 CkwtMa Tails StsHa Alliu ta Irtaf
latuiat ta Kuti Pags T.
TTiaiietef af Naval Cwu Aerou CKaanel
Indicate Saa Action.—Pige 7.
Laval Voitei Hofa of Victory for
Carminy—faga J.
■/OLUMg  41
FIVS CENTS MR COPY
m
Ctta_t_a_hU_\f*__tOa_
WM |ap lovadei».-J«|« 3. ■
Tiuwfer of Pacific CammaiUot M*4e to
tttm Victoria.—Ptgt 9.
Umrk Africa Porcai Reedy te Defend
Igfft Says Saaats.—H$t ^.
NILMN. -MUTISM COLUMBIA. CANAOA-TUSSOAY MMNIIM. JUNI SS. tM
NUMSgRI
RUSS RETRtAi BEFORE CONTINUOUS ATTAC
LONDON CLEARS RAID DAMAGES TO S TART REBUILDING
When London residents read of 1000-plane raids by the R.A.F. .on German cities
with resulting devastation they can look at scenes like the above with a certain grim sat-
Itfaction. For ths s part of the Heart of Empre, stll scarred by the all-out Luftwaffe
raids. The picture was made from Ludgate Hill looking West toward St. Bride's, Fleet
St. and Reuters, and shows how the work of demolishing, clearing and rebulding has
already started.
Canadian and U.S.
Patrols Cooperate
in Hunt (or Subs
Sub Attempted to Shell U.S. Army Fort ot
Seaside, Ore., While Two Enemy
Craft Shelled Vancouver Island
VICTORIA, June 22 (CP) —British Columbia defence
services remained on the alert tonight following an official
statement In the House of Commons today by Defence Minister Ralston that Saturday night's unsuccessful shelling of the
lighthouse and Dominion Government radio station at Estevan,
on the West Coast of Vancouver Island, apparently had been
carried out by two enemy craft.  (Also see pages 5 and 7.)
Officials remained silent on the suggestion advanced by
Mayor Andrew McCavin of Victoris that a surface raider "is
loose on nuisance raids" on the Pacific Coast. Col. Ralston's
ststement referred td "enemy craft" but previous official announcements attributed the attack to a submarine. United
States military authorities ttt
SEE WEDNESDAY
PAPER FOR NEW
TAXES
finance Mtnlttar Hiley1! budget will appear la Wtdnttdiy i
ptper with the complete itory
oo new taxation Ukei; ta attect
everybody.
NAZI
CASUALTIES IN
YEAR IN RUSSIA
Russ Claim 3,500,000
Killed; Own Losses
.  4,500,000
SAY 20,000 HUN
PLANES DOWNED
* MOSCOW, June 23 (Tueidty).
(AP)—Tht Germtni hivt loit fO,-
000,000 men killed, wounded tnd
ttken prisoner In tht tint yttr
of tht wtr with Ruiili, tgtinit
Soviet Iomi of 4,500,000 the Soviet Information Bureiu innounctd today in t year-end review.
Of the total German casualties,
it least 3,500,000 were killed, the
innouncement said.
It gave German plane losses at
50,000 craft compared to 9,000 Russian and said the Nazis lost 24,000
tanks to Russia's 15,000. The bureau
said the Germans also lost 30,500
guns.
Seventy per cent of the Red
Army'i wounded have returned
to action, the announcement laid,
while Germany has been able to
return only 40 per cent of her
wounded to lhe ranka.
Thl! discrepancy was attributed
to the overworked German ambulance aervice, which had been geared
for 1 ''lightning war".
Reviewing the war aince the German atlack was launched June 22,
1B41* the Information Bureau said
that Instead of knocking out the Red
Army in two months, as the Germins expected, the Nazis in one
year have witnessed "complete collapse of their war plans,"
The German army of 1942 Is not
what it was at the beginning or
the war, the statement continued,
adding that picked troopi have been
killed and officers demoralized.
WINS TEMPORARY
The review acknowledged the
Germans may achieve successes in
somt lectori of the front in the
near future but theie will be temporary.
German official circles said on
March 8 that Germany's casualties
totalled 1,500.000, including killed,
wounded and missing.
The last official German claims
on Russian louts were made Nov
21 when it was stated 10,000,000 So-
Canadian Premier
Congratulates .
Russians
OTTAWA, June 22 (CP) -
Prime MinUter Mackenzie King
congratulated the Sovltt people
today on the "forcefulnesi and
determination" of Ruulin n-
ilstance in 12 monthi ot wir
igaimt Germany."
"Today our peoplei era fighting ilde by side," Hr. King old
la a menage observing the anniversary of Germiny'! attick
on Ruslla June 22, IMl.
"Tomorrow, wntn am scourge
of Fuciim ii ended, our peoplei
will work lide by lide to aid in
establishment of a world order
based upon the dignity of all
men and the interdependence of
all nations."
viet troops had been killed, wounded or captured.
The most recent Soviet casualty
figures were given by the Soviet
Information Bureau Nov. 28 as 6,-
000,000 German casualties and 2,
122,000 Russion losses.
Creston Reclamation
Hearing Aug. 18
Council Here Learns
Notice that the Creston Reclamation Company'i application for permission to reclaim additional land
near Sirdar would be heard at
Creston Aug. 18 was received by tha
City Council Monday night from the
International   Joint   Commission.
Two Fliers Killed
in Coast Crash
PRINCE RUPERT, B. C, June 22
(CP)—Two members of the Royal
Canadian Air Force stationed at
Prince Rupert are believed to have
died ln the crash of their plane
into the sea off Digby Island Saturday, Sqdn. Leader L. H. Brooki,
commanding officer, announced today, i
They were Fit. Sgt. E. Phillips
and Fit. Sgt. H. Baum, Fit. Sgi.
Phillips' parents live at Auburn, N.
Y„ and Sgt. Baum's parents at
Outrement, Que.
Argentine President
Decides to Resign
BUENOS AIRES, June 22 (AP)
—The newspaper Critlca said tonight that President Roberto Ortiz,
suffering from pirt'pl *■''* ' **--
and in retirement for a year, hu
decided to resign.
INDIANS FLEE IN
MGHT ATTIRE AS
(OAST IS RAIDED
Shells Whizzed Over
Home of One
Kit if 1<5ATS
SIX MILES AWAY
ZEBALLOS, B. C June 22
—An Indian fiiherman told tonight how exploding ihelli trom
tntmy crift attacking the radio
station at Eestevan point caused
Indians to flee their homes on i
netrby reservation in night attire
and seek safety in their boati in
Hesqulat Harbor, six mllei away.
The Indian, Ben Thomai, reached
here from Estevan Point, 45 miles
northward up the Weit coast of
Vancouver Island with the tint
eye-witness account of the ihelllng,
"Shelli hlzzed over my home on
the Indian reservation near the
Point," Thomai nid. "Thert were
about 19 shots, but none did iny
damage.
"I waa plenty icared ind io were
my neighbor! and we raced for our
boati. Some ot the Indiana were
Juit retiring when the firing itarted and fled to their boats only partially dreued."
POOR SHOOTING
Thomas iald only one shell landed close to the lighthouse which is
beside the ndio itation on Estevan
Point. The ihelli imalhed t lot
of rock beyond the Reierve. It
wu poor shooting, he idded.
The Indian fiiherman aald the
lightkeeper at Eatevan Point ihut
off hii light when the attack began.
The Indiana who took to their
boata tought refuge ln a bay known
as Boat Basin, which actually torm
the harbor of Heiqulat, nearest lettlement to Eattvan Point.
The Saturday night attack wai
the tint direct assault of the war
on Canadian soil but failed to cauie
any damage. The ihelli from the
attackeri' gum landed ihort or
beyond the radio itition tnd light-
houie. Only damage wu to t few
windows in the radio nation, by
concussion.
U.J. Navy Convoying Merchant
Ships Along Eastern (oast
WASHINGTON, June 22 (AP) -
I The United States Navy announced
I today that it had instituted convoys
for the protection of shipping along
I the East coast.
A brief announcement said: "the
[Navy has been convoying merchant
Ithlps through the lanes ot the East
ern sei frontier for ipproxlmately
30 days."
The Eastern sea frontier has been
defined In the past as Including nil
the territorial waters from M-'ne
to Florida Inclusive, and under thli
definition It would appear that convoys are now being operated the
full length of the Eut cast.
Portland, Or*., ssid ths craft
which, shelled ths Oregon
Cosst near Seaside lsst night
wss s submarine.
Both Canadian aad United Itatei
nivtl tnd air unlti trt known to
bt cooperating ln widespread pa-
troll limed it finding ind eliminating tht rilders.
Civiliin defence offlclils innounctd no idditlonil measurei. thl
Wut Coait Air Balds Prtctutlon
syitem hiving been ca in "alert"
basis ilnct bit Dtc. T, with AJLP.
wardeni and otheri reidy tor Instant ctll.
40-MINUTI ATfA^IK
No further dettlli regarding Saturday  night'i attack on  btivm
todty. Col.
RUSS TOLD U. S.
TO GIVE HER AID
ON BATTLEFIELD
Second Front, Third,
Fourth If Needed,
Planned
NOTHING TO STOP
VICTORY MARCH
NIW YORK, Junt a (AP) -
Hirry Hopklni, ipitklng at a
Ruulin Wtr Relief rally, uld tonight Pruldtnt Roouvtlt told him
te till tht mtttlng the Unltid
Stitei would glvt Ruuil lid on
tht bittliflid tnd thit tht Rusiian tront would not fill.
Antrtlng ht hid spoken to Hr.
Rooievelt t few houn btfort coming to Ntw York while tht Preildent and Prima Mlnliter Churchill
were Uking "tbout itrtttglc itepi
light picked up by ihipt coming
into tha Strait ot Juan Dt ttm.
South of Vincouvtr Wind, from
tht Orient ind tht wireleu itition
il one of the mott powerful tn tht
Dominion. It li Impossible to mike
a boat landing anywhere along tht
rocky paint ind luppllei are
brought ovtr t llvt-mllt road from. to bt tiktn", Hopkini uld tht Pres-
Fall Back on Two
Sectors in Great
Sevastopol Battlei
Germans Renew Offensive on Kharkov Frorti
Report Russ; Stceet Fighting Reported
Under Way in Sevastopol
ly.HINRY C. CASSIDY
Auoelittd Pnu Stiff Writer
MOSGOW, Juns 2 (Tuesday)   (AP)—The Germans
newed thsir offensive on the Kharkov Front Monday and '
miles forced Sevastopol's beleaguered garrison to fall back *
two sectors, official reports seid early today.
The Mondsy midnight Soviet communique indicated
smsshlng Germsn sttacks against the hard-pressed Crimesri
naval base continued unabated.
The fighting on the Kharkov Front had been on a
duced scale for the past few days, with the Russians countfr-^j
attacking st some points, but?"
<•>'. ye-
-tte*^tn
Says John L. Lewis
Trying to
Defeat War Effort
DENVER, June 13 (AP)- The
American newiptper Guild hetrd
John L. Lewii, former C.I.O. preiident, iccuitd todty of "trying to
defeat tht war effort and place
himielf In a itrong poiition ln thli
nition even over the carcauei of
thoie hi tht Libor movement."
The tccuiition came fronfTteld
Robinion, Denver, i C.I.O. Vice-
Preildent and head of the Internitlonal Union of Mine, Mill end
Smelter Workeri. Ht chirged thit
Lewli, "In fighting Sgilnit the C.
I.O. and the Preildent of the United Statei li ti good a friend of Hitler as Martin Dlei and iome «I
thoie other reactionaries"____r"""'
• Sr
more thelU fell." Lt-Ctn. Ktn-
neth Stuart, Chief of Canadian Oeneral Staff who b acting Commm-
dcr-intChlef ot Welt Cout defences,
wu* not ivillable tor comment on
the minister's Itattmtntl.
Mayor McGavln uid that becauie
ot "curioilty, not Jitters," thl ptoplt ot Britiih Columbil wtrt mxl-
oui to know If tht crtft which ittacked the Oregon ihore wu tht
umt thtt ttticktd Estevan, "or if
t flit surface craft ll loose on
nuisance  rtlda."
Owing to llmlttd communication facilities no ictutl reports
ot the ihelllng have been received
from Eslevan, even military men
admitting lt waa difficult to gtt
information from the isolited
coutal hamlet
At Seatlde, Ore., , CoL Cirl 3
Doney, Comminding Officer of tht
Columbli Harbor defences, uld It
least nine projectiles peppered the
Fort Steveni military trtt juit
South of thl "olumbla Rive:* mouth.
Ai In the ttttck on Estevan thtrt
were no casualties or damage. Col.
Doney iald fragments trom tht projectile! Indicated they were flve-
inchers, about IS inchei long md
weighing tbout SO poundi.
Tht lighthouse on Estev.an Point
ll 133 teet high, one of the largut'
on the Pacific Cout.  It is the tint
Hetquitt, whtrt thtre ltt lindlng
facllltiu.
The'point li named afttr Dot
Eitevin Joie Martinet, iecond lieut-
taint to Commandtr Jum Pert! ot
th* corvette Santiago, who explored
tM cout in mt.
H«r Series ol
WASHIHOTOM, Junt 22 (AP)
—Tht United States Ntvy tnnounctd tonight t medium ilted
Amtrietn merchant thlp wu
iunk by tn underwiter explosion, presumably in enemy mine
off the Virglnli cout. Survivon
htvt been landed it tn Eut
Cout port
BUENOS AIRES—Fortlgn Miniittr Enrique Ruiz Gulnuu tnnounced tonight tbe linking ot the
4800-ton Argtntlnt freighter Rio
Terctro but uld he did not know
whether lt hid been torpedoed or
hid hit a mint.
BELEM, Brtxil, June 32 (AP)
-The torpedo linking ot the
«M-ton U. S. ihip Columbian tnd
lilt Pinamanlan ihip Cardinal
wtrt reported here tonight.
There were no details immediately on the Columbian, which wai
Mid to htve bttn ttticktd ln the
South Atltntic.
Thirty four lurvlvon of Bit Ctr-
,dlnu irrived todiy it Port Salinas
Pin SUIe, ind related their ihip
wu iunk by in Italian submarine.
Thii ihip tint wu Identified
the Argentine-owned Cardenas.
Allies Seeking Earliest Maximum
Concentration of War Power
on Axis Says Washington Statement
ldent give him thli mtiuge to deliver:
"Tell them thtt wt mtin to glvt
Ruult tld on tht fltld ot battle and
that our armed forcti will attack it
thi right timt tnd it tht right pltce
and thit tht Ruulin front will not
fill."
Hopklni laid a iecond front, ind
If neeemry a third and a fourth
front, w«uld be attabllihad tt
pte up-Nltlir'i armiei whlli the
Allied *lr Pereet dntrayt* Mi
oltlei, ant by one.
"Ibe Amerlcm ptoplt htvt midt
up thtir mlndi," tht Lend-Lttn
Administrator ind close tdviier of
the Pruident laid. "Nothing cin itop
tht onwird mtrch to overwhelming
military victory."
IUly, Hopklni predicted, "led by
that fit, ilmost retired exhibitionist
Mussolini, will collapse like an Inflated muihroom undtr tht tint
•treu of i violent ittack."
"Onct Mussolini wanted Ethiopia
—md got lt—well, when thli wtr U
over tf the Italian people do not
hmg him by hli cowardly neck I
cm only hope he will bt turned over
to the tender mercies of tht Ethiopian King."
Al for Hitler'i other mijor Ally,
Japm, Hopklni iald the battlei
of the Coral Sea and Midway
were "preludei of the Inevitable
disaster that awiiti Tojo (the Japanese Premier) and his cruel mUitiry dictatorship."
Hopkini cautioned, however, there
would be defeat! and dark dayi before victory. With reference to Chint
he iald 'never wu that brave country ln such danger. Generallulmo
Chiang Kai-Shek cm be sure of our
aid."
the communique said the initiative was. again In the hands
of the Gsrmsns.
On June 22 our troopa on the
Kharkov tront waged battle againit
attacking German troopa," the high
commind uld,
"On the jjevutopol frortt fltrca
battlei continued. On other lectors
of tht tront no essential changes
took plice."
Earlier reporti uld tht defend-
en of Sevutopol hid bttn thruit
buk both from the North end
South, deipite their ttubborn re
ilitince whieh cott the Germani
thouundi et llvei.     *
Tha rlilng onatende of battle
uehtrtd In Ruuii'i iecond yeir ef
«***■' ■■. ***-!\* ; •*
(The gravity of the iltuition wu
Indlctted by t Vlclur cltlm, hetrd
in London by Reuten, .which" iald
thit street fighting hed begun in
Sevutopol md thit t number of
the   defenders   had   embirked
transporti).
Qtrmin cuuiltiei wtn eitlmit. ■
ed it mort thin 100,000 but itttB
the enemy cime on with crushing
numben of mtn tnd mtehlnttkfl
Ai tha btttlt Intimity lncreu-'
id, Germin nivtl unlti wtrt rM
ported off tht fortrtu, but ef tlH
Runlan   Blick   Set  flttt  whote
itllori ire helping lti dtftnea,' ym
Around Leningrad, the Run
claimed to have killed 350 Gin
and silenced nine artillery bitti
Soviet artillery was credited I
destroying 410 other Germani
tht "Western front" and the 1
sectors. t -
(The German high commind mH
tht Ruuians attached with a I
tank-supported force on the central
front Weat ot Moscow and the Volk- J
hov sector below Leningrad. Bltttr
fighting was continuing around
Volkhov, the Germans aald).
By J. P. SANDERSON
Canidlan Preu stiff Writer
WASHINGTON, June 22 (AP)
—Wlniton Churchill tnd Pruldent Roouvtlt contlnuid their
conference! htrt tonight with tht
tnnounud objective of obtaining
"the eirllett miximum etnetn-
trttlen of Allied wtr pewtr upon
tht tntmy."
In t joint ititement ibout tht dli-
cuisloni they hivt bttn cirrylng
on for tour dayi, tht Pruldtnt
tnd thi Prlmt Miniittr omitted
details of decisions ruched md
specific problems.
,. Mr. Roosevelt ind Mr, ChurchlU
uld iny unofficial statements about
the count ot thiir discussions could
be nothing more thm turmtit. They
let down the birj of secrecy tar
enough to disclose thit they are
"reviewing, or whm neeemry, further concerting the measures which
have for some time put been on
footr'to develop ind sustain tht
tffort of tht United Nations."
Their wording wu broad enough
to cover numeroui operatloni, iuch
U thou of tht lend-lease progrim,
the combined Chiefs of Stiff, md
the Anglo-American production,
firm, ihlpping tnd munltloni assignment igcncles.
"Complete understanding tnd
harmony exists between til concerned In ftcin, tbt vut md
grave tuki which 111 ahead," tht
Joint statement nld. "A number.
of ouUUndlng polnti ot detail
which it would hivt been difficult to adjuit b- correspondence
hivt been adjusted by tht technical officen atter consultation
with tht Pruident ind the Prime
Mlnliter."
Pretldentlil Secretary Stephen
Eerly, who described the conferencei tl progress ln "• very satisfactory wty," tali tonlght't itatement was of in "Intermedialc" nature and thit " If Mil probability,
thtre will be t finil statement'
wben the taUi hare ended.
Filet Writ Against
Bus Lints,
Result of Accident
CRANBROOK, B. C, June 23
(CP)—Mlu Mildred Lindbergh of
Waldo hn filed 1 writ against the
Weitern Canada Greyhound Bus
Lines it Fernie, alleging the nis-
ttlned permanent Injurlu in a bus
accident late lut Fall between
Cranbrook tnd Femie.
A Cillfornli woman, a passenger
In the lame bus, wu drowned in
the creek, swollen by torrentlil
rains.
Thli li the first suit to grow out
of the accident. G. H. Thompson,
retired county court pudge for East
Koetenay, Is acting for the plaintiff.
Kootenay, Lardeau
Areas Promising
in War Metals Hunt
VANCOUVER, June 22 (CP) -
Britiih Columbia hu more than 600
proipecton ln the field thii Summer, lurching for metali, particularly thoie which might be used in
the war tffort.
Becauu cinntbar, the ore of mercury, hts been found ln many location! North of Fort St. James, lt
and the Manion Creek District, are
the scenes of much development
work to teit the deposit!, the Britiih Columbia Chamber of Minei
hai reported.
In the Kootenay and Lardeau
areu, proipecton and company
scouti are checking over many of
the old lead-zinc depoiiti, and it is
believed tome of theie will be openting thli yeir.
Scouti back from the Nelson and
Lardeau report iome new disccrv-
eriei ot tungsten that appear promising.
Weafigr
Summer took a firmer hold on
Nilion Monday with 1 lecond dty
of sunshine tnd warmth. Summer'
midi iti entry Sundty with the
tint bright md rainless day In eight
comecutlve days, Monday however,
did not quite equal ita record of 11
houn ot sunshine for it times the
iky wai largely overcait. The day'i
miximum temperature of 71 degree! equalled Sunday'i while the
minimum it 41 wu i degree higher.
t_
Ask City Folk
lo Stay Home
Thursday Night
OTTAWA, June 22 (CP) - If
millions of Canadian city dwellei*
will itay at home Thursday eve»
nlng they will be making an impor*
tant contribution to the war effort,
Wartime Prices and Trade Board
officials said today.
Volunteer workers in cities from
coast to coast are to collect sugar
'rationing application forms between
6 and 10 p.m. on Thursday and the |
Board is asking that householder!
see that some responsible party il
in the building when the canvaiaer
calls.
Board officials expressed pride ini
the voluntary organization which I
hai been developed. Information ;j
received at headquarters today in-1
dicated the distribution of applica- I
tion forms was almost completed. '
Girl Tells How Police Refused to
Believe Story of Escaped Flier
NORTH   BAY,   Ont.,  Juna  22
(CP)—Story of how in Helped
Qtrmin   prlionir  of wtr ipent
itvtnl houn dining tnd chitting
with  mtmbtn of t  North  Bay
fimlly wu told  htrt todiy by
Mlu A. I. Smyth who ilio uld
htr liiter hid notified North Biy
police, concerning  tht  mm  but
ne lotion hid betn tiktn.
The ucaped priioner, Identified
u Egbert Broiig, 23-year-old German parachute trooper, wu Uken
Into  cuitody   ln  New  York-State
and taken to Montrul, where he
told police yuterday he had covered more than 900 mllei of Canadian
territory In four dayi without being
questioned despite hli Germm air
force uniform.
Mlu Smyth uld (the man came' to
her home with her cousin who had
picked him up on the highway. Tho
cousin hid bten told he wai
Greek tiler and wanted to get lo
nearby Ramore to catch a train.
Before the train left, Miu Smyth
quoted him u saying:
"I'm going to tell you something
*nd 1 hope you'll promise not <
tell on me. I'm a German flier and J
I escaped this morning."
After telling them his correct
name, the German left the house j
and Miss Smyth said her iliter,
Margaret, Immediately notified *
North Bay police by telephone
that a German prisoner of war
had just left the house and wai
taking the train for MontreaL
"The police told her If it hid
been a German he would not have
admitted it," MUa Smyth said.
Inspector William Gartshore said
the Sergeant on duty at the time ,
had been questioned concernlttfil
the Incident. The Sergeant'i name
was Michaud, the Inspector laid,
and he explained he had no note
of the call because it was an anonymous one. ,
"He claims he reported tht call
to the military police, thinking it
was up to them to handle the situa«
tion," tht inspector added.
MLss Smyth said her sister had
identif'ed herself when the call wil
made.
At the same time military police
auihorlties denied they l.__d been
nc titled ol the call.
^^*-«~..'»-,^".-M*__IV_yr_l___^____,
...__ ..,i;t____*________ia-
 •
mmmmmWm*.^__m
IMson Council to Ask Gordon of
tmlstoke to (ome and Discuss
Clerkship; Council Evenly Divided
Bfchoa Olty CeeneH, ea e few
fc three reeerded vett. deeMed
r4y al|ht It eek Olty Clerk
A. tterdoe ef Revelttoke «
^kt It Nelttn te dltom Hk let
Bp tl Iht Ctunell In whieh he
I mat tke Ntlun offer ef tta ttr
I Mealh fer kim te become City
Clerk wet tot tuffleiint to mtkt
l jl werth kit whilt liavinj Revel.
Meket and le which ht tlie ttattd
StatHee tht rttianttitn tt w. I.
MMM*, prettnt Ntlien City
reteric, he weuld be wllllni te
I meet the Council te diicuu lti ot
Iter.
' title deciiten followed en extended debate Ip which Aldermen A. t
Mann, Oeorge Turner tnd T. &
■ktert Interpreted Mr Gordon'l let-
Mr et refuting tkt Ntlion offer:
gad la which Mtyor N. C. Stibbi ind
Ron Fleming tnd H. H.
I interpreted lt as meaning Mr
wat open to negotiation.
I. K McKenile voted wtth
ken yieailng and Hinitt, fore-
fttl even three-way split in which
Stibbi' vott decided the U-
TWOVOTU
i Twe votei wert polled. The ftnt
■M en Aldtrman Mtnn'i motion
Hk At Council advist Mr. Gordon
Bd received hii letter refusing
mt Nelton offer; and the aecond
pM on Alderman Fleming's motion
liking Mr. Oordon to comt to Nil-
pi te tattrvlew tht Council tnd
alng him Mr. Waeion had been
auated ind htd bttn reen-
*_• Aet er eette It eontri.
Worming
pgerannu
rr- oa t ttmjprary beat! "until
iuch ttat it a Ctty Clark hu been
properly lnitalled. •
Mr. Oordon'i letter waa Ua reply
le tbe Nebon offer ot the City
Clerkship, tendered two weeki ago
At tbat time the Council'! vote wu
recorded umilarly, witb the Council .pllttlng ln the umt mtnner ud
Mayor Stibbi catting tht deciding
ballot Aldtrman naming Mondty
night took exception to tke recording ot thtt vote md tht Ntlion
Newi" report of tht meeting, claiming both were incorrect in report-
lag Aldtrman Waten wai oppoied
to the offer being made to Mr. Oordon, but rather tbat be wanted Mr.
Oordon to eome to Nelion to interview the Council Aldermin Witers
■Uted ht had no objection to tbe
manner ln wbich hli itand wu reported.
10-.IAY TIME LIMIT
Mr. Oordon will bt uked to
eome to Nelaon within the next 10
dayi In order that the luue miy not
be prolonged.
Argument wai led by Aldermen
Minn, Turpir and Waten on tie
ont aldt, tnd Miyor Stibbi ind
Aldermen Fleming ud Hinitt on
the other.
Mayor Stibbi itated previoui
Council! realised tomeone should
be tnined to take Mr. Wauon'i
pltce but hid filled to ttke ictlon
in tht put two yean. Now die
Suptrinnuitlon Act wu In forct.
Ht held thit the City ihould ict
DAILV NIWI. NILION.
•  C.'-'VnOfV MORNINC JUNI tt*
Pullover Sweaters I $2 95
■nana   >y jantzen     ^^^^^
All Wool in ...
• MONTEREY BLUE
• WHEAT COLD       • RUST
GODFREY'S LTD.
The Homt of Cuarmteed Work
Clothing
Phone 270 387 laker St.
Guide for Travellers
NELSON'S LEADING HOTELS
NEW GRAND HOTEL
PHONI     MR. AND MRI. PETER KAPAK. Propi.     PHONE
JOA    In our new wing you miy enioy the fineit    J.A
Aa ■    roomi In the Interior — Bath or Shower.    **~
8PECIAL RATE8 BY THI WEEK OR MONTH
•rgued    tiei
•awe the Ocrtrnatnt bed aaked
eorporatiooa te retain, u tar u
pouible, ill elderly men, Iht dig
of Ntlton .hould cooperate.
that li. up to a ctrttia aft," Hit
Worthip uid.
POINT Ol IPIICIINCV
"There'i ao afl limit; ap le the
point et efficiency," Aldermu
Mun retaliated. "Wt ihould retain
eur preient City Cltrk tt long aa
bla health will ptrmlt ud give bin
u taalatut we think ia capable
af being trained to take bla place."
Aldermu Hinitt felt Mr. Oordon'i letter ww not a refueel of
the Ntlton offer; diet bt ihould bt
given in opportunity to ttlk it
over.
In oppoiition Aldtrmu Turntr
trgutd Mr. Oordon hid ne inten-
tion of coming to Nelaon until i
vacancy occurred, and ia bla opinion tba Revelstoke man definitely.
Mt out what _ie conildered a vacancy—the reilgnitlc.   of Mr. Wuton.
Tht Superannuation Act wu
meut to bt enforced." Mayor Stibbi
Uutittd.
"The vacancy bu occurred," added Aldejman Fleming.
Aldermu Waten alio held that
Mr. Oordon would not come to Nelion until Informed thit Mr. Waaaon
wiihed to leave.
"If he li told Mr. Waeion le on a
temporary bull It will not be necessary to tell him Mr. Wasson hu reilgned," suggested tht Miyor.
DONT WANT RESIGNATION
"Wi dont wut Mr. Wuton to ra-
slgn," Aldermin Flaming added.
"He hu refuied our offer of IUS,"
Alderman Mann countered.
Immediately following tbe recording of tht vott which dtfetttd
the motion to advise Mr. Oordon
tht Council hid received hli refuial
of the Nelion offer, Aldermin Minn
liked Alderman McKenzie how high
he wai prepared to go to get Mr.
Gordon.
Alderman Fleming objected to tbe
queition.
"Alderman McKenile, tre you illowlng Alderman Filming to do all
your arguing for you?" uked Aldermin Mann.
"Thli li out of order," declirtd
Mayor Stibbi.
"Wt hivt hid no expreailon of
opinion from Aldermin McKenile,"
Aldtrmu Mann  Insisted.
AS HIOH AS AT PRISENT
Waving Alderman Fleming's objection, Alderman McKenile replied: "I'd lay li high as we ire
paying our preient City Clerk."
Alderman Fleming objected that
It wai not good buiineu "to bring
thli out it the present itage H we
are dickering wtth Mr. Oordon."
Mayor Stibbi held thtl ihould be
"open to diicuuion with Mr. Gordon. If we cm get him tor $329 wt
ihould try."
Alderman Flemlng-i motion proposing that Mr. Gordon be uked to
Interview the Council and that he
be advised thtt Mr. Wauon htd
been superannuated but hid bttn
reengaged on a temporary bull
until a new City Clark could bt
lnitalled, wai then put to tht vote,
with Mtyor Stibbi' ballot deciding
It.
Tht timt limit of 10 dtyi wai In-
eluded upon tht insistence of Alderman Mann.
Michel Golfer
Title 3rd Time
KOtBOLlY, B. C, June H (CF)
-Bill PncUce of Michel wen the
Crow'i NNt Pau doll champion -
ahlp today tor tbe third time, de-
teetiag Art Franki of Kimberley
two ud one la Ike flnali of the
tbree-dey tourney.
Lut yeir'i winner, Art Burnley
at Ltthbrldgt, did not defend hu
title »ii yur
Un. W. A. fergtt ei Cranbrook
luccaaifully defended ber Itdlet'
cbtmpionahip, (Meeting Mn. JB.
Btrnum at Kimberliy, two ud ont
in tbt tlneta.
Meat tliti flight winner wet
Beecher Wilion of Blairmore, Alta..
and Mn. Archie Finley of Cranbrook wen the Women'i flnt flight
<  -'"fClty fronts $100
Body
Dificit
*«'iy wti!
Jtck O'Neill ef Kimberley took
the ienlor mm'i ehtmpioaehlp.
Ltthbrldgt wu choien u the ilte
of next yeir'i tournament.
Archie Finley of Cnnbrook did
not win the tournament, but he
did win a ipeclal prize for sinking •
hole ln one ln tbe qutllfyng round
Siturdiy.
Grtnt of gift} le the Nelaon Muaic
Feetivel AaaeeiaHon wee mtdt by
the City Cornell Tueeday night ta
auiit la mtetlng t deficit of $171.41
cauied by lack of ittendince, due
le reduced competition, it the IMS |
Framed Vote of Thanks for Fin!
David Rees
——
Teeie
itructor    ^^^^^^^^^^^^
Mondty ifl
Ctremony *■ W
oeived i -_t _■
Ptottvil.   Lulit Crtufurd, who wu   ^ ^ CeJPI^BHBW
| the St John" Ambulance Auoda-
ipaaled by Mn. 1.1. L. Dewdney ud John lobb ia waiting on
tht Council, explained t grut oi
thli ium, with btlucu trom previoui tatlvtlt would provldt lufficient to put tbt Auoclition ln tht
dttr with tbout $20 on hud to
carry en untU FttUvtli could bt
lucctufuily alaitd again.
Fishmen Take
Boxla Lead
VANCOUVER, June » (CP.)-
New Wutmlniter Salmonbellies
took over the leadenhip ot tbe ln-
ter-city box lacroue league tonight,
cloilng with a ruih to beat Vancouver Burrardi 11-8.
Salmonbelliei held a 1-0 lead at
tht tnd of tht tint quarter and a
4-1 edge at tha half. But after the
third quarter when Burrardi unk
four goali, they enjoyed only a one-
point lead but outscored the Vancouver team 4-1 ln the flnal quarter to assure tht victory.
Oordon Arrell ltd Salmonbellies
to victory with four goali. Johnny
Dtlt ltd Burrird icortri with thrtt.
Lady Volunteers
Ready lor
Rationing Work
Finil plant for tha prepantlon of
sugar ritioning ctrdi for Nelton by
a volunte.r ladlu committee were
laid Monday night ln an executive
meeting at the home of Mn. N. C.
Stibbs, Supervlaor of Recordi tor
Sugir Rationing.
There hu been i flnt rtsponae
to the ciU for volunteer worken,
lt wu'uld, md irnngementi trt
complttt for tht work, commencing
Frldiy morning. There it itill t
place for more worktn, Mri. Stibbi
uld, ind urged womtn, who wtrt
dttn legible writen ud willing
to aid, to phone here.
The lidlei will work tt Ctntrtl
School ln three reltyi dally ter
tour dayi, t t.m. till noon, 1 tm. to
4:90 p.m, wd 7 p.m. to I p.m.
Assisting Mn. Stibbi In orginlz-
Ing in Mrt. Reginald H. Dili, Mn.
E. T. Stromitttd, Mri. T. H.
Bourqut md Mri. T. 8 Shorthouie.
VANCOUVER/B. C, HOTELS
•YOUR VANCOUVER HOME"
Dufferin Hotel
Seymour SL       Vancouver, B. C.
Newly renovated throughout Phonti tnd  elevator
A. PAmERSON. late of
Coleman, Alta.. Proprietor
]
Water Level
Level of the Weit Arm continued It! recession at Nelion Monday
dropping to 9.05 feet ibove the low
water mark, a decline of .21 foot
ln 24 houn. Saturday'i level wu
10.12 foot above.
Alda wu written u part ot the
festivities for Empreu Eugenie at
the opening of the Suez Canal in
18M.
Are You Guilty of
PUBUC WASTE
Waite in Wartime is no longer Waste of money or money's value.
Waste is now the avoidable use of labour and materials
for purposes other than War.
LUXURY PURCHASING is WASTE in Wartime
It wastes money otherwise available for purchase of War Bonds.
It wastes Labour otherwise available for War Work.
It wastes material otherwise available for War Purposes
REMEMBER:-
"He who goes on a buying spree
Delays the day of Victory."
Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.
of Canada, Ltd.
Trail, 8.,C.
South Slocan
SOUTH SLOCAN, B. C. - Mlu
Betty Bird hai left for Vmcouver
for in Indefinite villi
Gordon Cobb, who hai been ln
training at Vemon, paid a weekend
visit to hli parents, Mr. ind Mri. O.
C. Cobb, prior to leaving for the
East. Mr. Gordon Cobb hai Joined
the Royal Canadian Artillery.
Mri. E. Stone of Waneta has came
to make har home with her aon,
Harvey Stona.
Mr. and Mri. Henry Nixon and
children motored to Perryi on Wed
naaday,
Thomai Anderson of Trill viilted
hli parenti, Mr. md Mri. Eric Anderson.
Mr. ind Mri. H. H. Frizzell of
Trill ipent • couple of dtyi with
Mr. tnd Mri. O. W. Humphry, Mrs.
Frtaell'i parents, at Summerhill.
Mr. and Mri. Alex Gray and little
daughter Donna, recently of Sbtep
Creek, htvt takan up ruidtnet ln
one of the Oliver cottages.
Mr. and Mn. W. Metzgtr of Ron-
land are ipending • week with
their ion md dtughter-ln-ltw, Mr.
and Mri. Harold Mttzgir.
Mn. G. C. Cobb wai a Nelson
viiltor Thuriday.
Mr. tnd Mri. W. A. MacCabt and
son Bruce ipent the dayi it their
Summer home tt Willow Point.
Mrs. Frank Frisby of Nelson was
tht gueit of Mri. Frank Scott during tht wtek.
Mn. William Muir md children
Beryl and James of Vancouver are
spending t few week! with Mr. tnd
Mn. G. Sweet and Mr. and Mn. D-
Muir, respectively.
Bees Take (
Gals W
TRAIL, B. C, June 22.-The Btu
defeated the "C" team ta in exciting softball game of the glrli leigut
in Vlctorli Park Monday night J-B.
The Ci were ahead In the fourth
Inning but were unable to icore
during the rest of the game. M.
Smith pitched for the Cs until the
last half of the ilxth, tnd itruck out
four tnd walked ont. H. Rothtry,
who replaced her ln the lait of the
sixth, itruck out ont ind illowed
no walki. D. Miller, pitching for tha
Bees, struck out one and gave away
one walk. T. Harrison made a home
run for the Ci ind K. McLean
atruck two homeri for the Bees. M.
Randall hit a three-bagger thd C.
Simister itruck t two-bait hit, both
for the wlnneri. The C'l made 11
hit! ind four erron while tht Btei
had 12 hiti and two erron.
Tetmi were:
Ci: M Smith p, E. Mtwdaley e,
M. Cronie lb, I. Morrii 2b, H. Rothtry Sb, p, J. Grieva ss, M. Flnlay If,
»b, T. Harriion cf, D. Rou, rf.
Beei: D. Miller p, H. Merry e, C.
Simister lb, M. Randall 2b, If, E.
Trlppel 3b, K. McLean si, E. Brown
If, 2b, H. McLean cf, F. Kjorsvlk rf,
Umpires: Len Ryman and Carl
Loblik.
Hon. ugned by Hid Royal Highneu
tbe brl ef Athlone u Knight Coo-
mander. Tba illuminated document
■tated tbe vcte of thinki wu 'for
viluabli uiltttnee rendered In tbe
furthering of tht work tf tbe order."
Hla reply wu to expreu the top*
thit bt eould contlnut to umt ta
Brat aid training lor May yeen.
AWARD! PftlMNTID
Mayor N. C. SUbbe preunted tbt
trued vote ef tbaeka to My. leet,
bad preemtod St John Ambulance
AjtoeuUoo awarda le mccaortul
cudidetu u followi:
Flnt yeu certificate!— Mlai Connie Genge, Cyril 3. Bdgmton, Lionel Somen and Mn. Agnu Brltton.
Second Yeer Voucher—Eric Holm-
ptn.
Third yeer nedaUlont-Mlu ld-
1th Lawtoa. Arthur L Ruatoka,
Herbert Pitta and George Kiway.
City Asks More
Tenders on
Hospital Work
City CouncU will Inform Kooteniy Ltkt Gtntrtl Hoipittl Socltty
thtt lt ipprovu tbt propoied Installation of iniuliting oiaterlal at tba
ieolatlon hoipital, but wuhei tendon to be called publlrly. The Hoipital Society lubmitted to tha City
Counrll Monday night a requut
Monday night utquwt for aaalat-
mre ln having tht ltolttlon unit in-
tultttd md lubmitted two tenden,
one of |1M and ene of $175 M. Tbt
Council felt there ihould bt mort
tender!.
Trail Office
Edge Oul Foundry
TRAIL, B. C, June U—T*he Oeneral Office tttm won from tht
Foundry team, 15-1J In a Smelter
League loflbill game ln Butler
Park Monday. Tht Foundry tried
hird to tvtn the ..mr. but tht whltt
coUtr boyt wert 7-2 thud In tbt
flnt Inning.
Teama were:
Foundry—W. Brownlle n, D. C.
Kirkpatrick c, B. Biauro 2b, A
Atuter lb, B. Marder p, A. Robb
Jb, C. Lund If, J. Reid o, Doan cf
J. Rossworm rf.
Genertl Office—Tiron, Edwirdi,
Chrliti-tno, Covemy, S1111 r,
Krause, Fortin, Hewgill, Whlttaker.
"WORN OOT"
ANI WORRIED
Inning
iiy, amble le de
iome work — crinlj
with the children —
••ling miserable.
Blaming it in "Mmi"
■henthtkitliityimty
.teeutelerder. When
udneytlailthetyalem
dip with impwitiu.
I leid.the. - hickicht friquenlly Mtn
Dodd'i Kidney Pills help clew Ihe ly.tem.
firing attorn a duaet le reilore hullh
uid-Mwiy. Euy tt tiki. Sift.      n_
Dodds Kidney Pills
For
Storage
For
Crating
PHONE  10*
WILLIAMS
The Specialists
FRUITVALE
FRUITVALE, B. C.-Compllment-
lng Mri. Elmer Johnion, the Ladles' Friendly Club entertained at a
farewell tea party at the home cf
Mn. Johnson Tea wu aerved, Mri.
W. T. Cole and Mn. L. Ayre, assisted the hostess, Mrs. Williams
on behalf of the club preiented the
honoree with a farewell gift.
Mr. and Mn. Johnson and daughter Janice left Friday. They will
make their home ln Vancouver but
Mn. Johnion and diughter will
vialt relative! it Pincher Creek for
a month before joining Mr. Johnson at the Coast
Mn. Glenn Graham was hoiteu
it i Jolly children'i party Wedneiday afternoon when her imaU ibn
celebrated his fourth birthday. The
■ervlng table wu centred by t pretty birthday cake, topped with four
candles. Mrs. R. Groslin assisted
the hosteu. The gueiti wert P.
Morrlion, M. Groslyn, Ronald Mason, Ray Groslin, Billy Muon, M.
Morrison, Mrs. Morrison and Mrs.
H. Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Grieve and
family of Vanoouver arrived Monday. Mr. Grieve will return to Vancouver In a few dayi' but Mn.
Grieve and ohlldren are here on
two months' vacation u guests of
Mr. and Mn. J. Sadler, Mrs.
Grieve's parenta.
Mn. W. E. Grieve ind Miaa Beth
Grieve were weekend vislton :o
Trail.
Mrs. Rose Anderson and sons
Eldoa and Orval of Spokane visited relativei here at the weekend.
Mn. J. Laurie of Trail was the
guest of Mn. S Pollock.
Mr. and Mn. A. R. Helghton and
daughter Bernice visited Trill.
Mn. S. Pollock left Tuesday to
ipend two weeki vacation it Cout
polnti.
Mr. md Mri. J. B. Dovty of
over the weekend.
Mr ind Mn. A. Crulckshank are
weekend vlilton to Tril).
Pte. Auitin Olien, who hai been
spending hli leave h;re, left for
Hamilton, Ont,
Officers Decorated
for Rescue of
Stranded Airmen
WASHINGTON, June 22 (AP)
An officer of • U. S. lubmarlne ln
Ihe Southweit Pacific recently
swam ashore on t Jeptneit-occU-
pitd iilmd, locited I group of Australian flien tnd trranged their
tranifer to the underaei ship that
removed them to ufety, the Navy
diicloted today.
The itory wai toM ln an an
nouncement of the award of the
Navy Crou for herotim to 24-yeir-
old Entlgn Ctrlion Cook, ntvtl reserve officer ot Marblthead Rock,
Mut. Tht submarine commander,
who took hii veuel through Jipaneie patroli successfully, wai ilso
decorated with the Navy Crou. He
wu Lieut. Hiram Caaeedy, 33, of
Brookhaven, Miss.
The dlitance from the moon to
liie earth varlei from 221,614  to
252,972 milea.
Insurance Nen
Lick Hustlers 5-1
TRAIL, B. C, tt-* a-Th* Sukatchewan Lift Item beal tbe HarrU Huitlen 8-1 in a unior mtn'i
loftbill gimt it Victoria Park Monday, ne Huitlen made tbeir lone
run In the liath Inning and bed alx
hita and two erron. Tbe Iniur-
ince nine made two runa la fm
iecond, tnd one In ttch ed the
fourth, ilxth ind ninth. They wire
credited with lt hita tnd two erron. Brovtrmtn, chucking for
tbe winnen, itruck out three ind
gave no walka. Gnhim, pitching
for tbe Huiilirc, atruck out three
ind> illowed thrtt walka. Two baae
hlti were made by Stanton for tbe
Huatlan, Martin, Bakken, and Waddell for tbe Saekatcbewea Ufa.
Teama ware:
Harrii Hui lara-B. Dimock lb, 3.
Bileiky aa, K Stenton *>, R Graham p, J. Burrowi c, L. Tognotti rf,
D. Baril If, B. Burke cf, J. McLeod
lb.
Sukitchtwtn 1.1ft- H Widdell
cf, A. Tognotti rf, I. Toffolo If, Bov-
ermtn p, L. Knipp c, 3*. Cimeron
2b. R. Mirtln u, O. Btkken lb, 8.
Ogg Jb.
Umpirei—Wlih Milburn md Km
Poplt.
PRINTED
LINOLEUM
taamata Sttek
Yard $1.10
FINK'S
Sweden'! Air Force bu loat N
memben bi aecldenta in connection
witb Ibe nation'! defence patrol, and
bl TT'0 *"g
City lo Exchange
$iorooo Bonds
Exchangi ot $10,000 Province ot
Britiih Columbli IVt ptr ctnt bondi
dm In 1MB for t ilmllar amount of
t per cent bondi due in 1M7 waa
approvtd by tht City Council Monday night. Tht City will (tin IH per
cent ln lntereit tor tht lift of tbt
1047 bondi, md thty will miture
at a tlmt when the olty will htvt
some ot Its own bondi to retire, thui
"fitting In" with linking fund requirementi.
Street Car Receipts
in May Up $285
Ntlion Strett Railway ractlpti In
May totalled |1S29.90; an Increaie
of $28(3.40 over Miy of IMl, • rtport
to the City Council Mondiy night
sttttd.
Genenl Olof Thornell, Swedlih
defence chief, uyi Swedlih trmy
morale la high and preparedness fills
the nation.
IATBT
Sleepy lagoon
Om Donn Roeti
Tangerine
Skylark
]«my Bounce
Alwiyi In My Heart
Thrtt Little Sliteyi
McKay and
Stretton Ltd.
Phone 544
NeUon
AND BE PREPARED
Western
Monarch
Gait
Greenhill
Furnace
Phone 889
TOWLER
FUEL <Jc TRANSFER
You have to perspire —
You don't have to offend!
A giel mey meef th* man ef k*r
eVeemi   -ui ihall never wai Ml
li.arf H tha it carelen about "I.O,"
No one can take penonal
freshness for granted. We all
perspire. It'i (oing on conitantly, winter or aummer. When
perspiration tteya on your skin,
it becomes offensive wd results
In "B.O." That It why we all
netd regular Lifebuoy protection. Lifebuoy ia liie out aoap
especially made to prevent
"B.O." No other popular toap
contain! Lifebuoy'i ipecial. deo
dorizing Ingredient to give you
ALL-OVER, LASTINd PROTECTION.
Start ueing Lifebuoy today
and youll actually fed the
difference. Its rich, tangy lather
la marvelouily refriihino.
You'll itep out of your bath
tun of all-day freshness. Uae
Lifebuoy for your face end
handa, too. It'a 20% milder
than many to-called beauty and
baby soaps.
ALEVERl
RODUCT
m
__rtfl
11       WJT»)
at] en 43_J_Htn_n9
sup
■■^^B
s
^1           ■          *»■%♦■
UFBOOY—"^S3SS»BjOL
j. *!____■_, __i', J,
....  .:.:■.
 I HI
—
-
tmmwmmmwm
-MILMN DAILY NIWI NtLW*. * t^-TUUOAV MORNING. JUM« B. »• —*-
-PAOI   TrtMII
CHEMISTRY   HELPS  TO  WIN  THI  WAR
"The Water Supply
Wes Cut dy The Enemy"
WATER—good drinking water—ii ill important to
the fighting'nun. Its importance has been demonstrated over and over again in this tod in other wars.
Remember how soon Hong I-yong capitulated after the
Japs ciptured the water supply?.
For assured supplies of safe drinking water, modern
armies dtptnd on mobile water tanks accompanied by
trucki especially equipped to disinfect water by chlorine
treitment—on the ipot
In the plints of its Alkali Division, Canadian Industries
Limited produces Chlorine for miny purposes, important
amongst which is its use t6 assure safe drinking witer for
the people of Canada and for their irmiei in the field.
Chlorine is -anther oj C-I-L'sproducts tf Industrial
Chemistry which art aiding Canada's war effort
LAVAL VOICES
HOPE Of
HUN VICTORY
VICHT (Frem Frtoch Broad-
cuti i Junt 11 (AP)—Pierre Laval
told hla comptirioti flatly tonight
•1 dttlre Germany'i victory."
"We muit tlthtr Utt part in Iht
WW Europe ot bt ruigned to
being cheated." the Chief of Government aid in i brocket!
-If I tell you thli policy It eat
U. uvt Frmce and guarantee a
good future you muat believe me,"
tie taid.
Germany, he declared, WU making great ucriticu to create (he
"new Europe," and without her "the
Boliheviit menace would ipread
over Iurope."
Appeellng to French workeri Laval uid: "lt ii for ttie llbetty ot
thf war pritoneo (tttt you htve to
go to work In Germtny.
"It it te give France her poeitlon
in new Europe." •
Hitler, he continued, hed decided
to liberate I greet number at pen-
VICHY, June U (AP)—Pierre
Uvtl diicloted tonight that Hitler
had agreed "to the liberation ot an
Important number ot larmer war
priaonen who will be able to return to France" ai toon u Frencn
laborer! go to Gtrmtny to help the
Rtich.
CANADIAN INDUSTRIES LIMITED
Plans for Peace.
Should Be Made
Now Says Athlone
TORONTO, June 13 (CP)—The
Earl ot Athlone aaid in an iddrui
it the 3Jrd Annuil Convention of
Rotary lnternttionil here todey
thit "thii ii • revolutionary war
and a revolutionary peace will be
by no meant incompatible."
The Governor-General aaid that
ilnce he had been In Canada he hed
reputedly urged toe importance
tnd urgency of careful itudy being
given to the ihape and nature of
the poit-war world.
Speaking in Maple Leet Gardeni,
he uid: "Thet itudy ihould, In my
opinion, begin now. ThU war ii
not a mere itruggle between contending natloni. It ll a phate ln t
world revolution. The war of 1M4-
11 wu' the flnt -out. It tccom-
pllafied nothing and io thla iecond
war wu lnevittblt . , ,"
A revolutionary peece "will be
an absolute neceulty if we are to
safeguard the world from a third
upheeval."
"We mutt place greater emphaiii
on the tiling! of the spirit and leu
on mtteriil wetlth. We muat iee
that our economic iyttem it td-
jutted to the requirement! ot the
consumer rather than of the producer md we muit tet that our
locial lervicu produce tn increulngly high minimum itindard of
living throughout the world."
NO MONE CALLS
UTTLE PENNIES
60 TO MARKET
.    TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY
NO C.O.D.', NO DELIVERIES
%
How to Save Clothes in Wartime
Use the NEW OXYDOL... s» m;«w_mg tmn it* Cm
.Wash WHITE without bleaching
Wash CLEAN without hard rubbing
Dtclare war on washttay wttr ani
ttar. Gtt yttr ahitttt math tvtr
with thi rich, taft wathing action
of OXYDOL
Each washday, in mi lliom of homes, a truly modern lotp—New OXYDOL—il helping women
to mtke clothei lut longer in wartime.
AvoW title Of Harifc Bleaching
Entry unci of todiy'l 0__ydol it richer, more
efficient in wuhing power. By it! life washing
action alone...Oxydol bringi clothei white wHh-
**t Hitching. And we mean the whiteit waih any
totp ctn give! Except for stains, of course, anil unuiuil piecei...your clothei come radiantly white
... and you avoid the riik of wsi ng harsh bleaches!
gllminofe Harmful Rubbing
- Ilnrdruhhin/;... the cause of io much weir ind
tetr... il OUT! New Oxydol'i livelier "Huitle-
bubble" ludi soak the dirt loose in the wuher.
A quick rub here tnd there—where necessary
— it ill. But NOT the herd rubbing that weara
clothei threadbare before their timet
And yet, for all iti "wartime" efficiency... New
Oxydol ii evtn milder now on htndi... life
for wi sh ab I c colour!... life for washable rayons!
lltethi,modem sotip.Siwyour clothes in wartime
by doing them the euier, atfer OXYDOL way!
for Beautiful Washes with Safety.
NEW OXYDOL lUU ITE  WITHOUT
WASHES W HII [BLEACHING!
GROCERY   SPECIALS
193   PHONES   194
Milk, Pacific, My, 2 Km  0?
Manhmillow Whip, Vi pint etn.  9f
Tomato Soup, Campbcll'i, tin   IX
Puffed Wheat, Quiker, pkg  9*
Iran Flakei. Pott'i, pk|      0?
Micironl, Cut, 16-oa. pkg.      He
Igg Noodlei, Creamette, pkg.   9*)
Prepired Muitird, French'i, 6-01. |ir  Of
lird Crawl, Brock'i, pkg.   9f
Ivory Flikti. Small Carton   Of
Soap, Royal Crown, 2 takei	
It mom, 1 for	
NOTIONS
Baiting Thread, 500 yarda  9f
Combt, 2 for   9?
Buttona, Coat and Droaa, 2 aardt  l>?
Duiten   0?
Oilikin Bibi for Children   9?
Kty Cuei — Change Furaoa, each  !>?
Pliofilm Bottle Coven, 6 for  IV
Fine Meih Cut Silk Hair Nott, 2 for  IV
Pudding Charma, Starling  IV
Man'i Hon Supportart, Pair  iV
COSMETICS
Perfume, "Night of Romance" 9*i
Powder Puffi, pkg   IV
Cold Cream and Vanishing Cream, jar   IV
Nail PoHth  IV
Nail Pollih  Remover       IV
Cuticle Oil   IV
Rnor Bladei, 2 pkga.  9*1
Riaor Bladti. pkg  !!<•
After Shaving Lotion  9?
Rote and Glycerine Lotion  !■<•
Abeoroent Cotton  ;><•
Tooth Pute    9?
■ay Rum Hair Tonic   9*
STATIONERY
Writing Pad), tach    >><■
Envelopei. 2 for   : I?
Serviettei. White, SO to a pkg  H<-
Doileyi, Paper, Imitation Lace, pkg  (V
COSTUME  JEWELLERY
Cllpa and Pint, Reduced to Clear, each   n<-
HOMEWARE5
Potato Mathert, each    IV
Ply Swattera, Reg. ISc, each   IV
Pot Cleanen, each    !V
Salta and Pepper*, pair  IV
'Maple Leaf" Lampi, Reg. ISc, each
3
Who Strainer*, each    :>c
Paring Knivea, each    9<r
Toilet Paper Holden, Reg. 29c  IV
Vegetable Peelera, each   9?
Silver Plated Salad Forki, tach  IV
Silver Plated Soup Spooni, each   Of
Tea Spooni, 2 for   Of
Odd Saucert, 2 for  Of
Tea Platei, each    Of
"Coldilocki" Cleanen, each  Of
¥$*«»%« &«p«s
0  ttT HMT I87Q
.
Guerilla Bands in
East Indies Clash
with Jap Invaders
rarmeci of Southern Europe use     Tbe   tint   tubmirlne   telegraph
the   merlgold   plant   lor   coloring linei'In New York harbor were laid
and flavoring ioup. | by Samuel Morte.
By 3. I. HOLDSWORTH
Ctntditn Prtn Coerttpondtnt
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Auitralia, June 22 (CP Cable)—A itory
of guerilla warfare in tht Netherlandi   Eaat   Indiei,   harassing   tht
Japaneae    Invaden   and    pinning Hit men, he laid, have kept the
i_l_.__.t___   4__u_.____    *__-.    nrinntHiil    Iaiihii    n r,A    '** m-       tnr.„.       ii_e-A      At.Mir.        hava
6UMANTBB YOUR WHITEST WASH EVMI
Yei, you'U agree, New Oxydol givei you
the whiteit waih tny totp ctn givt err
dothlt ytar money bruil
If you don't igree, limply return tbe
package, with ntmt tnd addreu to Oxydol, Montretl, tnd twice the purchait
price will be refunded. '
their troopt to principal towni tnd
main roada, hai been told to Netherlandi aitthoritlet md irmy men
here by the leader ot the guerilla
band, who hat juit returned to hii
forcei after a conference here.
.Ceaselosi underground warfare,
he reported, ia being waged againit
the Japaneie by the guerillai, who
have ample supplies and secret
methodt of repleniahing them.
He told how, when the moment
for withdrawal ol the Netherlandi
East Indiei forcea came, t itrong
band began t long, dangeroua Journey to previouily planned poiitioni
in tht hllli.    -
Through dente Jungle, along narrow mountain traila, the men marched for eight dayi and nights with
only matchei of ileep, limited
amounti of food and no medicine,
Frequently they became loit but
eventually they assembled their
forcei In a central post.
Although they found the Japanese outnumbered than 10 to one,
they lashed out on frequent tortlei
and attacki with tbe reiult that the
invaden ioon remained only m the
principal towni, uaed only the main
roadi and avoided clashes with the
guerlllu wherever possible.
Several timei the Japaneie com-
mander ient letteri asking the
mountain band to lurrender. Each
requeit waa ipurned.
Fimlly the Invaden lupplled
guni to the natlvei and offered •
caah reward for eech guerilla they
killed. However, the leader aaid,
thii drive proved untucceaaful.
Regular attack! on Japaneie
posts are carried out lucceaafully,
the Netherlander! . ahooting only
when they are certain ot killing
an Invader.
Apart from food captured en
thete expedition!, the guerlllu live
on rice, corn beam and some meat.
The Japaneie art working hird
among the natlvei, trying to convince them thtt the inviden ire
really liberttori and to enlist their
aupport  to   lhe   fight  ifttntt  tht
Nether tenden.
The guerillt leader predicted Hit
vtlue of hii men would be realized
when the United Natloni begin
their reconquett of thete  Iilandi.
'Japanest forcei tied down, have
inflicted heavy losses, gathered
much Information and diitributed
Allied propaganda to the natives
while twiltlng the Allied offentive.
Two Hits Scored
on Axis Convoy
in Mediterranean
CAIRO, Egypt, June 22 (API-
Air Headquirteri announced today that Brltlth torpedo bombtn
icored hltt on two ltrgt frtlght-
tn tnd tnt Meort vtutl In in
•Hack en in Axil Mediterranean
eenvoy yuttrdty.
The convoy wu tttacked, South of
Capt Bon, Tunlaia, oo tht route
bttween Libya and Sicily, the communique uid. Two Axia planei
were ihot down by tighten which
accompanied the torpedo bomben.
BLACKHEADS
■Imply dl_i»olv« uid dteappeer by this OM
■tuple, Mie and nn petbod. Oet twe
t___» of perezlike powder from any drug
■ler*. sprinkle on a hot, wet cloth, end
•pplr futly^-erety bUekheed wUl be fhm,
(Advt)
THE   BEST  IN
COALS
DRUMHELLER
GLO-COAL
MERCURY
PHONI 701
Fairview
Fuel Co.
iwo—own tn mm t_jtx
Grocery Savings
On Sal* Today, Wedneiday fr Thuriday—Phonei 193-194
Fresh Vegetables
Cabbage lb.... 6c
5ft    Freih Spinach, 2 lbi.   ...15?
mtt   New Carroti, 2 bunchei .17?
Celery, Utah, per Ib 15?
Tomatoei, Hothouie, Ib.  . 22?
Raisins, Faney bleached, per Ib 17?
Blanched Peanuti for Baking, Ib 22?
Coffee, Country Club, Freih, Ib 5.'!?
Cuitard Powder, Horne'i, 1 Ib. tint. Each -'!7?
Flour, Five Rosei, 49 Ib. tack ? I -50
Soda Biscuits
RED ARROW
Carton 22c   g <g$p'
Pacific Milk, tall   00       ^KKStf "
tint, 3 for --QV,
Cheeie, Hunter'i, 1 Ib. carton   36?
Sauiagei, Premium, l'i, per tin  28?
Canned Fruits and Juices
Peachei, Dew Kirt, 16-ox. tin 17*
Apricoti, Aylmer, 16-ox. tin  17*
Tomato |uice, Sunny Dawn, 26-ox„ 2 tim 23*
Soaps and Polishes
Palmo Olive Toilet Soap,
4 cakei   23*
Sunlight Soap, 4 cakei  25?
Clo-Coat, Johnston's
Pinti, Eaeh  59*
Kleenex Tissues, 500'l, per carton  33?
Purex Tiiiue, I roll 2a*
■ -"Htm 1 fin—
■Mill I      I [I     III ___t_*__\i(_m    ■ ' ■:,.,..<:.:::..-... t.
 PAM FOUK-
 NELION DAILV NlWt NttlM. t t*-tVlt**Af MOMlM. JU«* »■
treatments...
•Ray Discovery
Made in 1895
•y LOOAN CLINDININQ,  M.  a
L The ditcovtry ot tht X-rty wti
jsnouneed In 19N. At ttrly u IW
Br. Gllmtn of Chlcuo noticed Uui
(ie worken htd • kind ot tnflam-
iBttery  retcUon on  tht  skin  ind
tt tm *u_* thtt tbt m*- | Mothers
litiv.tj tl «mm to th. X-ny mu>. n
wttk lh* dtgrtt of diffcrentitoeo
of tkt cell. Therefore, t young ua-
difftrtntitl cell tuck u tbtt ot can-
ctr, lymphttic tittutt, tte., It det-
trayed moit tmly. But thu ltw :i
tnly relatively trut, ilnct It hn
been found out thet ttn. enviroa-
ment ot the celli li ilio of |rttl
importance.
Bt rationed thtt tht X-rty mty
fcUl ctrtaln celli ind lent • pitient
LWith etneer of tht breut for tre»t>
[Mnt to i Mr. Qrubel of Chlcuo,
I who wu tn ixptrt In the uie of the
I etrly X-rty tubei. I undersUnd Mr
Grubel ll ijill tllve.
[   % try to explain how the X-nj
■ workt It not tuy ln ilmplt lan-
gutge. The X-ray ind ridlum ami
' pttt t form of light different from
1 thi light which our tytt ptrctivt
fa being only • much ihorter wive
Itngth.
Wl ihorter  wivt length  givei
, ttw power to penetrate objectt thtt
kppetr optque to  the   eyei. Thli
light ll dlichirged tt t  tremendoui ntt la ttit form of tiny panic
hi of energy—electron! which pene
trite Umuh for iomt dlitance uniU they itrlke in tlom which thtn
koocki them out ot their orbit, the
I retult ot whjch It t trtniftr of tn-
#rgy, TUi chirged energy hu in
I effect upon eirttln Usiuei
ACTION OF THI X-RAY
I Tbe itcond ptrt of the ictlon of
tbe X-rty—tht eftect on tiiiuet —
' appUei bett Iter 1 tew kindi of ctlli.
Ilit ltw ot iction, which wu for-
QUESTION! ANO ANtWIRI
MT.R.: "WUl diathermy treat-
meat cure severe inflimmitlon of
tht fallopian tubei or oviduettf If
so, tpprozlmtttly over whtt period
of timt, It diathtrmy trettmenti
art not idvlubk, whtt ihould be
done tnd ovtr whtt period ot tune?
Aniwer— Diathtrmy it frequently i vtry lucceuful trtttmtnt of
Inflamed fallopian Wbtt. When Uie
condition doei not reipond lo dti
thtrmy, tt ctn bt treated by in
optrtUon. I would say that die
thermy treatment ihould be con
tinued for it ltut six months.
Actress Works lo
Keep Figure
If yeu waat tht etndid opinion
at Mrt. Loloant Flynn, toy woman
who neglect! to gtt ner figure btck
within t couplt of monthi after 'he
baby'i arrival kt "iuit plain luy
tnd thtrt ii nt «cum ftr hir"
At yoa Bty know, ktn. flynn u
tht volttilt tnd very beiutlful
Uii Dtmitt. Sht ii tlto tht mother
of in Ingratiating young perion the
ctlli "thonny"—wnich it Johnny
with tn tcsenv After Ihe young
man made hit advent into thu
world lhe went on t diet and,
won u htr doctor givt tkt word,
tbt took txerclau every dty,
There trt not miny mothen with
/t*r-«!d youagilm who havt
meuuieaeati Uki hen: butt, Mf
.nchet; wrnltt, Hi* lacon. hipt, M
It
Js* tut*, mm m
.oot, eke would ht thia tee sot
oaly weight 10) poundi tn Mr
atifbt of tt*e tttt two inchu.
Bar choict ot food tl tweUent.
Sho drlnki • quart ot mUk a day,
loves vegetablu, proton mem
routed rather thtn fried, tnd
tanks eggi tie ibout Ust belt
thing! anyone cin ttt. Tht sugar
rationing bo ther i btr* aet t whit—
she never usei tt
Her beiuty tip u to lie down for
• while tvery ifternoon with ptdi
of cotton soaked la lotion ovtr tht
tytt, and to utt plenty of ict wtttr
on tht tttt tnd thrott ifttr deeming. But whtt ikt thinki moit
womtn nted It mort txtrciit, especially tht kind Uitt mako for •
■lim walat and trim hlpi
Wm m * ■ —"       t iiiV— wil  *m swwww
iSlftlALSTMY I, ADIIAIDI HUMfHIIU
Child's Daily Nap |YOU ARE THE ONE
Is Important
Training Vines
lo Save Space
By DEAN HALLIDAY
Miny vlnei ind climbing vegetablu need to bt lupported ind
trained ln i manner which will tike
u little spice •• poulblt tnd yet
not entail too much work.
77?
wmt Clip molds
• U4HT wlitfHT VINE
Training vine! ht victory
gardeni
Al Illustrated In Ule Oardtn-
Griph, piptr cllpi when optned oul
lengthwise make excellent lupports
for lightweight vines. One can work
quickly and easily with them and
the clips can be used many times.
For hetvy vlnei, iuch as gripes,
dewberry and boylenberry canei,
large hookl art advisable. These
can be kept from ont year to another.
Using hookl of thli kind ll especially idvtntagtoui In the extreme
northern lectloni al the entire vine
can easily be loosened, Uid down
and covered for winter.
ffi
I* there a ipeclal mtn In your
life or Ii It your ambition to be
all round popular I -Either way,
you'd better play tafe about
dilnilnrm. Don't risk nndie odor.
Evtry night, ioon ai you take
your undies off, dip them in Lux.
A diily dip prevent! odor — keepe
undies fruh ahd new-looking —
keeps you dtlnty. So join the diily
dlpperi todayl
d.K_
0mP
* LEVER i-hoiiii(.i
■y Oirey Cltvtlind Myen, Pn. D.
Young chUdrtn ihould tlwayi
havt afternoon nipi. During Uta
preunt emergency ttkt tfttrnooo
rett period It mort Importut than
tvtr before. It will render tht tot
len prone to fean tnd will ilio pvt
bit mothtr more time.
Any Uttle child can be trained
to take a nay regularly if ch after-
noon^ though not aU partntt lucceed hi getting him to do io.
Sucee* It cultivating tbt cooperation of thi llttlt child dtptndi
oo many factota, chiefly tht degree
of cooperation woo trom him in
scorei ot othtr situitioni up to now;
111 on hli gentrtl health, ippetm.
and lletji at night; on how regularly
hi U fed tnd put to bed by night
or dty, b«w tttlgued or excited hi
It it mp tlmt, er bow ixciuoii
or lU-controUod ii mothtr or nuru.
Stt tbtt your tot li not too wttry
or excited tt nip Umt. Try to gtt
him off to btd in i hippy mood.
SOLVING PAMNT PROBLIMS
Q.  My  lix-jetr-old dtughtir  U
ilwiyi teuing htr baby brother.
A. Suspect jeilouiy u the chief
ciuse.  Writt mt  tn ctrt ot thii
ptptr,   enclosing   •   lelf-iddreued
tnvelope with i thrtt cent item?
on lt and aik for my ipeclal bulletin
on Jealouiy.
KASLO
OH .PTIR TIN . Ung.   1 can't believe it sometime!
■Cintliwedl when 1 find myielf wty up thtre
It madt you klad of light-headed. m the tky, tht world btlow to tor-
KIMBERLEY
KIMBERLEY, B. C,-The home of
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Miller, was the
scene of a pretty wedding on June
12, when Muriel Irene, second
diughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
E. f\. Miller was united in marriage
to John Ademek of Kimberley. The
ceremony was performed by Rev.
T. E. Roullton before the fireplace
banked with white and mauve 11-
lacs.
The bride wore a beige afternoon
dress with brown accessories, and
carried a bouquet of putel gladioli;
Mlis Violet Miller, was her sisler's
only attendant chose a gold crepe
afternoon dress with blue accessories, and a corsage of pink and
white carnations. N. Dufresne was
belt man. Following the ceremony
the wedding supper was served.
Tht table laid for twenty guests
was centred with a three-tiered
wedding cake. Mr. and Mrs. Ademek left for a honeymoon at Water-
ton Lakes, on their return they will
reside in Kimberley.*
Mr. and Mrs. J. Reva spent Sunday at Sinclair Hot Springs.
Mra. Harry Paterson and daughter
Lorraine and Norma Fay of Pittsburgh, P., are guests of Mrs. Patterson's parents. Mr. and Mri. J. Scott.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Johnston left
for Fernie Where they were called
by the illness of the later's niece,
Miss Katherine Shaw.
Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Mathleson ot
Calgiry are guests of Mr. and Mrs.
H. M. Moll.
Mn. B. H. Blentley and Mrs. R.
Beck left to attend the annual ses-
"After the Baby Comes" la tn
appropriate title for the tableau
above posed by dynamic LIU Da-
mita, mother of a year-old boy. The
figure-regaining exercliei depleted, of the itretch ind bend viriity
can be done t few monthi ifttr the
bjby arrlvei, with the doctor'! per
mission.
KASLO, B. C.-Mr. tnd Mn. Aitrid Robert! tnd mall ton of TraU
ire vltltlng the former'i pirenti,
Mr. tnd Mn. W. J. Roberta.
Mn. I. H. Morphlt of Shutty
Bench ipent the weekend ln Nel
ton.
Mr. tad Mn. Uric Aldeui tnd
children, Betty rnd Ruth, hivt
returned from Cilgiry, whtre they
vUlted Mn. Aldoul' mother for
two weeki.
Mra. M. Stevenion iptnt Frldiy
ln Nelion.
Mn. Lloyd Helmer tnd dtughtir
Jo Ann of PoUon, Mont., ltft tor
their homt ifttr iptndlng three
weeki with Mn. Helmtr'i sister,
Miss Olive Link, rt Mirror Likt.
Mr. tnd Mn. E. W. MiiktU havt
moved Into Uie Moore home. Mr.
Mukell, who U from Cranbrook,
hu been adde dto Uie P. Burni'
staff.
The Girl Guides enjoyed a weiner
roait on the beach Wednesday nlfht,
celebrating tht winding up of thtir
work unUl Fill. Mn. Welllntgon,
Ciptaln, md Mn. t. Beiecker,
lieutenant, ltd the girli In t singsong around the bonfire.
at Batterful wty Ji.. Courtwright
bad ot managing thlngi and people
ahd ilttutioni. At ltut Tibby Mt
confuted  tnd  tmprtned  ud tort
of quaky.
Sho wu io lurprUtd he had even
remembered her. It hid been weeki
lince thtt dty In bit offiet whtn
iht had thought iht would Ion htr
Job. Sht wonefcred now thit lhe
bid dared be u independent, uying ihe had not thought tttt dt-
itrvtd to be diamiued. She wondered that ht could recti! tru htr
uae.
She did not reiliie thit It had
beu i new experience, from io
many viried onu, for him to in-
eountor t girl, or anyone for thtt
mittir, who htd dtred My whrt
■hi thought. New experttncei wire
too ran In t lift to crammed tnd
ovtrflowlng n Wiyne Courtwrlght'a
to bt overlooked or forgotten Hi
hid not forgotten this girl, or Uie
thlngi lhe had win, or the wiy the
htd looked He hid intended looking hir up, hid he not run into her
accidentally ltke thU, although an
accidtntal encounter wu mort to
hU Uking.
She looked Just as he recalled.
Very youpg, with none of youth's
loveliness rubbed oft not oven at
the edges. Very nitunl, without
the tllghteit suspicion of artificial
ity. Very iweet—and desirable-
yet somehow itrong. Ue hid admired her courage tblt diy. Ht
wu u excellent ,Ju<fge of chtrac-
ter, ti well u of true buuty.
Kt really would htvt liked to
hivt known whit her thoughts hid
bttn, to hive mide htr io ibiorbed
tnd removed from her surroundings
to htve given her tace that lighted
look, her eyei thit soft radiance.
But he die not aik her again, Ht
htd uld he would net, Instead, he
iald, "Tell me, how in thingi going? Are you still enthused with
your position as stewardess? Does
flying still mem so much to you
Everything Indeed?" He repeited
her own words.
Sht htd wondered whit they
would find to talk about. ThU would
not bt difficult—It givt a common
ground. She said. "Oh, yet—It'i
■Ull Just as wonderful, Just u thril
ELKO
lloni of the Grand Chapter O.E.S
at Vancouvef.
Mr. and Mrs. R. Makepeace left
Wednesday for Vancouver.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Eskog were Sunday visitors at Sinclair Springs.
Miss Pearl Dolson returned home
after spending a vacation at the
Coast.
'One Piece of Rubber
q Day' Slogan
fer Rubber Drive
WILLOW POINT, B. C—The pu
pils of the Willow Point School held
a very energetic and successful rubber salvage campaign.
All ot the pupils, Ray Hamilton,
George Bing, John Bing, .Michael
Worsfold, Duncap Hamilton, Mary
Bing, Marlon Learmonth, Joy Bennett. Jean Hamilton. Helen Bing
nnd Fred Heddle brought one pieco
of rubber for each day of the month,
uf May. The rubber was taken to
town by truck.
CASTLEGAR
CASTLEGAR, B. C.-Mlsi Norma Peterson returned home from
Trail-Trdanac  Hospital  Thursday.
Miss Mary Alexander and Mlis
Pearl Dami were Trail viiiton on
Thursday.
Mri. J. Towniend li i patient in
Trail-Tadanac Hospital.
Mrs. Thiel and Miss Bonny Thiel
vlflted Trail Thursday.
Miss Eva Peterson is a patient
in the Trail Hospital.
Mrs. Thomas and George Thomas
iof Kinnaird visited Trail Thursday.
Mrs. F. Woodrow and daughters
Beverley Ann and Elaine visited
Kinnaird Thursday.
Miss Beatrice Dams was a vUitor to Nelson Wednesday.
ribly tiny, ao unimportant. That'i
part tf it, I gueu To took dew*
on it aU and reeitit how nui] tt
cu be. How maU ivtrything itin relation to flying, hiving wlngi
—thit something ioiidt you thtt U
separate, iptrt—tomihow blfgei
youmlf, I iuppo|i  oy your toul*
Shl Itopped. imued once mott
thtt tt* would dirt speak thui to
him, I nu lha scarcely kntw. Htr
tnntrmott thoughti, htr heart al
molt.
Ttt Iht kntw, initinawtly, thit
flying rnunt it much to him. Ht
hid btu oot of tht-flrtt mu to
seek wlngi, one of thi old-Umtn,
Un trail Mum. Not thit Mr
Courtwright wu old. Ht muit be
ll his thirtlu. Ht htd ntt needed
traiU to blt=t Which mitnt bt, too,
htd tilt thm thingi.
"Tu, thit'i Ihi wty It U," hi
uid. Hi undtntood. Ht did not
think It strange to ipeik ont'i loul
"For iome, that is Only i choien
few, perhapi." HU eyei imiled
deeply into hen, something they did
not da tully. which mide • momtiu
ipirt whtn thty did. "I kntw you
would ful that wty. I'm gUd. Tell
me." He ltanad forward aerou the
UtUe ttblt, "Would you like to
ltgrn to fly—by youmlf, I mtu?
So that you'd reilly bt ilont—up
there—looking down on this imtll
and insignificant—and beautiful —
world?"
Tiby guped. Would iht like It—
when Uitt really htd bun htr moit
cherished tnd secret dream ot ill
When ihe bad never dired think
about iuch • poulbility, contenting
henelf with coming u elon u ihe
could in her petition •■ hosteu in
a ihip. although the had Juit been
thinking thit sometimes drums did
comt trut. But not thli ont sure,
ly.   Not so unexpectedly.   Ro tdop
"Would I like It?" How Intdt-
uitt wordi wtrtl Sht did not nttd
thtm, not with thtt shining look ln
her eyes, her tremulous breith. "ltl
like it more than inything In Ult
world."
(Tt Bt Contlnuid)
Slocan Brandies
[Raise $511 In
Red Cross Drive
SLOCAN OTT, B. C.-A tuU *t
JOTUD wu rund In tbt reeul Bid
Crou fintnct ctmptlgn by the vari***
out Sloctn branches. Tht lndlvlduil contribution wort:
Ntw Dtnvir flM.M, Huottrl
Siding I1MI, Roiebery |7 00. Sudon OM, Zincton Minu |M, SUverton lUMt, Perr; Siding tltlt,
Attpltdili MIO, Wlplaw fli. Vaill-
cw til, (loou City |M.M.
Tht Balkan state of Montenegro
Is Inhibited by 228,000 cltlieni,
moitly Slavi of Uie- Greek church.
Plinu tiki in their food from UM
soil oily in liquid form, ihtntoro
• pltntlful sujyjly of witer U htlp-
ful When waterlog U neeemry,
glvt t thorough sotktng, followed
by cultivating whu the soil is dry
not wtter tbe plinti
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi.il
-guild B   C P'venlll"
HAS THI
NATURAL
flavor:
"AU my diys I hivt beu *
Judgt of fltvor," writu Mri.
B. H. "ud Ptcific MUk hu It,
tht nituril fltvor. Not everyone U i Judgt of good thlngi
to ttt; iomt no judgt tt aU,
do not ivu know good from
bad. But depend upon lt, Pacific
Milk hu whtt ill irt looking
tor—tht natural flavor."
Pacific Milk
Irradiated and Vaouum Packed
iiHiiiiiiiiniiimiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin
Summer squash often are neglected in small gardens due to lack of
space but the bush varieties require very little room and are exceptionally prolific producers.
2i\b*LLpt
cHouAmvivcA.
By BETSY NEWMAN
ELKO, B. C—Mr. tnd Mn. a,
Todhunter vUlted Fernie.
J. A. Grtdy vUlted Fernie.
Sgt. Cliff Uphill tnd H. Uphill
vUlted Elko on Thuridiy.
Mr. and Mn. F. Swanion vUlted
Fernie.
J. Hockley of Kimberley viilted
his family here.
Mr. and Mrs. R. LUter, Mra. Ondy
ind Donald and Mn. J. Stokei motored to Fernie during the week.
The Elko Khool children held
their picnic at Bock Creek Sunday.
Ice cream and lemonade! were
served. Softball and racu wtrt en-
Joyed.
Mrs. J. Hockley and children left
Elko on Friday for Cranbrook to
reside.
MUs Mildred Sheridan Is spending a few days in Cranbrook.
Miu Davis wai a Cranbrook
visitor.
Mrs. Vanderburg and famUy were
Fernie shoppers.
Mrs. G- Todhunter and children
and W. Wilson were Fernie ihoppen.
Mrs. C. Ingham and children motored to Fernie on Sunday.
J. stokes, J. Swope, L. DtvU, bicycled to Fernie Saturday.
J. Swope 1* spending t few dtyi
ln Elko.
Mrs. Cooper Is visiUng her husband who U with the'home guard.
1. STORE-
GROUND
FRESHNESS
*__■•
Salads are good for us, we all
know. With our sugar ration low
and a doubt in our minds concerning the availability of other sweetening agents,, we will more and
more serve fresh fruit salads and
fruit cups for desserts. Very little
sweetening of any kind is needed in
fruit salad dressings, and we can
learn to take our fruit cups straight.
Wonder how
JODAY'SMENU
Broiled Chops     Scalloped Potatoes
Green Beans Pickles
Fresh Fruit Cup or  Salnd
Tea
COOKED SALAD DRESSING
1 egg, 2 tablespoons sugar, Hi teaspoons salt, 2 teaspoons dry mus-
vlnegar, *\ cup corn salad oil, 1 cup
tard, 1-8 teaspoon paprika, Vi cup
water, 4 tablespoons cornstarch.
Combine ill lngredlenta exeept
water and cornstarch ln large mixing bowl. Stir only until well
blended. Mix '/. cup water with
cornstarch in saucepan, then add remaining water, and cook, stirring
constantly until thick and clear
Add hot cornstarch mixture to ln-
gredients in mixing bowl and beat
briskly with rotary egg beater (or
electric mixer). Cool before serving
Makes 2 cupi of dressing.
FRENCH  DRESSING
1 tablespoon lemon Juice, 3 table
spoons salad oil,  Vs. teaspoon salt,
Vs teaspoon pepper, 1 slice onion.
Put slice, of onion Into bottom of
bottle or Jar, pour in rest oMngre-
dients and shake thoroughly
Enough for 4 salads.
CREAM SALAD  DRESSING
Yolk 5 eggs, 5 tablespoons vine
gar, 1 teaspoon butter, Mi teaspoon
salt, v4 teaspoon dry mustard. Vi
teaspoon pepper, juice Vi lemon
tablespoon sugar, Vi pint whipping
cream.
Beat egg yolks until thick. Put
vinegar and sugar on to boll, add
yolks and stir quickly until of cui<
tard-like consistency, then take
trom fire and add butter tnd sea
■onlngs. Put in refrigerator. When
serving, whip cream and stir Into
the dressing, or add sufficient dress
ing to the cream and mix with sal*
ad Ingredients. This dreuing, with
out the cream, will keep for some
time In the refrigerator.
NeW under-etrm
Cream Deodorant
"fib
Stops Perspiration
To make lute you get
Airway uven-fresh,
it'i hurried in the bean direct to joat
grocer. Ftethnai it protected nature'i
way. Aod no mitter what type coffee
mikeiyou uie, Airtfiy is tlw»f« ground
right. That'i 1 big help in mtking ftcth
satisfying coffee... but that'i only one
of Airway'i three advantagei.
><Vfc
2. GUARANTEED
QUALITY
The most imDortint il
quality! And Airwiy
hti ic. Tiy it younelf. See w(itt 1 choice
mellow-mild coffee it reilly is. TJie
type of blend preferred by millions.
Delicious! Puil-fliTored! Gloriouily
frwh. Gutrintee it? Indeed we do.
Your coffee money cunot buy «
Wtter, fteiher mellow-mild blend.
That'i the iecond big idvtntgge.
1. Doei not rot dreuei or ment
shins. Doei not iriiuie Skin.
2. No wsiting to dry. Cir be
used right liter shiving. .
t. Iniuntlr nop! penpirtdon
for 1 m 3 dayt. Removes odor
from penpiration.
4. A pare, white, gretieleii,
uunleu Ttnlihiog cretm.
5- Airid his beep twirded the
Approval SeiloftlieAmeiicin
Institute of laundering for
Mm hirmleis to ftbrict.
Anld U th* 1MOUT RLLDra
DEODORANT, Try a Ju tbdayl
ARRID
,.,   .„    Altllilitti|i>Mliltniil
ftftm (•i.oi_,is*..as_*0"_)
SOLD BY
SAFEWAY
STORES, LTD.
3. WORTH-WHILE
SAVINGS
liitly, you'U seldom
find a gvurinteed-
quality coffee costing
to little. But Airway*
system of controlled distribution ind
thrifty btg, mytt you miny 1 penny.
Let the fiMv "untple" Aitwiy now
.todty. Unless they thoroughly enjoy in ovin freshness, famous flivor,
I led economy, it costs you nothing I
^u..
Airway coffee
.     .
.	
 	
 'V.J
COOL
FOR SPORTS
HOPSACKINC
PUY SHOES
Coel, colorful pliy ihoei!
Bveryoni tl wild ibout their
cuual comfortl Gtt youn in
yeur favorite itylt today!
R. Andrew
& co.
Leaden in Footfashion
NILUN DAILY KIWI  NILMN. %. C.-TL'I»0*V MOHItlM**. JUM *
Regulations  for
Rationing System
16 Raised by
nior High
lor War Eflort
A total ot falfl.M wu railed Sal-
rday by toe Junior High School
kg bay, tba ichool wir effort In
Id ot bombed children tnd imokti
IT loldien.
Thl teacher committet in ehtrgt
tcluded Miu Enid Etter, conven-
lin.  Mom  Meaghtr,  Norman
wanm and D. G. Chamberlain.
The student committti consisted
Herbert Pltte, convener, Laurie
duiltone ind Liwrence Webiter.
Thetaggcri were:
Roie Ludwig, Loulie Santor, Edith
ugties, Fiy Johniton, Peggy Smith,
tilne Radcliffe, Join Hunter, Rhett
lelien,  Carmen  Fletcher,   Either
rodle, Peggy Wood, Lola Whimiter,
ib Boitock, Ronald Jarrett, David
wnsend,   Arthur   do   Glrolamo,
McKay, Jouph Staplei, Elaine
[rr,   Dolorei   Smith,    Elaine
tl, Kathleen Radcliffe, Haiti
acCotmlck, Mary Jaremko, Den-
Colman, John Burni, Mildred
yck, Jtm Swan, Pit Hunttr, Huti
m,   Laurlt   Johniton,   Jamei
, Kathle Paddon, Grace Sttw-
V Pearl Hickey, Nlnt Pattenon,
ilrley McDonald, Vivian Hall, Rel-
Imlth, Ann Stefanac, Join Nagle,
ley McCoihtm, Douglai Ab-
r, William PosUethwaite, Doug-
Smlih, Roy Langill, Frieda Mania
Int Nelion, Joyce Peicud, Mar-
Klein, Leille Holmei, Miry
Rtrai,  Join  Donaldion,  Joyct
tittheid, Richard Lawrence, Wil-
deRldder, Margaret  Qentlea,
OTTAWA June U iCPI-lag-
ulationi governing uit of veutbtri
let lugar purehaiu by mduitriel
uteri, public cetertre/and initltu-
tioni under ritiontBg reguliUoni
itarting July 1 were innounced ty
I!** Wtrtimt Prittt tnd Trtdt
Beard.
Ttt* vouchtr putchiit aMthod
ilio ippliw tar otficul purchuu
tt iugir tor tht irmid forcti aad
intra amounu uud by individual
eoiuumen tor homt pruervun.
RiUUtrt obtaining vatiehera
through thatt channel! muit turn
them la to the Botrd, along wtth
comumer couponi lurrtndtrtd by
individual!, when obtaining further suppliei trom wholeulen.
Industrial useri, public caterers
and institutions, the lugar order
ten out, muat regiiter with the
Board and ntme their proipecttvt
lupplier.
"No person may lawfully Mil
iugir to men io cluiifitd unltu
thty ire nglittrtd ind htvt named
the teller u their lupplier," tht
ordtr provide!. "The litter muit
alio obtain from iuch purchuirs
i completed purchue vouchtr."
Purchase! by tht Munition! tnd
Supply Department tor tht trmtd
forcti ilio require completion ol
the voucher formi. Llcenied merchant! miy tell iugir to conjumin
for home preterving "upon receiving t properly-completed voucher
ind ilgning the ipplicitlon." When
reflnen tell to wholeulen or re-
tilleri thty must obttin t completed wholeule purchaie certificitt.
Regulationi governing wit ef
■ugtr to beekeeptri, lumber operator!, conitruction tnd mining
campi and for ship's itorei ire
alio preicribed.
"Provincial apiarlala, on receipt
of detailed Information from,applicant! u to the number of coloniea of beea, determine the minimum quantity of augar needed,
which the beekeeper li then entitled to purchase during the quarter ending Sept. 30, 1942," the Board
Uid.
Limitation of Induitrlil uteri to
70 per cent of the quantity of
lugar med in t the corrupondlng
quarter of IMl, previously anounced, appliei to operaton at conitruction ind mining camps, ves
.J.  0.  Piteaaafc.  Ctrbeette i retimed lewder aigki tmm VeH-
'riiini i ii 111 ii i ii im
SLIPS
1 crtpt or utin bin cut, white
and tea-roae. Siie 32 to 40.
91.95
ASHION FIRST LTD.
L" " "»M " " i n 111 u
H It li on tht ilr t
C. E. RADIO
Will fit It
IELSON ELECTRIC CO.
Colorful Cottons
$3.95 and up
(lilady's Fashion Shop
REMOVAL NOTICE
H. SUTHERLAND
Jeweler
Moved to 4S1 Baker St.
Next L.D. Cafe
aell,  ind  to   employer!  of   foreit weeki or longer.
worken uaku they regular with
the Baud ts the "inaututiee" tlai-
iificition, ia which me as/ %*_•***
will ipply with tha Sugar Admin-
ittrator miy lis for membm of
the Canadian Lumbermen'! Alloc -
ittion tad Cantdian Pulp in* Paptr Aieociation.
Ivery iptutor ot cooitruiUon
aad minmg turpi who iup»li«
meeli te hii worken mut ipply
ler regiatretioa u optraior of in
Iwtitution.
In tht uu of I veutl optrtted
ey a rttidmt ol Canada, tba tp-
eritor ami apply for nguirttion
in tbt "inuitution" citegory aad '*
bound by the reguliUoni, ejoept
that amount of lugar uied for iny
voyige li not to exceed TO per cent
at the amount which would normally be purchased tnd med.
Where a vtwtl u operated by i
non-reiidtnt ot Cantdt, tht ruident igent muit apply for rtgi-
itrtuon Thu nelion appliei only
to merchant veueli Optrtted fur
commerciil purpoiei.
Sugar uied on fiihlng veueli u
alio lubject to tht 70 pt*** ctnt limitation, but a fuhtrman miy Uke
on board and mt my iugir which
hi ll entitled to purchau ll I con-
lumtr, in iddition to tny thtt may
be lupplled by the operitor of the
veuel.
The TO per cent quota Impoied
upon indmtrial men doei not includt lugar uied ln manufacture
lor exporti within tht Empirt, Hte
mtnufictun ol producti (or the
defence departmenti, Munition tnd
Supply or Red Crou, or In tht manufacture ol product! tor canteens
and meuei, barucki tnd dockyard!, ligned tar by in officer In
tuthorlty.
No industrial uter la permitted
to export to other than Empire
countriei • qutntity of any product
In which augar or iwtttentd eon-
dented milk wu med, in exceu of
70 per cent of the total exported
during the quarter ot 1941.
Although hilitutioni—and certain tmploytri permitted to regiiter u iuch—make their lugar
purchuti by voucher, thty ara to
collect couponi trom tht ntlon
carda of all reildenti tnd forwird
them it leaat once a month to the
neareit offiet of tht Board. A per
son la deemed to bt i "resident" ot
an Inititute on raiding there two
NEWONSOOALto Sub Peppers
Military Area on
the Oregon Coast
Street, bed at weekend guett hli
nephew  aod niece,  Mr. ud Mn.
Idmond  Pattoaud-  tnd  tstir  II-
yetr-old wa Pat o." Htltoa, Um-,
wht havt mtatft
* Mn Walk* QUlelle it I **■
tieat is Keetasay Use Oeatial
Kaaaittl bUowmg mi tptttuaa lar
appendiilUa.
e Mri. John Chiraotl aad beby
bey hare lait Kooiinty Uka Qt»-
enl Hoipital ter U»tu keen at
Creaeent Vallay
e Mra. thm*** X Jtaeejekn
aad baby, Reefer Iwatt, ttn* it-
turned treat Idaiantoa wktrt (My
vliited Mn. Jeonijehai ttrtati,
Mr. and Mn. MaaWde, lar a taw
wttki.
HONORED IY IHOWI*
Saturday   titeraoea   Triaiiy
couver waate bt mmt te detent*
w He 10 0. tmtMmm tat *m
tpteiated  Oread  W»rdee  a  **t
Monster Parade, Drumhead Service
to Open Army Week In Nelson
Nelson will open Army Week
with a monster paradt Irem the
biiatneei notion to Lakeilde Ptrk,
•nd a drumhead nrvice at the
Park next Sunday. Arrangements
wert completed Monday afternoon
at a meeting tt tht Armory. Mtyor
N. C. Stibbs preiided.
C. B. Garland and 0. A. Hoover
were named to organize thl parade. Arrangementi for the drumhead nrvict were pliced ln the
handi ot tht Nelion MinUter*! Fraternity, headed by Rev. J. G. Holmu. Lt. C. H. Hamilton will hive
charge of the'military arrangement.
Fire Chief McDonald will arrange
a public addreu system.
It Ii anticipated tha paradt will
include the Vettrtna Guard, Tie
Nelion Platoon of Rooky Moua
tain Rangers; Ntlion Detachment
of thi Cinidlan Women'i Training
Corpi, Canidlan Ltglon members
and ex-service men; ScouU and the
Girl Guldu; A.R.P. penonnel, high
and junior high tchool cadett, and
other patriotic societies, lodges and
■o on.
Kokanee Chapter I.O.D.E., Nelion
branch of the Red Crou and the
Nelion Women'a Auxiliary to the
Active Forcei irt expected to be
represented it the lervioe, though
pouibly not in the parade.
place ef Tea snd Coffee
arve K.V. Chocolate Milk
Jtenay Valley Dairy
Hazel MacLeod, John Glover, Fred
Brett, Vernon Hall, ■ Ronald Wtrd,
Fanny Ford, Irene Linen, Ruth Conrad, Roberta Marshall, Lucille Hin-
kel, Irene Freed, 'Mary Bodoaruk,
Kathleen Kane, Patricia Birkbeck,
Edith Hughei, Gordon Fleming, Bill
Horner, Gloria MacKay, Nora Gormley, Bernice Hale, Batty Jones, Eleanor Vulcano, Luba Torosoff, Bernice
Boneterud, Aileen Cathers, Alice
Robison, Dorothy Zubick, Rose
Ramsden, Francei Turner, Elaine
Langstaffe, Ann Hamilton, Mary
Timmons, Eleanor Kennedy, John
Bums, Dennis Colman, Ethelwyn
Crossley, Doreen Nelson, Roslna
Magllo, Margaret MacLeod, June
Fraser, Ruth Burge, Allan Corbett,
Alex Trickett, Mildred Parker, Marjorie Irving, Jerry McAvinn, Robert
Waulck, John Hopwood, Stanley
Trlggs, George Turner, Richard Radcliffe, Kenneth Chapman, John Morris, Alice Stasyn, Meriaro Armstrong,
Ivy Cote, Carol Fetterley, Glenyi
Manseil, Gordon Buchanan, Howard
Wilbur, Mary Donaldion, Bernice
Burgeu,   John   Holmee,   Desmond
____&,!
1:15 p.m.
TUESDAYS,
THURSDAYS
ii your timt for tht
"Carnation Bouquet"
of
Plttling Songi — Inspiring Music
—A Programme You'll Enjoy
Mayne, Kathleen Wilion, Dolorei
Ward, Shirley Goodman, Irene Wlie,
Helen Kcmani, Joiephine Caliguire.
Bayi' choir mtt at the homi of Mn
Robert Todd when Mtat Amelia
Hanna waa honor mttt tad waa
prtttnttd with a dainty n'ver butter duh. Jimmy Todd made tha pit-
wntttion. Mn. D. D. Tawaitad and ^^ Q,n,m Ho»»lUI
Mn. Ktnaedy of Runlind, luuttd. ho., ,, u^^ n^t.
t   Miu Shirley ltrnt. *m***t**.
wtat u umtaa nmtat a Mn.
teaay Use Oeeertl ***._ a mn-
uig»i t*t, bat rtturatd te ter beat*
oa Matty Uriel
* Mr aad Mit. J A. lUyatan
•nd eta AUa* el Kflttn Hi keu.
dayiag ti Um ****** it tin, Uy.
meet talker. V, PlWWUl. Q*t*m
load, where Utay ilea te ttm*
t ttw wees*
t Mia. Mslcol* Utti** *H baar
dmghttr ttn ttlt *teltety UM
Geatrtl MetpiMI ler *tir horn ll
Willtw Petal.
t W. Kleha tf Wetaa OtU ww
In lews yetterdty kiting retvaed
it the weekend ft* Vtateuver
wben bt attended Ike read ledge
ot the l.Q.Q-t, toavtatien,
t Mn. Koocbia ot lata* flatted
Neina yutardiy
a   Mit Iniee Ireadloet tad kar
baer daua>lee bin Ml Keeteney
their
Thott ttttndlnj intludtd Juk Wai
lach, Jimmy and J«k To^d, Tep-
my Pagdin, Uonaia Brown, Dtvld
Tow mind, Clydl Fleming. Den
Kettlewell, Arnold Kennedy, Keith
Buchanan, Billy Goggin aad Douglu I-iglt.
t Mn. Ptttr Chtrninkett kt*
lttt Koottnty Ukt Oeeeral Hoipiul lor har home it Crucent Villty
SPEND   LEAVE  HERE
t Mr. tnd Mn. G. Stuart Mclntoih, Silica Street, hive u gutiti
Lac. W. Wingatt tnd Ac. 1 W. Dyk-
er, of tht RAP., Cilgiry, who pltn
to ipend a watk'l furlough ln Nelson.
e Dr, L. Wrineh and hi* daughter Mary ot Roulind wtrt city
visitors Sundiy.
t Muttr Lorne Freno ttlthrattd
hli fourth birthdiy Sunday atternoon at tht homo ot hli mother,
Mri. Louli Freno, whtn t hugt
birthdiy cakt flunked by pink md
whltt tapen centred thl ttl table.
Lome's guuti Included gtrl Caitle-
berry and Alict Cattetberry ot Wallace, Idaho, Louise ind Louit Aurelio of Moose Jaw, Detn and Donald
Mclnnei, Ida Catenate!, Jouphlne
Ctteniecl, Jtaa Batata, TrtU. De-
lorta Ann McLellan, Mirjorie leu,
Victor Blilkowiki, Lorraine Frino,
Billy Freno and L. Freno.
HONORED AT FAREWELL
e Tha home of Mr. and Mri.
G. C, Arneion, Stanley Strehl, wu
I hippy actnt Sundty night, Hit
Occulon being in informil farewell to three memberi at Iba Trinity nnlor choir—Mlu Amelia Hinna receiving 11-t of I lilvtr mounted pit plate, on the occuion ol
htr approaching marriage to Bain
McBride. Mn. Jick Flttchtr tnd
Mn. Jamei Johnson, who are anticipating leaving Ntlion ihortly.
Among than ittending wtrt lev.
and Mn. a. 0, Boothroyd, Mn,
E. M. Fleury, Mn. Johnion, Mr,
ind Mn. A. A. Pagdin, Mr, and
Mn, S. C. Couch, Mr. and Mra. Arthur Stringer, Mr. tnd Mn. B. Low-
try, .Ir. ind Mn. J. Fletcher, Mill
Hanna, Mn. L. Hanna, Mill Dally
Norrli, Mr. md Mn.M J. Stall-
wood, Mri. Grant ot Cilgary, Mlu
No Damage to Fort Stevens But Shells Came
"Too Domnad Closa" Says O.C;
Farm House Had Close Call
-*aoi mp
FREEMAN
fUtNITUMCa
the Ham el HirWhire tejue*
ttm Ul Itite*
BUY YOUI FURNITUM
ONOU*
BUDCIT
PUN
e Mn Ruih Lunn, Stanlty Siritt.
had ai wttktnd guut bar ion
Oterga ei IML
>ETURNINO TO COAST
a Mr. McTelr, formerly et Ntlton, »ew »1 VtMiVTtT, whe vlttwa
TnU it Iht wttktnd wlU bt in
NeUon tn routt homt.
t Mn. Erie Obti tad btby bor
hive lttt Koottnty Lake Oeneral
Hoipital for their homt op Stanley
Street
• Mri. Nyi of Smdon vlllttd
Nelion yuttrdty
t Mrt. McDearmid of Shetp
Creek It t city viiltor having cowi
to attend the Pythlin lUttn githtr.
ing lut evening.
a Oa tba occulon al hti uvinth
birthday Donald Latihlty eatertaia-
td a law frlendi it tht ktaae ol hta
pannta, Br. aad Mra. Wilfrid Latin-
lty, Third Strtet Hli gueiti Included Jimmy Morrii, Donild Mo-
Rory, Wirren Swinion, Hirviy
Fltury, Keith Stalntop, Donald Marquii, Jick Marquii. jack Brummitt.
Rolliy Dirough, Bud Darough,
Frank Minhili md Gtrry and Teddy Anniblt.
Lillian Dickson, Mr. ind Mn. D. D.
Townsend,   MUi   Muriel  Weather.' (JA■Q|IJ PARTY
head, Mr. and Mn. J. Rym,   Mn. pmgajj,\erne
ENTERTAINMENT
Evans Wasson Is
to Go on
Active Service
Evans Wasson of Vancouver, son
of Mr. and Mri W. E. Wasson of
Nelson, will leave his post as Ciiy
Prosecutor for Vancouver to go
on active service with the 2nd Battalion Irish Fusiliers (VR), which
he holds the rank of acting captain.
Mr. Wasson, born ln Nelson, in
1905, wu educated at the University of British Columbia and Ot-
goodt HaU, Toronto, and wai called to the bar in 1928.
He aerved with the legal firm of
Raid, Wallbridge, Gibson It Sutton
before going to police headquarters
ai assistant prosecutor In 1937. Hs
was made proiecutor when Oscar
Orr went on active service in 1941,
Mr. Wauon wu -ommiuionod
In the Irish Fuiilie***! (Reserve) two
yean ago.
The god of dreami, Morpheus,
obtained hli name from the word
"Molder"— because he molda the
vision! of sleepers.
m— RllllVW HQHTHIY—>
FEMALE PAIN
Women -who luner pain of Irregulir
parlo^i with crank; nurvouiniii—
due to monthly functional disturbance!— iliould And Lydia X- Pink-
ham'! Vinltbli Compound Tablt la
(with added Iron) vtry eteettve tt
relieve iuch dlitnn.
Sbliti madt especially
la build up reilitdnM ai
fftalES.?nW0»
Jamet Spenctr, Mr. md Mn. O.
Stuart Mclntoih, Dr. and Mri. N. R.
Jennejohn, Mr. and Mn. W. R. Mc-
Candlish, Mr. and Mn. Rota Fleming, Oordon Allan, Mr. and Mn.
W. Kennedy, Mr. and Mn. C. M.
Young, Mln Alice Clark apd Mr.
and Mrs. Arneaon.
e Mn. Charlei King and her Infant ion left Kootenay Lake Oeneral
Hospital Sunday for their home, 310
Carbonate Street,
RETURNS FROM COAST
i   J R. Hunter, Kerr Apirtmenti
RCAF Casualties
OTTAWA, Juni 11 (CP)- The
Royal Canadian Air Parte In lta
297th euuilty Hit ot the war today
reported Ave men mining after
flying operatloni oveneu md ont
kllltd on ictlve itrvict In Ctntdt.
Following li thl latest Hit at
cuuiltiei:
Mining after flying tptrttlonr—
Flniham, Wllllim Edwird, Sgt.. Verdun, Quebec; Honychurch, Chtrlti
CyrU. Sgt., Toronto; Syktl, Edwin,
Edwird, Sgt., Chicigo; Tnurntr,
Jetn Albert Mtn, Igt., Hurdman'i
Bridge, Ont; WaUon, Idwird Belmd, Ac, Hamilton.
Previouily nported mining, bow
tor official purpoiei primmed deid
-MacKay, Jamu Garfield, Sgt., Ottawt.
Killed on totlve itrvict In Cinida—Wilion, Gordon Oswild, Lac,
Queensland, AuitnUa.
Died In Canada-McCaghey, Harold Abraham, Fit. Lt, Ancaiter, Ont.
tlAIKjr. Ort, m** U (AP)
-At Itltl tint trtjtttllit frem
e  lutmtrini  ptpptrtd  tht  Ptrt
Heveat military tne. Nertk tf
thii Picific Oeeen unit ttwa ttr
■aprexlmitily is minutu bum-
ala| it 11:30 p. m. latt nlfht. Tht
tart It Juit South ef tbt Columbil llvtr'i mouth.
Iht aaaU ituck md exploded hi
t pitttlnlly deserted betlk utt
ttnttlnlng but ftw houiu ind did
ae dimige to military eiubliih-
neati, InittUttitni or tt prlvf.i
proptrly There were aa cisuiltiii
but one lamily hid i doit call.
Om ihell fell netr i road laiding
trom Dtlaura Beach to the Fort
ind nude i enter about five lttt
In dlamtttr in t iwimp. FrigmtnU
wtn lound by mean! of which Ihe
kind md ilit ot tht projectile could
bt Identified.
One fngment iheared oft tht
two-hich limb of t tree ind penetrated to half ltl thickness Uit 18-
ineh trunk of tha tree.
Tht ihell came from I Wtittfly
(ilmoit Southwtsttrly) dirtctlon
tnd from tht Umt the tint ihots
wert fired until tht lut tht attacking crift either proceeded or drifted
ibout thrtt n\Uei, Army obierven
■tld. It wu several mllei oft ihore.
Col. Ctrl S. Doney, Commanding
Officer at the Columbli Harbor
Deltnoei, laid the fragmenti indlctted the projectllea were fivt-
Inohiri ind ibout 19 lnchei long,
weighing about 60 poundi.
AU told nlnt ihelli wtrt fired
tnd moit of the cnteri hivt been
{ound. When asked how close to
tht military reservation they landed, Col Doney laid: "Too damned
close."
Col. Doniy iald patrol plinei
wint up ttrly thli morning tnd
t combined lurfice tnd ilr lurch
for tht lubmarlne wu being
prined todiy,
CoL  Doney  uld  lt wu known
definitely the shelli came frpm a
submersible but that is wai impossible to tell whit kind of • iub
from tht fragment! unearthed io
far. Prom Ihe aoundi they created
the Colonel described the ihelli is
of "high velocity and flat trajectory."
SOLDIERS SLEEP
Tht ittack found the military
reservation on the alert but many I
ot the soldiers not only admitted'
duifuUy  tbey   bid  iltpt  througl
:ht ihelllng.
Ruident! of Aitorii md tkt
Octan Baack retort communltiu
took tbt ihelllng la itridi tad com
•ldtrtd It lomething ot t lark, bui
not the Jean Heffling farm ftmily.
Mrt. Heffling tdmltted "I wu
•cored tp death." Her huibtnd
uid--! tried to liugh lt -tt, but
I WU icared too." the reaion—
•hllli palled low, not over 100
yards from their house and struck
only about 500 yards away. However 10-year-old Keith Heffling
slept through It all, Hli Uttlt iliter, Donni Jem, I, becime fright,
ened ind fell out of bed.
HEARD II TO II SHOTS
ASTORIA, Ore., June 22 (AP)—
Shelling it let awakened hundred!
of reildenti of Astoria md lurrounding communltlei lata lait
night, tmong them Robert Lucas,
Aulciata Editor at the Aitoriin
Budget.
Lucai uid the sound ot the gunfire came between 11:30 ind 11:49
p. m„ p.D.T.
"I tiurr'cd upstairs to hivt I
look toward the iea,"*he continued,
"ind heird from II to 19 shod.
The ihelli itemed to be landing
■omtwhere with a great thud, but
I couldn't ttll what the objective
wai.
"I don't know whither they win
aimed at tht land er at iome target
at na."
Lucu lurned thit many of hli
acquaintance! In Astoria and nearby towni alio were awakened by
tht definitions. Ht wu .idviied
that ruldents in Hammond md
Warrenton,  Weit   of  Astorii  near
ibt mouth of tht Columbia liver,
alao hurd the gut fire, md that
peraeat la the vitiaity tt SeaiWe.
ea Ike oteta groqt South of the
Columbia, tt* fleahea ot Ught frees
a gun tr guaa,
Tht thellfire ww hetrd ever I*
wtt ot ip»to»lmitily M milet en-
tindhig frott Seaside, M milea from
the Columbia, lo Uwaco, Waah., on
tke North hank tl tbt rlvtr.
NEIGHBORLY NIWS
LAUDS NEUON
JUNIOR UO CROSS
Iff oru a| tkt Junior ltd Croit tt
tbt Ntlson High School wtrt landed by Earle Kelly Sunday In kit
well-known Neighborly Ntwi bread-
cut. The innuil nport ef Ibe
groups' ictivititi wtt carried lagt
wtek lo the NtUon Dally Ntwt.
dtt.
WAR]
SAVINGS
STAMPS
ARMY WEEK
Final irrangement! are being
made for tha gala garden fete to be
held Fridiy by St. Piul'i WA. at
the ipecloui home anjj garden! of
Mr. and Mrs. r. a. Peeblei, The
proceed! are to be donited toward
the genenl repair and decorating
of St. Paul's manse.
There la te bt a ttt tnd bake
ule, and amusing gimei auch u
bagatelle, putting, rumpus room
games and many others.
Ort Jhn Out
TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1942
CKLN AND 2:(»rMtHif by Bovtro
CBC PROGRAMMES
MORNING
7:4»—0 Cmada
TM-Morning Serenade  (CKLN)
8:00—CBC Newi
8:19—Swttt Hour of Priytr
8:30—Front Lint Ftmily
8:49—Texu Jim Robertion
9:00—BBC Newi
9:19-Conctrt  Timt   (CKLN)
9:49—Brtakfait it Sardl'i
0:59—Tlmt Signil
10:00—Brad Reynoldi, Songi
10:19—Song of Yesteryear (CKLN)
10:80—Hawaiian Paradln  (CKLN)
10:«—Morning Visit
11:00—Strictly Rhythm
11:19—Bttwttn tht Booktndi
!l:30-"Soldier'i Wife"
11:49—Sons by Jack Baker
AFTERNOON
12:00—B. C. Farm Broadcast
11:29—Thi Notice Board (CKLN)
I2:80-CBC Newi
12:45—Tht BtUadeer
1:1)0—Interlude
1_08—Talk
1:15 -'('urnntinn   ISouquet'  (CKLN)
1:31)—Club Matinee
1*
JUNE 29 - JULY 5
Pon't miu thlp grand opportunity
to ue our very efficient Array In
action and te pay a well-deserved
tribute to our gallant men
gnd women In khaki.
SALADA TEA COMPANY
OF  CANADA, LIMITID
,f;.t 1 *.'.' i p^mmmmmm, * *	
**■■-■ *■■■■- -y
■
2:30—Fiedler Conduct!
2:45-Thrca lukl Trio
,1:00-The Western Five
3:19—Joie   Bethancourt   and   Hli
Orchestra.
3:30-Wlihart Campbell ilngi
3:49-B0<? Ntwi
4:00—Let Swtttlmd Songi
4:15-Piano Recital
4:3fr-Htrb Taylor'l Orch.
4:49—"Booki and fihowi"
5:0O~Nawi  Commmtary
5:05—Addreu   by   Hon.   Adelard
Godbout
5:30—Blended Rhytbra
EVENING
8:0fM_JH_N'8 Variety Hour
6:45-Meet tha Band (CKLN)
7:00—CBC Ntwi
7:19—Summer Strlngi
7:49-Muter Works ol the Pianoforte
8:15-"Newbrldge'1
8:30-BBC Radio Ntwirttl
•:00—TflU^f Tlmt
9:30—Britain Ipeakl
»:45-"Al I Matter of Fact"
tO:00-CPC NtWl
J0:19-r-Senlor Olympic eholr
10:49—Harry Jamu 'ereraatra
UiOO-Ood Save tke King
Here's a tip for
sit-down workers...
Sitting all day at a detk or work
table doein't give much chance for
healthy exercise. So guard agalnat
the headachy, heavy feeling that so
often meant Incomplete diminution. Take those two itept
to health: (1) To gel well, tee your
doctor; (2) to keep well, watch your
ttablte. Make ture elimination ia
complete, but thun harah ca-
thartict! Get enough "bulk" In yow
diet to keep the food waatee moving
promptly. Start every morning with,
a bowl of crunchy Kellogg'a Bran
Flakei With Other Parte Of Wheat.
Gently laxative, they help supply
valuable minerali and proteins, too.
And they're eo freth and crlip, to
tiellclnut. you'U want them every
day! Look for Kellogg'a Bran Flakee
|n the golden yellow package. Comet
In two convenient siies. And when
you breakfaat put, order the intU-
liducil package wtth the Inner,
waxtitk, eealed bag. Made by
Kellogg's in London, Canada.
to the end of a wirt ta thete wartime mtfttt •_
picnic I can't aflord -alowdowne' ami dull, Unless daya. | hare
to keep fit) So here'i my message to every 'e|t-dpwn' worker:
do at I ilo, get plenty of hulk In your diet, eat a big bowlful of
Kellogg'i Bten Flakea every day In the year. They're mildly
laxative, and there'a nothing Uke their crisp flavour te atart
the day right."
KEEP FIT
WITH
Txms
evetgday
in the year/
■
 NILMN DAILY NIWI NILMN t C-TUtSOAY MORNINC JUNI tt. rf-
Hrlmm iailg Sfrma ? ? Questions ? ?,
ANSWERS
btaUta-hed AprU 8. tm.
Britith Columbia*t
Mut Jtttrttting Ntvtpaptr
Publlihtd tvtry morning except Sunday by
tha NIWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITID Xt Bakar St. Ntlton. Brltlth Columbia.
MEMBER OF THI CANADIAN PRISS AND
THI AUDIT BUBIAU OF CIRCULATIONS
TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 1942
The Battle to Conquer
Gangrene
A green-Upa test which in »n adapted form may help the army aurgeon
who has to decide whether or not to
amputate a frown or gangrenous foot
to gave a soldier's Ufe was demonstrated by Dr. Kurt Lange and Dr. Linn J.
Boyd at the New York Medical College, Flower and Fifth Avenue HospiUl.
The test is made with the dye, fluorescein, which gives off a greenish-yellow color under ultra-violet light. By
Injecting the dye into a vein of the arm
and shining an ultra-violet lamp on the
patient's lips the doctor can tell how
fast the blood is flowing through the
patient's body by the speed with which
his lips turn green. The test is made in
a slightly darkened room.
In some cases, such as gangrene and
Incarcerated intestines, it is important for the doctor to know whether
any blood is getting through to the
Uck part of the body. Successful adaptation of the green-lips test, originally
devised by Dr. Lange and Dr. E. Woll-
heim in Germany, for these other conditions, is now reported by Dr. Lange
and Dr. Boyd in the current issue of
the Medical Clinics of North America.
The dye is safe, inexpensive and
easily.available, it is pointed out.
In testing speed of blood flow, the
green lips showed that in normal
grown-ups, the blood circulation time
ls fifteen to twenty seconds. Patients
with heart disease had circulation
times varying from twenty to sixty-
eight seconds. Those with overactive thyroid glands had a\ery short
circulation time, seven to ten seconds,
while those with underactive thyroids
had a prolonged circulation time of
twenty-one to thiry-four seconds.
'  Beat the Quota
It must have been with a deep sense
of satisfaction that E. E. L. Dewdney
and his Nelson and District Red Crosa
campaign workers found that the quota
toward which they were working had
been exceeded by about $2000. When
this campaign was announced and it
became known that the quota for Nelson and district had been established
at $15,000 there was some surprise at
the size of the figure. The quota appeared to be high. There were quite
natural fears that it could not be
reached.
But the patriotism and the resources of tho district, together with
splendid work by the various members
of the committees who took part in the
canvass and organization, resulted in
a total of $16,903. It is a performance
of which everyone concerned has reason to be proud.
Optn tt my rttdtr. Ntmtt tf ptrttnt uking
ginttltni will Mt kt publlihtd.
Bttdtr, Mlchtl—Whtt waa tht data ot tba
mint dltaatar at Moott Rlvtr la Nova Scotia? It tha mint ttlll operating?
Tha Mooie River Oold Mint cavt-ln occurred on AprU 12, ItM. On AprU JJ, it 12:30 am,
Dr. D. E. Robertion and Alfred Sciddlng wtr*
brought to tht lurfice. You might tpply to
tht offices ot Mooie River Minet, Llmlttd, 20
Sufford Street West, Roxburj, Mua, for information u to pruent development!,
I N. Rouland—Caa you teU me If it li true
that cancer la curabla?
Yei, if It li dlicovered lufficlently tarly
and prompt meaturu ara taken to trut IL A
comblnaUon of X-rayi, radium and mrgtry trt
the methodi employed, varying ln each cue.
B. F. McD.. Trail—I hava glvtn t mthogany
deik one coit of mthogany-colored penetrating wtx. I wiih to get t finiih of t wtx
niture. Whtt ii my next procedure?
Polish with two thin coati of 1 piste wtx;
when dry ttch coit muit bt weU nibbed.
F. L., Kailo—How cm copper ind othtr kindi
of wire icreeni be'preserved when not ln
uie?
After cleming, coat with mixture of two
pirti of good spar varnish md one ptrt ttch
linseed oil tnd turpentine.
Looking Backward
10 YEARS  AGO
(From Dtlly Newi, June 23, 1932)
Roy Green and William Hendron of Kaslo
left to ipend several days ln Gerrard.
Nelson Amateur Athletic Association will
sponsor the formation of a Junior Olympic
Club in Nelson, according to A. Wallach and
Tony Banks, who have the matter in hand.
Harvey L. Fyfe, alderman of Slocan City,
was in Nelson Wednesday.
25 YEARS AGO
(From Dally Newi, June 23, 1917)
R. Dill of Saskatoon, brother of A. J. and
H. E. Dill of Nelson, made 46 out of a possible
50 at the Nelson Gun Club shoot.
A. B. Curtis, Taghum rancher, says that
the deer are so plentiful and bold in tbe district that they are eating the cabbage on his
property.
J. W. Orr and John Sherblnln are about
ready to commence timMr cutting operations
near Ymir.
40 YEAR8 AGO
(From Dally Newi, June 23, 1902)
W. S. Doyle of Slocan junction, hai secured the contract for supplying the Arlington
mine with timbtr.
G. A. Hunter and family of Nelson moved
yesterday to Balfour for the Summer.
Words of Wisdom
God divided men Inlo men, that Ihey might
help each other.—Seneca.
Press Comment
MR.   ILSLEY'S   RIGHTEOUS   ANGER
Not often li Camda'i Finance Minliter
itirred out of hli cuitomary lerenlty, but he
hid good reaion, ind plenty of IL for the iharp
reply idminlitered to the 'Rev. T. C. Douglai,
C.CF. member for Weyburn, Suk., ln the
Houie on Mondiy. Thli Mr. Douglu li t Baptlit Minliter, highly educated and endowed
with natural ttlenti as wtll, but on Ult lubject
qf liquor tnd beer coniumpUon he lecki tppreclitlon of reilltlei. He would hive the Dominion Government restrict the liquor tnd beer
business in time of war, apparently forgetting
that thli ll not t Fedenl function, tnd forgetting alio the dtsmtl experience of thli country
and the United Statei when he and thoie who
think with him had their way ln the lut war.
Most amaiing of all was his protest on Monday against large shipments of Canadian beer
to Libya for the use of Uie troopi who are defending him and his family and hii congregation under the ippilling condltioni of deiert
wirfire. It wis thii that rouied Mr. Ilsley'i
Ire tnd Uie Mlnliter would have been leu
than a man if he had held hli punch.
Thii ls what the Finance Miniater laid:
"When you think of what the forces of" the Empire ire going through In Libya, a tropical
country where It is very hard to get the right
kind of water, or any water; when you think
of the deaths men die who are taking part ln
tank warfare, I think a good many persons
here ln Canada who are making sarcastic remarks about the sending of beer to soldiers ln
Libya could better employed." Better employed They ought to be ashamed. Of courie Canadian beer Is going to the soldiers ln Libya,
a lot of It, and the more the better. Thii li
one ot the services which Canadian industry is
able to render and does render In this war.
Has the reverend member for Weyburn forgotten his Bible—his Exodus? He must have
read sometime during his period of scriptural
study that the children of Israel, ln their long
desert pilgrimage, complained bitterly to
Moses .demanding to know why he had
brought them up out of Egypt "to kill ua and
our children and our cattle with thirst?" There
followed the miracle of the water from the
rock.
Unfortuantely, no military commissariat
would be justified in permitting British soldiers to go into the Libyan desert relying upon
a miraculous provision of water. It is possible
to suply them with Canadian beer, and that
is being done, and Canadians ought to be
thankful that their country ls able to meet an
urgent, even an essential need. Beer is a mild,
thirst-quenching and strengthening drink. It
is out of the hard liquor class. It is not an intoxicant, certainly as doled out to an army in
the field. Does the Rev. T. C. Douglas, M.P,
ever pause lo think what the men of Uiat army
are enduring, day by day, night by night.
Week after week—those of them that survive?
The Finance Minister, with comemndable
finality, refuses absolutely to allow Federal
interference in what is a provincial responsibility, control of the sale of liquor and beer. 11
the provinces, he says, are incapable of discharging that responsibility, "then they are incapable, of taking that share In the war effort
which I think they are capable of taking." If
provincial control is not more rigid it ls because public sentiment does not favor increased restrictions. Mr. llsley presumes this to be
so, and correctly. Furthermore, his own figures
reveal only a very slight Increase in consumption. Nor should it be forgotten that the liquor
and beer Industry in Canada is making a heavy
financial contribution to the national war ef-
.fort through taxation. As shown by Mr. llsley,
that taxation has been inrceased 75 per cent
on spirits and 100 per cent on malt since the
beginning of the war. The tax on wine has
risen from 15 cents to 40 cents a gallon. These
levies have increased the war revenue. They
cannot be said to have facilitated liquor and
beer consumption. They represent all that the
Federal Government ought to do In this direction, and all, as the Finance Minister made
plain on Monday, that lt ls prepared to do.
—Montreal Gazette.
Qun Sights in
Place of Medals
A saw automatic wttpoa which Britain
la producing la hugt quantitlu la gtttlng tach
wttk JO.00O gun-alghta tad JOjOOO othar parti
trom a factory In South London which In pttct
timt unt million! ot Coronation md Jubilee
medtli all ovtr tht Domlnloni.
At tlrtt tht production ot tht ntw wttpos
wu htld up by a ihorttgt ot txtrudtd ban
af miM itatl trom which tha parti wait cut
ind machined Into ihipt. Whan tha medal
maken wtrt called in. thay demonitrited
how thty could itamp out tha parts ln exactly tba tame way u thty hid produced med-
tit tlnct ISM, uilng ordlntry itripi ot mild
ittel. which It tully obtainable.
It wu a victory tor old aatabUihad crafta-
minshlp over man production machintry.
Tht medil maken wtrt glvtn I contract it
onct. Thty irt now doing thit prectilon work
mort ipeedlly thm tnyont else, with three.
thoutandthi of m inch u thtlr neireit mtrgln
ot* error, md t production "bottleneck" hu
been completely wiped out.
Unskilled libor cm bt tnined to thl job
In ■ ftw houn. Somt of tht worktn trt glrli
not ytt It yean old.
Tht ftctory ilso maku lti own gaugct.
At tht momtnt tht only mtdtla thty in itrlking trt Um rColx dt Guerre tnd tht Medtlllt
Millttirt for tht Fret Frnch Forci ln Britiln.
They trt tiso mtking t large ihield ln Iron ind
illver which the Fret Pollih Govtrnmtnt li
preuntlng to tht Brlttih Forcei.
In puce Umt they madt diu for tha
colni of muy countriu ln South America
md for China and Slam. Thty htvt ilso itruck
medala for mmy of tha world'i turned iocle-
tltt, Including tht Roytl Acidemy md tht
Hudson'i Bty Compiny. Tht ion of Uit pruent principtl arranged the dlei of the flnt two
D.F.C.'t—awarded to Hawker ind Grieve ln
the lut wtr.
"From lack of moral itrength empires fall.
Right alone Is irresistible, permanent, eternal."
—Mary Baker Eddy.
"Know yet not, thit to whom ye yield
yourselves servtnti to obey, his wrvants yt
are to whom ye obey whether of sin unto
death, or of obedience unto righteousness?"
—The Bible.
Today's Horoscope
You are an enthusiastic planner, you who
have a birthday today, but sad to say you lack
the persistence and concentration neceuary
to bring thoie plans to a happy conclusion.
Practice application. Succeu and recognition
through the arti, writings and In review! are
presaged for you during the next year. Gain
will also come from *other sources, which may,
perhapi, be accompanied by some annoyance.
The child who ii born on this date wtll be
fortunate in muilc, art and literature. The disposition if thli child will be kind and hospitable, but liable to imposition.
Test Yourself      War—25 Years Ago
1. Where did Patrick Henry make his famous "Liberty or Death" speech?
2. What State does not give its governor
the power to veto a legislative act?
3. What nation produced the first porcelain?
June 23,1917—British liner Mongolia iunk
by mine off Bombay. Congresi of Soldien and
Workmen at Petrogrid called for dlisolutlon
of tbe Duma. Runlan troopi repulsed Turkish
attacki at several polnti on the Caucasus front.
TEST ANSWERS
St. John's Episcopal Church, Richmond,
North Carolina.
China.
Etiquette Hints
When drinks are paued by your hostess,
If you don't care for them, just say, "No, 1
thank you," and let It go at lhat.
	
British Women
Internees
A British woman recenUy returned to
Englind hu given details of lift ln the Bti-
mcon Internment camp, to which moit of Uie
British women ln Frince were lent by order
of the Germtni.
The Germani ln their hatt decreed everyone a Britiih woman who hid my connection
whatever with Britain. Thui hundredi of women who did not ipeak a word of English,
w.lvei of British subjects, were Interned,
among them widows of British subjects whose
husbands had been detd for yeirs.
About a hundred French soldiers did the
hetvy work of the cimp. From timt to time
ont of them would disappear. One who wu
ln chirge of the camp radio disappeared.because he had been accused of listening to tht
British broadcasts of the B.B.C. Another wai
accuied of spreading Communiit propaganda.
All theie men were anxloui for the time to
come to fight again and be revenged on their
Germm masters.
People In the town took a great lntereit ln
the "British martyrs," as they called them.
"Some ot the women became godmother! to
ui," iald the ex-Internee, "and they brought
us delicaclu, often depriving themselvei to
do io."
Workmen who came to the camp to make
repairs brought ui newi of the outer world.
They all listened to the B.B.C. In iplte of every
threat. At other timei, French women paued
near the barbed wire and gave messages of
hope and encouragement to the Internees, even
at times taking (.rent risks and throwing us
notes containing the latest Important news,
which they had picked up from the B.B.C.
Gems of Thought
MORAL STRENGTH
"In conduct do not riake trifles of trifles.
Regard the smallest action as being either
right or wrong, and make a conscience of little
thing."—Spurgeon.
"Those love ruth best who to themselves
are true, And what they dare to dream of,
dare to do."—Lowell.
"I am not bound to win, but I am bound
to be true. I am not bound to succeed, but I
am bound to live up to the light I have."—Lin-
coin.
TODAY'S News
SLIND WOMAN  IS
WAR WORKER
BUnd for X yean, Mlu Made-
lelne D. Brooki, M, hu tiken her
pltct ln tht United Stttei wtr
effort, being employed ti in Inipector on tlmt fuit partt. Her
work li u good is that ot any ot
her co-workeri, uyi her employer. Alwiyi with her li Verona, her
leelng-eye dog.
WHERE JAPS SEEKING STEPPING-STONES TO NORTH AMERICA
Japan's first attempt to seize strategic outposts in the Western Hemisphere has
been centred on remote parts of the Aleutian Islands. Landings have been made on tha
tiny islands of Kiska and Attu. Top photo shows the village of Attu on Attu Island, a
small collection of structures with the Russian orthodox church the main building.
Below is Unalaska, on which the Dutch Harbor naval and air base is situated, as seen
from an American patrol vessel. i*.,__g____u_. -dut Y-.
SHOPPING FOR THE GENERAL
Mrs. Douglas MacArhur, wife of Gen. MacArthur,
who is the United Nations' commander-in-chief in the
Southwest Pacific after his gallant defence of Bataan,
goes shopping in a Melbourne, Australia, department
store. She escaped Bataan with her husband and) their
yonng son.
HE SWEPT COLLEGE HONORS TOO
Here is Isadore Goldstein, 23, a New York street
cleaner, who graduated from Brooklyn college recently,
with Magna Cum Laude honors and a graduate scholarship. Isadore has been married one month. He worked
days and studied nights to achieve his high scholastic
standing.
NETHERLANDS FLIERS DRILL ON U. S. FIELDS
Some of the several hundred young Netherlands' men beiqg given basic and advanced raining as airmen at the U. S. army base in Jackson, Min., shown on the
march beside the planes they soon hope to fly. Six months from now this base Will be
sending out fully-equipped Dutch pilots, bombardiers, gunners and observers.
YAHK YOUJH IN R.C.A.r.
George Nedelec of Yahk Is lei
ing witn the R.C.A.F.
'	
iMiiifc mi
ii<-ti_.iM*-M_l*'**^iii______»iit_to^
 -—NIUON DAILV NIW*. NILMN. I &-TUMOAY MORNINC JUNI IS. »•-
1^\
■NU UViK ■
"North Wind Blows Warm, Christmas
Comes In Summer/' R. W. Haooen
Tells Rotary (Iub ol Nelson, N.Z.-
As Imaginary trip from Nelaon.
Britiih Columbia to Ntlton, Nev
Zealand, wu conducted Monday By ,
•V W. Haggen of Roultnd whtn he
eddremd tte Rotary Club at ttl
luncheon.
Born ln New letlind, Mr. Higgen wai ible to gtve I vivid account of tht country, ltt cUmttt
and people. Suggesting thtt in imag-
tnlry trip be taken to Niw Ztaland
to arrive than ai Chriitmu, Mr
Higgen ducribed tbt ocetn trip,
beginning it Vincouver in prt-wtr
dtyt, tnd ifttr a week it set, tr-
tiring it Honolulu, "one of the
beiuty ipoti of Uit world."
"Wa ipend I diy there tnd thtn
proceed on our way untU we arrive
It tbe FIJI Iilandi, which tre certainly not a white man'i pandit*—
] another tour dayt at Ma and we at
lltt reach Auckland, the commercial capital of New Zealand, limited on ttt But cout
"Wt trt now In a country hiving
Ilmoit tht tun climate u wt have
bom Ban Diego to Nelton, ind
pontaing nrnt of tht finer, mountain rtnget to tht wolld."
CROI8INQ NIW XIALANO
Deecriblng tht trip by train trom
Auckland to the Wett cout, the
ipetker rtftrred to ttt tuned Maori regtttu whert tomt of tne
Breitett aoquatlc tuti, etpeclilly
ttl etnot hurdle rtcei, are per-
fcnned.
TrtrtUlng through thi grut
Jfatrylng country Is neceuary be-
■fore Wellington, Uie capital city
It Naw Zealand, li reecfled", he
glid. "It weU may be called Uie
Windy dty, ilnct lt li lituated nttr
In extremely rough piece ot water.
"When we arrive at Nelion by
tntr on the night before Christ-
we wtkt up Chriitmu mora-
to bur tht birdi ilnglng—tor
y kind ot Engliih long bird li
d in New Zealand. Thtrt it no
r tnd no lot. Insteid thtre It a
•t of ripe trult, eipeclillj In thl
ftlton ViUey. Ntlion, New Zealand
ttl greatest Jam making centre
tte Southern Hemisphere."
Mr. Higgen  told the hiitory of
I Urly settlement ot Nelion. There
record of a luncheon attended
white men tn 194»-but ttey it-
ided It In.the capacity ot thp mtln
HIM.
m1\l* m_ttli   compired the  two
■HM.
Th* Nelton  ot New Zetland,"
DOMINION
DAY—
WlDNESOAyjULVl
SPECIAL FARES
P4fW99fl   AH  MMMM  HI   vlM(M
■^■+*******Ar
ONE WAY FARE
md ONE-QUARTER
FOR ROUND TRIP
(Mlnlam Fm He)
**********
OOINO,
Fnm Junt )0 to 1 p.m. July I
incept where no train m vice on
une 30, ticket, will be nld for
une 29).
RETURNING
Letvedtetinttionuntil midnight,
Thunday, July 2 (attest if ne
train lervice, July 2, ticket! will
ht good on fint tvtiltble tram).
tat l.formation fnm A.y Attn.
ht uid. . ibout twlct tbt tin md
population ot ttll city—thi Ntw
Zealand city ta lituated oo tht iea.
whereu thu city u in intend tows,
limited on t lakt. Tbt mountiini
tvtr thert trt higher tnd Uie ctty
ii between two rtngu ind li con-
muently sheltered from the Eut
tnd Wttt Windi. .
"They htvt Chriitmai ln midium-
mer. Tbe North wind there ll tht
warm ont. Ntw Zttltnden drivt
thtir cut oo tht -wrong aide'.
"Your Nelion it named atter Hon.
Hugh Nelaon, one of the urly lieutenant governon ot Britiih Columbia. Nelion, N.Z., bu named lti main
Itreet. Trafalgar Street, tnd when
you look it soma of tht namet of
cltiei in New Zealand, Uke Marlboro, Blenheim and Wellington, you
can guett thtt Nelaon ll ntmed ifter
the greit Admiril Ntlion.
Tht Rottry Club of Ntlion drank
a tout to tbt Rottry Club of Ntlion, N.Z.. on iti 100th innlveniry;
I tout to the City of Ntlion, N.Z.;
md ont to the Domlnltn ot Ntw
Ztaland.
Gueiti it the luncheon Included
R. T. Blyth ot Roulind ind J. C.
Hughei of Vincouver.
Preildent J. R. McLenntn wai ln
tht chtir.
Par Nof Thriatmid
in Qualifying
Rounds at Kimbartay
KIMBERLIY. B. _ Junt B (CP)
—Par ID tor tte Kimberliy count
wu not tven thrwleoed te ttt
qualifying roundi of tte tilt tnnual
Crow*! Nut Pta Oolf Tourntmtnt
here, te which cooieetentt trom
Lethbridge, Blairmore, remit, ud
Crmbrook tnd Kimbtrley in ptr-
ticlpinte.
Low mtn were BUI Prentice, rer-
nii, wltt I areu of 14 md ntt of
TO and Hugo Mickle, Kimbtrley,
grou Tl tnd ntt TO. An unuiuil
fut et tbt Qualifying roundi wu
ttl ice Archit rtntey, Cncbrok.
mtdt on thi fifth holi tor I grouj
of M, net JO. Mn. P. B. Btrnum, of
Kimberley, hid, low ntt ud grou
for the ltdlu' nine-hole qualifier
witt M ind a.
ChurchUl Tells Stalin Allies to
Bring Enemies to Their Knees
LONDON, Junt H <CP)-A innu trom Prlmt MlnUttr ChurchUl to Jouph Suite on the tat
univemry ot thi Qtma invuion
nf Ruula uid today "the fighting
tlUinct ot our two countriei ud
of our otter ilUet, to whom then
hu now been Joined thl vut rt-
nurcu ot ttt United Stetu, wttt
surely bring our enemlu to thtlr
kneu."
"Yoa cu count on ut to t___J_rt
you by tvtry muni In our power,"
Ae Prime Mlnltter tdded.
Th* miutgt contained "• rt-
newed txprtulon ot our admir-
aUon  tor ttl magnificent
at your armed torcu, guerilla
bandi aod civilian worktn" ud
expreued $e conviction ttat "thou
achlvementt wUl be equalled ud
lurputed In tt* coming monthi."
Mt. ChurchUl tectUed ttat Britain uon would uter ber fourth
year ot Un war.
He told the Soviet Premier tte
Aaglo-Ruuteu 10-year pact reflected the progreuive itreogthening et
relitioni betweu tte two countriu
during ttt put yur lad uld:—
"Thit truty ti i pltdgt ttlt wt
ttall confound our enemlu ud
when tte war It over build i tun
puce for tU freedom-loving plop-
New Trophy Up
for Mixed
Golf on July I
On July 1 pity will get under
wiy In tte mixed foursomes com-
petltion ot the Nelaon Golf and
Country Club. Tail year lniteid of
the Smyth Shield, which hai been
up for competition for yeara, there
I* a new trophy. "The Reno Mine
Row owl", donated by S. E. Kills,
one of th* most enthusiutlc goUers
In tte district during the lut hilf
dozen yein. This trophy wu posted by Mr. Ellis lut FlU when the
need of ■ new one was made known,
and will take the place ot the Smyth
Shield. The former trophy hai been
removed from competition becauie
of the lick of space for more plaques
on IL
Play takea the form of two-ball
mixed foursome with three-eighths
of the differences of the combined
handicaps being allowed. Although
tht fixture card call! tor pliy to
■tart on June 28, pliy hu bun portioned tUl Dominion Say due to lag-"
gtng In the C.I.L. Cup, held up by
wet weather. An entry sheet hai
been poited In the clubhouse for
those washing to enter.
The Match Committee will draw
pirtnen for tU ilngle names poited.
Rodeo to Nark
Kimberley
Fete on July 1
KIMBERI-fY, B. C.-Plini ir*
neirlng completion for ont of ttl
lirgest Dominion Diy celebnUoni
ln Klmberley'i hiitory. Committee! are busy lining up t ltrgt ud
varied progrim.
The festivities will optn with I
big paradt from tht High School
through the busineu lection, on
to Llnduy Ptrk. R.MR.'s, Boy
Scout's Girl Guldor, decorated ctn,
flvt binds, clowni, fluts ud Indlani tnd cowboyi from tht mtin
tire diitrict wiu'be Uking part
The day'i program lncluei: fltg
railing ceremon;, kiddies free treat,
sports, swimming gala, loftball tourntmtnt, archer}, liwn bowling,
A.R.P. demonitrttion, hone ric
ing tnd in Indlm rodeo it night.
RODEO PLANNED
The rodeo li • new venture for
thli dlitrict It wlU be held Tuudty md Wednesdiy nighti u Uit
largeit Indoor rodeo ln the Kootenayi. Entrlu ire plUng up for
all eventi. Then will be wild cow
milking, bucking horses, ttetr rid*
ing, roping and all the eventi of •
real stampede.
The evening'will finiih up with
two dances it tte K.P. and I.O.O.F.
hall!.
BALL STANDINGS
Eleanor Dudley Medal
Winner in Women's
Western Coif Open
CHICAGO, June 22 (API-Eleanor Dudley of Chicago recorded the
day'i only par over the Elmhurst
Country Club today to take medalist honon ln the Women'i Western
open tournament and lead the 32
entrant! who will begin five days of
'match play tomorrow. Known is the
hardest hitter In women'i golfing
circles, the University of Alabama
graduate compiled a 37-39—76 and
no one ln the field of 120 fame near,
er than two strokes to catching her.
Dorothy Kirby of Atlanta, Ga.,
ahot a 41-37-78 md Phyllis Otto of
Omiha, Neb., turned in a 39-39—78
to tie for the runner-up position.
Betty Jameson of San Antonio,
Tex, leml-flnalist in 1941, was next
wltt 41-38—79, three over par.
SOLD
By Classified-Ad
FOR   SALE:   CRIB,   MATTRESS,
spring, chest of drawer!. Ph.	
IN ONE DAY
This Classified Ad
Sold All the Items
IF YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL
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——
_-__, .^....,-. :■_•. ,M._t_i__lil_mT\fo-l'ifatf.--,-------m------i
MAJOR LEAOUBS
No gamu tcheduled.
WESTERN INTER.
Vancouver          _	
Tacoma ...
Salem    , .».'
PACIFIC COAST
W   L   Pet.
M   23   Mf
3*3   18    WJ
as is mi
22   59    Ml
.... 48 11 .80S
44 32 .579
  48 M Mt
  38 38 .488
38 41 .481
87 40 .481
.... }5 47 .427
  28 48 .388
 41 24 .881
Lot Angelei ..—
Su Diego  	
SettUe        _..
Oakland      	
HoUywood   	
PorUand '.	
INTERNATIONAL
Jeney City   	
.... SS IS .878
Buffilo
38 27 .371
  31 35 .470
  32 38 .457
  30 3« .455
  37 S3 .450
TION
 87 23 .817
Syncuu    	
Toronto    _	
BalUmon   	
AMERICAN ASSOCIA
Milwaukee    -	
  38 28 .581
Japs Held ior Six
Days In
Rail Una Fight
CHUNGKING, June it (AP)-
Ifce High Commind Indicited todty tht Jiptneu htd bun held to
almoit no galna in ilx dayt of
fighting for the 80-mile central section ot the Cbeklang-Klangal nil-
way   which   remains   In   Chinut
Prairie, Troil Men
Leave for Army
TRAIL. B.C June B-H. Er-
metora ot Wmnifred. AIM, Uft Sundiy, ind T. C. M. Bud at TnU UA
Mondty tor Vmcouver to report it
thl Diitrtct Dipot tor activt nrvict
la tht Canadlm Army. Both man
war* tttuted it tht TraU recruiting
oltice.
R.C.A.F. Mobile
Party at
Kimberley Today
Beginning a recruiting tour Into
Sm Kooteoiy-Boundary, a Royal
CanadUn Air Force mobUt recruiting party from Calgary wUl be In
Kimberley today, and will tien
work Wutward to rOand Forki.
From Klmbtrlty tht ptrty wUl
nme to Nelion tor Thundiy tvtnlng tnd Frldiy. It will be it Grind
Forkt Junt 39; it TrtU Junt 30 tnd
July 1 tnd 3; tnd it Ftrnlt July 3.
A number ot ippllcinti for tn-
liitment In the Women'! DivUlon
of the RCAT htvt received no-
Ucei to tpptar befon the recruiting offlcen when they come to Nelton. It U anticipated a number of
High School graduatu will alto ippear for examination, at well ai
other young men ieeklng to enlist
ln tbe Air Force.
Two Craft May Have
Taken Part in Attack
on Estevan Station
MlraietpolU -  38 31 .537
LouUvllle     32 32 .500
Columbui     19 30 .492
InditnapolU   31 35 .470
St Ptul    27 3T .422
Toledo ,.... 2« 40 .394
A communique uld thtt Chlneu
troopt who were forced uide whtn
tbt Japanese imaihed through to
their idvinced positions htd cloied
lo on key pointi behind the Jip-
tnete llnu ln iharp threats to tht
Invader's communication! and supply iyttem.
Chlneu forcei were reported attacking Lungyu, on the rail line
Eait ot the Cheklang-Kiangal border, and assaulting Jipineu positions around the walled town ot
Chuhsien.
Heavy fighting alio was reported
going on in the hills* near Kwang-
feng on the rail line Just across the
border into Kltngil Province.
The art of photography wai perfected ln 1839 by • Frenchman
named Daguerr*.
Second Round of
Ul Golllo
End Wednesday
Nelson golfen for ttit moit ptrt
were well iway In,the iecond round
of the C.I.L. Cup Mondiy, and word
ctmt from the Oolf tnd Country
Club Mitch Committee thtt this
round muat be wound up by Wed-
ntsday evening.
The opening of the Cup tourney
lut week Introduced twUight tournament golf to Nelaon. Becauie ot
the rain the opening dragged, but
the first round waa about completed
Saturday, and second round play began.
Barrett Takes
Golf Sweep
Tht weekend drew a good entry
ln the Nelion Golf and Country
Club medal iweep. William Blr-
rctt, who placed second In lut
week'i rweep, itepped Into flnt
place with a net 66, even par. Barrett has an eight handicap. Walter
Walt drew second place with t net
70 to win one ball, while W. H.
Dunwoody carded a net 71 to win
a baU and W. A. Duckworth carded
a net 72 to win the last ball.
Other icoru poited were—V. C.
Owen, 75; Nelion Colville, 81; Cecil
Hughei, 86; Lenird Peerleu, 78;
Dr. W. Laishley 77.
Looking over the icorei afterward! the Match Committee felt thtt
iomt playen,' who ton up their
cards ln desperation it what they
thought was a poor icon, might hive
won a ball had they completed their
rounds. The larger the entry Uie
larger the "pot" In UiU event. The
weekend entry lUowed four prizei,
two bills for first pltce, ind thru
pri7.os ot one hall uch.
Whirlaway Forced
to Set Record
to Win "Workout"
NEW YORK, Junt 22 (AP)-
Whlrlaway hid to ut i new trick
record it Aqutduct todty to win
in ordlntry overnight net thtt
wu tuppoied to be Juit i workout ' "tlghtentr" for Siturdiy'i
Brooklyn htndlcip.
Under the unfamiliar handling of
Jockey Georgie Woolf, Whlrltwiy
came from fir bick as usual in tht
mlle-and-tn eighth test to come ln
Juat In front of Mn. Parker Corn-
lng'i Attention, who upsel Whirly
ln the Arlington clauie a year ago.
So fast did Warren Wright's Kentucky Cannon Bill htvt to trtvel to
pick up the $2275 winner'i pune
that he wai clocked In 1:49 2-8.
three-Mills of a second better than
the old trick mark.
South Africa Forces Stand Ready to
Defend Egypt Says Smuts
LONDON, Junt 22 (AP).-Gtn.
Jtn Christian, Smuts, Print Miniiter ot1 the Union of South Africa,
innounced I todty Uut, ilthoyfh
"substantial numbers" of South Afrlcin troopi wert ciptured it Tobruk, most of the force from South
Africa remained intact and ready to
help hold Egypt, the BBC uld.
"These unlti, together with the
reinforcementi which South Africi
will now provide, will phy i vital
ptrt ln the defence of Egypt ind ln
the ultimate wresting ot LibVt from
AxU control," BBC quoted Gen.
SmuU ii uying.
Another BBC broidcut said that
although AxU ihelllng of Tobruk
harbor mtde lt Impossible to embark troopi, tour supply ships escaped from the port during the
fight, uvlng their cargoes of wir
material
Tht broadcast quoted t dispatch
from Cairo thtt "Britiih, South African and Indian troops were strenuously engiged ln the work of dem-
oUUon, ind Uiey may have been
more successful In destroying stores
tnd equipment than might have
been expected considering the
shortness of fhe time at' their disposal."
McNaughton as
Chief of Second
Front Favored
LONDON, June 23 (CP Ctblt) ■-
Early edlUoni of London'i ifternoon ptpen todty givt front-page
display to a Wuhlngton dispatch
reporting that Lt.-Gen. A. O. L-
McNiughton U hetvily fivored
there to assume supreme command
of United Natloni forcu chirged
with opening t iecond front In
Europe.
The Standird rm the picture of
the Commander of Uie CanadUn
Army ln Britain under the caption
"the man for the new front?"
The Newi huded IU itory: "Second front chief."
The War Office declined to comment on the reporU.
By J. F. SANDERSON
WASHINGTON, June 22 <CP)-
Published reporU which lack any
official confirmation or backing
that Lt.-Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton,
Canadian Corpi Commander ln
Britain, U favored u Supreme
United Nation* Comander ln the
opening of a iecond European front
were called "highly tpeculative" to
day, -by Steve Early, President
Roosevelt's Secretary.
Churchill-Roosevelt Conferences
Continue Day and Night
WASHINGTON, June M (AP)-
Vltal conferencw bttween Prime
MinUter ChurchlU end Pruldent
Roosevelt were ducribed today by
the WhlU Home u progressing
day and night ln a "very satisfactory way" and It wu disclosed the
two United Nttlom leiden expected to Issue a Joint itatement
liter on.
They are conferring together and
with military, naval and air experU of both countriu.
Thli much wta revealed by Presidential Secretary  Stephen  Early.
But he had nothing to add on ipeciflc details ot the conferences,
iuch u whether the,two leaderi
were focusing their attenUon primarily on the question of opening
a second fighting front in Europe
or on pouible steps to stave off an
even more decisive defeit at the
hindi of the AxU Armlu ln North
Africa.
The itatement trom Early that
conferencu still Were continuing
wm the first word about the secret
deliberation! ot Uie Pruldent and
ChurchlU alnce the latter arrived
ln thU country Thursday.
Interpreting
The War News
By  KIRKE  L. SIMPSON    '
Auoclated Pnu Wir Analyst
One yetr ifter hU tint itttck
on Russia, Hitler'i war machine hu
revitalized IU mtrch Eutwird with
i stunning blow it Britain ln North
Africa ind wemi on the verge of
•httterlng RussUn resistance ln tht
Crimei.
Tobruk, Libyan outpoit for the
defence of Egypt,* hu gone down
Uke a houie of cardi, The Suei Canal link ln Britain'! life Unei is
more ominously menaced than ever.
Overnight, allied control of the
Eastern Mediterranean hai been
put in grave Jeopardy. The threat
to BritUh oil ruourcu tn the Middle Eut U real and no longer remote.
In the Crime* German clalmi to
have virtually overrun the defence!
ot sevutopol go all but denied by
Moicow. The faU ot that naval btu
•Mini Impending, probibly paving
the wty tor a Nui surge igainit Uie
Caucasus tnd IU ol) treiiures.
Thui t huge AxU vice U yawning ln the Eut to squeeze between
IU jaws a large part of the allied
oil resources, the moit vital necessity of modern war, Jipineu vlctoriu havt already itrlpped tht
United Natloni of the Nethertandt
Indiei and purine oU pooli. If the
Middle Eut tnd Caspian oil should
■lm be loit, the Weitern heml!-
phere wells would be practically
the only iource lett to power the
whole tilted wir effort.
Admittedly, thit represents
look at the gloomiest ilde ot the
war picture. It it making the wont
not the bett, of t bid situation; but
It muat form a background of the
conferencei between Pruldent Roo
uvelt tnd Prime Minister ChurchUl, out of which muit item moves
to revise the unhippy picture quick*
ly. Tobruk tnd Sevutopol, Import
ant u Uiey have proven to the allied cause in the past, ire not decis
Ive in a strategic sense. The main
battles In the Nail program ot closing it\ on Egypt and the Ciucuui
simultaneously tn itlll to bt
fought.
There are rumblings ln .London
of   utter   dissatisfaction   with   Uie
handling ot tht Llbym camptgn.
Calls for the return ot Mr. ChurchlU to face hli parliamentary critics
in voiced there. He obvlouily flett I new uprlsng at homt iuch as
followed Crete and Singipore.
For thl moment, howtvtr, both
Mr. Churchill ind President Roo
itvtlt muit bt mort conetrned
with military milium to offiet
tht  dtfttt  In  Llbyi thin  with
political repereussons at home or
•broid.
OTTAWA. Jun* B (CP)—O*-
fMW* MlnUUr Raltten uld tatty
In tht Heuu *f Cmiimm thit It
wu IndluU* tw* (Mmy crtft
tuk part I* thl Stturdiy ihillinj
•f Um ttevtrnment wireleu ind
tele graph itation et Ittavui
Paint et th* Wut uut tf Vm-
wuvir  litand.
0*1. Rtliton uld lOout IB *r
men thtlli wtn find it tht
ttttlen during tht Matte, in*
tht rat* of fin lnlle*t*d twe
cnfr wtn Invelvtd.
CoL Haitian uid furthir mformi-
tlon htd bun received from the
Commander-in-Chief, Weit cout
(Lt-Gen Kenneth Stuirt) In iddition to thtt contained m t lUta-
ment retailed lut nlghL
Tht ihelllng luted ibout 40 minutu but no dimige wu dont, tht
MinUter uld
Canadian naval and Air Forct
unlti wtre .ordered to Uie tru it
onct.
CoL Rtliton uld tht Government'i policy on the tlmt of releue of Informition on iuch Incidents wu to mike the Informition
public ii ioon •• pouible ifter the
event.
The flnt innouncement of the
Eitevein Point incident wu ll-
•ued her* lait night by CoL Rallton. At thit tim* lt wu uld Uii
attack took plici at 10:W p.m.,
Pacific Time Siturday night and
that a "lubmtrint'' wu reiponilble.
While the Government'i policy
wu to mtkt public Informition
ibout ittacki Ukt tht ont on Estevin Point u non u poulblt,
CoL Rallton uld, Uit releasi of InformaUon gave the enemy newa
about the operatloni ot hli ihlpi
which made it unnecessary for the
shipa themielvei to report and so
run the risk or giving iway their
poiition.
There would hav* to bl ■ lufficient delay to avoid helping tbe
enemy in thU way.
■arUer Prime Minuter King uid
tht ihtUing wu Uu tint ttttck
tn Canadian Und lino* Conitdut-
tion.
It ihould bring homt the th*
Canadian! lb* *u«*rnu* and tbe
raitneu ot tht dtngtr."
(In Vlctorli todty Mayor Andrew McGavln suggeited thl Itttck* on both Ei'.evin ind Stuiat,
Ore, raised tht poulbility l t**X
lUrtict nider might bt in tht tret.
(There wu no official oommint
on tht luggutlon but unofficially
It wu undentood that iomt offlclil opinion lubicrlbed to tbi
lurface raider theory although United statu offlcliU at Portland, Ore,
atrlbuted the Seaside attack to a
lubmarlne)
TOKYO, Juni It (AR)—Feinting out thtt Vineouvir Island I*
oleu to Puget Sound, "om of tho
moit Imperttnt Unltid Statu
nivil bnu on tht Pielflo dut,*
t Jipintu nivil comminutor
uld todty thtt tht. reporttd it-
tick by • Jtptnut lubmirini upon tht Iiland "muit hivt bun S
greit ihock to tht Unittd Statu
•nd Canidltn puplta,"
Ai quoted by Domei. th* oom-
mentitor concluded thtt tht United
SUtu would no longer be ibU to   3
diipatch relnforctmttrti to Auitra*
IU and New Zealand or ipeak ot  *i
formitlon of a tecond front hi Eur- J
ope.
He added that H refuted the itate- *
ment of Secretary of Wtr Stimuli *
that Unittd Statai ntvtl vlctoriu
ln tht Coral Sei tnd it Midway .
had removed the danger of Jipa- '■*
neu attack tgtinit tha United
Stitei cout.
i
f»tXn'<l $'° iNeed for Oversea! |
Conscription May
in School Section
Laurence Hendenon of NeUon,
pleading guilty to a charge of falling
to slow down a truck while passing the Hume School June 11, wu
fined $10 by MigUtrate William
Brown ln City Pollct Court Monday
morning.
The. informaUon wai laid by Acting Sergeant R. R. House.
Po. J. Doncaster,
Well Known Here,
Killed in Action
Pilot Officer John P. Doncuter,
22, of Uie Royal Canadian Air Force,
son of Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Doncuter
of Renfrew, OnL, hu been reported
killed ln action.
Mr. tnd '"ri. Doncaster and family were weU known in Nelson,
Mr. Doncuter having been Dominion Public Worki engineer here
from 1621 to 1932.
The young officer'! wife, formerly Mu Mary Watt, daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. H. J. Watt, whom he
married while on leave ln Wut-
mount.. Que., last October 11, received a telegram from Ottawa advising her of his death Saturday.
When she last heard direct from
Po. Doncaster he wu In Gibraltar
and intimated he might be going
to India.
PUot Officer Doncuter wai born
In British Columbia. He went to
Port Arthur with hU parenti when
his father wu appointed resident
engineer there for the Dominion
Department of Public Work!. He
received hU earUer education In
the public tchooli and the Collegiate Institute ln Port Arthur and
then went on to attend an eastern
university.
Buldu his wife and parenU ht
Is lurvived by a younger brother,
Joseph, and three sisters, Mn. GImmel of Vancouver and Mn. AUm
Chappie and Mlu Jocelyn Doncuter of Port Arthur.
PUN REORGANIZATION
OF U. S. WAR
PRODUCTION BOARD
WASHINGTON, June 22 (API-
Complete reorganization of the
United States War Production
Board, Including a reshuffling of
some top oficlals, probably will be
announced thU week, with Indications that W. P. B.'s future operaUon* will be tied even more
tightly to demands of military
itrategy.
BALL SCORES
EXHIBITION
Chicago (A) 3, Great Lakes 7.
INTERNATIONAL
Toronto 2, Montreal  3.
AMERICAN  ASSOCIATION
Kiniu Ctty 0, Columbui 1.
Thunder ot Guns
Heard
Across Channel
LONDON, June 23 (AP)- Out
of the veil of hewt hau which
shrouded the English Channel to.
day were heard the dUtant thunder
of guni and bombs from the dl-
recUon of France and bursts of
cloier firing which, for the seiond
time since last night, Indicated a
clash of lurface craft at sea,
Overhead, heard plainly although
too high to be seen, a large force
of R.A.F. planes raced out over
the Channel in the direction of
Dunkerque, presumably In a resumption of early dayUght assaults
upon the occupied French coast.
The air aeUvity continued at
IntervaU throughout the day, Inter-
spersed with the distant explosions.
Long bursU of firing were heard
out at sea late in the morning, but
the haue which limited visibility
to three miles prevented watchers
along the channel cliffs from seeing what craft were In action.
The Berlin communique said
there had been a night engagement
off the Netherlands coast between
German minesweeper! and • light
BritUh naval uniU including motor
torpedo boaU but there was no
immedUt* confirmation here.
(ome Suddenly
OTTAWA, June 23 (CP).-Nlvy '
MinUter Micdomld uld ln tht
House of Commons todiy ttat tht
moment when Ctntdt wlU require
conscription for OverieU lervice
may come auddenly and that the
Gxrvernment should be ln t position
to art without deliy.
The Navy Minister, himielf I veteran of the First Grett War, wu
the seventh Minister to participate
in tha debate on BUI 80, which
would amend the NaUonal Resources MobUiaUan Act to permit
the Government to Impost conicrlptlon for Oveneu by order-ln-
councll.
The preient conflict U not in Imperialistic war, the Minister Nil
Tt anyone htd tny doubt u to
whether this wu ■ Canadian war,
let him remember the newi that hu
come to ui within the lait 24 houn,"
he uid. "Our territory hu been
attacked by a hostile power.
"The Japanese evidently regtrd
this as a Canadian w*r."
Thomu Moore received $16,000
for hla book of poemi, Lalla ]
Pine trees are considered the
moit important lumber trees in
North America.
U Dl
RYE
This advertisement U not publUhed
or displayed by tht Liquor Control
Board or by the Government of
British Columbli.
. ENGL|
BLE
CIGAR
EI-941
 '   MM!   IKinr————-
 NILSON DAILY NtWl NILMN. I C.-TUIIOAV MORNINQ. JUNS a
Fun To Embroider / Mstralia Mario Regret But (ommenl
I'id on Fall tf Tobruk
.rOHTl. June a (CP C*Mt>-
L deep were of regm iweet otte
Lumlia today wilk cenflmaUoo
of tba iom of Tobruk. but publiihed
comment! were mild in loot
■Riii Common weelth hai had a
ipecial tnterett ln tht deiert fort-
rat becime af Ibe eland ot tbe Anna there hut yeer. However it
it recofnued in retpflonblt quarten thet tbe movement of Allied
forcei (ran thtt arte tfter Japan'i
•try into tba war wei* mad* an
behalf of Auitralia. and were an
important contributory (actor in
the  (all of the rtron^bold.
Wlllltm Morrla Hufbee. ttvertn
Kaieunan, m tbt Ont public itatement oe tbe defeat, condemned "tbe
eoothing lyrup of communique!
ebout Libya," but thla wai only •
audi -a i ip***
In wtuefc ta dealt wtth ttt Jtptn-
•ax. ttreet lo Auitralia.
Mr. _m_* delivend t iwong
wuning of dinger from Japan
which ha aaid In ua monthi haa
accomplaned evtry taek 4 nt out
to do except conquer Auitralia.
Whether Jtptt weuld turn next
to India er Auitrtlla, he taid, no
one can predict but Nippon cannot
afford to let Auatrtiia remain at tht
only krft erae trom which 1 router ofleoiivi would be launched.
"The Japaneie Navy," IA. Hughu
declared, -ttiii comaoda ttt ttat
Sbt u iblt to cover tte open-tied!
of her far-flunc armlet everywhere
tnd u m ever-prttent dinger to
our ■hipping."
io Uttlt work ind yet so effec-
tlvt — thtm toweli that you'll love
embroidering. Juit two or three
make a hostess gift tny housewife
will welcome. Pattern 370 contain!
1 trtnifer bittern of I motlfi iv-
eraglng -*!.xt*ft lnchei; illuitri-
tloni of itltchei; materiali required.
•end twtnty etnti ror thit pttttrn te The Nilion Dtlly Ntwi,
Nlldltcrtft Dipt. Nelion, Writ.
plllnly pttttrn numbtr, your
ntmt tnd tddrtu. Pttttrn will
bt millid to your homt within
10 dtyt
Five British and U.S.
Ships to Be
Launched This Week
SEATTLE, Junt 12 (AP)-nve
ihipt will be launched for tbe Britiah and U&lted Stetei Navie. in
Setttle tnd Ticomt thit wttk, it
wu innounced by tie U. S. Ntvy
Two Brltlth mines vreepeci wtll
be liunched In Setttle tod one for
tbe U S Navy in Tacoma Siturday
Ttit U S. S. Breton, tp escort air-
pltnt carrier, will be christened in
Tacomi the ume dty.
•Ru deitroyer U S S Hirdlng
will be liunched ui Setttle Sundty.
[Marks "Beginning of
Ithe End"
MOSCOW, Junt 12 (APl.-Tte
first inn.vemry of the German
invasion of tht Soviet Union pan- \
COMIC AND  ADVENTURE  STRIPS ..
ed today without formtl observance
Tht only public notict of thl
anniversary wai an editorial in
Pravda which uid thii dty 1 year
igo waa the "beginning of the end
ot the black-Hitlerite regime."
Ohio produces the largest imount
of petroleum in the United Stales
with an annual flow of 18,731,701
barrels.
CONTRACT
Wohion,  WjoLhiiiL
A  TWO-IN-ONI  OUTFIT
Your whole weekend "away-
from-it-all" wardrobe — ln one
Marian Martin Pattern, 9870! The
front-pleated shorts and bra-top
may be worn under the button-
front dress.
Pattern 9070 * may be ordered
only in Junior miss sizes 11. 13, 15
and 17. Size 13, playsuit, requires
. 1% yards 35 inch fabric; frock, 3Vi
yards 35 inch fabric.
•end twenty cent! (or thli
Marian Mirtln pittern. Be sure to
write plllnly your 8IZE, ntme,
tddrtu tnd itylt number.
Send your order to The Dtlly
Newi. Pittern will be tent to your
home within 10 days.
HUNS REPORT DANISH
KINC IS ILL
BERLIN. June 22 (API- The
Berlin radio reported from Copenhagen today that 71-y*ar-old
King .Christian of occupied Denmark had entered a hospital because of jaundice which had complicated a bilious condition from
which he had suffered recently.
AUNT HET
By ROBERT QU1LLEN
"The Bible says our sing will
find us out, but I reckon what moal
of us dread is havin' the neigh
bors find us out."
OCT-THINRINO THINKERS
CERTAIN stratagems are nevtr tried by Aim players against
average opponenta. but are at*
tempted only on advanced ones
Why U that? It would seem Illogical, m the expert would off-hand
be expected to set through a
•chem* to mialead him The answer Is that some of the dodgee
of Ue (anny depend upon making
an opponent gotthrough a certain
line of reasoning which would not
be used by any but a very skillful
cardsman
.3i
f A K 9 8 7 4
+ A J 2
4KQJ8f__
W   E
S
«
,»Q53
♦ <.*■;  ■
_<■> »•
fHU
V "     S
f 10 3 3
AK 4 3
#10 9 7
f A  K  in f
♦ J
+ 9 R 7 « .1
(Dealer: Wett Neither aide rul-
Weit
Piu
I*
I'H.KS
Pat!
North East
1 f Paas
1 NT Paai
2 f Pass
3NT
South
If
•-' +
.  2 NT
The Drat, moment he heard the
bid, East thought of West's spade
call aa a possible lead-director In
cate the opponents ultimately got
into No Trumpt He was al) ready
to do It, until South made that bid
of 3-No Trumpa Being.a careful
calculator, Eaat decided that
North'i dltmond rebld, after having bid No Trumpa once. Indicated
ihe had a ilngle Hopper in the suit.
and so feared It.
When South, knowing about
North'i apparent fear, then bid
By Shepard Barclay
No Trumpi himielf. thtt lounded
to Etit 11 If South wu ihowlng
t iecond iptde Hopper Hence, he
reckoned, Wett muit htve pretty
good stuff eliewhere In hit htnd,
probebly In the hetrt mil which
South hid hid. Consequently he
led the hetrt 3 tnd tht Jig wtt
up Winning thit. North took two
ditmondi. give up one to Weit,
ciptured the ipade return tnd
then ran the balance of the needed
nine trlcki.
Most memberi of the rank tnd
hie could have been depended on
to lead 1 iptde after Weit ihowed
the suit That would have knocked
out the A. and then, when a diamond had been lost, spadei would
have beaten the contract. Conie-
quently. aa South laid later, he
never would have made that 2-No
Trumpi cal] against anybody but j
a thinking player, and North
therefore would not have railed toi
3-No Trumps
•    •    •
'Tamorrow'i Problem
480 4
f J 6 4 2
♦ I 6 *_
+ KQ7
♦ Kit
f 8
* K !l K .*,
4 \  1 i; :>
3
N
W  E
S
410
f A Q 10 9
7
♦ A 7
+ 10 9 8 4
2
f A QJ975
VK 53
f Q 10 4 3
4 None
(Dealer: South Both sides vulnerable )
tf North keeps quiet until West
reachei 5-Clubs. and then double!,
how ihould declarer.play following
a lead to the ipade A and returni
of the diamond 3 ?
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS       6. Small Island 25 Flock
1. Letd pellet     7. Look, 26. Withers
5. Abrade askance
9 Roof edget     8 Scottlsh-
11. Saner Gaelic
12. Coronet 10. Uncivilized  31. In a line
'*. Pint on persona        33. Valley
which 11. Decrease      35. West Africa
30. Spanish title
(pl)
wheel! tum  16. Avenues
(abbr.)
18. Chllds
bedstead
It. Therefore
20. Applaud!
31. Seraglio
22. Maxim
34. Slayer of
Goliath
(abbr.)
38. Native of
Latvia
39. Mine
entrance
40. Italian river
41. Aacend
43. Wicked
44. Russian
river
u
HUB   UL«
m
■M-M   \;livm
:m
m_ MBiisirfzi
m
aa     i-miih
m
il   MMM    Ml-:
r.m
mmm ran
Bll
ilMlflM   IIUMW
•WIB   MUM   ,
His
41:1   i-JllllMUW
m
Hfc.llWM   \*M
asm ix.w t-iasi
Will*         Klf''ll.
BIllflWM  iViWIrlMH
SH.diii tmm
IrtHUn   [.»!_   1
Yestertar's tatwer
45. Maicullne
name
47. Nourished
40. A lupport
14. Entire
15. Carting
vehicle
17. Before
18. Cavern!
30. To accuse
23. Exoest of
chancea
17, Feminine
tltlei
»8. Part of
"to be"
H). Natives of
Arabia
30. Taate
32. Pin
33. Deduce
34. Merganser
36. Positive
terminals
37. Permit
39. Swiss river
42. Ever (poet.)
43. A fairy
46. Float
48. Young ee)
50. To let in
51. Fish net
52. Driven
obliquely
aaa nat)
53. Joyful
DOWN
1. Bristle-Ilk*
organ
3. Greet
I. Elliptic*.
I. Thrice        <
(mui.)
5. Mend
CBVPTfXjrOTE—A cryptogram qnotiitloe
M21APKPDVWVA A   PA   8   TZZT   HX8EPKB
O Z C   MOVSQLVGA   If!   KVSQI, VGA —
A JPOK. '
Teaterdey'i Oryptnqnote: POLITENESS HAS Bran WELL
DEFINED AS BENEVOLENCE IN SMALL THINGS—
MACAULAY.
Cryptoquotes ire quotations of famous persons written cipher.
A substitute character has replaced the original letter For instance,
an "R" may substitute for the original "E" throughout the entire
cryptoquote. or a "BB" may replace an "LL" Find the key and follow through to the solution.
THI GUMPS
By Cut Ed ion
BUT U.*Kft__l
AMUTHOU-tMCB
MILL* t_-_*** A
**mK N_jj*e.\a_Ne
BEBN tflNBOK-
USTLKiBTOCPIHa
f      -**m-tm_T*_t*_CX      '
tOUUmtttT-KK-
LIL ABNER
By Al Capp
HENRY
By Carl Anderson
BRINGING UP FATHER
By Ceorg« McManus
tKfri THS IS SOME
GHOST 9TOHV-IF
TREAD ANV MORE
NOW THAT m
AN  AIB-RAID
MUSTTRyOtJ
MV GA9-MASK-
*MY OOWTMOU
TELL CAOq/ VOU
ABE ANAiB-RAp
WARPEN ? OR DO
VOU  1MU-JT   TO
SURPRISE HIM?
DONALD DUCK
By Walt Diinty
iMR
$
.\
Nsp/
Cup imi. Wik D-r, rwd^^HpISBisL        X
(Voril Rifhu Itatntd                                      \^~m^                       6"ti
\
—
0m+m*itm*^*mamm$m4m*7\**.
KINC OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED
By Zane Grey
HANS IT ALL/ IP AURORA COULD
SO ALONG, LOOKING FOR THAT
HICrMlW WOULDN'T BE SUCH A
LONESOME TASK—   ,	
I5-.
 ml
d_  a
BLONDIE
wtmfr J
By Chic Young
__._■__ .. ;   ...i_. :    j, l. .!
'
 ;	
Ui_W. Vi_.'i_J____lAir_^_J,,4^^^^
-
 .
'
-MILSON DAILV NlWt- NILSON  I C.-TUIIOAY MONNIN* JUKI tg l_\-
SeU
Buy
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
BRINCS YOU QUICK MSULTt AT A LOW COST
Rent
Hire
—PASI NINI
Transfer of Pacific Commands Hade
o and From Vldoria
OTTAWA. Junt II (CP).-tatta.i porarfly  ukea  mm
HELP WANTED
Application! will oot bt oonaidtr-
_) trom partotu ia tht employment
I any firm, corporation or other
toployer engiged is tht proouc-
len ol muuitious. wtr equipment
It tuppliu lor Ult trmtd forcei
ISleti iuch t person It t ikillea
rtdesman not ictutlly employeu
It hii trade
Q>PUCATOMS wnX'W'M-
| etlvtd by tht NeUon Botrd ot
' Bchool Trustee! for. the poiition ot
Janitor it tht High School. Appointment temporary tubjkt to
confirmation at the conclusion ol
the war. Age limit SO years. Mint
bold fourth clasa engineers papers.
Apply up to 5 p.m. July 3 next.
Fred L. Irwin, Sejreury.
. ANTEli:' "YOWa "TUiffllTIOUs
Iri for iteady employment, knowl-
adgt of sewing tnd Ironing would
ba an auet Apply, Jonalla Clean.
»*, ffTO Baker St., Nelaon, BC.
PANTED: BOY lt YEARS OLD
lor Preu Room, Summer holidayi.
Apply Daily News tfter t p.m.
 , Brown, Portman.
■AMfift cm_.t taflWh 0*
| mucker. Phont 817-L or caU it
IliM  HaU Mlnu Road.
SITUATIONS WANTED
Sptciil Low Ratea tor noncommercial idvertliement! un-
ltt thli eluilflcatlon to aulit
ptoplt ieeklng employment.
Only Ue for ont ween (t dayi)
•overt tny number of required
llnet   Payable In idvance Add
lOe If box number dulred
KScOWTAMf,   M,   MASM
military  exempt,  pruenUy  employed In Toronto deiirei iteidy
poiition. Knowledge of credit! tnd
collection!,   offlct    management,
Umt keeping tnd payroll!. Bank
ing  experience.  Doing  cott   tc-
Bcountlng tn preient poiition. Ret-
^trencei. Box Wit Dally Newt.
i wra'cmus WISH-
position   u  housekeeper   ln
notherless home or help it Tour-
It Camp, Writt Box 5918 Daily
|Newi.
5WB U&T? WAlttS POSITION
oflice help or itort cltrk, full
ptrt time. Commercial trtln-
I. Phone 688-L.
ED  BOOKKEEPER
itenogripher deiirei position
edlately.   Apply   Box   5930
Ntwt.
UP. WOiM WANTS WORK BV
r or day. Apply Box 1913 Dally
mtn.
tm_b*ow_Lm
io light firm work.  Phont
horeicres Poit Office.
• USINESS ANO
PROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY
AIIAYIM ANO MINI
REPREIINTATIVII
HAROLD S EU1I3. ROSSLAND
B C Proviucm Auaytr. Chemm
Individual rtprtttuttUvt tor ihip-
pert al Trail Siuti'.u
A J BUIE Independent Mint Rep-
rutnutlvt  Boa tt. Trail B C
I W  WIDDOWSON. PROVINCUL
Assayer 901 Joiephlni SL, Nelion
CHIROPRACTORS
A.   B   McDONALD    DC,   Ptlmtr
Grid   X-Ray. Strand Blk.. Trail.
CORIITIIRII
SPENCER CORSETIERI
Miss S. Boomer. 217 flora, Ph tM L
ENGINEERS  ANO SURVEYOR!
BOYD C. AFFLECK, PO Box MX
Trail. B.C.. Surveyor tnd Enginttr
Phont "Beiver FaUi."
R W HAGGEN, MINING St CIVIL
Engineer; B C. Ltnd Surveyor,
Rosslind and Grand Fork!, B  C
FOOT SPECIALISTS
S. J QILLIS, DSO, R.CJ>, REGD
ChiropodltL Foot Speciilut, Bergeron Block. Ph. UM. Trail. BC
FUNERAL HOMtS
SOMERS FUNERAL HOME
702 Baker SL Phone 232
Cert. Mortician       Udy Attendant
Modern  Ambulance Servict
INSURANCE AND RIAL ESTATI
iDiily
IUSINISS OPPORTUNITIES
fcUTY BHOPPE, BUST LOCA-
, ilr conditioned bldg. Exceptionally good revenue. A bargain
r cash. Terma considered. Own-
leaving country. Apply Box
i Dally News
jtOPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
FOR SALE
▼ery well plinntd
BUNGALOW
Foundation. I loti.
$2100.
will handle
C. W. APPLEYARD
FARM UNDS FOR SALE
auy terms In Alberta   and
Ukatchtwan.   Wrlta tor full information to Ml Dept of Natural
esourccs  C.PR   Calgary   Alta
[>R SALE: CABIN 14'xlt' IN SEC
ont.   Complete   with   windows,
^ink, cupboardi, etc. Delivered. A,
llorrti, Salmo, B.C.
[ft'SALE: SMALL _m. HOWS
llose ln. Eaiy termi. Phone 94,
TOlngi.
|JK SALE: FIVE ROOMEfi 6UN-
■lo and one and one-hall loti.
Cloaa In. Phone 139-L.
| A. WHITFIELD," Real Eitate md
nurance. 417 Hall  St.,  Nelson.
IVESTOCK, POULTRY AND
FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.
IBY CHICKS-RHODE ISLAND
Redi and New Hampshlres. Andrew Chriitlt ttraln, good utility
■tock. approved and blood-tuted.
110.00 per IM. Chicki ready to
phip tvtry Tueiday   John Good-
an,   1655 Gilley  Avenue.  New
_ Vcitmlniter, B.C
|nEST QUALITY RHOWt ISLAND
Chlcks-$3 for 25, »t for 50,
11.90 for 100. $55 for 500. George
Same, R.O.P. Breeder, Armstrong,
l.C.
I SALE: 32 LAYING HENS. ALL
'or $39. Mrs. H. A. Crack, 1M9
lilt St., Ph. 326-R3.
5T
SALr:   HEAVY   HORSES
Hlookoff, Castlegar, B. C.
/ANTED MISCELLANEOUS
US YOUR SCRAP METALS
Iron. Any quantity Top pricei
aid.   Activt Trading Company
lit Powell St. Vancouver. B   C
flNDED:
Ibout
WkUt   Wtt.   SIZE
0x12x2. Buthlng, Kootenay
iy,P,0.. B.C.
NTfeD-SMALL  QtfANIWY't
ich used pipe. Write C. Schiavon,
Glover Road, Trail.    .
C  D.   BLACKWOOD  AGENCY
Insurance, Real Estate, Phone M
CHAS F. McHARDY, INSURANCE,
Real Estate. Phont 135.
MACHINISTS
BENNETTS LIMITED
Machine ihop, acetylene and electrle
wilding,   motor rewinding
commerciil refrigeration
Phont 593 ' 324 Vtrnon It.
OPTOMETRIST!
W. E. /tARSHALL
Optometrist!
1431 Bay Ave., Trail       Phont ITI
SASH FACTORIEI
LAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY
Hardwood merchinL 273 Btker St.
SECOND HAND STORII
WE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGE
What have you? Ph. 634. Ark Stort.
AUTOMOTIVE
MOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES
"Pick
of thi
arket"
USED CAR
Bargains
$365
1935 FORD COUPE. New Ford
exchange motor. Brakes relined.
4 new shocks, steering rebuihed,
etc. Licence.
Good tlrei	
- NO TRADES.
Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.
Opp. Hume Hotel and Post Office
SEE US FOR LIGHT AND HEAVY
uied trucki. Centril Truck ind
Equipment Co. Phone IM, 702
Front Street.
SACRIFICE 1935 DODGE SEDAN
near new rubber, privately owned
$285 cash. Apply Box 5942 Dally
News.
PERSONAL
WHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT
Aimer  HoiaL opp   C Pk   Depot
LEAVING NILSON FOR REGINA
ibout 3ua* a b*, car. Room tor a
man. Phont 4TI-L1
FOR ULE MISCELLANEOUS
USED CLOTHING WOULD BI
gratefully received tt tht Salvation Army, 111 Victorii StreeL
SINGER SEWING MACHINE A-l
ihape. Sail or trade tor what htvt
you. Chut, Ind. Hind Stort.
25*-THE PHOTO MILL-28<
P O Boa 335  Vancouver
ItolU developed tnd printed, ttt
H rtprioti _l tnlargtmtnt, Wc
FOR SALE: LONDON NO 4, CON-
crttt mixer, with thrtt horn
powtr "Nova", gu engine In funt
clau working order. Box It.
Cranbrook.
SYNOPTIC AND LEDGER SHEl'lS
all liwi kept la itock. No long
walta when you land your ordtn
to Daily Newt Printing Dtpi.,
Nilion, B. C.
iiiiiiiiiiiihhiiiiiii.|_iiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
OFFICE FURNITURE
FOR SALE
Complttt Mtt ot desks, lata,
lttd counter iet, tllta, typewriter, adding machine, oak
tablet, tic, to be iold lmme-
dltttly.
BEATTY WASHER STORE
321 Bikir SL Phone 91
IIIHItlHIIIIHHimtHIHIIIIIIIIIIimillll
MEN ONLYI SEND lc POSTAGE
lor Free Catalog of Jokta Novtl-
tlea, Booki. Bladei, Sundriei. Etc.
Parii Novelty, Dept "B" ill Mclntyrt Bldg.. Wlnnlptg. Minium
25t> —LIONS PHOTO— 25*
PO   Box 434. Vanoouver, B.C
Any ilia roll dtv, printed, ISc Reprint!, 3c tach. Fru 1x7 coupon.
"A trial will convince you"
PRIVATELY OWNED DODOE '38
Sedan. Fully equipped. Good rubber, imall mileage, perfect condition. Box 5906 Nelson Newi.
1940 DODGE 4 DR. SEDAN. A-l
condition. Will sell or tnde on 5-
rm. bungalow, doit ln. Ph. 1045.
PLENTY   OF   PARTS   AT   CITY
Auto Wreckers, ISO Baker St.
FARM. CARDEN & NURSERY
PRODUCTS, FERTILIZERS
PIPE - FITTINGS • TUBES • SPE-
cial low prices Active Trading Co
916  Powell  St..  Vancouver   BC
LOST AND FOUND
To Finders
If you find anything ttlephont
The Daily News A "Found" Ad.
will be Inserted without cost to
yon. We will collect from the
owntr.
MACHINERY
New Fractional Motors, ilngle pnue
ft, 1-3 and ft h.p   Pre-war price!
CASCADE MACHINERY CO
910 Main St. PAclflc 6823
Vancouver, B.C.
IT IS PATRIOTIC TO SILL THAT
unnatdtd trtielt to tomtom who
cm um IL It rtprntnti nw mttt-
rial tnd vtlutblt Ubor. Stll It
with in idvertliement In tht
Diily  Newi  Claulfled Column!.
FIRST AID-WE CAN HELP YOU
obtain an Induitrlal Flnt Aid Cir-
tlficite, corrupondenct counei,
clasa Initruetion. Writt for InformtUon to Fint Aid Attendtnti
B.C. MSA Wut Pender St., Vincouvtr, B.C.
FILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-
td (t or t exposure roll) ISc, Reprlnti lc etch. For your vtcition
mapshots, choose Kryital Finish
Ouarantttd non-ftdt print!
Kryital Photoi, Wllklt. Saikltctie-
wan   Eitabllihed over 30 yean
POLAR FURS LTD.
riNE QUALITY FURS AT RIAS-
onabla pricei. Expert re-ityiing
and repairing—Low rattl. Guaranteed itonge — 100 ptr nol
protection. - 941 Grinvillt St..
Vincouvtr, B.C
TWO COMPLITI JFTS VtLOX
printi trom iny roll of fllmi,-ltc,
ipeclal. mill only. ReprlnU IH
centi ttch Overnight icrvici Wl
promise to satisfy you In avtry
wty. Professionil Pbotograpbtr,
19 yean* experience. Send in
your frlendi' fllmi tool Film Ex-
chinge. Box 50. Cutlegir  B C.
MEN'S SPECIAL
Mtn'i penonal drug lundrlta
fineit duality, teited, guaranteed, 12 for 90c, 15 for 1100. u-
•orted, Including world'i funniest Jokt novtlty frtt, tnd cati-
logut Ot lundriei.
WESTERN  DISTRIBUTORS
Box 24 Dept NC. Regini. Suk.
FILMS PROPERLY PROCESSED.
Prlnti you will be proud to ihow
to your fritndi. Any t or 8 expo
sure roll developed tnd printed
26c; or 11 reprlnti 35c. Enltrge-
mcnti madt from your own ntgt-
tlvei and framed in in attractive
end frtme SftxSft; ipeclal 29c;
3 for 79c. 5x7 ipecial 43c; 3 for
$1.10. Place your films tn protei-
ilonil handi. No stains. No
scratches. Send your orden with
confidence to Suptr Snapshot!.
Box 2999. Winnipeg.
RENTALS
TO RENT: 4-ROOM HOUSE, HOT
and cold water, electric light,
ihower. Aim 2-rm. cottage. O.
Humphry, South Slocan, B. C.
UNFURN SUITE 4 RMS 2 BED-
roomi If desired. $49; tin furn
mite. 130. Hot water, heat and refrigeration  Included.   Ktrr  Apti
FOR RENT-9-ROOM FLAT 123.00
month, abova Nelion Grocery, ilso
3-room house Stanley SL with 4
lon and gardeni, Phona 89.
LARGE HOUSE FOR RENT, 4
bedrooms, fully modern, 915 Front
Strttt.
WANTttB: KnUC SOUS*, ttm
or five roomi. Phont 97 or P. O
Box 100, Nelion, B.C.
FOR  RENT,   HOUSE  CLOSE  IN
neir   Hoipital,  2  bedroomi.   $23.
C. W. Appleyard.
ttt Rttfr: AWtACnVBLV TOR.
4-rm  flat.   Open fire  plact  and
garage. $49.00. 1023 Stanley SL
FOR RENT; FURN. MOD. BUNGA-
low. Summer month!. Ph. 1065-R
tbfi wsnt: mmsHiD wm
Cloie ln. Phone 128-X.
A-HO'ME TO. WHlSt AWAV
from hrme Strathcom Hotel Apti
TERRACE APTS Beautiful modern
frigidaire equipped mites
FURN. SUITE, ALSO A SHKTX
houie pirtly furnlihed. Ph. 311.
HOUSES rott RfetJT. APPLY" D.
Magllo. Phone 808-L.
PETS. CANARIES. BEES. ETC
PUREBRED SCOTCH COLLIE
Pups, Males $5.00 E. Parkyn, Burton, BC.
PRIVATI SAH OF LIBRARY
Books, popular authon, uveral
MU, likt new, low pricei. Write
to Box 5949 Dally Newi for IUL
MASON k RISCS PIANO. HA'-
hogmy, cheap for cuh, 413 Hill
Street.
SMALL FURNISHED  CABIN TO
rent,  aim   rtbblti  for   wle.  921
Gordon  Rd., Fairvitw.
IfOR SAtl, SFT OF MECHANIC'S
tools, ex. condition, at a tacrillct
May be ieen at William'! Trtniftr
BALED BROME AND TTMtfffiY
Lut car. I. Nouqultr, Ctnyon,
B. C.
fOR SALE: WATER RAM. MID
uie.   Hirdly   uied.   Chetp.   Box
3964 Dally Ntwi.
flABV 30-CART,!« MJ-HTCIfl-
a'.or. Both good cond. Ph. T92-R.
HAY MoWICR ANb'fcAKB. CB5D
running order. A. Chtynt, Erie.
1931 FORD COUPE $119. WHITE
biby carrtaga $15. Phona 839-1..
f OR SALE: ROUND OAK HEATtift
Wut Trtnifer, Co.
NrUum Daily Npiob
Ttltphont 144
Trill Circulation:  Phone SN
Classified Advirtumg Rataj
He pu Unt per tnuruon
44c ptr lint par wttk It coomc-
utlvt iniertiom tor cott ot 4)
$141 t Una a month (It timu).
(Minimum 1 Unu par Ineartton)
Box number lie axtra. Thla
coven  any   number  of  timet
PUBUC  NOTICES, TENDERS.
ltc ptr Una, tint Lniertion tnd
ltc uch lubiequenl IsMrtion.
ALL ABOVE RATES LESS
10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT
IPICIAL LOW RATH
Nan commercial   lltyatltni
Wtnttd ftr 2Jc tor tny required
numbtr  of  llnu for ilx dtyt
ptyiblt In tdvinct.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Singlt copy .   I   .W
By cirrler, per  week 19
By cirrler. ptr yeu .    13.00
■y mill:
One  month     $   .73
Three monthi         100
Six monthi               4.00
Above rttu tpply ln Cinada
Unittd SUtu tnd Unittd Kingdom to lubtcrlben Uvlng outiidt regular carrier areu
Eliewhere ind In Canidi whtrt
extrt poitagt u required one
month $1.90; three monthi $4.00;
ilx monthi $8.00; ont year $15
Ont ya*r ..  .    ...        8.00
■OATS ANO EftCINES
RECONDITIONED MODEL "A"
Ford inginu Nelion Auto Wrack-
trt, 111 Vtrnon St.
FOR SALE: ROWBOATS AND
oan. M. I Obal. 1811 Stanley SL
Shipyard Delegates
Leave Tonight for
Ottawa Conference
VANCOUVER, June » (CPI.-A
delegation from tht Joint Shipyard
Trade Union Conftrence wlU luvt
here tomorrow night for Ottawa to
lay befort Ltbor Miniittr Humphrey Mitchell ■ lubititute pltn for
the ieven-day continuoui work
week now in elect In Wut ooiit
ihlpyirdi.
Tht deltgttlon will be huded by
Lawrence Anderion, Conference
SecreUry.
Fnnk Carllile, Conftrence Chiirman, uid turnout of workmen it
the thlpyarda Sunday "wu not
whit we hid hoped for but lt wu
no worse than that of any other
Sundiy lince the continuoui production plan wu adopted."
Bralornt Is Drilling
Claims; Closes
Buccanoer Mill
VANCOUVER, June 22 (CP) -
Bralornt Mlnu, B.C.'c major gold-
producing comptny now concentnt.
ing exploration on wir metili rather than on gold, la diamond drilling tht Packer Copper claims on
Alberni Canal, but Its Buccaneer
mill on tht Weit cout of Vincouvtr bland and hu ibindoned the
Canadian tungiten properly In the
Yukon.
Although recommendtd by Canadian Government geologUU u promising, the tungsten protptct did
not stand up under extensive diimond drilling tnd the crew hu
been withdrtwn.
Tht Bucetnter mill wu cloied
primtrily becauie ol thi difficulty
in maintaining a crew at that lomewhat isolated ipot on Bedwell In-
leL
ARP Supplies
Will Be
Rushed lo B. C.
VANCOUVER, Junt 11 (CP). -
W. C. Milnwirlng, chtlrmtn ol 'hi
Advitory Council of tht Provinciil
Civiliin Protection Committe, tald
htrt todiy on hli return from Ottawa that air raid precaution atadi
of Britiah Columbia hava bttn rt-
vttwtd following Jtptnut actlvltlei ln tht North Pacific tnd priority hu bttn glvtn dtllvtry ot ARP
tuppliei to the province.
Mr Malnwarlng uld thli ictlon
had bten Uken by Dr. R. J. Man-
Ion, Dirtctor of ClvU Air Rtld Precautions for the Dominion,
Mr. Milnwirlng uld the ihelllng
ot t Ughthouit ind rtdio nation
•t Bitevin Point, on Vtnoouvtr
Islind, by in tntmy crtft Saturday night "proved, beyond doubt,
tht nted for tht moit complttt
civilian protection orginlutlon ln
Brltlth Columbli, thit could bt dt-
veloped."
Auurtnct wu glvtn him by Fedenl offlciili thit iviryttilng poi
libit would bt dont to txptdltt tht
ihipment of ARP tuppliu ind
equipment to Britiih Columbli, Mr
Milnwirlng uid.
Cattlt Shipments
Higher
OTTAWA, Junt 22 (CP)-Cattle
ihlpmenti to public dockyard! ind
packing planU have been higher
ln 1942 ilthough recurring beef
shortages were reported hi consumer markets, agriculture department figures ihowed today.
For 24 weeks of the present year,
cattle shipments to packing plants
and rales it public itoczkyardi totalled 480,210 head against 454,8(1(1
in 1041.
LUXEMBOURG TOWN
FINED POR
ANTI-HITLER SLOCANS
NEW YORK, June 22 (AP)-
The little town of Grevenmacher
in Luxembourg wai fined 250,000
mark! by German authorltlei becauie an extraordinary number of
anti-Hitler llogtnt were chalked on
the walli, a BBC broadcait heard
by CBS said Sunday.
don to trtnifer ont headquarten ta
tha Pacific Command out ol Victoria ud to rtplict lt by toolbar
command on tha umt dty wta aa-
nounetd today r National Dtftaoe
Httdquartara,
Tba Hudquirun Involved ia tht
propottd ihift were not tdtntifled
Official ipokeimin laid the movt
waa "optratlontl" and would be
ktpt itertL
Tht movt It btlng mtdt to improve operational and adminuixi-
tivt control ln tht Piclflc Command
and at tha pm* Umt makt room
for othtr ottrly-cruUd httdquartara"
No movement of troopi It Involved.
Tht tnnouncement toUowtd within t wttk tht irrivil it tht Wut
cout ot Lt-Otn. Kenntth StutrL
Chltt of Otntnl Staff who hu ttm-
mlilttiy opart-loot
Ooatt region.
Otn. Stuart lueeudi M__J.-Qt* R
O. Alexinder who la moving ta
toother pott—that tt Inipector
Oiairel for the Army tn Centre
Canada.
Laat Friday, Defence Minutei
Rtliton told Toe Canadiin Prtn
hart thtt iomt mitten af rtorgan
lution in tht Picifk comaund aria
lag out of Army txpanaion wtn
btlng conildered by Oen. Stuart
Hi Mid that no innouncement could
bt mtdt it thtt titnt tbout dad
lloni rtachtd.
Pruumably today'i announcement ll tht retult of thut delibir-
tUona by tht Chief ot Oeneral SUff
CoL Rtliton mtdt hli lU'.eminl
Frldiy In reply to I quutlon about
poaiblt trtniftr af Army hud-
quirttn on the Wut Cout from
Victorii to Vincouvtr.
HUNS CLAIM THREE
TORPEDO BOATS SUNK
BERLIN, June 11 (AP)- Th*
Germin communique today uld
thret Brltlth motor torpedo gun-
boiti were iunk ln an engagement
with German mlnuweepen off the
Netherlands cout latt night tnd
leveral other Britiih veuels were
damaged. (Then wu no Brltlth
announcemtnt ot iuch tn engtgt-
ment.)
Butttr, Que. (92 icore) 34% traded
Stlu: 200 boxes tt 34 ft, S00 it 34ft.
Eggi, Eutern A-large 31ft to 38.
Futures: Butter, June and July
34ftZ, Aug. MftNB, Nov. 38V4B;
eggs, June 32B.
Calgary Livestock
CALGARY. June 22 (CP)-Week-
end recelpti: Cittle 340; calvei 11;
hogi HI. Todiy: Cittle 10; cilvei
10; hop 2f '.
Medium to good heifen 10 to
11.20. Common to medium cows 650
to 3. Medium to good veilen 10 to
12. Common stock iteen 6 to 9. Lut
hog ulei 10.14 for B-l « yardi and
planti.
MONTREAL PRODUCE
MONTREAL, Junt 2  (CP).-Ci*
nidltn Commodity Exchange: Spot, J ^ up two cents a doien for Gradi
Egg Prices Gain
VANCOUVER, June 22 (CP).-In
price   change   described   in   the
trade as largely seasonal, eggs mov-
EXCHANCE RATES
NEW YORK, June 22 (API-Closing exchange ntu follow-.
Official Canadian Control Board
ratei for U. S. dollan: Buying 10
per cent; selling 11 per cent.
Canadian dollar ln New York
open market 10 per cent dlicount or
90.00 U.S. centi.
NEW   YORK   STOCKS
American Can    Mft
Am Smelt te Rt  _.»  38ft
Amer Telephont  113ft
American   Tobacco  41ft
Anaconda   ..      24ft
Bendix Aviation  29ft
Beth Steel  NK
Canadian Pacific   4
Cerro Dt Paico     29ft
Chryiler       SBft
C Wright Pfd  __.  Sft
Eutman Kodak  129
General  Electric   - 25ft
Generil Moton  _.. 38ft
Oreat Nor Pfd    20
Inter Nickel   „  26ft
Kenn Copper  _ -_  27ft
Phillipi Pttt      3tft
Rldlo Corpontlon     Sft
SUn Oil of N J  33ft
Texai Gulf Sul  10ft
Union Carbide      .._ _  14ft
Union Oil of Cal      lOg
United   Aircraft       24ft
U S Rubber     ltft
U S Steel ,  43ft
A-medium and large and ont cent
for Grade A pulleti todiy. The
change meant Grade A-large egg^i
will bring producen 27 centi; medium 26 cenU ind pullets 22 cents.
Wholesale pricei ire 91, 90 ind 21
cents.
Monsoon winds blow from the
Southweit from April to October
and from the Northeast trom October to April.
MONTREAL     STOCKS
INDUSTRIALS
Bathunt P It P A  12ft
Can Car le Fdy Pfd  24ft
Can Celanese Pfd   123ft
Con Mln & Smelt  37ft
Dom Steel   Coal   8ft
Dominion Textile  75ft
Dryden  Paper  4ft
Howard Smith Paper  9ft
Inter Nickel of Can „   30ft
National Brew Ltd  _ 24ft
Price Broi  8
Shawnigan WiP  13
St. Law Corp Pfd  28
Steel of Can Pfd ..._  13
BANKI
Commerce   148
Imperial  178
Montreal     HO
Royal  147
CURB
Beauharnois  Corp    tft
Corn Paper Corp  1 90
Fruer Co Ltd    __-.  18ft
Inter Utilltlu A  1
Mitchedll Robt  14
Power Corp Pfd      83ft
Walker Good   W -..  41ft
WINNIPEG CRAIN
WINNIPEO, June 22 (CP)-Oraln
futurei quoUtloni:
Open   High
Low
ClOM
WHEAT:
July           80ft     80ft
80ft
tllft
OATS:
July   .       -       -
—
51ft
OcL   ...     49ft    49ft
40ft
40ft
Dec    —       —
—
48
BARLEY:
July       -       -
—
(Mfli
Oct    «3ft    —
—
63 Vi
RYE:
July       -       -
—
56ft
Oct.           57ft     SSft
57ft
38
CASH PRICES:
Wheat-1 hard 80ft
2 Nor
80ft;
2 Nor. 77ft; No. 3 No
. 73ft;
1 Nor.
71ft; 5 wheat 09ft;
1 whea
67ft
Feed  wheat tSft;  1
Garnet
78ft;
2 Garnet 73ft; No. 1 Garnet 72ft;
1 Amber Durum {12ft
Oati—2 C.W.  31ft;
Ex.  1
C.W.
51ft; 3 C.W. Sift; Ex
1 feed 51ft;
1 Ieed 51ft; 3 feed 47
Barley-1 It 2 C.W.
6-row 64ft; 1
tt 2 C.W. 2-row 64ft;
3 C.W.
6-row
64ft; 1 feed 84ft; 2
feed 64ft; 3
feed 64u.
P.ye-2 C.W. 56ft.
com-
Now that the freih
fruit Is
ing In buy It very ripe or ripen It
an extra day In the lun befon
Mrv-
Ing.   If   It's   wrved
very   cold,   it
wtll   be   delicious   without
iugir
idded.
CK8
VANCOUVER
8TO
Bralorne   	
7.M
7.30
Cariboo Gold
1.12   "
1.11
George Copper
.15
—
Gold Belt  	
.12
.14
Hedley  Mucot
.24
—
International Coal
,30ft
.34
Kootgnay Belle   ...
.17
.18
Pacific Nickel
—
.08 ft
Pend OreiUe
120
—
130
1.83
Premier Gold
—
.50
Privateer    	
.30
.03
.31
Reno   Gold    	
.04
Salmon Gold
.70
.74
.63
—
Surf Inlet
.06 ft
—
Taylor Bridge  	
—
.04
Whitewater
02
.03
Ymlr Yankee Girl
.03 ft
-
OILS
Anaconda  	
02
m'fi
A P Comolidated ..
.01
—
Calgary & Ed
—
.95
Commoil   .   .
.14
—
Dalhousie      	
.15
—
Davies  Pete
.12
—
Highwood Sarcee .
.08
—
Imperial      	
2.22
	
Home 	
2.22
_
MIU  CHy   ...
.06
_
Model	
,16ft
.20
National Pete
.04
—
.IS
—
Pacific Pete
.19
—
Royalite  	
6.50
—
Spooner   	
.05
	
Sunset    	
.0(1'4
—
Vanalta  	
.04 ft
-,-
NYLON BROUGHT
UNDER WAR
SUPPLY CONTROL
OTTAWA, Juni u (CP) .-Nylon
followed illk Into the rinks of thi
wir luppUu forcu todiy wtth tht
Mun!Uom and Supply Department
announcement that henceforth thli
production will come under Jurti-
dictlon of tht SuppUu COntrolltr,
A. H. Williamson.
Nylon ind Nylon producU hivt
bttn declared "suppliei" under the
Munitions ind Supply AcL
A factor In deciding on wartime
control of Nylon wti undentood to
be the probability lt would bt Ultd
ln tht minuficture of piraehutu,
and or other war requirementi. Thi
majority ot parchutet so ttr produced In the United Natloni hive
betn of pure silk but tht restriction
of suppliei due to wtr In tht Piclflc hastened the lurch for iitbitl-
tutei.
All of tht high-quality palm oil
produced ln the Belgian Congo ll
unt to Greit BrlUin.
Russia Asks More
Medical Supplies
From Red Cross
TORONTO, 3_t a (CP)-A
lecond requeit for mtdietl ind
hoipiul mppUu for Sovltt Ruuia
hu been received by tht Cinidlan
Red Croig Society, Dr. Fred W.
Routley, Nitlonil Commiuioner,
tnnounctd todty. Tht ordtr will
Involve the expenditure of 1300.000,
bringing the Society'i dtiburie-
menti on behilf of RuuU to ipproxlmttely 1890,000 ilnce lut Fall.
A lirgt quinltly of luppUu ilready ll tn routt to tht Soviet
Union. Tht monty uud to mett thli.
lateit requeit will be part of Uie
fundi ritaed by tht Red Crou lite
lut yetr tor medicil ild to Ruula
tnd tht order will bt diapttchtd it
tht earliest poulblt moment. Dr.
Routley uid.
DOW (ONES AVERAGES
30  industrial
20 rilll   	
15 utilltlu   	
Hli
103 33
23.48
11.87
Low
103.11
23 32
11.75
ClOM
1M.71
23 43
11.70
rgt
S5
.14
X
WlwifoL Jjwd-L
LONDON, June 28 (AP).-Prtcei
wert marked down today after
ntwi ot rtvenu to
the Britiih
torcu ln Llbyi.
Howevtr, selling pressure wai
Ucklng tnd tht mark-down! ippeired moitly precautionary, The
doling toni wu about ite»dy ln
mott division! ilthough iomt itiU
bicked witer.
NEW YORK-Tht itock lmrkit
today took It on tht chin trom i
bid wir newi budget. Tht direction wu downwird from Hit lUrt
with losses of fractloni to thrtt
polnta. Extreme idbacks wert reduced In many cum ln the closing
hour.
Abtenct of rul idling urgency
In Uu wakt of tht oollapie of Tobruk, tht critical Ruuian poiition
at Sevutopol and enemy shelling
of Wut Cout ttrrltory wai tn;our-
aglng to bulllih contingent!. Tramfen ipproximited 325,000 iharei.
TORONTO — Trading icntiment
fivored Uie down ilde Influenced
by deprtuing war newi. Gold
iharei iold olf • point or more
while Induitriill dumped about
three-quarten of a point md bue
metali ibout half a point. Weitern
oili ihowed UtUe change.
Lou of 2 pointi to 39ft for Mc
Intyre wu tht widest adjustment
in the gold group.
Loists of t point mort came out
for Bill Ttlephont, Union Ou, CanadUn Dredge and Moore Corporation.
MONTREAL— Price adjuitmenti
on the itock exchinge up to the
flnti hour todiy were on the down-
ilde, reflecting nervouineu of trader! over wtr development Loises
were generilly frictiontl only.
lnduitrltlt cimt ln for tht Ingest imount of depreciation.
ConiolidtUd Smtlttn tnd Norindi, Bulolo and Imperial OU wert
lower.
VANCOUVER-Urtla were un-
changed or lower during a morning
of ilow triding.
At Uit end of ttit itulon, Bnlorne dropped IB polnti to dole it
7.28, while Pend Ordlle loit 1 it
1.20 tnd Plonttr 1 it 111,
WINNIPEO — Thtrt wu no
change tn tht July whett future
which remained it 80ft cents a
bushel.
A small amount of ndieet buying
wu reported by exporter! and
milli. Then were IndiciUoni of a
minor export of when tnd in unconfirmed report on t imtll tmount
of flour shipped to the United Kingdom.
CHICAGO—Whut prices slump,
ed more than a cen early ln today'i
trade ind then spent the remilnder
of the session recovering pnctlcally
all of the losi.
Toronto Stock Quotations
Anglo-Huronlan        '-00
Bagamac Rouyn  °*^
Beattie Gold Mines       Wi
Bobjo Mines  —-      *10
Buffilo Ankerite      I*68
Cmadian Malartic  -     -'7
Castle-TreUiewey    —.      -M
Central Patricia        ■•°
Chromium M & S      I*40
Coniaurum Mines  - tt
Coniolldated M le S    36.90
Dome Minei      127S
East  Malartic    —     135
Eldorado Gold  - *•
Falconbridge Nickel  -    2.62
God's Lake Gold  - ">Vi
Gunnar Gold        -Wi
Hard Rock Gold       -38
Hollinger        82u
Hudion Biy M le S    23.00
Internitlonal Nickel _.    31.50
Kirkland Lake   , «
Lake Shore Minei      8.50
Lamaque  Contact       3.60
Little Long Lac  90
MacLeod Coekihutt     1-30
Madsen Red Lake Gold 41
Mclntyre-Porcuplne       39.00
McKenile Red Lake  97
Mining Corporation     M'
Nlplutng Mining  85
Norandt -    44 2S
Normetal _ 63
Pamour Porcuplnt —      8°
Perron Oold      100
Pickle Crow Gold      1-70
Powell Rouyn Gold _ «
San Antonio Gold      It*1
Sherrtt Gordon  85
Siicoe Gold 33
Sladen Malartlc   J24
Sudbury Basin  1.80
Sylvanite.  .     .  ._.—- 1.41
Teck-Hughes   Gold     ltt
Toburn Gold Minei  95
Ventures -  4.15
Waite Amulet  4.25
Wright Hargreaves  2.17
OILS
Ajax  10ft
British American    16.23
Imperial       2.25
Inter Petroleum     12.60
Texu Canadian         .75
INDUSTRIALS
Abitibi Power A 	
Bell Telephone  	
Brazilian T L fc P 	
Brewers fc Distillers .
B C Power A .
Can Car le Foundry ...
Can Malting	
Can  Pacific Rly
Can Ind Alcohol A 	
Cosmoi 	
Dominion  Bridge  	
Dom Tar   Chem      Sft
Distillen Seagrams    21ft
Ford of Canada A     17H
Goodyear   Tire       B2ft
Hamilton Bridge      Sft
Imperial Tobacco _     Oft
Kelvinator     7ft
Montreal Power     21
Nat Steel Car  _    28
Power   Corp     Sft
Pressed   Metals       3ft
Steel nf Can      Sft
88
144 ft
Bft
Sft
21
8ft
34
5
3
20
23ft
I ill i ii.lii.11- iit,*;ilr,i_iii__i*_l^,_iAl_V-"''**,;>'1''*:';*'-*'***"kAJ"J*
 	
CIVIC
a MMOaa tunat mum
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
Shtwt at _t-tM
Oayful-Tuntful-Punful
"VOLGA VOLGA"
A   Btw   ibittrt   experience
trom thou amazing Rmiiini.
Plui "HIGHWAY WIST"
wtth
■MMM MARSHAL
WIONUDAY ONLY
$65.00 IN CASH PRIZES
FOR BANK NITE
"HULLABAUO '
"A CENTLEMAN AT
HEART''
STARTS THURSDAY
BOBHOPE^-a.
"1
MADELEINE CAUOli
M TAVORlff
B10/VD*
POUR STARS LIBERTY
Rossland Favors
Rest Room,
Blacktop Walk
BOSSLAND, B. C, Junt U -
Ronland City Council tonight wu
on record u favoring t public reit
room. City Engineer Rupert Haggen will prepare an eitimate on the
conitruction coit and maintenance
lo be Included In the IMS budget.
The City Engineer ilso will be
Initructed to prepire an utimate
of the coit of t bltcktop md tir
fjnlth for the Columbia Avenue
ildewtlk between the Poit Office
ind Bank of Montreil, City Clerk
3. A. McLeod said some District of
Vancouver had lidewalki of thli
type, ind Mayor Gordon itated the
miin business section of Seattle
tlto had what looked to be a black
top turfact. It was agreed, that In
Bouland this would be more satisfactory than cement. Apart from the
difference ta cost the lUbstance
bow recommended would yield as
the preaent ildewalk continued to
nbtlde.
Columbia Down a
Foot at Trail
TRAIL, B.C., June 22—A drop of
a foot was recorded for the Columbia River during the weekend at
the bridge at Trail.
*■ -* -. _V •} - ■*> *•
BUTLER'S CAFE
Where You Get s Mesl Hist
Satisfies
•m..t^^.._
CARELESS today
_ CAR-LESS tomorrow
we are
CAR - SAVER
SPECIALISTS
Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.
Opp. Humt Hotel tnd Port Office
eeeie em»»ii»lt„
POWDER PUFF
SUNDAE
Melon Dew
ICE CREAM PARLOR
itttiitnttte*-tftii"*n
LAMBERT
Moulding
Shinglei
Veneer
Lath
etc.
Pasteurized
Milk Mskes
Children ,
Henlfhy
Fleury's Pharmacy
PHONE 25
Med. Arti Blk.
Preicriptioni
Compounded
Accurately
'/gljy/tfORREAL VALUE
Collinson's
T.ie House of
Fine Diamonds
BKIIIIIWIIHEHTII
 NILMN DAILY NlWt. NILMN. I. &-TUIUAY _S.RNIN«. JUNI M.
Huns Push Toward
Egyptian Border
By IOWANO KINNIOY
(Auetlatad Prtu Itaft Writer).
CAIRO, June 8 (AP).-Ofiv-
Ing forward without a pauu trom
their capture ef Tobruk, Neal mobile columni have cluhid with
Britith forcti a few mllu frem
the Ksyptlan border, Brltlth hud
quirtm reported today, m the
Allied poiition In the entire Middle Eaat appeared threatened by
the defeat In Llbyi.
Tht Britith Commind iald thi
clash occurred 12 milei Northweit
of Fort Cipuuo, which ll juit crosi
the border in Llbyi.
It wti Indlctted thit i few of
tht garrison troops, Britom, South
African! md Indttnt—hid ttciped
trom Tobruk. Somt imill craft
moved out ot tht harbor whilt it
wai under ihelltirt tram Germm
Unki and other partlei fought thtir
wiy through enemy fornutiorn In
the desert.
Iiolittd pirtiei ilio wtrt reported continuing rniitmct.
The booty gilned by tht Germtni
itlll wti oot know, here, but it wu
rtporttd thtt grett exploiitloni occurred io the lait houri of Tobruk'i
resilience, Indicating quantitiei of
miterlil wert deitroyed.
One of the glim of the Oermini
wu i recently built extenilon of
the deiert riilwiy to i point South
of Tobruk. Thii formerly reached
only to Mttruh ln Egypt, 120 mllei
from the border. Retreitlng troopi
were reported to hive torn up
stretches of the railway, however.
Tht Egyptian Govtrnment Issued
m order today to check the downward trend of the Cairo itock mtrket
The AxU Air Forcei, following
up quickly their success In Libya,
bombed the Egyptian coast between
Sidi Barrani and Fuka.
Ai the battered British mrvivori
of the bloody Llbym campaign
worked feverlihly to itrengthen
their poiitioni along the Egyptian
border, military qutrteri here conceded the probable truth of Axia
elilmi that MjOOO of Gen. Rltchie'i
men hid been ciptured by the
combined German-Italian forces
which completed occupation of To
bruk yttterdty.
Thtrt wai oo dtnlal tl&tr at report! from Berlin that German
troopi had puttied on from Tobruk
to ceptura Bir el Gobi, a deeert
track centre SO milei to ltu Southern, ind tbt port ef Bardia, only
eight milea trom the Egyptian border.
A Britiah communique reported
today that an Axli column wai
moving towird Fort Cipuuo, which
it juit inildt tht Libyan bordtr
tbout SO milei South tnd illghtly
Cut ot Bardla.
Thii forct mtdt contact yeiterday
near Sidi Aieia, ll milea Northweit
of Fort Cipuuo, with mobile Britiih forctt optntlng out In front of
tht Egyptian border defence line,
the communiqut Hid.
Tht bulletin givt no ntw Informition on development! it Tobruk
uying merely:
"Tliere It no furthir newi from
Tobruk, wbich must bi presumed
to have fallen."
Military quartan here were vague
u to the ficton tccountlng for tht
fill of Tobruk, but it ippeired the
Britiih forcei hid lett iuch t lirgt
proportion of their trmortd
itrength ln the iivige deiert fighting which preceded the finil uuult
thit they were unible to offer effective resistance.
Dlspatchei from tht front give
no Indicitlon of my ittempt to
remove the Tobruk garrison by tei
during the furioui 14-hour bittle
that tnded In lti fall.
Tht tull dtmigt iuffered by the
British forcei In the Llbym campaign and Uit reasoni tor their defeat itill ire obscure here.
Deipite the idvent turn of if-
filn In Llbyi, tht city of Alexindrli—iome 00 mill! Eut of tht
frontitr — wu ctlm todiy tnd
thtn wu no outwird ilgn of
chingt In tht iltuition lacing
Egypt, which li not ytt formtlly
•t wtr with thi Axli,
Fgypt'i well-tnlned trmy of 40,-
000 regular!, augmented by 100,000
guardsmen, li rttdy for ictlon however, md ictuilly ls performing
valuable aervice In support of the
Brltlth by patrolling vut itretchel
of tht Weitern deiert
TRAIL SOCIAL
By MRS. ROY FRASER
TRAIL, B.C., June M—The mtrritge ot Min Laura May Muir tnd
Gordon William Nash wu solemnized quietly ln Knox United Church
minie Saturday morning. The bride
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Muir of Waldo, B.C., and the
bridegroom ls the son of Mr, and
Mn. Harry Nuh, also of Waldo.
Misi Agnes E. White ind B. W.
Martin of Trail were the "attendants.
Mr. md Mrs. Nash will reside it
1187 Dewdney Avenue.
A lovely Summer wedding took
place ln St. Anthony of Padua
Church on Saturday morning when
Irene, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P.
Pacific!, 869 Byers Lane, became
the bride of Leonard S. Perri, ion
of R. Perri and the late Mri. Perri
of Trail. Rev. Father S. Balo, O.F.M.
officiated at the nuptial high masi.
The bride'i father gave the bride
in marriage. The bride wore a heavy
white iheer gown featuring a round
neckline, embroidered yoke and fitted top, and full ikirt. The long
full ileeves were ciught at the
wristi with imall cuffs. A wreath of
valley lilies held her long white
silk net veil ln place and she carried a bouquet of Better Timei
Roses; Misi Eveline Salsiccloll and
Miss Margaret Janni were bridesmaids. Miss Salsiccloll wore a gown
of yellow loll marquisette over taffeta fashioned with a low waiitllne
and full skirt. Her hat was covered
with lavendar Shasta daisies and
Madam Finch roses, and she carried
a bouquet of pale pink carnations
F. H, SMITH
If It's Electrle
Phons 666        351 Bsker St.
Nourlihmmt In
every illce of
HOOD'S
BREAD
THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
W. L. THOMPSON, Prop.
Day md Night Service.
rthour Ambulance Service
SIS Kooteniy SL Phtn* *Si
- AT THE PARK —
Get  what  you  want  for  the
Picnic at
LAKESIDE SERVICE
*W    .T ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼-▼-    *W
tnd lavender lirkipur. Shlita daisies md iweet pen. Mill Jinn! choie
a mauve lilk sheer gown with a
wide waistband from which flowed
the long full ikirt. She wore ■ hat
of lavender Shasta daisies and Madam Finch rosei and carried a bouquet of lavender larkspur, Shasta
dallies, pink carnatloni and pink
sweet peu. Little Jacqueline Sal-
siccoli as flower girl was exquisite
in peach organdie trimmed with applique. Her dress had a fitted bodice and long full skirt and ihe wore
a poke bonnet of the lame material
ai the dress and carried a colonial
bouquet of talisman roses and pink
corn flowers. Flneo Paclflcl, brother
of the bride, and Joseph Sommonet-
tl lupported the groom. Dominic
Potestio wai usher. Mri. Emillo Pi-
aapio lang "Ave Maria". A reception
for about 50 guesfc was held at the
home of the bride'i parents. The
bride'i table wu centred with a
four-tiered wedding cake and flanked by vasei of roses and carnatloni.
Reception aldei were Mn. A. Rizzuto, Mrs. D. E. DeStefano md Mrs.
R. DePasquale and Mary DePai-
quale. The young couple were ass-
sisted in receiving by Mtt. Pacific!
who wore a plum-colored afternoon
drew and navy accessories and a
corsage of Premier rosea The bride
wore a green tailored iuit with pink
accessories and a corsage of sweetheart roiei for her wedding trip to
Vancouver and Victoria. On their
return, Mr. and Mn. Perri will reiide on Wellington Street.
Mr. and Mn. Bay Dovey and Mr.
and Mrs.-W. Spooner spent the weekend at Nelson md on the North
Shore.
Miss Florence Bird left Sunday
for a vacation of two weeka to be
spent at the Cout.
Mr. and Mrs. William Dovey of
Salmo are ipending leveral days
ln Trail, the gueiti of Mr. and Mrs.
J. B. Dovey, Sr.
BALFOUR
BALFOUR, B. C-Mn. H. Hudson li spending a few dayi ln Nelson.
Mrs. M. Brenilson viilted Nelion
friends for the week end.
Mn. Anderson md Misi Alner-
aon visited Nelson.
C. Joyce of Trail visited Mr. and
Mn. A. Malnard ind hli nn Arthur.
Jimei Heuiton md Charlei
Noikei are home from Nelion High
School, having been recommended.
LONDON (CP.-Crowai thronging Picadilly Circui itared In aiton-
lshment when an Indian loldier
walked calmly along the itreet with
a tiny Iamb trotting at hli heeli. The
Midler adopted the lamb when 111
mother died.
Rossland Social. ♦ ♦
By MRS. HARYIY FLSURY
ROSSLAND, B. C June H-lta.
a W. mtu* wia i Ttall vieitor «
Friday.
Laalit 'Slid left Friday morning
on t tour-day tithing trip io Trout
Uke.
Mia. Out Hanaon. Plmei HUI.
entertained ln honor of Miaa Veronica Pearl Una, whoaa marriage
takea plaoe June 14, with t kitchen
ihower ind luncheon Friday. Summer flowen were attractively arranged throughout tie living roomi
and on thi luncheon table. Invited
gueiti were Mn. Maud Hardie, Hn
Ltonard Lint,  Mra  Wtldo  Holm,
tb*. Gilbert Hum, Mil. Floyd
Birch, Mn. C. A. Beam. Mn. 3.
Holm, and Wm bene Mclntoih,
who inland ttt bottta ia itrving.
Adolpht Morin, ot idmooton who
ii • medical ttudent, trrlvtd Sunday and la a guett ol hu brotoer-
tad uiwr-in-kw, Mr. and Hn. R
Morin, tor the next two monthi.
Mr. tod Mn Rupert Haggen and
dtughtir Winnlt ipent Mondty
ln Ntlion.
Mrt. Tobiaton Wd infant diughter expect to levee Mtttr Sfistri-
cordiai Hoepital tor ihelr homt on
Tuetdty.
Trlggs Invested
as Rover; to
Honor Enlistees
Captain Scott Rovtr Crtw of Ntlson, Mondiy nlgbt Invested Tony
Triggi u 1 Rover. Befon being invested Triggi wu on probation for
six weeki.
During tht meeting. Rev. W. J.
Silverwood givt t ihort talk on
tht word honor. A banquet, honoring iomt memben who plan to
leave ihortly for ictive urvice wu
plinned. The three, Normin Miy,
Jimu Cick tnd Gordon Picktrd,
will lift to ieven the number of
Crew memben In ictlve lervlet.
Chief of Police G. R Bone, Stanley HonwiU, Alliiter Jack ind J.
Cornfield ire all In tha Canadian
forcu. Triggi will ba leiving ioon
to take work it Htdley. *
Tht invutiture wu held it the
home of Mr. tnd Mn. W. A. Triggi,
ill Willow Street. Refreihmen'i
wen lerved. Beciuse of ilckneu,
Jim Hoover wu uniblt to ittend.
Requiem Mass for
P. Pagnan, Trail
TRAIL, B.C., Junt n-runenl
servicei were held this morning it
St. Anthony of Pidui Church for
Pletro Pagnin, who died Thursday.
Man wu iung by Rev. Eugene Cottone,-auiited by Rev. Ceiario Victor. Graveiide lervice wu conducted by Rev. S. Ballo.
Pallbearin were C. Benneton, G
Merlo, O. Gerontzzl, N. Geronizzl,
P. Chrlitinte, tnd F. Ciputo.
Interment wu In Mountain View
Cemetery. Clark'i Funeral Chapel
had charge.
CRESTON
CRESTON, B. C.,-Ceo« Conitable who hu ipent two weeks
visiting his parents Mr. md Mn.
G. Conitable, hu returned to Montreil.
H. Ottendorf haa left for Saik
on a buiiness trip.
Mr. and Mri. Robert Stewirt are
visiting  In  Cranbrook  and  Wasa.
Pte. Alfred Moorei vliited his
parents Mr, and Mn. . Moorea at
the weekend. Alfred li on the permanent itaff ot the military band
at Vernon.
Mri. Murray FliheT left lut week
to visit at Kimberley.
Bud Craig of the Royal Canadian
Navy hai returned after ipending
his leave with hli parenti, Mr. and
Mrs. Craig at Arrow Creek.
Mra. H. Lmgiton has left to
spend a vacation at Vancouver and
other cout points.
T. Gautier, of the itaff of the
Creiton Valley High School, left
at the end of the week for Calgary where he will take a course
in Air Cadet training.
C. J. Frederickson of Cranbrook
has been inspecting the schools
throughout the district.
Lac. Stewart Currie of the R.C.
A.F., and Mra. Currie and son, have
left after visiting the formers parents for a month.
,Mr. and Mrs. A. Chiiholm, who
have been guests of Mr. and Mrs.
G. John, have returned to their
home In Kimberley.
Mra. W. Priest and Children have
returned to Spokane after visiting
the former'i parents Mr. and Mn.
J. Rogen.
Mrs. A. Brown ipent the weekend visiting in Nelson.
L. S. Smith of the High School
teaching staff, left at the end of the
week for Vancouver.
Pte. Richard Avery who ls with
a military band at Calgary spent
the weekend here visiting his parents Mr. and Mrs. Avery.
Ken Sparks hu returned after
spending a few days at Vernon. On
his return he was accompanied by
hli mother Mn. Sparki, will visit
Mr. and Mrs. Sparks here.
Mrs. T. Bundy and daughter Lois,
were motor visitors to Cranbrook
at *he weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. F. Wertz of Calgary visited the latter'i parenti
Mr. and Mrs. F. Putnam.
H. WiUiami wu viiiting hU ion
and daughter-in-law Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Williami in Trail lut week.
Mr. Adamson who ls a hospital
patient ln Trail li reported progrei-
ilng favorably. Mn. Adamson is
remaining ln Trail during his linen.
W. Armstrong wai a Nelion viiltor lut week attending the Wilson-Thurston wedding.
Victor Peltzer hai left for Coleman, at which point he will villi
his sliter.
Australian Officer,
Who Visited Here,
It Killed Overseas
Mn. Harold Lakei ef Rosemont
Monijiy received word tblt Pilot
Officer Miurtce Mirtell. officer
in chargt of tht tint group of Aui-
triliim to viilt Ntlion undtr tht
C.tuen'i Committee pltn, had bten
kllltd ovtritu. Ntwt of hit death
cttue in I poit ctrd from Po. Allan
Morrii, hli p«l wbo witb Po. Mirtell wu • guett ol Mr. md Mn.
Hirold Liku during their visit
hert.
From letteri received from Po.
Mirtell previouily, Mra Likei hid
learned he hid taken ptrt ln nidi
ovtr Frince.
Rossland Within
Budget;
$51,921 Is Spent
ROSSLAND, B. C, June 11 -
rintnce report, prepired by the
City Auditor, wu ntd it the City
Council meeting Mondiy evening,
ihowlng tht expenditurei for the
tint five monthi of 1M2 to be $31,-
921 15. The City ii keeping within
lti budget the written report itated.
Mayor J. E. Gordon reported the
A.RP. bootter pump with a four
cylinder engine and 1000 feet of
hose wai received, ind was itored
In the Fire Hall. Firemen have begun training ln lti use. Rubber
suits and gu masks have ilso irrived.
Gyro Club Hears
ot Nelson In
New Zealand
Ntltoo Gyre Club wu introduced
to NtUon. Htw Zealand, Monday
night through an Intormiag addreu
by a native New Zealander, 8. W
Haggen of -loulind. He pictured
I "through the looking glair contrut between the two citlu In the
Northern tnd Southtrn Hemis-
phtrte.
Ia contrut to Canada, in New
Zealand Chriitmu wu in mid-
Summer, tht Norf-i wind wu tht
warm wind, "kttp to tht lift1' wu
tht rult of tht roid, no pert ol
tht lOO-milt-iong country wu more
than 10 mllu trom the sea, ind
nowhere wert th bitter cold of
Northern ind Intern Canadian
winten felt
1 MARKS   CENTENARY
Nelion wu i city of 19,000 population lituated on i North cout bay
of tht South lilind of New Ze»-
lmd. It wu laic out on a ilope
to tht ltt igiinit I background of
towering mountain!. It wu t city
of lunthine, ht md, ind the centre
of the country'i fruit growing Induitry. rrom the tret 15,000 toni
of Jun wti ihipped yeirly.
It wu thii yetr celebrating the
100th mniverury of lti founding
Tht City wu lettled orlglnilly by
memben of tht Wikefleld Compiny
expedition from Englind, he related.
though the Bay wu first visited by
Dutch tallon fully two centurlei
before.
Mr. Haggen ilio relited lomething of New Zeilind'i hiitory, Iti
people, their cuitomi, rellgioui ln-
cllnttlons, md nitive inlmali.
John Cirtmel wai Program
Chiirmm.
Lttt* OS juur Film tor
DiVILOTINC wd
ntlNTINC
S-hour  Strvlct and i  full ta-
largtmtat wtth tvtry J6 00 worth
Frtth itock ot film.
Your Rexill Stort.
City Drug Co.
P. O. Box 4*6 Phone St
Nisei Are Only
Trouble Makers
VANCOUVER, June » (CP). -
Maj. Howtrd Mellor, ipokumm or
the Britiih Columbia Security Commission, nld today the only trouble
the Commiulon hid experienced
with Jspmese who ire being removed from the cout defence
area "hu been ln the nature of
passive protest igr.inst being separated from their families."
Maj. Mellor said while few guards
are used at the campi there have
been no tcti of violence recorded
io far. He i»id the trouble experienced with lecond-genenllon Japaneie wai likely to be eaied by permitting families to escort workers
being moved to Eaitern project!.
He laid as far as is known no instances have occurred of Japanese
buying or leutng property although
Japanese with private means have
been illowed to maintain quarters
outside the defence zone.
BUDGET WILL BE
BROUGHT
DOWN TONIGHT
OTTAWA, June 22 (CP).—Finance Miniiter llsley iald in the
House of Commons today that his
budget will be presented tomorrow night it 8 p.m. E.D.T., (5 p.m.
P.D.T.) Instead of ln the afternoon as usual.
SLOCAN CITY
SLOCAN CITY, B. C. — John
Trainor and H. Gustafson of Perry's
who are employed on the bridge
crew spent Sunday at their homes.
Jamea Draper of New Denver
was a visitor here Monday.
D, Knechtel of Vancouver wai a
vlsitur here for a few dayi.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Chriitopherson
and son Bobby of New Denver were
weekend visitors here.
Mr. and Mrs. John Zugal and son
who visitedV Mr. and Mri. Balllargeon, left for their homes ln Spokane Sunday.
Miss Elsie Life of Nelson spent
the weekend here with her mother, Mrs. J. Life at the weekend.
Mr. and Mn. A. Schneabje and
Gui of Trail were weekend gueiti
of Mr. and Mri. J. Balllargeon.
Bob' Chrtitophenon- and James
Vandergrift of New Denver were
weekend visitors here.
Mra. W. E. Wylei md daughter,
left for their home in Nelson on
Wednesday.
Mra. J. McGuire and children
left for Vancouver on Sunday.
Mrs. W. Dawney and little daughter of Perry'i Siding, were guests
of Mr. and Mrs. E. Hicki for a few
dayi.
Mrs. E. D. Rogeri will make her
home in Kimberliy for a time.
MAIN'S WINNING
SONG TO BE
BROADCAST JULY 8
Robert Main's prltewlnnlng tong,
"Come Along Canadlani," will be
broadcait July 8 over a CBC Dominion wide hook-up ind the Mutual
Broadcuting Syitem ln the United
Statu by Captain J. J. Gagnier and
HU Majeity'i Canadian Grenadier
Guirdi Bind. It will go on the
tir (at 5:30 Pacific time.
Meanwhile the long will be published ln iheet muiic form. In iddition to their prize money the writ-
era of both muaic tnd lyrlci will
receive royiltlu on the sheet music
•nd orchestration! thit tre iold,
ilso mechanical royaltlu and synchronization   royalties.
Mr. Mtln mil P. W. MacDonald,
compottr of the muiic, both Intend
to devote iome of the proceedi to
the Red Cross.
illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli
NEWS OF THE DAY
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin
BOYSI Oet your model airplane
from 10c up, it VALENTINE'S.
Klnimen   Club   Meet!  Tonight
8:30 p.m. Humt Hotel
Select -a good book from Walt's
Lending Library for tonight.
SPECIAL'S PHOTOS 25c-SPECIAL
Wm. Rimuy, Vogue Studio, Ph. 46.
Enamelled Cold Pack Canneri.
Holds 7 quart Jars, $2.85 each. Get
yours now! Wood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.
More and more people are eating
O.K. Bread. There must be a reason.
It's better. It's different. It's rich
in milk.   Order some today.
File folders and file Indexes, at
prices below todays wholesale cost.
D. W. McDerby, "The Typewriter
Man", 654 Baker Street, Nelson, B.C.
H. H. Sutherland, Jeweler, now located In his new store at 491 Baker
Street, wishes to thank his friends
for their past patronage and respectfully solicits their future business.
ST. PAUL'S GARDEN FETE
The proceeds of the tea and home
cooking lale will be donated towards the repairing and decorating of the Manse.
The Annual Meeting of the Nelson
Musical Festival Association will be
held In Council Chamber, City Hall
Tonight, June 23rd, at 8 o'clock.
All Interested are Invited to attend.
Buy your canning needs now—
See us for canners—Heavy enamelled cold-pack canners, wilh wire
rack (7 quart Jar capacity) at $2.50
and   $2.00.-HIPPERSON'S.
The FINEST IN GINGER ALE
Aik for, lnilit on, at your deileri,
McDONAL0'8 DRY GINGER ALE.
It'i , midt from Pure Kooteniy
Wtter right hert In Nelion.
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
SUB-LIT JULY, AUGUST, FULLY
furnlihed apt. Suite 4, 415 Falls
St.,  Phone 386-R.
Rossland Pupils
Successful
In Musk Exams
ROSSLAND, B. C, June H.-Wei-
ley Roberta, F.R.A.M. Examiner to
the Auociated Board of the Royal
Schooli of Mujic, London, recently
conducted the practical examinationi In Rossland.
Reiult! were:
Gride I, paued with distinction:
Margaret Troseth, Valerie Topllff,
Mary Wrlnch, Rignur Nora, Shirley
Pat Perklni, Noreen Hedley, Frincii Sutherland, Gordon Perkins,
Jeromi Topliff and Donna Davis
passed with credit
Grade II: Jean Donaldson, pused
with diitinction; Marilyn Turner
and Mary Lou Leckie, passed with
credit; Louise Frederickien, Pamela Drake and Loli Ann Hedley,
pau.
Gride III: Carol Martin and June
Palmer, pan with credit; Elmarle
Martin, pais.
Grade IV: Anna Marie Mara, pais
with distinction; Shelli Singer, pass.
Grade V: Pamela Topliff, and
Jean Hedley, passed with distinction.
Rossland (lasses
ROSSLAND, B. C, June 22.—The
four P.T.A. shields which are awarded to gradei winning the highest
points ln the School Sports were
presented Monday morning.
Principal Wesley McKenzie presented the Junior High shield to
Grade VIIIB, Mrs. John Freney's
classroom, and the senior shield to
Grade X. J. Freney's classroom.
The MacLean School shields were
presented by Principal E. E. Perklni, the Junior shield going to
Grade IV, Miss Elsie'McRae's room
and the senior ihield to Grade VI,
Don Roberta' classroom.
No Damage From
Rossland Fire
ROSSLAND, B. C, June 22-Ac-
tion of the Rossland Fire Department prevented a chimney fire at
the home of the Victor Brays Sunday at 1:30 a.m, from doing damage.
The one story frame house occupied
by the Brays Is loaded next to the
Llttlejohn Apartment Building.
Have the Job Done Right
See
VIC GRAVES
MASTER  PLUMBER
PHONE 815
J. A. C. Laughton
Optometrist
Suite 205
Medical Arti Building
REAL ESTATE-
AND
INSURANCE
ROBERTSON REALTY
532 WARD ST
SPORT
SHIRTS
FOI SUMMER
WUl
Relax this Summer in ortt
of these Sport Shirts, cool
and comfortable. Choose
from a variety of crisply
tailored styles in tan,
blue, green, yvhite and
gray. Long and short
sleeved styles.
92.00, ?2.50, fS.OO
gMORY'S
LIMITED
Box  100
Phoni tl
(reslon Ships
Carload oi
Scrap Robber
CRESTON, B. C.,-Th« flnt cal
of salvaged rubber wai billed out
from Creiton it ihe weekend,
Charles Murrel head of the Rtd
Crou Salvage committee itated
30,730 pounds of icnp rubber hall
been packed Into the cir which wa(
being sent the Fairmont Companj
it Toronto.
The rubber which had been eel
lected from Kitchener to Crawfort
Bay was brought into Cfeiton bj
the forestry trucks ai well u In,
dividual citlzeni. School childrtl
•t ill the valley polnti collect**
rubber and iccounted for 4901
pounds. Along with this a matin*
it the flvoli theatre with an oil
tire at idmiasion for childrtl
brought ln 3000 poundi.
The car wai made up of 747 ca
tires, 130 truck tlrei and ont ton 0
pieces of Urea making a toul 0
24,430 poundi while pieces of ho*
weighed 500 pounds. The committal
were pleased to note teller ring
weighed 30 pounds and booti, iheet
md odd piecei 5120 poundi. Thtt
U still an amount of about IU
pounds that the committee cout
not squeeze Into the car and till
shall go towards a iecond car.
As well as the car of salvage
rubber the Red Croaa committe
have also lent out ttiree can 0
scrap iron, and rags etc. and tt
busy collecting for another cir.
Grenfell's
FRESH STRAWBERRY Pll
WITH WHIPPED CREAM
TODAY
We are equipped te handlt
ANY KIND OF WORK ON
YOUR CAR OR TRUCK
SKY CHIEF AUTO
205 Baker St
Phone1Z
Surprise the ptrtj
with a Permanent
Haigh Tru-Ar
Beauty Salon
Phone 327
Johnstone Block
CLUB CAFE,
SALADS
ARE THE VERY BEST
We make it the way you like lti
•-•-•
FOR RENT
3 Room  Apt.—Ground  Flee
Victoria Street., Annable Bll
Phone 667R or 358R
Drumheller
Lump
WANTED TO BUY: CONSOLE
phonograph, good tone, cheap for
cash. W. Ltktin, 1804 Ctdar SL
A Fresh Carload of Thii
Sparkling Clean Lump
Coal Has |uit Arrived.
This Is Your Opportunity to Stock Up for
Next Winter on a Really Cood Coal . ..
NELSON TRANSFER
Company, Limited
•_i
PHONES
36
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