 F
■»»""■ ■ *■	
aspect mf* I* Rsnsw Alf Mlts*
tft Islsai tiiapnti, Pege IC
Ns«e 35 PrisesMts Cephwe**! a*
He«| *«•!. Pegs 7.
Fifteen (mw Plsnes An Met
Dewa in Afrits, Pegs 5.
'   ■' ■ ■
VOLUME  41
FIVf CENTS MS COPY
Ammmm Si-king ef Uttm4 V*t**l hr
St. Lswienee River, Psgs i. LJ{
U. & Amy Plan* Patrols Dangere-at
Afes I* Spot Refugees, Psge i.
CIC Pest Kills Effect ef Proptgtnis
Sent for Sesmen, Pag* 3.
NUMMK a
RUSS FALL BACK MFORE SUPERIOR FORCES
BRITAIN ALERT TO INVASION
Prime Minister Churchill has warned Britain thst
the threat of invasion again is near and a "hornet's nest"
of preparation awaits it. Above, Gen. Sir. Bernard C. T.
Paget, commander-in-chief of the Home Forces in England, talks with the men of a Scottish regiment during a
recent tour of inspection of Scotland and ths defences
of the Orkney and Shetland Islands.
Highly Battle Forecast in Arctic
as Huns Drive at Russ Ufe line
CHINESE BRACED
FOR HEW CHARGE
BY MP TROOPS
Advance Guard Deep
Into Yunnan; Hit
Communications
WEARY ALLIES
HOLD IN BURMA
By I. C. Daniel
Auoelited Prew Staff wntir
LONDON, Msy IS (AP)-Veter-
ani ef tM Chine wtn unctir thi
pertenel Slreetlen ef Oen, Chimj
Kil (hen braes* their llnee tonight sgtlntt s relnferoed Jtptntte penamUen ef their Mil whlli
Uolittd, txhuittd Chmtii In*
Britith ferees held •tubbernly te
the lltt few blti ef Bunte.
After luffering • temportry but
bloody tetbeck, tbe Jipi idvinced
on the Burmi rotd wss reported
In t Chlntit communique from
Chungking to htve penetrated it
Uut SO mllet Iniide Chlmi beck-
yerd it Lungllng end to hivt push-
ed on towirdi Psoshsn, 88 milei
deeper iniide Yunnin Province. Tbe
mijor objective of thtl drive tup-
poeedly It Kunming, capital of tht
Province, tnd Chlni torminui el
the true Burmi Roid.
A Chungking ipokeimin Hid,
howtvtr thtt the Jtpeotte ln the
Lungllng ens hsve made ao pro-
greti tlnce yesterdsy, snd expresied the opinion thet they might not
try to advance farther beciuie of
Uie hetvy cuuiltiei they heve iuffered.
,     By DREW MIDDLETON
Auoelited Preu Stiff Wrlttr
IL   LONDON,  Mty 18  (AP.-Hlt-
": tort SS^-ton btttleihlp Tlrpite
mey leid tht Otrmin bittle iquidron  eut ef  Trondhelm  It  iny
. ^M«MmM',-*^*^
Britiih iniT'i.lritd huvy Vrir.
•hlpi will bt tht "Itrgtit nivtl
tngtgement of. tht wtr In Europe," in Informed quirter itld
todty.
The ilmost continuous Battle of
the Arctic, where the Germani tre
trying to dole the Northern lupply
route to Russia, has been Intensified lately ai lengthening days give
German aircraft more time for reconnaissance, and the Southward
drift to polar Ice narrows the pai-
tage to the Soviet ports.
The Germans claimed today that
bomberi sank an 8,000-ton freighter
and a imall coaster and damaged
four large transport! in Uie latest
engagement along Norway's Arctic
Coast and ln the harbor at Mur-
.mansk.
NEEDS  BATTLESHIP
Britith luthorltlu ny HiUtr li
filling to destroy tht British convoys witb hii light forctt, submir-
aes and ilrplinii, however, and
thst Admiral Seeder will be forced
to uie hi. onl* tatimbip thit Ii
known to be whole, the Tirpiti,
plut the pocket battleship Admiral
Scheer end the cruller Hipper, botti
also at Trondhelm, against iome
future convoy.
"When he doei the Allied squad
rom will be wilting. The Germins
will be extremely lucky if they get
i single ltrge ihip btck to port,"
in Informed iource declired.
The danger point of the Arctic
route li off North Cape, Norwiy,
where the* Germani ittack both
by air and by sea.
Informed quarten iald the Ger
mam tre more concerned now with
the Northern route to Ruult thin
any other. They have ordered their
crack U-boat commanderi from the
North Atlantic to ttttck thli rotd
and the numben of destroyers, submarines and bomberi ln the arei
is steadily Increasing.
Allied Bombers Sink 3000-Ton Jap
Ship in 1300-Mile Flight
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS AuitraUa, May lt (Thursdiy) (CP).—
Allied bombers a 1300-mile round
trip above Northern Ausralla, link
■ 3000-ton Japaneu ship at the Japanese-occupied Netherlands Island
of Ambolna, and set two others
afire, General MacArthur'i Headquarters announced .today.
Other Allied air uniti falling on a
lurprlse Japanese base at Rabaul,
New Britan Island, dropped bombs
on IS Japanese bombers drawn up
on a runway, blowng up three of
them, and severely damagng "many
others.'' The rads occurred last
might.
If the only reported Japaneie
counter-icton, an attempted rad on
Port Moreiby, Southern New Gunea,
by ilx Japaneie planei, two of the
enemy craft were ihot down tnd
one wis dimtgeJ.
The long overwater thrust igtnst
the Japanese-held Netherlindi Eait
Indies wts the fint by Allied bombers operitng under General Mac
Arthur's commind ln Australia.
Aside from lh_> one Japanese thlp
sunk. Die communique Hid mtt direct hits on two other ships, one of
300. tons and one of 3000 tont, iet
them rfire.
While Chltng*! tsssoned troopi
fought thli mw Incunion, other,
by-ptued unlt| of Lt.-Gen. Joieph
.sillwell'i Chinese force were tilth
Ing It tht enemy'i thin communication llnei in Northern Burmi.
The Chinese High Commind tald
Chinese unitt had dlirupted Jipineie communlcttioni    between  thl
Mindiliy-Ltihlo tri
ind MyltkyinVlo flit North.
While British ltad units, trying to
extrlctte' themielvei from Burmi,
withdrew cloier te the Assim border, t military ipokeimin at Nsw
Delhi dlsconcounted Jipineie reporti of success ln encircling Britith
remntnti.
He uid thit it leut pert ef Oen.
Sir Htrold Alextnder'i troopi were
it Shwegyln, 140 mllet from' Man-
daliy, before the Jipaneie punult
fully developed.
Malta Folk See
Nazi Pilots
Tossing Grenades
VALETTA, Mty 11 (CP.)-Two
more Axil planei were officially
reported deitroyed tnd two were
dimiged todiy over thli moit
bombed ipot on ekrth, bringing the
toll of deitroyed or cripple reiden
to IU ilnce Siturdiy.
A tew bomberi eicorted by Germtn tighten itruck et thli main
island's airdromes, while four mllei
to the Northweit on tiny Goto Islind four Messerschmitls machine-
gunned the itreeti ot Victoria, the
cipital.
Tht pltnei flew to low thtt res
idents could ' iee the piloti who
opened their cockpits tnd threw
grenades Into the itreeti.
Flood Waters Cover Urge Areas
in Crow; Guard Highway Bridge
rERNIE, B. C, Miy 18 (CP)—
Lirge areu ire under Spring
flood witen In the Crow'i Neit
Villty todty ind the Elk River
hli overflowed iti channel In Weit
Pernle.
Rains ire helping to swell old
creeki and creating new fresheti,
and public works crews are constantly guarding the large highway
bridge leading West of here which
Is In danger of going out.
The Elk River rose rapidly, and
both curling and ikating rinks on
the West ilde of Fernie are flooded
with three feet of water.
In Fernie Annex, to the ast, two
small bridges have been washed
oqt, and lower lands and residents
there ire threatened.
The. Hosmer Highway, to the
Eait, li covered with an overflow
of water of undetermined depth,
which has wuhed out a small bridge
and caused iome ranchen to quit
their holdings.
Five mud and rock slides htve
been reported on the highway between Fernie and Michel, and the
road has been washed out In three
placei. All passenger and mine bui
service to the Weit hai been cancelled becauie of falling rocki tnd
small slides.
Severtl Natal reildenti wert fore-
ed from their homei when the Michel Creek overflowed ltl banks,
and the Cotl Creek mlnu were idle
for leveral dayi when the power
transmission Unei went ouL
Factories and War
Industries to
Stay Optn May 25
VICTORIA, Mty IS (CP)-Schooli
itorei tnd offices' will cloie on
Mty 19, ,ln tht public holiday wt
uide for the observance of Em
plre Day, but fictoriei tnd other
war Induitrlei will continue openting, tt wu expliined todty by the
Provincial Deptrtment of thor*,
The holldiy hu been proclaimed in
British ColumbU undtr the Weekly
Hilf-. tolidty Act, but not under
the Fictoriu Act
Say Giraud Offers
to Return if Men
Are Freed
LONDON, May 1| (CP) -
Reuten reported todey ip I du-
patcfa ditelined "aa the German frontier" thit Qeo. Henri
Honore Otrtod, rreneh military
letder who ucaped (tam the
Germin Koelpteln fortreu, hu
offered te return then la exchinge fsr release oi N0.0OS
French priionen al wir.
Glnud'i offer wu laid to
htve beea made to Gen. Otto
von Stuelpmgel, Oermin miliUry administrator tor occupied France, la a meeting ir-
ranged It the instlgition ot tht
Vichy chief ot Oovernment
Pierre LtvtL'
HEW ARMORED
FORMATIONS GO
TO SWELL ARMY
Big Air Contingent
and Thousands of
Reinforcements
CROSSING "SWELL"
By  OOUQLAS  AMARON
Cinidlan Preu Stiff Writer
A MITISH PORT, Ml» 11 (CP
Cable.)—New formation! Nr thl
I Cinidlin armortd eorpi tnd tttm/-
' nndimin relafereemento fee the
Dei-effllon'. I*, end Sir lores
hive arrlvid In Britiln t« |oln the
mighty alllid military machine
btlng iieembled fer the of finely.
• jllnet the Axle.
IV tint repreienUtivei ot Maj.-
Oen. F. F. Worth|n|ton'i division
to come to BrlUin—special detach-
... ments compriied men fer s heivy
it and flheme reglmenU and Hfutdront dec dlvl-
.fattl and hrigsdl Iwidquirtert-
w{£- Included in in armored forct
which crested ths AOsntle In eom-
psny with relnlorcemtnU for ilmoit tvtry Ctntditn irmy unit In
BrlUin.
A Royil Ctntdlm Air Forct contingent, ont ot tht lirgttt of the
wir, Included men for every tir
force Job, tU eager to Join tfce Sum-
met offenilve igilnit Oermtny.
Ground lUff md ilr crtw penonnel errlved ln ilmoit equtl numben.
The armored troopi whieh will
ge te ctmp In Southern Englind
for ipeelil training, Included
among othert, representative! of
the Elgin regiment, the Britiih
Columbil regiment, tht South
Alberti regiment, tht Governor
Qtntrtl't Poetguirdi, the Cintdlm Grenadier Qutrdl, thl Sherbrooke Fuilllen tnd I Mtnltobt
irmored ur regiment
The btltnce of tht trmy' dtUch-
ments comprised men for a hevy
reptir ihop which will be eiubllih-
ed in a ltrgt English ftctory to
hindle repairs for ill Roytl Cmaditn irmy tervlce corpi vehlelei, t
radio location unit, nunlng siiten,
men of the Royil Ctntditn Ord-
nince corpi, Roytl Ctntdlm Artillery,'Roytl Ctntdian Army Medical
corpi, Roytl Canadian Corpi of Signall, Roytl Ctntditn Engineeri tnd
numeroui relnforcemenU fot in-
fintry tnd irmored corpi regiments.
Soldien and airmen hid ont
word for the crossing: "Swell," tnd
their only complaint wai thtt the
wetther wu cold. There were no
reporU of im ilckneu and the only
scare ctme netr the end ot the voy
tgt when light ileepen were
twiktned early one morning by
the boom of depth chirgei dropped by the escort ships.
BERLIN, Miy 13 (AP)-The Jip-
tneie report Chlnue HAt bomben
ttUcked Hmol, capital,of French
Indo-China Tuuday. tftgrnoon ind
cltlm two were ihot dowh hy Jlp-
inue mtl tircraft bittery.
Minen Certificates .
Expire May 31
VICTORIA, May 1» (CP)-Dr,
3. t. Wilktr, Deputy Minister of
Minu, innounced todty thtt Fnt
Minen Certflcstu will expire on
Miy SI, md should -be renewed by
thtt date. All certificitei repre
tenting property held under the
Mineral Act ind tht Plicer Mining
Act muit be renewed.
The feu tor renewal range from
Rouland Man to Be
Heard on Radio
OTTAWA. Miy 11 (CP)-'Oreet
Ingi from the Beiver Club" broid-!■«;**. 1ndivl.<,u*.1 FrM   _intn* _*°
rasters   Sunday   (CBC   10:30  i.m.-
II tm. M.D.T.)  Include Sigmn. E.
Ttylor, Roulind, B. C^
$80 ind (100 in tht cue ot corpora
tloni
Not Included in the list trt Provisional Free Minen Certificates,
held under mother itatute. the
Provisional Free Miners Certificitei
(Pltcer) Act, Dr. Walker nid. Such
certiflcatei cover the staking ind
recording ot cerUln claims without
fee.
JAPANEU BREAK
WINDOWS. USE
HOSE AT COAST
Just "Playful" Says
Taylor; Protest
Isolation
ARMED GUARDS
PATROL TRACKS
VANCOUVIR. Mty 13 <CP.)-
A number ot Jiptneu imuhed
windowi tod turned loou e fin-
hou et the Immigration Building
where they trt being htld here
UU todiy In the flrtt outbretk ol
IU kind since tbt ittrt of thi Ptcific war, but Auitin C. Tiylor,
Chtlrmtn of tht B. C. Security
Commiulon termed the outburst
"more pUyful thtn tnythlng
elie."
Mr. Tiylor uld the trouble ip-
ptrtntly hid been ctuted by the
fact the Jiptneu hound ln the
building htd been refuted dtily
convimtlom with friends outiide
He tdded thue Jtptntit trt ihortly to be moved to road campi in the
Interior of the province.
The outbretk. In which windowi
on the upper floor of the building
wert smashed, tn iron window
gritlng pushed Into the itreet md
t firehose turned on t guird below.
wu quilled shortly titer the out-
bunt.
Tonight trmy guirdi with fixed
beyontU petrolled ilong railway
trtcki in tront of tht building,
whilt tome Jtptneie still looked
out of the tmashed windowi on
thi ncond md third floon, ihouting occislontlly. What thty yelled
WU unintelligible. Now ud then
rolU of paper unfolded from the
broken windowi of the big build-
H
Mr Ttylor. whou Commission
hatslatadjr evicutted huaptf|.of
Japanese from the Pacific cout,
wld "there wu nothing miucloui
tbout the trouble. It wsi mora playful then anything else. Some of the
Jiptneu Just got t llttlt fed up
ibout being kept in'the building
tnd got • llttlt exuberant. There
wu mort yelling thtn inything
elie."
USE FIREHOSE
Scoru of passersby were attracted tb the icene of the outburst ln
the waterfront building by the
shouting that accompanied the
smashing ot glut. Guirdi on the
viaduct ktpt the onlookers tt t
distance u tht Japanese turned a
firehose out through one of the
broken windows, pliying the witer
on the ground below.
Mr. Taylor uid reporU of the
trouble htd been greatly exaggerated. Some reporU uld plasUr htd
been chipped from the wills of the
building tnd- hurled out of the windowi by the Japaneu, but the
Commiulon Chairman ,who apparently visited the building ifter the
outbreik, uld "we couldn't find
•ny."
Mr. Tiylor ntd up until today,
Japanese glrli tnd wlvu of men
hound In the building had been
tllowed to Ulk with the men at a
distance through thl Iron-grated
windowi. The stopping of thli practice, he nld, ii believed to have
caused the outburst.
Red Cross Drive
Hear Million
TORONTO, May 13 (CP)-Sub
scriptioni totalling nearly $1,000,
000 were reported tonight for the
flnt two dtyi of the Nttioml Red
Crou appetl for $9,000,000 to fintnct the orgtnintlon'i many ictlvltiu during the next fiscal yetr.
Response to the nationwide appeal In the tint three days led
offlciili to believe the cimpilgn
objective would be ruched before
the end ot the drive Miy 23. Princt
Edwird Island's objective wei netrly reiched ln the tint two dtyi
ctnvasslng.
Brltlth ColumbU Hetdquirten
todty reported receiving $10,000
trom the Vtncouver Hotels. Associition tnd tht Britiih Columbit
BTewnig Induitry; $2,500 from tht
Powell River Lumber Compiny;
$.1,500 trom Divld Spencers, Limited, tnd ttJDDt) from tht Ctntdt
Western Lumber Comptny.
LONDON, Mty lj (AP)-Und«
preuure of persistent criticism, the
government hu dtcldtd to postpone
putting into operation the fuel rationing icheme which wu to have
ttken pltce June 1- .
Flying Tigers Raid'
Indo-China Field;
Hit 15 Planes
CHUNGKING, May II (AP)
— Flying Tigers' of tht Americtn Volunteer Group bombed
ths Jipineie ilrdromt tt Hanoi.
Indo-China, yeiterday tnd deitroyed 19 (rounded pluu,
A V.G hetdquirten tnnounced
todty.
At ltut 19 mort Jiptneu
plinei were dimiged tnd direct hlti were'scored on td-
mlnistration   bulldlngi.
H LOST, and 14
SAVED WHEH1W0
SHIPS ARE SUNK
Entire Crew of One
Reaches Shore of
St, Lawrence
13 MISSING ON
SECOND VESSEL
A ST. LAWRENCE RIVER
PORT, Miy 1S (CP.\—Fourteen
crewman ire dud or milling tnd
thtrt trt 74 lurvlvon frem tht
Qirmin torpedoing ef twe freighter! In the St. Ltwrenct Rlvtr
Mondiy night. • riteutd officer
told ■ Ctntditn Prtu cerreipond
tnt htrt tonight
Here briefly ll the offlcer'i itory.
One freighter wti itruck by two
torpedoes and the entire crew ot
-W retched shore In boils. Tht ncond freighter wu Struck about the
time time by t ilngle torpedo md
29 crewmen were' picked up by in-
other ihip ind Uken to 1 netrby
pert. Trom thli-ship 13 men tm
mining Sad another died frem exposure afUr being Uken from the
water -T' fflt retl^it ihip.   , -
First survivor Interviewed, the
officer did nat give hli mme. He
nld thtt desipte the ftet'the first
freighter wti itruck by two torpe-
dou the did not sink for 20 minutes,
giving her crew time to put off In
boati.
SINKS QUICKLY
The iecond freighter went down
in six minutes ifter being struck
only once. Moit of the missing men
were uleep it the time, the officer
uld,. However 20 of the crew of 42
menaged to cling to rafts until they
were picked up by a third ship. He
stld thtt soma of the 29 were Injured tnd trt now being treated at a
hospiUl in a nearby fishing town.
On the way to port in the rescue
ship one crewman died from exposure tnd he wu buried today with
merchant mtrlne honon and moit
of the lurvlvon ittending,
SWIM TWO HOURS
After the lingle torpedo struck
the second ship, the officer uid.
"a terrific explosion followed and
she began to settle Immediately."
He said the sailors Jumped over the
side with lifebelts u thete was no
time to launch the boaU. The water
was Icy, he uld, ai)d most of the
men swam lor two houn before being picked up. i
A tight unsonhlp of all St.
Liwrence River polnti mtde It
difficult to ebUIn I cleir plcturt
Of tht ilnklngi.
A report, itlll unconfirmed, wu
thtt rnldtntt ilong the river
heard gun-fire—pouibly indicating e btttlt between freighter!
ind the tub, flnt enemy rtlder to
Invtde tht big river.
- m m w
Deny Nazi Claim
Battle Concluded
and Russ Fleeing
Report That 229 Hdn Transport Plar.es, 37 *
Fighters Destroyed in Central Area,       .]
Indicates Third Front Opening
RUSS DRIVE CAINS SPEED, KHARKOV
e .   i,
MOSCOW, Msy  14   (Thursdby)   (CP).—The Russisnj. 1
announced early-today that they had fallen back to new positions, on the Kerch Peninsula in the Crimea in the face of ■
attack by superior numbers of Nazis, but they denied German ,
claims that the battle had been concluded.
In the vicinity of Kharkov, approximately 300 miles North
of the Crimeen battlefront, the Russians under Msrshal Semeon
Timoshenko were engaged in a mounting offensive against tha
Germans, snd there the Red Army forces were "successfully
advancing"  according  to  thef-
LONDON, May 13 (CP) - The
Preu Auoclation said today that Sir
Gerald Campbell Is relinquishing
hit poit tl dirtctor general of BritUh information Servicu In the U.S.
midnight Soviet communique.
A poulbility thtt t third lmport-
int lector ot the front miy be opened by the Germmi toon, perhipi
ti pirt of • genenl offensive, was
seen In t brltf Motcow ndio report
thtt tbe huge total of 220 Germin
transport planu ind 37 fighters
wtrt destroyed in the lut few diyi
in the rtgion tbout SUriyt Russt,
South of Ptnlngrtd tnd Northweit
of Moicow, long t bitterly-contwted
tnt. /
Tht prutnet ef io miny airmen triniport plinei Indicited I
furthir Nitl ttUmpt to beliter
the report-dly tripped Qermtn
Uth Army South of Lake Ilmen.
Tbt Crlmetn front, metnwhlle,
continued to rock with . battle.
"Fierce fighting still Ms going on,'
ttld todty't communique.
By WES GALLAGHER
(Auoelited Prn. Stiff Writer).
LONDON, Mty 13 (AP).-per
miny'i continuing ttttck on the
Crlmttn Kerch Peniniuli took on
tht form tonight of tht opening
thruit In t coming Nui offeiylvi
from et lent three polnti towird
tht oil wetlth of tha Caucaiui, tn
offenilve bicked by 2,000,000 of
Hltler'i beit combtt troopi now
reported mined In tht Ukrtlne.
Informed London lources laid the
Germans could be expected to
smuh at Rostov from Taganrog,
above the sea o( Azov, and to attic kin force Southeast from Khtr
kov.
As for Kerch Itself competent
London Informants said "the key to
the situation ls in the air."
"The Germans can control the air
they can keep the Russian Black
Sea fleet away, smash resistance on
the peninsula and prepare to jump
the strait to take the Caucasus de
fences of Rostov from the rear," one
source said.
But, he added, if the Russians
could maintain air parity there ls
little likelihood of outstanding German success even if Kerch at the
HDastern end of the peninsula were
taken, for then the Germans would
not be able to negotiate the few
mllu icross the strait.
Etrlier In the day the Germani
claimed tha Human linei had
been broken; that 40,000 priionen
had been captured and that the
battle had been "decided" by an
tiuult ef 2000 Nui diva bomberi.
The German High Command said
the bittle wu "concluded" with
destruction of enemy forces en
circled and overrun and that "rem
Wea|t%
In the put tix dtyt Nelion hu
htd 2.5,1 Inchu of nln, mtde up ot
.27 Inch lut Friday, .07 Siturdiy,
.71 Sunday, .76 Mondiy, ,0< Tuetdiy, tnd tt Weidnudty, the measurements In each can being for the
24 hdurs ending at 9 p.m. Tuesday's tempenture extremes xittt
37 ind 63 degrees, md Monday's,
44 ind SO degreu.
Meanwhile the ltke hu been riling rapidly, tnd tt noon Wednesdiy
itood it 4.75 fut ibove the low
witer mirk, compired with 4.28
feet Tuesdiy tnd 4.00 feet Mondty.
■ gain of three-quarters toot in two
days.
force  were  b-ing  pursued towird
the tip of the lithmui.
HEAVY DIPITRUCTION
BERLIN, May 11 (AP).-A Ger J
man High Command announcement
claimed tonight that Oerman troopi
were relentlessly pursuing "ths
beaten enemy forcu In the direction of Kerch" arl tblt t Sovltt
fleet held rudy tor evacuation purposu in the Sea of Aaov bid been
ptrtly annihilated tnd ptrtly dim-
aged.
HiUer's newiptper Voelklscher
Beobachter under the heiding "Aig
Force imashei enemy stronghold!
ln peniniuli of Kerch," uld "Wave
tfter wtvt of Germtn mtchints
hivt bombed enemy sup emplacement, bunken *_ other fortified
strongholds, silencing gunt tnd det- >
troylng bunkers tnd mtchine-gun
nuts." '■
Continuous ilr ttttck htd "rued,
the foriflcttioni to the ground" tnd
"blotted out" fortified villtgu, "in-
nihllated" whole units of tnemy
forces and destroyed great numbers
of Unks, the papen declared.
"The planu," the account con*
tlnued, "kept artillery under bomb,
ing ittack so lt wu unable to interfere with the German advance kept.
roads and shipping under fire and
"secured air supremacy over the
whole of the peninsuli."
To Invite Hanson
to Appear
Before Committee
OTTAWA, May 13 (CP)— The
House of Commons Agriculture
Committee today voted 23 to 8 to
invite Conservative House Leader
Hanson to appear before it In connection with statements on Ctntdian Wheat Board operations which
he made in the House lait March.
The decision to invite Mr. Htmon
followed debate by memben, witn
Conservative members oppoied to
any suggestion that Mr. Htnson be
required to appear.
C.W.A.C. Units to
Move Overseos
VANCOUVER, May U (CP) -
Ma). Gen. H. F. G. Letson, Adjutant General, said on his irrivil
here today on an inspection teur
of the West, units of the Canaditn
Women's Army Corps would be
sent overseas In the near future.
He said that units of the Women'i
Army Corps which will be ient to
England will carry on work done
by the corps in Canada and to re-
ntnts"  of the  Russian   peninsular lease men to fighting units.
Report Laval lo Immobilize 3
Warships al Martinique
LONDON, May 14 (Thursday)
(AP.)—Informed sources uld today
that the Vichy chief of government
Pierre Laval in a note to the United
States regarding the status of Martinique had agreed lo Immobilize
three French warships there, the
aircraft carrier Beam, and the
crulien Emlle Bertln and Jeanne
D'Arc.
(The Berlin radio broadcast a
Vichy dispatch In which It said th-*
United States also had demanded
that Vichy turn over a number ol
french merchant ships now in
CSilbbeen  ports, but that France
would refuse this request because
her armistice with Germany forbids such a transaction).
Germany has forbidden Vichy to
part with 140.000 tons of merchant
shipping In French Martinique, and
has given orders to "scuttle the ships
if necesury," the Dally Mall uid.
today In a dispatch datellned on the
French frontier.
"American demands aimed at
neutralizing aMrtlnlque are believed to Include the diiarmlng of warships," the dispatch said. "Americtn
garrisons also- are to be itatloned
at strategic points in the Iilandi." .
y      a
^*A___-ti-__-J_.*.^, ■_____&._ A___^lVif ^mj^t\it______
 JJT3IW
IAOI   TWO
[hild Expert Fixes Death Cause as
idition of Malnutrition in
irtha White Trial; Enters (Ih Day
■Nothing noteworthy tress histology (mierotcopic essmlitttlsn)
to gubttantiitt t diaguosli ol itar-
Thii quotation trom i report
by the Vincouver Genenl Hoipittl pathologlit oa in txtnlnt-
tion of tht body orgspi of tht
btby Edwird Wiyne Kintel or
White, wii. introduced by A. G.
Cuntren et Ttall, Defence Countel, during ths eros-extminttlan
ot protecution witnenei Or. Char-
lit M. Hanlion ot Trail Wedneidiy in the trial of Martha White,
chested with mtniliugbter in *oa-
nsction with tht KSnttl biby'j
detth, la Supreme Court here.
LITTER WOULD ENLARGE
N REPORT
Reminding tie doctor thtt the rebld been received In Trtil be-
the Coroner'i inquest into the
[Intel lnfint'i death, Mr. Cimeron
td, "do you know why lt wasn't
reduced it tht Coroner s lmueit?"
"No, I do not," Qr. Hirriion rt-
lied, liter iiylog that a subsequent
trom ths Pathologist enlarged
I this ititement To thii Mr. Cam-
on countered:
"Could you product the letter tent
.Vtncouver to Induce the iecond
tier?"
Orlginil of my iuch letter would
IS it Vancouvtr tnd • copy prob-
|»ly would be in the C. S. Williims
le files, tht witneu replied.
LLERY FILLED
five witnesses for the prosecution
ire hetrd Tuesdiy u the triil ot
it JO-yeir-old mother before Mr.
dice Ellii of Vancouver ind I
ln Supreme Court it Nelson
ipltted iti third day. Arrtnge-
ents for night sitting! in iddition
thi daytime proceedingi were
ndoned on the ipllcatlon of C.
Gtrland, Crown Prosecutor, and
0, Cameron ot Trill, Deftnit
Couniel. The trial will continue into
lti fourth day thii morning at 10a.m.
f While many have ittended the lit-
'tlngi on ill three days, the gallery
Kris crowded to overflow at the
.Wednetdty ifternoon lession. Over
TO sttended.
OFTEN RESULTS
FROM MALNUTRITION
i   Dr. Morriion, when examined hy
'lb. Garland, Identified plcturei, entered ti exhibits by the Crown Pro-
•ecutor, ii "viewi of the body on
which I did tn tutopiy." He detailed
hii conduct of tbe tutopiy tnd hii
fkidlngi it t reiult. The autopsy
'hi ssid, givt tvidence that deith
"due to • condition of dystrophy
I condition of westing ln children with no organic disease ... lt
often results from malnutrition."
Dr. Morrison's evidence in this par-
ticular wil very limilar to that giv-
es by him at tht coroner'i lnqueit
M>t Trtil.
Tht witness ilso told of tint
teeing the dying biby it Trail-Tid-
Soio Hoipital, and described the
treitment administered to him ind
bit subsequent death.
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I
CHARTS WIRE CHECKEO
Crou «^»r**"ln*f Dt. Morriion
on hii teitimony concerning treatment administered the dying bebe
at tba hotpital; the Defenie Counisl
uked, "Isn't there some dinger
in giving cframint (i respirttory
itimulint administered to the btby)
and oxygen to in infant wben ihe
iptrk ot lltt il -low?"
"Whan tbe iptrk of lift Is low,"
iald Dr. Morrlion, "you havt to list
heroic measures."
"It it oni thing lor t phyiiciin
to tdminiiter it ind mother tpr io-
called trained nunei to tdminuttr
it?" Mr. Cameron continued. '
"In emergency nurtw oould glvt
it... lt li not thit dingeroui," wu
the reply.
"It an overdouge wu glvtn lt
could bt burltd?" he wu tsked.
"Not likely."
"Is there tny wiy ot checking
lt?" Counsel isked.
"No," wu Dr, Morrison'i iniwer.
"Then I am right In uying thit
If • miiUke wai made by nursei lt
could be buried?" Mr. Cimeron
ctme back.
"Probably io," uld Dr. Morriion.
Previouily Dr. Morrlion told the
had checked the charta on the treatment administered to the biby, ind
indicited nothing untoward wu
ihown.
"IT WAS MY REPORT"
Whin uked If hli nottt, midi
whilt performing tht tutopiy,
hid bein m.d. with thi tupport
ahd luggeitlon. ef Coroner Or.
J. 3. Dily ind Dr, D. J. M. Crawford of tht Clinic, who wtrt ilio
preient at tht lutopiy fer i tlmt,
Dr. Morrlion decltrtd, "Not tt
ill." Later, whtn Couniel iug-
Strttd tht autopiy wu midt with
tht "o.k." of tht two othir doo-
lori, hi itited, "No o.k. wei given
by them—It wu my report."
FIXES  DEATH  CAUSE
Dr. William Jamu Endicott of the
C. S. Williami Clinic at Trill, fifteenth witneu to be cilled by the
proiecutlon, told of conducting in
external examination of the baby's
body at the Somen-Carberry Funeral Home Jan. 26.
"The examination indlctted only
ont condition from which it could
htve died, tnd thtt, dystrophy. This
It advanced malnutrition essentially
caused by starvation for iome reuon
or other. Starvation in this wme
wonld mein lt rtad not received adequate nourishment or assimilated
nourishment received. The common cause it Insufficient nourishment."
Three free biby clinics in Trail
and one in Warfield were conducted,
he and Dr. N. D. C. McKimon, Medicil Hetlth Officer, examining bi-
bits and sdviting mothen tt theie,
Dr. Kndicott ttld.
The baby's body, had been weighed Jtn. 26 when he, Dr. Charles
Morrison and Dr. McKinnon were
pretent in the funeral home, the
witneu said. It weighed five pounds,
one half ounce.
Dr, Endicott, whole specialty li
child care and children'i dlseues,
tnd anaesthetics, also gave considerable medical teitimony ei to
the weights and progress of normal
Infant!, Infant feeding, care of infants, infants diseases and condl
tions, and the likely conditions to
result ln infants expoied to certain
specified condltioni.
The examination ot this witneu
by Crown Proiecutor C, B. Garland
completed the third day of the
trial. Other prosecution witnesses
are still to be called.
"I AM NOT TRYINQ
TO MISLEAD"
Mr. Cameron, defence counsel
Wedneidiy morning continued hii
crou examination of prosecution
witneu Mrl. Nellie Ellen McDonall,
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A headache need not be in illnem in itielf, but it
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ilugiisliniw- within.
To help overcome the cause of hetdtche it ia
necessary to eliminate the wute matter from the iyttem. Burdock Blood
Bitten helpt to remove the cause of hetdtches by regulating the dlgeative
and biliary organe, neutralising acidity, regulating the constipated bowels
and toning up the sluggish liver, and when thii has been accompliihed tkt
headaches should disappear.
Get B. B. B. at any drug counter.   Price tl .00 a bottle.
Th. T. Milburn Co., Limit*!, Toronto. Oat
Guide for Travellers
NELSON'S LEADING HOTELS
NEW GRAND HOTEL
PHONE     MR. ANO MRS. PETER KAPAK, Propi.  . PHONE
-)_iA    In our new wing you may enjoy the fineit    J\\A
-»*i~    rooms In the Interior — Bath or Shower.    *»~
8PECIAL RATES BY THE WEEK OR MONTH
L«ON DAILV MIW* rltlUk I C
it ifter 1* hours, ■tt*
compUu goes tn mint lion Tuesday attenooa tad Wednatday owning wti undir wty tor neatly four
hours. Ajsin, Mr. Cuneroa by coo-
stint referencei to tha iftniiiuu
it Uw preliminary hearing and ts
tbe tfswrlpl of the _n*tuni into
the Kanttl btby'i fcsih pointed
out differences in Mai McDonall't
C—TH.MBAY MORNINO  MAY 1< 1SSJ-
Once  after Mn. WDoatil had
Hmd tbt list time thi at w the baoy
is no more than uvtn tnd ns lass
than three days befort ltt dettn,
ht pointed out thst ia htr preliminary eninlnittnn tbt htd iniwered
the stmt nuewoa "two days before
it died.  No it wu tht night before."
"Whieh iniwer is correct * tbe
counsel queried.
"I d«n't know," tht witntit replied.
."And ytt," Hid Mr. Cimeron,
"you srs willing to answer bars
wbetier you know the iniwer or
not . . , Either you were trying to
mlilild tht migiitntt (it thi preliminary httrlng) or to mislead thl
court now."
'I tm not trying to mlilttd iny-
one." »
At mother point In the cron-
eximlnttion when tsked MlH
White'i reaction to lha newi ot htr
btby'i detth, tht witneu slid "I'd
sty Sht htd broken down with ths
newi."
"Definitely tod ilncerely?" isked
Mr. Cameron.
"Yet," wu tht rtply.
"I'm glid you'vt iuffered I chinge
ot hurt." wai Mr, Cuneron'i ruction to thli. 'Tor it ttit Inqutit
thli wai your itory: 'Oh there were
tears then,' md I uked 'Did you
ilncerely believe they were genuine tean?' and your reply wu 'No,
I did not.'"
"Today you put totntUdnf up
which wu to your credit . . ." he
continued. "WhiCwu your motlvi
in giving inch evidence to t coroner'i Jury?"
Mra McDoniU replied: "It didn't
sound u ilncere u I thought It
ihould."
The remtlnder of the crou-eMin-
Inition wu much ln tht ume vein.
BABY ALONE AT I A.M.
Mri. Mirthi Hoover, occupant t
the Trail rooming houte, when eximlned by Mr Gtrlind, uld on Ntw
Yetr'i Dty tfter I Ntw Yttr'l Eve
dance, ihe tnd her husbind had
returned home it > i.m. to find tbe
btby tloni tnd crying.
"I wtnt upstairs and tht biby in
Hii Ktnttl'i room wu crying. .. .
I turned the light on md covered
the biby up, md I rocked the bed
for e few minutei.. It went to ileep.
She hid ieen Min White downstiin or coming downstairs in tht
rooming houie sometime!, ind on
occtsioni ieen her down town without the infant, Mri. Hoover itited.
Noticing the biby wu apparently
failing, the hed it one time tug
gested to the mother thit it bt ttken
to a doctor. Miss White had never
told her she had been to t doctor
with the baby, the witness said. She
had ieen the mother bringing the
baby upstairs In the morning, Mn.
Hoover said, and later when cross-
examined described thia is "i common occurrence."
"You didn't like the tccused did
you?" uked Mr. Cimeron when
cross-examining.
"I wam't over friendly with her,
neither did I hate her," the replied.
HEARD BABY CRYINQ
"I hetr the (kantel) baby crying
always," testified Stanley Sygito-
wici, Polish occupant of Hie same
rooming house u Martht White.
Usually he hetrd tht crying between I and 11 p.m. ifter he hid
returned from work. Mr. Sygitn-
wicz liter when cross-examined
modified hii itatement, laying the
biby cried between 8 end 11 p.m„
but "when the Mm. hold the child
it did not cry.",
Once, he laid, he heerd the baby
crying .when the mother wu not
about. Earl L. McDonall, landlord,
upstairs it the time, went in
through the open door to the Kintel room to give the baby lti bottle.
The btby'i crying ceased.
The "Kanteli" were "alwayi happy," ht answered Mr. Ctmeron. Hte
hid ieen Miu White cirrying the
Hospital Board Increases Scale for
Nunlng Jlalf, Maids, Firemen;
New (onjrador to Operate laundry
Approximately SO nurssi *t Koo-
teoay Labs Oeneral Hospital benefit by SB Increue mated by tke
Hoe-pilal Dlrectori Tuetdiy night V)
til mtmbtrt of tk* protsssioasl
nursing stall ot IS par month. The
Board alao (ranted in increaie of
II SO par month tp maids wbo hsd
been In nrvice iu months, Maidi ot
ihorter terms will become eligible
far tb* new rat* titer completing
tix months. An increut ed IIS stats
ptr hour wu granted the firemen,
thus bringing the Kite in Unt with
t rteet ordtr of tht Botrd of Induitrlil Relations
NEW LAUNDRY FUGIME .
Tht Chintw itaft ot tha Hospltil
Laundry having tilled te th* ttdue-
thrt ippeil ot operating tirms vacated b ythe Jtptntu who htvt
bten movtd iwiy from tk* Coait,
and given notict, tht Board offered t contract ts I. Gregolrt, In exceu of $325 I month, for operation
ot the laundry. Mr. Ortgola* will
ttkt over tt onct, optntlng wtth
Wl own etefl. Th* lupltal _.
aeceuarUy out man upttr the
•ew csodttloaa. -r
Eitimttmg that ths PVrtD in-
cream granted, snd tht Increaied
coit of operating tbi I_*undry. wall
togtthtr idd ibout MM • year te
th* cost of operating tte Hoipltil,
tht Bowd appointed I committe*
to drift t letter to the Minister ol
Peniioni tad National Siealth, Bon.
Ian Mackenue, te drtw to hii ittention thi poiition th* institution
ll in under th* prlc* celling, wltb
te hoepitalutlon chirgei "trosen",
md aakng whether he eould lug-
geit tame meani et reliet
Piyment ot April tccounti
amounting to tfTSTJl wu authoriied, the operating coit for April
exceeding the April revenue by
HUM.
A check for 11000 trom the Department ot Heilth wu ordered tpplied on the bank loan on conitruction iccpunt in connection with the
modernised Uolitlon hotpital.
Train Service Is Resumed Through
Crowr but Snow and Deluge ol Rain
May Keep Highways (ullor 10Days
Whilt proipecti ire thit It will
tiki 10 diys or mort to reitore
highwiy tritflc ln the Crow'i Nut
Pais, under the mounting condltioni
of snow and flood water, the Canadian Pacific line wu ln operation
Wedneidiy, tnd through train lervice wu resumed.
Bringing passengers tnd arrears
of ixprtu tnd mall, from the
Prairie, the Westbound express due
at 8:45 a.m. Wednesdiy got through
but many houn latt, and wai able
to make Nelion ifter midnight.
It wai billed to go on West wtrd
u the Kettle Villey at 1:09 a.m.
Thursday's traini will- go out as
usual, the Eutbound it 1:90 i.m.
and thl Westbound it 10:01 i.m.. If
lt irrlvei on timt from tht Crow,
u now txpected.
EXTRAORDINARY SNOW
A picture of conations In the
Britiih Columbil ilde of tbe Crow'i
Neit Piu wu received Wedneiday
by Erneit Smith, Diitrict Public
Worki Engineer, from the Department it Cranbrook, which told of i
snowfall ot 10 inchei Eut ot Fernie,
with huvy nini now converting
the mow Into witer.
The highwiy ii under witer ln
the Nitel tnd Hoimer trtu In B V-,
tnd ln Iht Bltirmort neighborhood
on the Alberta side, with of coun*
washouts, while bridges art threatened.
Another all-day rain In the Cranbrook section started the .water up
•giln ifter lt hid dropped two feet.
Ai the witer must drain off the
lind before brldgei ind wuhed
out portloni cm be tickled, It is
thought thit 10 dayi miy be required before the hlghwiyi cm be
retdy for traffic.
Stories of the abnormal mow
wer* brought to Nelun by tb* crew
thtt took out Mondty'i Eutbound
train. It ii clilmed that people*yere
clambering through thret feet ot
mow. One obierver itated thit it
Hountr tht fencepoiti bore 10
inchei of snow.
The train thit came in from the
Crow Tuesday afternoon it • locil
rfom Cranbrook pused through a
snowstorm ilong Kooteniy Lake,
md ill traffic from the East has
ihown mow.
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Newly renovated throughout.  Phonti tnd elevator.
A. PATTERSON, late ol
Coleman, Alta.; Proprietor.
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Day
MONDAY, MAY 25
Between all Stations ln Canada
ONE-WAY FARE
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(Minimum Fare 29c) >
	
-
GOING: MAY 22 lo 2 P.M.
MAY 25.
(Except   if   no   Train   May 12
tickets wiU be iold lor May 21).
RETURN: Until Tin Msy 26
(Except   if  no  Train   Mty   2S
tickets will ba good on lint
available Train)
Full Information fron) my Agent
6Uiii*tf&4fc
iMriftiiiitim. ii 7Am''-v^-*'
—-
225 Competitors
in Festival;
Opens Here Today
Over 229 entrant! will participate
in the three-day Kootenay Music
Festival opening at 9 a.m. today in
the Capltol Theatre. Nelson, Trail,
Rossland, Nakusp, Castlegar, Kulo,
Robion, Fruitvtle, Tadanac, Gray
Creek and Longbeach are repreiented by competitors.
Arthur Benjamin, of Vancouver,
who will adjudicate all branchei of
competition excepting elocution, arrived here Wednesday. Mn. O. Daviu, elocution Judge, will not arrive
until Fridey.
British Ship Mod*
Heroic Exploit
at Diego Suarez
LONDON, Mty 11 (CP)-An of
flclal iource uld todiy thit thl
fill of thl Madigiicr port ef An-
Ul rtnt wu precipitated by tht
"extremely gallant exploit" of I
Britiih deitroyer which hid illd
through tht nirrow mlntd entrtnee to Diego Suarei Biy under
fin ef French bittirln ind linded
50 mirlnii. Antilrint lurnndirtd
Mty 8.
Driver Dies as Oil
Truck Hit by
U.S. Streamliner
LOS ANGELES, May 13 (AP). -
A Stnti Fe pauepger itreamliner
crashed into • fuel oil truck md
trailer in tht Eutern section of Loi
Angelu todty, killing the truck
driver and Injuring tlx other per-
tons.
Caught on the locomotlvt, thi
trailer burst Into (lames and the oil
iet fire to telephone poles al the
train swept on 1000 feet before coming to a stop.
FOR  WANT-AD SERVICE
PHONE 144
baby it timet, ind ihe had ihown
it to him. "She itemed pleued with
It"
Provinciil Pollct Conittbit A.
Lloyd Gray of Triil," District Regii-
trir of Blrthi, Deaths tnd Mar-
riagei, identified t certificate of
the registration ot the birth of Edward Wiym Kantel, filed on Jan.
IS by Fred Willitm Kintel, ige 90.
The form, Conitable Gray testified,
gave Kantel as the father, and Martht Aileen White, tge 20, u the
mother. It wu ligned "Martha Kan
tei" when he received it. Thli tig
nature wu not midt in his pretence, the witneu uld when cron-
tximined.
Men, Women Oyer 40
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I 1——,	
Canadianizing
R.U.F.
Has Opposition
OTTAWA, May 13 (CP)- Air
Miniiter Power told the Houie of
Commoni today he encountered
some resistance on the part of both
Royal Canadian Air Force and Royal
Air Force officers to his policy of
"Canadianiring" the R.C.A.F. overseu.
He laid ht ilso encountered iome
lack of enthuiiasm on the part of the
British Air Ministry but he intends
to persist iri the policy. "Nothing
Is dearer to my heard than the Ca-
nadianiiation of the R.CA.F." iald
the Miniiter. "I ihould like to get
all the support I can ln parliament.
And I don't know when I have had
a greater sense of frustration than
ln my attempts to Canadtnize the
R.C.A.F."
The Minister said there were arguments both for and against Ihe
policy of grouping Canadian airmen
in all-Canadian squadrons rather
than mixing them up in the general
poijl of the R.A.F.
Some Canadian officers, brought
up in the traditions of the R.A.F
were not sympathetic to the policy
ot segregating Canadians. An argument aginst lt wu that Canadian
officeri could not enjoy the lame opportunities for, promotion to high
commands if Canadians wert in thiir
own formttioni is 11 they were dispersed through the Royal Air Force.
"There ls a feeling both in thii
country and beyond it that it is lo
the general good to mix people
from all parts of the empire," Major
Power went on. 'To that theory 1
subscribe to a certain extent
"On the other band, I maintain
that these men in squadrons in t
teim ind lt ii easier to play on •
team with men you know, men of
your own kind, than to pity on
t team with men from another town
even though you may be the belt
of friends and have the greateit
re.pert for one another."
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Cirl.' Slacks
Girls' slscks snd farmerettes
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Prlct   _l.*YS
St. Anthony C.Y.O.
Adopts
Now Constitution
TRAIL, B. C, May lJ.-Thret
new memberi were lnttiittd by the
C.Y.O. of 8t' Anthony of Ptdui
Church Tuetdty night. A dtwiiiion
of the new conitltutlon of the club
wit held, ind the conitltutlon wu
adopted to takt effect it tht next
meeting.
A committee wu choien to mike
arrangementi for the toclal to be
held next month, compoied ot
Tony Cimpini, Alice Deicotatu,
Idi Agiul tnd Ceiare Allan.
The hike planned for lait Sunday bad to bi poitponed on iccount
of tht rainy weather, but li planned
again tor thli Sundiy it tht weather
permiti.
Following the business meeting
dancing wu ipjoyed by tht memberi.
C B. Davidson,
Shoreacres
Postmaster, Dies
Clarence Btrton Divldion, Shore-
acres ppitmuter tnd general itore.
keepei for 13 yein, died it tht tgt
of SS Wedneidiy moming ln Kooteniy Lake General Hospital. Ht
had iuffered a lengthy Illneu.
Mr. Davidson ctme to Csnada
from his birthplace in Eureka, Kansas, in 1902. Ha settled tint in
Ponoka, Alta., and 18 yeara agjl
moved to Shoreacrei. Well known
in the Shorea.cret irea, he at times
acted ai a guard for the B. C. Police
on tchooli during ^oukliobor trou
ble, tnd wil for leveral yein sn
hononry forest warden,
Surviving are hii wife, fire sons,
Oiwtld In South Carolina, Ord and
Clarence it Homeglen, Alta., Lyle
and Hugh in the Canadian Army
ovtneu; four daughten, Mrs. J
Miller, Rosmary, Alta.; Mrs. Uric
Quick, Fisherholma, Alta.; Mn. A T.
Bengiton, Sprlngdale, Alta.; and
Mallnder it Shoreacres; and t sister, Mn. L. Eley ln Montana.
NORFOLK, Ntb., Mty 18 (AP)
The toll ef • torntdo thtt cut •
destructive twith through North-
eaitern Nebruka laij night itood
•t flvt penoni dttd and thret
injurtd todty •■ ftrmen took
count of the extepilve dimtgt In
flioted on their liveitock 'tnd
firm bulldlngi.
Trad
Merchants Urged
TRAIL, B. C, Miy IS - J. H. Jicobi Mondiy night givt in iddren
on "Co-Optntlvei" betore the Retell Merchinti Auoclition Mondiy
night, the iecond tddreu ln t ttr
lei of three.
Mr. Jicobi pruented irguments
ln favor of tnd tlto agiinst thi co
operative system of business, /_,
co-operative buiineu wu not subject to taxation u other buiineisu
were, md wu iblt to operate more
economically. Tha moit effective
argument against tht co-operative
organisation, wu iti nted of employing fewer worken, tnd ln consequence mtny ot formerly employed were left without employment.
J. A. Ballantyne of Nelion, locsl
representative of tht Wirtlme
Pricei tnd Trade Board, also gave
in Intereitlng ttlk. Ht itreued the
neceulty for the merchinti to elim
inate all unnecessary frills tnd eut
down thtir overbold ln tvery pot-
tible way to aid ln carrying on at
reduced margins, u wu essential
now. He pointed out thtt thi mew
Oovernment regulationi concerning
the buying id selling of merchan
disc werex going to work out satis
fsclorlly tor both the merchant sad
thl customer,
A letter wts rtld from the Cintdlm Chamber ot Commerce urging buiineu mtn to promote the
Itle of wir uvlngi itampi. Tha
merchanti decided thtt in thii dii.
trlct thi ule could be boosted best
through the Rotary monthly war
savings draw, tnd that more books
of tlcketi ihould bt iold through
tht merchants.
80,000 YUGOSLAVS DIE
SINCE OCCUPATION
, MOSCOW, May U (AP)- The
official Soviet newi agency. Ttss
reported today that 80,000 Yugoslivi
had been killed tn aczska Province
ot Yugoslavia ilnce the Hungarian
occupation, that scores of villag-rs
had been devastated and thl bllt
land given to Hungarln landlords.
R.C.A.F. Tests Too
Mueh for Minister
OTTAWA. May II (CP) - Tht
tptitudi tuti ipplied to itudenti In
the Royal Canadian Air Force proved too itiff tor Air MinUter Pow
er, it wu revealed in tht House
of Commoni lut night. Whin Cspt
Kodney Adamson uked him it tht
aptitude teit wm working it'll.
satisfactorily the minister replied'
"I know I tried lt tnd failed."
TOKYO, May IS (AP)-The newt-
ptptr Nlchl Nichi Mid todsy thst
Oen. Sir Hsrold Alexander, commander of the British forcei In Burmi had innounced tranifer ot his
hudquarten ln India. Thli reported move hu not been mnounced
in New Delhi or London.)
DOES
INDIGESTION
WALLOP YOU
BELOW THE BELT?
lUlp Tier Firiothn "28" tte The Kind 01
Relet TU Helpi Mike Tea Unfa' Ti Ct
Mora thu hilt of row <i!n«tloa fa goal
Mow tin bolt- In rour Mint of bowols.
So wboi Indlnotlon itrftw. tor lomHliIni
thit helpi dilution la thl itomich AND
bolowthob.lt.
Whit rou may ued to Cirt _ r"i Llttlo Lhor
PIIU to Hn neoolS hole to Uut 1 oifotUD
11 fut" of bowell.
Tike on Cuttr-i Llttlo Mrer Pin bof or.
•nd on. _J*t.r m_i.li. Tiki them •roordlni to
dlnctloni. Th_y blip w.k. up . Irtf «r In
of th. lanla Unsure igloos In grow ito
uh AUa bow.ii-h.lp yoe dig™, whit j
htrt ttlan tn Nlton'i own way.
Tlttt moot folk. ntth. kind of r,llrf th.t
nuke, rou f«lb«tUr from rour h.«d to roui
B-..J»itb«iuriro->i_tlhii.nuln.C..t.r-.
ttll Umt Pllto from row dniubt-IM.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
NEWS OF THE DAY
ii11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111.il
|APS TO BE KEPT
ON PENSION
LIST TEMPERORARILY
VICTORIA, May 13 (CP)-Japaneu in receipt of mothers' old igt
peniioni will be kept on thi peniion llttl until the B. C. tecurity
commission lakes charga of them,
Provincial gecretary George S. Pear
■on said today.
Have You Read the .Classified?
•
NOTICI
Loading on Bridgei Nelion-Kaslo
Road.
Province ot British Columbia
Public Worki Depirtment
Public Notice ll hereby given
purulent to Subiectloni A tt C of
Section SS of Part IV ot the Highway Act that the maximum grou
load which may be hauled on or
over the bridge on the Nelson Kailo
Road over Roii Creek it the Inter-
icctlon of Queem Biy Roid, about
twenty-four mllu- from Nelion, il
hereby limited to five torn Including weight of vehicle.
E. SMITH,
Diitrict Engineer,
By authority of the Mlnliter of
Public Works.
Court House, Nelion, B. C.
May 14th, 1942.    .
GROCERSSELLTHEM
famUl***
irfl
WAR
SAYINGS
STAMPS
MOM
SANS! • 1011 Officii
DIMITMINt SIOIII • OHUOOISIS
OIOCIII • IOIACCONIIIS
IOOK STOMS aat atau MIM STOIB
k J2,
km
wmm
EARS TO HEAR
AU.REX
Today's Finest Hearing Aid,
ii accepted ky the Amerlcen Medlcel Auocloiion end Uo|oi
loi  the  Herd et Heoriei, . ..
AUR.K qui do wooden tor »ou too. Hear a witrti tlct thi
whliper of a friend, enjov atlln the theatre, the radio and rthira.
lervicei. IHE WOULD OS* SOUND RECKrtNS YOU!
Mr U. r Hile of the Hale Ontleal Co mil Hale Hearing, mem-
biri of thi Vincouver Better mulneu Bureau md Preicriptlon
Optician! et Americi wlU be ln
Nelion, Msy 16th and 18th st ths Humt Hottl
Free Aaalyih  and  Demteifratlmi  will  hi  A"i"sed.
Brifi
l relative
or a
Hind with
yen.
.. ltt thtm
ludat
with you
Thi
Manic    of
Aurex.
Don't mln thli opportunity. It'i trtll
No ordtn will be taken unleu entirely
ntlifictory to ill Dirioni concerned.
Hale Hearing
410-1  llrki Building
VinCMVir, B.C.
Writt lor  Frtt Booklet
 -
-NILSON DAILY NIWS NELSON S  C—THURSDAY MORNINO. MAY M
-MM
•I
Announce Sinking
of Second Ship in
St. Lawrence River
OTTAWA,   Miy   13   (CP)-Nivy
[   Miniiter Macdonald innounced to-
m$t ami
G ■
8c itarti romance and
then he wrecks it,
It'i all his fault
he gets the exit.
Don't make the tame
l        mistake, my friend,
'*" You mutf ptrtpire,
but don't offend.'
Bath tonight with LIFEBUOY
-"*-?%*>* *.o.
diy ln the House of Commoni the
lou ot 1 iecond ship by luomar.ne
attack In the St. Lawrence River.
Lott of oae ship wu innounced
yeiterdiy m • prtu itatement trom
the Minister.
The tecond ship wu iunk in ibout
the ume waters and about the wme
time u the tint, Mr. Macdonild
told the House.
Earlier toaay it wu reported to
the Cimdiin Preu thit neirly hilt
ot the more than four score turvlvort of the first veuel hid come
from mother ihip than the, tint one
known to have been iunk in the
St, Lawrence
The two sinking! ire the first
tine enemy submarine action hu
ever been reported in St. Lawrence
witen although In the First Grut
War enemy submarines lank some
ships off '.he Novi Scotii Coast.
In announcing the second St. Lawrence  linking,  Mr. Micdomld  re-
MONTHLY-
FEMALE PAIN
Womtn who iut ir piln of lntfulir
Womtn who
periods vith cranky nervousness—
dul to monthly functional disturb-
inoM—should find Lydll I. Pinkham'i Vegetable Compound TableU
(vith idded iron) wry effeetlne to
relieve such distress. Pinkham's
Tablets made especially for women
help build up reeleunce isilnit
euch eymptome. They help build
rod blood I Wide In Canada.
1 up
cilled lhat yerterday ha had laid
down the rule that oo mora information* ot- unkings as that area
would ba given antee*** it waa apparent that tha mlormiuon wouifl
not lid Ut enemy * .
That policy would ba pursued
twt ia ihia laitaacae the two unkings really cooftouted oae lneunce.
The information ha made public yea-
tar-day wai "coaapletely iccunte"
iccording to tie iatonniuon ha had
tt iht time.
A ST. LAWRENCE RIVER PORT,
Miy 13 (CP)—Netrly hall of tht
more than four icore survivors at
• veuel torpedoed two dayi igo
in the Si. Lawrence River were
reported to The Canadian Prea todiy to hive come from I vessel
other than the one iunk by the
tint enemy submarine ever to invade the River waten.
Reports from various sources have
Indicated thit either 87 or 81 wr-
vivori of the torpedo-sinking announced in Ottiwa yesterday by
Navy Minister Micdomld -have
ruched land. Forty-one survivors
ire snd to hive been crew memben of the veuel announced by tne
Nivy Minister to hive been sunk
in the St. Lawrence The others
were iboard the ssme vessel but
are uid to hsve come originally
from another ihip.
CAMPBELLTOWN, N.B, May 13.
(CP)— A report reached here today
survivon of a freighter sunk by
submarine in the St. Lawrence River Mondiy would depart (omorrow
from the port where they are at
present.
Thousands More
Canadian Troops
Land in Britain
Italians Claim Gort
Wounded in Arm
LONDQN, Miy 13 (CP)- The
Rome ndio claimed todiy 1 bomb
splinter pierced the left arm of
Lord Gort, new Governor and Commander ln Chief of Mall?' as lie
arrived at his post on the Mediterranean island last week.
AN IAST COAST CANADIAN
PORT. May 13 (CP)-'Eager te get
oveneu, thousands of Canadiin
toldien end tirmen uiled recently
from thii port in one of the lirgeit
Canadian reinforcement movementi
to cron the Atlantic in thii wir.
Their ufe arrival in Britain wu
announced today, alter an uneventful voyage under heavy escort of
Britiih ind United Statei warships.
Soldien, tanned and hardened by
months of intensive tnining, formed the larger part of the movement
with airmen, nursing slsten and
fighting men from other Allied
countriei iwelling their numben.
Included in the movement were
some of the first Australian airmen
ever to be completely trained in
that Island Dominion.
Only women in the huge movement were the nursing sisten, 121
strong, headed by Mary Jane Mercer of Weston, OnL, and more recently of Camp Borden.
Among the soldien were men
whose duty was not to fight but
to keep up morale. One of these
waa captain R. W. Lane, a chaplain,
destined for duty with front line
troops in England.
Scattered among them were seaa-
oned  veterani  of  the  First Great
War—"repaint Joht" lha newcomen
called theo—like Maj. G. A. An-
nine of Toronto, holder at tha Military Medal, and happy-go-lucky
toldien ot fortune Uke Pte. Jack
Shank ot Chicago, a veteran ot
eight yean in the United Statu
Nivy and additional yean in urvice in varioui countriu.
The airmen wera youthful product! ot tnining fieldi Kittcrea
aerou Canadi. Sergetnt Piloti in
the, group included D. E. Meicombe,
Vincouver.
JVireless Air Gunnen Included W.
Day, Vancouver and Jack Mclvor
of Wellington, New Zealand—who
had been in Canada exactly two
weeks and "with f could stay here.*
However, the khaki uniformi outnumbered the trim bluu of the
Air Force, flooding every nook end
cranny of the transports. From
every province in the Dominion
had they come, forming u pugnacious • group of fighting men u
ever left this jumping-otf spot for
battle.
From the ihoret ot the Wut
Coast had come Pte. Charlea Moore
and Pte. F. Day, both of Vancouver,
Sgt H. B. Minnu, Victoria, gnd
Pte. J. A. Turner, Port Alberni,
Vancouver Island.
Work and Camp
CLOTHES
CHOOSE YOURS FROM
"THi BAY'S" LARCE
SELECTION
Men's Work Shoes
Men'i Lackle 9" oil-tan
work boots. Full leather
Mies and heels. Sizes 6
to II.
Men's 6" black work
boots, leather soles and
heels. Double stitched
counters. Pair
$6.50        $4-50
CBC Post Kills Effect of Axis
Propaganda Sent for Seamen
OTTAWA, Miy JS (CP)-Infor-
mation received through the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
to be taken on propaganda directed
listening post enabled counteraction
to merchant seamen in the United
Nations, War Services Minister
Thorson told the House of Commons Committee on Radio Broadcasting today.
The Minister reviewed in detail
the work of the CBC for the Committee, which ha instructions to
study the annual report of the Corporation and present findings to the
House of Commons.
Mr. Thorson uid the CBC has
monitors who listen selectively to
the short-wave transmissions of
the world.
"Special reports are made on propaganda from Axis countries," Mr.
Thorson said.
"Reporta are circulated to all
Government Departments concerned and to the CBC News Service.
Propaganda analysis Is also conducted. In this connection information received through the CBC Lis
tening Post enabled counter-action
to be taken about' propaganda dir.
ected to merchant teamen ot the
United Nations,"
Reports he had received Indicated
the CBC "has contributed an all-
out effort tn every phase of Cant-
da's war effort.*'
Although the money criterion
wu unimportant in these matten,
it was perhipi ■ kind of "yardstick"
to indicite thit in the yeir April
1, IMl to March 31. 1042, the normil
commercial value of the time devoted to public service by the CBC
national and region networks and
individuil CBC stations wai estimated conservatively at $850,000.
"It Is, I believe, a ititement of
fact that the CBC hu not only
served all phases ot the war effort
In Canada, but also hai brought
encouragement and Inspiration to
free peoplei throughout the world,"
Mr. Thorion said.
It wis the CBC policy to oppoie
the estiblishment of new private
broadcasting stations, and sueh licenses as had been Issued tor short-
Quality Work Shirts
MEN'S WORK
GLOVES
Genuine cream leather
"Roper" work glove.
Strongly sewn seams with
reinforced thumb. Sixes 8
Si'- $1.25
MEN'S WORK
PANTS .
A closely woven hand finished work pant that will
stand months of hard
wear. Roomy cut, full set
of pockets. M OQ
Siies 30 to 44. .ip-t-.-JJ
A high quality shirt tt a
price that will suit your
pocketbook. Full cut,
well sewn to stand rough
wear. Size M'/j-IT/i
$1.00
MEN'S WORK
SHIRTS
Full siie heavy twill work
shirts. Will not fade or
shrink. Triple stitched at
points of strain. Two
pockets. Siie
14'A to 18. .
.ini.       I f-rv
$1.85
Hf'fyitoiiift'fog dompflttt!
wtvt itations exiiting In ItM hid
contained t suitable expropriation
cliuie.
The Mlnliter uid: "So-called spot
news originating from Government
sources, ll, of course, lupplled to available to deipitch direct
the CBC Newi Bureiux by the Preu 0, umuuli ,ignificinct which
Servicei on which they depend for ^ „ieue(j M shortly before t
their ntwt. mrt de,dl.ne thet the normtl
"However,  special  machinery   u neli would be too ilow."
ltetnil
might I
newi" I
chit)-
11 J. Army Plane Patrols Dangerous
Area to Spol Refugees,
By WILLIAM MCGAFFIN
Auoelited Preu Stall Wrlttr
AN ADVANCED AIRDROME IN
INDIA, May 12 (Delayed) (AP)-
The U. S. Army plane warming up on the field is about to fly
into Burma to see if It can spot any
more of the refugees still plodding
out on secret routes, making their
way on foot ahead of the advancing
Japanese through some of the most)
torturous country in, the world.
Sam Brewer of the Chicago Tribune and I are going along.
We have been warned it will be
no picnic. If we had any such ideas
we soon got rid of them when we
were handed parachutes and they
started sticking tommy guns in the
windows and telling us how to
work them.
"Keep your eyes peeled for Japs,
they say.
A few seconds later the motors
increase their thunder to flying
tempo and we take off—a long
transport with no fighter protection. We are gambling on cloud cover, which is good today, and luck
to see us through without a bruih
with the Japanese who were report
ed over this area in large numbers
only the day before.
As we dart through the cloudi 1
look down from 13,000 feet at wild
sharp crags and the Impenetrable
juhgle growths below. There Is an
additional cause for reflection: head
hunters are living below. They make
no distinctions.
The plane drops lower and lower
until It is hardly 100 reet above the
ground and flying in big circles.
There should be some refugees
here—
Suddenly the observer grim ind
signals the pilot. He has sighted a
party of refugees. They are standing in the open, waving a big white
cloth at us.
Jfe don't land—the country is too
rugged. But we identify ourselves
and drop messages asking them to
signal If they need food or medicine
They reply they are all right.
There's still more to the story
but   security   reasons- prevent   me
from telling the rest for the time
being.
Rommel May Take
Command on
the Eastern Front
LONDON, May 13 (CP)-Field
Marshal Erwin Rommel has been
withdrawn from his command
of German forces in Libya and
may be given a command on the
Eastern front, Reuters News Agency has reported in a dispatch from
the German frontier.
The dispatch said Field Marshal
Albert Kesselring, who has been
directing the air attack on Malta
from Sicily, also had left Italy
and that German air strength in
the Mediterranean was being
withdrawan to other fronts.
Continue to Bomb
Paris Cafes
That Germans Use
BERNE, Switzerland, May 12 (AP)
—Two more restaurants used by the
Germans in Paris have been bombed,
advices from the occupied French
capital said today.
It was suggested that theie were
inspired by the appointment of
Major General Oberg, one of the
right hand men of Gestapo Chief
Heinrich Himmler, as head "f police
in the Paris area.
Canterbury TEA
^^^ SOLD BT *^
SAFEWAY STORES. LTD
LIQUOR COMMISSIONERS
RETURNS TO COAST
VICTORIA, May 13 (CP)-After
meeting liquor commissioners of
the other eight provinces and Dominion government officials. Liquor
Commissioner W.F. Kennedy returned here today from Toronto.
Mr. Kennedy said: "It was generally discussed but nothing definite was
done," in referring to the curtailment
of liquor sales for the war's dura-
lion.
DODDS
KIDNEY
PILLS
Recruiting Patriotic Dollars
At 500 Canadian Stations
Every band) of the Bank of Montreal is a "recruiting itation"
for Canadian dollars whose owners wish to serve their country.
At any one of our 300 Canadian branches you an buy war
savings stamps and certificates, and obtain full information regarding war loans.
Enlist to the full extent of your ability to help win a decisive
victory for freedom.
BANK OF MONTREAL
"A   BANK   WHERE   SMALL   ACCOUNT*   ARE   WELCOME"
Modem, Experienced Banking Service •.. the Outcome of 124 Yetn' Successful Operation
'B«y>
WAR
SAVINGS
CEKnFICATTS '
H. RADCLIFFE,
W. II. RAKES, Managee
Nelson Branchi
Trail Branchi
Rosiland Branchi
New Denver Branchi }. BURMAN, Manages
Kaalo Branchi        A. B. ROBERTSON, Maneges
I. N. CRAN, Manager
m
ittiibii Tl-Aiisl'i i i infc •y^mkrl^-.i
-.'-. __':.. J.__l...Ja-..H_ it,.
 |l    FOUft-
jin Power . . .
There a Gen ins
Your Home!
LOGAN   CLEMDININO,   MO.
i ii nothing t mother cu de
tt* birth to increaie het child'i
ilH U3VE GTCIS
TO SE FRESH
AS A "DAISY*
BO TD WEAK
UNDIES TWICE
I SIMPLY CRAZV/
king for romancd Then rentier men odor* dalntinenl
Never endanger your charm by
•arlng undiu a lecond day with-
t dipping them ln Lux to mtore
leu.  Untiles abiorb peript-
i which 1 eatls to undle odor.
Pliy ufel Dip undlu In Lux
L every night, u non u yoa taka
them off. Lux remove! pcrtplre-
tien—keepi umllri freih ind
I dainty. And regular dlpi ln Lux
" help dainty fabrici to wear longer
brain powtr," ays OS.
Laird. However bar methods ot ran
ing ind educating tha child can
help or injure hia latent mental acuity. Dr. Laird gou cm to iniwer
tbe following queitiona.
Art college prolettort brainy? Not
eipeciiUy. Tutt havt tbown tbat
tbt iverage college profeuor hu
only ilightly mort brain power than
the iverage itudent. About one-
fourth of tht itudenti ut brtiaier
than tba iverage teacher. The profeuor knowi more about hii own
ipecial tubject but doei not nee-
eatuily have any more brain power.
Are there many achool itudenti
who tre u briiny u coUege leacb-.
ers?   Yes.
Are children u brainy u their
parents believe? Seldom. Tbe cute
uying! of chUdren impreu pirenti
more thm outsider!.
Oo ichool tetchen uiuaUy recog-
xe brainy children? No. Gradi
Khool teichen ipot dumb youngsters more emly thin bnlny onei.
Are lightning ctlculiton brainy?
Seldom. A few have so few bni.il,
other than their calculating ability,
lhat they are to all practical purposes feebleminded.
li great arliaite or musical ability i lign of brainineu? No. An average dose ot brum seems to be
enough for • celebrited artist or
musician. Accomplishment in these
fieldi dependi more on ipecial g.fti
ind their cultivation than it doei
on generil brainineu.
Can a family have one brainy
and one dumb child? Not usually.
Children ln the ume family are
usually cloeely alike in brain power
even though tbey may be very unlike in interest! and tastes.
Are homely people more likely
to be brainy? Just the opposite according to statistics.
Are briiny children underlined?
It seems 10. The imalleat child in
the ichool room li uiuilly the brain-
iut.
GIRLS AND BOYS EVEN
Are glrli more likely to be briiny?
No, Girli and boyi have about an
equal chince.
Are brainy people likely to go
crazy? No.
Are brainy people likely to be conceited? No. Brainy folk uiually realize that they have better heedi than
others, but they do not rub It ln.
Are brainy people happy? Sel.
dom.
Does the world reward brainy peo.
pie? Seldom.
Are brainy people ikilled with the
handa? Seldom.
Are brainy people popular? Rare
ly-
-NILSON DAILY NIWI. NILSON  I C—THURSDAY MOKNINO. MAY 14, _t-
Jobless . . .
Boyfriend Slays
Away Because He
Hasn't Any Honey
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX
Detr Miu Fairfax: rr* been going with t young map tor iomi
Umt. WhUe ha had a Job wt wtnt
out tnd had lott ot tun together but
ifter tht Chriitmu ruth ht wtt
ItM otf tnd lince then he wont
come over. I've uked him uvtrtl
tiftet to coma over tnd ipend thi
evening it my houu bot ha inmti
ht won't comt ovtr until ht findi
i Job and bu monty to ipend.
UNHAPPY
It'i too btd thtt Jobleu men io
often hive the feeling thtt if they
hiven't money to trut girli they
•rent welcome. Hundredi ot girlt
hive written to thli column, confiding how disappointed they in because a certain boy friend doun't
show up, the reaion being thtt he'i
Jobless tnd (eels the girl doein't
wint to ue him if he isn't ln t
poiition to treat.
There may be iome glrli who feel
thU wiy tbout men but the mijorlty
don't, ind it'i 1 mistake lor I
man to feel he'i unwelcome if he
doesn't irrlve with i bouquet in
one hand and a box of candy in the
other. I think my correspondent
should write a friendly letter to
this man and Invite him to a family meal. Tell him she understandi
the iltuition, md please to forget
ibout "showing her i good time."
•—keep undiu new-looking! Start
your 1 n\
( dally dipping tonin.it.
dipKi
in-
k LEVER rmooucT
QUESTIONS   AND   ANSWERS
M.C.R.-Would it be pouible for
a boy five yean of age to get asthma
from playing with a dog?
Aniwer—Yes, hypersentlveneu to
animal dander ll one ot the most
frequent causes ot asthma.
UNION MAY OUST
WOMAN WELDER
VICTORIA, MaV  13  (CP)- The
status of Mri. Ethel Harvey, who is
employed at a local shipyard u •
welder improver, wat lut night reviewed by boilermikeri' Union Local 2 and lt is understood that the
decision of the Union delegatei
wu unfavorable to her.
Union leaderi, however, declined
to make-in announcement on the reiult of the meeting which wu it-
tended by representative! of ill
the union locals.
Inquiry at the ihlpyard employing the woman welder dlicloied thit
Mrs. Harvey was still at work and
doing it satisfactorily.
Whether or not the Boilermakers'
Union would make a move to enforce the removal of. the woman
from the plant could not be ascer
talned.
MRS. MCFARLANE OP
CRANBROOK IS
PRESBYTERY VICE-PRES.
VANCOUVER, May 13 (CP)-
E. G. Duncan of West Point Grey
United Church was re-elected President of the Lay Association of
the B. C. Conference of the United
Church of Canada at tin- annual
business session yesterday.
Presbytery Vice-Presidents appointed included Kootenay—Mrs.
W. B. McFarlane, Cranbrook.
FRENCH'S
MUSTARD
avvuftto
t_zTcL4__!
You'll be astonished to learn
how French's improves meat!
The superior quality and distinctive flavour of this fine mustard
sdds s decided taste appeal to
steaks, chops snd cold meat;
Caitltgar Cubs Go
to Comp July 3
CASTLEGAR, B. C. - The Boy
Scout Executive Auociatwo met io
Coronation Hall bare. Tba dates
tor Cup camp at Csmp Tweedimuir,
Fruitvale, wen (tt for July 3 to IS-
Miss,Nl Attridge,
Cranbrook,
Weds J. McLean
CRANBROOK, B. C.-MIss Mary
Louise Attridge, daughter of the
late Mr. and Mn. W. t. L. Attridge, became the bride of John
Cyril McLean, son of the late Mr.
and Mrs. J. T. McLean of Rossland, Saturday, at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. J. F. Scott.
The bride was given in marrisge
by J. F. Scott and wore a trim tour-
quolse iuit with rust accessories
ond a large rust hat. Her corsage
was of talisman rosea and she wore
her mother'i watch around her neck
for the traditional "something old.-"
Her attendant wu Miss Helen May
Scott who wore a navy blue silk
dress with white embroidered panels, navy shoes and black velvet
turban. Her corsage was of pink
roses.
Officiating clergyman was Rev.
Galbraith of Kimberley and groomsman was Jack Ross of Kimberley.
Folowlng the ceremony the toast
to the bride was given by Rev. Galbraith which was responded to by
the groom.
A buffet lunch was served in the
dining room of the Scott residence
where the table was set with an
ecru lace cloth centred by a three-
tiered wedding cake flanked by
burning tapers.
The young couple left by motor
for Christifia Lake via Spokane in
the eafly afternoon and will reside
In Kimberley on their return.
Out of town guests were Mr, and
Mrs. George Wilson, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Ross and Mr. and Mrs. J. Ructi-
anan of Kimberley and Miss Christine Paterson of Vancouver.
Good Citizens . . .
Punishments lor
Ihe "Teen-Aged"
>y Garry Cleveland Myen, Ph.D.
Some tints igo I led i public forum oo home cltlstnihip, with '.etchers tnd pirenti.
I took the ittnd tblt tht slpDabet
ot good eitlsenshlp ls home control
eatsblished In the etrly yetrs—re-
tpect for tht rights at otheri snd
regard tor constituted tuthorlty.
Whilt punishment! for tht pre-
ichool child ihould be llmlttd to
preventing him trom doing certun
things, iomt punithihenti for oldtr
school age children might be he.p-
t'.il
Hen in iome of the techniques
suggested it thi forum. All pun-
Ishmtnis thould be administered
without tongut laihing! tnd emotion. Ont typt of puniitunent proposed wu for the offender to htve
to sit doing nothing where he csn
be seen for t definite period, ranging with ige, from 20 to 90 minutei, I idded thit thli punishment
would only be effective with the
child who hu turned the meaning of NO, and would not vtnturt
to leive the chtlr before the tiipe
wu up.
I feel sure that corporal punlih- j
ment and chair sitting are out.   If
punishment really seems necessiry
so lite, let ui limit lt to denials
of a cheriihed privilege.
The other diy I hetrd of a mother who made her high ichool ion
stay twty trom i school dtnce beciuse he had disobeyed her In some
wty. This lad had to cancel hli
dite with a girl. It wu molt humiliating. Now ind then I hear
of I parent who refuiei to talk to
her adolescent daughter for uveral
dayi, to punlih her. All iuch punishments seem to me very undetlr-
ible, the lut-ntmed one utterly
childish.
A simple rule which might generally be applied is, do not punish
on the fint offense. Let the nature
and the seriousness of this flrit
offense be mide cleir ind let the
penilty be announced, If the act Is
repeited. Then prove your word
Is good.
Midsection . . .
Stretching Is
Best Streamliner
•y IOA JEAN KAIN
It your weight looms larga at tbt
midriff, it'i stretching exercuct tm
you. You ctn—and moit likely need
to—takt uveral lnchu ott your
waiitlint tnd'tont, firm tnd flttttn
your abdominal girdle.
Any woman who will do thit
tat ot itretching exerciiei every dty
can bring htr wiistline to termi ind
tcquire t firm muscular girdle.
1. Position—Lying on your btck
on tht floor with legi itnlght down
Ind irms on floor overhead.
Movement—Stretch your right leg
tcrou tht lltt tnd touch teet to
floor on the fir side. Hold for t itcond tnd glvt in extri itretch to
the midriff muscle!. Relax, then
stretch left leg tcrou the right tnd
touch tou to floor beyond. Repett
six tlmu, relixing between timu.
I. Petition—Stme, ttntch on floor
to full extenilon.
Movtatet-ritx right knu aad
bring thigh oy toward chut. As you
do thit, dig tht null ot tbt back
into Iba, floor. Hold for I second
then ilowly forct kneecap over ta
the lett ude tod touch it to iht
floor. Return to chut, relax, and repeat with lttt knee flexed, i
J. Poiition—Lying oa bick on
floor, left itnlght down tod iron
itretched up on floor.
Movement— Inch around until
your body forma in uc, with knees
tnd elbowi fairly itralght, and hinds
ind feet u clou together u you etn
gtt thtm. Hold it for t moment end
thtn work your wty back in tht oppoilte direction. Try to keep your
back and hipi on the floor through-
out
4. Poiition—Still on your back on
the floor, but wtth armi itnight
out it iidu on floor, ihoulder level.
Movement—Keeping legi together,
move them u t unit. Hex toward
chut, thin turn hlpi ildtwtrd ud
itnighten with • rolling motion.
Hive legs itnlght down, then iwing
up to other tide ind flex igiiln
towird chut. Thli exerciie dou
two thingi. It itretchu your wttit.
line tnd massigei the back of the
hips into t imooth line. Repeat 20
times.
Panley 1$ Best
Vitamin Source
S, DIAN HALLIDAY
\
Panley, onca merely thought ot
u tbe moit popular herb for gtrn-
uhing or flavoring, la now consider -
td tbe but tourct of VUsmin A.
Ont ounce ot parties suppliu many
unlti of Vitamin A, along wtth Vitamin C and many other food minerals.
Pulley cin be town u early ts
the ground csn be worked in the
Spring. Space the audi thinly, covering wtth only one-fourth to one-
eighth inch of toil
Sinn ptrtlty leedi in ilow to
germin ite I taking from four to tix
weeks), It u but, juit before towing, to pour boiling wtter in tbt
If you wtnt t illm wtilt, do thli
itretching exerclie Illustrited by
buutlful Helene Hudson, imbltious
young  actress.   Begin   with   kneei
Poted for ldt Jem Kiln
flexed, top picture, then keep ihoulden flat on floor u you roll hips
sideward and touch kneecap to
floor.
WINDSOR, England, (CP.) -
Percy Collins, head forester to Royalty at Windsor for 42 years, has retired. *«m
ASK YOUff <'..
bmpanion^^
SOLVING PARENT PROBLEMS
Q. Should we crltlciie the com
manderi of our army, navy or air
forcei ln the preience of our children?
A. No; became we do not hive
eU the ficU.
Q. "How can I keep my three-
year-old from crying io much? It
you don't let her hive her way lhe
cries. If you don't give her whit
she wants ihe erlu."
A. Sne'i smarter thain you are.
She knows how to get what she
wants and lo have her own way.
Quit plying her for crying. See
that she doesn't get what she wants
'SHALLOW DRILLS
READY TOB MROLTY
SEED ,<
Crowing vitamia A in victory
sard eni
shallow drills, u shown ln tht Gtr-
den-Graph. The seedi ihould htvt
been soaked for 14 houn before-
hind in tepid witer. Thit process
will cut tht gtrminitlng ptrlod ilmost ln hilf.
Ltttr, ts tht plinti develop, thin
them to sttnd ilx to tight lnchu
(or even more) iptrt. Pinlty grows
best ln partial shade and liku a
rather moiit soil.
cniunftsi
•beaU ba stun ti swag
to tan-day Intervals trots tha ttaa
Um* unllintj ippear ibove tba
ground until tbe planti gat to large
that oot cannot pt through tba
raws without Injuring tba tallage.
_^-s_____t j*_bl^_^
* y ^^^^******^*f / ^a^^^^^^^
PART of our wa>-timt duty U ta
maka tun wa glvt our fimiliu tha -
kind of tood thty require for
heilth tnd tn«rgy, u thla weak I'd
like to tell yeu of t iptciilly nouriihing. delicloui food to Includt ln
thit week'i ihopping.
Wt til know thtt Niture'i ilmoit
perfect food ii MILK, tnd reilixe
thit this ihould ntvtr bt itinted In
tbe home. Unfortunately, tomt
children, end tAlti (oo, dont like
drinking milk ilone. So here'i how
to popultrlu thit vtry necessiry
food. Simply servi lt wltb Fry'i
Cocoa.
Fry'i CoCot It ■ rich ta Caloriu
(the name given to deicrlbe the
energy vtlue of tood) tnd ti tlto
rich in IRON. Now Iron ti prtcticil-
ly tht only Important eonatituent
lacking in milk, io by adding Fry'i
Cocoa to milk you Increase the
•mount of Iron continued by 40%.
Plan to icrve Fry'i Cocoa every
day—Iti delightful chocolaty flivour
maku lt i moit welcome food in
your home.
Fryi' Cocot ii very economical
ind todiy ictuilly costi leu thtn
before the wtr.
See how euy lt It to serve.
Pry's Cocot
For ttch cupful required, mix to-
R ether DRY, htlf to ont teispoon-
il of Fry'i Cocot, with sugir to
tutt. Add tnough cold milk to mikt
cocoi md iugir Into i imooth putt.
Pour on boiling milk tnd itlr well.
Note: The flavour of Fry's Cocot
It improved by whiiklng with t rottry beater Jutt betore terving.
You ctn mtkt 60 lirgt cupt trom
one pound of Fry'i Cocot.
Writt Jthtne Ptttntu' - Fry-Cid-
bury Ltd., Montrul, fur the new
by crying for It. Just ily NO to
younelf, and make younelf obey.
It might be wise to hive her checked by your doctor.
Q. My son ilx yein old hu been
ituttering ilnce he was three. He
does not itutter it ill when reciting from memory. He is highly
imiginitlve tnd very ictlvi.
A. Reid much to him. Encourage him to recite from memory ind
to make things with his handt. Work
on yourself and the family for calm
and serenity tnd on tMt child for
less excitement tnd fatigue. Aet
as if you don't notice the stuttering
ll all.
Red raipberriei ire eisler to
grow thin blick ind purple rasp
berries. Also they require leu
space. Indian Summer for etrly
and Taylor for late are amopg the
best   The former been i lecond |FRtB   Recipe   Book,   "Chocollts
crop in tht FlU.       . I Around tht flock."
100
delicious nouriihing
SANDWICHES
eon bo made from a
oi. bottlt
Of
BOVRIL
Spread it thinly, becauw tt Is highly concentrated.
Wonderful on hot birftered toast: try it today. «...
SERIAL   STORY By   JERRY   BRONDFIELD
No Refuge From Love
 	
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
(Contlnuid)
Then he released her. Molla s°tri-
into a chair. "So there were no other
reasons entering into the picture,"
he repeated. •
Molla bit her lip.   'No."
Then why did you kiss me like
that?" He sat down beside her.
"Molla," he said softly, "don't penalize me for being a sap—a blind
tap who didn't wake up until it
was almost too late. I love you,
Molla. I guess I can understand now
how men have been able to uy all
the fancy things and compose the
phrases they have when they ipoke
cf love."
He tipped her chin up with her
hand. "Now that you—Tay—now 1
feel free to say these things. You
love me—I know you do. Don't ask
me how—I Just do. I want to marry
you, Molla."
He look her In hii arms again
and she buried her head against his
shoulder. "Yes—Neil. I love you,"
she whispered, "but please don't
ask me to marry you."
"That doesn't make sense," he
uid incredulously.
"It dou—to me," she answered,
"but, please—do not ask me why—
T-igTnt now."
"You're not being fair," he whispered.
She knew that only too well. She
knew that he would come back and
ask her to marry him. She knew,
too, that she wouldn't be able to
say yes.
Molla struggled loose from his
arms. "I'm sorry—I muit leave."
She looked at her watch.
"What? At 11:45? Where are you
going at thii time of night?"
"I have an appointment. It li Important."
Neil's eyes grew serious. "An appointment. Where? With whom?
Or am I being too nosey?"
"I—I'm sorry, Nell, I cannot tell
you."
"Can J drop you off?"
She shook her head.  'No," the said
nervously.    "Please   go   now.    I
must be leaving myielf."
He left then and she hurried upstairs for her hat ind coat.
But Neil didn't go very tar. He
walked acron tht itreet ind moved
Into the dirkened corner of t hill-
way. Ht wilted then until Molla
came 'out Mol't pulted her gloves
from her pocket at the wtlked down
the steps tnd Nell uw t small
piece of piper flutter to the sidewalk. Ho walked ovir and picked
up the piece of piper.
>   He followed her at i life distance
until she got Into • taxi. Then he
hailed a cab himself and told the
driver to follow her.
Neil followed Molla up Lexington avenue to the Yorkvllle section.
They stopped a half block behind
when Molla got out, paid her driver
and went inside a restaurant.
"Okay," Nell told his driver. "I'll
get out here,"
Neil pulled his hat down over his
eyes and collar around his ears.
It had started to snow again, That
would help, too. He walked past
the restaurant and looked Inside. He
didn't see Molla. He walked past
again. This Ume he saw her. She
had just started to sit down at a
table along the side of the room
toward the rear. He noticed a tall,
blond man appear almost immediately from a back room and join
her.
Two men entered the restaurant.
That was Neil's chance. He lit a
cigaret and cupped his handa in
front of his face to shield it as much
as possible. He flipped Inside the
door behind the two men and walked lo a table ln the rear on the
opposite ilde of the room.
He couldn't explain his sudden
impulse to follow Molla except that
he had a hunch and he wanted to
play it us far as possible. He burled
his head ln a newspaper and hoped
Molla didn't see him.
(To Be Continued)
11 ■ ■ 1111111111 ■ i j r i ■ 111 j 11111111 r 11111111111 s 11.
"Build B. C. Ptyrolli"
PURE
TO THE
LAST
DROP
"Pacific Milk must be preserved, and there must be
some way to do it. Judging
by the way it keeps fresh In
the can after opening they
must have found the way. It
keeps its purity to the last
drop."—Mrs. L. C, from a
letter.
Pacific Milk
Irradiated and  Vacuum Packed
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
VI    • I      I*     *
1 his delicious cere
has proved itself
Sonw
we calt it
Shreddies
TWO YEARS AGO a ttity new bretkftst cereil wu introduced
to Canadlani. We wanted this cereal to win iti emit way in
the world. So we simply cilled it "Cubs".
Since' thtt time Cubs his won t ftvoured place on thouiandi
of Ctntditn breakfast tables. So today, we are proud to
receive it under the new trade mark, "Shreddies"*, as a member
of the Shredded Wheat family. It is made in the Shredded
Whett bakeries of Niagara Falls.
"Shreddlet", in their attractive new package, come to your table
crisp, crunchy, toasted i golden brown. "Shreddies" contiin ill
the goodneu of whole whett—the brtn, the minerals, the
protein, the precious wheit germ. Gtt t pick-
" ''om your grocer todty.
#e.
 ....
sf_____aa.il* ns  .
 IHOE S for the
■AAl.
WHO CARES
• ASTORIA
• WORTHMOM
tILUEILOOD
Priced from
$6.50 to $11.50
It Andrew
ft CO.
Leaders in Footfuhion
ed Cross Head
ills Gyros
Kiety's Origin
tr. Justice Gordon, Chairman ot
j Executive of the Canadian Red
Ml Society, Mondiy evening
ike belore the Nelion Gyro Club
fee origin of the Red Croat end
; remittee.ions. Motion picture!
[Britiih Columbia scenery, md
the King ind Queen's visit to
Bary, were also mown by G. T.
tnt Cilgary.
Ett. Tutfrey, B. C. Commiuioner
Ke Red Cross; E. E. L. Dewdney
klrman of the Nelson Red Crou
nee Cimpilgn; W. R. GrubDe,
■on Red Crou Pruident; ind
L. McBride tiso ipoke ln tup-
I ot the finance drive which
■ed Monday. J. Shapter of Cal-
(jr wis another speaker.
Irs.Hammof
tenata Dies
RENATA, B. C.-Mrs. A. A. Hamm
II taken ill auddenly recently and
M rushed to Trail-Tadanac Hoi-
III where ihe died May T.
The funeral service Uok place ln
» Rente School Home May 10.
, W Bahnman conducted the ser-
ice. Mrs. Himm Is lurvived by Mrs,
T. 3. Dyck, Mn. D. Hamm, Jake
Itmm, John Himm of Trill ind
b* Himm ot Oliver.
CAY PRINTS
in all sizes at
lilody's Fashion Shop
HONE 116
; FOR MILK AND CREAM
FOR COUPONS
h
SET NO "CEILING"
ON YOUR SERVICE
70 Visitors See
Trail-Tadanac
Hospital Plant
TRAIL B. C. Miy l*-6ev«niy
Trailiiu viiited the Tntl-Tadaaac
Hospital on Viiiton DM «e Saturdiy. Tbe vUitors wen Ihown ikl
different deptrtmeoti, and tin vtrioui equipment wu demooiutlea
to them. Memben ot the staff con-
ducted the visitor! through tht hoepital-
Trail Chipter of tbe Regiitered
Nurses Aaeocutioo entertained H
td Saturday afternoon at the Nunu
Borne. Muiic wm supplied by Um
Canadian Legion Bran Bud. The
tn table wai covered with an embroidered cloth and centred with
lovely lilacs In e low bowl, and pur.
pie candlu cut • toft iilumtnauoo
over tb* tea table. Ptnaiei asd tulips ornamented ItM individuil Ublu and mon than 100 gueiti wtn
welcomed by Mrs. Parker Williims
ind Mrs JM* Kamp. Mrs. W. A
Coghlin, Mn._C.W- Hailewood, Mn.
N D C. MacKinnon and Mrs. M. L
Brothen presided at the unu.
Mrs. DM.R. Willlamion was convener tnd the serviteurs wen members ot the AuocliUon waving their
uniformi.
Nelson Has High
Percentage Air
Crew Applicants
FO. J- E. Wright, who wu In
cherge of the R.C.A.F. recruiting
unit here Mondiy ind Tuesdty, uld
Tuesday that M men hed applied,
and about 90 , ptued the medical
examinations.
"Ai in Trsll," hi utd, "then hu
been an unuiuttly high percentage
ot men who wen applying tor ilr
cnw, thit li, wireless ilr|ur>neri.
air gunners, piloti tnd observers.
"Air crew will be called tint, tnd
reasonably non tnd th* ground
erew will be absorbed ai tut u
quotas will permit. Somt ilr cnw
will go to pre-enllstment schools
it Edmonton, tnd several will go
directly to manning depots."
Fo. Wright expliined thit these
pre-enlistment ichooli gave encouragement to boyi whose high school
education wu not complete. "Pre-
enllstment ichooli give i 12-weeks
course In ilgebn, geometry, physics
•nd Engliih to bring thett subject.
up to grid* XII standards, illowlng
boys with incomplete high ichool
training to quillty tor lir cnw,
whereas lormerly they m*t* turned
over to ground crew.
So. Rhoda C. Kelr, who received
IS applications for thl R.C.A,F.
(Women'i Division), uld thit of the
10, only three were rejected on
medicil groundi.
Ptt. O'Sullivan
Wini at Whitt
Pte. P. O'Sulllvytn wu first priie
winner ind Mrs. ft. Lunn second,
It the progressive whist sponsored
Tuudiy night by the Junior Catholic Women'i Letgue it the Cathedral HllL
P.  Difoe   won  the    consolttlon
priie. Twelve tables were in play.
6 Babies Immunized
at W.I. Clinic
Six ot the ieven babies ittending
the Women'i Institute Btby Clinic
Wednesday were vaccinated. Dr.
C. M. Robertson, uilited by Mill
Nancy Dunn, immunised four (Or
diphtheria, one for whooping cough
tnd one tor smallpox.
Ltdlu assisting were Mn. J. C.
Robison, Mrs. G. Sutherland tnd
Mri. W. Poitlethwtlt*.
Help The + ReJ Cross
nm _, « ah am
TEA
___
u . ..     m .     ■   .*.
Tko Flwot
Tiiiut Y«t)
Cin lay
-NH.MN DAILY NtWl MILSON •. C—THUMDAY MORNINO MAY 14.
NELSON SOCIAL
ty MM. M. J. VIONIUX
KDIY-mCHOLS
• St Paul'l United Church pre-
waMd t happy aeeae Saturday
moming when Rtv. H. Mwtrt-
tmfm nairni la wedlock Velmi,
only diughter ot Mr. tad Mn. J V
Nlcholi oi lh* Wiadumut tnd
Stanley, second ton oi Mr. ind Mrs.
L 3. tf-ty et Nelion. IW bride
chow u her matron of honor bar
lister, Mrt Itnad of Tunntl, ktr
hridumtld, Mlu Martha Johneoo of
Salmo and bar niee* Mia Bleo
May u flower girl Tbe groom wu
lupported by hli brot»«r, H Idey,
tnd the uiheri ww* Oordon WiUiami aad Jamu UDuc. Tb* bride
chu* a dainty whit* laat wtdding
trut ovtr white left*!* with iiriu.
tt wu form fitting tat ovtr It hung
t floor-length n*t v*ll with a becoming halo of silk net Her bouquet
wu ot Tillman roeu tnt mauve
Hocks. Mn. Strand chou turquoise
Mu* sheer ilyled M Oreciin llntt,
puiel flowers In htr hair aad carried a bouquet at Mtp dngoni and
narclui. Hm brldumild, Mlu Johnson, donn*d a thai) pink ihur frock
made on ilmilar Unu to tha matron
ot honor. AecuMrtu wttt la fold
tat abt etrritd tht urn* flowers
la bar bouquet U th* matron ol
honor. Tht llttl* flown girl, glltn
ttty, wu dainty la ktr floor Itngth
blu* flowered frock. Her colonial
bouquet mu et nircluus tnd ront.
Mn. Idey, mother ot tht groom,
won a powder blut sheer dreu and
a conage of nut. At tht ilgning of
thi register Donild Brown, iccomptnltd by Mn T.JS. Itrguion,
ung, "My Ships." ror trtvelling the
bride chtnged to a b«i|i crepe dress
turquoise blut coat md beige ac-
ceuorltt. ne honeymoon ii being
spent It Butt Ctlgtry, th* Windermere. Th* wedding breakfast at
tb* SUr Cate wu attended by thl
guests. Tht thrle-tiered wtdding
cake embedded In mauve tnd whltt
tulle, flanked by mauve lighted tapers thd white (lowers, centred th*
tablt. Tht groom rtipondtd to the
tout proposed ky Mri. Stewirt-
Forbes. Among those Ittending were
MT. tnd Mrs. I 3. Edey, Rontld
■dty, Mln EUen Edey, Hit 11
Strtnd, Mr. tnd Mrs. T. Johnion,
J. LeDuc, Oordon Willlimi, Mr. tnd
Mrs. William Brown, Br, Mr. and
Mrs. Dyke, Mr. tnd Mrs. McKay,
Mrl. 3. C Grummitt, MT. and Mrs.
Wlllltm Brown, Jr, Mr. and Mn
Hirvey Grummett, Mr. tad Mrt.
Thomu Maniell, Mn. J. Woodall.
Mrs. R. Milli. Miu Enid Hinsoa,
MiM IVt McUUan, Mrs gydtey
Honwill, Miu Rite WuthtrbeaS.
Miu Haul Stout, MI. and Mn. O.
RoUrlwa, CpL Thomu Hunt, Mlu
Mtry Htddla, Mr. Doyte, Jtev. tod
Mn. J. L Clerihue, Trail, Donald
Brown tat Mr. Stewart-Fork**.
VISITORS ntOM COAST
t   MraVllo Romano, SlUci street
bu u guut, Mr- tat Mrt. Anthony
Fury ot Vancouver.
a Pte. Pater Luuta ot Vtrnon
hu returned tfter spending his furlough with kit wltt tat Mr. aad
Mn. Stanley Morrii. Fifth Stntt
• Recent ihoppen in tho city n-
dudtd Berntrd F*rd ot CtsUegtr
• Mlu Junt Juty wu hi town
from Shutty Bench netr Katlo,
Tuudty.
• W. Rempel ot Rentta tptit
Tuttdty In tht dty.
• Harold Hailam wu la town
tram Cranbrook yuttrdty.
visrroRS new spokani
t Mr. tnd Mn John J. Ihllngu
ot Spokint wtrt viiiton in Ntlion
yuterdiy.
o Mlu "Jackie*' Holgen ipent
yuterdiy in town en routt to Ver
non, wben the hu been tnntfer-
nd.
• Mr. end Mn. Stanley MorrU,
Fairvitw, have lttt for Ctnyon to
■ptnd * wttk tt th* horn* ot the
latter*' parenU, Mr. tnd Mrs. Roy
Browell, belore Mr. Morrii leives
tor Calgary where ht hu enlisted
t Mr. tnd Mn W. C. Motlty of
Bonnington wtn ln town yuterdiy
tn route to their Summer pltoe ou
tht North Shore,
e Among recent ihoppen In the
city wu E. Wanstall of Nikusp.
e Mlu Joyce Pilmer ot Kulo
visited Nelson Tuudty.
t Mn. Willitm Wilion tnd her
baby diughter lift Kootenty Uk*
Generil Hoipittl yuterdiy tor thtlr
home it 111 ctrbontte Strut
• Mrs. T- J- Hukin of Trill Is
iptndlng ■ ftw days at the home of
Mrs. Normin McLeod, Ttt Stanley
Strut
• Mr. uid Mn. A- M. Htm were
ln the city trom Silverton Tuudty
t Recent vUiton In town Included f. O. Stenmon ot Stlmo.
• 3. Tier tnd Earl Tier Of New
Denver vUlted Nelion yuterdiy.
Icebreaker Goes
to Russia
for Duration
OTTAWA, Miy 11 (CP)- Tht
Canadian Icebreaker Montcalm hli
arrived safely In Northern Rutsit
end will remiln it thl service of the
Soviet Government tor tht duration
ot tht wu, It wu tnnounctd todty
by Ult Department of Externil
Atftlri.
Tht Montcalm U tht itcond Ctntdlm lclbretklr to serve in those
wtters under wir conditions. Toward th* Md Of tht Flnt Grett Wtr
tn Icebntktr newly-built tt Glugow for tht Canadian Govtrnmtnt
wu loaned to Russii by th* British
Government, with tht contint of
Canada.    .
Tht Montctlm U a ihip of 1432
grou toni tnd hu been In the Ctntditn ilrvlce for many yeara on
thl St. Lawrence Rlvtr tnd Atltntic coast.
Th* «Mittr ind crew were to
deliver the ship to the Ruulini wbo
will operate lt themselves, the Ci-
ntdians ire expected bick In Canada
ihortly.
Flnti arangementt regarding the
flnmclil aspect of tbt tranifer hive
ttot been settled tnd offlclils were
untblt to uy whether the ship ls
being iold or chattered to RuUit.
To Consider Wright
Apeal for
Training Deferment
VANCOUVIR, Miy IS (CP) -
E. E. Leery, chtlrmtn ot tht Vincouvtr Labor Council, Wld l mtet
lnf of Ute council thtt consideration
will be given by nitioni wu urvicu OfflcliU ln Vtncouver to in
application for deferment ot the
trltnlng ot AUln C. Wright, Ubor
OrganiiU- Mr. Wright wu given
police to nport tor tnining while
negotettlng on behalf of employees
of I govtrnmtnt owned pltnt here
Leery uld Mr. Justice A. M. Man-
son, mtmbtr ot tht Drift Boird,
tnd othtr members hid assure A lum
thtt tvtry consideration would be
glvtn to I rtquut for deferment
Wright, who ii JO, wu notified to
prepare for trmy camp when he was
organUlng employees of the Dominion Bridge Company md Hamilton
Bridge Comptny here.
Hirold J. Pritchett, Secrettry, has
cautioned th* council gainst assuming Wright's cut wu irregular until they knew ill the ftcts. He slid
he understood \here hid been 24
men of 30 yeirl of ige htd received
noticei in B. C- Wright left here
by pltne tor Otttwt Sundty.
__, mm     ,,...'
OTTAWA, Mty 11 (CP)- Ten
Canadian nunu who lttt Ctntdt
during tht tint week In April for
South Africa have trrlvtd ufely
tfter I pleasant trip.
On. Jhtt Ql\
THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1942
CKLN AND
CBC PROGRAMMES
MORNING
7:45-0 Ctntdt
7:48-Wak* Up gnd Llv. (CKLN)
8:06—C*C Niwi
SilS-Swilt Hour M Prtytr
l-tt-Frent LIM Ftmily
MS-Gf|in Mtlodiw.
MMftC News
t:ls-C*tiittl Tim* (OCUt)
fcJO-Breiktllt tt Slrdl'i
9:54-™* Slgnsl
10:0O-Motnlh» Vlt|t
I0:l»-8on$t from _t "X" Ranch
iOX_)
10:»-Nov«!ty Time (CKLN)
10:45-FMm thl Music ftoofe
Ui00-4ttleily Rhythm
U:15-B*lween thl BOOkendi
lliJO-Musle Btfort Lunch (CKt.N)
ntRNOON
11:00—»C   farm Broidtast
12:25—Thl  Notice  Botrd  (CKLN)
12:30-CBC   Ntws
12:41—Fifteen Minutu from Broad-
_____MBW________________M-_______M__MMMMM«
mJ*,m**mm**f*ilt»*ttmw*mm*-.
SLACK SUITS
SUM IS to ll. ftlttd from
$7.95 t6 $J 1.95
Fashion pint Ltd.
wiy.
i:&o-Muii-_tl interlude
1:6»-Ttlk
1:15—"Bbucjutt Tlmt"
LSO-Club Matin**
2:00-Sweet It Mellow
2:S0—Fiedler Conducts
2:45-Thrte Suns Trio
iiOO-tfht Western Flvt
3:l5-Jostph Gilllchtoi Otehattri
»:36-Wlihi«  Campbell   sings
S:45-BBO Newt
4:0»-Bob Cirroll. Songs
4:1J-Twt Pltno Tttm
4:45-"E*«t CAUt Reporti"
4:3fl-Ken Stevens It »wi» Y«°
1:00—Ntwt comment
5:05-CKLN's Birthdiy Ptrty
5:S(I-CBR Prulhti
J:45-Hert Wl Oo Dtkclng
VSNINC
lidft-ViglbOfid't RAtd
6:1*—tlnty^ai
«:JO-I«tbelle Mclwla Sing.
«:45-Notei In Music
7:00-CBC Ntwi
1tl*-Prtn)l»tdl Symphony Concert
»:0O-CBC Nttiontl Ntwi
l:l*-"Niwbrld|t"
H:30-BBC New.reel
•;l»-Dftm»
8:J0-Brittin Spukl '
fc-tt-'-A* A Mitter ot Fitt*
IO:00-CBC News
10:15—Muiln trOrn tht Piclflc
10:45-J»rry Jonu' Orcheitri
U:0ft-God Stvt tht King
Veterans Guard
Stages "Pro"
Enlertainmenl
Tbt V*te*aai Guird ptetooo it
Ntltoa givt t splendid eoctal at
tha Armory Friday nlgbt to the
Women'i Auxiliary to tha Activ*
Forcu, lh* Canadiaa Women's
Trtining Corpi. Nelson platoon ot
tht Rocky Mountiin Rangers aad
other friends. A number at guirdi-
men wu* ovu from Trtll,
A tint program wu marked by
tht amine* at vttutn aatutain-
en of the Gutrd staff. All" Rougn.
ton, who for years hid t prognm
on CBC. in Vincouver entitled
"Mr. md Mn." wu th* Muter ot
Ceremoniu. Then then wu "Bill'
Rtld. who wu formerly with tht
London itige, md George Brougs-
ton, * professional on th* London
itige. Cltvtr little dtnct* wtrt
performed by thru llttl* dincan,
ud Bobby Waulck did a tap dine*.
The tlx OM Country tirmen who
wtn finiihing • letvt it Ntlion
wtn guuti tt tht dmce, tnd Lieut-
CoL D. Philpot ot Crmbrook wu
tiso t guut
A delicioui reptrt followed dtnclng wd wu prepired md urved
by E. P. Wise slso of the Veteran's
Gutrd.
Lieut F. O. Harrii, It the Oftlcer
Comminding Nelion Detichment,
Vetertns' Guird of Cinada.
Vichy Replies
to U. S. Note
on Martinique
VICHY, Miy IS (AP) Tht Vichy
government innounced tonight thit
it hid lent • nply to i U. S. nott
concerning Mtrtlniqut whieh hu
given rise to grive queitiom.
Tbi text of the Vichy reply wu
not disclosed ut i communique uid
the Americtn note hid bee nsub-
mltted to thorough eximlnttion titer the hurried return of Marsh.il
Petain to Vichy, from vacation early
this wuk.
The communique followi:
The Americin government communicated to the French government
on Miy 5, through the Intermediary
of Admin) Georgei Robert high
commiuioner of Frmce In the An-
tillet, t nott eontilrflng new demand
tending to modify the status of the
Antilles it preient in force.
"Problems such u those put for
wtrd by the Americtn Government
has given rise to grave questions.
"They have bun made th* subject ot thorough examination since
the return of the Marshal.
On different occasions the ch'.el
of government, Ltvtl, has conferred on this subject with Admiral of
the fleet Darlan, Admiral Auphan,
Secretary of Sttte for th. Nivy, and
Governor Genertl Brieve, secrettry
of state for colonics.
"President Ltval today tent the
reply of the French to the American Government."
Lon of Destroyers
a Serious Blow
LONDON, Mty 13 (CP)-An offlclil source todty called the loss
of the destroyers Kipling, Lively
and Jackal In the Medlterrinein t
serloui blow because the "cuual-
tles, even though small In number,
were ill veteran lumen."
Since more thin 100 crew memberi wert reicued, the loss presumably wis no more thin 100 men.
Ttll bomberi which sink the deitroyen, thli iource Mid, trt believed to htvt comt from buu on
Crete which hive "very much hemp-
end" British naval operations in
the Eutern Mediterranean since
the Nails occupied that Island.
KINC RECEIVES U. S.
NAVY CHIEF
LONDON, Miy IS (CP)- The
king todty received in audience Admiral Hirold Stirk. commanden of
the U. S. fleet in Europeen waters.
Later, the Admiral with Ambuudor
tnd Mrs. John Winint lunched with
the King md Queen.
New under-arm
Cream Deodorant
tttftly
Stops Perspiration
1. Dou pet rot dram or men's
shim. Dou aot Irritate ikin.
2. No wirting ta diy. Cu be
ued tight ifter shiving.
S. Inmmljr stops pcrspintion
for 1 to 5 dayi. Removes odor
item penpintion.
4. A pure, white, gretieiesi,
stainless vanishing creim.
5. Arr i<I hu been iwirded the
ApprovilSeilofrheAmcricm
Institute of taunacriog tot
being hirmless to fsbrics.
Anld I. th. LAROEIT BEtUNO
OtOOOIUUn. Try a Jar todayl
ARRID
*__,_■    . At ill •_■*•• ttUI». ••'l-l «*^
W<"l» (^Xat*taa***i\-W
Veteran Chiefs
Lead Troops
in Kerch Battle
LONDON, Miy IS (CP) - Otrmin troopi ta th* Kerch Ptninauia
fighting tn undu commind ot 0*n.
Fritt von Muuuteln, 54-yur-oid
Pruttna who iucc*eded to command of tba llth army in Sept IMl
after Col-Gen lugen von Scbobert
wu killed in action.
Tht Soviet commander opposing
bun ll tht veteran Lt.-Gen. D. T
KmIov, wbo hu been chief of the
Trtni-Cucuiin Diitrict since May,
IMl.
Koslov'i principil Ututeamtt tn
thru young generals, Lvov, Kit-
kilenko, ind Perbuihla, ill at them
won diitinction in tht Crimein wu
lut Winter.
Fifteen German
Planes Shot
Down in Africa
CAIRO, Egypt, Miy IS (AP)-
Thlrteen Junker 52s, the Germm
troop-cirrying planes, ind two of
their Messerschmitt escorts wen
shot down yuterdiy Into the ue otf
North Africi. Still othen mty htvt
bun destroyed, i communique uid,
with only one British pltne lott
(There was no word whether the
German plinu wen cirrylng troopi
or when they were bound when the
RAF. intercepted them. The Junken S3, carrying a score or mon
troops, hu been used in ill the
Germin invulon campaigns to dite,
both for parachutist! and tbe transport ot regular Infantrymen to hot
spots.)
In addition to the fight off North
Africa, the R.A.F. reported destruction of four Messerschmltts over
Maltt Mondty ifternoon ind Tuetdty morning tnd ot • Heinkel 111
over the Eastern Mediterranean en
Monday. Two British tighten were
lilted u mining.
It is estimited thtt one out of
every 1000 persona- In the U. S.
suffers from rheumatism and allied
diseases.
len Applicants
IwRiUiF.
Heird at (reslon
CRBSTON, & C, May ll-*T»n
applicants, two ol thim w_*a«n,
wu* r*c*ived by B CAJ. Kunming Ottcui ot Calgary at Cruton
today.
Flying Otfleu J. B. Wngnt, hi
chugt at tb* mobtt* recruiting unit
eagiged ta t tour od to* Koottnty,
uid recruiting wu "quiet", but thtt
ont vtry likely young lad tm pilot
oburver wu tmong the pouibl*
rteralti.
Tht recruiting unitt gou tm to
Cranbrook Wednuday, and to Kimberley Thunday. Friday li gou
to Windermera aad Radium.
Flight Lt. Chirlu W. Ttylor li
mtdictl officer wtth tbt unit, CpL
H A. Wright wu tn chtrge cd claui-
flcttion tute, tnd LM. Raid um
triniport driver. Section Officu
Rhodt C. Kill ot tht RCAF (Women's Division) li wtth tkt unit to
receive ipplicmts tor tht Women'i
DivUlon.
Have Vou Rud the CUutflid?
-»AM MVi,
Mil
FREEMAN
FUtNITUU oa
Tk* Wmmm
ui
LOUNCI sti CHAIR SUITI
l-ht-sf
$72.50
Lightning fluhu ovu tb* urth
coatlnuouily. itrlking oo the irm-
ig* ot SO Umu • ucond, or MM,-
OOOMOtlatutytar.
Bngiument
H. H. Suttwrland
JtwdUr
IM Baku it Nilun. B C.
JUIT AR Al VIO
•IAUTIFUL IILICTION OP
•ONI CHINA
Nelion Electric Co.
174 Baku Bt
My war job eg I Is for energy-
s_i*fmt
Gripe-Nuts Ii t grud mil fW
wtriloit I Crlip tad cruochy.
Tempting out-lit. tmt. t*_tA
lib
MIO li
IMVINW
nirACKAoi
fcr tauty; Iron ht th. blood;
photphocui fee bonu lad tu*.
ttty to -dig.it. Gm ma. today.
fas
erle Oberon
expldins her Beauty Care to Vou/,\r&
J-re,tii. tftew tku LMvtx. tz^tttt UlutlAa
Jrttt J-lit'duna \_^»m»U%u
UXl-H
Mi
ifnit Oheron's exotic buuty bu thrilled
I thouundi. Thii wise ltu says thtt Lux
Toilet Stan is t wonderful lid in keeping ikin
smooth. She explains her daily facial cleansing.
"Gently pat thi Usher inn year shin. Km first with
warm water, thm with ewi. N«c dry wilh light faith
pats. Yeur ski* full smoother, looks fnshtrt" You cm
follow this simple beiuty cue it home. Lux Toilet
Soap'i Whipped Oeim Ltther doei t thorough
v\01, job ... ctrriu twty every trtce of duit,
-&($?} <"" ,n^ ,t,**e eoimuiq.
j To make sure of skin that's sweet... of
/''appealing daintiness ... UW Lux Toilet
Soap for your bid), too. Its refreshing Whipped
Cream Uther hU an exquisite, delicate perfume
. leaves i subtle clinging fragrance
i yout ikin.
fe^l^l^'
. ..
a   -■■■■'■
'•*_*       -■■<"
\*>*.
'•
M
.Mto^tSLtnU^^
ALEVtf.i-ov.c_r
<A____t______i___L
 	
i»A*M    UX
{blunt Saihi Xniis
bttbUhed April 8. IM.
BrtfisA CoismMa't
Jfatt /itttrtttMf Ntwtpaptr
Publiihed every moming except Sunday by
the NIWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITID. 2St Baker SU Nelton, Britiih Columbil.
MEMBER OE THI CANADIAN PRESS ANO
THI AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.
THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1942.
 r"
Indian Policy of Inertia
Is Invitation
to Tragedy
Indian advocates oil a policy of nonviolence and non-cooperation against
the Japanese who contend that it was
successful against the British fail to
recognize one factor.
That factor is the difference between the British and the Japanese.
The British are civilized. The Japanese
are savages.
It will be a tragic day for India if
its British, Chinese and American defenders are not able to hold back the
Japanese.
Kootenay's Musical
Festival
Kootenay's Musical Festival, which
opens in Nelson today, has gained such
a firm hold upon the affections of the
people of the district that not even war
conditions could interfere seriously
with its popularity.
Entries may be somewhat less than
in years which were free of the overwhelming necessities of the war. Attendance of school children from Trail
will be less but the Festival is carrying
on, its Executive wisely recognizing
that all through the ages not even war
could destroy humanity's deep need for
music.
Whether at peace or at war, a world
without music is unthinkable. Music
goes even deeper into the human emotions than literature. Imagination cannot conceive a world without either but
if human capacity for expression by
the written word were lost and all we
know of written or sound recorded
music were destroyed the first sign of
a reviving civilization would come not
in the cuneiforms of a new writer in
stone but in the sounding drums of
primitive expression andln the pipings
of a reawakened Pan.
Congratulations to
Creston
Creston did well to mark by a district wide celebration the occasion of
its fiftieth anniversary. A half century
is a long period in the history of our
Canadian West.
There was little development in
Kootenay in 1892. In that year we were
just beginning to realize the potential
wealth of our mineral resources. We
could see around us the obvious wealth
of the forests which have since contributed so many hundreds of millions of
feet of lumber. Only a comparatively
few far-sighted men, and they were
then generally regarded as visionaries,
realized how great could become Kootenay's contribution of products of the
land to the wealth of Canada.
Since 1892 Kootenay's population
has multiplied by probably five, its an-
anual production of metal, coal, lumber, farm and orchard products by
many times that,
Creston's rich orchard lands, its
great alluvial flats, only comparatively
recently reclaimed, have played a
large and constantly growing part in
Kootenay's progress.
Today's Horoscope
If you are celebrating a birthday today,
you may look for an active, busy year ahead,
successful in the main, although you should
exercise care ln investments, preferring safety
to high yields. Property is well signified. You
are a level-headed persons, practical and possessing good business sense. You are Independent and inclined to dominate others. You
should beware of beini? obstinate and selfish.
Born on this date a child will be resolute,
forceful, original nnd much Inclined to cultivate the arts. He or she will m«ct with success In life, but a love of gambling and pleasure will need restraint.
War—25 Years Ado
?? Questions??
ANSWERS
Open le any reider. Nemee al aiwtat
queetlent will nat ba publtahid.
Reader, Ntlion—How many wtti art than la
tht Houtt of Comont for Ukt Province of
Quebec?
There ire SJ.
Reader, Nelion— If t ptlr of illk ttorklngi ire
•ent ta England, ii there any duty to pay
on them eithef on thit tide or ovtr there!
Silk goodi ient to tngltnd trt dutiable,
but tha Government hat bean observing a
lenlet policy toward gift lilk itockingi to person! in Englind ind in moit cuei they in
not charged duty.
R. H. Sheep Creek—Wu Rolf Bruhn, the
Minliter of Public Worki, born ln Norwiy
or Sweden?
He wu born it Gothenburg, Sweden, September 4, 1878.
J B, Nelion—1. Pleue tell me whether there
is iny ipeciil formation for a bridal party
on entering i church? 1. How are the
gueits seated it the tible et the reception
following the wedding? Who till on the
bride'i side, who on the groom'i lide, tnd
in what formation?
1. The order on entering the church It ti
follows: Uihers, brideimtldi, mild ot honor,
flower girl, tnd finally, tht bride ind her
father. On leaving the church: Bride and
groom, best man and maid of honor, uihers
md brldeimaidi. 2. Heid ot tible, bride tnd
groom. Groom'i ilde: Mild of honor, usher,
bridesmaid, usher, relativei and friendl increasing in age, groom'i father, bride'i mother,
clergyman. End of tible: Father of bride (facing bride), md mother of groom dicing
groom). Bride'i side: Beit min, brldeimild,
usher, bridetmiid, relttlvei and friendl increasing in age, wife of clergyman.
 NIUOA DAILV NtWl NILSON. I. C~-TMUM»AV MQftNIHO. MAV 14, M»
Looking Backward
10 YIARS AQO
(From Dtlly Ntwi, Mty 14, 19S2)
Mri. R. J. Cryital ol Cantalri and Mr.
ard Mrs. McAllister of Blalrmore, Alta., were
weekend guests of Dr. and Mn. Large of
Cranbrook.
Sir James M. Barrla'i play "Allce Slt-by-
the-FIre" will be presented by the U.B.C.
Player's Club at Nelson opera house May 18.
Mrs. J. S. Hincki of Howser wai a city
shopper yesterday.
Mrs. E. A. Melander, Fairview, left today
for Spokane.
28 YEARS AQO
(From Dally Newi, Mty 14, Utt)
Mr. and Mri. J. A. Thompson and W. Tlnd-
lay of Sandon returned home Saturday.
Lieut. William M. Poupore, reported Saturday as having won the Military Crotl, li •
well-known old Nelson boy.
Sgt. Ed. Peters leaves todty for Boiwell,
where he expects to lecure recruita for thi
forestry company.
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Hamilton returned from
Ottawa last night.
40 YEARS AQO
(From Dally Newi, May 14, 1902)
H. Q. and W. D. Fraier, late of the Strith-,
cona Horse, arrived here yeaterday from Victoria en route for East Kootenay, where they
will join the staff of the McGregor C. P. R.
survey party.
Cerlificates of work were Iisued to C. C.
Ladd on the Clarenden fraction tnd Flnlay
McLeod on the Ymir Belle, Enterprlie and
Douglass.
The steamer International yeiterday
brought In a car of Rambler-Cariboo ore for
the Solby smelter at San Francisco, and one
car of Whitewater ore for the HaU Mlne*
Smelter here.
Press Comment
HITLER MISSES THE BUS
Japanese Christian leaders are praying for
peace. Rome buzzes with talk of a lepente
peace for Italy. The Nazi generals are at iome
pains to point out that the Fuehrer himself
planned and ls executing the assault on Russia. Our enemies are tiring of the war.
Perhaps Hitler himself is growing weary.
For although it might be a trifle far-fetched to
suggest that the house painter's propaganda
boys inspired the Japanese Christians, there
can be little doubt that the peace feelers from
Europe are inspired. We are about to witness a
peace offensive from Berlin.
It is too late. The Chamberlaini are gone,
somewhat chastened Lindbergh is working
quietly on war production. The Nyes and tho
Wheelers keep their counsels. All the grubby
little American Fascists have scurried underground, and equally grubby little congressmen are afraid to see them socially. Even
Senator Brooks, panting after the bandwagon,
admits that isolationism and appeasement are
dead.
Herr Hitler, you have missed the bui.
The American people are going to ilgn
their peace In Berlin, Tokyo and Rome!—Chicago Sun.
By The Canadian Preu
May 14, 1917-Zcppclin 1,-22 destroyed
by naval gunfire in the North Sea. Italian offensive launched from Tolmino tothe sea.
Russian military authoriUes estimated Germany had withdrawn 600.000 men from Ihe
Eastern front to oppose Anglo-Ficnch offen-
slvs.
FOR DEALER8 ONLY
News that the price to manufacturers of 88
grocery items Is arbitrarily lowered under
price ceiling regulations may lead to iome mil-
apprehension. There is likely to be an expectation on the part of many people that the pricei
of those articles will be reduced to the consumer.
In fairness to the retail merchantl, It
should e made plain lhat this will not be the
effect of the order. No suspicion ihould be
held against the retailers if they do not reduce
Iheir prices. The ruling is made eolely to bring
about an adjustment in the ipread between
cost' and selling prices, thus meeting a condition whereby both wholesaler! tnd rettilen
have been laboring under a disadvantige. Retail prices are already under the celling, tnd
on the itemi dealt with, merchantl ind Jobbers have been getting an unfairly imall return, and In some cases even tuffierlng a lost.
It Is a case in which Injustice oould be
done by jumping lo the conclusion that merchants who do not reduce pricei are cheating.
-Winditor Star.
Operational
Training Unks
Final Course
ty t. O. RMNMk MeQIIItvray, HUJ>,
LONDON, AprU SS.-Tht uderfrtduata
medicil itudent wbo It called upoo to attend
as emergency cast it aa flndi t parallel ln
tba Air Force pilot whe, while ttm under
training ln Great Britain, comu ttm ts tact
witb t German filar (or whose extermination
he hu bten initructed only la tht tbttrtcL
This over-prutnt poulbility U one of tht
many erorrlu imirfing the mft offlcen of
Operttioatl Trtiniag Unlti, thi chiin of
ichooli In Britiln which icctpt ilrertwg trash
from tht Britith Commonwulth Air Trilning
Plaa in tht Dominion tad teach them to apply
thalr knowledge of ivlatioa to flnt-lini tircraft undtr wu-timt condiUoni—in othtr
wordt, ta grtduttt thtm trom tnining crttt
to ultri-modern tighten, bomberi ind couttl
command machlnea, ind to extend ud polish
up thtlr knowledge of tht mtny tubjtcti tilled with opentlontl flying.
Occulonally, an OTU. itudent crones
itrlal pathi with i Hun. It doein't happen very
often, but lt it Inevitable, sow ind thto, ln i
country ttptrtttd by only t nirrow Chmnel
from Bocht-lnfeittd Iurope. And tha poulbility It lufficient to htvt made It advluble
for the Roytl Air Force to iuui Initructiom
to Q.T.U. itudenti to meet the unlikely, but
embarraulng iventutllty.
JUST DIFIND YOURSILF
Tht O. T. U. crtft ctrry gunt tnd immunl-
tion, of count. But tht itudent, unltu ht tt
Jutt finiihing hit count, li liktly not to bt
quite u edept tnd prtctlied ln their utt u
hli mort wttontd idvtmry. Coniequently.
hit instructioni in: "Keep twty tram Jtrry.
Lttvi him itrictly ilone. But lt ht comu ltttr
you, tnd lata within rtnge, thm defend your-
Mit.-*
The trt of "defending himielf" is something thtt your Cinidlin filer It pot taught
very thoroughly until he reaches O. T. 11,
md then It lin't limited to defence. In teet, the
emphuil li on ttttck, ill tht time.
Of the three mtln brinchtt of tht Air
Force, Bomber tnd Coutal Commind—tht
leut tmphuli on ictuel combit occun tn
Coutal. For tht function of the Coutal Commind ilrcnft optntlng trom Brltlth shorn
theie diyi lnvolvei ■ lirger proportion ot
itralght flying, with a imiller proportion ot
ihooting, bombing tnd torpedoing, thtn tht
othtr two combined. Mtny thouundi ot weary
houn per week in expended In ceueleu pitrol of the iklei md sea-lanes, ln reconntli-
unce, ln the convoying of merchant shlpi, ind
ln tht miintenance of ■ don gutrd ovtr ill
the approaches to the embattled island.
So it ii natural thit, it Coutal Commind
O.T.U.'i, emphuil ihould be pliced on thui
leu ipecticulir but moit vital function! ot
wartime lircnft.
•HIP RECOGNITION
One of the moit Important subject! being
itudied it Coutal O.T.U.'i todty li "thlp recognition"—the kntck of being tble to tqulnt
down trom one to tour thouund feet et t
tiny, imoky ipeck on the oceen'i lurfice, ind
to uy, without hultancy: "Thit'i one of our
deitroyen, Tribal Clui"; or "ThitSt thein—•
cruller, probably the Prim Eugen"; or "Skip IL
It'i the Rodney". And ln that Job, guesses ire
ouL
How thit degree of ability in ihip recognition ii developed wu demonitnted recently
by • group of Cinidlan ladi at a Coutal General Reconnaissance School, which prepares
the ladi for O.T.U., somewhere In EngUnd.
The clau consisted of Pilot Officer D. Murray
McKenile, of Stelltrton, N.S.; Pilot Officer
Milcolm G. Brown ot Montreil ind Toronto,
t former newipaper photographer; and Sergeant Obierven George Ritchie ot Ctmpbell-
ton, N. B., Alex Edgley of Quebec City, Clir-
ence B. Steves of Elgin, N. B, ind Simuel GUI-
man ot Sherbrooke, Que.
Using tiny but amazingly accurate icale
modelt of i half-hundred different modern
warships, they rm through them with in ilmoit Incredible degree of iccurtcy ln their
ldentlflcttiom, prompting trom Imtructor Flying Officer Brian Chtmpion tht remtrk; "The
iverage let by Canadlm tlr-ertw it thli ichool
li remirkably high. In ficL I have never yet
had to fall a lingle Cmadian tt whit we call
"ihip recco!"
At the Generil Reconnaissance School, obierven who ire ear-marked for Coutal Commind apend their time moitly on lecturu tnd
refresher couriei dealing with navigation,
tactlci. ihip and tlrcrtft "recpo", wireleu tnd
ilgnilllng, with t fair amount ot flying. From
there they move on to O.T.U. where their
initruetion Is more practical thtn refresher,
md where they receive the final bruthing-up
In the whole list of aeronautical arti md accomplishments which fit them, when they have
graduated, not to "avoid Jerry", but to lead in
slugging.
Test Yourself
1. What il one of Australia's major problems?
2. If "tete • tete" meini fice to fice, whit
does "doi t dos" metn?
3. Whit is ivlculture?
TEST ANSWERS
1. Irrigation.
2. Back to back.
3. The rearing of birds.
Words of Wisdom
Facti that are not frankly faced hive a
habit of itibblng ui ln the beck.—Sir Hirold
Bowden.
Etiquette Hints
Let tht children thtre the tugir ration-
In gwlth the rut of the fimlly. Don't give up
your shire to the children. You will only
mike them lelfiih md Inconsiderate of others
if you do. If, for their heilth, they need more
thin idulti, find out how much ind miki them
itick to thit imount.
TODAY'S News Pictures
FLAGS ARE LANGUAGE OF CONVOYS
A sailor aboard a unit of the U. S. navy's Atlantic
task force is shown chatting by semaphore to ships of a
convoy being escorted to its destination. Radios are not
used for intership communication except in an extreme
emergency, 'since they might betray positions of ships
in the convoy to lurking submarines.
REST AMID THE RUINS OF BATH
Takng time-out from salvage and rescue work amid
the ruins of Bath, a British Tommy enjoys a cup of tea
served from a tea car sent to Britain by the students of
Vassar College through the British War Relief Society.
Loss of life was heavy when the Nazis staged their "reprisal raid" on the defenceless resort city, thronged with
refugees and evacuees.
■■'*9&° '\;;;'-....;::. ._... ..
.  ... ^
*        &   ;.*    'it.*.-'.*..- ■■%*•."
;%j)ffe!fiPWGpwiwwMK3
CAPTURED NAZIS
Ernest Wagner md Reinhardt
Pmndter, Gtrmtn priionen from
Bowmanville priion camp, who
were recaptured In Ontario atter
a brief respite of freedom. Both
mtt* loe'-'k 1"*A 'nrilth. Weiner
having lived in Montreil, where
he worked as t ikl instructor.
V. S. ARMY GETS PRIORITY ON THE LOWLY HERRING
Every year, from time immemorial, millions of herring have swarmed up the Taunton River to spawn at the headwaters near Middleboro, Mass., and every year it was
either the Indians with their traps or the white man with their nets who caught them in
thousands. But either way, the tasty fish ultimately satisfied someone's appetite. Thia
year the U. S. army has put in its order and the herring will, in their own way, help
beat the Axis. Photo at lefts shows the millions of herring in the water, header! upstream. The other picture shows the nerring or (alewives) being pullia in with »
dragnet. In this spot the daily catch runs up to 1000 barrels.
Ilijliglijg^
t^^Mt^^^^UJurj^^L^m^MiA.
 	
—
1 uld nd Morris, Nelson, Margeson
if Trait Win U. B. C. Scholarships
yANCOUVER, Mty IJ (C?>-
hrard Groat, 11-year-old Vtncou-
|T itudent, today waa caned win-
It of the Governor-Gensssl'i gold
a<Ul u reiulti ot recant exuni-
IHons at the Univenity Jt Briuin
Dliunbii were made paWp. In id-
Hon to winning the hlgrfti honor
nibble to glutting ttuAntt »e
*_* awarded the Unlvenity <)ridu-
la Kholanhlp and tht _-M Boi/
icon prill In Irti ind Kieaes. /
Oroai majored ln psychology jr&
hllotophy ind hopes to conitoue
I thote lubjecti "if ta» wif milt
It me.*-
Highest honor tvallable lo com-
larce itudenti wont to Bavid A.
Igrper of  Victorit who won tne
Uwtnii Club gold toedtjf while iht
«favre gold medsj tniyicholinhip
ru iwirded to Oeorgp V. Brown-
Bg of Duncin. IJie sjholirjhip will
avert to DonsM «. McLellan of
hnoouvel, hM»evet. Browning tl-
• received the Dr. F. 3. NlchoUon
choltrahlQ for oheml^trr.
I    John M, fc Mirjattn of Trill
! wen  tha  Ajilpa toholtrthlp for
| prftlel-pey ll Or«ek md tht Unl-
vinlty tmr prise. Helen R. Mmnlng M Wtorli, • third yttr un-
d«r-|_»0kti,   wti   iwtrdtd  tht
John t*d  Annli Southcott mem-
arllTtiholirihlp fer Britiah Columbit hiitory.
Bert A. Auld of Nilwn, t lint-
yeir itudent, received the Roytl
Initftutlon icholinhlp for g«n-
«nt proficiency, whlli thl Unl-
vtriity griduttt Hlttorlcil Society prl« went to Robert J. D.
tterrlt of Nelion.
Divld J. Roie of Vlctorli was
ftuited the University scholarahip
Applied Science for General
roflency, proceeding to the fourth
air. The Convocation prlu for
leneral Itfllcency In fifth year Ap-
UtiJ Science went to C. Gordon
logers of Victoria, t civil engtn-
sring student, who ilso won the
Snglneering   Institute   of   Canada
Eg.
*R. Kenneth G. Davies of Kimber.
ty was awarded a Highland Bell
iriie ln geol"(y.
Faculty of Arts and Science.
Conferring the degree of Master
It ArU: Donald Edwin Bunyan,"
1 A, Nelion, (physics, mathemat-
Cs); Joieph Arthur Frederick Gar-
lener, B. A, Nikuip (chemlitry,
phyilcs); Magnus Lunde, B. A.,
tnil, (geology, chemistry)..
Conferring the degree of Batch-
llor of Arts (with honon): John
Ifslcolm Russel Margeson, Trill,
[tint elect, English and classics);
Itobirt John Donald Morrii, Nelion, (first class, history).
VICTORIA
■—DAY—i
MONDAY, MAY M
SPECIAL FARES
Bttwttn All Suiioni In Cinidi
ONE WAY FARE
snd ONE-QUARTER
FOR ROUND TRIP
(Minimum Fire SSc)
*••*******
OOlNOi
From Mty 22 until 2 p.m. May
25 (except if no train aervice on
Muy 22, ticket* will be iold for
May 21).
RETURNING.
Leave deat inat ion until midnight,
Tuesday, May 26 (except if no
train aarvice, May 26, ticket i will
ba good on first available train).
Futl Injorniatttn/toi. Any Aftnt.
iYOHD";   GHUTISJ    [HflVFL    S'STFM
Pused (with tupplementtU):
Amy L. Hackciy, Ronland, (math.
1«.        «•      •
' Conferring Ut Degree of Bsche-
Vor st Comnttrce—Clm 1. lant- E.
Cos, Rowland. Clan II, Francei E.
Ashworth, Invermere.
'Social Work. Completed the wort
ot the Winter itition. Clau II,
Gunhild a Dellert Kimberley.
Ficulty ot Applied Science, avli
Engineering — Clau 11: John H.
Harding. Nelson.
Forest Engineering-First Clasa
Honors, Normin H. Bon, Ntlun.
Cltn Ii, William I. L. Young, Oy-
unt,
Mechtnlctl Engineering—Cltn II,
Normin C. Bruce, Golden.
Metallurgies Engineering-Hon-
ors: Bernard H. Morriion, Nation.
Mining Engineering — Class 11:
Kenneth R. G. Davies, Kimberley.
Passed with Supplementals: Donald
M. Edwards, Crinbrook, (CE. ISA,
Chem. SB, Geol 9, Mining 3).
Ficulty ot Arti ind Scienct —
Third Year: Pined with Supple-
mtntili: Thomu R. Cullimne, Roultnd (Gov. 3, Soc. 1).
Socitl Work—Completed work of
Winter Senlon: Cltn II: Gunhild
H. Dellert, Kimberley.
Faculty of Arta and Science —
Second Yetr; Class 1: Kenneth D.
Hester, Creston. Class II: Joseph
Francis, New Denver; Arne Henrickson, Nelson; Michael D. Turyk,
Michel. Passed: George L. C. MacKinnon, Cranbrook (Latin S, extri-
tupp.); Margaret M. O'Neill, \Kim-
berley. Passed with Supplemental!: Mary L. Attridge, Cranbrook
(Hist.,3. Eng. 16 repeat); Albert Dellert, Kimberley (Ger. IB); Edmond
J. A. Paulsen, Trail (Psych. 1); Muriel F. Whimster, Nelson (Fr. 2, Chem.
2). Pasied ln certain tubjecta: William F  Shkwarok, Cutlegar,
Corhmerce—Class II: Ouy P. S.
Cawley, Salmo; S. Caswell Todhunter, Grand Forks; Adam C. Waldie,
TralL Paued with Supplemental!:
Ronald T. McBride, Nelion (Eng. 2.).
First Year — Clan 1; Bert A.
Auld, Nelion; Ruth C. Margeson,
Trail; Elizabeth J. Ore, Chapman
Camp. Class II: F. Claire Jamietpn,
Roulind; Jimei H. Kilburn, Trtll;
Mike J. R. Lakes, Nelson. Passed:
Hans P. Johnson, Rossland; Passed
with Supplementals: .Stewart J. Andrews, Chapman Cimp (beg. Ger.);
Donald C. M. Fither, Nelion (beg.
Ger.); J. E. SuHinne Harrison, Cranbrook (Chem. 1); Bruce McD. Murray, Yahk (Fr. 1); William W. Pol-
llngton, Rosiland (Math. 1); Elizabeth B. Spreull, Cranbrook (Phys.
1, Psych. 2.). Passed ki certain subject!: M- Elltabeth ReynoldX Grand
Forks (Eng. IA, En. IB, Math. 1,
Hilt 1).
Ficulty of Applied Science, Fourth
Class II: Erneit Mason, Trail. Passed
Class II: Brest Mason, Trail. Passed
with Supplementals: Harold M.
Coverdale, Trail (Math. 8); Frank
F. Smith, Kimberley (Civil. 10A,
Mech. Eng. 5, Elect, 2, Elect. 3).
Metallurgical Engineering—Passed with Supplementals: Edward
Benton, Chapman Camp (Civil 10A.)
Mining Engineering — Class II:
Norman A. Gill, Kimberley. Passed with Supplemental*: John P.
Beley, Rossland (Civil 10A, Elect.
1, Elect. 1 Lab.). Third Year, Class
II: Alfred L. Bonutto, Trail; Allan
Ourrle, Rossland; Aldo Marzocco,
Kimberley; John t, Tiedje, Trail,
Puied with Supplementals: Isaac
Halle, Fernie (Civil 1); Paul H. H.
Hooklngi, Nelson (Chem. 2B, Civil
31); Donald McLean, Michel (Civil
1, Phys, 5, Civil 31); Allan B. Workman, Fernie (Civil 1, Phys. 5, Civil
31). Second Year, Honors: Donald
B. Robinson, Michel. Passed with
Supplementals: Leslie A. Challls,
Leith, Kimberley (ClvU 4); John
Greenwood (Chem 2A); James A.
Stefanelli. Trail (Math. 2, Phys. 4A,
Phys. 4B. Civil 30).
The undersea continental shelf
that runs from Newfoundland :o
Florida slopes gradually to its edge
and then drops off abruptly into
1500 fathoms depth.
for ixtra Shaving fose fry Today's
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King'i Hone Wini
Second Straight
Newmorkit Evtnt
NEWMARKET, England. May 13
iCP)-The King'i liable completed
i rare double it Ntwmtrket today
whan Sua Chariot won tht om
thouiand gulneai stakes fir three-
year-old filliei iftar lbs Royil co.lt
big gunt took ths two thouiand
guineit claim yesterdty. Sun Chtr-
iot was the even money favorite.'
lt waa tha tint time linct 1901
thtt one ittblt had won both sveati
tad tht tint tint nytl entrtet won
both.
.       i__
Indians Take
Rookies In
Trail Opener
TRAIL, B. C, Mty ISn-rint gimt
of the Junior Softbill Leigue uw
the Indians Ukt tht C.N.l.B. Rookiet (-4 tt Victoria Park Tueidiy.
The Indiini madt nlna hits, two
by Turik and two by Miglitnl, one
of Migllinl'i being t two-bigger.
The Rookiei collected four hita
Two were by Jick Underwood, ont
ot theie being i doublt.
Martin Merlo was Umpire
Lineupi were: ^
CN.I.B.-Tew Fowler p, 3*t\ Underwood, c, Jtck Nayies, ,1b, Ivo
Delia Lana, 2b, George McLein.-Sb,
Joe Relley, ss. Milcolm Mckemle,
If, Jack Fleming, ct, and Long, rf.
Indians — Bert Milne, p, Frmk
Turik, c, Lorne Zinio, lb, Sergio
Stmmtrtlno, 3b, Izzy McLaughlin,
3b, Tlni Miglunl. u, Wo Toffolo, If,
Ref Iuf, cf, ind Ezo Georgetti, rf.
-NIUON DAILY NIWI. NILtON. ■. fc-THUMDAV NOftWM. MAY «. •_%■
Jefferson Trophy
Play Opens
Saturday Afl'noon
TRAIL, B. C, Miy 1J-A matketrt
tournament will be pliyed for the
Jefferson trophy tt tht Trtll-Rott-
land Golf tnd Country Club, itarting Saturday at 1:19. The tournament will be a mixed handicap,
two ball foursome, tnd entrlei havi
to bt in tht handi of tht mttch
committti by 9 p.m. Frldiy. Part-
neri will be choien by draw, and
the losers In the first round of the
fhampionshtp will enter the flnt
flight.
There will be (upper tnd dancing at tht Clubhouse on Saturdiy
evening. . - •• - -    -»      ,
Tha Jefferson trophy U it prtttnt
held by Mn. Jamei Atwell ind Mlu
Thurza Roisman.
Lady Golfers to
Try Tourney
Again on Thursday
Jinxed by foul weather over the
weekend, the Nelson lady golfers
Thursday afternoon — the weather
gods. permitting — will open their
twice-postponed Get Acquainted
tournament. The tourney was first
slated to get under way May 3, but a
snow storm descended on the Golf
and Country Club links. It was rescheduled for last Sunday and rain
washed out all golf.
A ladles' luncheon will be held at
the Club house, and opening
rounds will follow that. Succeeding
rounds will be played off on follow-
lg days.
Flnajlsts In both the championship and consolation flights of the
men's Get Acquainted event hive
yet to meet, and they will likely
face off before the weekend. The
top flight final ■ matches Vic Owen
and Lloyd Wllklns igalnst John
Cartmel and Don Clark. A. H. Allan
and S. T. McCulloch meet Walter
Walt and William Barrett ln the
other final.
Babe Dahlgren Goes
to the Browni
ST. LOUIS, May IS (AP).-Babe
Dahlgren, first-baseman with Chicago Cubs, wai acquired today by
St. Louis Browns for an unannounced sum of money In ■ Straight cash
deal.
Dihlgren, formerly with New
York Yankees end Boston Braves,
will join the Browni late tomorrow
or Friday.
BALL STANDINGS
AMERICAN EAGUE
New York  .'	
Cleveland   	
Detroit    _	
Boton   	
Philadelphia   	
Washington 	
St. LouU     	
Chicago    	
NATIONAL LEAQUE
Brooklyn     ....
Pittsburgh   	
Boston * 	
Cinclnniti   	
New York 	
Chicago   	
Philadelphia   ....
17
17
18 U
14 11
13 16
11 19
11 18
7 19
8 .680
9 .634
.600
.580
.448
.423
.379
18 8,
17 12
16 13
13 13
12 19 .444
12 19
8 20
.444
Tobln Blasts Out Three Home Runs
While Pitching Braves lo Win
Over Cubs; Indians Stop Yankees
•y The Csnadian Pnee
JIB Tobln, vtttrtn righthander,
att a naw Major Lugue komt-rua
iIum>*S retard fer pNefcen toaay
by blaitlng eut thre* oontecutlve
circuit drlvea fer a total of four
runa whlli hurting tea-ten Irtvtt
te a t-S victory tvtr Chiangs Cubi.
Tobln, wbo loit thrte *. his uvea
previous itarts btctuie hit ma'.et
wars unablt to hit behind, him, won
hit own giant ln tht tlghth by homering titer Paul Winer hsd linglei.
He opened the fifth and tsven'.i
banns for tht BHvtt by clearing
the fence.
While duplicating a ftet thai, u
tar it the record booki reveel, wai
performed only by Pitcher Ouy
Reeker tor tha Louisville American
Auoclation Club back In IStt, Tob.n
hit tour homeri in hit lut flvt turns
it bal
Hi poled out hit iecond of tht
season u I pinch hitter igtlntt tht
Cubs yeiterdiy. At i rtaulfof todiy'l clubbing, Jim becime Boiton'i
top hitter with in ivenge of .400
for hit 17 turns it tht pltte.
DODQERS BLANK REDS
Curt Divli, 33-yeir-old righthander, dtllvtrtd Brooklyn Dodgeri' retort to yesterdiy'i ont hit pitching
performance by Gene Thompton of
Cinclnniti Rtdi. Thi vtteran dtllvtrtd tn effective two-hitter ind
retired the Redi ln lucceuion ln the
lut li> innings to ichieve a 4-0
ihutout for hit fourth triumph of
tht Nitlonil Ltagut ituon.
lut ilx Innlngi to ichieve a 4-0
ihutout for hli fourth triumph of
the Nitlonil Leigue seaion.
it bit
won hit lut itart without liming
t tingle but on balls, mads up for
lt today with a ipell of wtldneu that
helped the Dodgen tcort all thtlr
runt ln the first four framei and
finally brought big Piul Derringer
to the mound In t reliet role,
CARDS TAKE PHILS
* Held Scoreless In 20 ji thtlr previoui 29 Innings, st- Louli Ctrdlntli
ilimmed out 13 hltt to wallop tht
Phils 9-1 snd tnd t tour game loiing itreak. Lon Wirneke hurled I
muterful five-hitter to chalk up hli
itcond itralght triumph. Tha Phili'
lone ully cime In the flnt Inning oo
Dtnny Lltwhller's leventh horntr,
of tht ituon.
Mintger Fnnk Frisch of Pittiburgh Pirates wis banished by Umpiru tor the third time ln I month,
but not until he hid ieen hit Bue-
cineeri rally for thrtt run ln Ibt
seventh inning for tba margin ot S
3-1 triumph over New York Giants.
The game wu i pitching dull between big MM Butchtr of tht Pirates and Rooklt Dtvt Koslo molt
of the wiy wtth Butcher outlasting
hli Southpaw rival tor hli fourth
victory.
In thi Amtrietn Ltague Lovi 11
(Chubby) Dtan itopped ill ef tht
Ntw York Yinkiei except Jot
DIMigglt tnd pitched Cleviltnd
lititiw te I M vlttery (hat gavt
tke* half a game wtthla being
Nsdatti who were rMIng the creit
tf a Hven-gtmt winning itreak.
Dean, a Southpaw with a long
record u i nuliance to the Yanka,
allowed Naw York only ita hits aod
would hava had a shutout except
for home runi in tha leventh ahd
ninth miiinp by DiMaggio. Thay
ware hli lixth and leventh round
tripptn of tht uaaon.
Detroit Tigen iqutrtd accounti
with thtir former mate, Pitcher
Bobo Ntwiom, by bltlttng htm fer
nine hits In ieven lnningi thtt ied
u i l-l victory ovtr Wuhnigtoa
Senaton. Young Hal Newhouier
yielded three hita ln achieving hu
flrtt IM) triumph. It wu tht ninth
lucceuive himi victory for tht Tigen gaho hivt gont unbeaten here
tine ethey dropped the leuon opener to Cleveland Indians.
Myrll Hoig'i loth-inning ilngle
•cond Joe Kuhel tnd give Chicago's
reviving White Sox a 2-1 victory
aver Boiton Rad Sox In the only
game of their curtailed urlei
Tht victory wu the third in the
lut four ittrti for the Sox, who previouily hid ttken only four ot 12
gtmti.
A'l MOVE UP
Phllidelphii Athletici moved Into
-fifth plice by defeating St. Louli
Browni 10-t ln I free-for-all struggle ftiturlng 28 hits tnd ieven erron. A tottl ot 10 pitchers ptrided
to the mound; tix for SL LouU and
four for Philadelphia.
NATIONAL
Chicago    8   8   1
Boiton       6   9   4
gnoihBStwee
Mooty, Bithorn 7. tnd McCuUough
nttl
Tobin ind Lombirdl, Mui 3.
ClnclnniU     0   2   0
llrooklyn 4   9   0
Vtndir Mter, Derringer 4, Shoun,
8. ind Hemsley, Dtvls and Owen.
SL Loull          8 19   0
Prllidtlphli        1   5   1
Wirneke ind O'Dei, Johnson, Pear
ion 1, Beck 3, Nahem 8, and Warre-i
PltUburgh       3 7   0
New York    1   6   1
Butcher ind Lopei, Koilo, Adams
7, sunkel s and Dinning.
AMIRICAN
,New York    2  6  0
CleveUnd    7   0  0
Gomel, Lindell 8 and Rosar; Dean
and Denning.
ytghington       2   3   2
Detroit     6 11   0
Newiom, Zuber 8 vtt Evans, Nc»-
houier end TebbetU
Boiton     I   7  0
Chlctgo     2   7   0
Wigner tnd Peicock, Humphries
Hiynes ind Turner, Dickey 10.
St. LouU     9 13   3
PhlledelpWi  10 19   4
Besse, Fowler 3, ChrUtopher 9,
Wolff 7 ind Hayes, Wagner 9, Holllngsworth, Blscan 3, Trotter 9, Caster 6, Muncrlef 6, Whitehead 9, and
Swift, Ferrell 9.
ii«   1      1
*.^s\J
-**A_ SIVIN
Batting Leaders
By Thl Auoelited Preu
Bitting (three leaderi In ttch
league):
Player, club G AB R H Pet
Doerr, Red Sox IS 69 12 28 .406
Spence, Sen. .. 26,111 19 48 .408
Dickey, Yanki 20 Its » 29 .302
Reiser, Dodgen 24 94 17 31 .330
Murtaugh, Phlll 26 85 13 28 .329
Fernandez,
Brivei    :... 29 11«   17   •(!   519
Home rum: Americtn Ltigue—
Willlimi, Red Sox, York, Tigen, DiMeglio, Yankees 7; Nitlonil Leigue
—Cimllli, Dodgeri, 7.
Runs batted ln: American Leegue
-Johnion, Athletici, 28; National
League—F. McCormick, Redi, 23.
BALL SCORES
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
St Paul  -400 280 000 9 10   2
MlnneapolU    MS 400 22x14  4  2
Bowman, Smith, (4), Ltnahtn (8),
ind Andrtws; Hteftntr md Linton.
Toledo ...: ;3   4  0
Columbus   4  8  3
Ostermuifller tnd Spindel; Mun-
ger tnd Blaemire.
INTERNATIONAL
Jeraey City ... 100 011200-8   7   3
Buffalo    ...990040 320—17 18   3
Wittig, Miglle (2), Danna (2) and
Poland, Beal (4); ^ierra and Gar-
bark. ,
Community Club at
Caitlegar to
Sponior Celebration
CASTLfcOAR, B. C—The Castle-
far Community Club will sponsor
the Dominion Day celebration at
Castlegar this year It was decided
at a public meeting in the Coronation Hall. S. C. Watson WM
Chairman.
LONDON (CP) — Internitiontl
color wu given the London Public
School'l fencing champlonihlpi with
Judges including men from the Netherlinds Belglin ind Ciechotlo-
vakltn irmiei end navies, and top-
ranking British fencers, Including
Hirry Cookt, undefeated Britiih
Foil chimpion. A tottl of 143 schoolboys crossed foils in the competition. , »    .
Ted Williams
Worried-
bul Skies Clear
CHICAGO, Miy 13 (AP)-For a
couple of hours today the draft
stilus of Ted Williams seemed up
ln the air again, but lt appears
now the Boiton Red Sox star wont
be called Into the Army right iway.
Word trom Cleveland that Major
Ernest M. Culllgan, Public Relation! Officer of the Selectlvb Service Syitem, hid sild Williams
"probibly" would be taken In hii
Drift Board'i next call caught the
ilugglng outfielder by surprise.
"I can't understand lt," Red
said. "I haven't heard anything
Ukt that from my draft board in
Minneapolis."
.Hii draft board in Minneapolis
apparently shared Williami' sur-
;rlie. Chairman George W. Price
Immediately declared Ted still is
ln a deferred classification and
thre Is no Intention of reopening his
case.
Told at Comiskey Park, where
the Red Sox loit to Chicago White
Sox, of hli Boird Chairman's statement, Ted ltughed happjly.
"I was .afraid we were getting all
mixed up again," he said. "Now I
can go to work."
Hawkins Expected to
Sign With Seals
SAN FRANCISCO, Mty 13 (AP)
—Frankie Hawklni, Infielder released by the Portland Beaven last
week, li expected to sign a contract
with the Seals in the next 24 hours.
President Charles Griham of the
Seals retched Hawkins by telephone eirly today and they virtually
agreed on terms, Hawklni will
play third bue in the event he
signs t contract
LONDON, (CP).-Captalni ln the
British Army, two prominent English sportsmen are missing at Singapore. John Paul Burrough, 26, rowed for Oxford igalnst Cambridge
ln 1987-38. R. J. Ritchie of the Royal
Artillery  wai a  Wimbledon  lawn
tennU player,
PROMISING   ROOKIE
Stan MuiUl. outfielder, St.
Louii CirdlmU. Publiclxtd u No.
1 rookie ot the year in the Nitlonil Leigue. Unhanded bitter
from Donora. Pa., who pliyed
with Springfield. Rocheiter end
Cardinals last season, outhittlng
the (eadlng batter ln each league.
Hit .426 for Cards in 12 games
late in season.
Jim Bloodworth
Going Places
ior Ihe Tigers
DETROIT, Miy 18 (AP)^-Fer
thl flnt time ilnct 1928 whtn Ty
Cobb wu itlll • pliylng mimger,
Detroit Tigen hid • ueond but
problem thli Soring. With the
Amerlcen Lugut leuon only 1
month old It cin be reported thit
thi poit vacated by peerleti Chirley Gehringer ii being filled mere
thtn tceeptibly by hustling Jimmy Bloodworth.
If there Is. anything utonlshing
about Del Baker'. Tigers staying
In the first division tgainst preseason expert opinion, it is that
Bloodworth's clutch batting and his
steady fielding have won over critical Detroit fins. At'23 Bloodworth
U somewhit of a major league veteran because of three seasons ln a
Washington uniform.
Bloodworth, who came to Detroit
ln a Winter deal with Roger Cramer
for Bruce Campbell and Frank
Croucher hu a current batting average barely above .200. He Is batting In the lead-off position for 1
relatively light hitting club, yet he
has hatted in 19 runs with his 28
hiU.
Known to the trade as a long ball
hitter, Bloodworth possesses a good
R.B.I, record. He had 70 two years
ago and last season with 88 ranked
28th ln the league and surpassed
the output of such cont imporarles
as Dom DiMaggio of Boston, Luke
Appling of Chicago, Manager Lou
Boudreau of Cleveland ad Barney
McCosky of the Tigers.
In the field Bloodworth has good
range and possesses a strong arm.
He admittedly is no counterpart of
the smooth fielding Gehringer, but
Jimmy does the Job to the satisfaction of Gehringer himself, now a
Tiger coach.
Dave Fairbank
Is Aerial
Observer Now
Dave Fairbank, now a sergeant-
observer of the R.C.A.F., was in
Nelson Tuesday on his way to Vancouver to spend leave. He received
his observer's wings at Macdonald,
Man., May 9.
Well-known ln Nelson, Dave attended High School here and enthusiastically took part in almost
every school sport. He played badminton, softball, tennis and was a
keen swimmer. He represented the
High School at the Kootenay-Boundary track meet at Kimberley In
1938.
He ls the son o{ H. Fairbank, now
of-Ollver, formerly of Harrop.
Sgt. Observer Fairbanks said that
W. J. Clark of Rossland, a member
of the Rossland Redmen lacrosse
team, had also received his wings
last Saturday, as a sergeant-observ-
Name 35 Prisoners
Taken at H-Kong
OTTAWA, Miy 13 (CP)-Namtt
of 34 officeri tnd oot civilian auxiliary nrvice man were reported
is unofficially lilted prisoners ot
wtr In an Army casualty lut toaay.
Tha men are those mentioned in
a meiuge received by the External
Affuri Department on Canadian
prisoners it Hong Kong ind molt
of them ire memberi ot the Winnipeg Grenadiers, one ot the two Canadian bi'.t^lioni which fought there
ai pirt ol the British garrison tnd
which were overcome by the Jtp-
anese.
Only scanty informition his been
received concerning the fite of Canadians at Hong Kong. Besides today'i
lilt, irmy casualty lists ln recent
weeki heve reported the deaths ot i
a few Canadlani while they were
in Japanese prison camps.
Information on the 33 men listed
today as unofficially reported prisoners cime through London from
lhe British Embauy it Chungking.
Japanese hive reported they took
1,689 priionen when Hong Kong
fell. On this basis it has beenotfi-
cially assumed that 296 Canadians
are dead or missing as a result of
the Hong Kong operations.
In addition to the Hong Kong
names, today's 104th Army casualty
list of the war also reported the
death oversets of one man, the dangerous Illnesi overseas of two men
and the serious Illness oversea ot
SIX.
The men listed ai "unofficially
reported prisoner! of wir" were the
only Hong Kong casualties ln today's list, a National Defence Department spokesman said. The rest
were casualties in other overseas
countries  where  Canadians  serve.
Following ls the latest list of casu.
allies:
Overseas:
Died—Royal Canadian Engineers:
Murray, James Ewart, Lieut., Toronto.  Royal Canadian Artillery: An-
Trees Broken
as Snow
Hits Cranbrook
CRANBROOK, B. C, May 13
—April showers brought more than
May flowen to Cranbrook Monday. Six inches of snow fell and
the total precipitation of rain and
snow was 1.70 inches.
Trees were broken and bushes
flattened to the grotnd while tulips and other Spring flowers were
burled under the heavy wet snow.
The West bound train was several
hours late because of bridge washout at Natal. The city streets kept
men busy shovelling to prevent
flooding and rubber boots were to
be seen in great abundance.
Louii Celebratei
28th Birthday
NEW YORK, May 13 (AP).-Joe
Louis, heavyweight boxing champion, celebrated his 28th birthday
on duty with the Special Services
Branch of the Army.
Louis, recently transferred from
Camp Upton, worked at routine
Army duties In the forenoon and
then was given a pass tor the afternoon so that he might examine the
hundreds of congratulatory messages.
LONDON (CP)—A former England International rugby footballer
was among the British prisoners ol
wsr recently repatriated from Italy.
He ii Ma]. Geoffrey J. Dean.
Pope Broadcasts
Plea for Peace
VATICAN CITY, May 13 (AP) -
Pope Pius XII broadcast to the
world today a plea for peace, "wilh
the greater insistence in view of
the menace of greater destructive
weapons," even though he acknowledged that the present poltical situation would hardly allow of such a
offer being accepted.
Speaking on the 25th anniversary
of his consecration as an archbishop
and on the eve of the feast of the
Ascenison, the Pope said—
"We have even before the outbreak of war worked for peace with
all'our soul and strength within the
limits of our apostolic ministry.
But now that people are living
in anxiety, awaiting imminent military operations, we have the opportunity offered us by today's anniversary to pronounce once again
a word of peace.
"We say It with Impartiality toward all beligerents and with equal
affection for all sections of all peoples.
"While there Is no immediate
hope for peace, the destruction that
is caused by war Is forever accumulating.
We make this appeal today with
greater insistence in view of the
menace of greater destructive weapons.
derion. Albert I, Onr, Woodlandt,
Mtn.; MtcKeuie, Harry Wilbur,
Gnr, MicKiy, AlU.; MtcLenntn,
Lewis Junes, Gnr, Loland, Man.;
MacMillan, Milton Ernest Gnr., Toronto: Sargtint Edward Lion, Gnr.
Toronto; Simon, Mervyn Joieph,
Gnr., The Pas, Man. Royal Cana.
dian Corps of Signals: Drever, Leonard Eugene, Sigmao., Yeilowxnite,
N.WT. CanadUn Provoit Corpi:
Strutt John Hugh, Pie, Toronto.
Reconnaissance UniU: Gibb, Alfred,
S.. Sgt.-Mal- Toronto.
Following are the names ot men
ln the Canadian Garrison force at
Hong Kong unofficially reported
prisoners ot wtr:
Quebec Regiment— Prince, Joan
Herbert, Vii. Quebec.
Manitoba Regiment—Hook, Henry
William, Maj., Winnipeg; Hodkln-
son, Ernest Maj, Winnipeg; Bailie,
John Albert. Ma], Winnipeg; Balr-
don, Kenneth George, Maj., Winnipeg; Philip, Robert William, Captain,
Winnipeg; Walker, Edward Butler,
Capt., Jamaica, B.W.I.; Bardal, JJall
Ofeugur, Capt., Winnipeg; Norrii,
John Alexander, Capt. (QM.) Wln-
nepeg: Prendergast, Alexander William, Lieut., Killarney, Man.; Philip,
Donald George, Lieut, Winnipeg;
White. Harry Leslie, Lieut, Cilgary;
Dennis, Frederick Victor, Lieut.
Winnipeg; Dunderdale, John Edward, Lieut., Winnipeg; Golden,
David Aaron, Lieut., Winnipeg; McCarthy, James Dormer, Lieut, Winnipeg; Campbell, Rallton Arthur
Henry, Lieut, Winnipeg; Nugent,
William Francis, Lieut., Llndny,
Ont.; Blackwood, Thomu Alexinder. Lieut.. Regini; Black, Alexander Sleln, Lieut, Robert Black
(father), New Westminster, B. Ci
Corrigan, Leonard Bertham, Lieut,
Winnipeg; Harper, George Blake,
Lieut, Weyburn, Sask.; Maze, Rich-
ard, Lieut, LaFleche, Sask.; Mac-
Kechnle, Hugh Edward, Lieut,
Winnipeg; Park, John Elphlnitone,
Lieut, Winnipeg; Queen-Hughei,
Richard   Wilfred,   Lieut,   Halilax.
Royal Canadian Army Medical
Corps: Crawford, John Nellson
Brown, Ma), Areola, Sask.; Ban-
fill, Stanley Martin, Capt., Mont-
real; Reid, John Anthony Gibson,
Capt., Toronto; Gray, Gordon Cameron, Capt., Toronto.
Canadian Dental Corps—Cunning,
ham, Winston Ross, Capt, Windsor,
Ont; Spence, James Clayton McCarthy, Capt., Fort William.
Royal Canadian Army Pay Corps'.
Terry, Edward Louis, Capt, Ottawa.
Canadian Chaplain Service: Laite,
Uriah, Capt, Mrs. Sarah Guppy
Laite (wife), Vancouver.
Auxiliary Services — Porteous.
George, Saskatoon, Sask."
Following overseas casualties are
reported from other placet than
Hong Kong:'
Wounded—Royal   Canadian   Engineers: Hodson, Cyril, Spr,, Strat- ,
ford, Ont.
Dangerously 111—Royal Canadian
Corps of Signals: Currier, Henry,
Sigmn., Ottawa; MacCallum, Randolph Kitchener, Cpl., Montreal
Seriously 111—Canadian Armored
Corps: Rosslter, Hilyard Doyle, Tr.,
Germantown, N3. Royal Canadian
Engineers: Crouch, Thomai Charles,
Acting Cpl., Mrs. Haiel Jenmie I.
Crouch (wife) Westholme, B. C.
Central Ontario Regiment: Heln-
ecke, Paul, Rifleman, Toronto. Man-
itoba Regiment: Avery, Albert
Charles, Rifleman, Balmorel, Man.
Royal Canadian 'Army Service
Corps: Messender, John Burton,
Pte., Leamington, Ont; Payer, Philippe, Pte., Rockland, Ont.
UDL
i%M
SAVE BOTTLES! There is a great
shortage of bottles and all glassware. Help the war effort by having your "empties" picked up by
the local RED CROSS SALVAGE
DEPOT.
This advertisement is not published
or displayed by the Liquor Control
Board  or  by  the Government ol
British Columljla.
Senior Mens1
SOFTBALL
VICTORIA PARK, TRAIL, B. C.
SUNDAY, MAY 17th AT 5:30 P. M.
SASKATCHEWAN LIFE
VS
HARRIS HUSTLERS
-J   ■..__■:_..
________*■_
._
t^^yttljjkj^
 PASI   llfiHT-
-NtLWN OAILV NiWt. NCLBOM  B. C-THUMOAY M0KNIN6  MAV te
For the Smart Home
Rossland to Examine Madean School
Foundations; Street Grading Praised
ROSSLAND, B. C, May  U-At
Ifce City Council muting Monty
night, Aid. A. F. Smith propouo
thtt the City Bngtaur, R. H. Hag-
fen, thould intytct tb* foundation
ot Maclean School, u it ii unuta-
factory md in need of repain of I
permanent natur*. Th* Council di-
ncted this be don*.
AM. 3. R Corner ished to* City'i
cooperttlon with the Junior Boirfl
oo tht Rubber Stlvtgt ctmpaign.
Atter the rubber it taken to Trail,
the CM at S. Company will snip
it to the lait.
The City tgreed to cooperate fully-
Aid. Fr*d Bthridt* pcu*nt*d •
report trom ta* Wtrkt Cooautuu
tad oo tht Committe*1! ncoctuen-
dttioo Mn. Doton uit gnntod. a*
af City bulldoier tt IT pu hoar.
Aln, to vitw ot to* improvementi promiud by Frank GruiiWe,
th* City tgreed to tell bim the property idjoloing hia own land.
Mayor John Gordon complimented the Board cd Works tor th«>or_t
done by the grader. He uid Rouland streets hid nevtr looked to
tttnetiv*.
Tht bootter pump ordered trom
Vancouver ii upacted nat weel,
lti cut being fttO.
British Whalers
to Serve
With Red Fleet
LONDON, Miy IS tCPI-A greup
ot whalers which Britein hu used
two yeirs for mine sweeping bu
irrived it the Soviet supply port of
Murminsk Ior tervlce with the Red
fleet, the Ministry of InformtUon
tiid lut night.
The wmiers were handed over
to the Russians at the Arctic port
after whit one BriUsh officer called
a nightmare trip" throitgh Ice for-
mitions, mists, gales, floating mine
fields and bombing attacks.
hm^if-fltatU
ta-Ma thou towel disputes
with a smart "His" or "Hen"
monogram. Embroidered on tow-
til or pillow slips, they're a
lovely gift for a bride. Pattern 214
contains • transfer pittern of 12
motifs tveriging 4x7 inchei; miteriili required; Illustrations of
ititchu.
ltnd twtnty ctnti ler thit pat
tern ta. The Ntlun Dally Newt,
Ntedlunft Dept, Nelun. Writ*
plainly pttttrn numbtr, yeur
nam* and iddreia. Pttttrn will
b* malted to your horn, within
10 daya
IS CONDCMNID AS
COMMUNISTS
BERNE. Switierlmd, May 11
(AP)-A military court in Skolpje,
former Yugoiliv twritory wu re-
ported to hav* condemned to duth
11 penoni tccused ot being Communists ind waging quenllt wirfire. Eighteen otheri got long prison terms.
FREE FRENCH TO Hltf
AT MADAGASCAR
LONDON, Miy 11 (CP)- The
Free French will assist Britain in
administering Madagucar, the Foreign Office anounced tonight.
mudon. %n____
WAISTLINI NOVELTY
Summer's coming—be ready
with this gay house frock, Pattern 9680. It has Jiffy front buttoning and slimming side waist inset
lections. The yokes are cut in one
with the back.
Pattern 9880 may be ordered
only in misses' and women's sizes
12, 14, 8, 18, 28, 30, 32, 34, 38, 38
and 40. Size 18 requires 4 yards 35
inch fabric.
Bend twenty cents for thli Mar-
Ian Martin pattern. Be sure to
write plainly your SIZE, name,
■ ddreis ind ityle number.
8end your order to The Dally
Ntwt. Pattern will be tent to your
homt within 10 dayi.
PROBE MYSTERY FIRE
KILLAM, Alta*., May 13 (CP) -
R.C.M.P. are probing a fire which
destroyed a shack occupied by Eli C.
Morgan, farmer, residing five miles
Northwest of here, and the sudden
disappearance of Morgan and his
foster son.
AUNT HET
By ROBERT QUILLEN
"It takes a big-hearted mar, to
give his wife a charge account. It
may not cost him a cent more, but
he loses the pleasure of feelin' like
Santa Clau* every day or so."
DAILY CROSSWORD
I. Treat wtth 28. Body: com-
tnaol.no bluing form
4 VaU 2' Keel-billed
32. Land. «ur-
«. Unfaattn roiss_4 by
7. Bravery wtter
« Fumlgator 33. Leafy
to bleach 34. Morning
grain star
10. Ful OM't 36. Muaic not.
l_i.mil   li'.'llll
UttKIl   H.dJIld
niJDiaiaidM
n.m ,7.n:-i u.oia
BltlH  HUH   BliB
illl.Li        -1 MUS
'•IMinitlCllfflHIIIa
llll'illl
:M>Hi:.il*.'XH;*i>.
ay ti fl     lauaff
_$   * tu  Htm
*aw. ix_ .<!•.!•:
uitiiaH .-taidui
''.ill--.      WMU
way
11. Clint
16. A gam.
10. A fepubMc
33 Halt an em
37. Structure.
38. Add In
plant )ulre«
M. Hang
loeuly
43. Coalition
46 Beige color
80. Female fowl
11. Bu
ACBOOB
1. Silkworm
4. Btktmo tool
7. Noblemen
». Mttll
clrcleti
li QuantlUu
of paper
11. Mother o»-
peart
ld.Laad-
meaaure
18 Young dog
17. SplH ovtr
It. Aitatt
(abbr.)
1*. Strik*
11. liktly
11. Devour**
M. Locki of hah
St. Spanish title
18. Handle Ui
whip
1*. Conjunction
M.Hebrew
prophet
32. Whether
34. Gaming calm
36. Too
37. Shattered
40. En ttr.
41. Grau cured
(or fodder
41. Hlblle.l
character
44.Sloth
45.Olh.rwto.
47. Tavern
48. Negative
reply
tt. A moat
51. Encircle.
53. Frighten
54. Detached
55. Flow
M. Conclude
DOWN
1. Epoch
l-Playe
botrt.rooety
CBTFTO4JC0TE— A rrypUgrun *uoUUo*
AJBKCLK   MCN   OPNKAQR   MS'K   TKSIl
TMBVMUBK   WVMBJQJKA   JC   LPCTKI-
4MQJPC —OPCQMJHCK.
Tcrterday** Cryptoquote:   LET US DRAW UPON CONTENT
FOR THE DEFICIENCIES OF FORTUNE-GOLDSMITH.
Cryptoquotes are 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 "Br ■ ■ • replace an "LL" Find the key and foi-
low through to the solution. .     " dlllJMMi
CONTRACT
LEARN THE PATTERN
UNTIL YOU learn the pattern
secessary for making a double
squeeze play, you are not very
likely to put one over, except by
sheer luck. Usually, besides the
card on which neither opponent
can follow suit, there ls a card In
the same hand which you can lead
to the top card of Its suit ln the
opposite holding, and also a single
card of the third suit which can
be guarded only by the defender
at Its right, and In the opposite
hand, another single card of the
fourth suit which can be guarded
only by the defender at Its right.
If you build that arrangement,
the opponents are squeezed beyond repair.
4AKJ82
»Q
48 7
+AQ87*
4053
4 10 7
t in r, .
4954
+ K J 8 4
2
V.
_
»K«Ili
♦ 11 J 10 li
1
*3
4>Q6 4
»AJ932
♦ AK2
410 5
(Dealer:   South.   North-South-
vulnerable.)
South
If
-t
3NT
6 NT
Wert
Pass
Pats
Pau
Pass
North
1*
»*
4 NT
« +
Eut
Pau
Pass
Pass
Pau
At ont table ot t Bridge-tor
Ambulances tournament tn Boston, th* declarer tried for a double squeeze to make an extra
trick, but failed. Atter the spade
10 to the Q. he lent through the
club 10, then nneued the 9,
brought the hurt Q through tnd
then ran the rut of the spades,
which he followed With the club
A. Thli turned to bother Eut,
who cut down to two ditmondi In
onlcr to hold two heartt, but whtn
By Shepard Barclay
West followed with the club J, he
was also able to hold three diamonds, so that a diamond waa
dropped at the end.
The real mistake here wai failure to take the heart A early and
leave Only the J aa a squeeze
threat against East's K. The
squeeze could be made still more
simple by cashing the diamond K
rather early, so that the lut ipade
would be led to the eleventh trick,
with the proper letup, u wai done
by Mrs. Richmond.H. Skinner,
Massachusetts itate chairman'of
the Bridge-for-Ambulance campaign, who with her partner wo*
the tournament.
When the finally cilled the
apade 8, ahe htd In the dummy
also the diamond 8 tnd tht club
Q. East could not discard the
heart K„ or it would make tht
dummy'! J good, so trashed tht
diamond J. Now the heart J wat
thrown from tht South htnd and
Weit wu squeezed. If he toued
his club K, the Q and the diamond
A would have ended the hand. Ht
put off one ot hii two ditmondi,
whereupon the dltmond A and I
brought in the lttt two trickt.
•   *   .
Tomorrow's Problem
4J86
♦J9171
4>J92
♦ AKQ5
ft
♦ KQ105
4
*K84
+ 1T12
t K 9 8 7
♦ 2
+ A6I1
410 4
VAJlOltl
♦ A«
♦ Q10T
(Detler: North. Both sides vulnerable.)
If South bids and rebldt hurt*
on thU deal, and then leada the
dltmond A tnd 6, how Would you
pity this htnd In thi Eut to
mtke 4-Spades r
)AN! ARDEN
By Monte  Barrett and  Russell Re
SOHEOieD-v   .
jggg/.
HENRY
By Carl Andar
HENRY, YOUtl HIWl TO
FIND SOMC PLACE FOR.
YOUR TOYS/THtY
DP Tl*
BRINGING UP FATHER
By Ceo. McMamii
_-_y_y-*-*\_.
^^i_^.-
KMaeHiT our.
DONALD DUCK
By Walt Disney
KINC OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED
By Zane Grej
BL0NDIE
By Chic Youno
W bfeS BUMSTEAP-- AJIM
v ALEXANDER AMP ALVIN '
ARE FeUTMS .-.'
Li
	
_______a___l._itt,i&i
^jUt^tmdtai./ ^_^gj^g^_^_
 tfpl
FOR
JVANT AD
SERVICE
-
Classified Advertising
WHERE YOU WILL CET QUICK
RESULTS IN SERVICES OR CASH
niuon i -tm-rmmioAy vwicw **y m -mm-
TO    SELL
USED
GOODS
phoni
1
4
4
IIITHJ
SJDOKIMC^-To Mr. tnd Mrs
tf tvo-okaw of South Slocan. it
M-Bay Lake General HotpKai,
fU.t ton.
BBtSWORTH-To Mi Djd Mrt
J. Hemsworth of Sheep- Creel
MOTOHCrCtlS.   IICYCllS
•    AVT0M0TIV1
Sm DEI UXI FORD SEDAN, A-l
rtobec. only 11000 aim tm
Sawtrby CuthDert Ltd. opp Pott
OH.ci tnd Hunt ttettt.
rDiirTATBffKas wra
Bpoitnay Ukt General Ho«pitai,-j F BaUdoiar in good working eouai-
I tion, can be wen working. Not
» in  old  CitirpUlar   Reply  Box
•74B, Daily Nawa	
for sALim pcyMotrtimo-
tor A-l cond Law mileage. Oood
tirei and upholstery. Reuonioii.
Apply Star Cife
iISTpOWOaC COACH. A! CAR,
good tirei, only 1900 mllei. WOO.
Write or ne Postmister, Appie-
dale B. C.
8iOT*<JSTT»D~B!X*r~Cm
Auto Wreckers 180 Baker'St.
Nelson.
j IS i ion, Brian Mm.
fn   *    -i    '      iifl    •   ■•
HELP WANTED
Lpplicidooi will nol ba conantr-
Irom pertont la tea impioytaent
tny firm, corpontlon or other
■plbyer engiged m the prooue.
I of munitioni. war equipment
'tuppliei for the irmed form
|aai luch • person ll I ikillM
rinman not ictuilly employed
Ui uide
t    CORflWrTTo
SAW  LUMBER
IAJTT _* GIV* A CONTRAC1
10 tomehnin tSat hu i iiwmiu
b nw rour miMion feet ot lumber
I tha .Utile Slocin, M Cameron.
llocfi\ City, B. C.
BfflSSSW TSTSfiT __*_
fits-it oq Kootenay Lake; also
ranted, boom mm. Apply to
t, Pitenon. Nelion.
JUST COR "GENBtAl,
twork  it  Bonnington   FalU
ply Box IMl, Daily Newa
BD-GiftL' WS BITOOa
E~ lliwork     Box    8761,    Nelson
Uy Newi.
i_T>r___rm
•tall itore. Box 5347, Dtily Newi.
SITUATIONS WANTED
Ipeciil Low Rttei for non-
ommtrclil idvertisements un-
lar thli clasiiflcation to airnt
people ieeklng employment
Dnly 25c for one weex (8 days)
wven iny number Of required
llnei Piyible In idvance Ado
10c if box number desired
MftiJ-NCBfl welBErTHOm
Cout would like to loctte In interior iround N?lson. Married man
With one child. Box 5297, Daily
Newi.
APAl"LT~WOMAtf' WANTS
housework or office cleaning.
frh. 928 R Or apply 1011 Front St.
SUnrOTWElTHiAsS C cTfADF-
ttt with 3 yeeri expsrlence Apply Box 5220, Dally News.
ROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS
Last Chance
Buy a Truck
'41   3-ton Maple Leaf, 197" W B.
■JS-^-1-ton Dodge.
VI—J-ton Dodge.
'W—H-l-(on International.
'40—IVi-Ton  International.
'3»-4-lon International.
'37-4-ton UiternatlonaL
Each truck In A-l condition and
first class tires.
CENTRAL TRUCK &
EQUIPMENT CO.
i
702 Front St. Nelion
fUSONAL
WHIM IN VANCOirVIR STOP AT
Aimer Botti opp  CH   Depot
ama _anm* msn _■
comt would like to neat lady 11
lo M.   Box MOO, Daily Newa
rHRit   SKTION   5XR   BOTR
eatt. bttt tnd top, good condition. J. Ch«t, U4 Vtrnon St
grttifully reeeived at tbe Suvi
lion Army, 111 Vtttorti Sueet
ttt tk*t Kt PHEW WR "OCT
chlnt. i ilver wire, and turn uun
Anything old Antique Shop. 411
Hill St. Ntlion. BC.    '
Ue - Tht Photo MUI - Ue
P O Box 133. Vincouver
Rolli developed md printed, ltt
t * 1 Enlirgimtot Free
II reprmti 5x1 inUf|namt 55c
fOTTireS «m« hn-
tlvt ln tht hoipltil will enjoy
raiding Tht Dally Ntwt. Phont
144 and hive, a copy dillvtred
tach morning.
USED AUTO PARTS. REASON-
■ble prices Nelson Auto Wrecking 813 Vernon Street.
OOD FARM LAND3 FOR SAl.k
on easy terms in Alberta and
Saikatrhewan Write Ior full in*
lormation to 908 Dept of Natural
Resources. C P R Calgary Aim
BtfslsTOR SALE-NEW LIST-
ings $1,500. 11.650 ind »2 500 Two
of these excellent location in
Fairview May we show you them
C W. Appleyard and Co Ltd
5iT~SALErFARM AND LIVE-
Itock, 168 acres. 12 acres under
cultivation, remainder timber.
Good buildings, running wa'er,
piped In, electric light. Apply J
Hanson, Erie. B: C.
fli Hirt SMALL COTTAGE IN
Sheep Creek. State description
and price, and If willing to trade
as part payment on house In Nelion. Box 5291. Dally News
POB, SALE - TH"KEI~B80MIB
houie, light and w;ter. Tw<- In s
Anderion street. $400 cash. Apply
140 High Street.
ROOMED HOUSE AVD LOT FOR
8ale tl Silmo. B C. S**00 ca=n
Apply Box 5287. Daily News
* rS6M"COTTAGE: FURNACE:
cloie In; ilso furniture. Box 5345,
Dally Newi.
tt V WHITFIELD, Real Estate and
Insurance, 417 Hill St. Nelson
RENIALS
FOR REN I: NEAT SMALL COT-
tage two small bedroomi. Cement
foundation. Garden. 911 Cedir
St. $20 month    C  W. Appleyard
UNFURN SUITE 4 RMS 2 SEC
rooms if desired. $45, also furn
auite $30 Hot w^lcr, heel and rt-
fngsration   Included   Kerr   Ap:i
COMFORTABLE STEAM HEATED
house keep.ie rooms in Annable
B! ick. Ward St   Ph  657R
LlSr YOUR HOUSE FOR RENT
with us We have many enquiries    H  E Dill 532 Ward St.
BUENA VISTA APTS FURN OR
un'urn 4 room suite. Adults only
Phone 542 R
FOR RENT* FURN 3 RM StftTfc
and single hskpg room. Free
fuel and light. 116 Vernon St.
F'OR RENT. 8 ROOMED BUNGA"-
low. Furnace heated. Apply 702
Latimer St.. Phpne 495 L.
FOR RENT: JULY AND XTJO, WC-
men'i Institute Hse., Willow Pt-
furn. Apply Sucty. or ph. 401 L 3.
-TaCRE FARM ROSEMONT; 2
acres hay; garden ploughed; 25
fruit trees; 40 chickens. Pb. 6671-2.
FOR RENT: SMALL HOUSE. DU-
pl-x and suite. Phone 316.
A-~H5ME~¥5ir THOSE SWCT
from h "me strathcona Hotel ApU
ffit? -LIONS PHOTO-25t>
PO   Box 434. Vincouver, B.C
Any ilze roti dev, printed. JSc. Reprint* Jc etch.  Free 8x7 coupon.
"A trial will convince you'
MEtf-Rf&AlN VtOOR Wl" -
, Try Vltex, $1 25 per box. Penonil
drug lundriei, 12 for $100. Su-
prema Raior Blide Shirpenir Mc
Shirpons blades perfectly. J. Jensen. Box 324, Vincouvtr, B. C
IUSINESS ANO
MOfESSlONAL   DIRICTORY
AMAVIM AND MINI
MMHINTATIVIt
HAROLD I ELMES. ROSSLAND
B C Protmciti Amyer. Cbtaiit
Individuil rtprettnttUvt tor Ihip-
pen it Trail Soulier
A J BUU Independent Wine Rep-
rcttatativt Box 54, Tnu  B C
I *  WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL
Amyir. H>1 Joiephlni St. NtUon.
**- "    * -p.il
CHIROPRACTORS
A   B    McDONALD,   DC,   Palmer
Qrad   X-Rty. Strtnd Blk. Tnu.
CORIITIIRII
spin Cir coRSETinii. miss
Shirlty Boomer, IM Gore, Pb 889L
INOINIIRI ANO SURVEYOR!
BOYD C AFFLECK, P.O. Box loi
Trail. B.C.. Survtyor tnd Engineer
Phoot "Beaver Falla."
r * _._m. timma t. civil
Enginter; B. C. Lind Survtyor,
Rosilind ind Grind Forki, B C.
FOOT SPECIALISTS
FILMS DEVELOPED AND PRTNT-
td (6 or I eipoiuri roll) 25c, He-
printi Ic each. For your victtion
intpthou, choose KryiUI Fmnh
Guirtnteed oon-tidt p n n 11
KrysUl Photoi, Wilki*. Sukitcht-
wan   Established over 10 yun
POLAR FURS Lit)
PINE QUALITY FURS AT REAS-
ontbie pricei Expert re-ltyllng
•nd repining Low ritn Guirtnteed itonge - 100 pir tent
protection - Ml Grmvilli St.
Vincouvtr. BC
"men's special
Men'i ptnonti drug sundries.
flnett quillty. tested, guinn-
teea 12 for SOc. 28 for $100. •■•
lortea, Including world'i funniest Joke novelty free, tnd catalogue ol lundries
WESTERN  DISTRIBUTORS
Box 24 Dept NC. Regina Silk.
rwo toMi-im sm vnox
prints Irom iny roll of fllmi. JSc
special mill only Reprintj 24
centi etch Overnight tervict We
pr mise to satisfy you In tvtry
wav Professional Pbotogriphtr,
25 yeari' experience Send In
your friendl' filmt tool Film Ex*
change. Box 60. Cutlegar B C.
S. J. OlLLIS. D.S.C., R.C.P, REG'D
Chiropodist, Foot SptclllUt Bergeron Block, Pb. UM, TraU. B.C
FUNIRAL HOMIt
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY A(fD
FARM SUPPLIIS, ITC.
*H,CH rtilllK
CHICKS  OlVf  Willi)■
Rilie-'THX CHICKS WHICH
GIVE RESULTS" and get maximum
production.
PrlOM par W iter May 15th-
Umexed Pullets
WhlU Leghorns 110.75 $22 50
Rockv Rids, N. Hamps 1200 20.00
Sussex   . ...   14.00   2400
Leghorn Cockereli »—100
Heavy Cockereli $10-100
Order from' this advertisement.
Live dtllvtry guirtnteed.
Remember-irS RESULTS  THAT
COUNT.
Box N        Langley Prairie, B. C.
SOMERS FUNERAL HOME
701 Biktr St Phont J6J
Cut. Mortlclin       Udy Attendini
Modern Ambulance Service
INSURANCE AND REAL EITATE
C D. BLACKWOOD AOENCY
Iniurinct, Retl EsUte, Phont 99
mi rHcllAMrc.lMNMNll
Reil Eiuti. Phont IU.
MACHIN
STS
UENNhTTS UMITED
Michlnt stidftacttylene tnd electric
wilding,   motor rtwinding
commerciil  refrigeration
Phoni 593 IM Vtrnon St
OPTOMETRISTS
W   E. MARSHALL
Optometrists
1488 Bay Avi„ Trill'     Phont 177
SASH FACTORIU
LAWSOITB   SASH   FACTORY
Hardwood mtrchlnt 271 Btktr St.
SECOND HAND ITOREI
BABY CHICKS-RHODE ISLAND
Reds tnd New Hampsnires, Andrew Chrutle itrein, good utility
itock, ipproved ind blood-tetteo
$11.00 per 100. Chicki retdy to
ihip tvtry Tueiday John OooO-
man, 1665 Gilley Avenue, New
Wutmlniter, B.C.	
NNinStfAUTV MODI IS-
lind Red Chicks-25. 1350; 50,
$7; 100. $13.50; 500. f03 George
Gimt, ROP. Breeder, Armitrong, BC.
rerwH TtKk'GV H&RSES,
tlxleen hindi, wtll mttched; built
to work. Seven yein old. Reuon-
•bly priced. Apply Sam Holubufl,
Cutlegar Ferry,
Nelaon Bally \Htmt
Teltjihoiie IM
Trail Circulation: Phont Ml
Classified Adv«r»ijin| Ratu
Uc per Uce per lniertion.
44c per line per week tl comecutlve lniertiooi for coat ot *)■
$143 i line i month (M timet).
(Minimum 3 llnet par Itutrtion)
Box number lit extra, Thit
covert iny   number  at  timet.
PUBLIC NOTICES, TINDERS,
ETC
18c par Una, tint lniertion and
lie etch luhaequesl lniertion.
ALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS
10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT
SPECIAL tOW RATES
Non commirclll   II tult lint
Wanted for Be fer my nqulred
number of llnee for tlx dtyt
ptyiblt In tdvinct.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Single copy    . ..  1   .06
By carrier, per week   .      35
By carrier, per year ._
■y maill
One   month    	
Three monthi   _	
Sis monthi    ._	
One yetr	
Above ratei ipply In Cinida.
United Sum ind United Klng-
- dou to lubt'cribtrt living out-
Elsewhere tnd In Canadi whtrt
extri poitige it required one
month $1.60; three monthi $4 00; .
■it months 18.00; om yeir 111 >
■ldt rtgultr carrier trtll.
Clarifies Report of
Paper Shortages
NEW YOBK. Mu 13 lAPi -Ttlk
at paper laervigti torn at !• tht
■ear tf_m wat decided today hy
Richard 3. Cullen, Preiident of In-
tantoooal Paper Compuy, in kit
statement ta itockhoiden ti thai*
usual netting.
•Regardiett at the faet that varloui Cotanaant agenttee haw
•id»ly broadcut tht oplnioi thai
an icuti ihortige ot paper would
dtvelop," Culien uid, "than It t
lurplui it pmcot over demand and
thtrt trt indict uoni thtl demind
for the btlgnct of tht year will not
be ti grut u it wti in 1641."
$1130 Will Bur
Rossland
a New Sidewalk
1300
I    71
3.00
4.00
1.00
FOR SALE-SOUND, RELIABLE
Saddle hone, ilso (ood stock ud-
dli In A-l ihipt. Both reuonibly
priced. Box 5318, Daily Newi.
FOR SALE - YORKSHIRE PIQSV
tlx weeki old $500 each. Apply
J. A. McKay, Balfour, B. C.
CaSlOAB HKAVY HORSgff
TR
Nelion at Ellison MUg. Barn,
LOST AND FOUND
To Finders
If you tlni) mything telephone
The Dally NeWi. A "Found" Ad.
wtll be Inserted without cott to
you. We will collect from the
owner.
iM-rfi% VjeWR*BW6,9AT,
night' between Eagle . Hall a'nd
Royal Hotel. Reward, Return
Dally Ntwi. ,
WRIST
WE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANCE
Whit have you7 Ph. 534. Ark Store
LOST-OCTAGON LADIES
watch,  gold bind.  Reward
turn Diily Newi.
Rt
WANTED MISCELLANEOUS
(HIP US YOUR S'.'RAP METALS
or Iron  Any quantity  Tnp pricr;
paid     Active Trading Comoany
tit Powell St    Vanmuvpr   B   f
PANTED - 2nd-HANS" FACTORY
well-made row boat. 14 or 19 leet
,ljng,  complete  with  oars.  Muit
be in.good ihape. Dumont, Gal-,
loway, B. C.
■ftANTED-SECOND-HAND MOW-
er 'machine in good rond. Write
Stete Masura, Ymlr, B. C.
WAITED: GOOD USED CAMERA.
also vacuum cleaner. Write Box
533B, Dally News
WaWed-io FOOT IWliXKE.
Must  be  (n  first-class  condition
and price right. R. Quin, Harrop
W'».OTED-SMA"tL PLANER. GEO
Birr.. Kimberley. B C
If-\NT_to-USEn CUB UNIFORM
for boy 10 to 12 years. Phone 79RR
F. "M. CARDEN & NURSERY
PRODUCTS, FERTILIZERS
FOR YOUR REQUIREMENTS IN
Seeds, Feed and Poultry Supplies.
call and see us. Ask fnr our price
lilt Ellison Milling St Elevator
Comptny, Ltd.. Nelson. B C. -
Phnne 238,
SPECIAL! EXHIBITION GLADIOLI
Bulbs, $3.50 per 100 del. Phone 910,
Mic's   Greenhouses,   Nelson
HpE - P11TtMgmJBE9"nSPTf-
Cml low prices Active Trading Co
916 Powell St.,  Vancouver,  BC
TEKRACE APTS Beautiful modern
IrlRida re equ iped lUitey
STV ROOM STUCCO MODERN
H:;uie, 303 H'inver SI. Ph 484 K ».
COTTAGE. 4 RMS AND BATH,
Opp. Lak* ide Park. Ph. 448 R.
fOr fl-ttre - COiffOOTABU
room, 918 Kootenay St., Ph. 713 L.
OR  SALE  MISCELLANEOUS
FBlGIDAirE l-3rd HP. COMPRES-
sor with (orc_d air coil; also one
4-liole    crmb nation   Ice   cream
freezer and  bottle cooler.    Both
these   machinei  In   good  condition.  For further information call
or write L. D. Cafe, Nelion,
PIPES TUBES. FITTINGS
NEW AND USED
Larffp stock for immediate shipment
SWARTZ   PIPE   YARD
1st Avenue and Main Street
Vancouver  BC
CXosincTaCcount
Electric Washer, modern ityle, por
eelain tub. Will sell to reliable
party for balance owing. Call Credit
Manager,
BEATTY   WASHER   STORE
Phone 81 321 Baker St., Nelson
YOU "NEED- RffSSElTllTAMFS
for youi unemployment insurance
and Wariime Price Bnard Licence,
We can give you quick service at
reasonable prices. Nelson Daily
News Commercial Printing Dept.
ALL "TYPES "OFTTLAS-HOMt
Workshop power tools available.
Wrile for catalogue. McKenile,
White nnd Dunsmuir Ltd., Nelson.
ft>R~SALE"- DESK-AND" BAWS
Crib. Lawson's Factory, 273 Baker
Street.
SINGER SEWING MACHINE. Excellent cond Good as new. Cheap
for cash. N, Cox. Harrop.
Machinists Hold Out
Against New
Production Program
VANCOUVER, May 13 (CP)-The
Vancouver Machinist's Union has
decided to maintain Its stand against
acceptance of the continuous production program Introduced thli
month In British Columbia ihip-
yardi, a spokesman for the Union
said today.
Nine other unions ln the yards
have accepted tho program, Only
the machinists and blacksmiths in
the yard have refused to cooperate.
F.D.R. Signs Huge Sub
Building Bill
WASHINGTON, -May 13 (AP)-
Conitructlon of 300,000 tons more of*
submarines in a move to bett the
Axis at its own game was authorized today by a bill signed Into lew
by President Rooievelt.
Just how many more submarines
the measure will add to the United
States expanding fleet is a military
secret, but Chairman Carl Vinson
(Dem-Georgla) of the House Nival
Committee has iald that It would
provide for "more than 100."
SHAFER NAMED PACIFIC
FISH OILS DIRECTOR
OTTAWA, May 13 (CPI-Gordon
Shafer of yancouver has been appointed by the Wartime Prices and
Trade Board as Director of* fish oils
on the Pacitlc coast it was announced today by Mrs. Phyllis Turner,
Oils and Fats Administrator. Mr.
Shifer li I partner in the Vancouver
firm (Shlfer-Haggart Ltd.) of fish
oil broken
SPAIN CALLS WORKERS
FOR HUN PUNTS
MADRID, Miy 13 (AP.-Syndl-
cates throughout Spain have begun
ilgning up worktn for tervlce with
labor groups In Otrminy. The Nuts
pay transportation to and from Germiny.
Hart Coos to Ottawa
to Discuss
Rail Finance
VICTORIA, Miy 13 (CP)-Prem-
ler John Hut will leive Friday or
Saturday for Ottawa to discus., i
number of matters affecting British Columbia with the federal government, including re-flnancing of
the Pacific Great Eastern Railway,
It is expected the premier will
continue discussions, started by
Mines Minister Herbert Anscomb,
on Peace River oil resources, offered to the Dominion government for
the duration of the war.
It will be Mr. Hart'i iecond vialt
to Ottawa since he assumed the prl-
miershlp last December.
Montreal Produce
MONTREAL. May 13 (CP)—Spot:
Butter. Que., and Western 85B.
Eggs, Eastern A-large 36-29^4; A-
meflium 24«-28; A-pullets 23-23.4;
E-B 24^-25\t;E-C21V4.22.
Futures: Butter, Miy 34.4B, June
34",B; Eggs, Miy 38B.
Discuss War Risk
Insurance
WARNS STRIKING
MINERS TO      *     •
RETURN TO WORK
CANBERRA, Australia, May 13
(CP)—Prime Minister John Curtin
called upon groups of striking coal
minen to return to work* tomorrow
or face Governmental action and
said "the Government shall stand or
fall by the luue."
If the minen do not go bick to
the pits, tho Prime Miniiter told
Pirliament, lUthority will be invoked "to compel them."
Declaring a majority of the coal
miners were loyal ln the war criill,
Mr. Curtin addreised hli statement
to those who Joined strikes called,
for a variety of reasons in 10 mines.
Seniority and wage disputes are involved,
OTTAWA, May IS (CP) -Poiition of the home owntr whou prop-
trty Li rented to mother tentnt wM
discussed todiy by tht Houtt of
Commoni Banking ind Commtrct
Committee which opened eontldert-
tlon ot the new wir riik Iniurinct
ict Introduced by Fintnct Mlniitci
llsley.
The Act provldei free Iniurtnci
•gainst war dimige up to tSDttl lot
homei occupied by their ownen,
tree chattel Iniurance up to $800
ind Hts up machinery property
owners of ill cli.uei miy buy tur
ther Iniurtnce it I flit ntt pile
tble to ill pirts of the Dominion.
Howard Green suggested thli will
work ih injustice Ht mtntioned
the cue qt • loldier overseu who
had rented hu homt to tnothtr ttn
tnt.
H ihould be provided thit trtt
coverage would tpply to the owner
of • home if he occupied hit homt
it the itart ot tht wir but hid ilnce
loft it because of wtr service of
my kind. While it ihould not be
the intention to cover property Invutment, the aim should be to protect a citizen's only home even If
he were temporarily not In occupation, iald Mr. Leonard.
ROSSLAND. B. O, Miy IJ—City
tnglneer R. W Higgen presented
to tht City Council Mondiy night
a comprehensive report on the concrete sidewalk on Columbil Avenue
betweeyi the Poit Office ind the
Bmk ot Montretl, explilntd thit
the dimige wu ciused by the fire
13 yteri igo, ind tint in placei the
water Uy in pooli three Inchei deep.
The lidtwilk li badly broken in
ipoti md dmgtroui to ptdtttrum.
The tottl coit of repairing it md
putting t complete new turtict of
two-Inch cement tht full length of
tbe block, would be $1110.
Citv Clerk J. A. McLeod wu Instructed to WriU to tht property
ownen involved, tnd find out whtt
miontr would bt tht molt luitable
for them to meet their ilurt of the
expense. The (Ity li willing to
ipread thla over • ptr of yttn-
Mr. Ilmen itated thit 111 miteriili wert available. Tht City'i
ahare ot tht expense ls $800.
■ ■ PASI    NINe
War Metals May
Revitalize
Says Engineer
Addrauiag • gathering ai prof
pecton wd mining men tn th*
Council Chimoar Tuitday light *■
-Strategic Wir Metal** R. J. Maconachie, Resident Mining tegtneer.
itreued the fact that tbe new demind for minerali which bad oot
been conildered u producible ia
Cmada until recenUy might revitalize whole areu which had
either betn proepetttd, or ibandoo-
td u pouiblt wur«i ol •lotrai
♦ orth, and Individuil prapertiei
which had been mined eatanaively
lor iome othir mlntrtl, ind than-
doaad when tht ort wu exbautted
"TH* principal of thett new mln.
ertl producu," ht tald, 'art mica,
chromt, macganiM, mercury, tin,
md tungiten Mica it in tutntltl
miulktlng material and ti uud la
tha entire electrical Industry Principal tourcet now trt Itdii, Madagaicar, md Qutbtt. It SM two former tyt cut off, wt will pretty wtll
be thrown on our ruourees. Chromium, manganeu tnd tungsten grt
ill uted is alloying material ln tht
making of ipeciil Iteel.
"Tin is not exictly i wir minen],
but t very definite euentiil mtttr-
lal. inasmuch as it Is a constituent
part of bibbitt ind bearing metals.
The production of tin trom the Malay Peninsula li eitentlally from
placer operations, and If the Britiih
do not wreck the tin dredgei when
they left, thi Japi certtlnly will
when they leive. Thli meani that
there can bi no tin production on
the MiUy Peniniuli for it ltut a
year after the ind ot the war, ai
It wil lttke it leut thtt long to rehabilitate ihe Induitry."
Calqorv Livestock
CALGARY, May 13 (CP)-Re-
ceipts, Cattle 118; Calvei *8; Hogi
150.
Good lo choice butcher iteers
10-10.75; Odd top 11; Common to
medium 9-9.75. Good heifers 9.25-
0.50; Common to medium B-8.50.
Good to choice fed calves common
to medium 8.75-9.75, Good cows
7.25-7,75; Common to medium 6-7,
Good bulls 7.75-8.50; Common 8,50-7,
Good veel calves 10.50-11.50; Common to medium 8.50-10.
Hogs Tueiday 13.75 or B-l at yards
and planti; Sows 8.25-8.80.
BOATS AW ENGINES
WANTFTV SMALL BOAT. SOIIARE
end. B. Aylmer, Queen's Bay.
_.        . ,______.     ; *
MONTREAL  STOCKS
Bathurst P It P A ..   14%
Can Bronze pfd    28-4
Can Car Se Fdy       25
Inter Nickel of Can  30"i
National Brew Ltd   24
Price Bros              7V4
Quebec Power          U',4
Shawnigan WiP   13
BANKS
Commerce   141
Dominion    1"
Imperial     187
Montreal   181
Royal     ...   147
CURB
Baihurst P Jr P A    14
Beauharno'i Corp   9%
Can Vickers           ,  2.4
Com Paper Corp    .,  185
Fra'srCnLtd             11Jk
Walker Go°d St W  42
:' '_i____i      , I
ui'a______________i
DOW JONES AVERAGES
High
30 Industrials       98.19
20 rails      24.33
15 utilities    -      H-70
Low
Close
Change
96.92
97.21
off   1.35
24.14
24.17
off    .34
11.52
11.55
off     .17
7JiaAkd.JmdL
LONDON, May 13 (AP)-Devel-1 Bithunt ind St. Liwrence Corpor*
opmenti on the Russian Front held
the Interut In the stock market today and trading was restricted.
Industrials held steady and British fundi were maintained, however.
NEW YORK—The itock market
today experienced iti iharpeit reaction since Inception of IU forward
jaunt In late April and leaders generally slid off fractions to around
2 points.
TORONTO-MIld weakness lor
the mining groupi and general
itrength for industrials and Weitern
oils marked trade.
MONTREAL—A number of leading iuues took a mild bearish tinge
in trading up to the final hour todsy
Deficits were posted by St. Lawrence Paper preferred, tt a new low,
Bolivia and Mexico lead bl world
oulput ot antimony, important ln
the manufacture of itonge batteriu.
NEW   YORK
American Can	
American Tobicco ....
Anaconda
STOCKS
    m
    s»
33*
Chargti Againit
Tobacco Firmi
May Be Propped
EDMONTON, Miy 13—Rejection
by the Supnme Court of Cinidi
of ipplicitlon of the Atto-mty-Otn-
trtl of Albtrta for liivt to tppaal
the decliion of the Alberta Appeal
Court quashing tht conviction of
$5 tobicco compinlei on combine
charges may have written finis to
the whole proceeding!.
In some quirten, lt wu suggeiKd
Uit Provinct likely will drop its
orlginil chirgu igainit tht comptn
lei which were laid undtr th* crimiml code. tThue were itayed when
tctloni were entered under the
Combines Act.
Yuterdiy Mr. Juitice Hudion ot
tht Supreme Court ot tynidi refund permiulon to thi Province
which hid applied for ipeclal letvt
to tppetl. Coniequently, the Province ii prevented from ttking iny
further ippeil itep on the Combine
chirgu.
While there hu been no Oovernment tnouncement of the next
itep, if eny, ther* li t itrong belief
thit the whole iction will be dropped.
When the tobicco firmi were convicted lilt July ln Supreme Court
by Mr. Justice S. J. Shepherd, flnti
toUUing 3221,500 were Imposed.
Bendix Avittion  311*
Beth Steel  52*
Canidlan Pacific   4%
Cerro de Pasco   29H
Chryiler     8*
Dupont  107'zi
Eastman Kodak   Ill
Oeneral Electrle  34
General Motors  38%
Grinby    '  4'/i
Great Nor pfd  21
Internitlonil Nickel   25ft
Inter Tel It Tel  33
Kenn Copptr   27H
Radio Corpontlon'  2H
Stan Oil of N J  >S'/i
Texai Gulf Sul  28*H
United Aircraft  231k
Union Carbide  80
U S Rubber   15H
US Steel     45%
ation  preferred.
VANCOUVER - Salu dropped
badly during the morning seisi"n.
Triding wu chiefly in the hill, ind
Home rose to close at 2.50.
WINNIPEG - An exceedingly
light trade was noted on Winnipeg
Grain Exchange today with no lign
of export uiinesi in either wheat
or flour and only a minimum of
outside interest, wheat futures closed unchanged, with May at 79'A,
cents a bushel and July at 90H.
CHICAOO-The outlook for a big
wheat crop, a slump in flour business
and prospects that government sales
of feed wheat will continue to press
the market u efforts ire made to
stimulate uie of huge domeitic grain
lurpluses caused a In* li decline in
pricei here today.
VANCOUVER STOCKS
MINES
Bid
Bralorne    8.80
Cariboo Gold       1.08
George Copper ....—   .15
Gold Belt  _ -   .15
Grandview  13.4
Hedley Mucot     .23".
Island Mountain  91
Kootenay Belle  20
Picific Nickel     -
Ped Oreille  1.20
Pioneer Gold  .'. l_
Premier Gold  41
Privateer     _Vt
Reevei  MacDonald  ....    —
Sheep Creek  70
Surf Inlet  _    OS
OILS
Anglo Canidlan  33
A P Consolidated 03V*
Calg. It Edmonton  8S
Commonwealth 19
Dalhousie   15
Foothills    60
Home  3.40
Mercury    __    .04-Vi
Mill City     .08
Model 17
Okalta  Com  ,.   .28
Pacific Peta  14
Royallte    17.00
Spooner  _.    OtVt
United       jOS*
Vanalta    04V«
Vulcan   15
U. S. Ship Sunk Off
African Coait
WASHINGTON, Miy IS (API -
A medlum-itzed Unittd States merchant vessel hai bten torpedoed md
sunk otf tht Wut cout of Africi,
the nivy innounced todiy, idding
thit lurvlvon hid bttn landed at
an JSutern port of the U. S.
Thli wu the navy'i flnt 1
nouncement In the current German
lubmirine campaign of the loss of
an Americn ihip ln Afrlcin witers,
N. Denver W.I.
Plans Program
NEW DENVIR, B. C.-Tht monthly muting of the New Denver
Women'i Inititute wu htld In thl
Legion Hill with M memberi and
three viiiton preunt Nlm memberi of the Silverton Institute
were tiso preient.
Mn. Shannon ind Mn. Tiylor
were ippolnted to thi Viiiting Committee for Miy. Mn, A. Francis
gave 1 list of articles donated for
Bundles for Britain, Mrt. J. Grttr,
Convenor of Home Economlci, gavt
a report ind rud • ipeciil bulletin. She ilso rud 1 litter from in
Inititute Pen Friend In Bngland,
Mrs. Crellin reported tor the
Hill Committee and I list ot members working In booths on Mty 34
art to be poited. Mrs. Frtoclt itited thtt tht May Queen Mid Mty
Poll Dmce celebration will be prepired.
Mn. Beggi gave 1 full report Ot
Red Cross activities. The following
ltdiei are canvassing thl diitrict.
Mri. Beggi, Mri. Greer, Mn. Ttylor, Mn. Balbirnie, Mra. Gunn ind
Miss M. H. Butlin,
, Mri. H. Pendry reported on I
clean up bee recently held for town
ind bathing beach, and stated the
Cemetery Committee will have a
bee.
Mrs. H. H. Pitts as gueit ipeaker
from Nelion, gave m Interesting
account of Ottawa and Toronto
Conference!.
The President welcomed the SUverton ladlet to whioh Mn. Scait
responded.
Delicioui refreshments were served by the hosteiiei, MM. Crellin,
Mri. Campbell, Mrs. Carter, Mi"
Carter md Miu Clever.
LONDON, (CP.)-A merchtnt In
the Netherlandi wai fined for lelllng a "fine brand of tobacco" consisting of oak and beech tree shavings mixed with dried manure.
Toronto Stock Quotation!
Ask
8.1)5
1.10
3a
1.00
.08
1.25
1.39
.42
.32
75
**P
100
M
2.49
.30
04tt
MINES
Aldermac Copper 	
Anglo-Huronian    ...
Beattie Gold Mines 	
Bidgood Kirkland 	
Buffalo Ank'rite 	
Cutle-Trethcwey   —
Centnl Patricia 	
Chromium M. <e S. —
Cout Copper  „....
Coniaurum Minu 	
Consolidated M. le S.
Eut Malartic
...     .08
_. J.10
....    «
...   .oeM
  1.15
_ JS7
_    X
_ m
...   .90
Siscoe Gold 	
Sudbury Bisln .
Sylvinite
, 37.76
.   1.36
Ftlconbridge Nickel     2.78
Grmdoro Mines  —     .03
Gunnar Gold      .09
Herd Rock Oold  35
Hollinger -   7.73
Hudson Bay M Jc S 28.65
International Nickel _ 30.50
Kerr-Addison    3.40
Klrklsnd Lake  - 42.i
Like Shore Mines    B_26
Ltmaque Contact  _    3.30
Leitch Gold       .45
Little Long Lac     1.02
MicLeod Cockshutt    1.19
MldsA Red Lake Gold .......    .45
Mclntyre-Porcuplne 37.00
McKenile Red Lake ....
Mining Corpontlon _.
Nipissing Mining —
Noranda   —.
Normetal   ..._
.57
.95
.84
43.50
.6814
.54
1.10
Pimour Porcupine  	
Perron Gold 	
Pickle Crowd Gold     150
Powell Rouyn Gold     .53
San Antonio Gold    1.51
Sherritt Gordon 70
.33
1.11
1.30
1.78
.90
3.15
4.20
2.15
.09
15.00
8.50
12.35
Teck-Hughes Gold  _..._
Toburn Gold Mlnei 	
VenturM   -m.
Waite Amulet  	
Wright Hargreavei  _.
OILS
Ajax ~.
British American  	
Imperial  	
Inter Petroleum	
INDUSTRIALS
Abitibi Power A  .
Bell Telephone 	
Brazilian T L !r P  -.
B. C. Power A    _,
Can Car Se Foundry ...
Can Cement    —
Can Malting —
Can Pacific Rly	
Can Ind Alcohol A	
Cosmos  1
Dominion Bridge  , 	
Dom Tar ft Chem 	
Distillers Seagraras  	
Ford of Canada A 	
Goodyear  Tire      32(4
Hamilton Bridge           2K
Nat Steel Ca.  _     28
Loblaw "A"      20'/i
Kelvinator  %
Musey  Harris         V/t
Montreal Power      204
Nat Steel Car       28
Power Corp       3
Pressed Metals         S%
Steel of Can  =..     60
.48
1434
Vfe
16
9
34
5,
im
184
28 V4
34
214
m
 	
	
-—^m——mm—*\
PASI TIN
CIVIC
a mmoos tiavses maana
Last Times Tonight
•howt at 7*8-8:21
Hllirlom All-SUf RamaiKe-
"MARRIED
BACHELOR"
with
Robert Yeanf Ruth    Huiuy
Phis "CAMT CIRL"
Starring
Cirole  Lindll
Gtorge Montgomery
FRIQl-Y-IATURDAY
I
■0-As-m-m-t-t**/
Plut
"Riders of the
Timberline"
Divorces Granted
Eleanor Driver,
Main, Anderson
Three tbaoluta decstu ot divorce
wert gnnted ta Supreme Court at
Nelaon Wedneeday tfleraoa by Mr,
Justice Ellii at Vancouvtr.
Elttnor Mtrgirtt QutanK Driver of Pon Crev .ord tnt granted
a decree od divorce trom WUliam
Herbert Driver ot Katlo, tad cm-
tody of their IH-yeer-old child.
Marjorie B. Keckt wu ntmed ln
Ibe petition u intervener, E. t.
Dawson ippetred tor the petitioner.
Petitioner Jamu Guna Mtin ot
Trtil wai gnnted l divorce trom
Mirgiret Main o. Trail aod cut-
tody ot hit lS-yttr-old ton. Charlu
Ernut Witts of Mtdlcint Hit wu
the co-retpondent nimtd in tht
petition. R. J. G. Richtrdi of Trail
wu countel for tht petitioner.
A divorce wu granted Files
Chickering Andenon ot Tighum,
from Emily Mtry Andenon of NeV
son. Malcolm Aitken, now ot Van-
couver, wu named in the petition,
-MLMtt DAILY NlWt, NELSON  S. C.-THUMOAY MORNINO MAY 14 mt-
u a.
peered its Ibe p4uoooer.
■upiaidwta did net tppeir  la
iny ot tbt thru estes.   ,       •
—    ■■ UN—      IMl    , ■-
Lom Bicycles
for 10 Days
TRAH, B. C, May U.-Five Juv-
■lilet ippetred  befoA  Mtgiitritt
Parker Wtlliimi la Ctty Police
Court Tueeday ifternoon, chargtd
with failing to have Ueencu on
tbeir bicycles The chargei a
laid April 30.
Tht Juvenilu were ordered to
put iwiy tbeir bicycltt lor 10 dtyt
SH J. McMillan proiecuted.
Fintd in Trail
Bod Parking
TRAII. B. C. May ll.-Murlla A
Rogen ippeired before Migittntt
Parker WiUiimi ln City Police
COurt en Tuudiy afternoon chirgei
witb obitructiijg itreet trtffic. Bt
pleeded guilty to the chirge, which
uott trom parking bit truck on
Dtwdnty Avenue on Mty 1 to tbtt
it obttructed traffic
• Be wu fined S3 md cotts. Sgt. J
McMillen proiecuted.
TRAIL SOCIAL
Expect Japs lo Renew Air Baffle
Soon for Island Ramparts
ALLIED HEAEK5U ARTXRS, AUSTRALIA, May IJ (CP)-Ratumptioo
ot tbe lir battle for Auttralii't outer
iiland rimptrti to in tarly dtte wu
predicted today by observers at advanced buu tnd throughout tbe
am allied ilrmen wttt on the
tlert to detect tbe flrtt move of the
Jip nivy to renew tbe btttlt of thi
Coral See which lt broke ott lut
wuk, /
Tba remntntt at tht tint Jap Invulon Beet wera believed hiding in
the icreen of lilindi, wilting tor
reinforcement!. Although dispersed
thaw uaiti could Quickly coot together it tbt tppeerince of tbe
mtin hattle fleet, which it bthtved
to be gathered umewbra North of
th New Gulnn-New Britain area.
Conupondenti who Inquired it
headquarten about tbe abeence ot
furthtr newt from tbe Pbilippinu
vere told thtt comaunicatloai wire
eut off.
Norman Stockton, wtr corrtipon-
dent ot tbe Melbourne Hertld, wrote
in t dupitch from in idvinced open tionik bait thtt the tppearnce
ot Jipaneie bomben la rtidi Moo-
day tgtinit Port Moreiby. ind of
Born Islind, indicited the enemy
bad received reinforoemeati tor
buffeted tir forcu bued it Rtbaul.
New Britain, tnd Lie, New Guinu
"Since bomben were wiped trom
the New Guinea tky by i lucceii-
ful tilled M-day ctmptlgn, only
ttro tighten hid been used in
raldi," ht uld.
Interpreting
The War News
Grenfell's
BRAISED VEAL CUTLETS
and MUSHROOM SAUCE
TODAT
If It's Iniurance
SEE US AND SAVE MONEY
ROBERTSON REALTY
COMPANY LIMITED
347 Biker Phone SN
Dally    Dellverlei
ill pirti ef tht city.
IttUWIUHtttlW
At Your Service
OUR
BODY SHOP
Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.
Opp. Hume Hotel tnd Put Offlte
tttittautitituittiitti
Keep Youth tnd
. Loveliness    with
I' Permanent.
Hai&h Tru-Art
Beauty Salon
Johnitone Block
Phone S27
W. W. Powell
Company, Limited
Tht Homt of Good tumber
LUMBER      LATH
SHINGLES
Wholeule and Retail
Telephone 176
Foot of Stanley Street
TRAIL, B- C. May 1S-A lucceuful tet end ule wu given Siturday
by the Women'i Auoclation Clrclu
of Knox United Church, in the Ma-
Kinlc Temple. The pi irons were welcomed by Mra. M. W. Leei ind Mrs.
Frank Wilby. Mn. Herbert Cltrk
wu In chtrge of the ule ot tlcketi,
ind the home cooking ulu #ere
supervised by Mn. C. ("riser, Mrs.
W. J. Wigitaffe, Mn. W. ___. Wilion,
ind Mn. A. E- Crilg. The home tewing table wai in chirge of Mn. M.
MIchiely, Mn. P. L. Crowe, Mn. T.
Laienby, end Mn. M. Cirpenter.
Serviteurs included Mn. A.C.B. Cooper, Mn. N- Tittrle md Mn. E. Mc-
McLeod, Mn. H- 0. Hinch, Mn. D.
Chalmen ind Mn. E- Dibner lup-
ervlsed the kitchen irirrgementi.
Rontld Rimtden it tperldlng i few
dtyi In Nelson visiting hli mother,
Mn. B. Ramsden.
Mr. ind Mn. S A. Wlie ipent Sunday in Rouland, visiting Mr. and
Mn. Mix Woogmm.
Robert Kirby left Mondiy for
Spokine where he will try out tor
the American Ajr Corpi.
Connor Allison left for Pinchi
Lake Siturday.
Mr. and Mn. W. A. Bennett, Sr,
of Nelso'n, were weekend gueiti of
their son ind daughter-in-law, Mr.
md Mn. W. A. Bennett Jr., of 1218
Rlverildo Avenut.
Miu Ivy Wilker of South Slocin
viilted her mother, Mrs. W. II. Wilker of Anniblt (Airing tht weekend.
Ronald Somen left Sundiy lo
■pend e lew days ln Nelion at the
home ot Mi perenti, Mr. md Mrs.
By MRS. ROY FRAIIR
t. W. Somen.
CHINESE ALMOND CAKES
Try some for s change.
| Club Cafe |
infant
Quality Groceries
We Heve ■ Complete Line
LAKESIDE SERVICE
Ph. SSS Free Delivery
Opp. Likuldt Pirk
FOR LEASE OR RENT
MY MODERN HOME,
804 STANLEY STREET
MRS. R. E. CRERAR
SUCCESS TO THE WEST
KOOTENAY'S 13th. ANNUAL FESTIVAL
Make your outing complete,
bring the family ln for dinner.
Mrs. Gerild Brown ltft Stturdiy for Spokine where ihe will
visit her husbind.
Mrt. Arthur Johnion of Nelion
•frlved Mondty night to visit her
diughter, Mn. Roy fruer, md
friends tor ■ dty or two.
TRAH, B. C, Mty U.-Mrs. T.
Htlvtnon won tht prist for high
icon when bridge wu enjpyed by
the Put Chlefi Club of the Pythlin
Siiten Tuesdiy night it tht home
of Mrt D. Willlamion. The buiineu
meeting wu held end refreshments
were urved following the cird
gtme. The hoiteu wu uslsted in
urving by Mn. E. Howtrd. Memben pruent Included Mn. T. Alty,
Mrs. O. B. Hollington, Mrs. N. F
Norrli, Mn. C. Ctartii, Mn. E. Clay
Mn. J. T. Woodi, Mn. A. B- Clirk,
Mn. W. C. Bndihtw, Mn. H. Beck,
ett, Mrs. T Hilverson, Mn. 0- Wil
ton irtd Mn. H. Slmpion.
Mrs. A. Ftrnum wit wlnntr of
tht priie drawn for tt tht Circle
teu ot the Catholic Womtn'i Leigut
of Our Lady ot ePrpetual Help
Church Tueidiy tvening. The ltdlu enjoyed t toclil tftirnoon, md
ire knitting for the Red Crou it
both circles. Mn. T. McGhee, Shaven Bench, wu hoiteu to Circle No.
2, end her guuti Included, Mn. S.
Lesuik, Mn. T. Kobluk, Mri. R.
Loughtry, Mrs, A. C. Archlbsld,
Mrs. V. Biner, Mrt. R. J. Aihby,
tnd Mn. H. W. Wilte. Circle No. S
met tt the, home ol Mn. George
Hirriion, Fifth Avenue. Memberi
preient Included Mri. J. Colllgan,
Mn. W. Cimeron, Mn. J. 0. Putsey,
Mn. W. H. Roblnion, Mrs. J. M.
Brennm, Mri. J. Montpelller, Mn.
M. Btron tnd Mrs A. Rumier.
Ltc. J. E. Burrowi left Wedneiday after ipending hli leave from
Red Deer In Trail.
Charlei Hand haa returned to
Trail from Pinchi Lake.
TRAIL, B. C, May 13.—Mn. J. B.
Bodgener hai returned to her home
In Turner Valley after viiiting her
parents, Mr. and Mn. 0. B. Holden,
South Slocan, for two weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Shultz motored to Nelson Wednesday.
Corporal and Mrs. J. Copeland of
Vancouver are visiting Mr. and Mrs,
H. Barr for two weeks.
Miu E. Woodburn ipent Wednuday visiting friendl at.Blueberry.
Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Holden have
returned from a buiineu trip to
Calgary.
W. Poznlko of Rosebery wai attested for army dutlei In Trail-end
left Wednesday for Vancouver to
report at.the district depot.
H. B. Murray left Nelson Tuesday for Vancouver, where he will
report for military duty.
By KIRKI L. SIMPSON
Auoelited Preu Wer Anelytt
Tht Ruutani' mnouncement thtt
they have retired to new poiitioni
on tht Kerch Peniniuli lives i
lombre cut to the wir newi, ilthough there li yet no confirmation
of Hitler'i cltlmi ot • decisive victory ln thtt tret.
In fict tht Ruulini deny the Nail
leider's bout thit the bittle his
been concluded. They uy the Red
troops ire retiring In good order
•nd Inflicting hetvy losses.
Thut, tht rul Import of tht blow
tht Null htvt struck ln this vtstly
ImporUnt tector remains for eventi
to determine.
The Nui tnnouncement clilmed
cipture of 40,000 prisoner! ind vut
wtr booty. It uyi that tht Ntil
forcei trt pursuing the Reds from
tht brokin 12-mile defence line at
the Weitern neck of the lsthmui
towtrd Kerch Itself.
Word pictures of the bittle plinted by Nisi Preu reporti Indlcite
thit t missive forct ot men, plmes,
tanks and guns was mustered ln the
Crimei for the Kerch drive. It tendi
to verify the conclusion of observer!
•t Berne thit hilf • dozen Germin
divliioni tnd overpowering 'tir
itrength were thrown into the five-
day itruggle.
If thit ll trut, 11 It leemi to be,
It ellmlntttt thi poiilbillty thit
tht Kirch fight li merely t tactical operation to Improve tht Ntil
petition on the South flink of tht
long btttlt lint or remove t dtn-
gereul Ruulin thr.it.
Troil Bike Riden
Are Fined;
Licencee Lacking   ,
TRAIL, E C. Miy ll.-WilfrtJ
Leduc tad Mania Moen. Meydists,
re fined $1 esch, without cottt,
whtn they ippetred before Miglitrite Parker Williami ta City Police
Court Tuetdty ifternoon oa
chirgei of failing to htve licence
platei on tbeir bicycle****, laid April
N. Both pleeded guilty.
The magiitrate iiiued I warning
thdt in future the bicycle lawi
would be itrictly enforced, etpeclilly ln connection with hiving no
llcencei, and doublt riding. Ht itated that flashlights did not comply
with the Provincial law tor bicycle
lights
New C. B. C.
News Times
Evening News Broadcasts
will now be heard at
7 p.m. and 10 p.m.
CKkl
Thtrt in vtrioui reports of lyn
chronlsed Nui ittacki til ilong the
uctor extending trom the Khirkov
region in the Denett Buin to the
Germm "Island" tdvinct but it
Tigtnrog on the ihoru ot the Sei
of Aiov, only 00-odd miles from
the ill Importent Roitov corner on
the Don.
Theu reporti lend color to the
belief, thit t vut Nizl turning
movement, ln effect hinged on
Kerch lithmui but calculated to
iweep the Don River front door
to the Caucasus cletr to tht Volgi,
li brewing it not ilready ln action.
Berne onlooker! hive reported a
Nui army 2,000,000 itrong essem-
bled for ■ big push in the South. The
Hitler claim ot I smashing victory
on Kerch lithmui tends to substantiate that. It suggests that 100,000
or more Germtn troopi were concentrated on thit 12-mile front
ilone.
Thet   eny   iuch   oencentrttlon
could hivi bttn brought togtthtr
In thl Eutern Crimei undetected
by tht Ruulini leemi Impoulblt.
Air obiervttlon md reporti from
Ruulin clvlllam muit have rt-
veiled mllitery movementi on
thit Kill. ;i
It would follow, morally, thtt
Red irmy preparatlont'Sto meet i
tremendoui Ntzi attack to regain the
Kerch gateway to the Caucasus
have been In progreu on both sides
of Kerch Strait, A fiilure. to hold
that narrow water barrier even if
Kerch Isthmus Ii lost tgaln, would
undermine the Don defence line before the foe evtn retches it.
Fear and Shock
Expounded to
Nursing (lasses
R09SLAND, B. C, Mty 13—Dr
E. E. Topliff, guest speaker at the
Home Nursing Clau Tueidiy even
Ing. gave au absorbing talk on the
subjects, 'Tear" ami "Shock."
There wai no room (or tear, the
Doctor asserted. Anger, indication, md hite towird the enemy
must take prevalence over fear in
UN-A-SOTK
hr tai* Sor.
ma*4a*,*ae*mmm
Sold only it yeur Rtxall Storei
CityDrugCo.
Bex SSI *- Phone M
order to win thii wir. Tht mother
mutt not thow ftlr, tvtn betore
the tiny beby, u it wu conttgioui.
In order that the morale of tht Cmadian people remained high it wu
Important for the mothen to remain
calm, come whit may. Dr. Toplifft
definition of "uoni!" wu Thi
ability to contlnut u usutl undtr
unuiuil circumstancei." Al in eximple, the Britiih mortlt wu prilled, whtn. In ipitt ol night bombings, the English people ippetred
the following morning reidy to
carry on u usual.
Dr. Topliffs iecond lubject,
"shock", waa gone Into fully, hii
exposition of the cause of ihock,
tbe tymptomt md the treitment.
proving mosl informing, leasoned
with witty tnecdoiet gained trom
his own wide experience it ■ private practitioner, an army doctor ot
the last war, and a medical itudent.
There wu in exceptlomlly good
turnout.
COOD LOOKING1
HOSft-fcY
Serviceable  too,   for Irm
reinforced heels snd told
give protection where tM
wear comes.
Plain shades or new now-!
elty designs, just ts you
wish."
50<   75*   91-00
EMORY'S]
**"' LIMITIO mail
\Trm Msns Stort
When ft* hsve dinner tt,
BUTLER'S
yeu go twty SATISFIED.
•••••••••tl
Rossland Social ♦ ♦ ♦
U«m School for
Normal School
Classes'at Victoria
VICTORIA, Miy 13 (CP)-The
Anglican Memorial School here will
be leaied by the Provincial Government ai quarter! for Normal School
classes, it wts learned at the Legislative Buildings today.
Victoria's Normal School has been
taken over by the Army and converted Into a base hospital and students completed their classes at the
Serine Auditorium.
The lease of the Memorial Hall
will date from July 1 and transfer
of books and school equipment and
arrangement for Instructor's offices
will be completed in time for the
next clau ln the autumn.
•»*s*w*»»«Mes9Sie«ssss«s-wss»'
HOOD'S BREAD
Is made with Canada
Approved Flour—Vitamin B.
Note: This ti important.
THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
W. L. THOMPSON, Prop.
Diy md Night Service.
24 hour Ambulance Service
«1S Kooteniy Sb        Phoni 381
KOOTENAY
MUSICAL
FESTIVAL
Opens at
Capitol Thoatro
THIS MORNINC AT
9 o'Clock
AFTERNOON SESSION
2 P.M.
EVENINC SESSION
8 P.M.
SEASON  TICKETS
Adultt-41.S0       Chlldrin-78o
Mornlnq tnd Afternoon
Adultt-SSo      Chlldren-1Sc
Evening
Adulti-JOo       Chlldren-2Sc
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
1940 DODOE. TIRES A-l AND
heater, $650 (ikes It Ph. HOfl-Y,
Trail.
CASTLEGAR
CASTLEGAR, B. C-Mn. L. E.
Killough and her sister, Mrs. P.
Swinson of Kinnalrd, have taken
up residence in Castlegar.
O. A. Gowler, L. Watson, W. A.
Devitt, J. Dunlop, E. Lundy and A
Schiavon visited Nelson,
Miss Rose Hansauer ot Rossland
was a weekend guest at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Killough.
R. A. D. West has returned from
a trip to Vancouver.
Dr. and Mrs. V. Goresky have returned from a short trip to Spokane
Mrs: J. Morrison, entertained at
an amusing "earthquake" bridge,
Mrs. Miller won the prize for high
score, and Mrs. H, Hesklth for low
score. Guests were Mrs. R. A. West,
Mrs. J. P. Taylor, Mrs. H. Bryden,
Mrs. W. O. Devitt, Mrs. H. Heskilh,
Mrs. D. A. Shea, Mrs. N. Miller and
Mrs, N. M. McKenzie. The tea
table was centred with red tulips.
Mrs. West assisted the hostess.
News of the Day
"Tuckeit's" fine cut tob. 10c pkt,
SSc tin, at Valentine's.
Phone 522 expert laundry service.
Crystal Laundry & Dry Cleanen,
When In the city be mre to stay
at The Noble Hotel, 664 Baker St
Help yourself to Health. Eat the
new O.K. Vitamin B Bread (Canada Approved).
Heavy horses for sale. Suitable for
farming or logging. Morgan Connel,
Brilliant.
Cash register rolls for all models
caih reglsteri. D. W. McDerby, 654
Baker St., Nelson, B. C.
ATTENTION
Kinette Tea Saturday, 16th, Fink's
basement itore.   Tea 21c.
Support the Kinettea by ittending
their Air Raid Shelter Tea. Proceeds to Kin MUk for Britain rund.
Fiftieth Anniverury Servicei will
be held ln St Saviour's, Sunday,
May 17th.
TODAY! St. Saviour'i Mother'i
Club Spring Tea, Sale. Memorial
Hall, 3 to 6 p.m.
Don't forget to come up and enjoy
younelf at the Eaglei whist tnd
dtnct  tonight.    Admlulon 25c.
£m^^
in _* __i_i.-ii __i ai tt_S_rt.___^i__Mir_i_-l_l
i 9th ANNUAL ALUMNI DANCE
it High School Mty 15th. M. Gri-
him'i Orch. 8-12.   75c couplt.   .
I. ._j-___B.__-_.~M___-.__..
Monthly meeting, Botrd of Trtde
TODAY, 12 noon. Hume Hotel. Important builntu. Memberi urged to
ittend.
Buy Burgeu batteries for better
service. Our stock Is complete of
radio A, B and C batteries, flashlight, Ignition and trainmen's batteries.—Hipperson's.
ROSLAND, B. C
ver and son, David John,    were
Trill visitors Saturday.
Elmer Thuktala, Columbia Avenue, was a Trail visitor recently.
Mrs. A. F. G. Drake, Butte Street,
and Mrs. W. M. Gibson, Fourth
Avenue, expect to attend classes in
Trail this week ln connection with
Guide work.
Mrs. Ernest McGauley who has
been a patient in Mater Misericordiae Hospital for the past two weeks,
expects to return to her home within
the next few dsys.
ROSSLAND, B. C, May 12—Tha
Mater Mlsericordiae Hospital Auxiliary held a very lovely tea Tuesday afternoon in Ihe solarium on
the first floor. A silver basket tilled
wilh narcissi and Dame Clara Butt
tulips centred the lace covered tea
table on which tall green tapers in
silver holders were used effectively. Mn. J. A. Butcher presided at
the tei table. Kitchen irrangements
were conducted by Mrs. A. Lalonde
and Mrs. E. E- Turner. The general
convener was Mrs. T. Knight. A
good number attended.1
Mn. Jack Page of Fruitvale Is
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Herb Christian.
Mrs. Lester Brown Brown and
small daughter have returned from
visiting Mrs. Brown's parenti, Mr.
Snd Mrs. Donaldson in Grand Forks.
Mrs. George Mara, who has been
in Kimberley attending a Catholic
Women's League convention, has
returned home to Rossland.
Miss Eileen Bowman of Murray
Drive, Trail, will spend Wednesday
ln Rossland.
Mrs. P. Palmer and Mrs. F. McKenzie wer ethe Rossland delegates
to the Pythian Sisters meeting held
in Nelson Monday evening.
Mrs. Fowler of Riondel who has
been visiting her son and daughter
in-law, Mr, and Mrs. H. S. Fowler,
will leave Wednesday for her home.
Mrs. Jack Henderson was hostess
to St. Andrew's Government Square
Circle Monday evening. Mrs. Gordon Sommerville delighted the
members by giving the life story of
that well known author and rtlst,
Miss Emily Carr of Victoria, Beautiful passages from "Kleewyck" Miss
Carr's latest book, were read. Those
present were Mrs. Rene Morin, Mrs.
E. Perkins, Mrs. H. Clegg, Mrs. T.
Fraser, Mrs. G. Moss, Mrs, J. C.
Urquhart, Mrs. Swanson, Mrs. A. II.
Freeman, and Mrs. H. Lefevre.
Dainty refreshments were served.
Red Cross sewing was done.
ROSSLAND, B. C, May 13-The
By MRS. HAAVEY FLEURY
Mri. Ike Glo- Women'! Auxiliary oft. George'!
Church,   .meeting Tueidiy   it  the
home of Mrs. S. E. Wilson, did the
usual Red Cross knitting. Mrs.
Mark Storie assisted Mrs. Wilson
in the serving of refreshments.
Other presenl were Mrs. F. A. Newell, Mrs. T. Tongue, Mrs. B. Fulton,
and Mrs. S. E. Thomas.
Dr. W. Laishley of Nelson was a
Rossland visitor Tuesday.
The Pioneer Circle of St. Andrew's Church met Monday evening
at the home of Mrs. R. Mann. Plins
were made for a lilac tea being
held In the near future. Miss Ethel
Jamieson and Mrs. R. C. Jones were
chosen to serve lea at the Red Crou
on June 10. Thoie preient were
Mrs. C. Bradshaw, Mrs. J. Gordon,
Mrs. J. Shearer, Mn. D. Jones, and
Miss E. Jamieson. The hoitess, Mn.
Mann, served refreihmenti tnd
the entertainment wis supplied by
Mr. Hones and Miss Jamieson, taking the form of contests tnd games,
J. A.
OptOITl
Suits
Medlctl Art!
There's s lig DM
Between s Cress* )otr
Cusrsnttsd   Lubrl
SKY CHIEF A?v
F. H. SMI'
If It's Electric
Phon* 666 351 Biker I
• GRAY'S •
25% OFP
On All Cindy tnd Chocolttit
Whilt They Lltt
SS?«SS$S«S5««S4SSSS5$SJ_««$-»S$
Have th* Job Dono Right
See
VIC GRAVES
MA8TER  PLUMBER
PHONE 815
Fleury's Pharmacy
PHONE 25
Med. Arti Blk.
Prescriptions
Compounded
Accurately
Mn. Marlon Grummett wishes
to announce the opening of the new
branch of Milady'i Beauty Shoppe at
Castlegar during the week of May
18 to 23. Mrs. Peggy Horswill is to
manage the Shoppe.
NOTICE
B. R. T. MEMBERS
The funeral of Bro. W. H. Stalnton
will be held from St Paul's Church
Friday at 2 o'clock. Members are
requested to gather at the Church
at 1:30.
J. S. EDWARDS, Prei.
C. N. Sewell, Sec'y.
NOTICE
Mr. Sidney Norman will glvt
detailed tcoount of hli eastern trip,
it tht Chtmbtr of Mlnei meeting
Frldiy tvtnlng tt 8 p.m., Mty 15th.
All Intereited welcome to ittend.
FUNERAL NOTICE
Funeral lervices for the late William G. H. Stalnton will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. from St. Paul's
United Church, Rev. H. R. Stovell
officiating. Funeral arrtngementi
under direction of Thompion Fun
enl Home.
FULL COURSE
DINNER
FESTIVAL
VISITORS
Drop in snd hsve Dinner
st Nelson's finest csfe.
Fountain
Service
Club Cafe
624 Bsker St.
FILL
%fa1hejuftw!
With increased demands for coal, transportation
difficulties, etc., the consumer can no longer expect coal wherrthey happen to want it!
SO BE SAFE
ORDER YOUR COAL NOW!
GALT - WILDFIRE
GREENHILL COALS
BURNS
LUMBER & COAL-CO.!
J. VlUihJM 'M tk Bujjdi>;
"Iht secret of my perpoht-l
youth ts proper car* by th*
General Motors Car Conson
vofion Plant"
* Under thli Cir Comervition
Plin, designed for Wtr time —
we help you livt right iwiy by
■topping trouble before It itirti
—by correcting tin wttr—edd-
Ing to guoline mileage—doing
everything to keep your ctr fit
for the duration.
$17,000.00 Worth
of Modern Equipment — plus 230
Man-Years of Experience make this
possible!
Nelson Transfer
Co.. Ltd.
