can m«
today. The comparative yields;
high ana the chance of depreci
tion Is small. We have seve
mortgages we can place from w
to $2000. Better see us and
particulars. Robertson Realty
Ltd.. S47 Baker Street
WE HAVE CONSIDERABl
money available for Mortgai
repayments monthly. Yorksb
Plan. C. W. Appleyard.
FOR CAR INSURANCE. FIRE I
surance or burglary insurer
Phone Appleyards, 269.
LOST AND FOUND
To Finders
It you find anything, telephon
The Daily News. A "Found" Ac
will be inserted without cost t
you. We will collect trom th
owner.
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTOI
A88AYER8
E. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVING
Analyst Assayer, Metalluri
Engineer, Sampling Agent*
Trail Smelter, 304-305 Josepl
Street Nelson. B. C.
GRENVILLE H. GRIMWb(fl
Provincial Assayer and Chemist,
Fall Street P O. Box 9. Net
B. C. Representing shipt
Interest at Trail, B. C.
HAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSL*
B. C. Provincial Asstyer, Chat
Individual representative tot s
pers at Trail.Smelter. _<
CHIROPRACTORS
j. r McMillan, d. c, neu
calometer, X-ray, McCulIoch
DR.  WILBERT BROClt, bi
542 Baker Street Phone f
CORSETIERE8
SPENCER CORSETS. MRS. V
Campbell, 870 Baker St Ph,
ENGINEERS AND 8URVEY0
R W. HAGGEN, Mining te I
Engineer; B. C. Land Sunn
Rossland and Grand Forks,
BOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvalt,
Surveyor and Engineer. Ph
"Beaver Falls".
INSURANCE AND REAL 1ST
C. D. BLACKWOOD, Insuranc
_every description. Real Est H
CHAS. F. McHARDY, INSUR_J
Real Estate. Phone 135.
R. W. .DAWSON, Real Estate,
surance, Rentals. Next Hipp!
Hardware. Baker St Phone
MACHINISTS
BENNETTS LIMITED
Machine shop, acetylene and til
welding,   motor   rewlndini
commercial refrigeration
Phone 593 324 Vema
STEVENSON'S MACHINE SI
Ph. B8, Vernon St Nelson, Ij
for Renold Chain drives Sc g
MEMORIALS
SAME AS USED ON GRAVXI
Forest Lawn Memorial Park
Erice list from Bronze Mem<
td.. Box 726 Vancouver, B.
SASH FACTORIES
LAWSON'S SASH FACT
hardwood merchant, 273 Baki
SECOND HAND STORES
WE  BUY,  SELL  &  EXCHAI
furniture, etc. Ark Store, Ph.
YOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY M
THIS COGUED BEEP AU*
CABBAGE WIU. TASTE
GOOD WHEU I GET OW
THE TBAN -MOW FOR A
QUICK SHAVE.
t HAD THE POGTEB CHECK
IT AMD PUT IT IM WITH THS
TRUWKS IKI THE BAGGAGE
CAU- YOU WON'T  NEED 1T-
ANYWAY-
THATS
WHAT
M3U
TWNk_»
'WELL, I UeVER,' IKWblUE.
TVW M&C_.ft 5PURNIMC"
THE CC_1KT1_W. ANb FOR
5.UCH A FUWSY EXCUSE/
HUMPH! v-UST 6ECAUS* HB a
OOUUWY SU. PORT WW-/.
** ^ rd_£t?Z   r*
nob_e-/jBS__. *w .- *-
_____
.. -. -    -■
a_n'_i_iiii  i'   ."j".
■
 "'
eavy Amount Preserving Expected
This Year as Jar and Sugar Sales
Strong, Wholesale Dealers Slate
erries Approaching
Season's Peak;
Eggs Advance
.lth the season about a month
ltd of other years, with sugar
ces continuing at a relatively
r level, and with strawberries
1 other small fruits fast ap-
oaching their peak, Nelson
olesalers said Wednesday they
.ected an unusual amount ot
ne preserving would be done
I year. An exceptionally early
anup of Jars was expected if
es continued at their present
e, one dealer said. New pack
at Jam was on the market last
ek.
?rocessing of itrawberriei has
lira for winter Jam making. All
awberries on the mfrket in the
it week were local. Heavy ship-
nts to prairie and other points
ire made from -Wynndel,. Perry
ling and Harrop.
ffltn continued high tempera-
tats, hot weather foods continue
sell rapidly, Including all bev-
iges, selad foods and salad drees-
;s, canned and cooked meats, and
on. Watermelons are somewhat
m in price because of floods tn
i California growing district
nut a month ago.
iULLY BEEF" SELLING.
While prices of fresh end smoked
eats remain stationery, egg prices
e up again over last week. This
due to a shortage. The lamb
;uation has eased somewhat with
ppl'ics slightly more, plentiful. A
Itvy run on canned corned beef
the well known "bully beef" of
■ First Great War—is reporteij,
Most canned goodi In the hands
cf packen are short, with tha Dominion pack 2,800,000 caiea short of
last fear. Dealers said they thought
this was because packers under-
estlmated their requirements.
Many canned goods will not be
available until the new pack arrives on the market Canned peaa
are nearly cleaned up and the new
pack is not expected until about
the middle of July. Some grades
and sizes of salmon are also nearly
out of packers' stocks.
B.C. POTATOES STRONGER
AU new potatoes on tha mtikct
now are British Columbia grown,
because of a dump duty placed on
American potatoes entering the
Dominion. Most of them are from
Vancouver. Local carroti, beets and
cabbages are available in larger
quantities. Hothouse tomatoei, field
cucumbers and Bing cherries are
arriving from the Okanagan.
Onions from Washington and cantaloupe and plums trom California
are also on.
Feed and grain dealers report
the seasonal decrease in business is
ahead of other years. Sales of bulk
tnd package seeds have almoit
stopped. Fertilizer sales ara continuing in smaller volume. Poultry feeds continue to sell in good
quantity, and sales of agricultural
poisons and insecticides are increasing.
Flour dropped 10 cents per barrel
during the week.
Carlot arrivEls of tha week Included one of sugar, two of groceries, two of meats, one of salt,
one of soap, one of British Columbia new potatoes, one ot oranges,
one of watermelons, and one of
flour and feed. *
.ace Negotiators
o Meet in Madrid
BORDEAUX, June 19 (AP).-
'h« newspaper Figaro aald today
hat French and Qerman peace
egotlatori would meet In Marti at the reiidence of General-
»lmo  Franclico  Franco.
The "newspaper did not iay when
hi meeting would be held but It
IMarid that Joee Felix Lequer.
i,    Spanish     Ambassador    to
ranee, wai leaving Bordeaux for
hdrld Immediately to aiilit.
Le Petit Parlilen, which, like
ha other principal Parli news-
apers, li publishing here, laid
srmi of the peace conditioni pro-
oied by Germany and Italy
rauld not be dlsoloied until after
hey had been accepted or reject-
d by France.
introl Zeballos May
Output Is $25,059
_J»vlng opened up a nice length
Ore on No. S level Central Zebal-
-'li extending the.wlnre down-
rd with a view to opening No. i
el on the vein, reports W. A.
I on, Secretary-Treasurer of the
iratlng Company, Reno Oold
les Ltd.
lentral Zeballoi production in
j wai $23,058 compared with
,030 in April.
ilief-Arlington's
day Output $33,215
ITANCOUVEB, B.C., June 19-Net
gilt of Relief-Arlington Mines
d. at Erie in May is officially
ir«.ed at 84,134 before write-
-ugainet $1,403 in ApriL Value
gold output in May from 2,672
is was $33,215, an average o!
1.4}. In April, value of gold out-
t was $30,740 from 2,586 tone, an
erage of $11.98 per ton.
Ymir Yankee Girl
Cuts Dundee Vein;
Crosscut 800 Feet
After driving 800 feet of crosscut
from the 1235 level of the Ymir
Yankee Girl Mine at Ymir, the company reports that the Dundee vein,
which was the objective, was cut
almost at the precise point it was
expected judging trom the itrike of
the vein In the Dundee working!
some 400 feet lower ln elevation.
R. B. Lamb, Managing Director,
stated that where cut the vein is
not commercial. Drifting would
need to be done before any conclusions could be drawn, he said, in
reporting he had no confirmation
of reports printed in Toronto claiming good values.
Due to the proximity of the Dundee to Ymir Yankee Girl and the
opportunity of reaching the Dundee
vein at a new horizon with an 800-
foot crosscut from its own wordings, Ymir Yankee Girl took an option on the Dundee property last
February.
Sheep Creek Up 6
in Vancouver Gains
VANCOUVER, June 19 (CP).-
Small gain outnumbered losses
during fairly active trading on the
Vancouver Stock Exchange today.
Transactions totalled 27.894 ihares.
Bralorne Gold gained 10 to 8.00
and Sheep Creek at 88 rose 6 over
yesterday's closing bid. Hedley Mascot at SlVi and Minto at 1'A each
gained Vt from Tuesday'! bid. Unchanged were Premier at 80, and
Privateer at 44.
Home Oil dropped 2 to 1.40. Okalta
at 60 and Calgary tt Edmonton at
1.05 remained unchanged.
.Among the base metals Pend
Oreille was up 5 at 1.48 and Grand-
view was unchanged at 11*A.
DIVIDENDS
Steel Company of Canada Ltd.,
common and Pfd. 43% cents.
TORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS
NES
lermac Copper
an Gold 	
glo-Huronian  ..
atfield Gold .
toria Rouyn Mines
nor  —	
jamac Rouyn	
ttkfleld Gold 	
M Metals Mining -
attie Gold Mines —
Igood Kirkland .....
: Missouri	
ilo Mines	
ilorne Mines
Halo Ankerite	
nker Hill Ex	
nadian Malartlc .—
riboo Gold Quartz
Itle-Trethewey 	
gtral Patricia  -
jit Copper  	
niaurum Mines 	
nsolidated M & S ....
Mines 	
rval-Siicoe  -	
Malartic
orado Hold	
Icon-ridge Nickel
"   il Kirkland  ....
les Lake 	
,'s Lake Gold	
indoro Mines 	
mar Gold  	
(rd Rock Gold 	
Blnger	
rey Gold 	
son Bay M It S ....
.national Nickel..
Consolidated 	
Waite .-	
>ls Gold 	
.'Addison 	
land Lake 	
i Shore Mines ....
Bh Gold 	
Oro Mines 	
le Long Lac 	
isa Mlnea 	
irl.rnd   Cockshutt
l!en Red Lake Gold .
jfly	
|lntyre-Porcupine   	
Kenzie Red Lake ...
IVittle-Graham  	
■Watters Gold 	
ping Corporation 	
melt Porcupine 	
Irris-Kirkland	
pissing Mining -
tnda 	
netal	
brim Gold  i—
Eega Gold  ~	
nour Porcupine 	
master Cons 	
_i Oreille	
j Oold	
Ekle Crow Gold 	
meer Gold 	
fcmicr Gold	
.14
.01'.
..    1.55
.05
.oil.
.91
.05
.07
.11
.85
.12V4
.05
.05
8.00
3.05
.01
.40
1.65
.50
1.48
.50
1.00
3250
16.00
.01
2.12
.36
2.15
.02
.03 li
.26
.02 i,i
.30
.03
10 00
,23
20.40
32 50
.01
.ww
02 li
146
.70
17 00
.42
.OlVi
1.95
2 35
1.05
.23
■09
40 00
.92
.05V4
.20
.48
.41
.02
.75
47.50
.254
,50
.10
.80
.22
1.48
105
2.25
1 65
80
Powell Rouyn Gold       .74
Preston East Dome      1.44
Reno Gold Mines       .19
Roche Long Lac  -      .03
San Antonio Gold  -     132
Shawkey Gold -      .01V*
Sheep Creek Gold         .86
Sherritt Gordon  __ _      .60
Siscoe Gold         62
Sladen Malartlc 20
St. Anthony         .08
Sudbury Basin      1.01
Sullivan Consolidated  -      .47
Sylvanite -     1.96
Teck-Hughes Gold      2.50
Toburn Gold Mines  -    1.10
Towagmac    -      10
Ventures —     2.00
Waite Amulet       3.00
Wright-Hargreaves     4.80
Ymir Yankee Girl       .05
OIL8
Ajax        .1034
British American     1630
Chemical Research  12
Imperial  _    9.75
Inter Petroleum    14.00
Texas Canadian      1.00
INDUSTRIALS
AbiUbi Power A        -75
Bell Telephone 148
Brazilian T L tt P -    4Vi
Brewers & Distillers     314
B C Power B      2
Building Products  '.    12%
Canada Bread       3
Can Bud Malting  —    5
Can Car    Foundry  _    6*A
Can Cement        3»«
Can Malting  - -   31 Vi
Can Pacific Railway     4yt
Can Ind Alcohol A      1.90
Can Wineries  3
Cons Bakeries _   13
Cosmos    18V»
Dominion Bridge     23V*
Dominion Storei       iVt
Dom Tar fc Chem     4
Distillers Seagrams -   1\\\
Fanny Farmer    21 Vi
Ford of Canada A    1<
Gen Steel Wares  „     4*>i
Goodyear Tire    60Vi
Gypsum L lc A     3
Hamilton Bridge      3
Hiram Walker    30V.
Int Metals       5V.
Imperial Tobacco     12%
Loblaw A     22 V.
Loblaw B -   21
Kelvinator.        5
Maple Leaf Milling     2
Massey Harris      "Vi
Montreal Power    *•***
Moore Corp    35"i
Nat Steel Car     38H
Page Hersey    90
Power Corp  ;      6
Pressed Metals      6
Steel of Can ...    65
.Standard Pavine  50
—NILION DAILY NIWS. NELSON, B. ..-THURSDAY MORNINO, JUNE 20. 1940-
METAL MARKITS
LONDON, Juna lt (AF). - Bar
silver 23V.d, off Vt. (Equivalent
41.93 cents based on the dollar at
$4.03). Bar gold 168s, unchanged.
Montreal—Bar gold in London
wu unchanged at $37.54 an ounce
in Canadian funds; 168s In British,
representing tha Bank of England's
buying price. The fixed $35 Washington price amounted to $38.50 In
Canadian,
Silver futures cloied unchanged
today. No sales. Bid: Juna 37.75.
New York — Copper iteady; elec
trolytic ipot, Conn. Valley 11.50;
export, fas N, Y. 11.25-50. Tin steadier; spot and nearby 53.35; forward
51.00. Lead steday, spot, New York
5.00-5.05; East SL Louis 4.85. Zinc
steady; East SL Louis spot and forward 4.25. Quicksilver 19730-200.00.
Bar silver 34%, unchanged.
LONDON, June 19 (AP). - Tin
steadier; spot £281 10s bid. £266
15s asked; future £268 15s bid,
£259 asked.
Mining Shares
Firm at Toronto
TORONTO, June 19 (CP).-Mining shares displayed a firm front
ln the dullest trading ot the year
today on Toronto market.
Brazilian Traction took a dip of a
point to 4, a new low for recent
years and it then recovered to
close around 4Vi. Political disturbances in South America were responsible.
The Steel of Canada Issues advanced more than a point. Mclntyre, Hollinger, Lak* Shore and
Bralorne held gains. Improvement
wis noted for Tick Hughes, Sigma,
Macassa and Lamaque.
Home Oil, Vermllata, Dalhousie
nad Davies ihowed final losses of
1 to 4.
Only Seven Placer
Claims Recorded in
Past Seven Months
Only seven placer claims have
been recorded at the Nelson Mining Recorder's office since December of 1939. All but one on Goat
River, Creiton area, were in the
South Kootenay, one being at
Salmo, one on the Salmon River,
and the remainder en the Pend
d'Orellle and tributaries.
The claims were:
Echo, on Lovola Creek, on Ooat
River, by Alex Mazeppa, Kitchener,
Kioga, on South side of Salmon
River, recorded by Frank Shels-
well, Waneta.
Bear Creek, on Bear Creek, tributary of Pend d'Oraill* River, by
Joe Starika, Waneta.
Bear Creek No. 2, on Bear Creek,
by John Thorell, Waneta.
B. B. B., on Salmon River, by Oscar Hall, Salmo.
Good Hope, on North bank of the
Pend d'Orellle River, by Kasper
Baily, Waneta.
An unnamed claim, on Pend
d'Orellle River, by Raymond Lank,
Waneta.
19 Mineral Claims
Recorded in Month
Nineteen mineral' claims have
been recorded at the Nelson Mining Recorder's office in the past
month. Seven of these, seven miles
Northeast of Castlegar, were recorded by Paul M. Zaltaoff. His
claims were the Gibson Creek Gold
Mine Claim Noi. 1 to 7.
Other claimi were:
Bonanza, 3Vi miles South of Gray
Creek Whart, recorded by Donald
Broster. ,     ,
Bonanza No. 2, in the same locality, recorded by A. R. McGregor.
Cap Rock, on the East Fork of
Rover Creek, by Harry Allport.
Hattie Fraction, on the West sid«
ot Sheep Creek, by Vere McDowell.
Kay, on Midge Creek, by G. R.
Thompson.
Tatra, on Young Creek, Tennessee Mountain, by Joe Ferchik.
Westwar Ho No. 2, near Deer Park
by Fred G. Hamblin.
Blue Fraction and Red Fraction,
on Whiskey Creek, noar Erie, by
H. D. Read.
Spot, and Whit* Fraction, on
Whiskey Creek, near Erie, by L.
Matassa.      	
MONTREAL PRODUCE
MONTREAL, June 19 (CP). -
Spot: Butter, Que. (92 score) 21V4
to 21H; Que. (38 score) 20Vi to
20S. Eggs, Eastern A Large 24A.
Butter futures: Nov. 22Kto22%.
Bayonne Output
in May $34,300;
Start Exploring
May was the first complete
month of milling since Bayonne
Consolidated Mlnea Ltd. resumed
production from Its property tbove
Tye, Kootenay Lake. Outpi* tor
the month wai $34,300 trom 1,538
tons. Heads averaged 0.606 oz. gold
per ton and recovery was approximately 94 per cent. Stoptag at present li being confined to the 5th and
»th levels as the 4th level is inclined to be wet at this time of
year. •
Preliminary work Is proceeding
In connection with the next phase
of the company's explorstion program as recommended by H. Grat-
tan Lynch, consulting engineer.
Contour lines are being run prior
to starting work on the surface ot
the mountain slope «<t what will
be the horizon of the 8th level, two
levels below the present bottom
level.
8URFACE EXPLORATION
The new vein will be sought at
this horizon at a point tome 1500
teet distant from the portal of No.
8 level of the old worklngi. Thi!
surface exploration will be carried
out by tractor and bulldozer as
soon te the snow clears from the
mountaih slope. This will likely
be before the end of June.
The Summer program will also
include further work on an Interesting but short oreshoot discovered last season on No. 3 level.
This ore shoot averaged 2.49 oz.
gold per ton across 18 Inches for a
length cf ten feet, wh«h it was cut
off hy a Ault. The vein now being
worked on the 4th, 5th and 6th
levels will break through to the
surface at about the elevation of
the third level but exploration of
the ahort high grade shoot found
en the third level and other possibilities provide scope for work
on the upper levels. .
Canada May Issue
$1 Passports for
Visitors to U. S.
OTTAWA, June 19 (CP). - The
Dominion Government is considering the issuing of special passports
at $1 apiece and good for 12 months
for persons desiring to visit the
United States it was learned last
night
The special passports under consideration would be for travel in
the United States only, to meet
new regulations there, and would
not be renewable.
Visas to accompany passports tor
travel in the United States are to be
issued free of charge by United
States officials.
WINNIPEG CRAIN
WINNIPEG, June 19 (CP). —
Grain futures quotations:
WHEAT Open High Low Close
July . .. 71"ri 71% 71Vi 71V4
October .. 74% 74% 74% 74V!
December .   75%   75%   75%   75%
OATS
July      30 .   30%   29%   29%
October .. . 27% 27% 27% 27%
December .   VI      27      26%   26%
BARLEY
July       33%   34      33%   33%
October 34%   34%   34      34%
December .    35      35%   34%   35
FLAX
July 131    132    131    132
October   135    135    134    135
RYE
July         44%   45%   43%   45%
October .. 43% 43% 43% 43%
December'     44%   44%   43%   44%
CASH PRICES
WHEAT - No. 1 hard 71%; No.
1 nor. 71; No. 2 nor. 68; No. 3
nor. 74%; No. 4 nor. 62%; No. 5,
58%; No. 6, 56%; feed 52%; No.
1 garnet 65%; No. 2 garnet 64%;
No. 3 garnet 60%; No. 1 durum
63; No. 4 special 62%; No. 3 special
56%; No. 6 special 56%; No. 1
mixed 57%; track 71%; screenings
50 cents per ton.
OATS - No. 2 C. W. 30%; ex.
3 C. W. 29%; No. 3 C. W., ex. 1
feed and No. 1 feed 29%; No. 2 feed
27%; No. 3 feed 24%; track 28%.
BARLEY — Malting grades — fl-
row Nos 1 and 2 C. W. 33%; 2-row
Nos. 1 snd 2 C. W. 38%; 6-row
No. 3 C. W. 31%. Others: No. 1
feed 30%; No. 2 feed 30%; No. 3
feed 29%; track 33%.
FLAX - No. 1 C. W. 131%; No.
2 C. W. 127%; No. 3 C. W. 120;
No. 4 C. W. 107; track 131%.
RYE - No. 2 C. W. 45%.
Tha Classified Will Sell  ltl
Fuel Distributors
Walk When Run Out
of Own Product
CRANBROOK, B. C. - The lalei
supervisors for East and Weit Kootenay for a well-known oil company
had iome doubts last week as to
the ultimate efficiency of their efforts and a pair of sore feet apiece.
Returning from an Inspection trip
at Fernle late one evening the car
ln which they were driving coughed
»t the Fort Steele Junction, eight
miles out and quietly died. Suspicions concerning-the gas tank were
confirmed.—Empty!
It was past midnight and they
itrpllcd Cranbrookward with their
thumb! limbered up to go Into
action. It wai a good Idea, it would
have been better, though if there
had been any traffic on the road.
By four o'clock they had walked all
the way into Cranbrook, during
which time they had had plenty of
time to ruminate on what their
product meant to the general public.
A little arch propping and several
hours oi sleep put the oil distributor! back on their feet the next day.
Reno Drifts on
Motherlode Vein
Drifting hai itarted on the new
low level on the Motherlode vein
at Reno Gold Mines Ltd., Sheep
Creek. This level haa been opened
from an internal shaft from the
4900 main working level. Production of the Reno Mine in May is reported at $42,000 compared with
$45,150 in April.
Reno production since milling resumed on October 10,1939, has been
as follows:
1939
October   $29,834
November ...
December ...
1940
January 	
February .....
March  	
April	
May 	
 47,071
 47,090
 47,100
 47,000
 47,000
 45,150
 42,000
QUOTATIONS ON WALL STREET
Open Cloie
Amerlcin C«n  97 97
Am Smelt tt Ref   88% 38%
American Tobacco  75% 75%
Anaconda   21% 21%
Baldwin     15% »#
Bait lc Ohio   3% 3%
Bendix Aviation -  28% »*
Beth Steel   77% 78
Cinada Dry       - 1J% 1}
Canadian Fwiflc  J »
ConGaiNY  tlV, 64
C Wright pM   26% 26
Duooht          "% 7,B
ElTm.n Kodak  160% UH*
Ford English  128 127%
General Foodi   SlVi 32%
General Motori  41 41%
Goodrich  m «**
Granby -• *_> «%
Great Nor pfd  _ »»
Howe Sound - 21% 21%
Inter Nickel    23% 2$
Inter Tel fc Tel  JVi J«
Kenn Copper  ...   29* 28V,
Montgomery Ward  39 39
Nash Motori .
New York Central .
Packard Motors 	
Penn R R	
Phlllipi Pete 	
Pullman 	
Radio Corporation .
Rem Rand 	
Safeway Storei 	
Shell Union	
S Cal Edison	
Stan Oil of N J 	
Studebaker 	
Texai Corporation .
Texai Gulf Sul 	
Union Carbide  	
Union Oil of Cal	
United Aircraft	
Union Pacific 	
U S Rubber	
U S Steel	
Warner Brothers ...
West Electric 	
West Union 	
Woolworth	
Yellow Truck	
4%    4%
11%   11%
3Vi
18
3 V.
18%
32% 32>,i
20% 20%
4% 4%
7 7%
40% 40%
8%     8%
25% 25%
34% 33%
7        7%
38% 38%
30% 30%
68% 68%
12% 12%
39% 40%
78% 78%
21 21%
53% 54
2%
91
16%
2%
92
16%
31%   31%
12%   12%
MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE
INDUSTRIALS
Alta Pac Grain	
Aisoc Brew of Can	
Bathurst P & P A	
Canadian Bronze 	
Can Car fc Fdy Pfd 	
Can Celanese	
Can Celanese Pfd _	
Can North Power 	
Can Steamship  	
Con Min fc Smelting	
Dominion Coll Pfd 	
Dom Steel fc Coal B	
Dominion Textile	
Dryden Paper 	
Foundation C ot C 	
Gatineau Powir 	
Gatineau Power Pfd	
Qmi Charlti 	
Ward Smith Paper	
Imperial Oil 	
Inter Petroleum 	
Inter Nickel oi Can	
Lake of the Woods	
McColl Frontenac	
National Brew Ltd 	
Nat Brew Pid 	
Osilvie Flour New	
Price Bros 	
„_,__.■_:._.__:__-____.- ____■ -^■"fjniiitMiilii'iiiU'nt.liiMill
^--'—
31
15
.     8%
31
15
26
109
11%
,    3
32
17%
7%
72
. 6
.    8%
12
80%
5
12
9%
14%
33
16
5%
W   ■
34
21%
10%
13V4
16%
2Vi
11%
Quebec Power 	
Shawnlgan W fc P —
St Lawrnce Corp _	
St Law Corp Pfd	
Steel of Can Pfd     68-
Western Grocers    55
BANK8
Commerce  150
Dominion   „   _ 172
Nova Scotia _  240
Royal _ 157
Toronto  220
CURB
Abitibi 8 Pfd _
Beauharnois Corp  _.	
British American Oil	
B C Packen  „ 	
Can IndUitries B 	
Can Marconi	
Can Vicken      3%
Com Paper Corp „„       4
Fairchild Aircraft      2%
Fraaer Co Ltd     6%
Inter Utllitiei B 25
MacLaren P fc P    12
McColl Frontenac Pfd    85
Mitchell Robt      6%
Royalite Oil    18
United Dift of Can     31%
.80
4%
16%
10%
1.88
80
Total   $352,246
Beaverdell Property
Distributing $26,317
Quarterly, Dividends
Dividends at the rate of 2 centi
a stare Quarterly have been continued in 1940 by the Highland Bell
on Wallace Mountain, Beaverdell.
The mine ships high-grade silver
ore to the Trail smelter. In 1939
this company paid 2 cents a share
quarterly. Similar payments have
been made this year, on January 5
and rn Aprill 22. Each 2-csnt distribution amounts to $26,317.
Securities Gain in
Response to Speech
LONDON, June 19 (AP) - The
securities market today responded
with brotd gains to Prime Minister
Churchill's speech Tuesday. Demand concentrated on British Government bonds at prices In some
cases more than a full point above
minimum levels. Industrials advanced a iew pence throughout al-
thoufh all g£iiii were not maintained. Kaffirs tended upward and
most oils improved. Coppers and
other base metals also shifted to
the plus side. Japanese and Austrian loans weakened in the foreign bond market.
F. D. R. Approves Bill
for Naval Expansion
WASHINGTON, June 19 (AP).-
Chairman Vinson (Dem., Georgia)
said today that the $4,000,000,000
Naval Expansion Bill recommended
by the House of Representatives
Naval Committee yesterday has
President Roosevelt's approval.
The measure would merely authorize the expansion. It would
carry no funds although Admiral
Harold R. Stark, Chief of naval operations who recommended the huge
seven-year • program, said that ii
Congress approved it he would ask
at this session for $1,175,000,000 to
start construction.
Italian Loans Down
NEW YORK, June 19 (AP). -
Italian loans dropped sharply in
the bond market today.
Losses of 3 to 5 appeared for
Italy 7s, Milan 6%s, Rome 6%s and
Italisn Public Utility 7s.
French Government stamped 7s
lost 4. German loans tended downward, a
LONDON CLOSE
LONDON, June 19 (AP). - British stock closings, in sterling: Babcock fc Wilcox 33s 9d; Cent Mining
£10%; Consol Gold Fields 26s 3d;
Crown £13%; Metal Box 65s; Mex
Eagle 2s 9d; Mining Trust ls 6d;
Rand £7; Springs 18s 9d,
BONDS - British 2% per cent
Consols £71%; British 3% per cent
War Loan £97%.
Wheal Gains
in late Rally
CHICAGO, June 19 (AP). -
After declining as much as 1%
cents, whest pricei rallied today,
wiping out all of the early loss and
substituting net gains of almost a
cant.    •
Some of the buying on the recovery was attributed to mills and
to dealers who acted in indications
of a relatively light movement of
new whest in tht Southwest. Mar.
keting ot the new crop is running
behind that of last year, traders
said, not only because of the later
hsrvest but also becauie the bulk
of the crop apparently is going
Into storage. Prices are below Government loan rates.
Strength in securities also attracted attention here but many
dealers preferred to go slow pending announcement of peace terms
to be imposed on France.
Wheat cloied % to % cent higher than yesterday, Julv 78% to 78%;
September 78%; corn % to % higher, July 82, September 60%; oats
»'. to % higher.
Decision Reserved
Doukhobor Case
VANCOUVER, June 19 (CP). -
Decision has been reserved by the
Court ot Appeal on appeal of the
Christian Community of Universal
Brotherhood, from a judgment by
Mr. Justice H. B. Robertson's finding that the Doukhobor company
was not a fanner and entitled to the
benefits of Farmers Creditors'
Agreement Act.
The Judgment was given in an action brought by National Trust Company, Ltd., of Vancouver, with a
claim for approximately $170,000
against the Doukhobor holdings.
Enemy Makes No
Big Gains, France
BORDEAUX, June 19 (AP).—The
French High Command announced
today that, despite continued attacks
in all sectors, the Germans had
made no important advances during
the night.
The text ot the morning commun
Ique:
"The enemy continued pressure
along the whole front. They have
achieved no Important advance since
yesterday evening."
ANGLO-JAPANESE
AGREEMENT MADE
LONDON, June 19 (AP) .-Signature in Tokyo of an Anglo-Japanese agreement settling several
points of their Tientsin controveny
was announced today in the House
ot Commons by Richard Butler, Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs.
U. S. Gets Plans
■     of French Motor
WASHINGTON, June 19 (AP).-
Secretary Morgenthau announced
today the French Government had
turned over to the United States
the designs for the powerful His'
pano-Suiza airplane engine.
The French made the patents
available to the United States for
engine production for both United
States and the Allies, the Treasury
Chief said.
Britain recently gave the United
States patent rights on their power
ful Rolls-Royce airplane engine.
LEADERS GAIN
MONTREAL, June 18 (CP). -
Leading issues tod«y appeared with
gaine ranging irom fractions to a
point or more.
Advances of a point or more
were marked up for Steel of Canada Issues while Dominion Bridge
added a fraction, B. C. Power A
mrrked up fractional improvement.
National Steel Car added more
than a point while fractional advancement was noted for Nickel
and Hollinger.
Calgary Listless
CALGARY, June 19 (CP). - It
was another listless session on the
Calgary Stock Exchange today. Oil
shares actually traded totalled only
100.
Bids on C. & E. were up five
and Home two cents. Okalta bids
were off three cents from the previous close.
CALCARY LIVESTOCK
CALGARY, June 19 (CP). - Re
ceipts, cattle 250; calves 5; hogs
180; sheep 4.
Common to plain butcher staers
6 to 7. Good fed calves 7.75 to 8.
Medium to good cows 4 to 4.50;
canners and cutten 2.50 to 3. Medium to good veal calves 6.50 to
7.50. Plain to medium stockere 550
to 6. Spring lambs yesterday 9.75.
Last bacons 7.25 to 7.35.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
High .Low Close Change
30 Industrials _  124.51   122.50 123.86 up    .63
20 rails -    25.86    25.31 28.73 up    .10
15 utilities     21.11    20.68 21.02 up    .23
VANCOUVER STOCK EXCHANGE
MINES
Big Missouri
Bid
*-^^-^-'
7.98
Cariboo Gold 	
1.70
Dentonla 	
—
Fairview Amal .	
.W'/i
George Copper 	
jOS
Gold Belt  	
—
.H%
Grull Wihksne  ....
.OUi
Hedley Mascot	
.31
Inter Coal  _
—
Island Mount 	
—
Koot Belle      .
.25
Lucky Jim  	
MV,
Minto Oold 	
.01
Nicola M fc M —
.01
Pend Oreille  ...
145
Pioneer Gold 	
1.58
Porter Idaho  	
.01%
Premier Border  „
aOOH
Premier  Gold  ..
.75
Privateer   	
.42
.oiv,
Reeves MacDonald
—
Relief Arlington ..
.04'4
Reno Gold 	
	
.02
Sheep Creek 	
.85
Silbak Premier ....
3D
Taylor Bridge	
.02
Vidette Gold	
.02
Aik
.07
.01%
.01
.20
.12
.02%
.83
.88
.72
.35
.01%
150
1.65
.02%
.01
.44
..10
.08
.19
.03%
Wellington — -
Whitewater  	
Ymir Yankee Girl
OILS
Amalgamated „
Anaconpa    _.
Anglo Can  _	
A. P. Cons 	
Brown Corp 	
Calg &  E<J 	
Commonwealth   ....
East Crest 	
Extension  _
Firestone Pete .....
Four Star Pete .....
Home   	
Madison   	
Mar   |on   	
Mercury    	
Mill City  	
Monarch Roy	
Okalta   	
Pacalta _
Prairie Roy 	
Royal Can 	
Royil Crest Pete ..
.05
,00'i
.03
.48
.07%
.06
1.05
.18
.03
.15
.05
.07%
1.40
.01%
.00%
.0,.'j
.04%
.OS'S
.58
.02
.11%
.14
00
Royalite       17.50
Spooner
United
Vanalta   	
INDUSTRIALS
Capital Estates ...
Coast Breweries
.02
.04
.03
1.00
on.
.01%
.07'-a
.00%
012
.10%
142
.02
.01
04%
04%
US
1.20
EXCHANCE MARKETS
MONTREAL, June 19 (CD-British and foreign exchange, nominal
rates between banks only;
Argentina, peso, 2488.
China, Hong Kong dollars, 2498.
Switzerland, franc, 2499.
(Compiled by The Royal Bank of
Canada).
Closing exchange rates:
At Montreal—Pound: Buying 4.43.
selling 4.47; U. S. dollar: Buying
1.10, selling LU;
NEW YORK. June 19 (CP). -
Open market price ior the Swiss
franc moved up briskly today ui
the foreign exchange market wheu
it was disclosed that available supplies of the currency were ex'
tremely limited. The franc closed
.02 cent higher at 22.45 cents.
The pound sterling lost 3% cents
to $3.58% in relation to the United
States dollar and tha Canadian dollar % cent to a discount of 19% per
cent. (Ottawa Foreign Exchange
Control Board rate 9.09-9.91 per
cent discount).
French Abandon
Maginot Forls
BASEL, Switzerland, June 19
(AP). — Great Maginot Line forts
on the Rhine North of Basel were
abandoned by their skeleton French
garrisons this morning.
Powerful French forts of St. Louis
Hunique, Village Neuf and Rose-
nau fired their last shells at German positions in Aden at 2:45 a.m.
today and their garrisons retreated
West toward Belfort.
Apparently at least one of the
forts at the Burgundian Gate near
Belfort atill held out, however, for
sounds of artillery and machine-
gun fire from that region reached
Basel.
Shortly after dawn 20 German
soldiers led by a Lieutenant paddled rubber boats across the Rhine
just North of a buoy marking tho
''three countries corner" in the middle of the river where France,
Germany and Switzerland come
together.
They drifted alongside the walls
ot the great forts rising to a height
of 40 feet out ot the river.
The soldiers held machine-syns
ready but not a shot came from
the deserted fortifications.
After a few minutes the Germans
paddled back without landing, linging the 'March Against England"
song.
They were greeted by hundreds
oi their comrades who rushed to
the river bank cheering and
shouting. i
Germcm-ltalo Pact
Settling Economic
Problems Is Signed
ROME, June 19 (AP)—An agreement settling "certain problems ot
war economy," between Germany
and Italy was announced officially
today. Details were withheld. The
agreement was signed yesterday. It
was negotiated by Dr. Karl Clo-
dius, German economic ace, and
Aadeo Cianini.
PAGE  NINI
Rails Lead New
York Price Rallies
Mine Shares Firm
NEW YORK, June 19 (AP). -
Stocka passed through a series ot
quickly terminated rising and sinking ir.clls todey with a group ot
firm rails serving as a rallying
ground.
Most fluctuations were fractional
toward l\e close, About 600,000
shares changed hands.
Along the leaders exhibiting
firmness were Santa Fe, Great
Northern preferred, Chesapeake U
Ohio, Boeing, Douglas, Lockheed,
Glenn .Martin, Caterpillar, Sean
Roebuck, Youngstown, Republic
Steel, American Telephone. West.
inghouse; Osneral Electric, Loft,
Canada Dry. Mi American Woolen,
The last named was assisted by a
Government overcoat order worth
more than $4,000,000:
. Showing weakness were such Issues as Standard Oil of N. J., Western Union, Kennecott and Eastman.
Canadian Pacific and Distiller!
Seagram, the only quoted stocks,
showed losses. In the bond market
Canada 4s were unchanged.
Miens Must Turn
in Arms by June 20
. OTTAWA, June 19 (CP)- New
restrictions placed on the possession of firetrms by an order-in-
ccuncil just announced are in addition to those authorized during
the second month of the war. Thesis
required all enemy aliens to surrender their firearms and other explosives,
The amendment to the Defence
of Canada Regulations, assented
to June 10, requires all aliens of
any person of German or Italian
racial origin who have become naturalized British subjects since the
first day of September, 1929, to
deliver to a Justice of the peace
nil firearms, ammunition, dynamite, gun powder or other-danger-
ous explosives not later than Juna
20.
Failure to comply with this regulation renders persons affected
by the order-in-council liable to
prceecution and to a fine not exceeding $500 or to imprisonment
for three months.
10 Killed, 3 Die
of Shock in Raid
LONDON, June 19 (CP.-Cable)—
Ten persons were killed and three
died of shock ln large scale air
raids on the East coast during the
night.
Killed ln a Cambridgeshire town
were Thomas' Beresford, his wife
and daughter aged two; Gladys
Clarke, 11; Heather Dear, five
montha; William Langley and his
son Sam; and Mollie Palmer, eight
and her brother, Lennie, six.
In a Thames Estuary town Frederick Jolley died in hospital; Mrs.
Jane Edith Wallamn died of shock.
Edward Milner of Kent and Harry
Whitehead of Yorkshire died of
shock.
BENNETT OF B_NN_TT
AND WHITE DIES COAST
VANCOUVER, June 19 (CP). —
Joseph G. Bennett, President of
Bennett & White Construction Company in Vancouver, died here last
night. He came here with his family
from Calgary about a year ago.
U. S. Warns Dictators
Will Not Countenance)
Interference in West
ROME, .Tune 19 (AP).—A sourca
usually reliable laid today that tha
United States Government has
warned Italy that lt would not
countenance any German or Italian
interference with French or British
possessions in the Western Hemls«
phere.
The Informant said ha understood
that an American note to the Italian
Government quoted passages from
President Monroe's 1823 message
which proclaimed the Monroe Doctrine, particularly the part opposing
any extension of the political systems of foreign powers to tha
American Hemisphere.
It was said that a statement ot
the United States position was delivered by Ambassador William
Phillips. to the Italian authorities
yesterday.
French possessions In the Wetterg
Hemisphere — the territories molt
immediately concerned in view of
the French request for an armitUca
—are French Guiana, Martinique
and Gaudeloupe in the West Indies
and St. Pierre and Miquelon off
Newfoundland.
Britain, France and exiled Netherlands Government, the nations having possessions in this Hemisphere,
similarly were notified.
Let Us Chrome Plate Your
Plumbing Fixtures
L.C.M. Electroplating
Lsurltx Bldg.    704 Nation Ave.
Printing
From the
Qround Up
TKere Is more to printing tfiani
jyst setting type. Quality materials — ink and paper stock
-style of type and arrangement
determine the attractiveness
of the finished job. We know-
printing from the ground up.
Take advantage of the facilities offered by our modern
printing plant, large paper,
and ink stocks.
PHONE 143
Msoxx Satly Nnua
Commercial Printing Department
266 Baker St. Nelson, B. C.
—___________
 PAGE TIN ■
mmtstttttmteMotmmosimOiSstommtsttm'^^
I
WHOSE LOVE WILL BE FOREVER IN HER HEART,
-NEUON DAILY NIWI. NILWN. B, C_-THUMOAY MORNINO. JUNI » W» '"•'•[
CARROLL • AHERNE- HAYWARD
nw son, rm. son!
hom tm iisr stttiNO novu ir howaio sumo
•M UIA1NI OAT • NINIT HUH ■
EXTRA — DISNEY CARTOON, PARAMOUNT NEWS |
TODAY TIL SATURDAY
Complete ihowi 2, 7, 9:01
STENOGRAPHERS
Economize for your office by
buying your supplies  In small
quantitlei trom ui ii you need
them.
A Complete Una of Office
Suppliei
Mann, Rutherford
Drug. Co.
PHONE II NELSON). B. C.
Many Attend the
Funeral Services
of Harold Brown
Rossland Oulchecks and Outpasses
Nelson lor 16-7 Lacrosse Victory
There is still no substitute for
Quality.
Phone JONELLA 1042
Only Filter Cleaning
In the Kootenays
Beach Lott at Creicent Bay
and Balfour on very eaiy
termi.
ROBERTSON REALTY
Co., Ltd.
RED INDIAN AVIATION
MOTOR OIL
"Armour Plated"
SKY CHIEF AUTO
KM Baker St  SERVICE  Phone 122
FURNACES
Initalled and Repaired
R. H. Maber
Phone 655        110 Kootenay
J. A.C. Laughton
Optometrist
SUITE MS. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.
Auction Sale
302 2nd St., Fairview
Saturday, June 22nd, 2 p.m.
Acting under instructions from
Mr. John Thomson, I will offer
the following: Garden Tools,
Child's Go-Cart, small Queen
Heater, Kitchen Table and
Chairs, Child Table, and Chairs,
Glencoe White Enamel Range,
Kitchen Utensils and Dishes,
General Electric 8-tube Console
Radio, long and short waves. 3
bands, Rockers, Library Table,
small three-way table, Smokers
Cabinet, Table and Floor Lamps,
Rugs, Chesterfield, Cushions,
Chest, Beds, Mattresses and
Springs, Dolls House, small Cottage Piano, etc., etc.
Goods on view morning of sale.
Terms: Cash. G. HORSTEAD,
Auctioneer
Labor Supports
Australia Gov't.
SYDNEY, Australia, June 19 (CP
Cable).—The plight of France hai
resulted In an increased rush to enlist in Australia's overseas forces
and the greatest prospect of national
unity since the outbreak of war.
The latter development is a consequence of the Federal Labor conference which, facing realities, withdrew its previous opposition to Australian forces going overseas. The
party supported pledging the whole
of Australia's resources to Britain
and her Allies, accepted compulsory
service for home defence and endorsed full participation in the Empire air scheme.
Quebec Assembly ,
Rejects Move to
Beat Mobilization
QUEBEC, June 19 (CP). — A
moUon opposing the Federal Government's projected general mobilization for the defence of Canada and favoring "a free and moderate participation In the war"
was rejected today by vote nf
56-12 in Uie 86-eat Quebec Legislative Assembly.
TENDER WANTED
To load 1000 tons Zinc Concentrates now alongside Durango Mill.
Power shovel preferred.
L S. Davidson—Hume Hotel
BOYS', MISSES' AND
CHILDREN'S
Summer Footwear
Godfreys' Limited
WHAT HAVE YOU ?
We have a Cash Buyer for a
Five-Room Bungalow, close in
RELIANCE AGENCIES LTD.
Phone 530 662 Baker SL
Lambert's
for
LUMBER
PHONE 82
We have wedding or shower
gifts for your
choice for the
June Brides
Pyrex Ware — Crockery
Ware — Silverware —
Carving Sets — Kitchen
Utensils — Bread Tins
Etc.
—  Toasters — Coffee
Makers— Electric Irons
Wood, Vallance
Hardware Company, Limited
The Late Harold Brown
With Kinsmen Club and the Sons
of England Lodge attending ln a
body, a large number of Nelson
citizenry paid laat honors to Harold Brown, 30, ln funeral lervices
from St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral
Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Brown,
well-known Nelson pianist, died at
Tranquille Saturday morning after
taking HI suddenly three days previously during a trip to Revelstoke.
Ven. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham
conducted the services in the church
and at the graveside in the family
plot in the City Cemetery. The large
congregation sang "All Through the
Wight" and "Abide With Me". Pallbearen were Jack Brown, William
Brown, Jr., Joseph Sutcliffe, A. H.
Whitehead, A. Cuthbert and Benny
Sutherland.
Leafs Unable Carry
Plays Through;
Clean Game
ROSSLAND, B. C, June lJ-HoH-
land fani were treated to one ot
Uie flneit gamei witnessed on the
home floor Wedneiday night as
Roisland Redmen trounced Nelion
Maple Leaf! 16-7 In a West Kootenay Boxla League game.        -
Particularly noticeable during the
whole game wai the clean pleylM
of both ildei. Apart from a fight
between Joe Laface and Fete Bonneville ln the lait period, there wai
no exhlbiUon ot temper by either
team. Tbe Laface-Bonneville argument itarted on the floor when both
were penaUied. They itarted throwing their flit! around in the penalty
box and were given game penal-
ties. They mixed lt up again on
Uie other tide of Uie rink near the
drealng room. Bob Scott tried to
charge into Uie fray but wu he:d
back by Uie other Redmen, and
"Curly" WheaUey finally took things
ln hand, huatllng Bonneville into
the Leaf dreiiing room.
The Redmen hid thingi weU in
hand at Uie outlet and fought the
Leafs' playi up to Sapronoff'! goal
with ateady man-to-man defence
and clever checking, making it prac
ticaUy impossible tor toe Leaf! to
break through. The visitor! put up
a determined fight but failed to
click on teamwork and their defence
was erratic, before toe passing playi
of the Redmen.
Ken McGuire UteraUy icored
himself into toe Leafs' citadel in
the third period, when he waa tripped by Lapointe and landed behind
Gibbona in the net He lost the ball
in toe tanlge, and misled the opportunity tor a freak goal
BOX SCORE
NELSON G A PtPe
Gibboni, g  -    0
Totvraend,' d 	
Kuhn, d  -	
Lapointe, d	
Stinaker, d 	
Walmsley, r - ~
MUler, r     	
Bonneville, c 	
Bishop, c -
Paterson, w 	
Morrow, w  _
Price, w  -	
Dingwall, w 	
Nelson Students
(leaning Up Work;
Finish Wednesday
Final exams In moit Nelion
schools have been completed md
the students have either swung
back into regular work channels
or are cleaning up odds snd endi
of the l»3e-40 term.
At Uie High School, Grade X and
most Grade XI students will be
through for toe term on Friday.
Senior and Junior Matriculation
students, however, and some Grade
XI students who take Junior Matriculation subjects, will continue
to write Government exams unUl
the "bitter end", on Wednesday, the
official closing date for the term.
At the Junior High School, exams
were completed Tuesday, and the
students went back to regular work
and to cleaning up. Wednesday was
devoted to campaign speeches for
the new students Council officer!,
and elections will be held today.
The election machinery is identical
with that used in municipal or national elections. There will be three
polling booths, one each for Grade
TO, VIU and IX classes, with the
returning officer, his deputy, and
all the other officials in charge,
When the polls are closed the officers will retire to count toe votes.
Nominations for officers for the
House Councils are to be in by this
afternoon and elections will be held
at House meetings Friday after,
noon.
As part of a special privilege extended them each year, toe Students Council and House Council
officers attended a picture show
Wednesday afternoon, using funds
from their respective councils.
PREPARE FOR OPEN HOUSE
Beside their regular and cleanup
work the students are preparing
for their "open house" Monday
when their work of the term will
be displayed to the public; and for
their graduation exercises Wednesday, which will begin about 9:15
am. with Uie graduating clasa picture.
At the Hume School, tests were
completed Monday and regular
work was reverted to. A few pupils
who went behind in their tests are
being coached, and other "odds snd
ends" are being attended to. There
will be no general closing ceremonies in the auditorium, but each
class will have its individual pro
gram.
No final tests have been written
at the Central School, the testa
given throughout Uie year counUng
as the final result. No ranking list
wiU be given, and no passing list
will be published. The pupils are
doing regular and cleanup work,
and are arranging an auditorium
grogram for Tuesday afternoon,
elides this, each room will have
its individual program some time
during the week.
FRUITVALE BOY HONORED
ON HIS FIFTH BIRTHDAY
FRUITVALE, B.C.—Complimenting her small son Frank, on his
fifth birthday, Mrs. F. Varseveld
-Ktt hcsless to a number of small
guests at a birthday party. Games
were enjoyed followed by a dainty
tea, the serving table being centred by a lovely cake, decorated
in pink and white, and topped with
five pink candles. Candies were
served during the afternoon. The
hostess vet assisted in serving by
Mrs. G. Varseveld, Mrs. Lois De-
bnunyer, and Mrs. A. Endersby.
The guesls were Mable Wagner,
Martin W-gner, Annette Varseveld,
Rosie Matson, Richard Matson,
Eileen Endersby, Stanley Endersby, Jean DeBruyn, Alice Popoff,
Donald and Bernard Endersby,
Bobby DeBruyn, Polly Popotf. Dor-
een DeBruyn, Allen Endersby,
Mike Popofl, Mrs. A. Endersby,
Mrs. Lois DeBruyn, Mrs. C Wagner, Mrs. G. Varseveld and son
George of Trail.
Totals     1 3 10 24
ROSSLAND
Sapronoff, g _   0 0 0  0
Carkner, d    8 2 5   0
Bob Scott, d  0 2 2   2
Bailey, d  -  1 0 1   6
Cussicic, d  — 00 0   0
Ssundry, r   0 5 5   }
Ralph Scott, r  2 1 3   ?
Laface, c  -  2 0 2 12
Anderson, c — — 1 0 1   0
Thatcher, w  0 0 9   2
Sittoti, w  1 0 1   0
Jorgenson, w  10 10
McGuire, w  5 0 5   2
Totals -■■•- 1« W 26 26
Referee—Max Deirisay. Judge of
play-^John GlUnskl. Scorekeeper—
Low Crowe. Timekeeper—George
Nixon. Goal judges-Harold Long
and Percy Harrli.	
Miss Edwards Weds
C. Baglo, Kimberley
KIMBERLEY, B. C.-An lmprei-
sive and lovely wedding took place
Saturday evening to toe United
Church when Elfrida, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Edwards
of Blarchmont wai united in holy
matrimony to Carl Ingwall, eldest
son ot toe late I. Baglo and Mrs.
Baglo of Brandon, Man.
Entering the church on the arm
of her father, the bride looked
charming in a floor-length gown
of white sbeer with fitted waist
and tucked sheer bolero. Her floor-
length veil was caught coronet style
with orsnge blossoms. White gloves
and shoes completed her attire and
she carried a bouquet of sweetheart roses snd tern. Miss Gladys
Baglo of Trail, sister of the groom,
was bridesmaid uid choie a floor-
length gown of torquoise blue taffeta with sheered waist and puffed
sleeves, and a matching hat. Her
bouquet was of pink and white
csrnations and fern. Little Irene
Edwards, youngest sister of too
bride, made a charming flower girl
dressed in pink and blue taffeta
snd carrytag snapdragons and colorful iris. Godfrey Edwards, brother of the bride, was best man. Rev.
Galbraith officiated, while Mrs. J.
Walker played the wedding march.
During the signing of toe register,
Mrs. J. Glanville 6ang, "Because."
Following the ceremony, a reception was held ln toe I.O.O.F. hall
with some 200 friends and relaUves
present. The hall wai decorated ln
pink, blue and white and the table
centred with a three-tier wedding
cake. A seven-p*iece orchestra supplied the music tor the dancing.
The happy couple will honeymoon
at Banff and points before returning to Trail to reside where both
are well-known.
Crown Point Held to
Lone Run and Ousted
4-1, Trail Softball
TRAIL, B.C., June 16 - While.
Crown Point chalked up the firit
run in the second frame of a
Men's Softball League game at
Victoria Park Wednesday eve
ning, they were held to it when
Wsrfield Acei defeated them 4-1.
Martin circled the bases in the
firat frame for what would have
been another nin for Crown Point
had he touched first base. Both
teams played heads-up ball, neitiv
er making a single error.
Score by innings:
Crown Point ....   010 000 000   18 0
Aces     001 102 OOx   4 6 0
Few More Needed
for Trail Platoon
TRAIL, B. C, June It—Six or
seven more men are needed to
bring the Veteran's Home Defence
up to itrength.
The Medical Board lat In Trail
Wedneiday, and will again be at
Nelion Thursday.
89-Degree Heat Here
A blazing sun Wedneiday, relieved by frequent cloudi, sent the
mercury in Nelson soaring to within
one degree of the season's record
of M, set a couple of weeks igo,
and equalled Tuesday. The day's
minimum up to 5 p.m. wai 57
degrees.
6 ORGANIZATIONS
OF WOMEN TO AID
DISASTER RELIEF
Besides the Nelion Rotary and
Kinsmen Clubi, toe Gyro Gub and
lix   women'!   organizations   have
Sledged their support to Uie Disas-
•r Relief Committee of toe Nelson Branch ot the Canadian Red
Cross Society.
The women's organizations are the
Kokanee Chapter, L O. D. E.; Soroptimist Club, Pythian Sisters, Nomads
of Avrudika, Order of toe Eutern
Star and the Women's Institute.
.
Chinese Tailor
Shop at Trail
Gutted by Fire
TRAIL, B. C, June 16 — Breaking
out ln a small room at toe rear whUe
C. Joe, Chinese proprietor was
working ln toe front, fire gutted
the interior of a tailor shop at 857
Farwell Street Wedneiday afternoon despite quick acUon on the
part of toe Fire Department, which
had the blaze under control 18 min
utes after the alarm was turned in.
Firemen laid two lines from a
hydrant and poured water into front
and back of toe premises.
Douglas Groutage rushed to the
icene with a portable fire extinguisher from toe Douglu Hotel,
across toe lane, and wu Directing
chemicals Into toe rear rbom when
the firemen arrived.
The building adjoined a large
frame and stucco block occupied by
two businesses on toe ground floor
snd rooms up stairs. The tire wai
confjned to toe tailor ihop, only a
litUe water damage being done to
two   rooms above.
C. Joe stated he wu working
at his pressing counter In toe front
part of ths shop when he noticed
the fire In the rear. He ran out
and phoned in toe alarm from an
adjoining store.
"When I came out trom phoning,"
he said, "I thought I would be able
to take out some ot toe clothes, but
the whole Interior of my shop was
ablaze and I couldn't get In. "It was
just about a minute" he said. Mr.
Joe estimated the loss of contents
to be about $700. The building is
owned by Mrs. Marie DIPuquale
and la covered by lniurance.
25 Kids Throng
Rossland's "Box"
lor Bantam Try
By KAY LOWDON
ROSSLAND; B. C, June 16-1
wu sorry I missed the leap frog
business, which wu later described
to me, because the light of a youngster who had juit finlihed leaping
over 24 of hli companion!, of all
lizes, would probably have reminded
me of a neglected salad, but I didn't
miu toe light of 29 kids thronging
around Al Sifton, Johnnie Pollock
and Bruce Vermiere, in toe Rossland boxla rink, Tuesday night, for
their tint try-out for a place on toe
Rossland bantam lacrosse team.
The idea of a bantam lacroase
team wu instituted by Johnnie
Pollock, goalie tor toe Rosiland
Junior Terrlen, who passed the
word around to toe youngiten to
"be there" Tueiday, persuaded Slt-
ton, a member of the senior team,
to coach, and roped Bruce Vermiere,
trainer for toe Redmen, Into giving
his support.
NOT GETTING.
8ITTON DOWN
Sltton, allowing himself a com
plete survey of acUve bodies, dirty
faces, and exuberant spirits, presented by the youngsters who turned
up with their own, borrowed or no
lacrosse sticks, remarked "Gosh! Am
I going to have my hands full!" but
the prospect didn t look u though
it wu getting him down any.
If noise and enthusiasm mean any'
thing, particularly noise, the env
bryo bantami are going to live up
to the name of Redmen. Four teams
were picked at random for tryouts,
and when I left, two teams were
steaming up and down the floor,
with toe other two teams lined up
In the players boxes, looking like
horses prancing at the line a iecond
before the starter gives the signal.
Pollock is planning to arrange
games with Marcus Smith's bantams at Trail, and some talk ot
forming a West Kootenay League
is In the air, but it will take some
Ume to get the kids sorted out and
setUed down.
Youngsters who turned up Tuesday included Jerry Monoghan, Tom
Ham, Bill Finlay, Ray Manning,
Bruce Ham, Buddy Dupperon, Raymond Dominicl, Jack French, Pat
Martin, Jack Zelner, Arthur Ridgers, Arthur Martin, Steve Yurislcn,
John Dougan, Jack Lloyd, Don La-
Face, Willie Scott, Archie Scott, Eddie Conroy, Lundy Hamilton, Richard Gibbard, Bob Richardson, Frank
Spring. Charlie oDugan, George
Holoboff and David Smith.
BEAUTY CADDY
by HARRIET HUBBARD AYER
Introducing the new
Beautifying Make-up
Film with Luxuria, Face
Powder, Skin Tonic
and Pink Dover Per-
fume. Avery tSMen '
__~_.tv_t.il. a>i«iu
special value.
T
We carry a complete stock and are exclusive agents for
Harriet Hubbard Ayer
National Unity
Party Planned to
Take Canada, 1940
MONTREAL, June 19 (CP)—The
National Unity Party, Fascist organization smashed by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, had planned to take over Canada "sometime
ln 1940," according to evidence today at the preliminary hearing of
charges agalnit Adrlen Arcand.
Fuehrer, and 10 alleged party members.
Gerald Fauteux, Crown Prosecutor told Judge Rodolphe DeSerres
the plan went Into minute details
ai to how the financial administration of the Dominion would be
handled when the party took over
"lometime ln 1640.'' It carried the
date, he added, of Feb. 15, 1940.
Later, Judge DeSerres adjourn*
the hearing unUl June 26. The judge
iaid he wished to further study the
mass of evidence submitted by the
Crown to establish where there was
a prima facie case against live of
ths accused.
Rossland
Social ♦ ♦ ♦
ROSSLAND, B. C, June 19-The
regular meeting of toe Dorcu Circle
wu held at the home of Mrs. James
Cant, Preiident, Friday evening.
After discussing the general busi-
ness member! were entertained by
two reading! given by Mn. Howard
Ferguion. DeUcioui refreshments
were served by the hostess, assistoi
by Mm. George Craig and Mrs.
William Blackwell. Other members
present were Mrs. Ida Corbett, Mrs
John Roscorla, Mri. Edward Seccombe, Mn. WiUlam Arrowsmith,
Mn. William Blackwell and Mn.
Howard Hayden. Mn. S. Reid and
Mn. J. Armstrong attended u
visiton.
Mr. and Mn. W. S. Clark left
Tuesday for Vancouver after weeki
viiit ln toe city u gueit of Mn.
Clark'i brother-in-law and liiter,
Mr. and Mrs. R G. Lees.
Mn. Warren Crowe of Waneta Is
a patient at toe Mater Misericordiae
Hospital.
Peter Clark returned to Rossland
from Moicow, Idaho, where he hu
been itudylng at the Univenity of
Moscow. He wu accompanied by
Edmund Cox and Jack Tongue, who
motored down to meet him.
Mr. and Mn. Irvln Gurevlteh and
daughter Sharon have been ipending a fortnight, holiday at Calgary
and Edmonton. Mr. Gurevlteh returned Tueaday, while Mn. Gurevlteh and daughter are continuing
their viiit at Edmonton.
Mr. and Mn. Fred Neveroskl have
as their gueit Mr. Neveroskl'i
mother, trom Moore Jaw.
Mr. and Mn. F. St John Madeley
have gone to Calgary, where Mr.
Madeley hu joined toe Canadian
force!. Mn. Madeley is expected
back in Rossland in a few days.
Mr. and Hn. Ray Underwood are
spending a week's holiday at Christina Lake.
The Lyceum Club held a welner
rout at toe Trail ski cabin Monday
evening.
W. A. Turner is 111 at the Mater
Misericordiae Hospital.
Mlu Mary Rogen, who hu been
viiiting her home here for the put
two weeki, leavei Saturday for Spokane td visit relatives for a few
dayi before returning to Vancouver to resume her training at toe
Vancouver General Hospital.
Mr. and Mn. Jack Reid, accompanied by Mrs William Reid, motored to Kimberley, having been
called there by toe illness of Mrs.
Jack Reld's father. While at Kimberley Mn. William Reid will be
the gueit of Mr. and Mn. George
Wilson, formerly of Rossland.
Swim Suits
• jANTZEN
t SKINTITE
t CATALINA
All the new styles In the
new materials, In all
colors.
f 1.9S, ?2.95 to ?4.95
EMORY'S LTD.
SUMMER HOMI SITES
1V« acres level nicely wooded loti,
$250.00.
A fine wooded landy beach lot
(500.00.
H. E. DILL
AUTO, FIRE, ACCIDENT
INSURANCE
The PERCOLAT OI
Doughnuts
ARE GOOD Al
ANY MEAL
Large Attendance
Mrs. M. J. Benzies'
Funeral at Trail
TRAIL, B. C, June 19 — Many
residents and pioneen of West Kootenay point!, where Mri. Benzies
had resided over a period of 46
yean, attended the funeral Tuesdiy ot Mn. Marie Jane Benzies,
held from Clark'! Funeral Chapel.
John L. Wood of toe Pentecoital
Mission officiated at toe chapel and
the graveside. Interment wai in the
Knighta of Pythiu Columbia River
View Cemetery.
There wu a profusion ot floral
tribute!.
Pallbearers were E. Mcintosh, E.
Laarz, I. Tyson, L. Cody, H. D.
Thaln and M. B. McLaren.
McDougall Miss
Weds Fernie Man
KIMBERLEY, B. C- A pretty
home wedding took place on Saturday afternoon at the home of Mr.
snd Mrs. Z. N. Spinks of McDougall Townsite when their third
daughter, Gladys Elizabeth was
united ln marriage to Albert,
youngest ion of Mr. and Mn. Jack
Littler of Fernle. The marriage
took place under a beautiful white
srch decorated with cedar boughs,
rosettes, white bells and centred
with a large horseshoe. The bride
who was given in marriage by her
father looked lovely in a floor-
length gown ot white chiffon with
a plain bolero. Her shoulder veil
was caught coronet style by a
wreath of orsnge blossoms. A tiny
gold pendant broke the simplicity
of her attire. To complete her attire she wore white gloves and slippers and carried a bouquet of
sweetheart roses and fern. Mrs.
Jack Eckenley, lister of toe bride,
was her only attendant snd chose
a floor-length gown of pale blue
satin, trimmed with sequins, snd
wore stiver slippers. Small pink
flowen adorned her hair and she
carried a bouquet of pink and
white csrnatlom. Miss Ida Spinks,
youngest sister of the bride, played
the wedding march. Rev. Galbraith
officiated. The groom wu supported by his brother, Jim Littler
of Natal. Following toe ceremony a
reception wai held for immediate
friends and relatives. The room
and tsbles was tastefully decorated
in pink and white, the table being
centred with a four-tier wedding
cake. The happy couple left for a
hcnejircon at coast points and on
their return will reside in Natal.
For travelling tiie bride changed
to a navy tailored suit with white
accessories.
Out-of-town guests (or the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Jim Littler,
Miss Ada Littler, Harry Littler, of
Natal, Mr. and Mn. Tom Littler
and daughter Brenda of Michel,
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack LitUer of
Fernle.
SLOCAN HOSPITAL AID
GIVES GIFT TO MEMBER
NEW DENVER, B. C. - At the
Slocan Community Hospital June
meeting, Mn. Greer, Preiident presided. Mrs. Greer on behalf of the
memben presented a gift to Mn.
Dewir, who Is leaving thii month
for Vancouver.
Tbe hostess Mrs. G. Burkett. assisted by Mri. A. Trickett, ierved
refreshment*
NEWS OFTHE DAY
mtsttmstootesossteotssmiem
Eaglei Military Whist and Dance
tonignt, 25 centi.
Harold A. Fouldi — Electrician
Contracting, Repain. Phone 644.
Annual Qenaral Meeting Nelion
Senior Hockey Club, City, HaU, on
Tonight, June 20 at 8 o'clock.
. Ask your Dealer for McDonald
Nu-pack Strawberry Jam. Patronize
Home Induitry.
To AU Dads!—Your youngiter'i
big desire Is a bike. Buy a C. C. M.
for him and make him happy. —
Hippenon Hardware Company.
Something different every Ume
st St Paul'i Boyi' Choir Concerts.
72 boys will sing tomorrow night,
8 p.m., in SL Paul's Church
Auditorium.
May 24th Committee wishes to
thank all donors of cuh or goodi,
children in ceremonies, May Queen
candidates, and all others who
helped make toil year'i celebration
io enjoyable.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
On and after July 2nd, Lodge
will meet on Tuesday nights instead of Thunday nights in the
Eagle HaU.
APPLICATIONS WANTED
Applications will be received up
until 8 o'clock Tuesday, June 25th,
for the position of Swimming Instructor or Instructress at Lakeside
Park during July and August
Applicant! should state qualifications and experience and be prepared to organize Swimming Classes
snd playground activities.
W> E. Wuson, City Clerk.
Household Appliances and
Silex Coffee Makers
Standard Electric
433 Joiephlne St Phom S38
CHOCOLATE DAIRY DRINK
AT YOUR PALM DEALERS
1937 Dodge
De Luxe Sedan
Many Extrai
Queen City Motors
Ph. 43      Limited      HI Josephine
HOOD'S
Hot Dog Buns
FRESH DAILY
Your Home Bakery
«S0KSS&SSe&&9M0a0SMXS0S0)S
NEW COIFFURES
A STYLE TO SUIT YOU
Haifch Tru-Art
BEAUTY SALON
Phone 327        -Johnstone Blk
&O!SS«OOiSSSS&SSSS&S8»#&0»l
"Pick of the Market
Guaranteed Used Cars
Sowerby-Cuthbert Lt.
Opp. Poit Office arid Hume Hot)
2 USED PORTABL
COMPRESSORS
FOR SALE OR RENT
JACK ANNABLE
Fleury's Pharmacy
Med Arte Bil
PHONE 25
Prescription
Compounded
Accurately
Try
Qrenfell's Cafe
Famous Fresh Strawberry F
$j$$$5$O5$09S.
CUT FLOWERS. WEDDIN
AND FUNERAL DESIGN!
Phone   KITCHENE
xootootsHittstieettMSttttttim
PHONE 815
for better and prompter service In plumbing repairs i
alterations.
VICGRA
MASTER PLUMBER
pter Mr-
pairs and I
VES
Kootenay No-Odo
Dry Cleaning Co.
Phone 128    ,
FOR PROMPT SERVICE
l^S FORD
DE LUXE SEDAN
Radio, heater, tog lights and mm
extras. Bargain.
PEEBLES MOTORS
Baker 8L     Limited     Phone 11
FINANCIAL SECURITY
INVESTORS SYNDICATE
Monthly Savings Plan
R. W. DAWSON
Bonded Representative
Box 81    Hippenon Blk.    Ph. II
CIVIC
TONICHT and FRIDAY
Complete shows 7:00-8:12
"THE CISCO KID AND
THE LADY"
with
CESAR   ROMERO
MARJORIE WEAVCR
Second Ace Hit
"THE HURRICANE"
with
Jon Hall — Dorothy Lamour
W, W. Powell
Company, Limited
The Home of Good Lumber
Lumber Lath Shingles
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL '
Telephone 176 Foot of St.mlcy St.
'
,     -       J*, m**      ■_ ......      .1  ... .._._ «■■__,
_m
