 ——"
175,000 Troopj
•  < V I   /I
17 Generals
Allied Prisoners
By EDWARD KENNEDY
,     Auociated Pren Stiff Writer
. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, May 13
(AP)—The captive toll of Cermans and Italians today neared
175,000, included 17 be-hnedalled Generals, in a Tunisian triumph which put Allied airmen only a few minutes' unchallenged flight from Italian,Sic--
ily's already devastated ports
and military installations.    .  '
One unconfirmed report laid that
I son-in-law of King Victor Emanuel of Italy wu among the captivei
laken when the IUlian Marshal
Mesit and hli lit Army surrendered.
(The IUlian King h»a four ions-m-
law, although one is King Boris ol
Bulgaria. The others are Count Cal-
vi de Bergolo, Prince Philip of
Heaie ind Prince Louii of Bourbon-Parma.)
Both Rome and Berlin acknowledged that the African war was
ended. Naval forces itill -patrolled
both sides of Cap Bon Peninsula to
prevent tny Axis attempt to escape
by sea.
The   Allied   communlqui   uld
thtit UniU captured varioui imall
partiei of troopi trying to reich
Pantelleria   Iiland  In imall  bolU
during tht lilt few dtyi. A numbtr of Qermtn ind lUllin troopi
alio were roundtd up on Zembra
Island, 12 mllei off Cap Bon.
Allied airmen ilready had railed their ilghti toward Sicily, IUly,
ind other Axli Mediterranean holdings. In possession of the entire African coaitllne these airmen alio
were ready to protect Allied ihipping freed for the ihorter Mediter-
raneen routei to Middle Eutern
ports handling mppllei for Rus-
lii, and also to India.
Wellington bomberi atUcked the
Hirbor of Mtriala, Sicily, on Tueiday night, icorlng hiU in tht dock
ireai and starting large tirei.
A BBC broidcut uld tht R.A.F.
had dropptd tvtr Minili thouiandi of leaflet! bearing one itn-
ttnet: "If you wtnt tht bombing
to itop, demand peace ind demon.
ttratt In tht ttrtttt your dnln
for peace."
Four enemy alrpllnei were ihot
down by fighters of the Coailil Air
Forct Tueiday, knd thret AxU
bomben were deitroyed lut night
In repulrlhg an attempted a\Uck
on the Alglen area, the communique (aid. , ,,
In one week of ihatterlng ittick
tht Axii troopi were isolated and
cruihed. The Germin General, Von
Arnim, It was pointed out, wai cut
off from hii troopi in the Northern
Bizerte irea. The« lurrendered to
American forces.
NAMED HIS OWN CAPTOR
The German Commander alio wu
cut off from Meiie'i troopi ficing
the Ith Army South of Tunli. The
IUllin Commander incldenUUy In-
liited ln mrrenderlng to the fith
Army, i formality that wai reidily
granted.
The Italian veterin of the Rui-
itan and other wen apparently
conildered lt better personal prestige to give up to that British machine which ii recognized as one
ot the world'i fineit armies.
But what Meise didn't know wai
that i portion of the Sth Army alw
participated In the break-through
to Tunli behind him.
It wu Gen. Alexander who chartered the original smash at the Ger.
mam at El Alamein, Egypt, from
where Gen Montgomery'! 8th Army
chaied Rommtl 1700 milei acrosa
Africa into the arms of the Hriush,
Americin and French forcei in Tu-
nllll.
In three yeari of wir In wheh
Muuolini loat hli African Empire,
it ia eitimaled that more than 700,*
000 Axia prisonen were either captured or killed, most of them Italians.
St-it-hlng Revolt Breaks Owt In Uw     _]
Countries.—Pig* 3.
Smashing Raid on Dulsbarg It Heivlut '
of the War.—Page S.
Von Arnim Refutes to Sign Termi; Only ,-
Interest It Baggage.—Page 3.   '
Big Nazi Force
of Bombers
Over England
LONDON, Miy 14 (Frldiy).
(CP)—Tht Itrgtit forci of Qtrmin raldtn to tppur nur Lon-
dan for wtiki ctuitd in hour-
long alert ttrly todty, but flrtt
reporti Indicated no dtmtgt.
A heivy bunge met the enemy
ilrcnft. They penetnted only to
lhe ouUkirU of the city, dropping
flirei.
A heavier atUck hli Eaitern England, raided for tht leventh consecutive diy. High exploiives were
dropped there.
The ilert lounded with this morn,
ng'i London raid was the fint in
the capital ilnce a brief early morning alarm May 8 The lut night
ilirm wai April 2J.
QERMANY HIT AGAIN
LONDON. Miy 14 (Frldiy). (CP)
—R A F. bombers wert over Germany last night for the iecond iuc-
reulve night, it wu mnounced todiy.
Thii ilghalled the contlnumce of
i vut two-wiy offenilve agiinit
Hitler'i Europe, with the Ruuini
Joining In from the Eait in the re-
jumptlon of Allied round-lhe-clock
raiding.
MAY II  FIEIUIN
STOCKHOLM May 14 (Fr day)
(CP) — Telephone communication
with Berlin wu cui off at 10 o'clock
lait night and itill wai luspended
early thii morn ng. Indicating i poiilble Allied air raid on the Oerman
capiUl.
EXPECT VICTORY
LOAN TO TOP
BILLION TODAY
Totdl Subscribed
So Far
Is $959,707,800
END SAT. NICHT
OTTAWA, Miy 13 (CP) - Thl
Nitlonil Wir Finance Committal
innounctd tonight thtt mbicrlp-
tlom to Canada'! Fourth Victory
Loin ihould top tht $1,000,000,000
mtrk with tht computation of
today'i returni If preient trendi
contlnut.
The three weeks' campaign for
a minimum objective of SI, 100,000,-
000 opened April 20 and the cumulative toUl subscribed so far is
18(9,707,800. The Committee innounced that, tp facilitate late subscriptions ind ltd the general can-
vast to reach its goal, aU Branch
Banka and Truit and Loan Companies in Canada would remain
open Saturday afternoon from 2
to 4 o'clock to receive subscriptions. The campaign closet Saturday night
On' Wednesday, 15th day of the
campaign, 152,22. Individuil subscriptions accounted for • dollar
toUl of $74,405,450, but several large
corporate subscriptions were Included ln thli total. Lateit combined toUl for Canada'i three Fighting Servlcei is $21,191 j0>, made up
of Navy subscription! of $2,22,100,
Army subscriptions of $10395,409,
and Air Force subscriptions of $7,-
474,400.
Judging of entrlei In the Fourth
Victory Loan Community Contest, with awardi ind honon for
the beit promotional ideas conceived and executed during the
campaign, has bten slated to begin June 3 at Ottawa. Prellmin-
- ary judging of the belt achemei
to-e*»-rt-ti-tm wlU BK
pleted by May 22, Loin Headquirteri announced. Nominations must reach OtUwt by Miy
99.
The community deemed to have
carted out the most original and
forceful promotional plan will hive
IU name emblazoned on a g ant Lancaster bomber built ln Canadi. The
names of five other communities,
ranked at having the beit entriei in
u many populated groups, will be
conferred on fast Mosquito bomben now being made in the Dominion. *
The citlei of Summenide ind
Charlottetown, P.E.I., took the lead
among urban communitiei over
their objectivei for general canvau
and payroll savings subscriptions.
Summerside reported 13C per cent
of its quota while the Island Capital reported its objective covered
by IIS per cent. Halifax was third
with 104 per cent and Fort WiUiam
has 101 per cent.
In centrei reporting their total objectivei reached, Siint John
reported 13S per cent; Frederlcton, 131; and. Summerside. 119.
Fort William. reported 110 per
cent of it idbjectlve, comng up
from 7! per cent In three dtyi.
Subscriptions by employeei of
Canadian Nitlonil Railwayi itood
at $8,336,100 at the end of the 14th
day.
Names Drown Today
By Victory Loin
Committee for NtUon
District Honor Roll
Tonight In ltt mimgt ovtr Ha
dlo Station CKLN tht Ntlton Victory Lean Committti wlll call on
Dlitr'ct reildenti to buy bondi In
•upport of:
Mile. Riddle
T. Wallace
V. E. Howtrd
Gilbert Hunt
J. M. Nlvtn
L. itllngtr
William Rtmuy
R. K. Flynn
C. W. Linden
A. C. Mithuon
Theie boyt from Ntlion trt
tttieklng tht moit ruthlm forcei
tht world hu ytt txperitnced,
fighting for tht wty of lltt thtt
wt know tnd wtnt to Mvt. Thty
otn only ctrry on if wt on tht
homt front keep up i iteidy
itreim of lupply. Our dollan furniih thli nttdtd lupply.
RUSS BOMBERS
HAMMER
POLISH CAPITAL
Long-Range Planes
* Hit Trains,  .
Dumps and Stores
SET BIG FIRES
* LONDON, Miy 18 (CP)-Tht
Moicow rldlo innounctd tonight
that Ruuitn long-range bomberi
had raided Wartiw, tht Nail-held
capital ef Poland.
The communications system ot
War.aw wu the main target ot the
Red Air Force bomberi, said the
broadcast.
"On Us* night of Miy IS," tbt en-
riouncemem said, "our long-range
tircraft raided tht railway junction
ot Wariaw, military traini, ammun
ftton; dun-pr- *n* xrmtment' ito*
oi well li tbt llntl ind Itation In
stn 11 a tions ot the riilwiy itation It
Wariaw and the mburb bf Praga
on the right bank of the Vistula.
"Large flrei ind explosions of the
traini and military itorei were obierved.
"Our aircraft iuffered no losiei."
The lut long-range Soviet Air
Force raids were on ConltmU, Rumania, on May 5 md Koenigiburg,
East Prussia, on April 28.
STRENGTH
IS OVER 190,000
Ralston Tells Hduse
Dieppe Lessons
Still Being Studied
HAD VITAL PART
OTTAWA, Miy 18 (OP)—O*.
ftnet Miniittr Riliton told tht
Houie of Commoni tonight thit
tht itrtngth of thl Cinidlin Army overieai tn Miroh tl Utt
wu mort thin 190,000.
Ht uld iomt 70,000 army ptr-
•onntl hid bttn unt oveneu In
tht latt flical ytir. Tht itrtngth
of tht irmy ovtrttu on Mirch
81, 1942, wu mort thin 180,000.
The enllitment requirementi tor
the flical year ending lait March
31 had been from 90,000 to 100,000
men. Actuilly more than IK-AM enlisted. Not ill were for relnforcemenU for overieai uniU as a portion
went Into uniU held for home defence.
• In addition, the National Reiourcei Mobll-tatlon Act call-up had
brdught in ■ net of about 60,000 men,
ln Maroh and April the enliit-
menU bad been down and May had
"not btgun io well."
Col. Riliton uld tha Dltppt
"rtconmllunct In -force"' had
bten i vlUl ptrt of tht offtmlvt
on whloh tht UnlUd Natloni had
agreed. Tht leilioni learned from
It itlll wtrt btlng itudied ind
hid bttn put ta uit.
Tht High Command required information which could only be ob-
Uined by "fighting for .it." It wai
a heavy Usk which could be en-
tmited only to troopi of a high
itandard.
Beciuse of the avowed aggreuive
policy of the Alliei, the Germini
hid itrengthened their forcei generally ind were on the alert along
the French cout
ReporU he had received prilled
the luiittnct given by the Royal
Nary and by the S.A.F. ind by the
Canadians participating in both the
Nivy tnd iir operatloni.
i_i*vi.iM_tmm^-ti*tt   . ^       .^    d prllM,; -fc-t
Churchill to
Address
U.S. Congress
WASHINGTON. Miy IS (AP) -
Prime Minlrter Churchill will addreu the United SUtei Congreu
next week.
Speaker Sam Rayburn of the
Houie of RepresenUtivei invited
him thli morning, he accepted, and
Rayburn returned to the Capttol to
arrange l Joint Senate-House Ul-
lion.
The White Houie laid, meanwhile,
thit i radio iddreii Mr. Churchill
his icheduled for tomorrow ifternoon at 12 noon, PDT., will be ilmoit entirely for home corrumptlon
in BrlUin,
Reports Shelling
of Pantellaria
Island by Navy
LONDON, Miy 14 (Friday).
(CP)— Detmond Tight, Riutin
Niwi Agency corretpendtnt with
tht M.dlterranean flttt, report-
id todty thit unitt af tht Rtytl
Nivy hid ihellid Pantillirli Iilmd In tht Sicilian Strait yittr-
diy.
It wu tht flrtt nival attick of
tht wtr ed the Iilandi, which hid
wrvtd tht Axli •• tn llrbait during tht hattle  of Tunlila.
Tht itronghold hu frequently
bten bombed from tht ilr, howtvtr.
Jap Solomon
Base Bombed
WASHINGTON, May 13 (AP) -
Probable deitructlon by heavy
bombers of i number of enemy aircraft caught on the ground at Japan's Kahili base in the Northwestern Solomon Islands wu reported by the United SUtei Navy
today. The communique also revealed that aerial attacki had been
returned igainit Japaneie installation? on Kiska Island in the North
Pacific.
The heavy bombers raided Kahili,
In the Shortland Island area of the
Solomoni chain, Wedneeday morning tnd tUrted i number ot tires,
which "appeared to be burning
enemy aircraft. ,
Another group of bomberi attacked Japanese poiitioni on Bil-
lale Island, alao In the Shortland
area, and started a large fire.
Later in the morning a force of
dive bombers, torpedo bombers and
fighters raided Japanese installation! at Mundi ln the Central Solomons. This attack wai followed up
Wednesday night by bombardment
of both Munda and the nearby Port
of Vila on Kolombangara Island by
a force of light naval uniU.
Regal Party Makes
Round at Vancouver
VANCOUVER, May 13 (CP) -
The Governor-General and Princeit
Alice today began a round of official
vlslU and Intpectlom which will
keep them In Vancouver until Monday, when they begin their return
trip to Ottawa.
Thli morning the vlct-regil couple
who arrived here from Victorii lut
night ifter viiiting Seittle and Portlind, Ore, met officeri of the Pt-
eHV Commind.
794 POUND STURCEON
CAUCHT IN FRASER
NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, Miy
IJ (CP) — A TM-pound iturgeon
wu ciught ln the Fruer River todiy by Thomu Gowini, commerciil fuhermin. Thii Is the lirgett
sturgeon ciught lh the river In
decide, commented officiiU, and
hu • commerciil value of $130. It
may be lent to ■ Winnipeg depirtment itore for window dlipliy pur
potei.
9th ARMYS HUMAN LIFE-LINE
Passing ammunition and food and water for Ohe
British Eighth Army in Tunisia, the Tommies, above,
form a human conveyor belt and make fast work of beaching a cargo, hand over hand alqng the rocks, from an
unloading barge at the end of the jetty. British Columbia today is celebrating "8th Army Day."
Thret of Best Nazi
Armored
Divisions Smashed
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN
NORTH AFRICA, Miy 13 (AP)-
Three cf Germany'i but tnd old-
tit irmored dlvlilom ind evtry
Itallin irmored dlvlilon thtt tvtr
exlited art imong the flvt Axil
irmiu wiped out In tht Afrlcin
campaign which ended In Tunlila.
A totil cf 36 dlvlilom hive been
annihilated.
hid bttn "beyond pril
keen deiire tc come to grlpi with
tht tnTmy Indicited. Thert wU nc
ilgn thit tvtn ont min hid filtered In hit duty.
The Defence Miniiter made hii
itatement with the Houie ln Com-
mitUe   diKuising  i  resolution   to
Introduce t bill covering t $3,890,-
000,000 war appropriation.
The Defence Miniiter mentioned
these poinU ln dlscuuing Dieppe:
1. A large naval force croued the
channel and approached the French
coast, proticted by powerful Ilr
support, and remained off that cout
for many hour! with the lou of
but one deitroyer and a number
of imall landing craft. Thii was
ligniflcint achievement."
2. Although Dieppe wai a itrong
place, miliUry forcei were linded
on the enemy-occupied beachei, ind
heavy tanks in Urge numben were
transported acro'i the channel and
luccesafully landed.
3. It could be wld. that the organiiatlon of combined command
worked out ln ruch detail In advance of the operation functioned
moit admirably. The reiult of iht
operation had been to afford complete confidence ln the effective
coordination of the efforti of the
lervices in lirge combined operatloni.
4. The extenilve raid compelled
the enemy to concentrate iir tqliad-
roni from many distant poinU and
to commit • lirge force to action.
Even night fighters, night bomben
ind training iquadroni wtre thrown
Into the fight Thli give the RA.F.
i valuable opportunity, and in the
air fighting over Dieppe the German
Air Force*"suffered loises In aircraft amounting to a very urloui
itrategic reverie."
5. Ai for the more limited and
local objectives, Col. Raliton Mid
enemy batteriei ind 1 radio locition itition were deitroyed, heavy
caiualtlei were Inflicted md priionen of war were brought back
to Bngland. One and pouibly two
irmed vettelt were sunk.
'Tor the lessons letrned md the
tdvintagei gilned the forcei engaged, ind pirtlculirly the lind forcei,
paid i very blgh price," Col Riliton uid.
/ "The htatory of ilmiltr operation!
In the put »ervei to Indicate that
heavy losses ire to be expected in
arrrphlbloui operatloni of thli type
directed agalnit a fortified coaitllne held by a determined ind ilert
enemy."
Deillng with the Army orgmiution broadly, Col. Rtliton uld thit
on the tuumption Germiny wu
the backbone of tht Axli, It* itrategy of the United Nationi wu to
direct the man opentioni igilnit
Hitler ind "hli IUlian ulo-llte."
flrtt.
The Canadian millUry forci
wu deployed In two miin component!, one in the Europem
theitre of operation! ind tht
other ln North Americi and IU
OUtpotU, thl two connected by the
Atlantic lifeline iKmg which
flowed I itreim of equipment ind
trained rtlnforcemtnu.
by th* Home, wu to to:
kmr-**. BtiUm-, lo convert the
tth Dtvkio* into in Armored Diviiion ind lend lt overieai In 19U, to
organize the two Corpi into which
the 3rd Infantry Diviiion and two
armored divliioni could be fitted
u circumstance! might require, to
provide corpi troops for thoie two
corpi, ind bring the two corpi together under au organization called
the. Firat Canadian Army and to
provide army tropi.
More than two yeari ago, all
five divliioni and an Army Tank
Brigade of the overseai army had
been authorized, and what had
been done in the past year was to
make theie individual formations
•a ielf dependent and effective as
reiourcei would permit.
Secondly, the formation! authorized sinoe that time had—except the
2nd Army Tank Brigade—been the
headquarter! Second Corps and the
headquarten Fint Army and the
Corps and Army troops which are
ancillary and supplementary to
these formations.
In Canada and S_r_gland more than
170 uniU ot all eizei had been organized for the formation of ancillary and supplementary uniti of the
Second Corpt and' the First Canadian Army, to help make up corps
irmy tnd line of communication
troop*.
Most of those organized ln Canada were tent overseai in 1942 but'
a few itlll awaited dispatch.
There were two principal divisions In these troopt—first combat
uniU Including artillery and antiaircraft uniu which could be used
by the Corpt or Army commander outside the divlsioni themselves,
and lecond, the servicing uniu to
extend the maintenance ind lupply
lervicei towirdi the base.
C.C.F. Organizer
to Visit North
VANCOUVni, May 18 (CP) -
The C.CJ. Pirty In Britiih Columbli next month wlU extend IU ic-
tlvitlei lo lhe Yukon Territory when
Arthur Turner, Provincial Orgin-
izer, will vlvt Dawion City, Whitehone md other Northern communitiei, the Pirty innounced todiy.
PORT MORESBY
RAIDED BY
TWO JAP PLANES
Jap Casualties in
Fighting on
New Guinea, Mount
A.LLIED    HEADQUAKTBHS
Auitralia, M«yx14 (Fridiy). (CP)
—Two Japmue plmu bombed
the tort Maitlby W* without
' earning dunafw/yestwdir, ithe
High Command announced. Port
More_by tl the btg' Allied bale
on the South coast of New Guinea.
Allied bomberi struck it Oumati,
on the Southern tip, md Rabaul, on
the Northern tip of New Britain.
Three planes were destroyed on
the ground at the Gasmala airdrome.
In thi ground fighting on New
Gulnlt, tht noon communiqut tnnounced, Allied pttroli hivt killed » Jipineie ilnct Miy 9 neir
Mubo. Thli fighting occurred on
the ipproichei to.Silimiui.
A third aerial itrlke againit New
Britan  wai directed  by  two   big
bomben at the Cap Glouceiter airdrome.        .
The Gasmata raid wu mide by
medium bombers and long-range
fighters who "executed two strong
daylight attacks on the airarome
and waterfront."
Targets bombed Included airplanes in the dispersal areas, antiaircraft positions, camp areas and
barges. Later a big bomber swung
over to bomb and itrafe the airdrome. Gasmata is approximately
325 miles Northeast of Port Moresby.
On New Guinei, a four-engined
Allied bomber atUdked a village
near Madang. Heavy and medium
bombers atUcked Finschhafen on
the Huon Peninsula South of Madang.
In • oontlnuitton of pitrol lotions South of Silimiui, tht Jipineu tried to penertitt Allied poiitioni on Llbtbll Ridge but
"wert fo'rctd to rttlrt to their
orlginil llnu with over «0 cuuiltlu."
"In two irribusti claihes our forward patrols killed 35 of the enemy
and wounded many others" at Ko-
miatum. the communique added.
Two Rabtul airdromes—Lakunia,
Vanakanau,—were itUcked by big
Allied bomberi before dawn,
Pave Way for
Mighty Thrust
"  By EDDY GILMORE
Auoelited Pren Staff Writer
MOSCOW, May 13 (AP)—The Red Army, attacking under a tremendous barrage of hundreds of big guns, has smashed
its way into secondary Cerman defences Northwest o»Movor-
ossisk in the Caucasus, dispatches said today,
A Pravda dispatch reported that hundreds of guns had
paved the way for an infantry and tank wedge in the new
Cerman defence line near Nov-
orossisk after the Red Army
had smashed its way through
the first enemy line.
' The man shelling of the German
positions was on such a scale ai to
presage • final big push aimed at
throwing the enemy into the Black
Sea
The midnight communique said
Rusiian artillery mounted North of
Novorouiik had destroyed 19 German artillery batteries, M machine
gun nesti, two German Unks and
a number of block-houies.
The Red Army also was reported
to have wiped out another German
infantry batUlion of approximately
800 men md antl-aircraftmen dowp-
ed four Nizl planes.
Front dispatches said the Germans
and their fortifications were being
blasted to bits by the Russian guns
eating toward Novorosslsk.
The Qtrmin eomminden cling
Ing to the Ciucuui were uld to
be shifting their ilx-birrelled mor
Ur uniU from ont point to moth
tr In in tffort to glvt the Imprei-
lion of huge concentration! of
irtillery, but tht Ruulini meth-
odlcally lurgtd forwird Into tht
'   gapi chewed up by thllr gunt
Air battlei Increued* ln violence
over the. Novorouiik lector, the
Ruuiam raining down heivy exploilvei on the German dug In on
the hills surrounding the city.
tht Sovltt Air Forci' .wii tril-
IM In theie dlipitchu with ■
VlUl pirt lh Soviet advancei, ind
tht Germani wtn uld to bt In
• dttptr'tte plight btctuit of Inferior ilr power,
German Infantrymen were coun-
ter-atUcklng fitfully, but, these dn-
patchei laid, there' were ligns of i
developing weakneu ln  the  Axli
rinks.
MUTUAL AID
BULK
6IVEN APPROVAL
Diefenbaker, Shaw
Amendments
Are Both Defeated
MOBILE T.B. UNIT
TO TOUR B.C.
VANCOUVtR. May IJ (CP) -A
new 118,000 mobile T- B. unit, purchued by the Britiih Columbia Tuberculosis Society will arrive here
early In the Till ind will be taken
through the Province to examine
war workeri for tuberculoili, It waa
announced at the Society'! annual
meeting.
CAPI TOWN (CP)-Brlg. Oen.
Sir Edward Thornton hai been appointed Director-General of Rehabilitation training to implement
the South African Government'i
promlie to rutort heilth ind use-
fulneu to every man luffering phy-
The  HM2-U prognm, tuthocltedilci.y In tht wir.
Middle East
TalksWindUp
CAIRO, May IJ (AP)-A full-
dress conference of the powerful Allied Middle East Council of miliUry
md civil leaderi wai concluded today w th innouncement thit igreement wu reached "on the ihape ind
liie of the problem! under dlicui-
lion md recommenditlon! for deillng with them."
What thoie problemi are wai not
dlicloied, but they were undentood
to deal with the Middle Eait u a
forthcoming theitre of ictlve wir.
The four-day conference wai it-
tended by R. O. Caiey, Brituh Wir
Cabinet Mlnliter for the Middle
Eut. ilx high Army and Naval Offlciali. three Ambaiudon, and other civil officiaU.
"Thert wti no pirticulir problem thit mtde the conferenct necesury," an offlclil lUtement Hid.
"It io hippened that the conference
colnc.ded with the final defeit of
the Axli In North Africa, but lhat
wai only fortultoui."
Regret Japanese
Not Allowed
lo Attend Meet
VANCOUVER, May IJ (CP) -
British Columbia Conference of the
United Church of Canada, in conference here, t^day expressed "regret" that the British Columbia Security Commission had refused to
allow Japanese evacuees to return
to the Coast to attend the Conference.
Rev. Bryce Wallace, Charman of
the Home Missions Committee disclosed that efforts had been unsuccessful to secure permission for
Japanese memben to come to Vancouver.
Their absence li a losi to the
Conference," he stated, suggesting
that subsequent meeUng be held
In the Interior so that Japanese
members of the Church could attend.
Rev. W. R McWilllams. Missionary among the evacuated Japanese
sad that lack of incentive to work
had produced lack of zest among
second generation Canadian-born
Japanese. He iald that If they
were adequately rewarded for their
labor they could be used to manufacture munitions, cut firewood or
any other required work.
SAYS LACK Of FISH
CLOSED PLANT
VANCOUVER, May IS (CP) -
J. M. Buchanan, General Manager
of B. C. Pickers here said today the
Edmund and Walker Cold Storage
Plant ln New Westminster has been
closed since May 5 because no halibut Is going through the plant. It
wu previously reported the plant
wu closed due to a lockout following i labor controversy.
OTTAWA, May 13 (CP)—Thl
House of Common! in Committee to.
night approved tha $1,000,000,000
Mutual Aid Bill after consideration
of the measure clause by cliuse.
Second reading hu been glvtn thl
meuure md third reading will bt
given at the next sitting.
Angus Maolnnli (OCT Vancouver East) said tonight the $1,000,-
000,000 wu ipoken of •■ i (Ut to
the United Nationi but ht .hid
never heard i gift discussed it
such length.
New Democracy Leader Black-
more said he approved tht billi
principle of mutual lid which might
be/carried on beyohdftt t»»r to
remove the danger ol adverse trade
balance, throughout the world.     —
With a mutual aid lyitem i"«up-
ra-Natlonal" Government poking Id
nose Into the affairs of nationi would
not be needed. No lovereignty
should be yielded to a "Supra-Na- '
tional" gang.
F. D. Shaw (ND. Hed Deer) told
the House that need should be the
only test applied to Cahtdi'i ippor-
tiorwnent of surplus war tuppliu
among the United Nation!.,
Mr. Shaw moved in amendment to itrike out proviiion in the
Act permitting tranifer of goodi
to be made subject ot an exchingt
of goods ot a kind. If the bill
was providing for. a gift then
should be nothing in it thit luggeited exchange ln payment In
kind.
Robert Fair (N.D. Battle River)
seconded the amendment but lt wai
immediately defeated on I call of
ayes'and nays.
J. G. Diefenbaker (Prog. Con.
Lake Centre) said Canada did not
have representation on the combined Fpod Board, and should leek
such a place.
He moved an amendment to the
bill providing that if any trade or
Uriff agreement were entered into
under the Mutual Aid Plan It ihould
be presented to the House for approval within six months.
Mr. Ilslev explained that under
the b 11 section being discussed, piyment might be required for luppliei
provided under the bill.
There was no power under tht
bill to touch the tariffs of Canada,
and therefore a reciprocal trade of
tariff agreement could not be madt,
He had never said this could be
done.
It was a 'misqunUtion" of hi!
language to say he had claimed
Canada could stipulate for trade
agreemenU under the Mutual Aid
Bill.
"I want Parliament to know whit'
the   Government  ls  doing,"   InUr-
iccted Mr. Diefenbaker.
The amendment moved by Mr.
Diefenbaker was defeated on a voice
vote.
;'
B. C. Subscriptions
Reach 100.54
Per Cent of Quota
VANCOUVER, Miy 13 (CP) -
tubicrlptloni 1% the. Fourth Vic-
tory Loin In tht BrlUih Colum-
bit-Yukon Dlvlilon todiy total
led $110,596,700, or 100.M per cent
of IU quota of »l 10,000.-00. Gen
iral public buying today amounted to $2,182,660.
Tht  cimpilgn  cloiu  officlilly
Siturdiy night
COAST CHINESE FINED
FOR RACKETEERING
VANCOUVER. May IJ (CP) -
Seven Chinese vegetable mcrchanU
here paid for black market racketeering to the tune of $617 in finea
and costs today. The fines were imposed by Magistrate G. R. McQueen
in Police Court for selling potatoes
above ceiling price, aft.r chargei
were laid by the Prices Board.
600 Japanese
Ask Exchange
VANCOUVER. May IJ (CP) —
Six hundred Japanese Nationill,
evacuated from the Coist to Tash-
me, BC. have asked to be exchanged for Japanese-held Canad an priionen, Rev. W. R MrWill ami. Missionary among ihe evacuee groupi,
today told the Rritish Columbil
Conference of the United Church
of Cinada.
_______________________________________________________________
 ;
I      . } ..     TA.
r ■
Bf,— NIUON DAILY NIWJ, FRIDAY, MAY 14,  194i|p|attjc Res|n
Building Faces
fernie Goes Over Top
South Interior Needs
$424,100 to Go Over
KOOTENAY-BOUNDARY VICTORY LOAN STANDING.
'    Genera, canvass—
East Kootenay 	
Kelson Unit   -
Trail'Unit  	
Sales Thurs. Total to date
Totala  	
Quota m.
Special names—
Nelson Unit	
Trill Unit 	
|155,500
81,600
«l-50
$264,750
Total
753,060
547,900
874,050
12,175,900
$2,600,000
$ 225,000
8,820,000
$9,04.,000
_uiai -..
I To go over the top ln the Fourth Victory Loan campaign Kootenay-
I Boundary needs $424,100 today and Saturday. It has $2,175,900. Its quota
111 $2,600,000.
Throughout the district a concentrated drive will be made today to
"reach objectives and go over them ln tribute to the 8th Army of the North
'African campaign, for this ls "8th Army Day".
!«A»T KOOTENAY 8URQE8 <
UP IN BIGGEST DAY
CRANBKOOK, B. C, May 13 -
last Kootenay' Victory lean *__b-
ecrlptioni surged, upward Thursday
it omake up the biggest single day's
report of ttie campaign to date, and
with this record the Diitrict set itielf to go over the top in honor ot
tth Army Day.
Tbe  Dlitrict  total  on  Thursday
reached $753,050. Ita quota is $925,000
10 Eut Kootenay needi $171,950 in
the hut two dayi of the drive.
The big* boost todiy came from
Fernie, which topped IU objective
by 25 per eent In one full twoop.
A $100,000 subscription through
thi bank put them well over their
!   $210,000 objective. ,
|   Creston Mier were • stellar note,
too, and brought, the sub-unit up
linkway to the $110,000 quota. Cranbrook tales were sbove average but
'the Sub-Unlt ii still nearly $100,000
■ ghort of ita $210,000 goal.
, Michel-Natal, reporting for tile
first time in several days, is past
the halfway mark toward its quota
;of $75,000 and Windermere is well
over the top.
'•'  Salea today of $10,100 brought the
Kimberley  total to $211,100.   The
quota ii $235,008.
Tee vblt of tlie Royal Canadian'
.Navy Band of Esquimalt Wedneaday
wu a bug eiuccess. First event wu
1 a parade in which the Rocky Moun-
' tain Rangers end Air Cadeta participated. About 1000 personi attended
the band conoert In the school _ud-
, itorium ind a capacity crowd danced to,the'music of the Band'i iwing
.aection it McDougall Hall.
' War Savings Stampi were the ad-
misiion to these eventi and salei
■.amounted to an even $500. They were
LONDON (CP)r-Far-reachlng and
ImporUnt discoveries In plastic relln
hu now made It possible tor war-
injured and civilian raid cuualtiei
who loit ean and noiei to have natural appearances restored without multiple operations.
Testa of faciei features from plastic resin have convinced experts the
material may lead to radical changes ln reconstructive surgery.
One synthetic resin, known **
"Portex", can be made to produce
eilher a very hard "Ivory" or "bone"
a soft, resilient, rubber-like substance or a liquid. It his been used
to build noses, cheeks, ean md to
replace ikln tissues. The substance
has tbe same resilience as healthy
flesh and cannot become Indented
by pressure.
Velocity Drive
Every Day
Job to Penny
Nelson Today Driving lor Victory
Loan Quota Will! Montgomery's
Message lo Troops as Spearpoinl
over $481,000—Juit $74,000 ihort ot
lti objective.'
That is the pioture In Nelson Dls>
trict on the second last day of ttie
Fourth Victory Loan drive. Today
is 8th Army Day, and to go "over
the tog?" in tribute to the glorious
record af the Sth Army ln North Africa—to aound a victory pean in thl
area by Victory Loan oversubscription—is the Objective spt by Loan
Committeei today.
Neleon Unit subscriptions climbed by $81,600 Thursday. New Denver reported $13,000 to send the Slocan soaring over the $42,000 goal.
Nelson recorded $61,200. A series of
subscriptions were made by per-,
sons who subscribed through banks
and whose names therefore remained unknown. Orte such subscription
waa for $25,000.
The official figures a« of noon on
Thursday were:
NELSON UNIT:
Gen. Canvass:     Salea Thur.   Total
Kaslo     $ 3,660 $ 29,150
Nakusp _ 2.200 29,900
Nelson _  61,300 421,050
New Denver  13,000 48,000
Safano _ _  1,550 19,600
Totals    $81,600   $547,900
ild by the Junior Red Cross and
Kimbe-leiy War Finance Coro-
■ ttce.
, Thursday*!   bond   sales   figures
Were:
«A*T KOOTENAY
Oen. Canvass:      Sales Thur.  Totil
ibrook       $ 8,090   $ 121,900
lon        21,000       80,100
le        108,700      259,100
rliy         10,100      211,100
lei-Natal  .._      7,550       40,300
'indennere     100       40,550
Totala  $135,300   $753,080
IpVIR THE TOP WITH
| THE ITH ARMY
| j     llooan li ovir the top by $6000
I In  the  offlclil   count,  md   still
,  climbing. Kulo Is In ruch of lti
$30,000 quota.  Nikusp  Is driving
II upwird ind only $8100 short of
jl Hi goal. Salmo Is due for a booit
II  with  substantial   payroll   uvlngi
! addition! .to be recorded. Nelson
j,   ll   officlilly   credited   with   $421,
! UO but hu idditlonil aubacrlp-
tloni In sight thit wlll bring it
iw
TRAIL 8EEKS $100,000
TO HONOR 8TH ARMY
TRAM-, B. C, May 13 — Today
Triil District Victory Loan subscriptions totalled $8T.4,950. This
wu $100,060 short of the $075,000 at
which this District hu been aiming.
Joining in today's Victory Bond
tribute to the magnificent Sth Army
of the suocesstful North African
campaign. This District i» going
all out to beat iti Objective today.
General Montgomery'i address to
his troopi before the final Tunisian
campaign is thf Inspiration of this
"over the top" drive.
Castlegar, Fruitvale and Greenwood lie already over. The Consolidated Mining Jt Smelting Company employees' canvass- and the
West Kootenay Power & Light Company employees' canvass are both
over.
Trail at noon Thursday had $588,-
900 officially recorded, and needed
$91,100. Rossland had $190,900 and
needed $24,100. Grand Forks had
$52,290 and needed $7,750.
The official figurei follow:
TRAIL UNIT—
Sales   Total
General canvisi:     Thun to date
Castlegar    _.... $    250   $ 21.900
SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,
(OP)—From the ground Penny
Quill's- pline was just a speck ln
the sky. *ien It wasn't a specie at
all but an invisible something that
left a vapor trail, a while atreek like
smoke-writing albove the eirth.
Somebody in the ground group of
officers and newamen, all of thesn
looking skyward, uld Penny wai
"still climbing" and then followed
it with a hoarse "here he comei."
There was a noise as though the
devil himself wu plucking -he
strings of some giant violin and in
no time Penny was within I few
feet of being one of ua on the
ground—but only for split seconds.
Then he was gone again, the noise
of his plane'changed to low-pitched
thunder.
Penny Is a test pilot, one of the
best. He is so good Ihey gave htm
the O.B.E. In the New Year's honor
list, an honor welcomed by every
man who flies In Britain because
he Is one of that group of men who
have power of decision over
whether a plane is fit to fly in com
bat or not. There is no way of call
brating these things but Penny, like
all test pilots, has probabjy saved
the lives of hundreds of airmen, Including Canadians for many Canadians fly planes that he put through
their trial paces himself.
This job we watched wu a "routine" flight to Penny. AU the wey
up he threw It into loops and tolls
and spins, whining higher and
higher until he was ready to tip
over and head downward. Every
day he works Penny comes down
at least once in a velocity dive. They
call it a '9G plus," Uie steepest
fastest possible to see if the wings
will fall off. The Sipit was just a
faling steak of blue, the speed so
fast that it was kept secret, at 70
he levelled out end wu gone.
Officially he Is Geoffrey Quill, 29.
It ls only natural, because of his
Job that they call him "Hell Dive*"
but "Penny," another nickname
suits him better, because there ls
enough "show" ln his job for him
never to have {o do anything showy.
He doesn't go beyond the needs ot
the job, not often anyway.
Once he did. That wu when he
was testing a Spit In 1940 and saw
some fighter boys tadkllng a flock
of M.E.'l and bombers. He joined
in. Penny won't tell you but the
fighter boys, it is reported, eay he
shot down three Germans.
"Over the  top  with  thi  Ith
Army!"     '
Thli li the eall that goei out to
Nelion   Dlitrict  reildenti  today.
Thli li Sth Army Day. Thl Fourth
Vlotory Loan hu two diys to go.
Nelson,   officially   credited   with
$421,250, hu lufficient additional
•ubKrlptloni In light to bring It
within $77,000 ef lti quota.
To achieve that quota today, end
go well over the quota on the final
day of the drive, Saturday, ls the
Immediate objective ot the NeUon
Victory Loan Comlttee.
"You have never failed yet," the
Committee declares ln a Victory
Loan advertisement ln this Issue,
directed to residents. "We dare not
fall down at this, critical time ....
"Bring our boys and girls home
victorious."
General Montgomery's message to
the Sth Army ai it launched Its final
victorious drive ll the theme of the
Victory Loan campaign today.
In that order General Montgomery iald In part:
"I . . . told you that If each one
of us did his duty and pulled his full
weight then nothing could stop us.
And nothing has stopped us.
"Yoa have given our families at
home and In fact thl whole world
good news md plenty of It every
day.>
"I want now to express to you,
my aoldieri, whitever may be your
rank or employment, my grateful
thanks for the way In which you responded to my calls and my admiration for your wonderful fighting
qualitiei.
"I doubt if our Empire hai ever
possessed such a magnificent machine as the Bth Army; you made
Its name a household word all over
the world.
"I thank each one of you for
what you have dom.
"I am very proud of my Sth Army.
"On your behalf I Bent a message
of appreciation to the Western Desert Air Force. The brave and brilliant work of the squadrons and the
devotion to duty of all piloti made
our victories possible ln such a short
time.
"We are all one entity—the Bth
Army and the Western Desert Air
Force—together constituting one
magnificent fighting machine.
"And now let us get on with the
third Usk. . . .
The triumphant cry now li: Forward to Tunis!
"Drive the enemy into the sea."
Errand of Mercy
Nearly Tragic
MALTA, (OP.) — An errand of
mercy by two Canadian Spitfire
pilots almoit ended in disaster for
them. The pair. Sgt. Piloti Douglas
Love of Winnipeg and 8. W. Tapley
of Hamilton Ont., had the Job of
guiding and escorting • flying boit
to a point In the sea near Sfax
where two R.A.F. pun were floating ln dinghies and ln Imminent
danger of being taken priioner by
the enemy.
The rescue was carried out successfully, btlt the catch wu thit
when they set out with flying boat
the fighter ladi knew that the
round trip represented the extreme
range of their machines. "When we
got back to Malta," recalled Love, a
noted hockey player who starred ln
England in 1939-40, "our fuel guagei
registered 'empty' and if we had
made one more circuit of the 'drome
we'd have crashed for sure."
' Women's Spring Shoes
$2.99
$2.99
WHITE AND TAN SPECTATORS.
Black heels and Cuban heals. Sizes 4 to 8
WHITE ANb BLUE SPECTATORS.
Cuban heels.  Sizes 4 to 8	
II Candidates for Air Force
Interviewed by Recruiting Party
Fruitvale	
Grand Forki
Greenwood   ..
Rossland  	
Trail 	
2.200
8,150
8,430
36,600
26,100
012,250
24,900
150,900
598,900
Eighteen cand dates for the Royal j
Canadian Air Force were Interviewed Thursday by officers of the Mobile Unit from No. 2 Recruiting
Centre at Calgary, IS of them men
and six young women. Of the men
applying, five were accepted.
Flying Officer Archie Muir, heading the Recruiting Party, stated it
had come to the Kootenays at this
time with the object particularly of
contacting youths who will graduate
from High School at the end of
June. They can be enlisted now,
and be given leave until July in
order to complete their education.
He emphasised the need of young
men for air crew in order to increase the United Nations', strength
in the air as the war drives toward
more conclusive stages. Young men
enlisting now can be placed in July
quotas, and enter training immediately on finishing school.
LABORATORY A88ISTANT8
80UQHT
Flying Officer Muir and Section
Officer Rhoda Keir, representing
the Women's Division, each had a
new opening for trained personnel
—laboratory assistants, men or women. They must have not less than
two years' experience in a pathological or bacteriological laboratory.
Section Officer Kelr stated there
was a greater demand for women to
serve as operation room clerks. To
qualify candidatei must have senior
matriculation and must be of high
character and integrity, since the
work Is of a secret nature. They
must be Intelligent, alert and accurate, must not be highly strung nor
SORE FEET
THIS WAY
■ Rub In Mimnl's liniment generously,
' and ful the relief it__al over the aching
I nuueta ind joints. For ell muscle ana
' joint paini, schri and it iff ness, iprained
! ankles, twisted limbs—Minard'a hu
I been famous for over 60 years. Good
I for dandruff and skio disorders, too.
[ Oet a bottle todiy; keep It
kandy.
Totals  S47,o*50   J874.990
Internil Cinvaiiet—
CM. le S. employed:
Trail    	
Rossland  — - —
Castlegar  	
Fruitvale     —
G.and Forks  _._	
Total _ _.
Quota   	
W. K. P. It L, employees:
Trail   District    J12.09O
Othtr District     13.850
®
ARD'S
INIMENT
Total   .
Quota
..♦25,900
$211,000
nervous, must have good hearing
and must have no impediments in
their speech.
New trades for women are aircraft helper, aircraft recognition Instructor and hairdresser.
THE PARTY
The party consists of Flying Officer Muir, Flight Lieutenant A. S.
Underhill, Senior Medical Officer
at the Calgary recruiting station,
Section Officer Kelr, Flight Sergeint
William Burgman, Corporal A. E.
Markvand Corporal Victor Reid. Flying Officer W. J. Hoover, formerly
with the Mobile Unit as cluslficalon
officer, has been posted to Toronto.
Also in Nelson are Flight Lieutenant A. M. Davidson and Sergeant
Betty Loggin, who are speaking to
High School graduating classes,
clubs and so on from the Crow
through ihe -Kootenays regarding air
crew and the Womens' Division.
They are showing three films,
"Ferry Pilot", depicting the work
of ferrying planes; "That Men May
Fly", showing work of the Women's
Division; and "Fighter Pilot", ln
which fighters are shown ln combat.
The recruiting party will be In
Nelson till Sunday evening, and
next week will be in Trail.
Flight Lieutenant Davidson and
Sergeant Loggin, who were at the
Nelson High School Thursday, go to
Trail and Rossland today. They wlll
be In Fernie Tuesday and Michel
Wednesday.
The films were shown at the High
School Thursday and to an audience
at the Canadian Legion Thursday
night. Members of the Canadian Women's Training Corps at Nelson saw
them during their parade.
Junior Bowlers
Wind Up Year
al Gay Banquet
Nelson Junior Ladles Bowling
Club Thursday evening wtott finis
to a successful 1942-43 seuon at i
gay banquet. Twenty-four, repre-
sentlhg the four teams and officials of the Club, sat down'to the
banquet tables ln the First Presbyterian O-urch parlors.
Presentation of gifts to cowrhes
and score™ by President Agnes Stewart was a highlight. Gifts were received by Coaches Ohum Arcure,
Gene Nadeau and Jack Harmon;
and by Scorer Robert Fleming,
Repreientativei of the tour squad-
Rookies, Savoys, Queens and U.I.C.
Pinbnsters, who attended were Helen Duclos, M. McLeod, B. McLeod,
Betty Hickey, P. Thompson, Verna
Hickey, Agnes Stewart, Fran Norris, Rosa Stewart, Nat Comislon, F.
McMullen, B. Moore, J. SP"". Con-
nip Hamson, M- Bailea, M. White-
look, Ruby Jarbeau, Ola Paterson,
J. Andereon, V. Lam, and Jean
Hammer.
Biege Pumps
BIECE HIGH HEEL PUMPS.
Sizes 4 to 8	
$3.45
MOTHERS
New Shipment of Children's Footwear
Jha Sooisuu^
411 Baker Street
Formation oi Sea Cadet Corps Here
Enthusiastically Received by Citizens
NATAL
Kaslo Red Cross
Reports
Are Enthusiastic
KASLO, B. C.-The ittay meeting
of the Ka-lo Red C-0.B Society
WB0 held m ttie Red Oross rooms
Monday afternoon. In Ule absence
ot __ Secretary, Mrs. W. Hendron, Mrs. Guy Browell read the
minutes. The Trea_t_r*r, Mrs. Ray
Fahrni, jn the frruvncle! re-poct, said
$828.05 had been sent to headqU-t-
te-T1, being llhe Bum totai <_ the
Kaslo and District annuel drive.
The sum of $21.06 wai in the Expense Fund.
The Shutty Bench ladies tent ta
$23, proceeds og a tea.
A letter from the Provincial President, E. W. Hamber, was read
in whloh he expressed his appreciation end tbonks for the fine re-
6ponre at the Koslo people In the
recent drive. Mre1. J. N. Murphy,
K__slo President, also thanked lill
those who had worked to make tfr_e
drive such a success.
Jam making to. overseas, ior
1843, was freely discussed end a
ccjrmlttce we__ named to meet a
commttteo of. W. I. memben to arrange ifor sugar, _»», etc., which
LEOPARDS OFF TO
SLOCAN PARK
FOR SUNDAY CAME
Leopards, Nelson'i travelling softbaU outfit, Sunday will journey to
Slocan Park to do battle with the
Tamaracks. Practice has been called
for Saturday night to line up the
squad for the trip,
MACO, HANSON
WHIST WINNERS
Scoring — points, Steve Maco and
Victor Hanson Thursday night
claimed first prizes at the Eagles
partner whist, Second prizes were
won by Mrs, G. M. DeGirolamo and
Miss Ida Levine. while consolation
awards went to Mr. and Mrs. O.
Aurelio. Mr. Maco, Eagles President, donated his award lor contest
prizes.
Harry Talbot and Peter Santor
were In charge, Dancing followed.
CAPETOWN (CP)—In Port Eliza
beth District i major step ln the
emancipation of natives is being
tried. .At i New Brighton native
village the post of Medical Officer
has been filled by the appointmen! | ^""11 be needed. Mrs. L. Lockard,
Mrs. G. GUbion, Mrs. J   ** '
WOMAN DOCTOR
TESTS DEATH
LONTJOr (CP.-Mentillty lingers on even in approaching death.
That is the conclusion of Dr. Helen
Barnes of London who, to test • I parents
theory, took arrow poison, the stuff
used by South American Indians
which paralyzes the nerve endings
and often brings death from stoppage of breathing due to failure of
the respiratory mu-cles.
"My sensations were dramatic,"
she wrote In the Lancet, publication of the British Medicil Association. "At once my vision became
blurred and almost blacked out.
Then came double vision which persisted for two hours. Then came
dropping of the upper eyelids, a
sign of paralysis of a nerve.
"It was accompanied by extreme
prostration, fatigue, a sense of Impending death and a sensation of
constriction In the throit. Mentality  appeared  normal  throughout."
NATAL, B-C.—A farewell party'
was held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. S. Letasy of Michel In honor
of Miss Cecelia Letasy who left during the weekend for Calgary. The
guest of honor was the recipient ot
mony beautiful gifts.
A surprise birthday party was
held at Natal on May 9 ln honor
of Ml-s Clara Chala who celebrated
her 12th bthday. Games md dancing were enjoyed by about 20 guests.
The gueit of honor was the recipient
of many beautiful presents.
William Fowler of the RCAF..
!_ a Michel visitor at the home of
his parents.
Pte. Kenneth Galli who has been'
In training at the Coast Is Ipending his furlough at Michel at the
home of his parents.
Gnr. Oscar Volpattl who Is In
training at Esquimalt Ig home at
Michel.
Joe Katrichak, RCAF. Edmonton, was a Michel visitor at the home
of his parenti.
Frank Kozler from Red Deer
wai a visitor it his home.
Andrew Salva, after spending a
short leave visiting his parents, has
left for the East.
Corp. George Olev returned to
his unit at Debert. NS., af'er spending his furlough visiting his par-
en's.
Hearty endorsement of the formation of a Royal Canadian Sea Cadet Corpi ll Nelson wai voiced by
prominent businessmen and citizens of Nelson at a public meeting
at tht City Hall Thursday night.
Lieutenant Convminder C. 8.
Glassco, R.C.N.V.R., Commanding
Officer.' H.M.C.S. Discovery, Vancouver, the Area Commanding Officer; J. R. K. Millen, Assistant-
Coordinator for See Cadets for Naval Service; L:eut. G L. Hooper,
R.C.N.V.R., Liaison Officer, H. M.
C. S. Discovery, and Russel E. Potter of the Navy League of Canadi,
Commanding Officer of the New
Westminster Sea Cadet Corps Eraser, and former City Engineer st
Nelson, were in attendance it the
meeting and by their explanations
drew a clear pic,ure of the requirements, the opera! Iqn and the id-
vantagei of i Sea Cadet Corpi In
Nelson.
"Nelson hai everything In the
world to offer a Cadet Corps; I can't
visualize where a corps has so much
at 1.3 door" said Mr. Millen when
he described the requirementi. "1
spoke to the boyi this af'.ernoon It
school, and they are fine ladi—I
don't say that everywhere 1 go
e ther," he commeijted. 'They are
true of eye, sparkling with energy,
and seem so Interested In becoming
Sea Cadeti.
"A Sea Cadet Corps ll i peat
contribution to the commun ty, lt
is entirely a youth movement We
don't ;et them up In evtry community, but where we do build
we build truly and well.
NO PAN8IE8
"It Isn't • pansy affair, it Is I
virile, vigorous, clean and well-
run organization and It bringi out
the belt in boys," he slid.
Mr. MlUen explained that the cost
of uniforms for boys was cut from
$15 each to $750 and the cost ot
puling about 130 boys in uniformi
would be $790 io be paid in three
Pte. Joe G.rgel from Vincouver  equal payments over s period of
was a visitor at the home of his
of a native doctor with I salary of
£360 a year, plus free housing.
Guide for Travellers
VANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS
I       "YOUR VANCOUVER HOMS"
Dufferin Hotel
Soymour 8t
Vancouver, 8. C,
Ntwly renovated throughout  Phonei  and   elevator.
A.   PATTERSON,   late   of
Colemin. Alta, Proprietor
Peterson
and Mrs. L. Besecker .were cums-d.
The  monthly   Red   Oroas   whist
wfll be held «e__ln the ttord week
in May.
Canadian Airman
Find Enemy
Field Easy Target
TRANSPORTATION—Motor  Freight   Linei
FREIGHT TRUCKS
LEAVE NELSON DAILY
At 10:30 t.m.—Except Sundiy
Trail Livery Ca.
M. H  MclVOR. Prop.
Trail—Phone 135      Nelion—Phone 35
WITH THE R.A.F. IW NORTH
AFRICA (CP)-Bomblng li made
easy and even the gunners get e
lick In when ihe enemy Is obliging
enough to leave his ilrdrome flare
pith alight and his beacon.? on.
Thai's what happened when R.A.F.
Wefllngtons recently ittacked limns in Sicily.
"When we got there the place was
well alight from fires started in
the hangars", Po. Al Webb of Windsor, Ont., said. "In addition there
we-e still wlnrd flarei which mide
the place as bright il day."
A crew-mate is Sgl. T. McQuitty
of Toronto and other Canaditn. on
the same station are Fit. Lt. O. H.
Morgan, D.F.C, Kimloops, B.C.,
Fo. Ken Martin, Cilgary. Po. D
Hill. St. Catharines, Onl, Fit. Sgt.
B Shaver, Ottawa, Sgts. J. Ward
Woodstock. Oni, Frank Patterson,
Montreil. D K. Semans, Rollo, Sask.
T. H. McOlade, Smith Falls, Ont,'
L. W Matthewi. Cilgary.. W. f
Harris. Vancouver, and Fo. R. M
Malcolm, Winnipeg.
Excitement
in Malta Assignment
VALCTTE, Malta (CP) - "Stooge
trips", the sbrt of foolproof and perfunctory assignments which in
some other theatres of war are given to "sprog"—green pilots, are the
exception rather than the rule in
Malta.
There ls, for example, the case
of Po, Allan Hunter of Britannia
Heights, Ottawa. On his first trip
after arriving here he [ound himself ln the middle of a hot dogfigbt
over the Bay of Himamat. He and
another R.C.A.F. Spitfire pll.t, since
reported miising, attacked eight of
the formidable JU88's which were
escorting a convoy and succeeded in
damaging one of them. Junter came
here from Britain where he served
with two Spitfire squadrons, one an
R.C.A.F. unit.
Another Canadian on fighter
"ops' here who formerly flew with
an R.C.A.F, tquadron In Englind
li Po. Lloyd Stewary-ol Fairy Hill,
Sask., a seasoned veteran with 160
hours of operations. He his been
on numerous sweeps and strafing
operations since his arrival here
last December.
FIRE STARTS UNDER
WALTON BOAT
BUILDINQ PLANT
Ai_parently due to ■ discarded
cigarette filling on ihayings and
jiwdiut, • lire itarted under the
boit building plint of C. W. Walton le Son on the witerfront Thuri-
dsy evening. It was extinguished
with no damage to the plant.
Leo Des.reau, pasilng under the
shed on h's way to the boithouii
float, siw th. fire and called the
Fire  Department
Aussie Pilot Wins
Crew's Praise
on Difficult Fliaht
WITH THE R, C. A. F„ Overseas
(CP)—They speak highly of Fit.
Lt. Keith Thiele, D.F.C, of Chrisi-
church N.Z., captain of i Lancaster
crew In an Australian squadron
which includes a Cimdiin gunner.
Sgt. Wally Copeland of Petrelu.
Ont. And rightly io.
Fifteen minutei after take-off on
a raid to Nuremberg, in engine
caught fire. Thiele, now on hli second tour of operitions, feathered tne
engine snd succeeded ln extinguishing the fire Instead of return ng
to base, he Jettisoned part of the
bomb-load but kept a 4000-pounder
and some incendiaries so the 30-torV
giant would fly properly on three
eng;nes. and carried on.
Not only did they reach the target
and bomb 11 wilh the "cookie" and
fire-bombs, but they carrte bick
with a negative in their centre wh'Cti
showed they had successfully bombed the target area
To Thiele and his crew. It wu the
natural thing to do—to go on ind
bomb the target after taking stock
of thl situation. Copelind admitted
he wti "scared ill right," but then
"I'd go anywhere with Ihe sklppir,
and so would the others."
Frank Lvne who received his 1
wings at Calgsry recently Is spend- j
Ing his leave at the home of n s i
parents, Mr. and Mrs, J. Lyne.
The I.MB.F. of Natal sponsored
a successful dance In the Koo'enay
Hall recently. The proceeds of the
dance went towards 'he i;r1 of the
CreckoSlovikli soldiers fighting in
Russia.
Roy Eckersley returned to hi'
home it Fernie after spending i
week's holiday it Natal.
L-ilie Smith returned to his home
in New Wes'nvnster. B.C, after visiting at 'he home nt Mrs M Owl"
His w fe and son. Robert, remained
at Natil for a longer vis".
Miss Marie Jenkins and Mis* Helen Katrichak of Natal were v'sttnrs
to Lethbridge.
Rubv Thomson, R.CN. was s Michel visitor at the home of his parents.
George Fisher, Jr., returned to
his position it the Cout after visiting his parents.
Pte. Harold Galla who li In training at Calgary was a Michel visitor
at the home of his father.
Pte. Cecil Sweet who i In 'rain-
Ing at the Coast is a Natal visitor
WATIR  LIVIL
Passing the five-foot mark on
Its continued declfne, tht leke wss
down Thursday evening to I level
of. 4.94 feet above the lov witer
mark zero, a drop (or fhe 14 hours
of .Ifl toot The totil decline In 19
diys his been 2.14 feet since the
early seison peak of 7.06 fill on
Mirch 24.
CIRL PROVOSTS
MAY BE GENTLE   .
VANCOUVER (OP) - Provosts
aren't tough, says L Cpl. Florence
Stein, Cmidim Women's Army
Corps, who Is 8 feet. 2 Inches, and
24 yein of age. "We've ill got
heard of gold lnd love little children."
One of five women provosts to
keep Vancouver's 1000 "CWACS" on
the straight ind narrow, L. CpJ
Stein claims provosts are like policemen and are Ju't around to help
the girli.
From Northern Saskatchewan she
has been in the Corps only three
months and has not yet taken the
special one-month provost'' tnining course at Calgary. Students art-
given instruction in "judo"—a form
of Jui-Jltsu. Tlyy also leirn how to
hindle . revolver. Except in emergency, however, provosts go un-
irmed.
The )udo courie teiches glrla ap«.
clil "come ilong" holds. While hy-
stendera may think provoit ind
prisoner ire merely tiklng • pleas-
•nt stroll arm In arm, ictuilly the
unhappy prisoner his hot palna in
her irm and Is extremely uncomfortable.
Kvintuilly British Columbia's
Provoit Corps will be expanded to
30 membera and special birracki
built for the glrli.
three years. Officeri would be uni
formed it the expense of the Nivy
League, and their uniforms would
remain the property of the Navy
League, •
"The equipment comes from H.
M. C. S. Discovery, and Incluaes
rifles, ropes, signalling lamps, flags,
ammunition and so on," Mr. Millen
said, "and you have here fine mater al for officers, doctors, you hsve
the space the favorable surroundings, and the cooperation of the
schools and the Mayoi-—oyu have
everything in your lap", he iald.
Collaborit.ng bn the remarks
made by Mr. Millen. Lieut.-Commander Glassco said that the Navy
League was prepared to back up a
new corps with actual assistance.
''Enthusiasm for the Sea CadeU has
grown rap diy during the pa.*t three
months, and concessions have been
made to the cadets" he said. Their
uniformi were reduced in price, and
we now have a Summer camp at
Commox, Vancouver Island, staffed
by Instructors, doctors and cooks,
all from the naval services. Transportation is pa d, and besides hav.
Ing a good holiday the boys take on
further  'raining
"All corps are run strictly on R.
C. N. V. R. lines, and ire based on
naval serv ce sys em Such procedure li ■ great advantage to boys
who become old enough for active
service."
NO COMPULSION
Lieut-Commander Glassco empna.
s'red the fact that no sea cadet was
obliged lo Join the navy "This ls not
a recruiting mission", he laid "We
only hope lhat by their training the
cadets will learn to love the sea
and perhaps, if the war is still on
when they come of ase that 'Oey
will go ir.tn act ve service But if
a sea cadit wan', to Join the army,
air force or navy, he is absolutely
free to do io, and his training .n
'he Sea Cadet' will be an advanlaRc
to him no matter what aervice he
C. Stibbi, Chairman it the meet-
.ng, spoke briefly.
"These boyi come Into the corpi
as rough-and-tumble ichool kids,
they wear lhe King's uniform and
in an amazingly short tlmethey display remarkable qualities and they
are all is keen as mustard to be
sailon," he said.
'The eges range from 14 to 11.
years, and height should be five feet,
three inches or belter. They learn
seamanship, boat handling, knoti
and iplices, gunnery, first aid, iwimming, drill and many olher things.
Boys haven't had • break like thli
before, and the Sea Cadets are iecond to none as boys' servicei."
Mr. Potter also expressed his
kein appreciation of returning to
Nelson and finding it "such a bright
and shiny city."
After adjournment, a temporary
committee and chairman were set
up to outline plans for establishment of I corpi here.
Mayor N. C. Stibbi wai appointed Chairman and B. Crawford, ai-
sistant Cadet Instructor at Nelson
Junior H gh School, was named Secretary.
K C. McCannell, A, L.' Creech, J.
B. Stark, A. H. Allan, E. C. Wragge,
E. P. Dawson, C. B. Garland, D. U.
Chamberlain, Aid. Ross Fleming,
and H. A. D. Greenwood were ip-
ponted by the Mayor as temporary
Committee Memben.
The discussion Included queitlons
on men, officers, boats, games, •
bugle band, etc., ind I rough budget
war outlined.
A meeting Is scheduled for next
Wednesday night it the City Haa
Book Comments
on Social Setup
By Thi Cinidlin Prm
In what he terms "a reconna..
sance survey of a very large prob
lem," Harry M. Cassidy, Ph.D., Pro
fessor of Social Welfare, Unlverslt;
of Californi, outlines a proposa
fbr "Social S-curKy and Reconstruc
struction ln Canada" (Ryerson). Hii
book Is interesting read ng for stu
dents of pres_nt-day and post-wai
economic problems.
Prof Cassidy says "Canada's services are backward and weak lr
many respects" by contresi with
many other soc al security systems, and th.t bu'lding in adequati
lystem "will b? ev n mo:e dlff cull
In Canada than In many other countries."
Do&t the tM!
BLACK FLIES.MOSQUITOES
-   t   Potler, given his old place
at '.he Coune 1 table by Mayor N.
11111111111111111111 r 11111! 11 .iMii
GREENHILL
WASHED FURNACE COAL
PHONE 889
TOWLER FUEL
& TRANSFER
Mllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
BILTMORE
HATS
For SPRING . . .
Crescent    $2.00
Hartley HaP ?3.05
Master    $4.50
GODFREYS' Ltd.
Phont 270      387 Baker St.
Thl Home of Quirintiid
Work Clothing
 ■,
Seething Revolts
in Low Countries
LONDON, May 1S (CP).-Reporti from the oontinent today
laid revolt wti riglng In occupied Holland ind hid iprtad "like
wildfire" torou tht bordtr Into
Belgium whtrt there wti t ttrltt
ef atticki en Qirmin troepi, mlllttry eitabliihmenti ind communication!.
Reverberatloni of the Allied victory In Africa were said to be shaking the whole of Hitler'i Europe.
Account! of sabotage, armed
clashes and general resistance poured in from Poland, Norway, Yugoilavia and Greece, but Hollanders
and Belgians appeared to be giving
Nail occupation forcei the greatest
trouble.
There were indications in reporta
reaching here that the Germani
were .sending additional troop! into
the low countriei, but It was not
clear whether this was In anticipation of an Allied invasion or to suppress rebellion.
Belgian patriots were reported to
have stormed a military garage in
Ghent, killing 14 guards and demolishing 11 trucks with hand grenades. Others derailed and wrecked
three traini on the Malines—Lou-
vain and Namur-Huy lines, local
lources said. One train was said to
WOMEN PAY BIG
PRICE FOR POOR
"BLOOD MAKE UP"
Ton women who te.1 and took "wtiht.
•flt"-llmp aod droop.-mir -t paTioi tha
pr iea of namot lobln ihortaf a ln tha blood.
Tha demandi of monthly "periodi" pregnancy, ate. all con-pin, to bring about thla
■hortara of tha vital red coloring matter In
tha rod blood celli. Tir Dr. Wlllltmi Pink
PUU.
Thar help increaie hemoglobin where
there ta a ihortage of It dm to Iron defl*
lienor and help ttti.ee iwiy that "leaden"
feeling of tiredneii 10 often in. ta thla
oondition. Start yonr eoorae of Dr. WlllUm-
Pink I'lUa todiy. All rou dniggiit.
tlun Prisoners
Make Up Bulk
BRITISH 1ST ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Tunisia, Mty 11
(AP)— Lt.-Gen. Kenneth Anderion, Comminder of thi vlctorloui
Brltlth lit Army wti aiked tt t
Prtn conference todty whtt wlll
bt done .with thl prlioneri ttken
i by hit trmy.        • ■
"Perhapi thiy wlll bl ient to
Dirndl."
"At luit two-thirdi ire Oermini, which li gratifying."
have carried troopi entering Belgium, many of whom were killed.
The other two trajm carried munltloni, It was reported.
A ilmilar report came from Wariaw, where i locomotive wu laid
to have been badly dtmaged Juat ai
It entered a itation. A German rail
way Inipector killed the Pollih engineer and fireman on the ipot, the
report itid, whereupon Poll.h workmen beat the inipector and two
other Germana to death with crowbars Haitlly-summoned Nail troopi
were declared to have killed five
Polei.
The Italian! were iald to have
established an 8 p.m. curfew along
the Mediterranean coast of France.
The Netherlands Government In
London urged Holland's 400,000 ex-
servicemen to defy German orders
to register for reinternment.
The broadcast represented an unprecedented action on the part ef
the Government In London, which
thua—by implication, at any rate—
advocated for the first time a policy of outright physical resistance In
the homeland.
German authorities who had directed the reinternment of all former members of the. Netherlands'
armed forces for the apparent purpose of preventing them from cooperating ln a possible -Allied invasion, had iet today aa the deadline
for registration.
The - broadcait came ai Axis
sources disclosed that five more
Netherlands' citizens had been ex
ecuted in the town of Eindhoven
under a recent proclamation of martial law in the Netherlands, bringing the total put to death since May
1 to 43.
Hame Ships Sunk
OH Guadalcanal
WASHINGTON, May IS (AP). -
The United Statei Navy today identified the three Allied ships iunk
by Jipaneie planei off Guadalcanal
Island In the Solomoni April 17 as
the American destroyer Aaron
Ward, the American tanker Kanawha and the New Zealand corvette
Moa.
The Identification! were made in
a communique which also reported
a resumption of air attacks against
enemy position! of Klika Iiland in
the Aleutians, three new raids
against Japanese bases in the Sol
omon Iilandi, and a bombardment
by American light warships of the
enemy positions at Vila and Munda
it the Solomons.
Resumption of air action In the
Aleutian! ended a four-day period
of inactivity described here as re
suiting from bad weather.
'—•■■.*'■-. «  . ■•-.-■.-.-
Smashing Raid on
Duisberg
Heaviest of War
LONDON, May IS (CP).—R. A.{bombed 58 tlmea before. Among lta
F. bamberi delivered their hetvl- important Induitrlei ll the Verein-
eit attack of the war on Germany Igte Stlhlwerke munltloni pltnt,
lait night, dropping more than which wai reported heavily hit in
sum .... „i hnmhi on tha bat-1 successive raida on April 8 and 9.
Day of Prayer for
African Victory
LONDON, May IS (CP) - The
Government has called for a day ol
prayer next Sunday In thanksgiving for the Allied victory in North
Africa.
V_<-
On Sal* Todty, Saturday and Monday—Phonei 193-194
KOFY SUB, Dr. )ackion'i, Catton ....: 35f
PRUNES, Lirge Site 30-40*1, 2 lbi 20<
SOUP MIX, Habitant, 2 pkgi     23*
STONI WWAT THINS, per pkg 14«.
QUAKER OATS, With Tumbler, Larga catton 28<
FIGS, Choice Whlta, por lb 29f
TU, Fort York, I Ib. carton tittc
OXO FLUID, For Cravi-t and Stawi, 11 oz. bottle 7«c
LOBSTER, Soaltct Brand, Vi't, Hn "...(_<■
FLOUR, Elliion'i Vitamin B, 49-lb. tack fl.45
SODA BISCUITS, Larga Boxes, each 38*
CRAPE NUTS FLAKES, 2 pkgi .!><•
FLOOR WAX, Old Engliih, 2 Ib. tint, each Sf> <•
FACE'S LINOLEUM SOAP, 1 Ib. carton 25*
(For Linoleum, Tile, Paint, Woodwork, Rugs,
Clothes arid Hands)
FRUIJS AND VEGETABLES
ORANCES, Swoet and Juicy 288't. Dozen  *M\c
CRAPEFRUIT, Florida, 3 for  29*
NEW CARROTS, 2 bunchei 25*
HMHMIIMIMIWa
ARE YOU
Planning to Move?
DO YOU
Need More Fuel ?
It his ilwiyi been our pol
cy to give the best
possible lervice
at
all
times  .
. .  However, with
changing personnel
difficult
transportation prob-
lems, tte. . . .
Wt would
app
rae
ate your
placing your orders
well In tdvinct
ot
the time that you will require
our servicei . .
PHONE 33
WEST TRANSFER Co
SS Troops Break
Up Berlin Riol
LONDON, May IS (CF).—A Reuten dispatch from Stockholm tonight, laid a riot broke out yesterday in Berlin before the German
A_rrr_y's information office when
thousands of women and elderly
men gathered to obtain information
about their felatives in the Africa
Corpi.
It iald that the people were
brusquely dismissed when they
made their Inquiriei at the Information office and were told they
would be given the necessary information at a more opportune moment.
Whereupon, it reported, the crowd
began rioting and SS Troops (Elite
Guards) had to be called. It said
the riot was broken up without the
use of their arms by the troopers.
The newspaper, the Reuters account said stated similar riots were
reported from other parts of Germany.
1600 torn of bombi on tht bit
tared Induitrlil centro of Duliburg, It wti announced todty.
Thirty-four bomberi were reported lost In \he raid—the flrit great
night attack on the Reich ilnce the
imashing assault on Dortmund.
The Canadian Bomber Group was
"well repreiented" in the attack by
Hallfaxes and Wellington!. Two of
the Canadian squadrom were led
by Wing Cmdr. M. Fleming, D.F.C.,
of Ottawa and Wing Cmdr. L,
Crookes, D.F.C., of Durham, England.
■Nine Canadian bombers Were
missing from the attack, authorities
said.
Allied raiden followed up thli
amult by itreamlng acron the
Engliih Chmnel thli morning In
bright iunllg.it to imuh at the
coait of Occupied Fnnce. Tha
rumble of heavy explosions rolled
acron the Channel, and later
twin-engined bomben ctme wing
Ing home under a iwarmlng eicort of flghteri.
Duisburg, situated at the junction
of the Rhine and Rurh, is a vital
transport and communications centre in addition to being the site of
important war Industries. It was
last bombed the night of April. 26.
The communique did not specify
the exact weight of bombs dropped
on Duisburg, but characterized the
raid unequivocally as "the heaviest
attack of the war."
The greatest weight of bombs previously loosed on a single target
was 1500 tons—a record that was get
in the great 1000-plane raid on Cologne nearly a year ago and probably was equalled in the May 4 raid
on Dortmund.
The largest concentration of four-
engined bombers ever sent out on a
war mission participated in the latter assault. Thirty bomberi failed
to return from that foray.
Duisburg, which is only 12 miles
West of oft-bombed Essen, had been
successive raida on April I
LONDON, May IS (OP).-Medium
bomberi raided railway ytrdi it
Boulogne ln Frtnct today while
Ri A. F. Spltflrei made widespread
daylight sweeps over Northern
France In which they ihot down ilx
Nazi Focke-WulMM flghteri, the
Air Miniitry Newi Service announced.
A Norwegian iquidron which has
been top icorer in .the R. A. F.
Fighter Command ilnce March 1
bagged two of the German tighten,
bringing its total in nine weeki to
21 planei deitroyed.
Canadian fighter piloti iweeplng
the Abbeville-Stomer area of Occupied France ran acron 20 German
tighten and shot down four damaging a number of othen. '
By  FOSTER  BARCLAY
Canadian Preu SUff Writer
LONDON, May 13 (CP Cihle).-
Milcolm Macdonald, Brltlth
High Commiuioner to Ctnadt, it-
tended the briefing of crewi of
Wing Cmdr. L. Crook'i Wellington iquidron laat night before tha
bomberi flew off toward thl
"Happy Villey" of the Ruhr where
• violent attack wai mide en tne
Induitrlil centro of Duliburg.
After returning home tht enthuil-
astic Canadian airmen told the uiual stories of huge explosions spreading fires throughout the battered
city.
"One granddaddy of an explosion
started with a tremendous white
flash and it lasted long enough for
me to look up from the controls and
see it die away," said Po. C. E. Macintosh of Winnipeg.
"There were lots of really neat
fires but one of them toppeoevery-
thing I have ever seen," said Sgt.
Leslie Burnett, an alrgunner of
Winnipeg. "It started with an explosion that shot flamei 2000 feet high.
When it died down thick black
smoke rose about 6*000 feet."
Election Depends
on Soldiers
Voting Soys Nixon
TORONTO, May, 18 (CP)—H__ny
C. Nixon, leader of'the Ontario Libera! V—ty. said todsy that at far
at he it concerned a Provlncitl election tn June depends on whether
timing—itnta for taking the soldier
vote we completed and whether the
Ctntdian Army overaeee it in action at that time.
Mr. Nixon declined comment on a
donferenca he Is reported to have
had yeeterday with Premier Conant The conference, It fs said, -tr—
amnged by a "mutual friend" and
the Premier is repofted to have told
Mr. Nixon tt_at tie will resign next
Monday cr *rue_-dty. TV resignation would pave the way tot Mr.
Nixon to become Premier.
Hick Yadernuk, Cranbrook Takes the
LeapWith Soldiers of the Sky
Mussolini Demands
More Planes
From Der Feuhrer
STOCKHOl-M. May 18 ("API -
Anti-Nail German circlei reported
to the Goteborg newipaper Han-
deli Tidnlng todiy that Primer
Munollnl had sent a peremptory demmd to Adolf H:tler fj>r anti-aircraft artillery ind planei to defend
Italy.
They declared that the tone of
Musiolini'i demand hid caused ss-
tonlihment   it   Hitler'i   Headquar-
By ERIC 8ANDERSON
SHILO CAMP. Man., May 13 (CP)
—It's "heads up" and "straight forward for Canada's soldiers of the
iky.
Watching from an Avro Anson
bomber, I iaw several men from the
1st Canadian Parachute Battalion
"roll out" of a huge Lockheed Lodestar transport over the plains at
this camp—largest army centre in
Western Canada,
them in. On the field nearby, also
is an ambulance in case of accidents.
The men, who look like small
specka from above, then gather up
their parachute and take it to the
drying room here. If wet, it hangs
in the room 48 hours and then the
soldier who used it, has to pack it
again ready for his next leap.
Capt. H. A. Fauquier of Toronto
wai Jumpmaster with the Trst group
that I saw glide to earth. The men
The men are flown here from No.! making the'leap included Ma). Jeff
I Central Navigation School, R. C. j N:cklin of Winnipeg.
A. F„ at Rivers, 46 miles Northeast.     in another group were Cpl. How-
The R. C. A. F. operate in conjunc-  al-d Hollowsy, Vancouver, and Pte. |
tion with the battalion in flying the , joe Pringle, Westwold, B.C.
soldiers. I    Others who made the leap, bring-
Circling the field, the door on the | ing to more than 80 the number that
port side of the transport, piloted | have   parachuted ihere,    included
by Fit. Lt. T. E. Daniels of Loi Angeles, la opened by the Jumpmaster
and then orders are issued.
At the last command, the paratroopers, with heads up and eyes
forward, roll out—five seconds apart.
Their white, silk 'chutes are bare-
Cpl. Harry Wright, Nanalmo. B.C.I
Pte. Nick Yadernuk of Cranbrook,
B.C.; Pte. Robert Simoni, Kelowni,
B.C.. and Pte. Andy McNally of
Edmonton.
All the Jumpi wen mide over l
"spot" marked with two large yel-
ly  visible  againit the  ground  bui j low arrows,
the men can be seen tumbling over j    The plane, piloted by Fo. Jack H.
as they hit the earth. Thompson of New Weftminster, B.C.,
A« soon as they are released from flew within a few hundred yards
the plane. Jeeps head out from the of the transport giving a clear view
base here to pick them up and bring I of the jumps.
Von Arnim Refuses lo Sign Surrender
Terms; Only Interest Is Baggage
German Prisoner
Recaptured in Ont.
COCHRANE, Ont., May 13 (CP)
—Ham Hilpert, German prisoner
of war who ncapid lait night from
i prison cimp it Montelth, Ont,
wai recaptund today by Provincial PoUct In the nllwiy yirdi
hire.
Hopkins, Kimberley
Wins Commission
CALGARY. Miy IS (CP)-N»mc«
of Western Canadians granted com-
minlons m pilot! in the R.C.A F.
were announoed today by No. 4
Training Corrtrfnd
The Uat Included F. H Hopkins of
K -mberley.
Newsmen Almost     t
Cet Commissions
With Paratroops
RIVERS. Vtn., May 13 iCTi -
Whan i group of Canadian — *.-
papermen ind pho^ogra^ier. rime
Inn to make arrmngemanti tox I
flight over SWV, camp to watcfl
mem-ban ot (he lit Canidlan Pari-
draft Baetation grille mthwarrl.
ttwy were aaked to sign wiiveri
rtaiar—t the RCAF (V any re-
<q_of__Jlbil.ty in tha eveait nt an ac-
otdemt.
lrrw, ou Ware-fat
An ot_K__r hand-id a raportar a
number nt forma _n_nri_-*_ng him
-to manly "ilgn your name and »d-
It aee end Hit data."
Juat m tha reporter waa about to
append hia ilgnature the officer ra-
aUied he had ma__a a mistake
Instead of hanrUnf out the waiver
form!, ha had givan out applicant for oumrr_l_e»on' forma
They ware exchanigod quiokly
lor In eon-eot forma
By   DANIEL   DE   LUCE
Auociated Preu 8ta(f Writer
BRITISH 1ST ARMY HEADQUARTERS. Tunisia, May 13 (AP),
—Dust-stained Col-Gen. Jurgen von
Arnim. captured commander ol the
conquered Axis forces in Africa, refused to ilgn the surrender terms
of Lt.-Gen. Kenneth Anderson and
was sent to the rear today more
anxious about his baggage than his
troops.
Driven nearly 100 miles In an
automobile aflber sending out envoys
with a white flag and surrendering.
Von Arnim wai received last night
by Gen. Anderion in the tent in a
green pasture from which he directed the drive ot hii forcei.
Gen. Anderson's refused terms
were that the enemy cease destruction of wir material, relinquish
weaponi undamaged, give detail.
nf mine fields and aid in clearing
them—but the refuial was academic.
Gen. Anderson himself told war
correspondents that it didn't matter
anyhow, underlining the completeness of the Axis debacle
Officially Von Arnim was captured by troops of the Indian 4Ui
Division which ittacked ihe enemy'i
1st Army a week ago. The 4th Division. Desert veterans, now Is part
of the British 1st Army.
Cornered neir Ste, Marie du ZH.
Von Arnim sent out envoyi with
a white (lag, surrendered and wa!
interv.ewed lilt night by Gen. Anderson in his pasture tent. After tbat
Ihe British leider met Allied wir
correspondents.
Von Arnim ind other capturea
generals were accorded full military
courteitei.
As the inflow of prisoner! continued one military iource said thit
lhe total bag of captlvei since May
It probably would approach 175.000
Standing in the moonlit Rrltiih
Headquarlen after a hot supper
list n ght. Vmi Arnim's only comment! were ibout hli baggage which
wai   being   transferred   from   onl
truck  to another.
The procession of Axii commanders through the mess tent here for
meali included Gen. Count von Spo-
neck, Commander of the 90th Light
Infantry Division; Maj.-Gen. Frani
of the 19th Anti-Alrcraft Dlvlilon
Bnd the past few days Acting Commander of the Goerlng Diviiion;
Maj.-Gen. Broich of the 10th Armored Division; Maj.-Gen. Hulsen,
Acting Commander of the 21st Armored Division; Gen. Kramer; and
Gen. Da Costa, of the CenUuro Division, President of the Italian Military Tribunal.
One hundred and thirty thousand
prisoners at that tune were reported
in Allied hands. (Since then it hai
been innounced in the House of
Commons that the bag exceedi 150
000.)
Halsey Confers
With MacArthur
AN ADVANCE SOUTH PACIFIC
BASE, May 13 (AP)-Admiral William F Haliey, Jr., Nival Com
mander-ln-Chlef in this area, hai
conferred for the first time with
General Douglai MacArthur it thl
la'tter's headquarters in Australia,
the United States Navy'i South Pa-
cifc Command announced today.
Observen here igree that the
MecArthur-Haliey conference may
be the signal for i new phaii In the
Pacific war.
Report Rommel Has
Cone to Greece
NEW YORK. May IJ (AP.-A
BBC French-languige brtudcait wai
quoted today by OBS ■■ uying that
Field Marshal Erwin Rommel former Axli Commander In Chief in
North Africa, had arrived In Salonika. Greece. BBC did not give
the iource of ill report
1 FASHION CENTRI
WHERE NELSON'S
FASHIONS BBCUM
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to rf\v6<^
A
r$*ei
i\ \yS
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'Sweaters 'Skirts
'Jerkins 'Shirtwaists
A wardrobe of Mix and Match
Mates will give you endless variety
for -business and sports wear. Suits,
Shirtwaists, Slacks and Sweaters in
an endless variety of colors—Come in
and have the fun of doing your own
mixing and matching.
Herringbone
Wool Suits
Classic-tailored Suits — three-button fastening,
two kick pleats in skirt. Plain colors — easy to
accessorize.  Siies 12-20.
_&&
$15.95
Brushed Rayon
Jerkins
Bright colors in soft brushed rayon —
Elasticiied waist band, just th* fri QC
thing to top your slacks. Each ... ylaafw
Women's and Crowing Cirls'
Shoes
Easy shoes to wear in styles to *u''±*vtW
ie. Pumps, Loafers and ""
gay Summer colors. Siies
one. Pumps, Loafers and Ties in JO QO
BACK THE
ATTACK
BUY
Victory
Bonds
Slacks — Shirts
Expertly tailored in Sharkskin—Taperid
Slacks with ilpper, fastening. Tailored short!
to mix or match.
 $4.95
$3.95
Classic Tailored
Shirtwaists
To wear with suits and jerkins . . ,
Long - Sleeved Shirtwaists in snowy
white and gay stripes. frO QP
Siies 14-20 yL.VO'
 _________________________ arr mm __*
 w^m
^^PBl^^
— NIUON DAILY NIWI, HtlBW MAY 14, IMl
ernal (are
Years Ago
LOGAN   CLEND-NING,   M.D.
One hundred yeari ago on February 19, 1843, a young man named Dr. OUver Wendell Holmei read
a paper before the Boiton Society
Jor Medical  Improvement. In tins
riper he called attention to the con-
Itlon which waa known ai childbed (ever, which afflicted women
about four dayi after the birth of
a chid and had an appalling mortality.
The docton preferred to eierlbe
ttt to an iccident or to an act of
Sod. Dr. Holmei itated In very
ar and tipecifio termi thu lt
i due to filth thai thi doctors
carried on thllr hinds, which contaminated the mother. ThU naturally
outraged the medicil profeuion and
ybung Dr. Holmu (who wai only
34) wai ittacked with great yltuper.
ation. He stuck to hli gum, however end stated: "The dlaeeie known
ai puerperal (aver ti n far contagious ii to be frequently cirrled
/■How to relieve MONTHLY*^
EKWfete
trail i. rmuuuni vwutu com-
pouml'li made iipirtilly tor —men
to reiier, peilodle pels ud vut,
nenroui, Hue feellniii. It hu >
•oothinj effeot on om of —man's
mott importont orporu. T»ken regu-
Urly-Plnkhim'i Compound helpi
build up reeUUiic igilnit iuch
lymptomi. Thouundi helped,        .
from patient to patient by phyilciani
and nursei." He alio quoted tha
wordi of Oordon of Aberdeen, who
nld: "I eould venture to foretell
what women would ba affected with
the dlseiie by hearing by whit m'd-
wlfe or nune tbey were to be attended during their lying-in."
ThU _ one of the firat sugg-stloni
ot liie principle ot preventive nep-
ili which li now such a commonplace in every department of medicine, surgery and obstetrics.
Somewhat later i young man ln
VUnna named Semmelweli, who
waa an attendant at the Maternity
Hospital, found a woman ln hU wird
crying He asked bar the reaion
and she said it wti biciuie ihe had
been ient to hii ward, that lhe
would rather go to the ward ot the
mldwivea becauie they had fewer
deaths from sepsis.
He then Investigated and found
that the students ln his ward came
directly from the1 post-mortem room
and examined the women ln the
maternity ward without wishing
their hands. He instituted pnvin<
tive methods by miking than Waih
their hands ltnd rime them ln a solution of chloride of lime, following
which his mortality dropped ti tha
unheard of level of 1.3J par cant
Every mother in the country,
Indeed, every mothir in the wdWd
ihould pay grateful homage thla
yeir to Oliver Wendell Holmei. Ha
laid: "I do not know that I ihall
aver again have so good an opportunity of being useful as was granted me by the raising of the question
which produced thU emy." To
hU detractors he said: "I take no offence and attempt no retort. No man
makei a quarrel with me over tha
counterpane that covers a mother,
with her new-born Intent it her
briaitt"
QUEITION) AND ANIWIM
0, R. A.: The Navy has reject-
me becauie I have extra lyttoln:
I am 42. Whet ciuses them and can
they be eliminated? The Navy doctor told me that thiy did not dii-
appear after exercise. What would
nat mean?
Answer: Extra systoles are extra
baits of the heart, forming ■ very
common type of irregularity of the
Gike. In most instances they are
irmless and meaningless. Sometime?, however, they indicate a
mild disease ofc the heart muscle.
In rental cases they disappear after
exirclie; ln cases where they do
Indicate heart muscle disease, they
do not disappear after exercise.
Slim Hips..,
Give Minute ol
Exercise lor
Each Hour You Sll
By IDA JIAN KAIN
Iba ratio et one minute of exirclie to every bow you alt to work
will keep you ln ahape no matter
ho.v many hourt you lit on tba Job,
or whether you work on the ii-
lembly line or at a desk. If you lit
for the regulation eight houn, tike
eight minutei of calisthenics a day,
It isn't the llttfe-g that' spreads
the hipline, it'i the fict that when
you alt, you don't get exercise fqr
th. hip muscles.
"here are any number of blp
slimmers. But tt I were mpervll-
lng your program there are thr.ee In
particular I wpuld give you becauie they git iuch excellent result! and there U io little chance
of doing them wrong.
We would start off with a leg"
swing. Stand eyet and ln good poiture, with one hind on chair it
side for support. Swing one ' leg
from the hip in a high forwird kick,
then up kt back, if you bend for-
Mrs. Nesmith
Dies, N. Denver
NBW DE-NT*****"*, B. C—Mn. Mary
J. Nesmith, wife of the lata Clins
Nesmith, died May 9 ln Slocin Community Hospital after i weik'i Illneu.
Borp In Iowa, USA., she came to
Canada in 1906 and setled it Kair-
light, Saek. She liver there till
193., coming to New Denver.
Surv-vOTs include • daughter,
Mn. I,. R. a___mp*oell, New Denver,
and a ion, __rlln Wade of Trail.
There are seven grandchildren.
She took a keen Interest in women's work and was a member of
the United Church.
A  funeral   servlci  wn  held  In
I ward with the backward awing, you
can klek higher—and tha higher
you kick, the mora you um your
Up muscles. Continue for M counti
relax, and repeat with tha other leg.
To make the leg awing double
i exerclie tor the abdominal girdle, pull up and In with the lower
abdominal musclei throughout.
If ilttlng hu,encouraged a little
pad of fat to perch on tbe aide and
back of .the hip, you can kick it off.
Short, itaccatlc baokward thruste ot
the leg trom tbe hip ahould do the
trick. Place om hand on the pad
and make sure that you are working the muiclei underneath. Keep It
up for 20 counti, ihake thl lig
vigorouily but looeely from the hip
to dispel tension, and repeat witn
othar leg.
Here U my favorite hip slimmer:
Ue on the tide on floor, head pillowed on arms, legi itralght down,
Swing the top leg up In front, than
up and out In back. Juit swing the
top leg. Keep the tinder leg out ot
action, Swing for 23 counti, flop
over on your back and relax, then
repeat with the other lag,
Finiih with a roll. I like a itralght
roll, It'i so eaiy on your back. Raise
bead md feet illghtly off the floor
•nd roll straight acron the hlpi and
ovar on ona aide. Olve yourself a
puih and roll back across ind over
on (he othir ilde. Keep rolling. Thli
really is not ■■ slimming ■• the
othar exercises but it has a nice,
smoothing effect en the figure.
Offonded
Thinks Uniform
Should Curb
Public Spooning
ly IIATI.I0I FAIRFAX
Deir MUa Fatrfan:
It never occurred to me that public damonitratlon of love'i young
driun would prove offensive until
the other night, whan I happened to
■It baok ot a Ullor md a girl in
uniform, at a movie. Tba only thing
that can ba iald in extenuation of
thalr behavior U that thay were
both young.
Thi girl wore the uniform of one
of thoie women'i military orgeniu-
tloni, lately mobilized for the purpose of relieving men for combit
duty. The antlci ot theae two rivaled that of thl monkeys Ip the
Zoo. Everyone In their vicinity stopped witching the icreen and gave
thllr undivided attention to thi pair.
I know that Germany encourages
any sort of love-making for lti own
purposes, but Iniiiti the uniform
should be respected to the extant
Beef Upside-Down Pie
Hoipmllk.ofhulf
milk ud halfwit**
M cup iHc«_ onion
1 out eeaSmmi
tomito eoup
H lb. iround rtw btt-f
\rW\0*
IH cope flour
I ttj». Mali-Bikini
lOO. Mit
IHp.0-JfTT--.lt
Heap, white pefptr
1 Ite. iliorctnlng
Uft together loor, bikini powdtr, \i tea-
atoms t_.lt, Mlerr eedt end pepperi add I
tableepoo_4ebortc-_t-_a uid mil It tharettWf
-Ith tort. Add milk anil .lir until blended,
MH. remaining two (ahlopoone .hottenlna
In _' trjltt* ytt. aaA cook onion, until -tt.
Mt tomato eoup, rfmalnlna H teaapoon
eait end ftroead meat; brine to boll. Spread
baking powdir mlitii.e, on top of meat mixtura and bake In hot oran at 479* F. for about
M mlnutea. Tern out upolde down on larfte
Plata. Same a.
MAPI IN CANADA
Station CKLN
Cooperating With th* Victory Loan Committee
PRESENTS
MISS FRANCES NICHOLSON
and
JIM HOOVER
Speaking Tonight at 6:30
RT. HON. WINSTON
CHURCHILL
Will Bt Heard Teday at
12 Noon
CKkl
IIIIMIIIIIIIII|||IIIIIIIIIIMIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|ll|l|IIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIII|lllll|
dioUAQWWQAm
By   BET3Y   NEWMAN
i'l'llll I ■....•...Illif.l.l Illllll Ill It Illl 111II111 ■ 111 I ■ 11 lll II ■ 11 It
TOPAY'I MINU
BREAKFAST
Grapefruit pr Juice
Cereal with Milk
Whole Wheat or Enriched
White Bread Tpait
llicon Cottee
lUNCHBON
Creim  of  Aiparagui Soup
Crisp Toait
Fruit Salad    Whole Wheat Witers
Milk
DINNER
•    twite Steak
Muhed or Rlead Potatoei
Prune Bread      Dandelion Oreem
Grim Onions    Rhubirb Pia
Tea er Cottle .
WHOLi WHEAT PRUNU BRIAD
1 cup prunei, H cup milk, iy.
cakei comprissed yeut, I teaipoon
•alt, IVi tablaapooni iugir, or raol-
__ j, Stt tablupooni softened fat,
t eff, IVi cup whole wheat flour,
Vi cup water In which prunei cooked, i*K oup all purpoie flour.
Waih prunei, idd water te almoit cover, cover pan and simmer
until tender; drain fron water,
saving it, and cool; remove piu
and cut ln amall pleoaa, Scild m>i*
and cool to lumwarffli add yaait
cakei, itirrlng until dissolved. Stir
water ln which prunei cooked, and
a portion of flour. When each '»
blended ln add prunei and reit ot
flour. Knead until smooth, oovar
and let rUe In a warm plaoe, Take
from bowl to a lightly floured
board apd separate Into two ball;;
Ut atand 10 to in minutei, then
•shape Into loaves and put Into well-
freesed loit pins. Let rise tn wain
place until almost double In bulk,
then bake In rnoderpte oven, TO
degreei P., fer about 49 minutes.
ol kiiolng rapturei within boundi
Mie places.
In pubV
P.A.
Mutual demonstrations of affection may ba io interesting to the
participants as to make them forget there are onlookers, Such demonstrations ara boring, amusing or
disgusting, according to,tha onlooker's own feelings about romance.
Funeral Services
for Japanese
Woman Held at Kailo
——_0, ll. C—Funeral services
for Mrs. H. CXsuka, aged 58, who
died May » at the Victorian Hospital, wire held Monday afternoon
at St. Andrew's United Church.
Rev. K. Shlmlau conducted the service.
family lervioe was Held In Som-
_r*i funeral Pirlori Bundiy ivenlng. A ion and i elster cune te
att-nd the funeral. The body wn
ient to New Denver for ernnatlon.
Por thit ipreadlng hlp-llne, hold your leg up lo a right angle. Pauline
onto a chair, the body held tall, and Kaye, of the Radio City Music Hall
do a backward kick ai high as you ballet corps, showa you thl tech-
can, then a forward kick to bring nlque.
Turner Memorial United Church.
Rev. F. Browne of St, Stephen'i
Anglican Church conducted the nrvice. Tlie Organist was Mrs. M.
Jamei.
The body wae sent to Pel-light
for Interment in the Jamily plot.
KIMBERLEY
lUMBBRLBY, B.C. - A pretty
wedding wis lelamnlred on May 1
it the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Sortome, when thiir eldut
daughter, Mildred Mirlon, became
the bride of Alfred Merrll Inge-
brigtsen, eldeit son of Mr, and Mrs,
ft Ingebrlgtsen, all of Kimberliy.
The Rev. S. T. Galbraith officiated.
The bride who was given ln mirriige by her father looked charming In a light blue afternoon dreu
with shoulder length veil, and navy
shoes. She wore a corsage of Americin Buuty roaei. Mlu Kleiner Sortome, sister of the bride as bridesmaid was ittlred in a rose afternoon
drear, with navy accessories, her
coruge wai of American Beauty
roses. Arthur Nichols was best min.
The bride's mother choie a floral
print ifternoon dress, while the
groom'i mothir choie a blick dreu,
both won corteges of cirnitioni.
live reception wu hild it thi home
of the bride's parents. The decori-
tions were pink and white carnations, and snapdragons. Betty and
Taffy Clark acted as serviteurs. The
dining table was arranged under a
bower of pink and white itreameri,
and covered with a lace cloth end
contred with a three-tier wedding
cake, which was decorated with sll
ver maple leivei ind surmounted
with a silver hone ihoi ind a ipray
of white heather tied with white
ribbon. Double pink petunias ln
silver vases ind Ull pink tapers
ln silver Konces idded to the beiu
ty of tha amnfemmt. Mr. and Mrs,
Ingebrlgtsen left for a honeymoon
at Vancouver. For travailing the
bride won a princeu ityle nivy
coit, a «ilver fox fur ind navy ae-
cifioriii. On their return they wlll
make.tbeir honu-In Kimberley.
Pte. Evle Divlei of the Piri-
troopers it visiting hit pirenti while
on leave,
Miu Edith Bunyin returned to
Cilgary ifter visiting her mother
here.
Mrs, 0, Johni ind children returned to their home at Trail after is-
lting thi former's parents Mr. and
Mrs. T. Dawion and sliter, Mrs.
A. Chisholm.
Mn. M MicKay and son of tha
Coast are visiting Mri. Beninatl.
Jick CiUlns left Saturday for
Vancouver having joined the* armed
forcea.
Miss Margoret Gergel
Becomes Bride of
R. Weaver ot Natal
NATAL, B.C.,—A quiet wedding
took place at Natal when Miu
Mirgaret Oergel, eldest daughter of
Mr. ind Mrs. J. Gergel of Natal
becime thl bride of Robert Weaver,
only ion of Mrs. W. Weiver ot
Michel The wedding 'Ceremony took
place at the Michel St. Michael's
Church with Fither Brophy officiating. Immedlitely after the wedding a reception was held at the
home of the bride'i parenti for lm.
mediate relatives. Mlu Mary Gergel, iliter of thi bride acted as
bridesmaid while Bfran D'Angelo of
Michel supported thi groom. Thi
young couple left to ipmd their
honeymoon in Lethbridge before
returning to Nital when thl groom
It employed u a motorman at thl
Michel mlnu.
A, W. Mooney of
Crawford Bay
Wed at Vancouver
CRAWFORD BAY, B.C. - The
bride's fither officiated, when Nancy
Nicholis, elder daughter of Rev. md
Mrs. G. H. Flndlay, I7M Quesnelle
Drive, Vancouver, became the bride
of Alvin Willii Mooney, only ion
of Mr. ind Mrs. W. W. Mooney of
J Cnwford Biy. The ceremony took
j plice it thi homi of tha brlde'i
parents. Given away by her grandfather, Robert Hendinon, the bride
wore i floor-length gown of white
triple sheer.
The  bridesmild  wai  her lliter,
I Miu Mirgaret Mary Findiay, and
i best man wai Archie Macaulay,
]   The bride and groom are graduates of tha Univenlty of B.C., and
both taught In the Hugh M. fraser
High School. Mr. Mooney is a mem-
oer ot the Phi Kaqppa Sigma fraternity.
Thi newlywedi left for Bdmonton
where Mr. Mooney Is now a medical student, stopping off in route
at Crawford Bay.
Nurses Meet in ,
Slocan City
A second meeting of the Silver Arrow Chapter of Registered Nurui
was held at the B.C. Security Hospital Unit ln Slocan City on May
10, INS.
President, Miu C. Miginsen, wn
ln thi chiir and 18 memberi wera
present. •
A very intereitlng cue history on
Secondary Anemia wai gtvin by Dr,
Shimo-Takahara.
Tea wis served by Mines 0. Reynolds, Robinson and Yamaneka.
Kaslo W.A. Hears
of Bible Society
KASLO, B. C.-The W.A. of Bt
Andrew'i Unltid Church hild their
monthly meeting it the home of
Mrs. A. OlUlt. Mri. Robert Himllton was misting hojte.s, There
wen 90 lld'es present, several being
out of town visitors.
Mri. 0. Glbion aooke on the work
of the Bible Society. Mrs. John
Patenon took the "worth while"
period wlih a reading by Nellie MeClung. Several of the lidlei assisted
the hostess ln servin| a dainty
lunch.
Procter Aid Holds
Tea and Bake Sale
PROCTER, B, C.-The Ladlei Aid
of Saint Andrew'i Unittd Chureh
held an afternoon taa and bake sale
ln the Churoh basement on frldiy
afternoon, Mrs. J, Sewell, Mri, J.
Ferguson, Mrs, M, McKinnon, Mrs
F. Bonacci.. Mrs. M, McKay and
Mn, John McLeod uilited in tht
kitchen and wilting on tables while
Mri, J, McDonald hid Charge of tha
home cooking table, and Mn, H.
Cleft of the work table.
Basic Facts...
Helping (hild to
Learn Arithmetic
By Oarry Cleveland Myen, Ph.D.
youl before your child may hava
homework assignments from Khool
you cm htlp him cultivate good
habits In rate learning.
Yes, In order to get ilong beit at
achool the child In elementary
gradei muit aequlrt good hiblts of
memorising by rota.
for example, ha will need to
memoriae the simple basic addition and subtraction facta, ai I and
5 are 19, t frem ll leave i. There
are only 100 bulc addition facta
and 100 basic subtraction facta.
As ioon ai your child begins addition at school, you can help him at
home by hiving him learn theie
baite   addition   facts  there    H«ve
him «ttaek only two or three an
evening. A food way ll to mike
small cards with eni fact to a card.
To Illustrate, put on one ilde of thli
card 7 with (I under It, a line beneath the o and 13 under th's 1 ne.
Hsve the child, as he looks carefully
it thli whole fact, aay ovar apd
over, '7 and t are llf till he knowi
It. Then he can tum tha card and
try himself out on tha testing side
of the card, which has J under 7
with tha 13 omitted,
Betore he ittacki a naw group
Ot two or three cardi, ha ihould
review ill the old onu he haa
learned on the prtvloui evening.
Having mistered perfectly the 100
iddition facta, hi ihould proceed
in like faihion with tha subline-
tion facts.
Coffee
nnd
Carnation
How thay do to together! Undiluted Cirtutloo Milk
brings out thi -fiver of the coffee, the tempting color, Aa
It comet from the can, mi Carnation Ukt acta. Uk It fbr
whipping tool Diluted with in equil amount oi water, It
la fine, whole pi'lk fbr drinking ind cooking.
Carnation ii good, whole milk, enponted, t-omogen-
ind, sttrilind tad imdlttii for eitri "sunihine" vltimln D. Write for frie Cook Book.
Carnation Co., Limited, Vancouver, B. C.
ma IRRADIATE. -  -    . .
Carnation Milk
A CANADIAN PRODUCT .'film _mt«t__
OiL'JkL   (&L
FRIDAY, MAY 14
CKLN AND
CBC PROGRAMMES
MORNING
Tltt-'O Canada*
t-00-CBC Newt
I:1S—front Lim family
gtSO-Ymkee Houae Party
B;00-BBC Newa    -
OtllHOrgin (CKLN)
BiSO-Thi Concert Muter (CKLN)
(tid—Tht Record Cibintt
t:S9—Tlmo  Signil
10:00—Morning Vlilt
10:lS-HaU te Half (CKLN)
10:44—Claire Wallace - 'They Tell
Me"
11*0—Talk "International Espionage"
11:15—Variety Time (CKLN)
ll:S0-"8oldier*i  Wife"
11:44-Your Hollywood Newigirl
AFTERNOON
lfcOO-TWk by l__ Mtntoter Wta-
eksD CJiurchtll
ll:J4-Thi Notice Board (CKLN)
11:_0-CBC News
H:44-Betwcen the  Bookende
l:0O-Ii»belle K"cE_wan Sin«j
l:15-Interlude
1:1B—Talk
1:30-Fiedler Cotiducti
J:0O-Madillni Cirroll Raids
3:18—Muslcsl Progrimme
_:_0—Tei Time
2:44—Listeners' Favor! tei
3:00—Don Messer and HU Islanders
3:lS-*Wk - "Know  Your Wild
Flowere"
3:30—Muilc by Lavallt
3:45-0BC  Newi
tlOO—Noveleique
4:30—Songi at Teatlme
4:4»-Viotory Loan Addtfeei
4:00—Ntws Commentiry
6:04—Hiven of Harmony (CKLN)
J:»0-Rhythm by Requeet (CKLN)
M»-Voeal Paridi (CKLN)
EVENINC
8-00-Supper Melodlei (CKLN)
4:14-Hiwalian Paradlii (CKLN)
8:30—Victory Loan Speakeri —
Jim Hoover, JYeticee Nichol-
aon
8:40—Victory Loan I*ro«ram CKLN
7:00-CEC Niwi
7:14-"Comridn In Arms"
IrOO-BBC Niwrttl
8:30—Drimi
3:00—Tunii for Todey
8:30—Sophlstlcited Strings
10:00~CBC Ntws
10:14—Bebroadoai* of Victory Loan
A-Ureee
10:_0--Gentletnen With Wlngi
ll:00-Ood Save  the King
R. R. Horner
R & R CROCERY
TA-LE SYRUP, OA
Eamon's, Bottlt .. . OUC
JAM, Class Jars, OQ
Apricot Tumbler ,. £OC
JAM, Apricot or Creen Cage
—Limit, 1 to euitomtr—
2 Ib. Jan.
PRISTO FIRTUIZIR, or
5 lb. box JJC
CRAPEFRUIT, Florida 1|j
ORANGES, Florida,     OC
Slit 320, Dottn .. JJC
Per lb.' a*OC
CARROTS, Otm
2 bunchei   LO*t
ZT_ 30c
LITTUCI, OC„
Htad   dd*,
RHUBARB, Frtth,       -)C .
i Ibt t-OVi
CREEN ONIONS,       1C_
2 bunchu ldl
PHONI 161
ImM-MSed
f i£\        »%#«
YOU CAN COUNT ON ME
TO SEE YOU THROUGH'
L've got a wtr Job In my own
quiet way, and it's for the duration," gays Mr. Gold Seal/ famous
emblem of Congoleum Rugs and
Congoleum by-the-yard. "It's to
itand up under punishment as
never before jo that in spite of
everything, your floors will continue to look bright and beautiful.
You'll find it hard to replace them
In a hurry: that'i why the care we
put into the making of Congoleum
means extra value today. It's value
that will ihow up quickly—if you
give it a chance—in added wear
and service. For years, as you
know, I've stood for the highest in
home furnishing values and today,
my aim li higher than ever."
CONGOLEUM
OOLD SEAL
HOW TO Htlf
MR. OOLD SEAL MAKI OOOD
You cin gtt Idded wetr out of nor Coeft^
leum   (toon   with   wry   little   effort.    Drab
tod mop tbeu rtmilifly ltd rmv tki
htifhtncn of thrli lurfici whh aa ocodoad
w-ulaj, Mikt nut too, that the ftoor ..-..trr-
tioeih li mDath ud ttm item cftrlcae oc
knot.!. If It'i ■ nig, mort ft mrr lr4
hi..ml.! to "iprtad" tb* reiffic. Vm, ■ litiU
ctn will pir big dJtldeod*.
. _L.'_
__________________
m^A^to^^^
 FOOT HEALTH
Your-feet deserve plenty
of consideration  '
Repay  them  by  buying
only Quality Shoes
at Andrew's
R. Andrew
& Co*
Leaders In Footfashion
ADVERTISE THE CLASSIFIED
WAV
DRESS UP SMART
WITH NEW FINERY
Milady's Fashion Shop
MILK
Il nature's moit perfect food.
Kootinay Yalley ])**■
WATCH REPAIR
ll • Job for experti. Our work
aiiurei yeur utlitictlon.
H. H. Sutherland
491 Biker It        Ntlun. ■ C.
tf »_■""?*'-"*'"** ft
SLACKS end SLACK SUITS
Sizes 12 to 18
$4.95 to $12.95
FASHION FIRST LTD.
wSf
10**
Off*
#___
C**.f&rf
Brings you
sweet, tasty bread
/UWA.S DEPENDABLE
W..APPFD AIPT/GHT
TO ENSURE POTENCY
Hudson's Bay Company Gold Medal
Goes lo Andy Speln lor Long Service
Staff Group at Hudson's Bay Company Presentation
The Governor and Committee of
the Hudson's Bay Company has
awarded to Andrew C. Speirs, the
Company's Gold Medal representing "the completion this montbi of
30 years' loyal and leUtMul service."
In t letter from C. S. Riley, Chairman of the Oanadian Committee,
Mr. 6peirs Is congratulated "on
th* fine reports we have received
about your work in Nelson going
right baok to the time when you
were teamster before going oversea* in the last war. These reports
emphasize your dependability and
popularity with the customers and
itaff alike which are very desirable qualities." Mr. Riley mentions
also that a son of Mr. Speirs is
serving with the Royel Canadian
Air -Torce "carrying on your traditional servioe to the Armed Forces
of Canada."
It Is estimated that during hii
services with the Oompany, Mr.
Speirj haa covered a total of 235,000
miles in the course of his work with
the delivery wagon and trucks.
The pre.enta.tion was made in
Nelson last Friday in the presence
of the staff ait the Hudson Bay Com-
pany's store, by F. F. Martin, General Manager of Retail Stores following a few remarki by T. H.
Glover, Store Manager.
In addition to the Company's Gold
Medal, Mr. Martin presented to Mr.
-Speirs a substantial check.
"ANDY" SPEIRS
receiving congratulation! from his
many friends. '
A bouquet o-(ro_u wu ient to
Mrs. Speln.
Mr. Spelri wu born at Ktrmloh-
ael, Scotland. He Joined the Hudson's Bay Company'i service' on
April 15th, 1913, as teamster. He
served Jor four years from 1915 to
1919 as a Sapper in the Sth Battalion
Canadian  Engineers.
On his return frorri overuu, he
continued as teamster for two yeari
when the fast motor truck wai purchased by the company.
Mr. Speirs owns his own ranch
home on Granite Road. His chief
hobby is hunting and fishing.
CASTLEGAR
CASTLEGAR, B.C.—Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Jorgenson and son Melcher ol
Rossland visited Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
Peterson Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Schiavon visited
Trail.
Pat Bruce was a Trail shopper
Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. R. Fletcher were
visitors to Trail.
Miss Eva Peterson visited Trail
Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Jorgenson ot
Rossland. were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Isaac Peterson.
Nick Oswald was a weekend Trail
visitor.
Mrs. E. Snell and daughter Eliu-
beth were Trail visitors Friday.
They were accompanied by Ricn-
ard Knobland.
Mrs. A. E. Hodgins and daughter Aria have left for their home in
Tompkins, Sask. They were called
by <he death ofthe latter's father.
Mrs. M. Horning has left for her
home in Stone, Sask., alter spending the Winter with her son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. Thiel
Mrs. A. Saunders and daugnters
I
OverwaiteA
•    LIMITED
ON SALI SATURDAY ANO MONDAY
WATER CLASS, Pint Bottles, each  35c
nou*.: Purity, Royil Houtthold,  Quiker,  Ml,      C2 QO
Sick, dtllvtrtd     *fm*9*
BULK MACARONI: _MA
t lbi    m**T
SPRING  CLOTHES
PINS: t doi. limit 3 doi.
M
NIPPY  CANADIAN At(
CHEESE: Lb  ***r
MILD CANADIAN
CHEESE; Lb	
BANANA FLAKES: 2$t
35U
CREAMO EGG NOODLES, 2 for 19c
ASHCROFT CATSUP-.
Bottlt    	
CORNSTARCH:
Limit 2, 2 for _.	
27<
PARD DOQ FOOD:
2 for	
PRUNES:
2 lbl.	
29<
25<
Another shipment of shrubs tnd fruit trees has just
arrived ... See them.
RICE:
Limit 2 lbi., 2 lbi.
VEGETABLE SOUP
Cinidi Flnt, 3 for .
WHEAT PUFFS:
Buihei bigi 	
VARIETY SQUARES:
2 (or
2«
25<
)>t us deliver your week md order
250
Ciliry, Cirroti, Beeti, Aiparagui, Lettuce, Spinich ind (rult
diily.
PHONE 707
Ora and Hazel were Saturday visitors to Trail and were accompanied
by Mrs. A. Liens.
Mrs. J. Cabana and baby were
Trail visitors Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. K. Crosble and
daughter Dianna were weekend visitors to Nelson.
Jake Dyck and children were Saturday visitors to Trail, accompanied
by Mr. and Mrs. John Dyck.
Miss A, Haudgins js visiting her
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and
Mrs. C. Plca-'ance.
Miss Norma Petenon wai a weekend visitor to Trail.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Appleton and ion
Charles were Trail ihoppers Saturday.
Mrs. R. Cooke was a weekend vUitor to Trail.
Mrs. A. Olsen was a Saturday
.•hooper in Trail.
Mr. and Mrs. L. Wilion Ind daugh.
ler Barbara of Trail are visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. John Hansen.
Mrs. A. Wilson visited Trail Monday.
Mrs. L, Simmons was a Monday
v'.s.tor to Trail.
Mr. and Mrs. K. Appleby have
Wt !o take up residence in Crocketville.
Bill Morozo was a weekend via
itor '.o Trail.
Mr. and Mrs. L. Prlorie and ion
spent Saturday ln Trill.
Cliff Wanless. R.C.N., Ii spending
his furlough with relitlvei here.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Wright were Saturday visitors to Trail. They were
accompaned by Mr. and Mrs. V.
Lamphear.
The monthly meeting of the United Church W.A. met at the home
of Mr.. Sommen. Refreshments
were served by the co-hostess, Mrs.
J. .Wright. Memberi present were
Mrs. V. Goresky, Mn. C, Appleton,
Mrs. J. Wright, Mrs. A. Saunden,
Mrs. J. Hansen. Mrs. Grunerod, Mrs.
B. Hunter, Mrs. A. Lelns, Mrs. H.
Huddleston, Mrs. E. Glmmell. Mrs
O Lightle, Mrs. A. Limpard, W. H.
Houston and Mrs. J. Morrison.
John Waldle ind*Elmer Wallner
hkve returned from a trip to Pen-
liclon.
Mrs. J. Wanless of Birch Island
1. visiting her ion and daughter-in-
law, Mr. and Mrs. G. Wanless.
NELSON
■y MRS. M. I. VIGNEUX
t Chief Petty Officer SUnley
Creech irrived yetterday to -Vend
his furlough with his wlft, US
Douglu Sold.
t BL Paul'l Church Circle No.
1 mtt yeiterdiy tt tht home on
BUlci Street of Urt. Anthony M.
Banks, when thoie preient were
Mn. Margaret BeU, Mri. W. O.
Stewirt, Mrs. D. H. BtU, Mrs. Alex
Carrie, Mill Grice Cuh, Mri.
Chirlei H. Bein, Mri. R. D. Barnei,
Mri, J, D. Foggo, Mn, R. A. Peeblei,
Mrs. Hector Mackemie, Mln Margaret McCorkle, Mill Annie Mc-
Corkle and Mri Charlei H. Stark.
e Pte. N. R. German leaves this
morning for,Vancouver after ipending hli leave with hli parenti, Mr,
and Mn. T. German, Hoover Street.
HOME ON FURLOUGH
t Airwoman Peggy Horswill,
who li stationed on Uie Weit Coait,
U iptndlng her leive with her mother, Mri. W. R. Gibbon, 201 Beker
StreeL She alio plam to visit Mr.
Gibbon at Trail.
e Mri. Dacy Petty, Petty Apartmenti, hu •■ gueit Mri. E. Doney
Sr„ of New Denver.
e Charlei Holt, merchmt ot Balfour, visltci Nelion yeiterdiy.
t Shoppen ln town yesterday
Included Ctptaln and Mn. Jamei
Ferguion of Sunshine Biy.
t Mra. Leille Haycock and baby
boy have left Kootenay Lake General Hospital for their home on
Eighth and Elwyn Streets.
t Mm. Chrli Jenien was ln town
from Kailo yetterday.
t Mn. Whiteley, Aniufole Block,
la viiiting friendi at South Slocan.
e Mn. Scot wai in Uie city from
KaiJo yeiterday.
t Ven. Ardhdetoon Fred H. Qrt-
ham was In Roisland yeiterday attending the Nelion Anglicin Deanery.
t Mn. M Martendtle ot Fruitvtle and Mri. F. Ottiwiy of Trill
will be weekend guesta of Mr. end
Mri. T. German, Hoover StreeL
HERE FROM CALGARY
t   Mn. T. D. Oakei of Calgary, li
t gueit at the home of her sister,
Mra. J. P. McLaren, 808 Stanley
Street.
t Mn. M. DeGlroltmo, Innei
Street, entertained the Calhednl
of Mary Unmaculate Circle et her
home Wedneidiy afternoon when
thoie attending were Mlu Albertlne
Choquette, Mn. Louli ColetU, Mri.
Henry Lindblad, Mrs. D. A. McPhenon, Mn. Joseph Sturgeon, Mn.
tt 3. Vigneux, Mn. J. Munro, Mn.
Harry Korolik, Mn. V. Doylt, Mn,
O. F. Stevens, Mn. A. G. Gcllnis,
Mn. M. J. Vaneveld, Mn. Ruth
Lunn. Mn. Jamei Eccles, Mri,
James Morrlion, Mri. D. Mclnnes,
Mn. W. G. Fullerton, Mrs. Ann
Aduddle, Mri. Philip Rahal, Mri
Norbert 0. Choquette, Mn. D. H.
Thompion ind Mn. Edith Edgar.
e Mr. and Mra. M. J. Duffy,
Fairview, have left to make their
homt In New Weitminiter,
FIFTH SON ENLISTS
t Mr. ind Mn. Edward Slmpion
tnd ion Michael, who ipent the pait
nine months In Roultnd, are vtiltlng relitlvei ln Nelion on their
wty to Cilgiry where Mr. Simpaon
U to join the R.C.A.F. He li the
fifth ion ln Uie fimlly to Join the
rorcei.
t 0. B. Holden of South Slocin
•pent yesterdty In town.
t Ac. 1 Jimei Cornfield of Riven, Man,, ll spending hli furlough
with hli pirenti, Mr. ind Mra. A. E.
Cornfield, Hall Mlnea Road.
t Mn. T. H. Horner of Kaslo
viiited Nelson yeiterday.
t Shoppen in the city yetterdty
Included Mn. Burrird A. Smith of
Longbeich.
e Rev. J. 0. Holmei md Rev.
W. J. Silverwood were In Roultnd
attending the Neleon Anglican Deanery.
t Mn. Mary WaUace, Annable
Block, hu returned fbr a fortnlght'i
vliit wHh Mr. ind Mra. R. Chalmen
at Thrumi.
VISITOR FROM COAST
e Mn. A. M. Sturgess, Medicil
Arti Apartmenti, hu u gueit her
daughter, Mra. F. R. Cullin of Vancouver, who li accompanied by her
young ion, Michael. Mra. Cullin,
who plini on ipending several
week] in Nelson, li enroute to join
her husband in Toronto.
t Mr. ind Mra. Jack Wright of
Robion'viilted Nelion yeiterday.
t Rev. rmncle Flynn has returned from 'Crmbrook where he
ittended the Silver Jubilee celebntion of Very Rev. A. K. Maclntyre, V.G., Wedneiday,
t Mr. tnd Mn. George Scott,
High StreeL htve u gueit their1
ion, Chief Petty Officer Verdun
Scott, who irrived yeiterday to
viiit hli perenti.
REV. M. COONEY,
ONCE OF NELSON,
CRESTON, ENLISTS
Rev. Maurice Cooney of Winnipeg, wlu served in the Catholic Diocese of Nelson for iome time, has
enlisted ^s a Chaplain In the Royil
Canadian Nivy. He will commence
hi., (tulles In June.
farther Cooney was on the itaff
nf ttw Cathedral of Mary Immaculate here, and later terved aa Pallia at Crcslon From Creeton he
whi called lo Winnipeg where he
was tationed at St. Edward'* Pin_h
and St  Joseph! Vocational Sctiool.
NEW DENVER
NEW DENVER, B. C.-MIu Mildred Fruer left ifor a vlilt to Nelson on Tlnmdiy,
'Mra. J. Dowling end daughter
Barbara Joy, returned from Grand
Forkt on Thursday.
Mn. A. Wallace of SUverton wat
a visitor here on Friday.
Mr. and Mri. George Ptlettiorpe
returned home from Nelson on Friday.
Mr. tnd Mri. L. OK of Ntkuip
'were viiiton ln town on Frldiy.
Mn. E. Mttbewi of SUverton
wu t visitor here on Friday.
Dr. Ormcnd of Sheep Creek wu
In town for a few dayi.
Mr. and Mrs. T. H. WUson of
Silverton were visitors here on Friday.
Dr. A. Francei wu in Trtil on
Friday.
Frank Ruihton of Nakuip wu
in town on Friday on hit way to
Tnil.
Lewii Brown of Nakusp wai t
visitor here Utrk^ay.
Ac. 2 George Teir returned to
Edmonton on Fridty. He wu tccompmied ns far as Nelson by Mrs.
George Teir tnd hit ibter Mlu
Alice Teir.
Bill Jupp of Ntkuip wu tn town
on Fridty.
Capt. and Mn. C. S. Leary of Ntkuip were vliltori here on their
way from Nelson.
Dan Ttttrie arrived back on Saturdiy.
Mist Ruth Vandergrift tnd Misi
Margiret Vandergrift returned to
their heme in Nakutp on Friday
after vltiting thelx grandmother,
Mn. H. H. Pendry .or two weeki
Mn. C. Thriog, Sr., arrived from
Trail on Saturday to visit here.
Mn. C. Vindengrrtt left Siturday for her home in Nakutp.
Constable W. Stark of the Provincial Polioe and Mn. Stark, arrived -rom CTanbrook on Saturday. Constable Stark will replace
CuislcM. J. Bowling iwhq hu
been trtni-Wed to Blue River in
the Kamloopi District.
Ken Fowler of Tnil waa a viiltor here on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arline Nennttii of
Trail were oalled here Sunday ow
ing to the ll>nea ot ttie former'i
mother, Mm. M. J. Nesmith.
Mns. D. MicAj-k-fll and her nelcd
Misa Mlarlon MacAiklll of Three
Forks were visiton in town on
Mondty.
L. Carter wu a visitor to Zincton op Sunday.
D. Powell hu returned home
from Vietcffla.
Prctfcyterltn Ladlea Aid memben met at the home of Mn. Doyle
Thursday. Misa Woodiworth and
Mrs. J. Nyman were vltlton. The
Preildent, Mlu Dora Cfcver, presided. Refreshment! wete ierved.
St. Stephen'! GulV met Thursday it the home of Mn. G. Doug-
la*, rresktent Mrt. H. George pre-
tided. At ihe cloje of the meeting
Ttfjesbment* were aerved. Mem-
fcers pretent were Mn. H. George.
Mns. G. Doug.aa, Mill Willi Aylwin, \l_ Joyce BuUln, Mill M«i-
lea Butlin.
St. Stephen* W. A. meeUng wai
held Tburtttay at -he home of Mn.
A. Levy. Mn. F. JErowne, Prei -
dent, pretWed. Mn. R. CVellln reported for Visiting Committee. Mn.
A. Levy and Mri. O'Reilly wlll
vii.lt during Mty. Mri. S, Thomhn-
aon will clean the church thli
month. The hcoteti, titltted by
Mn. O'Reilly terved Tefreihminti.
Memberi preient were Mn. Brown,
Mrt. Levy, Mrt. CreHIn, Mn, Bur-
jest, Mrt. Powell, Mrt. Jonet, Mn.
O'Reilly. Mrt. Peinon. Mlu Htmllton. Mln Mlnardet, Mlu Clinch,
and Mns. M H. Butlin.
Vancouver Canning
Sugar to Ba
Divided Equally
VANCOUVER, Miny 13 (CP) -
Vancouver'! canning sugar quota
will be divided equally tmong all
applicants regardless o_ tbe amount
requested. Aid, George C. MUler,
Chairman of the Local Ration Board
announced today.
Clothing couponi metn little,, to
Mn. Jeremiah Irwin ind her diughter of Lowerwtter in the Lake District of England, but they wear
good clothes. They collect iheep
wool from hedget ind ditches, spin
it, dye it tnd weave it and make
their own clothei.
ynndel Concert
Realizes $34
lor Red Cross
High tchool itudtnti it Wynndtl,
B. C, held t vtritty concert lh the
Community Hall, realizing $34 for
tht Red Crou. Ttwre wu a splendid audience.
The play, "Buddy Buyi tn Orchid," wu t laugh getter with Mill
M. Huicroft tnd Lloyd Mclnnli
turning ln iplendld acting, tbly
lupported by Mist M. Butterfield,
Jack Wigen tnd A. Ogilvie.
The p'ay, "$300 Reward", wu well
played. Bobby Wigen wai tbly tup-
ported by Min D. Huicroft, M. He*
and T. Butterfield.
Vocal solos by Mlw H. Davis tnd
Mlu R. Moon were weU-received.
Recitation by Misi M. Huscroft, tap
damcea by Mln M. Husoroft and
Mlu A. Ogilvie, club twinging by
J. B. Wigen, Miss N. Gregory and
C. Vichnryiz, plmo duet tnd pltno
•olo by Mluei V. Packman and A.
Ogilvie tnd Mln C. Vlcharysz and
acrobatic stunt* by Mlu C. Vich.
arsyz and clioru. were highly applauded.
The Maypole burlesque by boyi
In maiden attire stopped the ihow.
The Maypole danced by the girls
wu quite a contrut and we<s loudly applauded. A camp {ke scene wai
a Ilttlng end to the concert. Vocal
solos rung to violin and guitar accompaniment were tung by Mias R.
Moon, with the is-udienoe joining In
the tinging of the Other songs. Ac-
companiata were Mlqa Riddell and
Mlts Daviei. Jim Spencer was Matter of Ceremonlei and at the close
of the conoert presented Mrs. R.
Andestad with t glass water tet,
from the coAiert party. In appreciation of fter pervlcei. A dance followed.
Mrs. Andestad wu ho: .ess to the
concert party ln her home at a later
daite. Gamei, contests and tinging
'were enjoyed tnd a dainty refreshments were terved.
KASLO
KASLO, B. C—A L. MdFliee wu
a viiitor to Nelion Sundiy.
Rev. H. J. Armitage hai left for
Vancouver to the United Church
Conference.
Mrs.- Alec Thompton of Spokane
ind Mra. J. Sime of Riondel were
In Kailo at the weekend. Dave
Suitcliffc of Riondel was alio ln
town.
Mr_. S. Stocking left for Vancouver, where lhe will visit her ion
and daughter-in-law, former residents of Kaslo, for aeveral weeki.
Crawford Bay
CRAWFORD BAY, B. C.-Mrs.
M. Palmer has returned from i
visit to Nelson, accompanied by Mrs,
M. Peten and the later'a grandson,
Ray Andenon, of Kelso, Wash.
Mri. W. Macpherson is .pending
a few days in Nelson.
Mri. A. Moore has left for Nit-
gara Falla, Ont., where he Intends
to reside.
Mr. and Mrs. Foster of Nelton
were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
W. W. Mooney.
NlOBN  DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, MAY  14,  1943 - 5,
TRAIL AIRMAN
MIMING.
Clay Kennedy, Sergeant Navigator of the R.CA.F, youngeit son
of Mr. and Mra, W. F. Kennedy of
Robton, ii missing after air operations overseas, his parents have
been advised. Sgt. Kennedy, shown
above, left his post u Sporti Editor
of the Trail Daily Times In August,
IMl, to Join the Air Force. He wu
attached to a Royal Air Fo.ce
Bombing Station in England. He
hu a brother, Clyde, ln the
R.C.A.F, and another brother, Gibson, is a CJP.B. Telegraph Agent In
TraU.
SLOCAN CITY
SLOCAN CTTY, B. C.-Mrs. W.
Hlsfllp and Miss Myrtle Hufty have
gone to Nanaimo, B. C, Mrs. Hlslip it visiting her sons, Stanley and
Jamei, who are in training there.
Mri. T. Lundell was a guest of
Mrs. R. E. McMiUan on her way
home to Creston from Revelstoke
Mrs. C. R. Wiebe and son Jerry
are visiting relatives at Glent-
worth, Sask.
WUliam Warner was a Nelson
visitor on Thursday.
The Ladies' Aid of Knox United
Church met at the home of Mrs.
Walter Clough on Thursday afternoon. Those attend'ng were Mrs.
D. Ewing, Mrs. R G. Warner, Mrs.
T. Cooper, Mrs. R. IE. McMillan
and Mrs. Walter Clough. Tlie hostess served refreshments.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Clough, Mrs.
David Ewing and Mrs. Tracy Cooper and two children were Nelson
visitors on Saturday.
Dr. Shimo Takahara Is relieving
Dr. Kamitakahara who was operated on for appendicitis at the local
Japanese Hospital.
FREEMAN
FURNITURE CO.
The Houst of Furniture Valuei
Phone 113       . Nilwn
TRADE IN YOUR
Old Furniture
on NEW
i
Miss L Nordqulst
ArfK.Lfi.IL
Superintendent
Mill Lorna M. Nordqulst, newly
appointed Assistant Superintendent
of Kootenay Lake General Hotpital, ii a graduate of Carman General Hospital, Carman, Man., having
trained under Miss Honor Tregear,
Superintendent here. Ml__r Nord-
quist, who came to Nelson in April
It replacing Misi Etna P. Wilson,
now Secretary of the Hospital.
After her graduation in I934S Mlu
Nordqulst took her post-graduate
course at Jonei Hospital, Montreal.
She waa In charge of the Pickle
Crow Mines Hospital for a year,
and nursed in two New York hospitals for another year, the White
Plains Hospital and the Bronx Hospital.
From 1940 to 1943, prior lo her
arrival here, she wai administrator
of the Carman General Hospital.
Seven Victory Bond
Certificates
at the Leeming Home
At the home of Mr. and Mn.
John Leeming, 111 Nelion Avenge,
•even Victory Bond certificitei
hive a place of honor, They ihow
thit ieven memberi of thli fimily of eight ire "backing the attack" by buying Victory Bondi.
There are eight In the family,
one of them oveneu.
No Need
to Wish
You Had i
PERMANENT...
PHONE 389
FOR APPOINTMENT
FAIRVIEW
BEAUTY SHOPPE
LAURITZ BLOCK
//
'.ROBBED HER*_■CHANCE
• A moment before ihe had been io
confident, io hopeful. This waa the
job the had always wanted and she
knew how perfecUy she wai qualified
to fill it.
But now—t turndown, complete
tnd final. One fault had defeated
her-"B.0."l
You never know, yourself, about
"B.O."—but it may shatter your
dreams.   It ctn happen to imijtme.
except to those millions who Uke t
simple daily precaution. Follow their
lead. Bathe with Lifebuoy—the one
popular soap especially made to
itop "B.O."
Lifcbuoy'i rich, caressing luds ire
marveloualy cleansing—yet gentle to
your skin. That extra-clean Lifebuoy
scent invigorates you, then disappears before you're dressed. But iti
protection remaiml
mn.it*-trsms*-Q;
	
 JJ*torn latltj JJ0O10 ? ? Questions ?_?,      Danger in
EiUbllihed April 2J, 1902.
British Columbia'i
Most Interesting Newspaptr
'Publiihed every mornlni except Sunder by
the NEWS PUBLISHING, COMPANY UM-
[TED. 366 Biker St., Nelwn, British Columbli.
MEMBER OF THS CANADIAN PRESS AND
THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.
- FRIDAY, MAY 14,1948.
Showdown With Lewis
Despite the truce under which
striking coal miners Iq the United-
States will return to work, pending
negotiation of their demands, two
large and grave issues remain to be
decided. Is any group or faction to be
allowed to hamper and obstruct the
United Nations' war effort? Is any one
man bigger than the law and the Government of the United States?
These questions must be decided.
. That they are going to be decided was
made clear in President Roosevelt's
radio address to the miners. He did
not mince words. He placed the responsibility for the shutdown of the
mines where it belongs. He told the
workers plainly that they are interfering with the war effort, that they are
gambling with the lives of their fellow
citizens in uniform, and with the victory of the United Nations. These are
statements that cannot be contradicted.
The coal situation constitutes more
than a strike. It has, in fact, the elements of actual civil war. A continuance of the work stoppage from now on
is a strike against the Government,
which has taken possession of the
mines, and this is a grave matter. President Roosevelt has said that coal will
continue to be mined. He must make
gwd on that declaration, or constituted authority in the United States will
suffer a blow from which it may not
recover.
John L. Lewis faces the supreme
test of his power.'He has come out in
actual rebellion against the State. He
has been served with warning that he
must abide by the laws. He 6hows
every evidence of being prepared to
engage in a contest with those laws,
to set himself up, in fact, as greater
than the authority of the Government.
For the sake of all constituted authority, he must be shown, once and for all,
that neither he nor any other individual or organization is big enough for
that.
ANSWERS
Open tt any ruder. Nimei et pereeM
aaklng questions wlll net be publiihed.
There ll ne chirgi fer thli aervice. Quia-
tlem will net he iniwered by melt exeept
when there li obvioui neceulty ter privacy.
Ruder, Nelson—Whit Is meant when • perion li referred to u i quick?
A "quick" ll one who pretends to poisesi
medical skill lor tht purpoie of miking money. Although not to numeroui now as In former timet, quecki ue still to be found In ill
countriei. There is nothing to prevent a man
offering e remedy or a .person tiklng lt", but
lt ■ fraud can be proved, or a quick does in-
)ur| by whet he persuades people to buy, he
Is liable to prosecution.
0. S., Kulo—Would you pleise give'I recipe
for dandelion wine, preferably on* tblt
doein't take much sugar?
Ttke two quirts dandelion petils, pour
over them half t gallon ot wtter, warm, but
that bu bnn boiled; stir tnd cover with t
flannel cloth, tnd luve for three dtyi, stirring
now and tgtln. Strain it, then put the wtter'
Into a ptn tnd boll for halt an hour with the
rtnd of t lemon tnd in orange tmong It, end
t little ginger. Then illce ttie lemon ln It,
id tdd one tnd t half pounds lump sugar;
when cool put t bit ot breed with t qutrter
ot an ounce ot yeut on lt end leave for t dty
or two; then put lt ln t jar ind luve lt for a,
month or two. Bottle and cork for uie.
A. B., Castlegar—Who wu Jenny Und tnd
when did she live?
Jenny Und was t famous Swedlih soprano
who was born In 1820 nd died tin 1887,
R. T., Nelson—Is the Governor Generil ot
Canada related to the King?
lite Ear) of Athlone, the pruent Governor
General of Canada, li a brother of Queen
Miry, hence in uncle of King George VI.
M. S., Kimberley-We do not divulge  the
names of personi writing to thii column
for information.
Pacific
Martinique Status Clarified
No surprise is occasioned by the
official breaking off of relations between the United States and the pro-
Vichy administration of Martinique.
This has been inevitable, particularly
since the recent statement of Admiral
Georges Robert, which showed him as
willing to deal with the United Nationi.
in nothing more than a bargaining
mood.
It is well to have this clean break. It
puts affairs on a firm and understandable footing. Martinique offerg no serious threat to this continent, so long
as we understand that it is definitely
hostile, and this fact is now officially
recognized by the State Department
of the United States.
We are in a position to make and
keep the island impotent as a possible
base of enemy operations, and this we
shall do. If necessary, it can be occupied as was done with Madagascar.
The only danger would come from
continuing to recognize the colony, and
allowing a subversive administration
to carry on its machinations under the
cover of our friendship.
Today's  Horoscope
You are level-headed, practical ind poiseu i good buiineu unit Yea ire independent ind dominate otheri. Biwire ot being
obiUnite ind Mllilh. Davelop humility. You
will ittiin thi success you ink. For your
birthdiy, lt yeu ire in the habit of of tiklng i
drink of water when you' awaken ln thl night,
mike sure It la fresh. If you drive it • rapid
physical or mental apeed, you miy defut your
own endi by gilllng Into a Jim or argument.
Bl generous with advice or money. The deed
of kindness ihould be Its own rewird. Take
•n ictlvi pirt In a community project thli
evening, to help rehabiliutc the shattered war
victims.
War—25 Years Ago
By The Cinidlin Prm
Miy 14, 1918. - Italians hilted Auitritn
counter-attacks ll Monte Corno and other
potnti. Auilrlin btttluhip torpedoed In Poll
Hirbor. Germin thruit it Morlincourt on ths
Wutern Front hilted by Auitrillin forces
who improved their poiitioni ln the arei.
High Yield Crop
One That Pays
The best potato irop recorded In Cintdt
wu in 1.20 ioon tfter the close of the lut
wir. The crop that year totalled 80,299,000
cwts. harvested trom 785,000 acru, ind hid
a farm value of $1.62 per cwt., or t tottl vtlue
of ibout $130,000,000. This compares with the
1942 crop ot 42,882,000 cwti. from 505,000 acres
with i present firm value of $1.38 per cwt,
or t total value of about $80,000,000.
In normal seasons It li not the total production of any grower that determines the
profit he will mike, but rither the yield above
the per-aere cost ot producing and marketing
the crop that Is profit, says John Tucker, Manager, Seed Potato Section, Special. Producti
Board. A grower may produce a large quantity of potatoes, sell them at a fair price, and
still lose money. At 50 centi per buihei It usually requires 125 bushels per icre to piy tbe
cost of growing ind marketing the crop. Ttit
average yield for Canada is about 150 bushels per acre.
A 300-bushel per icri crop Is approximtte-
ly seven times more profitable than the 150-
bushel crop it this rite. Putting it another
way, It requires seven teres at 150 poundi per
acre, or 1030 bushels produced ind marketed,
to equal the profit of one icre of 300 buihei
yield. Most certified seed groweri produce
300 bushels or more per icre.
Growers' efforts should be directed toward increasing yields by the use of good
certified seed, rather than lncreulng the
acreage with mediocre seed. It will cost less in
time and materials, and will be found more
profitable in the long run.
(New York. Sun)
Warnings from General MacArthur tai
Auitrtllin Prime Mlnliter Curtin of growing
Jtptntte strength ia the Islind buu to the
North ot Australia ire underscored by the
litest Jipmese tir itttck—thU time on Milne
Bty In Eutern New Guinea, For the fourt,h
time rtctntly tbe Japanese attacked ln
strength, sending 79 to 100 plinu tftlnit Milne
Bty. At In urller ttttck on shipping tt Gaud-
alcantl, or Oro Bty tnd on Fort Moreiby,
lossu of the Jtptneie were prohibitive, yet
they kept coming,
tn tht Milne Bay rtld tbe Jipaneie loit
between t third tnd t half of the force ient
agalnit tht target. Such ■ loit it not likely to
discourage the Japanese It they ire convinced
ot the necessity for restoring the domination
of the ilr which they hive loit ln recent
monthi. Neither Burma' nor China is likely to
mtkt grut demands on Jtptneie tir strength
ln th* lmmedlite future, io thtt there li no
reuon to doubt the enemy'i ability to concentrate considerable tir tnd naval itrength ln
the Southwest Pacific, whether to upset Allied
plant or to engage in t new offenilve against
Auitrtlli.
Wuhlngton ind Canberra tre obvlouily it
odds over the iltuition tn the Pacific. Wuhlngton plays down the Japanese threit; Canberra plays It up. One of the explanations il
u old as the fable about lti making t difference whou ox li being gored. If the Jtptneie
ihould deliver in effective ittack it would
be Australia, not the United Statu, which
would bur the mtln burden. By the umt
token, if Canberra U worried ibout Id own
ufety, Wuhington Ii concerned about the wisdom ot the military and naval policiu to
i which lt hu become committed.
1 It it ihould turn out thit Wuhlngton hu
gueued wrong on thli matter and by io doing
opened the door to a fruh calamity in the
Pecific, that would be an error of Judgment
for which American public opinion would
surely demand an accounting. So far at the
American public Is concerned, ita confidence
in MacArthur remains extraordinarily strong.
It li prtptred to believe thtt, given th* minimum necessary equipment, he will do hli Job
tnd do it well, It Is perhaps thli thought alone
which prevents serious uneasiness over the
week'i crop et reports from tb* far Esst.
Generil MieArthur'i repruentitlvu wive
recently in Wuhlngton, tnd preiumibly thty
put th* whol* Ptdfie cut ftr more elttrly
than lt il permissible to prewnt It to the
public. These recent conferencei ihould be
borne ia mind when itatementi from Auitrtlla run head-on into itatementi from Wuhington. Everything that hu bun done md
will be done to itrengthen our Piclflc force*,
cinnot be put on the blackboard for til to rud.
Looking  Backward
10 YEARS AQO
(From Dally News, May 14, 1981)
The Soviet Government innounced the
issuance of a 3,000,000.000 ruple loin to finance the beginning of a iecond five-yeir piln.
Chancellor Adolf Hitler wlil defend Germany's foreign policy In an addreu Wednesday md lay the blame for deadlock In the
Geneva Disarmament Conference where the
Nazi Government thinks It belongs.
Captain and Mrs. Walter Wright of Nakuip
Friday visited Procter, where Captain Wright
will replace Captain F. L. Orr on the S. S.
Moyie.
-  YEARS AGO
(From Dally News, May 14, 1911)
The Admiralty innounces thit during the
period May 6-12 Induilve air force contingents, working from Dunkirk carried out succeuful bombing operttions against Ostend
docks and seaplane base, the Zeebrugge mole
•nd lock gates, ind enemy ihlpping in the
vicinity.
Dr. N. Wolverton his resigned from the
local Military Appeal Tribunal. J. Fred Hume
hu been ippointed to fill tb* vaciney.
Proipecti for • big trult crop In th* Creiton Villey DUtrlct tn excillint, stitei Chirlu
Moore, Provinciil Land Surveyor who li viiiting Nelion. SmiU fruiti are conildered generally promising.
Press Comment
ALU PLAY THIIR PART
Beciuse the British Eighth Army hu been
ln the limelight in the Tunisian fighting, an
lmpreuion hu grewn up that it his hid to
bur in unequal share of tbe btd. Slighting
references to the Americim hive been heird,
which tre entirely unjustified. The difference
in the ictlon ln which they have engiged hu
been entirely due to the fortunes of wir, md
no one cw truthfully uy that the United
Statu troopi have slacked, or have deliberately picked the soft spots.
Now comu • report which shows still
more clearly that all irms have been playing
a valuable role. It ls revealed that the junction betwun Britiih and American troopi
brought to the former huge quantities of badly
nelded tuppliu. The reserve lay inside the
American llnet, md our men had to fight
their way through to lt Acting u the supply
column li not a ipeetacular Job, but it is a
useful oae, md the United Statu muit be
given credit tor thui performing an euential
talk ln lupport of our forcu.—Windior Star.
IRELAND AND PEACE TABLI
Questioned ai to whether Eire expects
mything It the puce tible, Robert Brennan,
Irish Minister to Washington, replies: "Oh.
yes, wa expect it to be t Juit puce whieh will
benefit tht entire world." But ilttlng on the
sidelines ind munching peanuts Im't i greit
help toward thit end-Windsor Star.
ELOPEMENT BUSINESS
California hai repelled the law requiring
t three-day wilt ifter obtaining i mirriage
licence. The State wu simply loiing too much
buiineu through movie stars flying to Arizona
on those "secret" elopements, complete with
phetolrtpherl md preii agenti. — Windsor
Star.
HOW COULD HI?
A Goderlch area youth hu been fined $100
beeaun he violated gai rition rulei by driving eight.cirs during the yur. ilx of his own
•nd two ot hli ftthir'i. Let'i hope no cirrler,
half-track or truck il fatally itilled on the
rud to Tunli tonight beciusi ot in empty
tank or t worn-out tire.—Windior Star.
Test  Yourself
1. Whit ire the most difficult litters to
understmd over the telephone?
2. Whtt ll thl Punjab?
3. What geographical dlitlnction is held by
Und'i Btd, Englind?
40 YIARI AOO
(From Thi Nelun Tritium, Mty 14,1101)
Wild Hone Cruk placer mining companies  ire  prepirlnf  for  extemlve  operations
thli yeer.
A rich itrlke li reported on tbe Joiie mine,
it Roulmd, th* rich Annie vtin hiving been
•truck In th* 700-foot levil by diamond drill.
It li now predicted thit profitable dividend!
in assured the LeRoi No. 3 for leveril yttn.
t. J. JJfllion of Greenwood hu bttn *p>
pointed minager of, tha Northport Smelter.
Hi wy formerly with thi Grind forki imilt-
*r, ind Utterly hu bein looking ifter th* Intereiti of the Prlci Brothtr* In th*, Boundary
diitrict.
TIST ANSWERS
1. -8" atd T.
2. A Northwestirn Province of Britiih
Indii. .
3. It It the moit Westerly point of England.
Words of Wisdom
One food, heirty laugh ll • bombshell exploding ln the right pltce, while spleen md
dlieontent tft I gun thtt kick! ovir the man
who ihooti It olf.-D* Wltt Tilmige.
CP.R. Veteran
at Cranbrook
CRANBROOK, B. C. - Thomu
Booney, in employee of the Ctntditn Ptcific Railway In BritUh Columbia ilnce 1907, wu guut of
honor it t bmquet tendered by the
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineer! it Cranbrook, mtrking hli
"booking ln". F. R, MoDiniel wu
Muter of Ceremonies. A purse wu
pruented to him by Put Chief Engineer Hugh Brock on behalf of
the orginlutlon.    *•
Mr. Rooney wu borri at Gaspe,
Que. II* Joined th* rallwiy ti t
wiper tt Field in IHT, wu made
a firemen In 1900, and an engineer
in 1012.' Be Uved at Revelstoke
untU IMS, when he traniferred to
Cranbrook.
Special guests for the occulon
were P. J. Smith, Crinbrook. 0. A.
Henneuy of Nelion, Fred Mackenrot, J. W. Barber, Locometlve Foreman, M. T. HarrU, Jamu Doolan
and Oilbert Lacey.
Thirty-five attended the bmquet,
whieh wu prepared by the Canadian Daughter!.
JOHN VOLPATTI
BURIED AT NATAL
Fun*rtl Urvicu for John Volptt-
tl, youngest ion of Mr. tnd, Mn.
B. Volpattl of Michel were held at
SL Michael's Church, Father Brophy officiating. He wu 12 yeari
of age and leavu to mourn hti
mother and father, a sister and three
brothers, all living at Michel with
the exception of e brother, Oscar
who is in training with the Canadian army at Esquimalt, B.C.
The pallbearen were M. Pett*.
wile. D. ColoneUl, J. Purcell!, O,
Truant, D. Domino add C. DePoalt,
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■pr'T*T'1 '   ' 'f.i.ifiri'inxn*
\/ Today's
VICTORY GARDEN-GRAPH
By DIAN HALLIDAY
u iv	
m 1 rtANT-H«
i-sft   *   /**""• -43.
JL
DON'T flANT AU __K __-*
COWH At THK BAMK TIMK
10-OAtfg APART AND HAVB CO»t*
AU THROUGH THI SUMIVJtR.
4-t*
PIANTBO THE 9AMH DAV
THII CORN SHOWS THE
DIFFBBBHCB _-t_-i
&XO AND POOR 8EHO R
U.fcftlfWmCoa. It
75,000 Planes
WASHINOTON. Mty 13 (AP) —
Preildent Roouvtlt'i t«w 1943 *»*.
crttt production gotl- 011.000,000
pound*, ipparently meani about
75,000 plmu.
While toil figure ii much muller I
thth his odginil goil ot 128,000 j
pltnes, innounced etrly In th* wtr, 1
this yetr'i output figured en weight 1
basis wlll equil 150,000 plinu est I
the 1042 vintage.
Next yetr'i goal, ai* announced
by the Pruldent ll 1,417,000,000
poundt. Assuming t further average increue in weight of 25 per cents
—from 13,000 to 19,000 poundi per.
pltne—thla would meen ibout 90,000 |
planu.
KING CORN IN THE
VICTORY GARDEN
Unleu tb* Victory nrden te very
imtll Kind Corn will demand t
place In it tnd every bom* gtrd-
en*r lt reedy to bt its willing subject /or the uk* ot the lucculent
kernels tt "tweet corn time."
Corn, no mttter how great your
cnthirtia-nm for It. ihould not be
planted Until' til dinger ot froit It
ptst. Corn ta t warm weither vegetable tnd cannot tolerate ewn t
mild frectlng wetther.
Sweet corn, because of tht room
It takei, it hardly appropriate Ot
prtctlctl ln the very unall Vittory
garden but when aptct permits it
ahould bt Included ln the piloting
llrt, for there ta no more appetizing
and seal-tying vegetable than corn
plrnged fresh from ltw garden into
'the boiling pot. Both the quality
and fltvor deteriorate quickly after
the eut are pulled from the plant.
Bven in the small Victory garden
om ctn haw corn netrly all Summer If email, successive plantings
of it are mtde at 10-day intervtli,
M ihown ln the tccompanying-Gar-
<tan Graph.
Where eweet own t» concerned,
iit will P*y to buy th* very but
of seed. Only t comparatively imtll
quantity of ieed It requited for
the overage Victory garden and
poor quality ieed will yield only
disappointment in the planta, u
Illuttrtted. The bett teed ia ictutlly (he cheapest ln tb* end bectuu
of the Increued yield* plus improved quality of th* corn ltaelf. Only
the hybrid vtrleUet ot corn ihould
be grown in the small garden beciuie of the high yield trom eaoh
plant.
"Un-" towni In Britain'i peacetime airline network have asked
the Air Minliter tor guidance on
the postwar future of local airfields
ttken over by the Ministry.
Gettlnq You DOWN?
II morning findi you only halt rested, ifill
weiry ... il jour -Iwp U brolen by fitful
louinj md turning... il you can'l ma. tt
uttk dum te reining rut,,. yur kidnija
may be to Mum.
Whu your Wup got wt ol otoW, you
-h*p uiuilly luffori. To help your kidneji
rei-in a normil condition, lo help jou enjoy
lutfal tlmt ui* Dodd'i Kidney Pilli t
fauorita treitment hr MN thu lull t
century. Dodd'i Kidn.y Pilli ire my le
u» and «i not hibit (omiini. Alk ier
Dodd'i Kidnej PUU it My drug ante.
Look lor the bluo box with the nd bud. I»
Dodd'sKidneyPilli
THE STORY BEHIND
EAT  RATIONING
Food is a weapon of. war, and we must share our supplies with those who
are fighting to keep the war from our shores. After all special wartime
demands are taken care of, only one half vof the meat produced in,
Canada will' be available for ordinary domestic consumption at home.
Mi
Mut luppliei for our Armed Forcti must be
maintained It ill COIU.
Grut Britiln bu to depend mon ind more
on Canada for luppliei to miintiin even its
preient low rition rite of 21 cents Worth of
mett per penon, per week.
•Wffip^
Cinned mut U required in large qutntitk*
by the Rid Crosi to itnd to our bop sjho
ire prisonen of wir.
______
Places liki Newfoundland ind tbe Teit I:
which  previouily secured their mut fl
other K.urca—muit now depend to i
extent on Cuada.
m
Since tbe wir itirted the consumption of
meit by civilimi hu increued in Canida.
Grut defense projtcti iuch u the Akin
'Highway ind the Shipihaw Power Development hive creited new ind lirge demands
for mut in treu where practically oo demind
edited before.
Tbe miny extri shipi of the United Nitioni
now calling it Cimdiin porti, muit b*
furnished with meat.
Etiquette  Hints
Nevtr rtput l Itary yeu have heird. up«-
alilly It til Ut* facta ire not known to you
and It li an unkind itory ibout someone. Every
time iuch • tile it repeated II li Iold less to-
curataly tnd at lut th* ficti of Ut* caw are
entirely lut to tight. <
RATIONING IS INTELLIGENT FORESIGHT-INTELLIGENT PLANNING
Coupon rationing it the pn\y way of ensuring equal sharing of the meat available
for civilian conturnption in Canada. Those with lou of money wilhnot get more
than their share—and thote with less money will be assured of getting
their fair share.
Rationing will help prevent local meat shortages such as occurred last year from
becoming widespread and continuous throughout the whole Dominion. The
incentive for panic-buying which empties butcher shops early in the day,
will be eliminated:
<S_f_\*K^
m
THE MEAT RATION WIU IE AMPLE FOR HEALTH AND NUTRITION
Fortuaitily, our mm production it Canada hu increued. So, ilthough only
half our production will be available for civiliin uie, it wil mean i reduction
of only ibout 11% to 20% in thl iverige houiehold consumption.
Thi propoud rition of 2 lbs. (circui weight) pir penon, ptr week, hu bun
ipproved by tin country'i hiding food ind nutrition authorities, u ample for
thi hulth ud nutrition itudirdi of ivoryon*   wgirdlus of ige or occupation.
DATES AND OTHER DETAILS HOARDING MUT HATIONING-SOON TO
IICOMI EFFECTIVE IN CANADA-WILL tt ANNOUNCED LATER
WARTIME  PRICLS AND TRADE BOARD
 'SPORTS
.enalors, A's
[iplure
Wertlme Games
CLEVELAND, Miy 13 IAP) -*"■
Waihington Senaton racked up
two runi In tht 12th inning and
thin itivid iff 1 lut-mlnuti flurry by Clivilmd Indlani to tiko
I t-2 Americin Leigue triumph
todiy, Cltvtlind evened thl count
it oni run uth In thi ninth.
b 1 Ult ditch itind, the Indlani
oked OM run icrou on singles by
iink Edwirdi ind Otto Denning
ut win unible to look tbe ioon
giln befort pinch hitting Chubby
Mn hit a line drive Into George
fyitt'i wilting handi md ended
** fan*.
faehlngton   J 5 0
iltvtlmd   J  7  1
Pyle, Carrasequtl (12) and Giul-
ml; Eirly (10): Smith, Poit («),
nd Deuuteli, Roeir (10),
HAT TIOER8 2-1
MfntOJT, May IS (AP) - De-
Ntt Tigers, dropped a U-lnnlng
Lmerican League game today to
Wltdelphla Athletics 2-1 when
)lck Siebert ilngled home the win-
ling run to glvt Jtlll Floret, Mex-
can right-hander, Ml fourth lucees-
ive pitching triumph.
Slebert's gam-winning hit came
« Lefty Roy Heruhiw, third of
jur Detroit hurlers, with the bi.ei
oaded and oni out ln thi 13th.
■hllidtlphta      2   8  0
JettoU   _...   1 12   J
Christopher, Plorei (10) ind
hvift; Newhouser, Gorsica, (8) Hen-
haw (13) Trput (13) and Personi.
IYIA II HERO
I IT. LOUIS, May 13 (AP)- Thtrt
louWn't bt I tougher ittUng for I
Wif pVtehir—tbt Kort titd, tht
puee loaded ind no on* out ln thi
Vlt halt of the ninth Inning.
Mttt Ryba, Boiton Red Sox "lire-
nan", faced tblt iltuition today
ind itopped St Louli Browni cold.
hi wmt on to giln 1 will-nrned
r, 84, whtn thi Sox icored
in th* 12th Inning on 1 wilk,
by Ptt* Tox ind Ulyuei
jltn, ani Mike CSurtik'i error.
Iton     6 11   1
It Louis  -   4 11  8
■ffughion, Hybt (t) and P**eock:
Sundn,   Sinford   (4)   McKiin   (8)
Uuncrief (8) ind Hiyei.
Kew York it Chlctgo, postponed.
1ALL STANDINGS
NATIONAL LEAQUE
'    W LPct
Brooklyn  13  8 ,8M
Bt Loula „  ..   t  8 ,800
ltl     10   B .528
 8   i __
•fs    _  7      8   r-
 1   B ,487
CJhtcigo _ 711 in
ftttw York ...._ ._   7 11 J8»
AMERICAN LEAQUE
lbw York IJ  8 .884
Bare-end   _ _ 11   7 .811
Jetrott   .    9   B .528
Tuhlngton _  11 10 .M4
It lyoule  _ _,   8   8 JOO
••hiladelphia  — _   9 ll .-»
Mltti      8 10 J.5
ioeton . 7 13 .350
TIRES
800x11    ND ALL SIZES
Vulcanized
WITH   OUR   NIW
ELECTRICAL  PROCESS
Hui thott brtaki ind tuti
with   livt  rubbtr  ind   kup
'em rolling.
BEACON
Service and Garage
When Autoi Ar* Ripured
701 BAKER STREET
Chant 878
ianuMH-_cmai->siiiffi
Batting Leaders
By Till Auoelittd .Prm
(Baud on ao or mora Umu at bat)
Player,   Clubs       OABR'HBct
P. Winer, Dodgen 10 30 4 14 .487
O'Dea, Canto ... 10 33 8 14 .424
Stephens, Browns .. 18 80 10 23 .888
My, Redi 18 77 U 28 .877
Higglni, Tigers ..... 17 63 5 23 .365
Radcliff,  Tigtn ...12 44  915 .Ml
Runs batted In: National League:
Vaughan, Dodgtn 14; Americin League: Bpence, Senators 18.
Home runi: Nitional' League:
Maynard, Glanti 4; American League: Keller, Yankeei I-
Pal Loebllck
Takei District
Bowling Honors
TRAIL, B. C„ Mljr 18-Pat Lot-
bllolc of Trail Crown Polnti allowed henelf queen ot Wett Koottnay
ltdiei flv* pin artists Wednesday
»i ih* carried ott both high aggregate md high Ilngles trophies at the
Wett Koottnay Ladled Bowling
Tournament.
Her 248 ilnglt wis good enough
to win th* Bradley Cup whil* her
total of 870 gilned tor her th* Weit
Transter'Cup. Another Trailite, Beth
Laurie of Union Hotel wil high
singles runner-up wltb 248, whil*
Doris Stephen! of Nelson capturod
other runner's up honon with in
iggregate ot S20.
Woognwi'i quintet ot Witt oar-
ricd oil the top teim ehimplonihlp
and Savoy Cup with a total of 2499
polnti, Runner up wai the CrOwn
Point teim, aUo of Trail, with 2468
pointi. Tann reiults were announced tully In Thunday's Nelson Dally
Niwi,
Mn. M. Cord, Tournament Auociation Preiident, pre-ented the
awardl at a banquet In the Crown
Point At the innuil muting following a new slate of officeri war
elected. It comprised Mrt, G. Bennett, South Sloean, Preildent; Mn,
Dot Waterer, Ntlion, SecreUry; ind
Bitty Haggirty, Trill, Treaiurer,
South Slocin bowl«n will iponior tha 1844 tournament, although
It will be held on Nelion alleyi, lt
wia innounoed.
Sports Roundup
By'rlUGH FULLERTON, JR.
Auoelited Prtn Sport Writer
NBW YORK, Miy 18 CAP)-The
postman his to work anyway, to
why ihould wi both do ltt—Htri'i
today'i offering, courtesy ot thl
Poit Offlct Depi. and varioua contributors:
TODAY'S QUEST STAR
Ltwli Burton. New York Journsl-
Amerlcm: "A Senor Ginji of Mexico City ind Lisbon li ieeklng to lntereit Mikt Jicobi In bull (Ight
promoting iround New York—In-
dlviduiUy, bull uid Ught in two
of thi beit producti of Mr, Jicob'i
office."
PAINFUL POESY DEPT.
Jersey Jones, yt olde hoekey and
fight tub thumper who hu turned
hii tilenli to publicizing • Baltimore
amusement pirk thli season, suffered 1 poetical Inspiration after
reading all about tht "Balata Blight"
In basebaU—In can anyone thinks
this dept li reiponilble for the
world'i. wont vtrie, we reproduce
Jeriey effort h«n:
To baseball dm:
There's no "dead bill" at Carlin's,
The park of wldt renown,
With rldei ind chilli
And fun ind thrill*—
It's the llveit place In town.
Babe Phelpi
Sold fo Phillies
mTSSUIKJH, May 12 (AP) -
Gordon (Babe) Phelpi, Pittsburgh
Piratei catcher lut yaar, has been
sold to Philadelphia Phllllei for an
undiidoied mm. Preildtnt William
Beniwanger innounctd today.
Phtlpt, 89, cune to tht Bucs,
along with thrtt othtr Brooklyn
Dodgen pltyen, for Arky Vaughin.
QUALITY LURES
Have Always Definitely Led the Way
in the Gyro Trout Derby —
Seg your local tacki* dealer today — pick
out the spoons you'll nead for this season
and take good care of them. It is probable
that thar* wlll b* a sarioua ahortage of
spooni before the war has ended.
Alk the
Angler.
He Knows
Aik tht
Dealer
Who Still
Gibbs Tool & Stamping Works
Vancouver, B. C.
Till your dialer to itoch Gibbi Tucklr
TO LINE UP
HORNETS INFIELD,
BATTING TODAY
Hornets;" glrli futbtU aquad. will
hold their initial organization pnctlce tonight at (. A bitting order ind
infiald will dtfinlttly he named by
Cotch Slim Porter it tha workout,
Thoie named for tha iquad include
Wigg, Trouo, Procter, Blackwtil,
Stangherlin, Kubin, Cuemort, Stewirt, Willice, 3t Oarmaln, Ferguson
and Muifiit.
Dodgers Edge Out
Pirates;
Hubbell Beaten
■UPOKUYN, May 13 (AP) -
Brooklyn Dodgiri captured a turbulent National Leagut victory
from Pittiburgh Piratei today, 5-4,
on Jaa Madwlek'i pinch ilngle >n
tha ninth Inning, after Manager
Frmk frlieh, Pltchtr Truitt ltw,
•II ind Pint Bueman libit Fletcher of the Plratei ill'had bten
tjictid In in tlghth.Inning argil
mint With Umpire Ltt Ballin
fint   .
Bobo Newsom, who ittrted for
Brooklyn, protested ln tht iecond
inning agalnit the ball* and itrlke
Judgment of Umpirt Basils Reardon.
Then In the leventh Inning Durocher tnd Augie Galan irgutd over
Billapfant's ruling that a grounder
by Galon wai fair.
These preltminariei furnlihed tbe
superheated letting for tha .eighth
Inning, which Dixit Walker opened
with a triple. With two out, Billy
Herman hit a grpunder which sewell knocked down and threw to first
but Biillunfimt called Herman lafe
11 Wilker crossed with the tying
run,
The entire Plttaburgh team milled
around Ballanfant in a noisy ind
prolonged demonstration which ended only after Frisch, Sewell and
Fletcher had been ordered off tht
field.
Pittiburgh      4 18   1
Brooklyn  „    5 11   1
Sewell, Dlete (8) Hebert (») and
Lopei: Newsom, Webber (8) and
Owen.
CARDS BLANK BRAVES
BOSTON, May 13 (AP.-St. Louli Cardlmli turned flvi hits into
flvi runs (r the seventh Inning todiy td whitewash Boiton Bravei
S-0. Ernie White illowed but four
hlti, two of them In tht ninth, ind
St. Louli collected only thret off
Chirley Birrett during thi flnt
six Innings.
St. Louis „..„'..„ S 10  0
Boston .,„„... 0   4   1
Whltt and O'Dh; Barrett, Jeff-
coat (0) ind Klutti.
PHILLIII ADVANCE
PHILADELPHIA, Miy 13 (AP)-
Phtlidalphla Phillies moved into
fourth place today by splitting a
doubleheader with Cinclnniti Reds
before a ladles' day crowd ot 7341,
one of the largeit weekdiy turnouts
In yeats'tor the Phllllei. The Phillies advanced through their 1-1 victory in the opener, though thty
dropped the tecond gimt 8-1.
A pitching battle between Si John,
son ot the Phillies end Riy Starr ot
the Redi went into the ninth inning
ot the first game tied it 1-1, ind
Babe Dihlgren ilngled Ron Northey acrois with the winning tally.
FIRST OAME
Clncinntti ...'.   1 4  1
PhlUdelphia _....  I 8  0
Starr,  Beggs   (0)   ind  Mueller;
Johnion and Llvingiton.
SECOND
Cincinnati  _.   8 10  0
Phlladtlphia    „ 1 10   1
Riddle, Shoun (7) and Mueller; Podgajny, Salvo (8) Gerheauser (8) and
Livingston,
GIANTI TAKE CUBS
NEW YORK, May 13 (AP)-Carl
Hubbell. taking tht wraps off his
famed left arm for the tint time
th;i nawn, failed today in iht qtfcn
for hli 280th victory-put 1 pinch
home run by Dick Bariell with
two aboard in tht ninth inning
brought Ntw York Giantt a 7-4
triumph ovtr Chicago Cubi.
When King Carl wai forced to retire ln the seventh Inning he had
yielded 12 of Chicago's 13 hits and,
the Glanti were trailing 4-1. Two
of the Cubs' rum came in tht flnt
Inning, aided by an erro'r by Manager Mel Ott, and the other two
crossed ln the leventh.
But Glinti bounced back with I
abt run Inning ln tht ninth. They
drovt Cliude Pmeiu to the ihowen ind after Hank Wyie had taken
over, Bartell bitted for Ace Adami,
third New York hurltr, ind ilam-
med tht ball into the itandi for
the deciding runi,
Chicigo     4 13   4
New York    7 10   1
Paueau, Wyie (9) and Herosn-
dtz; Hubbell, Stylti (7) Adimi (9)
and Lombardi.
Workmen's Cooperative Committee
Deluged With (oal Orders;
(.1.0. Reliance on Committee
Baseball Scores
PACIFIC COAIT
Sacramento 8, Hollywood 1
Sin Franciico 2, Portland 1
San Diego 2, Otklind 1
INTERNATIONAL
Syncute 2, Montretl 8
Jimy City 1, Rocheiter 0
Newark 1, Toronto 2.
\MERICAN   ASSOCIATION
Colurrtbuc j, Toledo 0.
NIGHT GAMES
Columbus 1, Toledo 2.
St. Paul 3, Minneapolis 1.
Crash of Plant
at Newmarket
Cuti Raca Schedule
LONDON, Miy 18 (CP Cable)-
The racei at Newmarket icheduled
for May 18-10 hive bttn poitponed
for a week u 1 reiult of damage
i-iuied whtn an unidentified ilrcnft crashed on tht trick Iut
night, It wil innounced todiy.
Th* Ntwmirktt ftttum, tht 2000
and 1000 Gulneu, will bt run Miy
28 and 26, respectively.
Occupants <<f the plane were killed,
TBAIL, B.C, May 1»-Devld Ken.
neway, Chairman of the Workmen's
Cooperative Committee, stated today
that eoal forma had been Issued to
the workmen of the C, M. & S. Com.
pany and that tha Fuel Committee
ot the Workmen's Cooperative Com.
mlttaa waa being deluged with returns tor coal orders.
"It la lurpriilng, to aiy the lent"
utd the chairman, "bow many CIO.
mtmben are tendering orders (or
coal to be purchued for them by
the Committee lil face, of the write
up in th* Nelion Dally Newi, May
13, itating Local 480 would meat
Thursday to draw up an igreement
to present to the management of
the c. M. & s. Company, since wa
now have a majority membership
lt appears,1',stated Kenneway, "that
tht futl queition would be too
much ot a chore for tht Local 480,
or that tb* members of Local 480
have little faith In th* write-up."
The Victory Loan Internal oanvasi
will terminate on Saturday. Today
tht drive ii $16,000 ovtr the quota,
The Internal canvass organization,
iince ita inception, hu received 100
per cent cooperation trom the Work.
men's Cooperative Committee, miny
Of the committeemen participating
in the actual canvisi
NEXT DRIVE POR
INDEPENDENT UNION
With tha drive luccessfully com.
pleted, tha Workman's Cooperative
Committee will be tble to go all
out for 1 different kind of victory
In thalr membenhlp drive /or an
independent union, Tht propoied
oomtitutton wlll bt poited ln ibout
two days time, A miss meeting will
bi called Thursday, May 20, or IM
diy, Miy _
Mr. Kenneway stated that Local
480 might not have taken Into con-
lidiration the labor turnover from
Jan 1 to April 30 and would pro-
bably find In the final checkup that
many Of their memben wert tem.
porary employats of the CM. k .
Company, ind therefore defunct
memberi of Looal 480.
"Tba Committtc is stm at. tba
INO mark ln membenhlp, but faela
confident tbat attar tha mess meet*
Ing thoM who ara still in doubt will
have seats lha light and will add
their weight to the Committee's
causa for an Independent union,''
iald Mr. Kennewiy. .
Pick Montgomery
lo Take Jack
FEKLADSLFHtA, May 1» (AP)~
It Philadelphia's imart money boys
have the right dope ttie lightweight
boxing crown Is going to bounce
right off Beau Jack'i head in Madiion Squire Garden next Friday.
May 21.
And Bob Montgomery will don
it with a pridt that would be pardonable ln a lad who'i been making
false starts tow_id the throne tor
the better part of five yean.
It will be the 24-year-old Negro's
ilxth go with a title-holder. The
fight crowd hold that he Is Philadelphia'! greatest fighter since the
dayi ot Binny Leonird, Lew Ten-
die, ind Benny Basi; and Tendler
himself, now operating a restaurant
in the centre of th* 'Quaker City's
fight-fin neighborhood, Is saying
that no light-weight that ever lived,
not even Tendler — or Leonard t-
could have Ucked the Bobcat on the
recent occulon of his triumphant
tutil* with Lulu Costantino.
Coordinator for
Sports Likely
By SID PIOER
Aiioelated Prtu Sporti Wrlttr
NEW TORK, May 13 (AP) - A.
National Coordinator for all sports,
rumored for neirly ■ yeir, li likely
to be named by President Roosevelt within a month, and Senator
Jamei Mead of Buffalo, who advocated cancellation of the world serlea and all star gamea less than
three monthi tgo, Is tht leading
cin_l.dit« for the job,   •
Word of the eirly appointment
of iuch 1 iportl officer, whose big
job will be to decide bow the Nation* tporti "can be handled without •affecting the war effort," ctme
lait night from Heibert'Bayird
Swope, Chairman of th* New York
Racing Commiulon and Consultant
on Public Policy to the War De
partment, in a ipeech it a dinner
closing the two-day meeting of the
National Auoclation of State Rae.
ing Commiuloners.
'There is no doubt a Sports Coordinator Ii neceuary," Swope said.
"Many jiorti did not take their
problems to Waihington early in
the war, and they have suffered.
'Wii chief function will be to
leirn what people think of a sport
and how lt can be handled without
affecting the war effort. He will be
a 'clearing houie'."
Kootenay. Engineering
at 90 Per Cent of
Victory Loan Quota
Employeei of the Kooteniy Engineering Company at Brilliant havt
attained 90 per cent of their Victory Bond quota. Team captaltu reported Thunday to Dean Mann of
the Nelaon Victory Loan Office
that lubicrlptlona were up to g40,3O0.
They ire liming it $48,000.
Mrs. M. Riddell
Resigns From *
Kailo Legion Aux.
KASLO, B.C.-The monthly meet'
Ing of the Women's Auxiliary to th*
Canidlm Legion wu hild ln the
Drill Hill, Mrs. H. T, Driver, Presi
dent, was ln the choir.
A letter of resignation from Mr>.
M. Riddell, Secretary-Treuurer, was
raid,
Mn. A. Carney wis elected to
fill bet pltce. Mn. Oeorge Ptlmer
wit elected Vice-Prtildtnt tnd Mn,
W. Whlttaker Seoond Vlce-Preildent.
Mrs, r, McGibbon, Mrs. O. Palmer
and Mrs, T. Horner wnt named a
committee to handle the emergency
fund. A two-minute silence was
observed in respect to Pta, Meen,
who was killed in an accident overseu and a letter of sympathy wu
sent to Mrs. Meers and har family.
Mrs. Camey wu thanked for lb*
work she had done during her year
ln office and wat presented with the
Past President phi,
Plans for 1 tea to bt held ln
tht neir future were discussed, ifttr which a "war taa" wu served.
ASK WSTAUtANTS II
ESSENTIAL INDUSTRY
VANCOUVm, May 11 (Of) -
A plea that Vuwouvw natauranti
be reclateifled m "menti**" induitry haa been mad* by ttw vinoouv-
« Rettauraoit Ownen' AwocWJon
to the National Selective Service
Dlrtetea.        ■ '
Nelson Wins
Praise lor Neat,
(lean Appearance
Two viiiton to tha Nelion Dally
News offlo* this wttk commtnttd
upon Nelion'* neat and Glean appearance
On* was Dr, Pettr I. Koopmin ot
Setttlt wto waa visiting Ntlton
'tor tha flnt tlmt, Dr. Koopmin wai
born In yolland, ning to tha Unltid Statet Is ItM, The Dutch art noted fpr tha neitntis of thtlr habiti,
Thli characttriitic ihowi In tbt
manner In whloh thay conduct thalr
llvei ind it ihowi up mon prominently to thi publlo ln their homu,
thalr girdini, their oltl** and othtr
publlo placet, To tto Hollander
neatnesi and tldlneai ar* ataott a
religion, Dr. Koopmin Hid Nilson
reminded htm In .host retpedt of
hla homelind.
Ito othar visitor to comment on
Nelion'i attractive appearance was
Sergeant A. R. Joy, ton of R. G.
Joy at Nelion, and former Dally
New* reporter at Trail. Sgt, Joy
la now stationed with a Canadian
Army Unit ln tto Maritime Province!. H* commtnttd upon Jhe
beauty, cleanlineat and tbi modernity ot Nalion 11 compared with
imiller and larger placet ln East
ern Canada.
NIUON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY. MAY 14, 194J — 7
Harrison Tells Gyros of Efforis
lo Produce Rubber in Ul,
Canada; Synthetics Come lo Fore
'
New Denver Legion
W.A. Holdi Whiit
NEW DSNVJ5R, B.C/-An enjoy-
able whiit drive waa told in tha Legion Hall by the W,A. Cinidlan
Legion 101. Prises went to Mrs, A.
L, Harrii, Mn. H. Keliall, Mn.
H, Crellin, H. Kelull, R. Crellin
ind W. Blanchard, Memberi of the
Board of Trad* Joined the card
pliyen for supper.
SILVERTON
SILWrnTON, B. C.-Ultt Con
Cooper, who his been ipending a
vacation which her parenti, Mr,
■nd Mia. 3, Cooper, has returned
to Nelson.
Pte. L. Halgh, who spent a fur-
lough ln town, has returned to Medicine Hat.
Mr. and Mn. R. Fairhunt wen
visitors to Nelaon on Tueiday.
Mrs. A. Harding is ipending a
few diy In New Denver viiiting
her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mn. H. George. .
A, M. Ham wea i recent vlaltor
to Nelaon.
Mr. ind Mri. H. Welch ind family were vliltori to Sloan City on
Sundiy.
D. MacDiarmid hu returned from
i holiday ln Nelson and Salmo,
T. M. Lea.k .pent a few dayi In
Nelion.
J. Kiermey, who hu been ■ pttient tn Slocin Community Hospital, New Denver, has returned to
hli home.
Mrj. H. George of New Denver
visited relatives ln town on Saturday,
A pleuant evening wu tpent at
tht home ot Mr. md Mn, O. McKay
when contract and refreihmenti
wne enjoyed. Prise winnen for
the gime wtrt Mn. O, Hanm and
A. 1. Dunnett. Those present Included Mr. and Mn. H. V. D*wli,
Mr, and Mn. A. M. Him, Mrs. O.
Hinni of Crinbrook, Mn. W. Morrlion, A. J. Dunnttt- ind Mr. md
Mrt. 0. McKiy.
Interpreting
The War News
By GLENN  BABEI
Auoelited Pnu Wir Anilyit
Rome ind Btrlln trt trying
frantically to ulvigt iomt propaganda value from tho debacle of
. North Africi In thi obvioui hopt
of itlffinlng populir morili for
th* anticipated Allltd uuult on
tht Contlntnt.
The Italiaps ittm to have lived
i few moft tatteri of pride than
their Allies. Thllr High Command
boasts that lt wu the Italian 1st
Army which, had "the honor of th*
latt Axia resistance on Africm soil."
Deipite the comradely messages
exchanged by German and Italian
leaders thli items a rather pointed
reference to the tact that tht Hal-
lafis contlnutd fighting after Von
Arnim and thl flower of Hitler's
Africa Corps had quit.
Naturally II Duce'i regime ll
worried about the itate of Italian
morili ind must bt expected to rt-
lort to every poulblt metni to prevent .Its collipn. It ever i nition
faced • dark md foreboding prospect It is Fuclit IUly. Although the
British forcei left tht mtohlnu of
their new mechanized army In
rrance they brought moit of tlie
mw homt. Munollnl hu loit both
the men and machines.
Dispatchei from North Africa aay
thit hli loit armiei Include ill the
armored divliioni Italy tver hai
had and overy Italian infantry and
motorized diviiion which wai con-
lidered better than mediocre. Tht
Sth, lit tnd 10th Italian Armiei an
Inside Allied prison itockadci and
probably will loon bt furnishing
thousandi of not unwilling worken to alleviate thl firm manpower
problems of Britain, Canada and
perhaps the United States.
The hopt of Tl Duce'i Government
appirently li to whip up lomething
of tht grim back-to-the-will iplrlt
with which Goebbeli Imbued thl
Germani Iut Wlnttr, But lt Is
doubtful whether thli will work.
Ito Oermini wirt told, md with
Justice, that It wu fight to U>s
biiler and or parish, thit they could
expect no loftneu from thtlr enemies. *>But the Italians hive betn
told almoit frofr, thi beginning that
thtlr tnamles believe thtm to havt
been th* victimi ot thi pride md
nted of on* mm, Munollnl, md
encouraged to hop* thst Italy's dtfett will mem thtlr liberation from
tht Fuclit ind thi Nisi yoke.
L. Brandeis
Burled at Natal
NAITAt, B, C.-Tht funenl of
Loull Bnndeli took plice her* on
Mondiy. Th* funtr*l urvicu w*n
conducted by Rev. ChtUei Addy-
mm of th* United Churoh.,
He WM twn In Vlnarlca, Klidni,
In Czosho-Slovakla, on -Tib. 10,
IBM, He ltft th* old oountry In
lMt, arriving at Mlchtl at the ige
at 19 years. Ha had worked ln the
Michel mints tor the past J7 years.
He leavei i iliter, Mrs. M. Androlick ot Natal, ind two daughten
ln Albert*.
The pallbearen ware C. Koika,
3. Baranak, J. Kreian, SingaUk,
S. Weaver ind 3. Linjak.
MOYIE
MOWS, B. C.-A Mother'i Diy
service wu held In Moyl* United
Church cm Miy 9 by -Sty. R. t.
Crlbb, B.A., of Cranbrook.
' William Andniiiak of Tye spent
a couple of daya at his tome.
Mr. and Mn. C, A. Foote aod
Arthle Allen ol Kimberley motored
to Moyie on Sunday to vitit Mr, md
Mn. R. A. Smith.
Mr. and Mn. George Whitehead
Hd Children of Kimberley were
guetti <_ Mn. Whitehead's ptrents,
Mr. ind Mn. Andrews, on Sundiy,
Lois Andrewi wai also it homi.
Ramond, X, Bertoia, aon of Mr
and Mrs. Johnny Bertoia of Cranbrook visited his aunt, Mrs. A.
Oulndon on Prlday. Ramond li
wtth tto Oanadian Merchant Mar
Int and his brother, Roger, Is with
RCN.V.R.
Matt Solecki of the RCAT. it
Vincouver wu in Moyie on Sua
day.
Robert Ploco of Michel visited hli
parenti, Mr, end Mn. Tony Ploco
ot Aldridge,
Mrs, H. Peanon tod u guuti on
Sundiy her son-ln-law and' daugh.
ter, Mr. eng Mrs. Bill Steveley ud
sons Donald md Danny,, Mrs. A.
Benion and Gui Crekman, all ot
Cranbrook.
Mr. and Mn. Mark Nicholson mo
tored to Cranbrook'on Tuuday.
Outlining wldeaprtid programs to
produce rwtor trm guiyule. gold-
tnrod and a Russian dandelion m
Cinada and the United Statu, ind
ikttchlng synthetic rubber devel-
opminti In both countries, Harry
Hirrison In in tddreu. to thi Nelson Gyro Club urged all to 'pitch
ln", to "walk a littla more than
usual and maka a taw sacrifice! to
bring us clour to tha day when we
oan get baok regularly to those driving pliuurti Wl kntw so will."
Normil peacetime, comumption
ot rubber by Canada and the Unit-
ad States was 600000 tons of orude
rubbir, and VI par cant came from
BrlUih Miliyi, tha Netherlindi Indies, Ceylon and Borneo, he slid. In
IMl consumption wu rtducid to
421,000 tons, practically ill of It uied
for military purposes,
Prom a figure of 300,000 tons reclilmed annually before Purl Harbor, riclamitlon ot rubbtr had been
stspptd up to mora than 490,000
toni a year ln thi United Sfafcs.
In about three months Nelson
collected tnd shipped 57 tona of
senp, ind It thli effort hid been
duplicated throughout the Dominion, tha Canadian scrap pile should
have reached 115,000 tont, Mr, Harrison stated. More scrap rubber was
still available throughout thi country.
PIW IOURCIS NOW
Ceylon was now the only important Par Eaitern source of crude
rubber, producing about 100,000 tons
a yaar, but shipping wu ■ serious
problem, Brull, tbe origin ot the
rubber Industry of the East, was
producing a little better than 50,000
tons i yeir, or about the quantity
used innuilly by Canada.
In Northern Mexico and Texas
■ shrub, guiyull, wu being planted
for rubber, but lt would be 1944 be
fort i luge quantity would be
available. Goldenrod wu being
planted In Georgia for another future source.
The Rusiian dandelion plant, Kok.
sagyt, chief source of crudt rubber
for tht Russian Army, was now be
ing planted In Canada, many a*
ptrtmtntal stations hiving hid good
resulti In railing It At Agusls he
slid, vleld was is high as thst obtained ln Russia,
Rationing of tires was "the only
way that the chlsellen can be kept
ln thtir places and it has certainly
been worked out on a fair buis,"
Mr. Harrison commented. "It Is the
intention of tht Rubbtr Controllers
ot both Canadi ind tht United
Statei to keep euential driving supplied with rubber ind gu, All cars
are essential, but driving Is not. We
cm, therefore, expect fair treitment
If we can ihow sufficient reason
why wa ihould to granted ptrmiti
to buy retretdi or niw tlru,"
SYNTHETIC RUBBIR
Dialing wltb lynthetic rubbir, he
itated thi Dupont Intereiti hid been
miking lt iince IMl, Synthetic tires
had proven up In trnti,
"On March 30 lut," said Mr. Harrison," the tint U, 8. Govtrnment
Slant went Into synthetic producen a month ahead of ichtdule—
only 30 weeks after tha blueprint
stage. Thli on* plant alone hu an
output bull lufficient tor 4,000,000
PROCTER
PROCTBR, B. C, - Mn, N.
Shkwarok ind diughter Halm were
viiiton to Nelion.
Mn. W. Mill* vlilttd Ntlion during tht week.
Mn. S. Aylwin wu a Nebon visitor on Thundty.
Miu Dorothy Carlton returned
to Osoyoos after viiiting Mr. md
Mn. Alec McPhee.
Mn. John McLeod vlllttd Nition during tht week.
Ml* Annte Schmidt returned to
Crescent attar ipending • holiday
hire.
Mn. Lucher of Robion hu re
turned to htr home attar vltltlng
Mr. and Mn. Jick Nicholls of Procter.
Mn. W. A. Ward wai * Ntlion
viiltor on Thurtday.
Mr. ind Mn. A. MoPhet motond
to Nelson Thundty. Mri. W. Mlk-
kelion iccompinled thtm,
Mt, ind Mn. Angui MtoLeod ot
Ntlion wart motoriiti to Procttr
during the wtek.
Mn. R. Rufli md two chlldnn rtturned to Klmbtrlty on Stturdty
ifter spending two weeki it Proctor.
' Mn. Ann Z. Walker of Ntlion,
who hu been viiiting htr* tor
five weeks, hu left for Ntlion.
Mri. A. Ogdtn ind dtughtir w*r*
Nelwn motoriiti on Siturdiy.       |
Mn, R. A. Hilghton aptnt Situr-
t'-iy kt Nelion.
Mn. P. Bennett WM a Nelton
ihopptr it tht wtektnd.
Mn. W. O. Rott tru,a Proctor
viiltor lut wttktnd.
Mn. W. I. Ogdm and daughttr
Elaine win Ntlion vltlton on Saturday.
Mn. P. Schmidt tnd Mn. J. Itan-
ill ware wtekend ihoppen In Nil-
son.
Gnnt McKein, who hu iptnt I
ftw monthi at Nelson, viilted hli
home here at the weekend.
tlrei i yaar tor tha meehanlaed
forcu — Throughout tha United
Stitei there in 11 lynthetic planti
now either built or neiring completion, with • toul full cipaclty ot
ovtr 800/100 toni ot synthetic rub-
bar a yaar... .
"Mort of these planti," he continued, wlll be producing butadiene,
which ls made by cracking petroleum with heat or a catalytic agent
"Other synthetics will contribute
to the' supply at a rate of about
150,000 toni i yur by 1944, and W''-
llim Jeffen, Rubbtr Director of
thi Unltid Statai, hu predlcttd that
by thi middlt ot 1044 thl United
Ststei will hive lufficient rubber
to mut ill demandi, Including civilian.
"That situation also ihould be
trua ot our Canadiin rubbtr problem, so tht list wi drive for Juit a
whlli longer, the. quicker we will
get more gai md tlru, Let'i all
pitch In," Mr. Harrison urged,
tt Days ot Rain
In April Here
Eleven days with measurable
ralnfill md two dtyi with trices of
nln were marked up In Aprin
weather record ln Nelson. Eight ot
the 11 days with rain were ln the
period April 19-80.
Precipitation totil wu 2JK Inches,
the heaviest fall In a 24-hour period
being on April 1 when .70 inch fell.
The mercury reached a high ot
76 degrees on April 15, while on
April 4» the lowest temperature of
the month, 30 degreei, was recordC
Regal Party to
Ruit in Kamloopi
KAMLOOPS, B,C„ May 18 (CP)-
In accordance with the requut ot
the Governor Otntnl md Princess
Alice, tht Vice-Regal pirty wlll be
alldwcd complete quiet during their
itay-hore from next Mondiy evening until Prldiy. Only one publlo function hu been arringed, a
brief and lnformil reception Tuesdiy ifternoon.
On Wednudiy it It understood
the Governor-General's pirty will
visit the' military trilnlng centre at
Vemon, returning hen the lime
evening. They ire now In Vincouver.
PURE
I WHITE
*%r*
Field Labor
Will Be Scarce!
• TKI Dominion-Provincial Emergency Farm Labour S«rvlce is endeavoring ta meat Hia anticipated
•mergancy but It must hava your co-operation.
Approach direct the workeri you had last year,
and canvass tha local labour supply thoroughly.
SEND IN YOUR ESTIMATED REQUIREMENTS
TO THI LOCAL WAR AGRICULTURAL COMMITTEI NOW!
REMEMBER! that the Volunteer Field
Fighters sent to help you harvest the vital
crops will not bt seasoned workers. Preient
indication! are that many girls over 16 and
boyt ovtr 15 will have to be employed.
Their continued labour and their help in
thi futurt depends on the way you appre-
matt their tervice.
Green workeri ihould be discouraged
from working long hourt for the first few
dayi in your interests and theirs.
Make wane, arrangements on hiring and
itick to them, ray promptly!
DONT LEAVE EVERYTHING TO THE UST
MINUTE—TO THE WAR PRODUCTION COMMITTEE OR EMERGENCY FARM LABOUR SERVICE.
Make your seaionsl arrangements now, Manpower
le ahort!
Dominion-Provincial Emcrgoncy
Farm Labour Service
144 Weit Hutingi It.
Vineouvir, B.C.
and
tOt  Government   Street
Vlctorli, B.C.
U^y^^
___
  , ,	
8 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, MAY 14,  1943
TODAY'S News Pictures
m j U
WHERE TUNISIAN BATTLE ENDED
This Central Press Canadian map shows the swift
advance of the Allies forces to capture Bi_fterte and Tunis,
key Axis ports in Tunisia. In the space of a few days the
British First Army, the Americans and French, advanced from the line indicated by the dark portion, in a fury
of fighting. The Americans drove through'Ferry ville,
while another force cut the Bizerte-Tunis road. The British First Army feinted at Tebourba pulling the main Axis
forces to that area, while they drove on through Massicault to take Tunis.
ABLE   TO   TAKE   IT
Veterani ol a raid on Wllhelmi-
haven which cauied them a "carload" ol trouble. Sergeant A' G.
"Ace" Bailey, top. Cloverdale.
B. C, and Flight Sergeant R. E.
"Mooie" Taylor, D.F.M., ol Boon-
vllle, Ind., are ihown here. Flight
Sergeant Taylor, pilot ot Ihe aircraft, won Uie Diitinguiihed Flying Medal for hli part In the operation. Sergeint Bailey dimiged i
Meiterichmltt UO which attacked
the bomber. The pilot brought the
ilrcnft home to Englind riddled
with "fink", with only one motor
running. The ship's wireless operator, Flight SerRfnnt J, M Taffy"
Williams, Redna. Sask, had his
n.nti torn by a machine-gun bullet.
SALLY'S-SALLIES
>.,->,JII.!.hM_fa_
'    f*U_t MAW LEXERS   ,
, CM YOU .SEE OK 4KKT C_KM]_
TWO-PIECE CHARMER
If you want a aofter two-piece
frock that makes you look pretty
and young, here's your style! This
Marian Martin Pattern, 9383, is
wonderfully slenderizing, too,
with a panelled skirt and graceful, curving side sections to the
blouie The scallop-edged buttoning is gay!
Pattern 9383 may be ordered
only in women's sizes 34, 36, 38,
40, 42, 44, 48 and 46. Size 36 require! 3 1-8 yards 39-inch fabric.
Send 20 cent! for thli pattern to
Thl Nelion Dally News. Needle-
craft DepL, Nelion. Write plainly
partem number,, your name and
addreu. Pattern! wlll be milled
to yeur home In about 15 day*
There may bl lome further delay In delivery because of the
large Increaie In orderi during the
preient luion.
AUNT  HET
By ROBERT QUtLLEN
fijLWJtMcL...
8y Shepard Barclay
RISK A GREATER SET
IN RUBBER bridge, lt li'always aound percentage play to
risk being set one more trick than
seems likely, if it Increases .the
poiilbillty of making ypur contract. The additional triott, when
you are not doubled, would coat
you only 50 or 100 polnta, whereaa
making a garpe contract ls worth
about eight times that much when
'you are not vulnerable and ilx
timet ai much if you are vulnerable. So, even If the odds agalnit
your effort'! success are approximately 9 to 1 in the one case and
T to 1 tn the other. It li nevertheleu aound bridge.
4K«t>3
f AK2
«653
+ 763
VQ8763
4A87
4 A 10 . 2
N
W  F.
S
♦ 87
f 10 9 5
♦ K942
+ 1-985
"Pa would be good on Information |
Pleaie. He may not know the right
answer, but he soundi hi convincin'
ai them men on the radio."
4 A Q J 0*4 2
fJ4
4QJ10
+ <_■'    .
(Dealer: North. Both aides vulnerable.)
North      Eaat    South       West
Pais       Paaa     14 Pan
34 Pasi      44
When South heird from hli
partner that ipadea Were satlifec-
tory u a trump fit, hli own hand
luddenly became rauch better
than when he opened with hli
•hided bid, so he reached out for
game. He had hla chance t_| make
It. too, but failed.
Weal did not like to lead a
trump, fearing It would ptovi Juit
what the declarer moat desired,
and alio disliked a lead of either
iuit topped by the A, so idected
the heart 6. Promptly noting that
he had to lose two tricks etch In
diamonds and clubs, and that he
therefore would be down one,
SoutH took the opening trick ln
the dummy, cashed two spades
and led a diamond, the defenderi
then promptly taking two tricka
In each minor.
"Why didn't you let the opening
lead ride around toward your
heart J?" asked North after the
deal. "Then you cdhld have Immediately obtained 1 club dlicard on
the heart topi, making the success
of your contract a iure thing."
"Because the chancei were that
Eut had the Q, If Wait led the
suit," aniwered South.
That waa true enough, but the
oddt were assuredly not u gnat
as 7 to 1, ind that li the icale of
the gtln tt itake.
»   .   .
Tomorrow's Leeeos
♦ JT
f Kit
♦ 543
+ K10743
4 10 8 6 4
2
VKQ82
410 9
+ A6
N
W E
S
♦ KQ5
V J 10 6 5
4
♦ Q
+ QJSI
♦ Att
*>7
DOWN
♦ AKJ87I2
1. Male bee
*»»
1. Pltnt
(Dealer:    Wnt.    North-South
8. Like tn
vulnerable.)               .
tlkiU
If North doublet 4-Spadei and
4 Ruler of
then leadi the diamond 5, how
Tunli
should South play to obtain maxle
5 Wooden
mum reiulti t
mow runner
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
i.a ptir
5. Slide
9. Regulation
10. CttUe
11. Abounding
In rocki
12. Bury
14. Peruvian
Indian 21
15. Hindu deity 22
16. Ringi out 23
18. Hat
19. AntlaepUc 25
21. Mixed 26.
24. Mournful
JT. Comfort
28. To-do
2. Type
meuurei
80. Ambassador's
residence
33. Ctke
35. Faintly
37. Cases
41. Particle
42. Attractive
43.Cl.pa
45. Coat with
tlloy
46 Bark of
mulberry
47 Part of Stt-
u r n's ring!
48. Too
41. Employs
Trie 28. Moslemi
Engrossci    30. Cathedral
Make fretful     town
Tear
Rodent
Turf
Invite
From
(prefix)
Insect
Eicape
Indispensable
Sloths
Not wet
31. Muurlum
(iym.)
32 Large
34. Devicei for
holding
35 Humor
36 Artery
38 Pocketbook
39 Lampi for
heating
liquids
40 Observe
tlMM-li-H. M
Bll_IIJLIf.llII01.l0
J___    Hlli.ll:.
SI**..'...-   :Ji .Mm-
!.lf.V;l>!   JUM   W
a:«i    ___ .-:■;■•■
____\._■* atauE
i-iuu _'_k\
____ auffluiiB
<__VI   HHH     HD
aa ___ 'man
____■- '.umm
OllltlH   WMIiia
Q_..t.ll..i.ii.fc-.-_
MBUIi'l.....
Yfiur_-r'i lint
44. Anam.se
meuure
45 Greekletter
■
It
 ;	
mim
______
mum___________t
 	
	
mm-''' ■■■■v-^
-
:       ■ ...»
• ft,
PHONE 144
*
Look Down These Want Ad Columni for Bargains
PHONE 144
BIRTHS
.MBLIN-To Mr. and Mrs Fred
smblin, Deer Park, at Kootenay
ake General Hospital, May 8, a
m.
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY
ASSAYERS AND MINE
REPRESENTATIVES
NEALE-To Mr. and Mrs. Fred
r*ale, B.R. No, l.^at Kootenay Lake j
laneral Hospital,'May 11, a daugh- <
»  •   '  -_\
LUNGREN—To Mr. and Mrs.1
Jwan LungTen, View Street, al
Cootenay Lake General Hospnal,
Cay 13, ■ daughter.
IfuREVITCM^rifr.^rMrc |
irvln Gurevllch of Rossland, it
later Misericordiae Hospital, May
I, a ion.
WARD—To Mr. and Mri. L. S.
ffard of Rossland at the Mater M'S-
nricordiae Hospital May 6, a daugh-
ar. 	
HELP WANTED
HAROLD 5   H-R-K ROSSUND
BC, Provincial Aaiytr, Chem si.
Individual    reprettnttt.ve    tor
shippers at Trail Smeller   t '
A J   Buie  Independent Mine Rep-
reaentailve   Box 54,  I rail   B.C.
E W  WIDDOWS6N PftOVINClAL
Aiiayer. 301 Josephine Ht., Netson.
THE   WEST   KOQT1-NAY   AS3AV
Oltice. ISSO SUnley St.. Nelson Bt.
dIDDI.E-AGED MAN WITH GOOD
references, military exempt, as
general assistant ln hold. Wages
$75.00, Room and Board. Apuly
National Selective Service, Nelaon
rOUNG MAN A§ RADIO AN-
nouncer-operator, Apply National
Selective Service Office,
■n i — ' 11   i ii
SITUATIONS WANTED
 CHIROPRACTORS
FAE  McDONALD   DC.   PAUlEK
Grad  X-ray, Srand Blk., Trail
BNGINEER8  AND SURVEYORS
R W HAGGEN MINING {.'CIVIL
Engineer; B.C., Land Surveyor.
Rossjand and Grand Forks. BC
BOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.
Nelson. B.C.. Surveyor and
Engineer. Phone 689-R,
IN8URANCE AND REAL ESTAlt
CHAS F MctlARDY INSURANI-JS.
Real Estate Phone 139.
Special Low Rates (or noncommercial advertisement! under thii classification to assist
g.ople seeking employment
nly 23c (or one week '6 days)
coven eny number ot reauired
llnei Payable in advance Add
tOc i( box number desired
'ARM, GARDEN & NURSERY
MACHINISTS
BENNETTS LIMITED '
Machine shop, acetylene and electric
welding    motor   rewinding
commercial refrigeration
Phone 593 324 Vernon St.
STEVENSON'S   MACHINE   SHOP
Specialists in mine and mill work.
Much ne  work, light and heavy.
Eleciric  ind Acetylene  welding.
708 Vernon St., Nelson   - Ph 88
OPTOMETRISTS
W   E  MARSHALL
Optometriati
145. Bay Ave, Trail       Phont ITI
OR VOUR REQUIREMENTS IN j
Seedi. Feed and Poultry Suppliei. i
call ind' see us Ask lor our price I
lilt   Ellison    Mill ng It Elevator | Hardwood merchant, 2.3 Biker St
Company   Ltd.,  Nelson.   BC.  -
Phone 238
SASH FACT0RIE8
LAWSoIrS      SASH      FACTORY
IIULBERRY TREES, 4 TO 6 FT.
Illgh. SOc eaoh. Alao two-year-old
rooted grape plants, from best
table varieties, SOc each. Express
extra. C. Bogyo. R.R.-l, Oliver BC
SECOND HAND STORES
we buy. .Sell aNd -ftCHANUk.
What have you? Ph 534 Ark Store.
PETS
__.!*   FLOWERING   PANSlES,
80c a dosen. Mac's Greenhouse.
LOST AND FOUND
-OST. LADIES' WRIST WATCH
"between Civic Centre tt Wood,
Vallance. ■ Phone   454.	
WANTED MISCELLANEOUS
IHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS
ot Iron Any quantity Top pricei
paid Active Trading Company
(IS Powell St.   Vancouver   BC
fcTANTED: ELECTRIC SEWING
machine, In good condition/ IHU
vey cash. Box 3397 Daily News, or
Phone 350-1-1
.RDEE   KENNELS.   WALDHEIM,
Si.k Spaclalizlng In Irish Sdtteri
RENTALS
WANTED: UNFURNISHED GOOD.
ilied room (or elderly lady, |ir««
level, cloie ln. Box 8374, Newi.
SINGLE HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS,
also 2-rm. tuite with bath (or rent,
Strathcona Hotel.
FOR RENT: 8-RM HOUSE WITH
large garden. Ph. 670-L2,
yERRACE APTS Beautiful modern
Frlgldalre equipped suites.
FOR RENT: MODERN APT MIDI-
/il Arti Block Ph  McHirdy Iter
'ANTED;    GOOD    SIZE   COAL
range, ab* tent to ileep 8. Writt F
Bulling, Gen. Del, or Ph, 794-L1.1
Wanted: folding SABy buu-
gy, must be In good condition.
Phone 868-L.
f-T_. HOUSE AND FURNISHED
sutle. Ph J16. ■ ■	
FOR RENT: RANCH!--., COTTAOI,
shtck. Apply P.O., Tighum,
I. ANTED TO RENT: FftlGICAKB.
Ph. 429-R or Royal Hotel.
Telephone  144
Trail Circulation: Phone 1325-L
Classified Advertising Rates
lie per line per Insertion
44c per line per week (6 consec-
-ulive Insertions (or cost of 41
II 43 a line a month (28 timesl
(Minimum 2 lines Der Insertion)
Box number lie extra Thii
eoven any number of timei
-PUBLIC NOTICES   TENDERS
ETC
18c per line, flrit insertion and
14c each subsequent insertion.
ALL ABOVE RATES LESS
10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT
SPECIAL LOW RATES
Non commerciil  Situation
Wanted (or 25c for my requirtd
number ot   linei  for  ilx  dsyi
payable In advance
SUBSCRIPTION RATEo
Single copy   . J   05
By rarrler. per week       25
By carrier per year _  1300
By mall:
One   month     t   75
Three monthi     200
Six  monthi    .....   4.00
One veir       .   800
Above ratei apply In Canada,
Un'ted Statei and United K ng-
dom to lubicrlber! living outiide regular carrier areai
Elsewhere and to Canada wnere
txtra poitage ii required on.
month $150: three monthi J400;
tlx monthi 88 00: one vear SIS
4-RM  FURN. SUITE. 414 SH-.CA
St., Phont 437-X,
FOR EENT:  7 ROOM HOUSE, 3
bedrooms. ISO per mo. Ph 438-KI,
FOR HENT: FURN'D COTTAGE
WlUow Point. Apply Townshend.
FOR RUNT: H0U3E WITH fARD-
en. Ph. B08-L.
AUTOMOTIVE
MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES
SEE US FOR McCORMlCK-DEEK-
- lug cream separator! and milk ng
equipment   Central   Truck   ind
Equipment  Company,  702   front
Streei. Nelson
1935 SPORT PLYMOUTH COUPE,
rumble seat, low mileage, radio,
heater and (og lights. Cheap for
cash Apply P. Jeffery, 320 Hill
Mines Road.
PERSONAL
WHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT
Almu   Hotel.   Opp.  C.P.R   Depot.
EVERYTHING FROM COA'l
hanger! to bath tubs bought ina
sold it Chess Second-Hind Store.
TOP PRICES PAID FOR USED
furniture, ttovea beet|ri, toolt,
musical Instruments Ph 884 Ark
LONELY LADIES, GENJLEMEN,
get acquainted. Join mattlmonial
club. Letter Introduction. Free
particulars, .Box 383, Vancouver,
25* THE -PHOTO MILL 25<
PO Box 333, Vancouver
Rolls developed end printed 25c
12 reprints 3x7 enlargement SSc
25(,   LlONS PHOTON
P.O Box 434. Vancouver
Any 8-exp. roll developed and printed 25e Reprints 3c. Free 5x7 coupon
LONELY FdLkS! JOIN ftEUABLE
confidential matrimonial duo.
Many Members with means. Particulars and description! 10c Ladles (ree. Box 121   Regina
FOR ADULTS ONLYI SEND 10c
(or World's Funniest Joke Novelty
and catalog of (emlnine hygeine
products, druggists sundries, books
on all subjects, medlckl preparations etc. Western Distributors,
Box 24FNC, Regina, Sask,
PALOVA, THE BALM-o(-Gll_EAD.
For the relief and healing ot
PILES. Your money rethrned tn
(ull if the Balm does not prove
to be satisfactory after i (air trial.
Price $1.00 postpaid, (rom the In-
dim Remedies, Box 118 Vancouver
FILMS DEVELOPED AND PR1NT-
ed (8 or 8 exposure roll) 25c He-
printi 3c each. For your vacation
snapshots, choose Kryital Finish
Guaranteed non-fade prints.
Kryi'al Photos. Wilkie. Saskatche.
wan  Established over 30 years.
KODAK FANS-ROLLS DEVEL-
oped and primed 25c. Reprints 3c
each. 75 (or $2.00. Stnd names tnd
tddrtsses o( 8 friends who take
pictures end we will Include 3
extrt prlnti. Promp efficient ser
vice. "Fotos" c-o Postmaiter, Brll
lant,'B.C.  ■
FURS
Buy   your  Fur  Coat  Now—Pay
all   Summer-Free   storage-
Attractive Pricei
Expert Restyling - Repairing
—Low Rattl—
SAFE POLAR STORAGE
Polar Furs Ltd. — Vancouver. B.C.
FOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS
WRITE FOR SAMPLE OF OUR
new payroll and time sheet Tbey
art essential to every iint of business todiy. Dllly Newi Printing
Dept, Nelson. BC.
t-IQUID SUGAR SUBSTITUTE FOR
cakei, plei, puddingi, coffee, «tc.
Four-ounce bottle equal! eight
poundi sugar, 70c postpaid. Satisfaction guaranteed. Ed Hutch.-on
Agencies, Box 500, Spalding, Sask.
FOR SALE: STORE AWNING, 23
feet. SUit country. Arms, brscketi,
rollers, all parts. Ctnvai needi re
pain. What offer? Box 3319 News.
PIPE • FITTINGS - TUBES. SPE-
clsl low pricei. Active Triding Co.,
918 Powell St, Vancouver,  B.C.
CORONA PORTABLE fflPEWRlT-
er. good condition, $17.90. J. R.
Ramsden. R.R  No. 1, Nelion
FOR  SALE:   COAL RANGE. AL-
moit new. Phone 491-R.
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
WANTED FOR CASH: ONE ONLY, I
2 or 3 ton, late model truck. State
full particulars ln firat letter. Box
3420. Nelion News.  j
IMTfORD LIGHT, DELIVERY IN
Excellent mechanical condition.
Queen City Motori.
TsITCHRYSLETLiGHT STX7TT-
consed and raring to go. $12500
Koo'enay Motora (Nelion) Ltd.
NEW le USED~FORD "A" TRXN5"-
minioni. Nelion Auto Wrecken.
1937 DODGE DeLUXE SEDAN Al
condition. Ph. 570-L.
RADIATORS AND BALL BEAR-
ingi   Cty Auto Wrecken
BOATS ANO ENCINES
WANTED TO BUY: REASONABLY
priced used rowboat with oan;
also »'o iut 30 lbi. o( odd barbell
plates. Box J4J1 Dtlly Newi.
Cryptoquotes
FMCFOM     BHO    DTHD     RHO     PB     DTK
RCJDT     PJ    ATPLT     DC     RHEEO     SHN
APTMB-CTPN.
Teeterdayt Cryptoquote: THE MAN WHO LOSES HIS OPPORTUNITY, LOSE8 HIMSELF-G. MOORE.
Cryptoquotei ire quotatloni of famous persons written cipher
A liibititute chiracter hai replaced the original letter. For Instance,
in "R" may lubititute for the original "Br throughout the entire
cryptoquote. or a "BB" may replace ao "LL". Find the key ind follow through to the lolution.
Cloie in, ilx room modern houw.
Living room with fireplace, dining
room, bright modern kitchen ind
bathroom with new .fixtures. Three
bright newly decorated bedrooms
upstain. Full basement with piped
hot air furnace. House In excellent
condition with' duroid roo.. IVt loti
in lawn and garden, double gar
age. Outstanding buy
at   	
$4200
T. D. Rosling
688 Ward Street Phone 717
FOR SALE: 61 ACRES ON MAIN
highway 1 Mi mllei to post of ce,
ichool. Home, birn, hen houie,
hiy ihed. 18 fruit treu, 4 wilnut
treei, mall fruiti, 2 icrei ln niy
Irrigation by flume. Write for par-
ticulan. Gui Detta, Fiuquler. B.C
OOOD FARM LANDS FSB SALE
on euy termi In Alberti ind
SHkitchcwin Wrltt for full Informition to 908 Dept of Nituril
Reiourcei.  CPR..  Cilgiry. AlU
FOR SALE: NEW SUMMER CABIN,
y.-mlle from Lakeilde Park (Beilby'i Po nl). Fruit trees, 164 acres
4flo feet of lake frontagr Box 3395
Daily Newi or Ph. 514-X.
(Contlnutd In Next Column)
PROPERTY, MOUSES, FARMS
(CONTINUED)      ■
FOR $1850
We wlll sell 1 6-room house on
land 50'xl20'—House hts living
room, dining room, and kitchen
down and 3 bedrooms with elds-
ets and bathroom'up. Cement
foundation; ltrge woodshed and
good garden ground; also fruit
trees. Close to oarline.
This property il big value for
the money. Oood termi can be
arranged and poisesilon given
at once.
Robertson
Realty Co. Ltd.,
532 Ward Street.
WILL SELL TRADE OR RENT,
furnished or unlurn., my home el
905 Edgewood Ave G. B. Matthew
Call a(ter 1 p.m. 	
6-RM. HOUSE FOR SALE.. SBM1-
modern, 1 acre and (ruit trees, 3
blocks from carline on Cherry St.
Apply Box 3366, Nelson News.
WHY NOT RE-FINANCE YOUR
mortgage at 6% We have (unds
available. Monthly reduction plan.
APPLEYARD
SALE OR RENT; 3-RM. HOUSE
fruit, garden, land,,ipring. Apply
J.  Russell, Granite Rd, Nelson.
WANTED: 5- OR 6-ROOM BUNGA
low. Modern, close to High Schools
Cash. Box 3378. Daily News.
WANTED: 5 ACRES LAND WITH
house having water and electricity
Apply Be* 3338, Nelson Newa.
SMALL HOUSE, 2 LOTS, $1300
cash; or $15011 termi. C. W. Apple-
yard
t. A. WHITFIELD REAL ESTATE
and Insurance. 417 Hill St. Nelson
BEFORE BUYING  YOUR  HOME
See C W Appleyard It Co
LIVE STOCK, POULTRY AND
FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.
TKE WHICH «„,..„
chicks c»vE RBM..1
Wi regret that no more of theie
FAMOUS CHICKS ire available this season.'
We thank our thousands of customers for their continued confidence in the "CHICK8 WHICH
QIVE RESULTS".
There are t (ew copies left o(
our "ACTION YEAR" Book.
Write for yojrs and remember—
IT'S RESULTS THAT COUNT
l-frimc-ftSenfoH
Box N      Langley Prairie, B. C.
BABY CHICKS, NEW HAMPSHIRE
and Rhode Island Red Approved
and blood-t.ited Reidy to inip
every Tuesday $12 ptr 100 John
Goodman, Gilley Avenue Ha_ch-
ery, 1653 Gilley Avenue, New
Westminster. BC
Victory Gives
AlliesEdge
on Prisoners
NEW YORK, May 13 <CP..-The
Allied big of prisoner! In the Tunisian mop-up will give Internment
officials a firmer hand ln dealing
with Axis prisoners held ln North
America, Col. Hubert R. Strethem,
former Canadian director of internment operations, said ln an address
to the New York Rotary Club today.
"Before this," Col. Stethem said,
"every German- prisoner knew that
the German High Command held
the whip hand as (ar as prisoners
were concerned, with the Axis holding 50 British officers for every one
in our camps, and that knowledge
led to some fantastic demands that
we tried to meet (or fear of reprisals
on our men held by the Germans."
He told the Rotarians that "we
have., leaned over backwardi to
carry -out the termi of tha G*eneva
Convention In regard to war prisoners" and ln fairness to the German High Command, he added,
"they have'on the whole adhered
to the Convention" apart from the
shackling of Dieppe prisoners and
the feeding of Allied prisoners on
civilian rather than military rations.
Canadian Chiefs
Back In Canada
MONTREAL, May 13 (CP).-Brlg.
F. R. Phelan, p.S.O., M.C, who was
succeeded as Commanding Officer
of Canadian reinforcement units
overseas by Maj.-Gen. J. H. Roberts,
D.S.O., arrived home today after
nearly three years In Britain.
Re spoke warmly in a brief interview of the high morale of the
Canadian troops in Britain, and of
tbe powerful itriking force they had
become.
Others arriving today from overseas were Brig. C. B. Chisholm,
M.C, Director of Medto-1 Services
for the Canadian army, and Matron-
in-Chief E. J. Smellie, who heads
the Canadian Army Nursing Service.
J. ROSS BELTON
whose appointment to the position
of General Manager of Gutta
Percha It Rubber, Limited is announced by Mr. F. A. Warren,
President. Mr. Belton haf been
Assistant General Manager since
1936. In 11)20 ht Joined Gutta
Percha and (or the past 23 years
has occupied positions ot Increasing Importance In both the Factory and Head Office.
NEW   YORK  STOCKS
Am Smelt dc Re	
Am Telephone	
Amerlcen Tobacco ..
Anaconda  	
Beth Steel	
Canadian PacKlc 	
Dupont	
Eastman Kodak  _
General Electric	
Genwal Motors
i-Vi
. 162_-
. 56V4
. 28H
. t-Vt
. 10%
. 149%
. 168%
.   37
51%
International Nickel _  33%
Kenn Copper __  32%
Stan Oil of N J   _ 56%
Union Carbide  84%
U S Steel _.... 53%
VANCOUVER   STOCKS
BODY Of NORTHOLM
VICTIM FOUND
ON LONELY BEACH
PRINCE RUPERT, B. C, Mby 13
(CIP.-The body ot George Nord-
strom of Vancouver, one of 15 men
wtho lost their Uvea when the coa_t-
al iteamer Noctholai foundered lait
Jan. 16 off the North coast ot Vancouver Iiland, hae been fbund on a
lonely.beach in the Queen Charlotte Islands.
7 MILLION POUNDS
OF FAT SALVAGED
OTTAWA, May 12 (C!P)t- Mrs.
Phyllis Turner, Adm_n__.t»tio_ -of
Oils and Fats (ot the Prices Board,
.•edd In a Board statement today
that more (hon 7,00,000 of the
33,000,000 poundt of fats which must
—* rateed this year, by selvage (or
the manufacture of glycerine already hte been collected, the bulk
og It loroea butchers' counters.
MINES
Bnalorne  	
Cariboo Gold 	
Golconda 	
Gold Belt	
Grandview  _.
Grull Wihksne .._..
Island Mountain _
Kootenay Belle	
Pacific Nickel ....
Pend  Oreille  	
Pioneer Gold	
Premier Gold  	
Privateer	
Reeves MadDonald
Sheep Creek 	
Whitewater	
OILS
Anaconda ....'_	
Anglo Canadian 	
A. P. Consolidated ..
Calg. Se Edmonton ....
Commoil _
Commonwealth   	
Dalhouie	
Home  	
McDougall Secur ...
Mercury _..
Model  .......
Okalta Com, 	
Pacific Pete '..„ ___.
Royalite  	
Spooner	
Southwest Pete 	
United	
INDUSTRIALS
Capital Estates 	
Coast Breweries 	
United Distill	
Bid
9.18
1.20
•04 V4
.12
.15
.04
.22
.10
1.57
1.90
.75
.30
ia
.91
Aik
910
1.2S
.75
.24
M
2.00
.36
.50
.93
,_   .--     .03
.06
.01
15
1.58
.20
HI
3.25
.07
_   '
M
-•_
23.00 25 00
. .07 .10
. -3 .40
.   .06%     .07H
.04%
m
.10
148
11
_
.30
320
07%
.06%
M-
ei
*.Ss ■"
225
IX
2 25
'".:•„' >...■■'
■
NELSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1943 - O
'Ukranlan-Canadlan Committee' Gets
Sharp Criticism From Old Land
MOSCOW, May 13 (CP) - Today's newspapers published tn trtielt by Alexinder Bogomoletz,
Preildent cf the Ukrainian Academy cd Sciences, orltici-ing the "Ukrainian-Canadian Oommittec" tbat,
Uve article said, "not only Imagines
Itself representative of the Ukrainian people but pevnlta itsell to
tpcak on the latter's behalf with the
Canadian Government, allegedly expressing die desires of tbe Ukrainian people."
Bogomoletz wrote that the Ukrainian people, "heroically struggling
agalnat German plunderers, well
knows Hi Mends and ttt enemies."
"Ttte Ukrainian people feel t
warm affection lor its Ukrainian
brothers residing in Canada, who,
together with the. entire Canadian
people, do their utmost to expedite
defeat of Hitlerism, the common
enemy at all progressive humanity,"
he taid ln the article, entitled "Soviet Ukraine and Ukrainian-German National-its in Canada."
Because ot Vait affection, he tald
"the greater wta tbt penplexttj
caused In' public circles of the Soviet Ukraine" by newiptper reporti
that there existed In Canada a "ape
cial Ukrainian-Canadian Commit ,
tee" which sought to ipeak fbr thi'
Ukrainians.
He uld this committee "whict
consists ol a handful of pro-Ger
man-Ukrainian separatists allege
that Ukrainian* wish to heve 'a —ft
arate, Independent Ukrainian jtn A
in Europe."
'It li not d-Uicult to peroeivi
that only traitors Oan propose -'Uel
a plan for organization of thi
Ukraine."
Bogomoletz had praise tor the Ca>
nadian-Ukrainlai, Association "un.
der the patriotic leaderahlp whicn
Ukrainians residing in Canada render great aid to their brothers bt.
yond the ocean gallantly and herol'
cally. fighting for their freedom and
haippiness."
Modern Buses Rolling Along Alaska
Highway Amaze Settlers in North
WHnH-HORSE, Y. T., May 13
(OP)—The Spring thaiw -damaged
the Alaska Highway less than feared and already buses like those
on Oanadian highways amaze wt-,
tiers deep in the heart o_ the Northland.
During the dry and comparatively wann monithB ahead, Brig. Gen.
Jamet' A. CCOonriar, Commanding
General of the Northwest Service
Command, said today, the (Irst land
route in hiwtary to Alasto will be
come a permanent year-eiroynd
road.
"The pioneering phase of the Al-
oan project is ended, General O'Connor said in an interview. 'The
Job now Is to ir._prt.ve, maintain and
develop tl)e 1630 milea o< rood wc
pu-hed tfbrough from Maroh to
November last year. By.November,
we plan to have an all-year hdgh-
way."
The Spring thaw hed been particularly feared for washouts of bridges and stretdhei ot highway; JTow,
ever, many t-mber bridges, built
by engineer regiments aa temporary struehiree, withstood tbe full
force of liver ice movements. Ferries are being used where bridges
buckled.
"Right at the peek of the thaw,"
the General said, "a oonvoy o_
trucki reached Wataon Lake In the
Rocky Mountain* from Dawson
Oreek, the road's Southern terminus.
Theft's pretty good"
The big buses, although restricted
to military penonnel tnd civilian
construction workers, are now op
erated on regular runs fron Daw-
son Creek to Whiitefl-Orse. No commercial business is accepted.
"It'i quite a sight," one old settler observed, "to see a bus rolling
along where before you saw only
-ogslede, peck traini and an occasional canoe on rivers."
One ot the principal tasks this
Summer will be gravelling long
stretches c_ road.
After the loe hae left the riven,
a survey will be taken o( all the
bridges and some of the principal
ones' will be' reconstructed ai permanent, steel structures.
This Summer, the Northwest Service Command is Sho supervising
construction of an auxiliary link
from Haines, in Southeastern Alaska.
. .'This will connect Southeistern
Alaska with the Al con Highway,
will relieve any threat of congestion on tht White Pass and Yukon
Railway at Skagway 'and will enable
Water traffic (ram Seattle and the
South to load directly onto trucks
tar the haul into Fairbanks and Interior Alaaka," said Ool. Kenneth
B. Bush, Service Coo-mand Ohlet of
Staff.
The work of pushing (he road
through Uut year, In Gtn. O'Con-
nor'i opinion, wss es much of t
(rentier enterprise tt the expedition bf Alexander Mackenzie or
Simon FWser.
"Whenever I hear Kimecne say
our present generation la soft," he
commented, "I think of those young
128
2.50
GOVT. REGISTERED EGG GRAD-
lng itation, Rob-in. Prepired to
Uke eggi for shipment to Govt,
drying plant, Calgary, at minimum
price f.o.b. Robton. Grade A-lge„
2tc; Grade A-med.. 22c and A
pulleti, 19c. Apply Robson Co-op
ORDERS TAKEN FOR QUAUTY
Leghorn chick! (or May and June
delivery. All itock approved and
bloodtei.ed. Send (or particular!
and price llit today. New Siberia
Farm. A. llalikihin, Chilllwack,
Br.tiih Columbia,,
F6_r~SALE: "HOLSTEIN COW, A
heavy milker, fresh. Major Bros.
Procter
PETS. CANARIES, BEES, ETC.
FOR SALE: t-MO MALE PUP. $2.
Apply Box 3330 Dally Newi!
WTD: GD. HOME FOR LABRADOR
retriever. Prefer Country Ph. 492V
Calgary Livestock
CALGAHY, May II (CP.-CaWe
Bd; no calvei; hogi 911; iheep 7.
Medium-good butcher stecri 11 20-
12; good to tholce butcher heifen
11-11.75; common-medium 9.75-10.75;
good cows 8.75-9.50; common-medium 7 50-8.50; canneri ind cutter!
5-7. Good bulli 9-9.75. Good-choice
veal calvei 12-13; common-medium
10-11. Oood itocker and feeder
seen 10.25-11- common-medium 9-
10. Good Iambi 13-13.50.
Hogi yeiterdiy 15.40 for Bl yard!
and plinti; iowi 10.73 live weight
yardi; 13.40 dreued yardi and planta
(2).
7)ta_Jt_L JmdL . . .
LONDON, May 13 (CP)- The
stock market closed generally steady
Industrials were selectively higher. Home rails and oils advanced.
International securltlei were In
demand.
British funds finished higher for
NEW YORK—A number of odds
South American bonds were supported.
WINNIPEG—Wheat prices drop-
on (avorites did relatively well twt
many leaden were left at the post
or (inlshed in lhe losing (ield.
On the side o_ the bulb -was the
great Tunisian victory, growing idle
Investment funds and assorted hopeful business items. Smnje potential
purchasers, however, stood aside io
await development* in connection
with the war-itrategy conferences
at Washington.
Canadian issues were mixed.
TORONTO — Trends were mostly
downward in iluggish trading. Industrials, golds and western oili indices were all pared and baae metal
looked like joining them.
Smelten was ahead in base metals
but Steep Rock, Falconbridge, arftt
Sherritt were among the laggards.
CP.R. took a tumble in utilities.
MONTREAL — Selective leaders
were at new peaks in trading and
the majority of issue! appearing
were unchanged to mildly Irregular.
VANCOUVBR—Oili were buying
feature Ihis moming. Prices were
generally  higher along the board.
WINNIPEG—Wheat pricei dropped fractionally, the May closing Vt
cent lower at 99% cents, the July
%-Vt lower at 98S, the October %
lower ait 99*4 and the December Vt
lower at $1.00*4.
In the cash market aggressive
American demand for Canadian oat!
was repofted and 200,000 bushels
was sold. A little cash barley also
sold for export to the United States.
CHICAGO—Grains dropped about
a cent at times today, wheat and
oata moving to new lows tor the
past three weeks or longer, ts steady
selling uncovered a scarcity of bids.
Some stop loss orden were touched
off, accelerating the decline.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
30 Industrials
20 rail! .
15 utllltlei
High
138.55
36.23
20.10
Low Cloie    Change
137 56 137.88   ott     .36
.35.91 38.04   ott     .07
19.84 19.90   ott     .18
Toronto Stock Quotations
MINES
Anglo Huronlan 	
Beattie Gold    _..
Bidgood  Kirkland 	
Buttalo Ankerite
Caitle  Trethewey  	
Eait MalarUc _.
Chromium MH
Coniauru-n MBnei	
Com MtS -
Dome Minei	
the mort pirt ind In the
Udorado Gold    	
Fatoonbrldge Nickel ....
Hard Rock Gold  -   -
Hollinger    	
Hudton Bty —
Inter Nickel 	
Kerr Addison  _.,	
Kirkltnd Uke ....
Ltke Short Mlntt	
Lamaque  Contact	
Leitch Gold    	
Little Long Uc  -
Mad-rod  Coekihutt 	
Madsen Red Uke .......
Malartlc  Gold   	
Mclntyre Pore	
McKenile Red Uke 	
Mining Corp	
Nlpi ilng Mining .. ......
Nonnda   _..
Normetal	
Omegt Gold 	
PtmOur Pore    ._.
Perron Odd  	
Fickle Crow , -
     4.13
.....    117
 2m
._..    2.26
 73
...     1.21
......     2,10
....     110
.. 43.75
,   22.35
foreign li!t
4.10
.411
9.71)
3125
37.63
8.13
M
11.00
4M
M
.73
1,80
lir?
170
wno
m
145
I JO
46.00
.80
M
"ti
.9.1
1.4,1
Preston East Dome ...
San Antonio  .._
Sherritt Gordon .....
Siscoe Gold 	
Sladen Malartlc 	
Sudbury  Basin 	
Sullivan Cons  ....
Sylvanite       .... 	
Teck Hughes   .
Toburn GoM  	
Ventures    _	
Waite Amulet  _.
Wright Hirgreives ...
OILS
British Amerlcm'	
Imperial	
Inter Pete 	
INDUSTRIALS
Abltlbl Power A	
Bell Tele -.
Brasllltn Tract	
Breweri te Dlst 	
B C Power	
Build  prod      	
Otn Car St Fdy,    .
Can  Pte Rly
Ctn Ind Al 	
Dom  Bridge      	
Ford of Otntda  _..
Goodyeir Tire    ' 	
Hamilton Bridgt 	
Imperial Tob 	
Mont Power 	
Ntt Steel Car  ..'
Power Corp '__	
Steel ot an  	
105
a »5
.90**
.40
.38
Illl
• .78
1.80
2.90
.83
tM
tm
360
20.50
18.13
18.23
,85
149
.     22
t.
XV,
14'i
7
12
t_
'.'li'-,
22 Vi
82
BU
\l.
24',
an
7U.'«
Canadian Troops
Home Again After
Service Overseas
MONTREAL, May 13 (CP)-More
than 150 Canadian soldiers and sailors and memben of the Canadian
Auxiliary Fire Servlcei arrived here
today by train on their way to
homes across Canada after seeing
service overseas. Two ol the men
had been on torpedoed Canadian
corvettes, others at Dieppe and with
coastal antl-aircratt units.
A number o( them had recently
been released from hospital after
treatment to injurlei luffer.d during
the Dieppe raid and are being Invalided home. Otheri ire coming to
Canada to art aa Instructori and to
receive commissions.
They iald the Atlantic crossing
was "just like a Suihmer excursion"
and that they saw no sign of enemy
craft.
SENTENCED 7 YEARS ON
MANSLAUGHTER CHARGE
PRINCE RUPERT, B. C. May 13
(OP)-Mr. Justice Wendell FSrris
in Assize Court today tentenced
William Scott of Atlln to ieven
years' imj_rieor_ment in New Westminster Penitentiary for mens laugh.
ter ln connection with the death of
John Oe.
SHIP LOSSES LICHT
IN AFRICA CAMPAIGN
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN
NORTH AFRICA, Mby 13 (AP) -
Shipping losses In moving tbe enormous number ot men and lupplies
into North Africa _or the Allied
campaign have amounted to 2.16
per cent of the total traffic, tt was
announced o-fieiblly  today.
10 _t CENT U.BX.
STUDENTS JOIN UP
VANCOUVER, May 18 (CP.-Ten
per cent of the University of Britiah Columbia students who attended
Canadian Qffksen' Training Oorpa
camp at Vemon recently have enlisted and will take up duties In the
Canadian Aotlve Army , by next
week. Mort than 600 itudenti returned from the camp today.
MONTREAL     STOCKS
INDUSTRIALS
Auociated 'Brew of Cm     17
Canadian  Bronu       J3>rt
Can Car St Fdy Pfd    29.4
Can Celanese Pfd ..   ..,   138
Can Steam-hip    13"i
Con Mln Ji Smelt      ,    43%
Dom Steel It Coal B     SV«
Gatineiu Power Pfd ... .... ....   87
McColl Fforitentc     6%
Natlonar Brew Ltd       30
Quebec   Power     14Vi
Shbwnlgtn W & P     17V*
South Can Power _    10V4
Steel of Can P(d           84Vt
BANKS
Bulk o( Commerce .     133
Dominion Bink   lSflWj
Imperii!  174
Bank o( Montreal       ..   151 Vy
Nova. Scotli  23(1
Bunk o( Tu.on'.o   240
_.\_. Gngitteem-
Have your Job problem answered by an expert counsellor.
Write the CareeT Engineer,
care ot the Nelion Daily Newi.
Only initials will be publiihed.
Pleut explain the vilue of Vocational Antlytlcal Tub. —T.J.C.
I think your question is oi sufficient general interest to ansrwer lt
here. When a whole men or woman
goes on the job, there is profit and
contiMUment for worker and employer alike. By the words "whoie
man" 1 mean thtit he it pn p job
»ihere he can use all his ability—
not juat one pfi_ee of It. For instance a street car conductor may
have a natural bent towards succeuful politics. W*hat happens? He
drives the car with his hands and
tosses good politics with hla tongue
at the some time—end neither jobs
are well done. If such a man were
to be analyzed by a proper "battery" of tests, It might be found
that he is not mechanically Inclined by nature (therefore never ln
line for success at a conductor),
hut that lie _ ah extrovert, with
greai sympathiei ftr the masses,
not onty e forceful .ipeaker but a
logical thinker end can _»t his
thoughts in clear English and get
things done, the attributes od a
priceless statesman. His other aptitude! and abilities would be ttken Into comideritlon and he would
know the utmost about himself —
and his report would curry coflfl-
dence to those with and for whom
he works.
ft ts po-wble to trrlve tt very
clear definit-cni o( a perton'i characteristic! including home adjustment, special interests, aoclal, religious, political, emotional, vocational reaction!, <-<l\i.ationol and
perscnallty features—and to make
up a report on theee finding! that
givet the penon grounds for confidence in himself—or otherwite.
Theie veceUonal teiu tre now
available ki Canada, from aeveftl
Vocational Couniellon.
ALLIED RAIDS FORCE
ESSEN EVACUATION
STOCKHOLM, Mhy 13 (CP) -
The Gorman city of Bawn haa been
hit k hird by R.A.F. raidi that all
peraous not employed In war pianti
there muit be evacuated, the Yty/eti-
- National Zeitung declares. An
_<eue o( thii n_Avapftj.Pr, dated Miy
3, reaching here today, said 42 por-
soni were killed and many terioui-
ly Injured In the Inst raid before
thai dtte. The only ronion casual-
tiei wtre that small, the newipiper
said, wa., becaute women and children l_,d moved fiom the city carl-
t.1   ...__.^___ _
 •__
 	
—-__--__
_0 — NELSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, MAY  14, 1948
Great oe*e «i-»IW*««»'
FORKT
IGE
PAULETTE 60DDARD
susah umu
Cinidi Carriei On
NEW SOLDIERS ARE
TOUGH"
Showi at 7100-8:44
» CIVIC
F. H. SMITH
If It's Electrle
Phona 666        351 Btker St.
Watch (or tht
SUCAR BOWL
SPECIALS
In Tomorrow'! PiSer
FOR RENT
SINGLE ROOM
ANNABLE BLOCK
PLATING
CARDS
75c and $1.50
Mann, Rutherford
DRUG CO.
Ormond Surina Ditt
at Kimberliy
KMBE-ftLEY, B. C. — Ormand
Jerome, 15-monthi-old lon of Mt
■nd Mn. J. Surina ot Kimberley,
died following a short Illneu. Ee
was born ln Trill and hit perenti
have lived in Kimberley only a
year. A brother, Orville, age 4, survives blm, besides bU parents.
News of thfe Day
Cribbage tonight Eigle Bell.   -
Admission Mc, S p.m. iharp
B. A. Siunden, Chimney Sweep,
Phone 90
Soft drink bottlei wanted. Oood
price paid. Columbia Bottling Worki
Bummer CotUge, Bilfour, close to
beech. Blackwood Agency.
Tor leedi that will grow—Oo to
Wilt's Newi Depot.
We can repair any mike of Ironer.
Beatty Reptir Service, Ph. Bl.
Movie Story Mag,, Etqulre, Movie
ihow on sale at VALENTINE'S,
POLAROID CLASSES
For your protection.
Now available at
Cuthbert Motors Ltd.
Opp Hume Hotel and Put Office
Have You Ordered Your
COAL!
DON'T wait until next Fall to order your
Winter's supply — BE SAFE and order now
for early delivery...   .
3 ton or
1 ton       over
GAIT— Lump    $11.25     $10.75
Stove      9.75        9.25
WIUDFIRE—    Lump     11.50       11.00
Egg     10.75       10.25
CREENHJLt— Furnace    1100       10.50
Stoker       9.00 8.50
BURNS
Dumber lcoalco/4
J. A. C. Laughton
Optometrist
Salt* 205
Medicil Arti Building
BUSINESS MAN'S
LUNCH       ,
11:30 to 5:00
Melon Dew
ICB CBEAM PAHLOB
Fleury's Pharmacy
Prescriptions
Compounded
Accurately
Med Arti Blk.
PHONE 25
W. W. Powell
Company, Limited
The Home of Good humber
Wholesale and Retail
Telephone 176
Foot of Stanley Street
Phone
10- 11
Sia/L ^hoc-hy*
Quality
Service
MACARONI, Quaker Quick
Cooking, Ib. pkt..,   on
2 for  *Wt
PEAS, Sun Rhe, Sieve 5—
(Limit 2) 20-ox. Oft _
tlni, 2 for L*7-Z
PUMPKIN, Nabob, Urge 28
-_": 15c
MAGIC BAKING       or
POWDER, 12 oi. tin aWC
16 os. Hn * 30<
2 H>. Hn 70tt
MAGIC BAKING 11 .
SODA, Lb. pkt. ... UC
T™^':... 14c
PEARL SOAP, or
5 ben  LOl
THRIFT SOAP FLAKES —
ST4-*. 48c
TOILET SOAP, Maple 1QA
Leaf, 4 ban 13C
CAKE FLOUR, QQ
Swam' Down, pkt. . *wC
BAKER'S  CHOCOLATE —
_t**:\ 19c
DR. JACKSON'S        0 J
MEAL, Pkt OfK
STAFFORD'S SOUPS—Each
pkt. makei 4-6 servings in
4 minutes. Chicken Noodle, French Onion, Old-
Fashioned Bean, Yellow
Pea, Creen Pea,        OQ
2 pkts *WC
Vegetable, 2 pkti ...'Mti
NOOK NAPS, 70 to   OP
a pkt., 2 for a-vC
NABOB
TEA
2 ox. pkt Utt
4o*. pkt 211
8 ox. pkt 381
16 or. pkt 7M
Now, more than ever,
it pays to buy a really
good tea. *
m
QUALITY PRODUCE
ASPARAGUS, Crand Forki, Lb 25<
LETTUCE, Freih Headi, Each 2S#
RADISHES, CREEN ONIONS, Local, 2 bunchet ... .15*
SPINACH, Local, 2 lbi 35*
TOMATOES, Victoria Hot Houie, Ib 48f)
TOMATOES, Mexican Field, Ib 35f
FLOUR
Five Roses, Maple Leaf,
Robin Hood,   Royal
Household, Purity
98-lb. Sack |3.10
49-lb. Sack fl.60
24 lb. Sack HS<
7-lb. Sack *_Hti
RHUBARB, Local,
3 lb*.	
25c
ORANCES, Florida 252'i.
2 doien	
87c
Oarden Club meets tt City HtU
at S tonight. Diicuuion on carry-
Int bulbs through to next season.
BOGS
See Robion Co-op Ad ln
Classified   Columni.
Lcjve your reprlnti ind get your
fllmi developed at— ***-
RBNWICK'S   PORTRAIT  STUDIO
Small ranch about 5 acres cleared;
good houie, water record; cloie to
good town. (3000 terms or $2900
caih ROBERTSON REALTY.
Dent mlw bearing Ilr; M. Alfred
Gibbi tddreu In , Scindlr.av.in
Churoh at 8 p.m. tonight Many yein
experience ln Ootptl work ln Africi
Auitrtlli, New Zeilend tnd England
' Let Pyrex tojve your glitf problem.
The,Ideal gift (or ihower-or wedding present. See our large auortment of both oven tnd flame ware.
, .HtpP^EjaOICS
'''tiOCXfi-BTH.Vtt-O   7
Chooiq from opt of tht t beiutlful colon in1 which you can buy thit
will finiih deluxe— Velio.    .
BURNS' LUMBER le COAL CO.
Stvtn Featurei of The Qoipel,
tonight, at 1 -p.m., by M. Alfred
Qlrtii, Evangel lit, Author and Com'
poser. Evangelical Mission Covenant Church, 800 Baker St Every
body welcome. No collection.
TIRE  RETREADING
—Truckownen—
Wc  have   modern  equipment
Have your  tlrtt retreided NOWI
RIVERSIDE MOTORS
1993 Col. Ave., Trail «• Phone 440
■n» 1 '
SOMERS' FUNERAL
i    SERVICE
TM Baker St Phoae 23-
Open Day and Night
Crematorium Ambulance
*m***m_Ji_mf_* -|"~—- ....
J. P. Walgren
.   General Contractor '■
301 Carbonate St.
For retl vtlut in
RINGS
.,-..    See
HARVEY
084, Biker St
TRV
HOOD'S
Ry«, Malt, Whole
Wheat & Fancy Bread
Filing cardi. All sizes ind rulings.
D. W. McDerby, 'The Stationer and
Typewriter Man", 934 Baker St.,
Nelion, B.C.
Reglitered Nunei tnnutl meet
mg of Weit Kootenay Dlitrict tt
Nursei Home Wedneiday, May 18,
8 p.m., 30c each. Thole planning to
attend, phone Mlu Tregear at 868
by Monday. Dr. M. R. Baited ot
Trail wlll apeak on Transfusions
and Blood Banki.
Choose Your
SPRING
WALLPAPER
at
MURPHY BROS.
Sivt your Sugar Rition—
Oet a bottle ot
SACCHARIN  TABLETS
Vi quarter grain tablet equal to
1 teupoonful ot sugar
_•*-_><•   ■       a
100--H-3O*
At Your Rexall Store.
City Drug Co.
Phone 84 • -lex 4(0
THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
f W. L THOMPSON. Prop
Day and Night Strvlct.
24 Hour"Ambu!anct Service
616 Kooteniy St        Phont 881
Is Necessary for Health
STAR CAFE
 in r ■ 1111111111 ■ ■ i ■ i ■ i ■ t i ■ 11 ■ i ■ 111 ■
Look Your Beit
and you'll feel your
belt With a lovely
permanent
HaiAh Tru-Art
Beauty Salon
Johnitone Block
Phone 327
BARREL
SWEATERS
100% Pure Wool    A
fl.TB
Just arrived ... a new,
..shipment of these pure
wool, crew neck sweaters'
In all colors.
EMORY'S
The Hani, Store-
Quality Groceries
Wt Havt a Complttt Lint
LAKESIDE SERVICE
Ph. 485 Frtt Deliver;
Opp. Lakeilde Ptrk
Have the |ob Done Right
Set
VIC GRAVES
MASTER  PLUMBER
PHONE 815
CRAPEFRUIT, Florida, Cood Sixe   OA
3 for  *wC
CERTIFIED SEED POTATOES,
Netted Coma, 50-lb. aack ...
EISENHOWER
VICTORY "OVER THERE"
IS MADE POSSIBLE BY
VICTORY LOANS HERE
'THE EIGHTH ARMY WON OUR VICTORY THERE — LET'S
MAKE  OUR VICTORY HERE SURE THROUGH  REACHING
,'/.*'    OW VICTORY LOAN
$77,000 NEEDED
FELLOW CITIZENS!
Thii la Eighth Army Day. Ceneral Mont gomcry and the United Nationi have won a
glorioui Victory. The enemy la Oil the run! ... Let'i regiiter our gratitude in a practical
way for the magnificent Victories of our North African Armiet. Make sure we reach our
objective here by going,over the top In thia, Fourth Victory Loan . . . Make your Dollars
fighting Dollars. Back the attack ... We dare not f alf down at thia critical time ... Come on,
Citizens of Nelaon. Yon have never failed ua yet. Your money ia needed to apeed our
Armed Forcei along the road to Victory. Aa we value our HOMES, our FAMILIES, our way
of living, wa muat allow NOTHING to obscure our point of vision; NOTHING to deter
our attention from thla goal. ,
Enough planei; enough ihips; enough tanki;.and the bomba, guna, ammunition and
other equipment with which to fight them—quick enough—and we win and bring our
Boya and Girls home Victorious. v'
•n. fr. stibb-m
Mayor.and Nelaon Chairman,
National War Finance Committee.
IF YOU HAVE NOT ALREADY BOUGHT A VICTORY BOND... OR
IF YOU CAN BUY ANOTHER...
t
Phone Local Headquarters - 906 -
A SALESMAN WILL CALL
... OR MAKE YOUR APPLICATION THROUGH YOUR BANK —
KELSON WAR FINANCE COMMITTEE
Mayor N. C. Stibbs
C. B. Garland
Lt.-Col. C. A. Hoover
E. A. Mann
D. Townaend
E. Horton
R. B. (Jack) Morrii
A. H. Allan
R. b. Barnea
E. E. L. Dewdney
P. C. Morey
Aid. George Turner
T. H. Glover
R. Foxall *•
L. L Boomer
D. D. McLean
J. P. Duffy
W. Marquii
W. Roy Hunter
L. W. Humphrey
Back the Attack-Keep That Nelson Touch
MONTGOMERY
GIRAUD
•   ' ■,. >
n_   ''.
:.     •.._■*.     .-,
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