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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" r\nNatlt Land Pandiirtith Reekleiily\nen Crete Iilmd. Page I.\nWw Aim \"Merely te Survive\" Says\nDorothy Thompion. Page 8.\nDoukhobon to Do Ubor Service\nInitead of Training. Pago 7.\nVOLUME  40\nGerminy Must Not Be Allowed to\nWrack Peice Again. Page 3.\nGermans Ruthleiily Machine-Gun\nCrete Civilians. Paga 3.\nAir Cadet League Beglni Operation\nNext Week. Paga 3.\n\"101\nFIVE CENTS PIR CM\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-FRIDAY MORNINO. MAY SO. 1941\nNUMBER M\nTED REINFORCING CRETE\nWheat Conference to Be Meld\nin US. Welcomed by Canada\nBren Carriers Aid In Raising War Funds In England\nDoukhobors May\nWork on District\nHighway Projects\nOTTAWA, May 29\u2014Doukhobors\nin the 21 year old class, under the\nNational Registration Regulations\nmay go to work on the improvement ot the Nelson-Nelway road\n(Alao see \"Doukhobors,' Page 7.)\nAt least that is the proposal. An or-\nder-in-council tabled today provides\nJor labor service, ln lieu nl military\ntraining lor conscientious objectors,\nMennonltes and Doukhobors. Work\non the Nelson-Nelway road will\nprobably be allotted to the Doukho-\n>>orl.\nIt ll expected that the camps will\nbe in operation by June 19 and will\ncover a period ot three or foul\nmonths. Those who Jail to report\nat theae camps lor work will be\ndealt with in the ordinary way as\ndalaulters.\nIn the West Kootenay and Grand\nForks districts there are 143 Douk\nhobora in the 21 year old class.\n\u2014:\u2014 11\u2014!\u2014-\t\nDoukhobors Are\nConvicted on 2\nDefence Charges\nOeorge Philipoff and George Konkin, Crescent Valley Doukhobors,\nare serving lour months each as a\nresult of convictions under the Defence ot Canada Regulations and the\nNational Registrations Regulations,\nIn Provincial Police, Court Monday.\nTne charges arose'out ol their ar-\nreata on the C. P. R. tracks in the\nrestricted srtja of the West Kootenay\nPower le Light Company st South\nSlocan at 5 o'clock last Saturday\nmorning. Constable Walter Martin\nof the Provincial Police, Bonnington\nwaa notified by one of the guards\nthat th* two men weije trespassing\nahd lie immediately went to arrest\nConstable Martin also discovered\nthat they had not registered in accordance with the Registration Regulations.\nPhilipoff and Konkin each pleaded- guilty stating they had always\nused the track, and figured they\nhad a right to. but they were lound\nguilty by Stipendiary Magistrate\nJohn Cartmel. They entered pleas\nof guilty on the charge of failing\nto register. They were fined $50\nfor the tresspass and $150 each for\nihe non-registery, with the alternative of four months in Jail.\nConstable G. A. Brabazon prosecuted in Court.\nCONSIDER BUILDING\nBIG NEW, BOMBER\nPUNE IN CANADA\nOTTAWA, May 29   (CP)-Possi-\n<fllllty of constructing in Canada a\nnew   type   four-motored   bombing\nfilane of large proportions are be-\nng explored, it was learned from\na well-informed source in Muni-\ntlona and Supply Department today.\nRefused to Join Up,\nArrested, Now Free\nVANCOUVER, May 20 (CP). -\nA young Netherlander who claims\nto nave Deen arrested at the order\nof Royal Netherlands Army authorities because he refused to join\nup was released on his own recognizance by Chief Justice Aulay\nMorrison in Supreme Court today\npending presentation ot further\nevidence.\nTh e Netherlander, Frederick\nChristlasn van der Ree, who came\nto Canada in 1924, sought his release on a writ of habeas corpus\nIrom City Police whom he claims\narrested him at the order nf Li.-\nCol. G. T. Sas of the Royal Netherlands Army.\nBishop Johnson to\nAttend U. S. Congress\nMINNEAPOLIS, May 29 (CIP). -\nThree archbishops, 11 bishops and\none abbot of the Roman Catholic\nChurch in Canada have accepted\nthe Invitation of Archbishop John\nGregory Murray of St. Paul to attend the Ninth National Eucharistic\nCongress ln Minneapolis and St\nPaul June 23 to 28.\nCanadian prelates to attend Include: Archbishop William Duke of\nVancouver; Bishoo Francis P Carrol of Calgary. Bishop Martin M\nJohnson ot Nelson, B. C.\nCanada, Australia and Argentine Expected\nto Be Represented at Washington\nPlan Storage Collaboration\nOTTAWA, May 28 (CP).\u2014Canada today welcomed a\nconference to be held at Washington soon bv the four major\nwheat-exporting countries, weighed down by a surplus of\n1,198,000.000 bushels for which no market is in sight.\nCanada, holding about half the total surplus, has informed the United States of her readiness to attend the conference, and Australia and the Argentine are also expected to\nbe represented.\nPrime Minister Mackenzie\nKing tabled in the House of\nCommons an exchange of notes\nbetween the United States\nand Canada. These messages\nindicated that the two countries, in addition to the conference, plan to collaborate in\nmaking use of grain storage facilities.\nIn writing J. Pierrepont Moffatt,\nU. S. Minister to Canada, Mr. King\nsaid the Dominion Government was\nwilling to participate in continuing\nconsultations with tha United\nStates on wheat.\nHe said it was assumed the consultations would. embrace such aspects \"as the mutually advantageous\nuse ot storage facilities ln the\nUnited States and Canada, as well\nas all decisions ln the field of\nwheat policy which, although taken by one Government, may have\na bearing on the interest of the\nother,\"\n\"In view of the problem of surplus wheat with which. the Governments of almost all the major\nexporting countries now are confronted, and having in mind the\naltered conditions and prospects\nfor trade resulting from the war,\nthe   Canadian   Government   wei-\nGee King Fined\n$100 on Charge\nof Contributing\nGee King, Chinese laundryman,\nThursday morning was found guilty\nby Magistrate William Brown ol\ncontributing to the delinquency of\na juvenile and was fined $100.\nGee appeared ln'City Police Court\nand was charged on information of\nConstable R. R. House on May 18.\nAt the request of the defence counsel, W. w. Ferguson, the trial was\ndjourned until May 21. Following\nhe two-day trial, May 21 ahd 22,\nCounter\nBegin as\nAttacks\"\nPlanes\nthe .... .\nduring which three witnesses Ior\nthe prosecution and Gee and one\nother dclence witness were heard.\nMagistrate 'Brown reserved his decision tor one week. Constable R\nR. House and two young girls, one\nof whom was mentioned in the\ncharge against Gee, were prosecution witnesses; while Gee Hop was a\ndefense witness. An interpreter, Cecil Nang, wa\u00ab required because ot\nGee's limited knowledge of English\nL. S. Gansner appeared for the\nCrown.\nGee was charged under Section\n'33 of the Juvenile Delinquents Art,\nthat he, \"being an adult person not\nthe parent or guardian of a child\n. \u201e. did knowingly do acts likely to\nmake a child a juvenile delinquent.\"\nSISiBst^&HRB'sPHsJGssMM\nBig thrill of the \"war weapons week\" in Leis-\nton, Suffolk, for these children, waa the ride they\nwere given ln a Bren carrier named \"Winston\nChurchill\". Although the town had only 4000 inhabitants, it raised over $200,000 after setting a goal\not $79,000.\nLondon Firemen to   ,\nTour U.S. and Canada\nLONDON, (CP). \u2014 Three members of the London Fire brigade\nwho have gone through the worst\nair attacks the capital has endured\nace to tour the United States and\nCanada. The trio, DUtrict Officer\nD. D. Ivall and auxiliary firemen\nR. Hayzrook and C. Palmer, will\ntell people in America first-hand\nstories ot big fire raids on London.\nLast Winter Fire Chief McEUigott\nof New Yotk sent two of his officers\nto study raid conditions in the metropolis. The coming tour will constitute a return visit.\nDistrict Officer ivall was a professional fireman before the war.\nHe has been fighting fires in London almost continuously since the\nsevere attacks began last September.\nHaybcook formerly was a professional artist and also one of. the\ncrew of the fireboat Massey Shaw\nwhich rescued survivors from the\nbeaches at Dunkerque.\nThe firemen are taking with them\n100 paintings and water-colors of\nfire scenes in London, most of\nthem the work of auxiliau-y firemen\nwho were professional painters before the war. Some are the work\nof Haybrook, The pictures will be\nsold in America for the benefit\nof the firemen's fund.\ncomes the proposal that the discussions of this problem with the Governments of the United States and\nother interested countries, should\nbe resumed,\" Mr, King wrote.\nThe . United Kingdom, major\nwheat importing nation and\nmainstay of the Canadian wheat\nexport movement, wu expected\nto be represented. ' \u2022  -\nAt May 1, the estimated wheat\nsurplus was divided as follows:\nUnited States 400,000,000 bushels;\nCanada, 565,000,000 bushels; Australia, 73,000,000 bushels and Argentina 180,000,000 bushels. Estimates were that the 1940 world\ncrop of 4,052,000,000 bushels would\nequal the disappearance by consumption of grain on hand, leaving the surplus on hand no smaller\nthan it was last year.\nAnnouncement of the conference\ncame after a United States declaration of quotas on American imports of wheat and flour during the\nnext 12 months.\nPeople Can live\nWl Half Brain\nBy 8TEPHEN J. MeDONOUGH\nAssociated Preu Staff Writer\nCLEVELAND, May 29 (AiP).\u2014It\nis possible to live with only half a\nbrain and still not be half-witted.\nAt the forthcoming American\nMedical Association meetinn here,\ntwo Cleveland  Clinic physicians,\nDr, Louli J. Karnoih and Dr. W.\nJames  Gardner,  will  report the\ncases of three persani who lived\nmore  than  two  yean  with  the\nentire right halves of their'brains\nremoved.\nThey would present a fourth case\nexcept that after the operation lo\nremove the right. hemisphere, the\nyoung woman got over-confident,\ninsisted on walking without a cane,\nfell downstairs, and died ipmj,\nbrain concussion Tive years Etter.'\nAll four operations were done\nbecause Ot brain tumors. The surviving patients are partially paralyzed on the left side (the right\nhalt of the brain controls the motor\nnerves on the left side of the body)\nbut they are able to talk, write and\nwalk with little difficulty.\nThinking, according to reporta of\nbrain specialists, seems to be a\nfunction of the whole brain but is\nnot impaired by cutting out part\nof it. In fact, mental upsets, worries, hyeteria and chronic palsy have\nbeen eliminated in many cases by\ncutting small cores in the prefrontal lobes of the brain, Just behind the forehead.\nMusician and CBC\nHead Die in Crash\nMONTREAL, May 29 (CP). -\nLeo Pol Morin, well-known musician and lecturer, and Fernand\nLeclerc, head ot the Special\nEvents Department ot the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's\nMontrea studios, were fataly injured ln an automobile accident\nat Tae Guindon, 30 miles North\nof here, tonight.\nSuccession Duly\nBill Approved\nOTTAWA, May 29 (AP)- The\nMouse of Commons, tonight placed Its final approval on the firat\nFederal Succession Duty law ever I\n.,^jj\u00bb.|lV\u00a3M*4*r'.    \u2022   *\u2022    r*l\nAfter a day spent in threshing out\ndetails the bill was given third reading just before adjournment\nThe bin Imposes a graded Kale\not taxes on estates of deceased persons, in addition to the existing provincial succession duties.\nM. J. Coldwell, Acting C.C.F.\nHouse Leader, congratulated the\ngovernment on the passage of the\nbill which, he said, had been advocated by his party for years. He said\nhe wished the government had come\nfarther and imposed a straight estate\nduty which could be called a capital\nlevy.\nLate Flashes\nDUBLIN, May 30 (Friday) (CP)\n\u2014Anti-aircraft batteries fired on\na number of planes flying over\nEire early today, but there were\nno Incidents reported. It was the\nsecond straight night of activity\nby unidentified aircraft.\nSAN FRANCISCO. May 29 (AP)\n\u2014Twenty extra guards have been\ndetailed to duty on San Francisco\nwaterfi-ont following rumors that\n\"something big\" may happen to\nproperty there Memorial Day Joseph F. Marias. President of State\nBoard of Harbor Commissioners,\n\u2022aid tonight.\nEdmonton to Have\nStreet Car Library\nEDMONTON, (CP). -The first\nstreet car library ever eitabllihed\nin Canada, possibly the first in\nNorth America, will begin operating in Edmonton in \u25a0 September,\nthe Edmonton public library board\nhas decided.\nTentative arrangements were\nworked out several months ago with\nthe city's street railway department after the idea first was suggested to the board by Hugh C.\nGourlay, Chief Public Librarian,\nformerly of Hamilton, Ont.\nOne of the city's oldest trams,\nknown as No. 14 and not in use\nduring the past two years, will be\nreconditioned for service, its seats\nremoved and enough shelves In\nstalled to hold about 200 books.\nThe tram library will visit outlying districts ot Edmonton in accordance with a regular schedule\nIt will \"park\" for about six hours\nwhile the mota-man leaves the car\nin care of a member of the public\nlibrary staff.\nResidents of each district serv-\ned will be able to borrow books\nfrom the tram library exactly as\nif it were the man downtown branch\ntx- the one in South Edmonton,\nand books borrowed Jrom the tram\nwill be returnable at either ot those\nbranches. Mr. Gourlay said.\nBEAVERS TOO MUCH\nPOR W.P.A. WORKERS\nELLENSBURG, Wash. (CP)r-One\nof the state game protectors tells\nthis story about a Work Projects\nAdministration crew on a road project. The crew had to tear out \u2022\nbeaver dam.\n\"They finally had to give it up.\"\nsaid the projector. \"You see, the\nworkers Just simply eouldnt catch\nup with the beavers. The WPA\nmen worked regular hours and short\nweeks but the beavers never heard\nof overtime or five day weeks, and\nthey'd build up as fast as the WPA\nmen could tear down.\nKimberley Patriotic\nWar Donations $800\nKIMBERLEY, B.C, May 29 (CP)\n\u2014The May statement of the Kimberley Patroltlc Society for all war\ndonations in the area showed contributions totalling $834.52. The disbursements included $350 to the Canadian War Services Fund, $200 to\nthe Kimberley Red Cross, $M) to\nthe Queen's Canadian Fund and $73\nfor the rehabilitation trust fund.\nDuring the month payments of\nassistance to families of enlisted\nmen pending arrival of maintenance\nmoney totalled $50.\nBOMBED NORWAY AREA\nDRIVES FOLKS TO BOATS\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Many people at\nKristiansund in Norway were obliged to spend the whole Winter in\nfishing boats because of the destruction of their houses by German\nbombers last Summer, the Norweg-\nion Telegraph Agency reports. A\ncorrespondent who recently visited\nthe town describes the damage\ncaused by fires as \"the most catastrophic that has ever been known\nin all the Scandinavian countriei.\"\nNAZIS CLAIM SCHMELING ALIVE, BUI\nSUFFERING FROM TROPICAL DISEASE\nBig Slider Fleet\nSeen In Greece\nBy DANIEL DE LUCE\nAssooi'ted Press Staff Writer\nANKARA, May 29 (AP).-Tha\nGerman Air Force towed a huge\nfleet of gliders across Northern\nGreece a fortnight before opening die aerial invasion of Crete,\nit was reported today by a neutral merchant stranded in Salonika by the German occupation.\n\"I looked up from my front\nporch one morning and was\ndumbfounded to see big transports towing apparently broken-\ndown-planes at an altitude of 12,-\n000 feet,\" this source said. \"Then\n1 got my field glasses and discovered It was a glider convoy.\nBach transport trailed a cable of\nwhich five jliders were attached.\n(The gliders had long, slender fuselages i with tremendous wings and\nJussibly were able to carry from\n0 to 20 men apiece.\n\"The astonishing sight continued\nfor hours, the convoys flying in\nthree sections. I counted 299 motor-\nless craft and couldn't help but\nthink what soft pickings they'd be\nif the R.A.F. got them.\n\"It remained a mystery to me\nhow the Germani got the gliders\ninto the air, nor did anyone else\nin Salonika seem to know the takeoff method.\n\"None landed ln Salonika. Supposedly they went to the Peloponnesus without stopping.\"\nThe merchant, an old friend of\nmine, had just left Salonika but\nrequested anonymity.\n\"I saw 1500 British soldiers grouped miserably in a'dirty prison camp\noutside Salonika subsisting mostly\non bread and water,\" he related.\nPound at Germans\n30,000 Germans and Air Force Combine to\nPush Allies From Western Crete; Both\nSides Suffer Heavy Losses\nNEW YORK, May 29 (AP) .\u2014The British Broadcasting\nCorporation in a French-language broadcast heard tonight by\nCBS said it had received a report that British reinforcements\nin men and material have arrived in Crete and \"attacks are\nbeing answered with counter attacks.\"\nThe BBC said that report was contained in a Reuters\ndispatch from Cairo. .   ]\nly EDWARD KENNEDY\u2014Auoclated Press Staff Writer\nCAIRO, May 29 (AP).\u2014The combination of 30,000\nGerman troops and the Air Force dislodged the weary British\nand Creek forces from Western Crete today and destroyed t H\nSuda?\nAutograph King Dead\nYORK, England, (CP).-Reginald\nHunt, head ot a Yorkshire brewing\nfirm who had what is believed to\nbe the best collection of autographs\nln the world, died here at the age\nof 46.\nHis collection inclluded five kings\nand queens, six United States Presidents, Mussolini and 192 V.C.'s \u2014\nthe last atl on one sheet of paper.\nHunt received the ex-Kaiser'i\nautograph after five unsuccessful\napplications and when he asked\nII Duce for his Mussolini wrote to\nthe Chief Constable of York asking\nIf he werre a \"fit and proper\" person\nto receive it\nWhen he collected the signatures\nof the first British Labor Cabinet\nthe sheet of paper travelled to and\nfro 90 times In the mall before it\nwu completed.\nHunt's collection Included the signatures ot Queen Anne and Queen\nElizabeth. Disraeli, Nurse Edith Cavell and the murderer Crlppen. A\nnve hla coUectlo..\nlie \" \"\nSUMAS PRAIRte, B.C., May 29\n(CP)-The body gAFrank Lee, 56-\nyear-old Sumai farmer and. former\nmember of the Saskatchewan Pro\nvincial Polltfe at Radlwn, Sask., wu\nfound about 900 yaiMs from his\nhome hera today, a gunshot wound\nin the abdomen.\nCensus Information\nCooperation Urged\nOTTAWA, May 29 (CP)-Com-\nplete census information in Canada\nis 10 years old, \"too old in these\nfast-moving days,\" Trade Minister\nMacKinnon said tonight in urginj\npublic cooperation in the taking o:\nthe decennial census, starting June\n11.\nMr. MacKinnon ipoke over a na\ntional network of the C. B C.\n\"Because ot the large number of\npeople ln Canada born 4n other\ncountries, it is essential that we\nlearn all that can be known regard'\ning the birth place, origin, language,\nand so on, of our population,\" Mr\nMacKinnon said.\nThe 1941 census would advise as\nto housing conditions in the Dom.\ninion and provide data for a hous\ning plan which might be Instituted\nin Canada as an aid to post war\nreconstruction.\nthird British cruiser in\nBay, now in Cerman hands.\nAll the while, British bombers and long-range fighters,\noperating from the Egyptian\nmainland, were striking back\nat the German air fleet which\nnow crowds the Western end\nof Crete.\nA Royal Air Force communique\ngave some idea ot the magnitude of\nthis invading air army when it reported successful attacks Tuesday\nnight on more than 100 German\nplanes on the beachea of Northwest\nCrete alone,\nThe Air Force also gave its version of yesterday's bombing ot the\nTunisian harbor of Sfax which the\nVichy Government said it was pro'\ntesting.\nThe Air Force said It attacked\nan Italian oonvoy seeking shelter\nIn the port and hit a ship of about\n10,000 tons which exploded with\n' such force as to Indicate it was\nloaded with munitions.\nOn   the  10th  day  of   their  invasion, the Geraian air-borne army,\nswollen by reinforcements, fought\nEastward' from the shores of the\nBay,   counter-attacked   again   and\nagain by the retreating defenders.\nThe Struggle was as fierce as any\nin this war, and on both sides the\nlosses were large,\nThe Axis claimed the capture of\nCandia, largest city of Crete and\nmid-way of the Island's 100-mile\nNorthern coastal belt, and the arrival by sea of Italian troops in\nEastern Crete, claims which were\nnot confirmed by Britain.\nDive bombers, in endless assaults,\ndestroyed in Suda Bay the 8250-ton\ncruiser York as she lay crippled\nand under intermittent repair. All\nbut seven of her 800-man crew-\ntwo dead and five wounded\u2014got\naway unscathed, the Admiralty announced.\nShortly thereafter the Middle East\nCommand announced; \"Our troops\nhave withdrawn to positions East\not Suda Bay.\"\nThe Germans already held the\nbomb-ruined capital of Canea.\nwhich lies across a narrow neck of\nland just West of Suda Bay, and\nthe airport of Malemi, 10 miles\nSouthwest of Canea.\nPossession ot> the bay Itself\ngave the Germans a possible\nbridgehead . for sea-borne reinforcements. Until now, Malemi\nand the nearby beaches have\nformed the main gateway for the\nairborne invaders,\nMAX SCHMELING\nBERLIN, May 30 (Friday) -\n(AP).\u2014Nazi sourcu said today\nthat Max Schmeling; former world\nheavyweight boxing champion, ll\nalive, and claimed that ba is suffering from a tropical disease\npicked up while fighting u a\nNazi parachute trooper in Crete.\nHis illneu wai not regarded u\ndangeroui, lt wai Itated.\nTaken from the thick of the\nfighting ln Which he participated\nactively, Schmeling wu placed ln\nan air forc\u00ab hospital\u2014presumably\nsomewhere off tha besieged Greek\nIsland.\nLONDON,   Mary   30   (Frlday)-\n(CP).\u2014Authorised British sourcu\nsaid today there wu no reason to\ndoubt the announcement from Berlin that Max Schmeling is alive ln\na Nasi air forca hospital.\nThese sources uid the New Zealand ambulance drlver'i resort In\nEgypt that Schmeling had been\nkilled ln Crete might have resulted\ntrom mistaken Identity.\n\"New Zealanders had Identified\nthe man killed u Schmeling,\" they\nsaid, \"but It certainly Is possible\nthat they were mistaken or misled\nby Incorrect Identification.\n\"There appean to be no reason\nwhy the German sources ihould say\nSchmeling la alive if he li not\"\n500-Mile Race Entry\nBadly Hurt in Crash\nINDIANAPOLIS, May 29 (AP).-\nSam Hanks, 26, Alhambra, Calif.,\nwas taken unconscious frotn his\nwrecked speedster thia afternoon\nafter lt cracked up on a practice\nrun for tomorrow's 900-mile race at\nIndianapolis Motor Speedway.\nHanks' car smashed throuah the\nInfield fence at the Southwest\nturn, turned over twice and stopped on its wheels.\nThe California driver, entered in\nthe race (or the- second time, appeared to be badly hurt.\nOfficer Brings\nNew Patrol Car\nTRAIL, B. C, May 2ft-Constable\nD. C. Georgeson returned Friday\nnight from the Coast with a new\nhighway patrol car recently allot\nted to thli district.\nOPEN COPRA BUSINESS\nVANCOUVER. May 29 (CP) - A\nBritiih Columbia copra induitry\nawaited by commercial Interests\nhere since August. 1939, quietly be\ncame a reality today when Ihe firat\ntank car of (topra oil wai delivered\nto Canada Packers Ltd., from the\nnew copra plant of the W R. Carpenter (Canada) Company.\nPreviouily copra oil uied for\n| shortening hu bean Imported from\nPortland by Canada Packers.\nSo far few Axil troops have\nlanded by aea. The British forces\nhave received some sea-borne\nhelp.\nBritons, Australians and New\nZealanders, with their Greek and\nCretan allies, made several counterattacks that cost the Germans many\nlives, but they were forced slowly\nback by sheer'weight of numbers.\nDespite the German advance the\nterritory they hold is but \u00bb small\nfracUon of the island area, consisting, so far as is known here, of a\nstrip along the North coast from\nMalemi to an undesiganted new\nline East of Suda Bay.\nThe steep and cavernous mountains of the interior offer good defensive  positions.\nCAIRO, Egypt, May 29 (AP).-\nCapture of Khanuota, Iraq, halfway between Fallujah and Baghdad, was reported today by the\nRoyal Air Force.\nLONDON, May 29 (CP). - Axis\nforces driving across the Libyan-\nEgyptian frontier on a 30-mile\nfront have been halted by British\ntroops after occupying Halfaya Pass\nSouth of the border post of Salum,\nReuten News Agency said today.\nThe only movements reported today around Salum were those of\npatrols.\nIn Ethiopia, British forces were\nclearing the roads from Dessie to\nGondar and from Dessie to Assab\nIn the South, patriot forces were\nsaid to have surrounded Bako, ln\nthe laku region.\nBELIEVE IAPAN MAY\nWEAKEN TOWARD AXIS\nWASHINGTON May 29 (API-\nResponslble legislators said today\nthere Is s growing belief in Administration circles that Japan's adher\nence to the Axis soon may Weaken,\nand they cited n.\u00ab evidence President Roosevelt's virtual omission in\nhis fireside chat of any discussion\nof America's problems in the Pacific\nDoukhobor Given\nThree Months lor\nNot Registering\nMickey Nazaroff, of Crescent Val.\nley, who the previous day wu a\nwitness at the inquest into the death\nof Alex Berisoff; also of Crescent\nValley, was fined $100 with the al-\nternative of three months in Jail\nwhen he appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel on I\nThursday morning in ProvincUl\nPolice Court on a charge of failing\nto register under the National Reg- '\nistration  Regulations.\nNazaroff, who pleaded guilty, waa\ngiven an option of a $100 fine,\n-The charge 'was-laid  by Con-\nStable G. A. Brabazon.\nWin Over British\nClaimed by Iraq\nBAGHDAD, May 29 (AP). -\nMore than 350 British Imperial\ntroops were killed or wounded today in a fierce battle in Western\nIraq and in artillery bombardment\nof British positions in the Persian\nGulf region, the Iraqi Government\nclaimed tonight.\n(This.claim was not immediately\ncommented on in Cairo.)\nWithout locating the scene of tha\nWestern fighting, it asserted the 300\nmen were lost in a desperate itruggle. The Britons counter-attacked\nout were beaten off again with new\nheavy losses.\nThe British forces left JO dead\nor wounded on the field after an\nIraqi shelling of the British posi-\ntions at Maqil, in the South, tha\ncommunique claimed.\nBritain Instigator,\nof War Says Darlan.\nLONDON, May 29 (CP). -\nAdmiral Jean Francois Darlan,\nMarshal Petain's Successor Der\ninnate, contended in an inter- ,\nview todav that Britain was tha\n\"instigator\" of the war and that\nFrance was only a \"plaything ln\nBritish hands\"\nThe interview, quoted by the\nBritish Broadcasting Corporation\ntonight, was published in the pro-\nNazi newspaper G'ringolre.\nNEW MINISTRY NOT\nNEEDED SAYS CHURCHILL\nLONDON. May 29 (CP)\u2014Prime\nMinister Churchill told the House\nof Commons today there were no\ncircumstances to justify creation of\na Ministry of Social Welfare for\nseverely bombed areas.\nwea|tii'\nHI\nMin. Max..\nNELSON  48    72\nTRAIL   49    ea\nVictoria   48    68\nNanaimo     41     68\nVancouver     50\nKamloops   49\nPrince George   40\nEstevan Point   48\nPrince  Rupert   45\nLangara     45\nAtlin        31\nDawson    38\nSeattle    46\nPortland  46\nSan Francisco    93\nSpokane    \u2014  44\nPenticton      45\nVernon       _ 40\nKelowna        59\nGrand Forks   47\nKailo  46\nCranbrook    _  47\nCalgary  \u201e  33\nEdmonton          42\nSwift Current    38\nPrince  Albert    44\nWinnipeg   93\nForecast: Kootenay: Light variable winds! partly cloudy and mild\nwith a few widely scattered showers.\n63\n75\n73\n57\n76\n64\n69\n75\n65\n66\n64\n76\n70\n70\n54\n54\n65\n60\n67\n>T   >\u2022\n\u2014 - \u25a0--\u25a0- -' -\"-^\u00ab\u2014\u25a0\u00bb\u00ab\"' -'sl-attJ-t*.\nAj^m_________________^^\nilgl\nmm^mMmm\n m\nmmmm\nllipiipwiiiuiiiuippyiii\nIMIftMm.UWJIHfW'^W'W\nPAOI TWO-\nCranbrook Entertains Tourist Heads\nol Prairies; Welcomed by Minister\na  CRANBHOOK. B. C, Maj \u00bb-\nfThitty Alberta and Saskatchewan\nItourist  directors  who irrived  in\njCranbrook Thursday nljht in the\n.course est a tour designed to acquaint them with \"the |lorie\u00abi of\n\"this wctlon ol Britiah Columbia\"\n\u2022so they might go home and describe\nrthem, were entertain^ at a banquet tendered tonight by the Brit-\nish Columbia Department of Trade\nand   Industrial  Extension.   Major\nGordon Smith, Commissioner of the\nB. C. Travel Bureau, welcomed the\nvisitors. . ,\nHon. C. S. Leary, Minister of\nPublic Works, declared Alberta\nmeant much to British Columbia's\nprosperity. He itated MOO milei of\nroad had already been paved ind\nadditional surfacing was under way.\n\"B. C.'s highways are rugged, but\nthey take you to scenes that are\nalways different and always interesting.\" The Miniater said, \"if\ntourists pay attention to the road\n-'\u25a0Tis they nave nothing to fear.'\ntr. Leary emphasized that B. C.'s\nwsiTlat highways of today might\nbecome the military roada of tomorrow, and that the Province had\nstressed the necessity at preparing\nfor this eventuality.\nThe MinistCT was Introduced by\nArnold McGrath, M.L.A., for Cranbrook, who spoke of the widely diversified Industry of the district\u2014\nmining, lumbering, agriculture, coal\nand the tourist business.\nVisitors were welcomed by Mayor\nA. J. Balment ot Cranbrook; C. J.\nLittle. President of the Cranbrook\nBoard; R. B. McLeod. Ruident at\nthe Kimberley Board; Frank Putnam, MIA, for Nelaon-Creaton;\nDr. C. H.'Wiight of the Trail Board\nof Trade and J. V. Reweri of the\nFernie Board.\nS F. D. Roe of Red Deer, formerly of Cranbrook, urged the\ntourist directors to specialize, to\nsend each tourist to the dUtrict in\nwhich he would find what he\nwanted, and Eric Ramsden, Nelion,\nof hunting and fishing in the Koo-\ntcnsvs\nGeorge N. Hunt of Calgary, representing Alberta radio stations,\ndeclared British Columbia's own\nresidents were the worst offenders\nin decrying road conditions and\nurged a campaign to educate them\nthat the roads wera not as bad as\npainted.\nEmphasis that winning the war\nmuat come first marked the addressee of H. R. Banks of Kimberley, Consolidated Concentrator Su-\nSErintendent; Dr. Wright, Mr. Lit-\ntv Mr, Rewers and Mr. MoLeod.\nE. R. J. Forster of Lethbridge,\nBranch Manager ot the Alberta\nMotor Association, Introduced the\nvisitors. Their appreciation was\nvoiced by G. W. MdLean of Edmonton, a director of the Alb-rta\nHotels Association, and Ralph Edwards of the Dominion Government Information Bureau at Banff\nNational Parii.\nPower Company\nGives Flagpole\nTRAIL, B. C, May 2\u00bb-A permanent flagstaff has been donsttad\nand erected by the West Kootenay\nPower & Light Company at the\ntoot of Spokane Street on Esplanade. The pole, painted white wtth a\nlarge gold sphere on top; was set\nup Wednesday, ahd will be the\nwntre of the flag-raising ceremony\ntor the TraU Victory Loan Drive\nMonday afternoon.\nThe Trail Veterans' Guard have\nbuilt a sandbag fort in front of the\nheadquarters on Cedar Avenue,\nand will conduct sentry duty dur-\nlng the campaign period.\n\u25a0        \t\ndMcDiarmid Head\nof Canadian Club\n\u25a0v -EMEU B. C, May M \u2014 8. I.\nMcDiarmid  wu elected President\n'\u00abt the Trail Canadian Club Wed-\nElay evening. Other officera are\nL. McCallum, Honorary Presi-\ntH. H. O'Dell, Vice-President;\n|nd R. A. Moreley, Secretary-Treas-\n-'II!. Committee members are Mrs.\nily, Mrs. R. J. G. Richards,\nH. Kilburn, Mre G. G.\n%, A. D. Turnlbull, H. A.\nand F. S. Willis. W. A.\n it. Past President; was named an ex-otficio member ot tbe\ntwoutive committee.\nTroll Driver Pays\nFine of $10 After\nHaving Collision\nn(AIU . C, May 29\u2014Kenneth\nDawion of Trail was eonvicted on\nf charge of reckless driving and\nins fined |10 and costs, when he\nappeared before Magistrate S. Hum-\n. phries ln Castlegar Police Court\nWedneiday afternoon.\nliie case resulted from an acct\ndent Sunday afternoon at Birch-\nI bank, on the Trail-Castlegar Highway, whan Dawson's car collided\nwith a car driven by Ernest Morrison of Rossland. Mrs. Morrison Is\nbeing treated at the Mater Miser!-\n\u2022ordiae Hospital for minor injuries.\nNIGHT BASEBALL\nWE8TERN  INTERNATIONAL\nSalem 0  4  1\nSpokane       5 10   1\nDieriok   and  Adams;   Anderson\nand Myen.\nYakima      Oil\nWenatchee _.   J   8   1\nMcConnell and Sueme; Weldon\nand Farrell.\n\u2022NELION DAILY NIWS. NILtON\nVictory Loan Soles\nCampaign Is Mapped\nSalesmen for tbe Victory Loan\nbond sin thia Diatrict met Wednesday at the Loan committee roomi\nhere to make final arrangements\nfor the sales drive opening June 2.\nTba workers spent their time\nmapping out the coverage et Nelson and District, and ln studying\n\u2022nd familiarizing themselves with\nthe Victory Loan bond.\nHarrop, West Arm\nFolk at Funeral\nMrs. A. R. Johnston\nHarrop and West Arm residents\nThursday atternoon tilled Clark's\nFuneral Chapel tor the funeral ot\nMrs. A. R. Johniton, resident of\nSunshine Bay, Procter and finally\nHarrop, for some yean. Rev. T. J. S.\nFerguion conducted servlcei both at\nthe Chapel and at the graveside in\nMemorial Par*.\n\"Rock of Ages\" ind \"Safe In tbe\nArms ol Jesus\" were the hymni\nsung.\nSix Harrop residents were pallbearers. They were J. A. Knauf, T.\nNeale, Robert Scwab, John Berry,\nW. McConnell and R. Gainey.\nMn. Johnston died at her home\nMonday. Shs wss an activs Worn\nen's Institute Worker.\nVogues Win 20-13\nin Trail Softball\nTRAIL, B. C, May M \u2014 Ths\nVogues defeated the Newcastle3\n20-13 ln a ladles' softball game at\nVictoria Park Thursday afternoon.\nE. Edwards and K. McLean hit\ntriples for the Newcastles, and A.\nWallace made a three-bagger for the\nVoguea. Doubles were hit by E. Edwards, Lena Lepage and K. McLean\nfor the Newcastles, and L. Casey\nand M. McGregor for the Vogues.\nLineups:\nVogues: G. Owens If; E. Waddell\nIf; L. Casey, lb; M. McGregor c; N.\nMinton, p; A. Wallace, 2b; J. Kendall, 3b; E. Davies, ss; R. Cassarini rf; H. Ermacora rf; E. Johnson\ncf; A. Torpy cf.\nNewcastles: A. Krelow lb; E. Edwards cf; L Lepage 2b; H. McLean 2b; L. Saprunoff p; E. Reid rf;\nI. Haas rf; K McLean ss; L. Dodd\nIf; M. Cronie 2b; N. Rlndler s.\nConfirmation at\nTrail on Sunday\nTRAIL, B. C, May \u00bb-A 'confirmation service will be conducted\nin St. Andrew's Anglican Church,\nTrail, by Rt. Rev. W. R. Adams, D.\nD.. Bishop of Kootenay, Sunday\nnight.\nKiddie Breaks Arm\nTripping Over Dog\nTRAIL, B. C, May 20 \u2014 Robert\nCheyne, young son of Mr. and Mrs.\nAlexander Cheyne, broke his arm\nTuesday when he tripped over his\ndog while playing.\nLONDON, May 29 (AP).-British\nstock closings ln Sterling: Austin A\n13s 3d; Courtauldl 30s; De Been\ndfd. \u00a35tt.\nBonds\u2014British 2V4 per cent Consols \u00a378%; British 3H per cent\nWar Loan \u00a3103 11-16; British Funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3112%.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor,\nUMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. E. Therrien,\nW. H. Townsend, C. Smith, F. C.\nScott, G. J. Stewart, Vancouevr;\nC. A. Yule, Penticton; Mrs. S. By-\nsouth, Kusikanook; John E. Borstal, R. W. Haggen Rossland- A.\nMackie, Boswell; Joshua John, Bonnington Falls; Mr. and Mn. J. S.\nSmith, Blairmore;. Mr. and Mn.\nW. H. Sterne, Edmonton; T. Mulligan, J. H. Lewis, Medicine Hat; J.\nD. GtynmUl, H. S. GemmiU Winnipeg: Mr. and Mn. W. G. Beatty.\nFergus, Ont.; C. 2. McCaw, Toronto.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nPHONE       MR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, Props.      PHONI\n\u2022 ja     In our new wing you may enjoy the finest    <y9A\n-.2*1    rooms ln  ths Interior-Bath  or Shower     -.3*1\nSPECIAL RATES BV THE WEEK OR MONTH\nVANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS\n'   \"V6UR VANfiflUVM M6MS\"\nDuf Serin Hotel\nW0 Seymour St\nNewly rtnevatsd through-\nnut   Phones and slavator\nA. PATTERSON\" tale of\nVancouver. B. C. Coleman, s\\lU, Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM   H. MclVOR   Prop\nTrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nKimberley, Fernie\nen Leary Program\nCRANBROOK, B. C, May \u00bb -\nHon. C. S. Leary, Minister oi Public\nWorks, will go to Kimtoerley Friday\nand to Fernie Diatrict Saturday in\nthe course of a Southern interior\ntour durlhg which he is checking\nroad conditions preparatory to anticipated heavy tourist traffic.\nOn Sunday he will visit Golden,\nand travel over the Big Bend Highway to Revelstoke, where he wtll\nattend a Board of Trade function\nMonday.\nHe Is due ln Penticton Tuesday,\nKelowna and Kamloops Wednesday.\nINSTRUCTRESS\nHOME NURSING\nRECEIVES GIFT\nMn. F. P. Sparks, R.N., instructress ot the home nursing classes\nconducted under the St John Ambulance Association, at tht recent\npresentation of tint aid and home\nnursing awards, was presented with\na gift of appreciation from the class.\nMayor N. C. Stibbs made the presentation on behalf of th* home marling group.\nSeven penoni, successful ln their\nfint aid exams, received vouchers,\nwhile vouchers for three other successful candidates were not receiv\ned here \u00bbnd so could not be pre-\nsented. The thiree who did not receive their voucher* were Misi Mae\nMacfarlane, Vincent Eperson and\nFrancis E- Andenon.\nOther instructora,' besidei M\"\nSparks, were David Rees tnd Fire\nChief G. A. MacDonald.\nIn the list of home nursing certificate winnen published Thursday\nmorning, Elisabeth Mills' ntme appeared as Elisabeth Bells.\nVogues Are Leading\nin Trail Softball\nTRAIL, B.C., May 2\u00bb-The Voguei\nare leading the TraU Ladles Softball League with six straight win!.\n\"A\" team li second with two wim\nand three losses out of five games\nplayed, and Newcastles are third\nwith five losses out of five games.\nLate Closing at\nPaterson on Now\nTRAIL, B. C, May 28\u2014The customs port of Paterson is now open\nfrom 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. instead ol\nfrom 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. as formerly,\nThe recently arranged change went\ninto effect Tuesday.\nMixed Doubles Tennis\nTournament at Trail\nTRAIL B. C, May 29\u2014Date for\nthe WesT Kootenay mixed doubles\ntennis tournament for the Chesser\nCup has been set for June 15 at\nTadanac.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, May M (CP) .-Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen  High  Low   Close\nWHEAT'\nMay   '75%    75%    75%     76%\nJuly       .   THi    THi    77%     77%\nOATS:\nMay     37       37%    37        37%\nJuly    35%    36%    35%     35%\nOct     33%    34       83%    33%\nBs\\RLEY:\nMay     50       50%    50       SO\nJuly     \u00ab%    48%    48%    48%\nOct    44%    45       44%    44%\nFLAX:\nMay    150%   150%   147%   147%\nJuly  151      151%   148      148\nOct  140%   150%   145%   148%\nRYE\nMay     -       -       -       58%\nJuly     58%    58%    58%    56%\nOct.     54%    54%     52%     52%\nCASH PRICES: Basis in store Fort\nWilliam and Port Arthur:\nWHEAT\u2014 No. 1 hard 75%; No. 1\nNor. 75%; No. 2 Nor. 74%; No. 3\nNor. 71%; No. 4 Nor. 70%; No. 5\nwheat 67%; No. 6 wheat 68%; feed\n65%; No. 1 Garnet 71; No. 2 Garnet\n69%; No. 1 Durum 71; No. 4 Special\n68%; No. 5 Special 66%; No. 6 Special 64%\nOATS-^No. 2 C W. 37%; No. Ex.\n3 C. W. 88%; No. 8 C. W. 34%; Ex.\n1 feed 35; No. 1 feed 32%; No. 2\nfeed 31%; No. 8 feed 30%.\nBARLEY-No. 1 feed 46; No. 2\nfeed 44%; No. 3 feed 43%.\nKLAX-No. 1 C. W. 147%; No. 2\nC. W. 143%; No, 3 C. W. 132%; No. 4\nC. W. 127%.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 58%.\nNellie Minion Is\nAgain Leading In\nBatting Averages\nTRAIL, B.C., MNT 29\u2014Nellie Minton, who won the Trail Ladies Softball Cup for tha highest batting\naverage last season, is leading again\nthis year wltb .600 In- tha first official standings given out Thursday\nnight. K. McLean places second with\n.583, and Hazel Benolt follows with\n.526..\nTen leading batters up to May\n27th follow;\nO ABRH Pet\nMinton, N. (V)  \u00ab JO 7 18 .800\nMcLean, K. <N> 4 12 2   7 .583\nBenolt, H. (A)  I IB 3 10 JM\nWeir, H. (A) ..- t 16 -  8 .444\nSaprunoff, L. <N> _\u2022. 2   9 -   4 .444\nCasey, L. (V)   5 25 - 11 .440\nFiwettt, (N)  \u201e 4 10 - 4 .400\nLePage, L. (N)  3   8 -   3 .400\nKendal, J. (V)  6 29 2 11 .379\nForaey, P. (V)  6 22 1  8 JM\nThree Points in\nTennis Tourney\naf High Schools\nTRAIL, B. C, May \u00bb-The Weet\nKootenay High School tennis tournament wil be played at ths Tadanac courts Saturday, commencing at 9 am. Events pliyed will\nInclude boys' tnd girls' singlet tnd\ndoubles, tiid mixed doubles.\nOwing to the fact that Rosslind\nIs unable to field t full team of\nat least four boys and two girls,\nthe entire event will be played at\nTadanac, Instead of at Trail and\nTadanac as previously arranged.\nEntries from Trail, Nelson and\nGrand Forks have been received.\nThe players from the tint two\ncltiei follow:\nTrail: Joan Hannay, Ruth Margeson, Jsck Harrison, Robert Lepsoe,\nBill Rae, Bill Shannon and Bill\nDimock.\nNelson: Rosemary Fleming, Pamela Dewdney, S. W. Matheson,\nFrank Christian, Bud Smith and\nJoe HlUiard.\nCuts in Front of\nthe Torch Parade;\nPays Fine of $10\nTRAIL, B.  C May 29 - Gus\nErickson of Trail, pleaded guilty\nto reckless driving, when he appeared before Magistrate Parker\nWilliams in Ctty Police Court Wednesday afternoon. He waa fined $10\nand costs.\nErickson was charged after he\nhad crossed in front of the Trail\nVeterans Guard Parade on Victoria Street, Sunday afternoon, during the Trail Torch Dedication\nteremonies.\nFink's Furniture\nMemorial, Tadanac\nClubs to Meet in\nTennis Tournament\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e May 29-A tennis\ntournament between Trail Memorial Club and the Tadanac Tennis\nClub will be played at Tadanac Sunday.\nShavings Afire in\nCarpenter Shop\nTRAIL, . C, May 29 - A small\nfire in a pile of shavings in the carpenter shop of the Tadanac Smelter brought the Tadanac Fire Department to the scene about 1.35\nThursday afternoon. The blaze was\nquickly put out with a small fire\nhose, and very little damage was\ndone.\nMrs. Solly of Summerland Is Again\nHead Missionary Auxiliary Board\n$100 CASH-, 1928 BUICK SEDAN.\n9 Tires, good condition. Good famUy or fishing car. Phons 558X\nevenings.\nWANTED: CAPABLE WOMAN TO\ncare for child, keep house. Ph.\n7WY.\nFOR RENT - 3 FURNISHED\nhousekeeping rooms. Apply 124\nSilica.\nHOUSE FOR RENT  - 707  VIC\ntorit Street, Phone 309X1.\nMODERN BEDR\"M SUITE, FRIG\nother furniture. 308 Victoria St.\nWW9W9WW9WW9WB\n_______asts6s&ssst*te.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nOUTLET HOTEL\nCABINS, BOATING, FISHINC\n10 miles from Nelson.\nvlt Harrop Ferry\nKootenay'i Best Fishing at\nTwenty Mlnutt Pt\nPROCTER.   B C.\nRates reasonable\nPresident Mrs. H. A. Solly of\nSummerland wss returned to office for the 1941-42 term by the\nKooteney biocesan Board of tha\nWomen'i Auxllliry to tht Missionary Socltty of the Church of\nEnglind In Ctnidi here Thurs-\ndiy, tht dosing dty of tht two-\ndty innuil convtntion.\nOther officers elected wert Mrs.\nHtmllton Wtttt of Vernon, Vice-\nPresident for Okanagan; Mrt, F.\nV. Hirrlton of Cranbrook, Vice-\nPruldtnt for Koottnty; Misi R.\nJ. Sherman of Summerland, Recording Secretary; Mrt. A. Ruffle\nof Peachland, correiponding Secretary; Mrt. A. Pearson of Penticton, Treuurer; Mrs. Hughet of\nPtntliion, Secrettry for Girls;\nMrt. Hatcher of Revelstoke, Secrettry for Junion; Mrs, F. V,\nHarrison of Cnnbrook, Little\nHelpers Secretary; Mist S. Gibson, Vtmon, Secrettry Church\nBoyt Ltigut; Mrs. D. Spowart of\nGolden, Educational Secretary;\nMrs. I. Barnes of Summerland,\nPriytr Ptrtnir tnd United Thinki\nOffering Secretary; Mrt. John\nKeen of Kislo, Editor ind Secretary-Treasure of the Living MH\nsage; ind Mrt. McCtlg of Grind\nForks, Dorcas Secretary and Social Service Secretary.\nOFFICERS REPORT\nReports of the various Diocesan\nofficers marked the closing session.\nBouquets were presented to Mrs.\nSolly, President, to Miss A. M. Hilliard of New Westminster, Vice-\nPresident for Western Canada, and\nMrs. W. Oddley of Penticton, retiring Secetary-Treasurer.\nThe lession opened with Holy\nCommunion at the Church of the\nRedeemer before the delegates retired to the Parish HaU for the business meeting. Again before lunch\nwas served, they spent a quiet half\nhour in the Church being addressed\nby Rev. L. Smith of Trail on \"The\nPower of Ptayer.\"\nRev. W. J. Silverwood expressed\nhis pleasure at having the delegates here, It being the first time\nthe Church of Redeemer had been\nhost ot this meeting. He thanked\nthe Women's Auxiliaries of both\nthe Redeemer and St. Saviour's\nChurch, the service Club, and the\nSunday School Women's Auxiliary\nfor their hospitality, and for blllet-\ntlng the visitors.\nThe session closed with prayer.\nRossland Cadets Please Reviewer\nROSSLAND, B. C, May 2\u00bb-\"l\nam well pleased with what I have\nseen this atternoon. It Is difficult\nto realize mat these Corps are the\nsame ts those I inspected in September. There has been a tremendous improvement and they evidently have worked very hard to accomplish what they have done.\"\nThese were the words used by\nMajor W. R. Critchley from MD.\nNo. 11 Headquarters at Victoria,\nwhen he had reviewed at the Mac-\nLean school grounds over 200 members of the RossUnd Junior-Senior\nHigh School Cadets Corps. Accompanying Major Critchlsjy was Serg.-\nMaj. C. N. Henry.\nSeven platoons passed betore the\nreviewing stand, snd of these three\nwere composed of boys snd four ot\ngirls. The boys' platoon sre commanded by Mike Johnson, Chesty\nLenarduzzl, and Earl Martin; md\nthe girls' by Irene Beguin, Margaret Wright, Marion Fertlch and Ilda\nAgazzi. The unit formed by the\nboys' platoons Is known as \"A\" Compiny, commanded by Jack Lees:\nand the girls' platoons or \"B\" Company   Is   commanded   by   Alouize\ni\u00ab\u00abtttW\u00bb8M*W\u00bb\u00bbtM8\u00bbW\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\nSPECIAL1 Fresh Strawberry Sundae. It really Is delicious at GRAY'S\nRed Cross Garden Party. Bald-\ntag's Ranch. Blewett. June 18, 25c.\n\"Dixie\" tobacco. 20c a plug,  at\nVALENTINE'S.\nNewly-opened Hot Springs Cafe\nand Lunch Counter, Ainsworth.\nAINSWORTH HOT SPRINGS\nNOW OPEN\nTrade your bike in on a new or\nrebuilt bicycle at KITTO'S.\nAny  flavored  MERMAID  5c   at\nWAIT'S   NEWS\nCottage for rent Willow Point\nBest beach on lake. Phone 553.\nEDISON MAZDA  LAMPS F. H\nSMITH, PHONE 886  351 Baker 8t\nFour oi Cabinet\nSeeing Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B. C May 29 -\nToday Cranbrook greeted Hon. C.S,\nLeary, Minister of Public Works.\nOn Friday Hon. A. Wells Gray,\nMinister of Lands and Municipalities.\nHon. K. C. MacDonald, Minister\nGuaranteed\nMechanical Work\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n?01 B.ik-r St   SERVICE   Phone 122\nLook\nDressed Up\nat the next dance\n\\    Phon* 1042\nQonsiUa. (JlsmncAA.\nMarn. For the purposes of the Cadet\norganization these last two named\nhold the rank of Captain. James\nWright Jr., holds the rank of battalion commander. The entire Cadet\nCorps project at the school is supervised by Captain Wesley McKenzie, Principal and Officer Commanding; with H. E. Smith, industrial\narts instructor, second ln command\nMajor Critchley commented mat\nthis was the 88th Inspection which\nhe and Serg.-Maj. Henry had made\nsince AprU 1,1941 and they still had\nanother 2500 miles to travel in ur-\nanother 2500 miles to travel ln further inspecltons throughout the\nProvlnoe.\nIn addition to review by the officers while at attention, and a\ngeneral march past the reviewing\nstand, the battalion exhibited their\nknowledge of 'Section Drill, Rifle\nDrill, Physical Drill, Company Drill\nPlatoon Drill, First Aid, and Signalling, as well as performing Battalion Drill, and a mass march\npast ln Column of platoons, mtrch\npast in columns of route and an advance In review order.\nSAT. NICHT DANCE\nEagle HaU, Margaret Graham's Orchestra.\nNew UNDERWOOD Leader portables J45\u201475c per week. 538 Wara\nStreet. Phone 99.\nSylvatile, fir  veneer,  scored   ln\ntile designs, 4x8 sheet $3.27.\nBURNS LUMBER AND COAL CO\nQuality Bedding Plants. Phone\n910. Mac's Greenhouses. Open evenings.\nSpecial train to Eucharistlc Congress at TraU Sunday leaves 11:30\na. m.\not Agriculture, arrival Saturday.\nOn June 10 Hon, Gordon Wismer,\n-Attorney General, will comt to\nCrmbrook.\nFOR 25c\nYOU CAN TAKE HOME A BIO\nBISHOP \"\nFISH ANO CHIP8 FROM\nTlie PERCOLATOR\n80S Biktr St\nPhont 102\nfm going to have my\nhair fixed differently\nat\nHafth Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\nJohnstone Block\nWOW!\nCHICKEN  SANDWICH\nWith a Dili\nButler's Cafe\n286 Baker St\nFOR RENT\nTWO or THREE ROOM SUITE\nAnnable Block\nTrail Cadets Win Praise al Review\nTRAIL, B.C., May 2\u00bbi-MaJor W.\nB. Orlchlcy, of Military District No,\n11, reviewed the TraU-Tadanac Hlgb\nSchool cadet Corps at Butler Park,\nThursday morning, afterward stating the corps wss one of the smartest md best turned out units he bid\nInspected. Sgt Maj. Henry, slso ol\nVlctoris, wss with Maj. Qrichley\nPrinciptl A. E. Allison of the\nhigh tchool, snd G. F. Reimann.\nPresident of the Trail Branch No ll,\nCanadian Legion, attended the Inspection, and the high school puplla\nwere given a recess to enable them\nto' attend Uie review.\nMajor Crichlcy told the three\ncompanies thit ht was proud of the\nway they had carried out their drill,\nand was Impressed with their steadiness on pirade. \"Tlie officers snd\nN.C.O.'s ilso mtde a very good\nshowing\" he slid. >\nThe Corps wept through battalion\nformation, company drill, platoon\ndrill, group games, and physical\ndrill. Qne'platoon gave a signalling\ndemonstration and - another a first,\nair demonstration-. Moir McLagai.\nassisted by R. H- Lowe, both members ot the high school teaching\nstaff, instructed and trained the\ncorps.       \u25a0 '   , \u25a0\nFresh killed beef, lamb. pork,\nveal. Fresh spinach 2 for 13c. Local\nlettuce 5c per head. Halliwell's Fairway.\nNelson Junior War League Raffle\nMrs, R. Marshall won needlepoint\nItool with ticket 581 and Mrs. S.\nBostock won cushion with ticket 93.\nNaw 1941 Ford Deluxe sedan at a\nsaving bf J190. No trade accepted,\nNo dealers please. Box 559 Daily\nNews.\nOnly Easy Washing Machins can\noffer suoh gentle yet thorough action as is given by vacuum cups\nMcKay sf ^Stretton.\nListen to Mr. W. J. Coldwell, M\nP., C.C.F. House Leader, Ottawa,\ndiscuss the Q.C.F. war policy on Saturday, May-81, at 7:15 to 7:30, over\nCanadian Radio Stations.\nNeed a-typewrlter? We have them\nat prices from $15 up. Cash or on\neasy pajWtnts. D. W. McDerby.\n\"The Typewriter Man\" 854 Baker\nSt, Nlsoa, \"B. C.\nFot exwift servicing of refrigerators, wishing machines, vacuum\ncleaners, Mfftrie motors, etc., phone\nHippertorfi.' A factory-traineo mechanic at Jour service. \u2022\n;\u2014*~- sir\nTickets for Victory Loan-,Naval\nBand Dance which will -tallow immediately the free concert at the\nCivlc,Centre Monday night, may be-\nobtained-at Mann-Rutbfrford's. Me\nKay te Strettnn's, Wood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Fink's Ladies' Wear.\nEmory's, Walt's News Stand, or Hudson's Bay Co.\n\t\n\t\n -NILSON DAILY NtW*   NELSON \u00bb, C.-FRIDAY MORNINO. MAY JO. 1M1-\niwmu m ii um iiimw\nBe Allow\nAgain\nto Disrupt\nLONDON, May 28 (CP) -^Foreign\nSecretary* Eden, in his first comprehensive statement on Britain's war\npolitical and military terms ot peace\nwill be signed to prevent a repetition ot Germany's misdeeds.\"\nMr. Eden said that \"under the\nsystem of free economic cooperation, Germany tmut play a part.\nBut here I draw a firm distinction\n\"We must never forget that Germany is the worst master Europe\nhas yet known. Five times ln the\nlast century she has violated the\npeace. She must never be in a\nposition to play that role again.\"\nMr. Eden, addressing a London\n\u2022udience, termed President Roosevelt's speech Tuesday night \"a momentous world event\" because \"by\nhis words, the President has given\nresolute expression to the fixed determination of the most powerful\nnation on earth.\"\nHe asserted \"a lasting settlement\nDID YOU TAKE A\nLAXATIVE TODAY?\nDo you really know why constipation is so harmful?\nYou probably know that constipation seta up poisons in the large\nintestine or colon. But do you know\nthat these poisons seep through the\nwalls of the colon and infect the\nbloodstream? They set up toxic\naccumulations in kidneys and liver\nind are contributing causes of\nrheumatic pains, sciatica and backache.\nMoit laxatives only act in the\ncolon. Kruschen docs more. It is tho\nlaxative with adouble action. Besides\nridding the colon of stagnating waste\nmatter, Kruschen'a mineral salts\nhave a diuretic action. They flush\nthe kldneyi, help to cleir the\nbloodstream of all poisonous matter,\nand ao protect your whole system\nfrom that form of infection.\nYou can get Kruschen from all\ndrug Btores. Prices 75c, and 25c.\n(Advt.)\nOLD RYE WHISKY\nand internal peace ot the continent\nis a whole is our only aim.\"\n\"It is obvious,\" the Foreign Secretary said, \"that we have no moti\\\u00bb.-\nof self-interest prompting us to economic exploitation either of Germany or of tha rest of Europe.\n\"This is not what we wtnt nor\nwhat we could  perform. ..\n\"Only our victory chn restore\nboth to Europe and to the world\nthat freedom which it out- heritage\nfor centuries of Christian civilization and that security which alone\ncan make pouible the betterment\nof man's lot upon earth.\"\n\"We can not now foresee when\nthe end will come. But it Is the\nnature of a machine so rigid as\nthe German to break suddenly and\nwith little warning. When it comes\nthe need of succor to European\npeoples wtll be urgent\"\nThe Foreign Secretary, returning\nto the European situation declared\nit would be \"foolish to belittle Hitler's conquest of a greater part of\nthe continent of Europe.\"\n\"It is this man and hts satellites,\nall except the Deputy Fuehrer (Rudolf Hess) now otherwise engaged,\nwho control the lives and liberties\nof all who dwell in these vast territories ... yet this vast and sinister  fabric will  not  endure.\"\n\"We have declared that social\nsecurity must be the first object of\nour domestic policy after the war,\"\nhe said. \"Ana social security will\nbe our policy abroad not less than\nat home.\"\nHISKY\n\u25a0 OTTLSTO IN .ONs} IN CANADA, I S YEASSS OLD\n18 ot J2.00 _ 25 oz. *3.15\n\u25a0WTTLIO l\u00ab tout. III CAISADA\n18  ox.  $1.70-25  ox, U.65\n40 ox. $4.06\nUNDERWOOD\nLONDON\nMtmUB mo torn, so in camo*\n12 ox. $1.20 - 25 oz. $2.30\n40 oz. $3.40\nGasless Sundays\nMay Come to U. S.\nWASHINGTON, Miy 29 (AP)\n\u2014Interior Seertttry Hirold kkei\ntodty advocated daylight saving\nIn tha United Stttei en t nationwide sell* and suggested tht\ncountry mty htvt to retort te\nrestricted utt of electricity ind\nInstitute \"gillett Sundsyi\" to\nmeet ihorttgti ef powtr tnd ell.\nThe ititement came \u2022\u2022 tn offlclil of thi Federal Powtr Commiulon forest* \u2022 powtr emergency, \"perhipi the mott urloui\nIn history,\" ind revealed studioi\nwen being midt on meant of\ndiverting powtr from civilian te\ninduitrlil uitt, to prevent interruption of defence production.\nREBEL DITCHES FAIL\nTO HALT BRITISH IN\nADVANCE ON  BAGHDAD\nLONDON, May 29 (CP) - Irtq\nrebels have cut irrigation ditches\nand flooded roads al6ng the 40-mile\nline from Fallujah to Baghdad but\nhave failed to halt the British advance on the capital, in authoritative source said today.\nHow far the British troopi hive\ndriven Southeut from Fallujah,\nthis informant did not sty, but ht\nreported the only ground fighting\nin Iraq recently has been between\npatrols.\nREPORT LOSS OF\nCRUISER YORK\nLONDON, May 28 (CP) \u2014 The\n8250-ton cruiser York hat been lost,\nit was officially announced oday.\nThe Admiralty said the warship,\nwhich normally carried a crew of\n800 men, \"must now be regarded\nas a total lots.\" The ship was damaged some time ago ana was under\nrepair in Suda Bay when the ttttck began tnd since has been repeatedly bombed, the statement\nsaid.\nThe Admiralty taid the only\ncasualties were two killed and five\nwounded.\n. The York, whose chief weaponi\nwere six eight-inch guns, was the\neighth cruiser lott since the ttart\nof the war.\nHanson Asked\nto Continue os\nHoum Leader\nOTTAWA, May 29 (CP)- Hon.\nR. B. Hanson, Acting House Leader\nof (he Conservative group in tht\nHouse of Commons, hu been uked\nto continue in thtt ctptcity tor the\nnext session of Pirliament, it wu\nannounced today after a Conservative caucus.\nThe request for Mr. Hanson to\ncontinue aj House Leader wu unanimous, tbt caucus spokesman told\nthe Preu.\nU.S. May Oust Axis\nAirlines From\nSouth America\nBy J.  F.  SANDERSON\nCanadian Prut Stiff Wrlttr\nWASHINGTON, Mty 29 (CP)-\nThe United .Statu Government,\nthrough the Reconstruction Fin\nance Corporation, may attempt to\ndrive German and Italian airlines\nfrom South America where they\ncriss-cross in a veritable maze of\ndomination.\nAlarmed at the dominant poll\ntion of Axis airlines in South'America, which not only prejudice Pan-\nAmerican trade relations but \"constitute a threat to the strategic de-\nfence of the Western Hemisphere,\nthe R.F.C. may subsidize existing\nAmerican services to drive the Axis\nlines from the lir or establish new\ncompaniu.\nEight lirlines owned by German\nand Italian interests operate with'\nout hindrance over routes totalling\n21,762 miles, touching even remote\nsections of South America where\ncommercial services cannot be justified. Pilots are reserve oficers\nof the German and Italian air\nforcu and, it it believed 'here,\ncogs in the espionage and propaganda machines of the Axis powers.\nThere were nine Axis airlines in\nSouth Americi until'a few weeks\nago when Bolivia expropriated a\nGerman service which held an exclusive franchise in thit republic.\nNow Ordtr or Foil\nof Civilization, Says\nJapanese Minister\nNEW YORK, Miy 39 (API-Japanese Foreign Minister Yosuke Matsuoka declared today that the present world crisis must end either in\ndestruction of modern civilization\nor In establishment of a new world\norder, Domei, Japanese News Agency, reported in \u2022 radio broadcut,\nTOKYO, May 39 (AP)-German\nAmbassador Eugen Ott conferred\nfor more than an hour today with\nJapanese Foreign Minister Yosuke\nMatsuoka and their subject matter\nwu reliably undentood to have\nbeen Pruident Roosevelt's fireside\nchat.\nThe British Ambassador, Sir Robert Leslie Craigie, talked with Mat-\nsuoka, ilso tor more than an hour,\nalter the Matsuoka-Ott conference,\nbut the nature of this conference\nwu not disclosed.\n'Nazis Didn't Seem fo Care How They\nLanded Parachutists Over Crete'\nLONDON. May 39 (CP)-There'\nwere few momenta in the battle\nfor Crete \"when we weren't being\nbombed, machine-gunned or being\ndescended upon by German parachutists,\" Royil Air Force officers\njuit returned to Egypt from Crete\nsaid today ln interviews with Edward Ward, British Broadcasting\nCorporation observer with the Imperial Forcu ln the Middle tut\nWard's account wu broadcut by\nthe BBC.\nOne officer told Ward that on the\nfirst day of the attack German\nbombers and tighter planet \"gave\nin a terrific strafing,1'\n\"Next day came the parachutists,\"\nhe said, \"roe planu carrying them\nwere only about 300 feet up and u\nsoon u they got over land tha\nparachutists started to jump: But\nthey didn't allow for tha height\nof a hill and lots of the poor devils\nwere dropped only a few feet from\nthe ground.\"\nHe said some of the parachute\ntroops had stained their hands and\nfaces green, and told ot the use of\nwhite and red signal lights for\ncommunication between them. One\nparachutist captured by the British \"was a bjg, strapping fellow\nwhose nervu seemed Just shot to\npieces.\"\n\"After the first troop carrying\nplanes arrived at - the island they\ncarried out a complete taxi service,\nthe officer continued.\n\"Biery dldnt seem to care how\nthey landed\u2014some crash-landed on\nthe field and tome landed in the\nwater. They must have landed 9000\ntroops that day.\"\nHe described how he and some\nof his fellow Air Force men made\ntheir way to the Cretan capital.\nSome of our fellows joined up\nwith i bunch of Maoris (native New\nZealand troops) and went into a\nbayonet attack with them., Some\nof our boys had hardly handled a\nrifle before but they put up a mar-\nvellous show.\n\"But you should have seen the\nMaoris. They were terrific. They\njust seemed to laugh at wounds.\"\nA Royal Air Force observer told\nWard how Germans in gliders landed in an R.A.F. camp.\n\"They captured 40 of our men\nand officers,\" he said, \"and then\ndrove them ahead of them rtith\ntheir bands up toward somt Australians.\n\"The Germans shouted to the\nAustralians to surrender but the\nAustralians just held their ground.\nThen, suddenly, at a signal from an\nR.A.F. officer, all the prisoners\nducked and rolled down the hill.\nThe Australians fired over their\nheads and got all the Germans'\"\nThe observer said parachutes\nwere used to drop extra equipment for the parachute troopt, iuch\nu guns, ammunition, bombs, trench\nmortars, hand grenades, food and\nwireless sets.\nAir Cade! League to Swing Into\nOperation at Beginning of Week\nOTTAWA, Way 39 (CP)\u2014The Air\nCadet League of Canada, aimed at\nproviding a grounding in air force\ntraining for boys too young to enter\nthe force, will begin functioning is\na national organization next Monday.\n\"We are ready to operate now,\nand feel that we have the organization in proper shape,\" uld George\nB. Foster, K.C, of Montreal who\naccepted presidency of the League\nlut Fall at the request ot Air Minister Power.\n\"I think we can anticipate nt\nleast 39,000 cadets enrolled by next\nSeptember, possibly a great deal\nmore.. . .\"\nNext Monday and Tuesday delegates from all parts of Canada will\ngather  at air  cadet  headquarters\nnnuD. suma Mm iottuo in tctstu_m\n26 2\/3 os. $3.75\nVictory Bonds are\nBetter than Cash!\nBuy all you can and\nHELP FINISH THE JOB!\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or  by  the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nSchool Play Day\nHeld at Rock Lake\nJAFFRAY, B.S. \u2014Approximately\n220 school children gathered at Rock\nLake Thursday with their respective\nteachers to hold their second annual\nplay day.\nThe schools represented were:\nMayook, Miss S. Dixon; Warclner,\nA. Jones ind Mill A. Sandberg; Jaffray, Mlis M. Volsey; Sand Creek,\nMlu J. Rattray; Galloway, Miu M.\nFrost; Elko, Miss E. Daviu; Barnu\nLake, Miss S. Bebb; Waldo, J. Ver-\nkirk and Miss J. BreUnni, Roosville,\nMisi P. MacDonald; Grasmere, Miss\nB. Stace-Smith. The Newgate school\nunder Miss L. Ranti, was unable to\nattend.\nThe opening address wu mide\nby A. Jones of Wardner. J. Verklrk\nwu In chirge of the community\nsinging, which included novelty\nsongs by the senior girli ot the\nWirdner md Jiffriy schooli, ind\n\u25a0 short physlcil drill exhibition by\nthe senior boys of the Waldo ichool.\nLunch committee compriied S. Dixon, M. Frost ind A. Sandberg.\nMir. V. Lundbom of Wtrdner dontted $10 for Ice cretm.\nGERMANS PAY $10,016,953\nON \"BUCK TOM\" BLAST\nPHILADELPHIA. Miy 39 (AP)-\nA report filed in U.S. Dlitrict Court\ntoday disclosed thtt Germin lnteruti have paid the Lehigh Valley\nRailroad $10,016,963.80 for property\ndamage caused In the \"Black Tom\"\nexplosion it Jersey City during the\nFirst World Wir.\nURGE SICNAL SYSTEM\nBETWEEN HARBOR BOATS\nVANCOUVER, Miy 39 (CP)-Use\nof i signal system between small\nwork boats tnd lirger vessels undtr\nrepair wis recommended yuterday\nby \u2022 coroner's jury is it returned\n\u2022 verdict of accidental death In the\ndrowning of William A. Oakley, 49-\nyeir-old shipyard employee.\nREPORT NAZI RAIDER\nSINKS 1 FREIGHTERS\nNEW YORK, Mty 39 (AP) -\nMaritime sourcu reported todty\nthe sinkings of three British freighters ind capture of two Norwegim\noil refinery veuels by t Nazi rtld-\nCRESTON SPORTS\nSHOP ENLARGED\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Tbt yeir'i first\nbuilding permit for enlargement of\npremises lin the buslneu section hts\nbeen issued to Vic Mawson, who\nhu cirpenteri it work putting t\n38x34 foot iddition to hli sports\n\u25a0hop. The enlargement will double\nthe pruent floor spice and will\npermit of expansion in the several\nllnu he carries.\nConstruction la under wiy on t\nnew ruidence on the W. Hunck\nranch property, which ii alongside\nC.P.R. trackage in the company's\nEut yard. It is authoritatively stated the new home will be occupied\nby the C.P.R. tection foreman on\nthe East side of Creston, and as soon\nas It is completed the pruent, and\noriginal tection boas' ruidence will\nbe taken down and the land on\nwhich it stands along with a quite\nextensive garden, will be used to\nprovide additional trackage due the\nneeds of the new 90-99-foot two\nstory pea cleaning and fumigating\nplant, now under construction on\na site next tile cold storage plant of\nCruton Co-Optrative Trult, Xx\nchange.\nU.S. LEADERS APPEAL\nFOR NATIONAL UNITY\nWHW YORK, May 19 (AiP)-An\nappeal for unity during the pruent\nnational emergency wu made last\nnlgbt by three former Democratic\nPresidential candidates.\nIn a broadcut sponsored by the\nCommittee to Defend America by\nAiding the Alliu, Alfred E. Smith,\n\u2022peeking from New York, John W.\nDavit, from Albtny, N.Y., md J.\nM Cox, from Dayton, 0,# urged\nAmericana to unite.\nhere to set the League ln motion.\nThe Earl of Athlone is patron and\nAir Marshal W. A. Bishop, Director\nof Royal Canadian Air Force recruiting, is Honorary President.\nWhile the cadet movement will\nbe administered by civilians, it will\nbe under control md inspection of\nthe R.C.A.F. there will be two sections to the movement, senior for\nboys 19 to 18 and unior for boys 12\nto 19, but it has been said the intension is to torm a junior unit only\nin connection with a senior.\nWearing uniforms which ln most\nrespects resemble those of officers\nand airmen of the R.C.A.F., the cadets will undergo basic training In\nthe ground and technical features\nof aviation, elementary drill and\nphysical training, games md boxing.\nGermans Ruthlessly Machine-Gun\nCivilians as They Destroy Crete\n\u25a0\nIlr fytanff^ \u20actmq\u00bb\u00bbt\u00a3.1\u00a7P\nm\nmooivtmVan ttt ___\\ ____\nIt's Out\u2014The \"Bay's\"\nSHOP AT THE\n\"BAY\"\nThe Convenient Way\n1\nCASH\nBudget H down, 3 equal\npayments, no carrying\ncharge.\nCharge    account    Pay\nmonthly. \u25a0\nDeferred Payment Plan.,\n10% cash, balance ln 10\nequal monthly paymenti.\nPrepare\nfor Summer\n\"FLYER\"\nThree-Day Sale\nTo Help You Save on Summer Needs\nCHECICTHE FLYER DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR\nHBC GROCERY SPECIALS\nOn Silt Today, Saturday and Monday. Phonei 193\u2014194\nBUTTER, Hudsonia. First Grade, 3 lbs. $109 \\\nCORN STARCH: Can- ffft\nada, 1 Ib. pkgi. eaoh .. **T\nPEAS: Slat 6, Ayl- itf\n\u2022mer, 17 os. tlni, 2 for  m*rr\nTEA: HB Broken g_s*\nPekoe, Ib \"W\nBACON:  Premium, sliced  In\nit: 4#\nBAKING POWDER: l(M\nMagic, 2V_ Ib, tin  V*T\nSHREDDED\nWHEAT\n2 pkgs.. 21 e\nCOFFEE: Country tf*\nClub, Ib \u2022**>\nCHICKEN HADDIE: mQA\nLarge tins, eaeh  *\"^T\nPORK and BEANS: Aylmer,\nlarge tlni, 20 oz\u201e <\u00bbfft\n2 for \"*r\nLIFEBUOY SOAPi       fQ\u00ab\n5 eakti  **r\nORANQES: Rtgultr     jmA\ntlit, 2 dox. 9Sr\nORAPEFRUIT *%\u00a3*\n6 for \u2022*r\nSALAD  DRESSING:  Miracle\nwhip, aa\u00bb*\n19 oi. Jan  - W\nSODA BISCUITS:        *y_A\nOrmond'i, largt etn. _ \u2022**\"\nCORN FLAKES'. ftA\nKillogg'i, 3 pkgi.  -**-9T\nJAM:   Strawberry   er   Rupberry, Empreu, enA\n4 Ib, tlni .__ TwV\nNEW POTATOES:        *%**\nt ibi.  **r\nCARROTS: New, <y*A\n' i bunchu \u201e._ **JT.\nAPPLE JUICE\nSun-Rype, 26-oi. tim\n2 for 25c\nAnnouncement, on\nGardiner Change May\nBe Made in House\nOTTAWA, May 20 (CP) *-* Announcement that Apiculture Miniiter Gardiner would be permitted\nto give hia full time to that department, and an expansion of Mr.\nGardiner's other department, National War Services, may be made\nbefort Parliament adjourns, Prime\nMinister Mckenzie King told the\nHouse of Commons today.\nHe laid he \"hoped to be able to\nmake the announcement before adjournment.\n\"It won't be made at a calf auction?\" asked Conservative House\nLeader Hanson amid laughter.\n\"That depends what my honorable\nfriend regards as calves,\" replied\nthe Prime Minister.\nSIX SLOT MACHINES\nSEIZED AT VICTORIA\nVICTORIA, May 29 (CP)-In a\ngeneral round-up of gambling devices by the City Police Department under Chief John L. McLellan, tlx slot machines, alleged to\nhave been operated illegally, were\nconfiscated in raids of six premises\nlast night\nLONDON, May 29 (CP) - Prime\nMinister Emmanuel Tsouderos oj\nGreece, now somewhere in the\nMiddle East, informed his legation\nin London today that German\nbombers had so hammered the\nCrete cities ot Canea, Heraclean\n(Candia) and Retimo that there was\n\"not one stone left sanding,\"\nTsouderos said the German raiders \"ruthlessly machine-gunned\"\nthe civilian population, including\nchildren.\nRaging fires, ht declired, completed the work of , destruction\nstarted by high explosives.\nINDIAN ACQUITTED OF\nMANSLAUGHTER CHARGE\nKAMLOOPS, B. C, May 29 (CP)\n\u2014Joe Edwards, an Indian, has been\nacquitted by an assize court jury\nhere of a charge of manslaughter\nlaid in connection with the December death of Frank August, another Indian.\nVICTY TO PROTEST\n1 BOMBING IN AFRICA\nVICHY, May 29 (AP) - The\nVichy Government announced today it will protest the bombing of\nthe French North African port of\nSfax yesterday by Britiah aircraft\nCANBERRA (OP). \u2014 The Australian Government has provided\nspecial moratorium regulations for\narmy, navy and air force men and\ntheir dependents in respect of mortgages and agreements for property\npurchase.\niiiiiiiiii\"1\" ;    \/\/\nInvitation\nWe extend a cordial invitation ta tht ciHxeiw of Nelson\nand surrounding country ta visit our show it\nCastlegar Monday, Tuesday, June 2 and 3\nThe Greater Crescent Shows\nBigger gnd Better Than Ivor\nONLY THRU OF HOOD\nCREW REPORTED SAFE\nLONDON, May 29 (CP) - Although shipping circlet had given\nBritons tome hope that a number of turvlvort might be tound\nfrom the exploded battle cruiier\nHood, Informed tources said today\nthat only three\u2014an officer and two\nseamen\u2014had  been  accounted  lor.\nThe name of one survivor was\nknown, Robert Tilbum, whose\nfather, J. F. Tilbum of Leeds, received word he wat safe in Iceland.\nAMSTERDAM, German-Occupied\nNetherlands, May 29 (API-Former\nKaiser Wilhelm of Germany, 82,\nwaa reported today to have been\nill for several weekt in hit refugt\nin the Netherlands.\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS\u2014ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\nB. C. Plumbing tf Heating\nCompany, Limited\n~\/>y Me ##\/lvt Af\/trute Ate*\nHIOH SKID BUT NO HIOH PKSSURH\nThe only \"high pressure\" the Minute Men\nuse is tht pressure they put Into polishing\nglass. Their service it adjusted to fit etch\nCastanet's schedule.\nIf you're int hurry, they rush yoa through\nill nothing flat! If yoa have mott time\nthey check yoor star carefully from item\nto stern. In either cue, you get high spttJ\nhut no high prttsurt. Try them.\nUNION OIL \/f\/maZe\/f\/tZK SERVICE\n..l-l-mm  AJ.t.l^m..-._,tm'.,..__mm^.^A.r.^. -\n_*______.\t\n\u2022 \u2022''\u25a0'\u25a0\n\u2666\n1\n.\n,\nj^jj\n ^ww^p\n.\u25a0PRRHPR\n\"!- Jl, ...WJHf:iipH^ippppill\niwiwips'w^.'''\nMOP POUR\nW. Point Guides\nSend (lollies lo\nBritish Kiddles\nWUlow Point Olrl Guide Com-\nCUTS\nRight Through\nCLOGGING'\nEst use GiUett'a Pure Flake\nLye regularly .,. and you'U\n:p sink drains clean and running freely. It will not harm\nenamel or plumbing. Banishes\nunpleasant odors at it cleans.\nGiUett'a Lye make* light work\nof dozens of hard cleaning tasks:\n\u2022.:. uvei you hours of drudgery.\nKeep a tin always on handi\nFUl BOOKLET -Ths Olllrtt's Ln\nBooklet tells how this jxnratss! clanm\ndears clogged drains . . . keeps out,\nhouses clean ssisd odorless by dwtroyins\nthe contents of the closet.. .how It\nperfossss. doseos of tssks. lead for a\nJM copy t, St.nd.rdBnndsUA,\nFetter Ave. sod Liberty uiiasss,\nToronto, Oot\n\u25a0Ntw tltKl.i In tn hot wem. Tht\ntetlm at Iht lyt ttt ttl tteatl < fie Usui tf.\npany, recently reorganised, Is bully\nengaged preparinl ntw memberi\nlor enrollment in Tenderfoot work\nand nature study, and furthering\ntheir work ln the Guides' national\nwar effort.\nWorking throughout the Winter\nmonths, the Guides were able to\nmake a large contribution of knitted\nand sewn articles for children ln\nBritain, A recent shipment Included\none baby blanket, seven pairs ot\nsox, three pairs knitted woollen\npanties, four print dresses and pan-\nty sets, two frocks, six baby jackets,\none ptlr of pyjamas, leven crib\nquilts, one large quilt, and one petticoat The quilts were made entirely by girls tied eight to ten\nyears, the remainder of the knitting\ntnd sewing being done by four older Guides.- The ltrge quilt contained\n400 squares. Mrs. J. Learmonth,\nLeader, supervised all the work.\nThe Compaiiy, depleted by the\nremoval of several members was\nreently reorganised and eight new\nmembers were enrolled. The older\nGuides have been-holding up their\nfirst Class work to help instruct\nthe newcomers In their Tenderfoot\nwork. With tht advent of Spring\n\u00a7 Yon won't suffer\nfrom sleeplessness\nor Indigestion\n,^^__       etosed by caffeine\n*\u25a0..\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 when you drink\nDt. Jackson's Kofy Sab. This d e-\nlictoui alkaline bevenge contilni\nnocoffeeorcsffeineyithisarlch\nsatisfying coffee flavour. It's produced from cereil anins and soya\nbeam\u2014a source of energy as well\nai enjoyment. Make It ia the snot\neasy way sacoffet and drink It freely, ft cu do you nothing but good.\nKNOW MORI aksel Hot mt hioWi.\nNIW   Nf   FTM   POMsMI     A   Hi Of Wwt\nAtWiv\u00abmint.\"AslsV\u00bbtslik(.O.Joclssor,,\nM.D\u201eaix Vhe A v.., Tsjt.nl..       smi\nA Or. Jackson Product\ns^^W4\/7*4\nSpecials Fit, Sat and Mon.\nMay 80, 31 to June 2.\nSUGAR: B. C. 10 lbs. 89c\nPICKLES: Sweat mixed, 27 ox. jar  82*\nCHEESE: Spread Easy, 'A Ib. pkt  lty\nLARD: Pure Swift'i or Burnt', J lbs. for  27*\nBACON: Swift'i Evenweet, Ib '. 38*\nASPARACUS: Tasty cuts, 10V3t Of., 2 tins for . . .  25*\nSALT: Windior, 7 Ib. sack   23*\nPEPPER: Black bulk Lb. 15c\nMACARONI: Quaker Quick, 2 large pkts. ....... 29*\nFLOUR: Paltry, Wild Rose, 10 Ib. sack  591\nFLOUR: Pastry, Wild Rota, 7 Ib. tack  42*\nLUSHUS JELLY DESSERTS: 3 pkti. for  25*\nRAISINS: Sunmaid seeded, pkt  18*\nPINEAPPLE: Sliced, tall tin,  151\nCORN FLAKES: Quaker, 3 pkti. for   25*\nSHREDDED WHEAT: Pkt  11*\nOATS: Plain Quaker, pkt  18*\nltlTTTsPD   Flnt Grade, Over-\nDUllbnwaitea Brand\t\n3 lbs. $1.09\nTOFFEE: Allen's, Ib 29*\nJELLY POWDERS: Overwaitea Brand, 4 for 25*\n; TEA: Overwaitea Beit, lb     70*\ni TEA: Overwaitea Popular, Ib  65*\nj COFFEE: Mysore, freih ground, Ib  45*\nBEANS: Green cut, Columbia, 2 tint for 23*\n! ICING SUGAR: 2 lbi. for   19*\ni PEANUTS: Freih roasted, 2 lbi. fer  25*\n| TOMATO CATSUP: 2 tint for  23*\ni CAT FOOD: Dr. Ballard's, 2 tins for 25*\nSalad Dressing X\"\n32 oz. jar 45c\ni PUFFED WHEAT: Quaker, 3 pkti. for 25*\n! GRAPEFRUIT JUICE: 48 ox. tin  25*\nSODAS: I.B.C., wood box, 40 ox., eich  37*\nPREM Swin'*'tha mut\nof many uses.\nTin 29c\ni OLD DUTCH: 2 tin, for  19*\nOXYDOL: 1 large and 1 imall, both for  25*\n' SOAP: Big Bath, cake      5*\n; BRAN FLAKES: Posts, the new giant lixe, 2 pkts. 33*\n\u25a0 Grape-Nuti Flakes: Posts, new giant lixe, 2 pkti. 29*\nFresh Fruit and Vegetables\nGRAPEFRUIT: 7 for  25*\nORANGES: Good sixe, 2 dox. for   39*\n' BANANAS: 2 Ibt. for  25*\n! TOMATOES: Hot Houte, Ib  25*\nPOTATOES: New, 6 Ibt. for  25*\n! SPINACH: 3 lbi. for   21*\nCABBAGE: Lb       6*\nj CARROTS: Urge bunches, 3 for  23*\nStrawberries: Local. 2 boxes 35c\nGreen Onions, Radishes, Celery, Cantaloup\nAPPLES: Delicloui, 10 Ibt. for   .. 25*\nPHONE 707.\nFREE DELIVERY\n-NELSON DAILY NIW*  NILION   B.( C.-FRIDAY MORNINO. MAY SO ,1M1\u2014.\ncoarsely. Be sure brown sugar '\u00bb\nUMWWQA\nfo\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MINU\nRam Salad\nFresh Buttered Fees\nHot Bella Olives\nFresh Strawberries\nSpiced Crab Apples\nPecan Macaroons\nCoffee\nHAM SALAD\nTwo hard boiled eggs, lft cupi\ncooked ham, lft cups celery, ft cup\ncream, ft cup mayonnaise, i tablespoons horse-radish.\nCombine diced celery apd diced\nham. Whip cream, fold In mayonnaise tnd grated horseradish, tdd\nt dash ot pepper, fold ln htm and\ncelery. Une plates wltb crisp lettuce tnd watercress, pile ham mixture ip center, garnish with slices\nof hird boiled eggs tnd slices of\nstuffed olivet. Servei I or i.\nPIANUT MACAROONS\nt cup peetn or other nut meats,\n1 clip brown sugar, 1 egg white,\nft tap. Mit ;\nScald nut metti, by pouring hot\nwater over thtm, drain and chop\nthe Company his turned to ntture\nstudies, and at the, put two weekly meetings memberi htve brought\nspecimens tnd given t talk on each\nsubject.\nMIssM.Dyckls\n(rushed by (ar\nGranville Street\nAn auto (hat backed over the curb\ncrushed Miss M. Dyck of 1086 West\nTenth Street, Vancouver, against\nthe wall of a store in the 900 block\nGranville Street, at 7:19 p.m., last\nFriday. Miss Dyck wu formerly\not Nelson, having been nurse to\nthe late Mrs. Mary Kerr. She left\nNelson a few months ago for the\nCout where she had been practising up to the time of her accident.\nMiss. Dyck and another woman\nwere standing on the sidewalk when\nthe auto, driven by t 16-year-old\nboy, moved backwards along the\nroadway,' then swerved suddenly\nand jumped the curb.\nPlate glass windowi an both aides\nof the entrance of a stort front nearby were shattered by the machine.\nMiss Dyck suffered one broken leg,\nwhile tbe ligaments of the other\nwere badly torn. Her friend, however, who wu tlto knocked down,\nescaped uninjured.\nMas Dycks condition Is ducribed u critical, and she Is at present\nln Ward \"S\" of (he Vancouver\nGeneral Hospital. Frank Dyck, Rosemont, is a brother, tnd hts already\nleft for the Cout\nSparkle...\nModel Is Strong\non Health Note\nBy ALICE WADI ROBINSON\nWhether or not a woman happens\nto look beautiful to you depends\nof course, on what you look for in\nbeauty. Susan Shaw, beautiful\nmodel bid to fulfil tht llversified\nexpectations of a clnunlttee of artists, a fashion authority, society\nwriter and your dietitian.\nTo a man, the artists demanded a\n\"natural' beauty\" \u2014 they regarded\nthe glamorous, exotic type as too\nunreal. The fashion authority stipulated that she be tall and have a\nflair for clothes. The society writer\nsuggested she be photogenic, and\nyour dietitian insisted on \"a good\nhealthy specimen\" and turned\nthumbs down on a couple of candidates who looked as though they\ndidn't eat regularly.\nSo Sunn, was the composite\nchoice and a highly satisfactory one\ntil around. She ia a blonde with a\npearties and grade A cream complexion and has a figure like this:\nBust 34 inches; waist, 24 inches;\nhips, 35 inches. She weighs 110\npounds far her height of five feet,\nfour Inches.\nBesides being t model, Susan Is\nt housewife and she loves to cook.\nTo keep in trim, she goes out for\ntennis u often as possible, dou a lot\nof walking every day, and takes a\ndaily half dozen on her terrace\nevery morning. She says you can't\ndepend on general exercises to keep\nyour figure perfect and that it saves\ntrouble to nave a set of specific\nstreamliners which you take as a\nmatter of course.\nThis model has been brought op\nto believe that sparkle can't be faked, and you can't sparkle unless you\nhave had a good night' sleep. So\nshe gets her rest, along with her\nvaried diet and enough  exercise.\nTrail Social\nBy MISI KAY LOWDON\nRossland-Trall Soroptimist Club\nat the 'Masonic Temple Tuesday\nevening, voted to send money each\nmonth to Elisabeth Hawes, Soroptimist Federation President of Great\nBritain, in London, to be used for\nwar purposu. Plans were alao made\nto pack food supplies to be sent to\na different British Soroptimist Club\neach month. Mrs. J. F. Cooper of\nRossland. Past President, was presented with the put President's diamond-studded, jewel by Mias Florence RuUedge. Miss Hazel Harvie,\nand Miss Roxy little, were welcomed by Mrs. J. F. Morrish, as new\nmembers. Mrs, L. M. Irwin of Vancouver, gave an informal talk on\nher experience while teaching English tn Japan. Mrs. Gene Bennett ot\nWashington, D. C, President of the\nAmerican Federation of Soroptimist Clubs, Is visiting Canadian units\nand will be ln Nelson early next\nmonth, and the Rossland-Trail memberi received an invitation from the\nNelson club to meet Mrs. Bennett at\nNelson. ,\nDr. tnd Mil. Walter Bradshaw\nhave returned from a visit to Mr\nBradahaw's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJoseph Bradshaw of Nelson.\nMrs L. Dabner of Vincouver is\nvisiting her son-in-law end daughter, Mr, tnd Mm. John Mill\u2122.\nMr. uld Mrs. A, McWbinnle htve\nreturned trom t holiday to Sun\nahlne Bay.\nMrs. Bruno Lerose has returned\ntrom a visit to Nelson.\nVeme Holhnan and George Cock-\nshott of Cranbrook visited Mr. tnd\nMrs. Wilter Hollmtnn, Trill, enroute to Vancouver where they will\njoin the R.C.N.  '    s\nMr. and Mts. L. J. Turner of Kansas City, Mo\u201e visited their niece\nMrs. Robert Watson Tuesday. Tatj \\\nare now visiting Mr. and Mrs. G. F\nTurner of %utTegir.\nAMERICAN MEDICAL ASS'N\nFINED FOR VIOLATING\nTHI ANTI-TRUST ACT\nWASHINGTON, May 29 (AP) -\nJustice Jtmu M. Proctor of Dis-\ntrlc court todsy fined the American\nMedicil Society 11500 tor violation\nof tbe Shermsn Anti-Trust Act\nFOR THE SERIAL\nSEE PAGE EIGHT\nfree from lumps, then measure by\npicking will Into cup. Greue the\nbaking sheet. Stt oven tt 900 degrees F. Bretk egg white Into mix\ning bowl, add ult ud beat until tt\nstands up ln peaks. Add brown\nsugar 1 Ublespoon it t time, beating in each spoonful before adding\ntbe em, *\u00ab fold in pecans. Drop\ntttm tip of ipoon onto prtptred\nbaking Sheet and bake' until nicely\nbrown and firm\u2014U or JO minutes.\nRemove trom sheet at once and\nput on etkt rack to cool.\n\u25a0,\"!''       '.'\u25a0\u25a0     !\u25a0*\nliltllllll,\nIIIWI'll\nlliji evenrwben\nI Wieilf, flan.\n______==\nMM^mW^t^-^^mmW   ^t^t^^-tt^M-l-^mmm-^ m^^-^^^^^T^^^^*^^^^^ ^^^^T -^^^^-^^^       -*r^^^\nExcluilve Rlprtsentatlvei for Bridal Wreath Diimond Ringi\n561 Baker Sr. Phons 120 Nelson, B. C.\nPlay Shoes\nA new shipment In of the\nlightest, coolest, Summer\nshoes you've ever seen.\nLinen sandals and ties In\nwhite, blue, beige,.pink\n*nd multi-color. Casual\nheels for walking com-\n^...fes\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaden in Footfathton\nMrs. Bessette Is\nHead Lumby C.W.\nLUMBY, B. C, May 29-Mr*. A. J.\nBessette wm elected President ot\nthe Catholic Women's Letgue it the\nannual meeting in the Parish HllL\nOther officers elected wtre Mn J.\nA. LeBlanc, Fint Vice-President\nMrs, J, B. Bourcet Second Vice-\nPresident; Mn. J. Gallon, Third\nVice-President; Mn. O. LeFrancois,\nSecretary: and Mn. J. McAllister,\nSecretary-Treasurer.\nEFFECTIVE FRIDAY, SATURDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY, MAY 29 AND 30, JUNE 2 AND 3\nTOMATOES. Hothouse... Lb.21c\nNew Potatoes\nLT. 22c\nGrapefruit: Large liie,6 for.\nBananas: Fine quality, 2 lbi.\n25c\n25c\n7c\nNew Carrots\nLbunchM 21c\nOranges-\nLarge  sixe,  sweet and\n\\% 59c\nWatermelon: Vine ripened, Ib\t\nNewtown Apples: Extra fancy, 6 Ibs. 25c\nRhubarb: Strawberry Red, 5 Ibs. 10c\nLemons: Large size, doz. 25c\nNew Cabbage: Lb. 6c\nAsparagus: Local, 2 lbs.\nSpinach: Local, 3 Ibs. \u2014\nSweet Potatoes: 2 Ibs. _\nStrawberries\nMillion, B. C.\n2 bskts. 35c\n25c\n20c\n19c\n29c\n10c\nGreen Peas: Full pods, 2 Ibs. _\nCucumbers: For salads, each\nDELICIOUS APPLES\nFaney Wrapped, packed In ihopplng bag. OP .\n9 lbl CedC\nPLEASE NOTE\nNO ORDERS SENT C.O.D.\nCITY  Oft   COUNTRY\nJAM*\nBlack Currant\nLOGANBERRY: Empreu, 4 Ib. tin   4\u00bb*\n4-lb. tin 55c\n, Hn   4W\nPUREX TISSUE: 3 rolls 20c\nNew B-oi. alii.\nCHIPSO... Giant pkt 49c\nSOUP .SfiriC.^3 tins 25c\nCORN .\u00ab\u00a3\u2022. 2 tins 25c\nCheese SL Vi-lb. pkt 15c\nVinegar S&r 24-oz. bot. 18c\nHONEY '\u00a3_, 8-lb. tin 95c\nCoffee\nEdwardi Drip or    t*\\.\nRegular, lb *\u00bb'\nAirway, freih OAp\nground, lb \u00abTtt\nShortening\nJewel or Bakeasy, 0*7\n2 lbi \u00a3'C\nPure Lard,\n3 lbi\t\n23c\nSUGAR\nB. C. Granulated,     OC\n10 lbl OJC\n!r.!T'.....41c\nFLOUR\nKitchen Craft\n24 lbl 90*\n49 lbi f 1.70\n98 lbi. 93.25\nPEANUT\nBUTTER\nBeverly 32 oi.,\npaeked in Milan,\neach\n37c\nBEST FOODS\nREAL MAYOMNAISE\nREALLY FRESH\nSALTW2 pkts. 15c\nPEAS \u00bb'\u2022*..: 2 tins 25c\nCorn Starch *-* 2 pkts. 21c\nChicken *~ 7-oz. tin 25c\nPINEAPPLE        PUFFED WHEAT\nBirki crushed or iliced,     Quaker\u2014Free scribbler,\n 31c B* 25c\n15 oi.,\n2 rim\nBUY 'Vixtm.Lf BONDS\nCake Flour S    Pkt. 27c\nPrunes\".'?\" 10-lb. box 98c\nJELL-0 ?L. 3 pkts. 21c\nCorn Flakes '*_ 2 pkts. 22c\nGrapefruit Juice: 2 tins 23c\nTown House, 20 or.\nSPECIAL PURCHASE OV\nRED LABEL QUALITY\nPRIME RIB ROLLED:\nLb.\t\nPOT ROASTSt\nLb\t\nPLATE BOILINC BEEF: IO\n 32c\n20c 22c\nSTEAKS... Per lb. 30c\nRound or' Sirloin\nPORK\nSHOULDER OO.\nROASTS: Lb Wl\nLK ROASTS:\nLb\t\nSIDE PORK:\nLb\t\n25c\n18c\nPORK TENDERLOINS: Lb.\nPORK SPARE RIBS: 2 lbs..\n23c\n22c\nVEAL\nRUMP ROASTSl   OC-\nSHOULDER 00\u201e\nROASTS: Lb. .... LIX\nBREAST OF VEAL: IC\nSMOKED\nFILLETS: Lb\nFRESH COD\nFISH: Lb. .\n 30e\n 35c\nSPICED HAM:       10.\n'\/41b IOC\na**\"*' 18c\nLb\nSIDE BACON: Sliced, Vi lb\t\nCOTTAGE ROLLS: Tendered, Ib.\n15c\n30c\n\u25a0\u00abnwH aroaii LiMiTib\nii ti if ' iiiinili^sis^Miiilifriiii\n'\" \u25a0'\n -\nlii.   .nmmw   \u2022\u25a0 \u25a0 \u00ab jp.w.uiwuiui\n-NELSON DAILY NIWS  NILSON   8. C.-FRIDAY MORNINO. MAY 80  1941-\n\"m. t*AOf  WVf\n.\n'\nFREEMAN\nPhons 115\n\"Home of Furniture Values\"\n.     Eagle Nock\nBay on Our Budget Plan-\nto Months to Pay.\nNelson, B. C.\nFURNISH YOUR HOME. SELECT YOUR WEDDING GIFTS FROM THE LARGEST STOCK IN THE KOOTENAYS. A PRICE TO SUIT EVERY BUDGET\nChenille Bedspreads\nand Satin Comforters\nAll Reduced 10%\nBED'CHESTERFIELD SUITE        ^ -_\\ g%g* tin\nCovered all over in rich velour wine color. Regular $119.00.    * \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0^\u25a0\u2022'\"'\nJune Sale '        * W jf\nWalnut Desks\nPriced from   '.\n$14.50 to $79.00\nAt Special Prices,\nWALNUT\nBook Cases\nPriced from\n$17.95 to $89.50\nAll at Special Prices.\n3-PIECE CHESTERFIELD SUITE\nCovered in velvet. Chesterfield Suite, 1 chair in rust and 1 chair in green, A special\nReg. $179.00. Sals\nBED OUTFIT COMPLETE\nWith slat spring and inner spring\"\nmattress. Regular $45.95.\nJune Sals\t\n$\nS8'5\nCONVERTIBLE DAVENPORT\n*18-95\nChoice of covers.\nJune Sale ,\n4-Piece Walnut BEDROOM SUITE\nSec this suite before you buy. O otf s#^tf%  Afl\nRegular $119.00. June Sale , Mim-\n109\n6-Piece Walnut DINETTE SUITE\nbe proud to own.     ft,d\u00a3^%  CO\nA suite you w\nJune Sale ...\nYoui* Dollars Buy More in Our Store\u2014We Pay Freight on AH Orders $50.00 and Over\n>\nHAMILTON, Bermuda (CP). \u2014\nInflux of U, S. arm;, navy and air\npersonnel to handle construction \"o(\nnew defenca bases in Bermuda is\nexpected to compensate for curtailment of Canadian and U. S.\ntourist traffic this year.\nWhen Sutherland repairs your\nwatch, It's on time, all ths time\nH. H. Sutherland\nBLACKHEADS\nsjlmpl7 dlssssolTss. ssnd tt_ttS_mt br Oil ons)\n\u2022insplt. mit .at tttrt mithod. Get two\nsmeM ef paroxism powder from ssny drug\nstore.  sTprissltlo on a hot, wot cloth,  tnd\n\u2022pplr itMr-tnej Msukhwl will bo aou.\n(Advt. i\nWhite Felt Hats\nIdeal for Summer.\n?2.49 to 93.95\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n446 Baker St. Phone 874\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MR8. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Walton\nand child have arrived from Cranbrook, Mr. Walton having been\ntransferred to the Nelson branch of\nthe Canadian Bank of Commerce,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bell of\nTrail visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Fink,\nRobson Street, had as guest Rev. L.\nA. Smith of Trail, who attended the\nannual Diocesan W. A. meet\n\u2022 Mrs. F. Andrews and son Louis\nof Harrop were in the City yesterday far the funeral of Mrs. A. R.\nJohnson.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. B. Gray, Baker Street,\nreturned Wednesday night from a\ncouple of weeks at the Coast where\nshe visited her mother, Mrs. Jane\nMcAllister and her brother-in-law\nand sister, Dr. and Mrs. H. C, Ban-\nford.\n\u2022 H. E. Doelle of Sheep Creek\nwas in the City en route from Kimberley where he attended the Associated Boards of Trade gathering.\n\u2022 A. B. D. Campbell, CP.R.\ntravelling passenger agent, Vancouver, is a City visitor.\nHarper's Bazaar says-.\nIt's a\n\u2022 Frilly blouses, pettkoat*, giores, raffles,\nmost ererythtng is white! WHITE IS RIGHT thin\nseason. Bot white things most be washed frequently\n\u2022nd repeated washings turn them yellowish, unless\nBlue is added. A swish oc two of Bine in the\nfinal rinsing water on wash day assures the sparkling\nsnowy whiteness that fashion demands \u2014 aad it costs\nonly a cent or two a monthi\nRECKITT S BLUE\nPREVENTS CLOTHES FROM TURNING YELLOW\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A, Helghton and\ndaughter Edna of Procter attended\nthe funeral of Mrs. A. R. Johnson at\nNelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Robert Cunningham Jr. of\nCrescent Valley visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in town yesterday Included J. Bauer of Sheep Creek.\n\u2022 Leslie Oram of Nakusp Is\nspending a few days in the City.\n\u2022 In honor of Misa Helen Scanlan, whose marriage to William J.\nTurner takes place at the Cathedral\nof Macy Immaculate, June 2, Miss\nKay Pritchard entertained recently\nat her home, on Nelson Avenue at\nan evening party.\n\u2022 Mrs. Percival, who with her\nhuiband, Rev. M C. T. Percival. was\na guest of Mri. W. O. Rose while\nhere attending the annual Diocesan\nW.A., left yesterday tex Kaslo.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. John Smith of\nSheep creek visjted town Wednesday.\n\u2022 Visitors in town yesterday Included Mrs. J. Surina of Smutty\nBench.\n\u2022 H. Fairbank of Harrop was ln\nthe City yesterday for the funeral\nof Mrs. A. R. Johnson.\na Mrs. E. Henri Gautschi of\nTrail, who has been visiting her\nparents, Mr .and Mrs. J. B. Gray.\nreturned yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. P. DavU of\nTrail are guests of their son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Benny\nMonteleone, 124 Silica Street. They\nare here to celebrate their grandson Bernard's first birthday.\n\u2022 Wednesday evening the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. John H. Argyle,\nObservatory Street, was a happy\nscene when the teen-age members of\nthe Nelson Junior Wair League,\nnumbering eight, entertained a\nnumber of guests at a musicale. A\nneedlepoint stool was won by Mrs.\nR. Marshall, while the winner o( a\ncushion was Mrs. Stanley Bostock.\nThe spacious rooms were adorned\nwith a profusion of Spring blossoms. Contributing to the program\nwere Miss babel Young, Miss Marian Hillyard, Miss Claire Hughes.\nMiss Jessie Paterson, Mrss Jean\nYoung.Miss Evelyn Gunn, Miss Pamela Dewdney, and Miss Catherine\nArgyle. Among those attending\nwere Mayor and Mrs. N. C. Stibbs,\nMr. and Mrs. E. E. L. Dewdney, Mr.\nand Mts. W. M. Young, Mr. and Mrs.\nH, C. Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. W. K.\nGunn, Mr. and Mrs. C. M Young,\nRev. and Mrs. Foster Hilliard, Mrs,\nE. H. Paterson, Miss Stella Paterson, Mr. and Mrs. Eric P. Dawson,\nMr. and Mrs. A. W. Idiens, Mr. and\nMrs. Johnson of Vancouver, Mr.\nand Mrs. P. G. Morey, Mrs. H. T.\nBrown and Mrs. C. L. Cowdrill.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. S. Moffatt,,Fairview,\nplans to attend the Junior C.W.L.\nconvention in Trail today.\n\u2022 W. R. Blanchacd, who spent\nthe past week in Nelson, leaves today for his home in New Denver.\n\u2022 Yesterday afternoon Mrs. David Laughton, Edgewood Avenue,\nentertained members of Circle No.\n4 of St Paul's when those present\nwere Mrs. E. W. Somers, Mrs. Norman McLeod, Mrs. A. Forbes, Mrs.\nF. M. Erskine, Mrs. Thomas' McMillan, Mrs. J. G. Watson, Mrs. Donald McLeod, Miss Ida Graham, Mrs.\nF. T. Griffiths, Mrs. A. Wood and\nMrs. G. B. Russell.\n\u2022 Mrs. Albert Ogden and daujfh-\nter Claire and Mrs, Walton of Procter attended the funeral of Mrs. A.\nR. Johnson in Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 George Murray of Ymir visited Nelson Wednesday.\n\u2022 Wednesday evening Mrs. Joseph Winkelaar entertained at an\ninformal miscellaneous shower  in\nRossland Social \u2666.\u2666 \u2666\nBy MRS. LORNE V. McLEOD\nROSSLAND, B. C. - Sunday\nevening a reception was held at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. O. Oaing\nfor Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Turner\/the\nlatter formerly Miss Ida Osing.\nThe rooma were attractively decorated with tulips, lilacs and pansies,\nand the fireplace wu also banked\nwith flowers. Mrs. Osing and Mr>.\nW. J. Turner, Sr. received the 60-\nodd guests. Mrs. Osing was attired\nin navy flowered sheer, and Mrs.\nTurner ln flowered crepe. The Ua\ntable, which was covered with a\nlace cloth, was centred with a\nbasket of red roses and ' flanked\nby white tapers In silver sconces.\nMrs. S. Irvln poured, and th\u00bb \u00aber-\nviteurs Included Mrs. A. C. Ridgers\nof Trail, Mrs. J. Burdick of Trail,\nMrs. W. Grubisic Miss Mary Carpenter ot Trail, and Mlai Olga\nOsingg and Mrs. Kenneth McGuire.\nMrs. Marlon's Circle of the Sacred Heart Church mat at tht home\nof Mrt, Marions Tuesday evening,\nwhen a social evening was enjoyed\nThose present Included Mrs. i.\nCamozzi, Mrs. Berry, Mra. Ferrey,\nMrs. R. Jones. Mrs. Brown and Mrs.\nB. Lawrie. Refreshments were served by the hostess, assisted by Mrs\nJ. Camozzi.\nMr. and Mrs. S, E. Mills, M1\"\nVera Mills and Miss Olive Mills\nwere weekend visitors at Christina\nLake;\nFOR MILK-TRY\nK. V. D.\nPHONE 116\nBE PREPARED\nAt All Times With\n4X Fruitcakes __ 25c\nSLIPS\nIn   crept   or   satin.   Colors\nwhite,    tearose,    black    and\nnavy. Sizes S2 to 44.\n$1.29 to $1.95\nFashion First Ltd.\n476 Baker St. Phone 962\ncompliment to Miss Helen Scanlan,\nwhen those invited were Mrs. Harry\nHeise, who assisted by serving, Mrs.\nArchie Hardy, Mrs. S- B. Nordquist,\nMrs. W. S. Moftatt, Miss Margaret\nMeyer, Miss Kay McDougall, !'\u2022 s.\nGeorge H. Gelinas and Mrs. J. P\nDuffy. Spring flowers were artistically arranged about the living\nroom.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. P. Duffy, Victoria\nStreet, plans to attend the C.W.L.\nconvention in Trail today.\nJim Bagby Jr., made his start\nas a Cleveland pitcher 20 years after his father starred foe the same\nclub.\nIUR\nGrocery\nEffective   Friday\u2014Saturday\nSuper-Suds: Relish     Or\ndish free, pkg ujt\nPeaches: Golden        OQ\nAres iliced, 2 tint .. J Jt\nCorn Flakes: Sugar    OF\nCrisp, 3 pkgs \u00a3t)C\nBUTTER: Brightholm First\nCrade. The best at lowest\nmarket prices.\nHeinz Pork and OQ .\nBeans: 10 oz., 3 for . \u00a3\u00ab7C\nBaking Powder: Blue Rib-\nir'60\". 23c\nlOt* pkg. Tea free\nWheat Puffs: 1 HP.\nbushel apron, each .. Iwv\nWheat Puffs: Vi       iti\nbushel tea towels, ea. WC\nWaffle and Paneake   IT\nFlour: Fluffy, pkg. . 10C\nMrs. Fleming's Pie     OO\nCrust, per pkg \"JC\n5-strand   4JC   and   <\u00ab\/C\nOranges: Family        OQ\nSise.Z dos OVi.\nOrsnges: Large Size,   OC\u201e\nper doz \u00abWC\nOrsnges: Giant Sizs,   CC\npsr doz uvC\nWatermelon: Fresh in, *1\npsr Ib IC\nNew Beets, Asparagus, Carrots, Fresh Strawberries and\nApples for cooking or esling\nLettuce, Bsnanas, etc.\nFREE DELIVERY\nBritish Israelite\nWill Speak Here\n\"Russia\" and \"The 10th and lltli\nChapter of Daniel\" will be the subjects of Mrs. O. A. Brake of Victoria, British Israelite speaker,\nwhen she addresses Nolson audiences early next week. Mrs. Brake, who\nhas spoken here before, will hold\nThere is beauty and\neconomy  in  a\nGeneral Electric Range\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\n674 Baker St Phone 260\nMarriage Hygiene\nand Birth Control\nEnclose stamp for'\"free literature\nand advice on this most important\nsubject.\nLETA DAVIES\n751 Granville St.\nVancouver\ntwo metings at the First Baptist\nChurch.\nMELBOURNE (CP). - Australia's overseas trade in 1940 was\nvalued at \u00a32*5.219,000 ($865,623,-\n000) compared with \u00a3194,691,000\nin 1939, an increase of \u00a350,528,000.\nVANCOUVER, May 29 (CP) \u2014\nRobert J. Haddock, 30-year-old inmate of Oakalla Prison Farm, waa\nformally charged by police today\nwith attempted murder in connection with the shooting of Butna\nSingh, 55-year-old wealthy Eaat Indian wood dealer, in a shack here\nlast Feb. 14.\n..i\t\n\t\n,i\u00bbi.,U\n:\u25a0;.:';:\nzeeesbsbb\nRapid free delivery service\nTelephone 25\n!!!!!!!\nA responsible\nprofession!\nBoth by training and by law,\nyour Fleury's pharmacist is in i\nresponsible profession. His registration certificate was won\nonlv after thorough education\nana examination. You can depend on him to fill your doctor'*\nprescripitons with.the utmost in\nprecision, accuracy and conscientiousness. Our service is rapid,\ntoo.\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMedical Arts Block\n-_____33X___-m__m*\naxtxTxctn m n-n i iiaaa\nSummer Wash Dresses\nIn a wide range including colorful stripes, floral designs,\npolka dots. You must see them to appreciate all the\n. styles that we have for your choice. Sizes 12 to 44.\n*2-951\u00b0 $1095\nHEADED FOR STARDOM\nare these smart new Summer straws, and you'll rave\nabout them as soon as you try them on. Every new\nstyle detail, including the extra wide brims are included\nin our selection.\n$2-50 t0 $3.95\nJ(uMmLjba_t\n3_d.\n.. ,^^__________*_^__________^^\n\t\ns^aasUktsts\n\t\n PAQB  SIX\nIsSSSStm   misVT   1-IsTfTB    TO.WB-   Ss\n-^ '\t\ngs>rsiiiaT nioBtin\u2122. hit ee, wn-\n?\nJJf lamt Satlg Jf ?ma\nEstablished AprU 23. 1903.\nBritwA Columbia't\nMott Interetting Newipaper\nPublished every morning except Sundiy by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED 209 Baker St Nelson British Columbia.\nMEMBER OB THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nFRIDAY, MAY 30,1941.'\nThe Kootenay Barrier to\nB. C. Travel\nOne of the worst barriers to traffic\n,n the Southern Trans-Canada Highway is the delay and expense to travellers due to the length of the ferry\njourney between Fraser's Landing\nand Gray Creek.\nThe remedy is simple and in relation to highway expenditures generally would not involve a very large\nexpenditure.\nUnder present conditions it takes\none hour to travel from Fraser's Landing to Gray Creek or vice versa. On\naccount of the length of the journey\nthe ferry charges are sufficiently high\nto cause tourists to dodge travelling by\nthis route as well as imposing a hardship on the people of the district. Not\ninfrequently in the Summer the ferry\nlacks sufficient capacity to handle the\ntraffic. Consequently travellers are\nsometimes stranded at Gray Creek or\nFraser's Landing for a night or a*\nleast for the hours between ferry runs.\nWorse in its total effect than the occasional stranding of a party in a car\nfor an all night, stay at one end of the\nfcoute or the other, is the fear that this\nmay happen. Fear of being stranded\ncauses the average traveller to take\nalmost any other route than the Kootenay route if he wants to travel between East Kotenay and the Coast or\nfrom the Coast to East'Kootenay.\nKootenay as a whole is suffering\nnot only through the loss of through\ntraffic but West Kootenay is losing\na large volume of business which it\nwould otherwise get from places on the\nEast side of Kootenay Lake and from\nEast Kootenay, while East Kootenay\nIs losing the business which it should\nbe getting from the West side of the\nLake.\nThe solution Is a shorter ferry\nroute, from Baffour or some other suitable points to Kootenay Bay or Pilot\nBay, the installation of an open ferry\nwhich would permit a larger number\nof cars to be carried and which would\nnot restrict the passage of the larger\nmotor vehicles, and the completion of\na reasonably good highway from Gray\nCreek to Kootenay Bay or Pilot Bay.\nAt various times in the last ten\nyears some work has been done on the\nroad between Gray Creek and Crawford Bay. Improvements have been\nmade at both ends. The condition of\nabout a mile of this road midway between these two places is very bad.\nThe distance to be reconstructed i3\nshort, the cost fn relation to the benefits to the people of that district and\nto the' people of East and West Kootenay and the Province generally\nwould be small.\nWith a shorter ferry route and a\nferry of suitable construction the time\nof the lake journey could be cut in less\nthan half. The schedule could be more\nthan doubled. Blockades of traffic,\ndue to the inability of the present ferry\nto move enough cars in a busy season\nor to move more than one large vehicle\nat a time, would be ended. Charges to\nthe travelling public could be materially reduced.\nIt is time that we got action on\nthis important section of the Southern\nTrans-Canada Highway.\nIt, as far as we can see into the\nfuture, will continue to be the only one\ncapable of being kept open all the year\naround.\n? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any ruder. Namet ef penoni asking\nquestions will not be publiihed.\nM. P., Lumberton\u2014What It tha fattest time\nmade by the pacer, trotter and racer in the\nmile? How many racei, lt any, haa Man\n0* War won?\nThe world's trotting record is credited to\nGreyhound, whose time was 1.55 V* tor a mile\nrun at Lexington, Kentucky, September 3,\n1938. The pacing record it credited to Billy\nDirect, In a mUe run at Lexington, Sept 28,\n1939, when the Ume was 1.85. The world'i running record was made by Roamer in 1.34 minutes 4-5 seconds at Saratoga, New Vork in\nAugust 21, 1918. Man 0' War, as a two-year-\nold in 1919, won 10 races with winning! of\n$83,000, and as a three-year-old in 1930 won 11\nraces with winnings of $166,140. Man 0' War,\nnow 24 years old (in 1941) Uvei In luxury at\nFaraway Farms, the stud farm which hli\nowner, Samuel D. Riddle, built for him in the\nrolling meadow country, North of Lexington.\nIt Is estimated that Man O' War has brought\nhis owner close to $1,000,000 in prize money,\nstud fees and sale of foals.\nReader, Trail\u2014Would it be possible for you\nto give the estimated value of a large\nBible? The enclosed sheets are a copy of\nfly leaf of Uie Bible.,\nWe do not believe that this Bible has any\ngreat monetary value, but suggest you write to\nBond's Book Shop, 523 Dunsmuir Street lor a\nvaluation.\nFish, TraU\u2014Could you please tell me to which\nfirm or to whom to write ln Vancouver if\none wishes to get on a fishing schooner or\nboat during the Summer months?\nB.   C.  Packers  Limited,  Ft   Campbell;\nNootka Packing Company, Limited., 525 Seymour Street; Canadian Fishing Company, Ltd.,\nfoot of Gore; Cassiar Packing Company Ltd.,\n744 West Hastings;  National Fisheries Ltd.,\nfoot of Campbell, aU of Vancouver.\nP. G., Nelson\u2014Could you please tell me how\nto remove grass itains from cotton fabric?\nUse -ether or soap in methylated spirit\nF. N., Kaslo\u2014Can you tell me where I can\nsend a letter to Wendell WUlklfc.\nAddress at 1010 Fifth Avenue,-New York\nCity.\nD. L T., Cranbrook\u2014What Information can\nyou give me on the value of an American\ntwo and one half dollar gold piece, dated\n1872, and no bigger than a Canadian dime?\nIt is quoted at $3 ln an American coin\nprice list, which would represent $3.30 at the\npresent rate of exchange.\nPress Comment\nLINDBERGH'S BOOKS\nOne can understand the motives behind\nthis action, (A proposal of the Ottawa City\nCouncil that the Library Board should throw\nout books by Lindbergh.) Lindbergh is actively pro-German and anti-British. By doing\neverything in his power to prevent the United\nStates from helping Britain he is working for\na Nazi triumph. To all this he adds a singularly mean ingratitude, because it was to\nBritain he fled when life in his own country\nbecame unbearable. Few Canadians, \u25a0 while\nwar passions might ride high, would want to\nread tlie books of such a man.\nBut officially, to exclude them from a\npublic library is another matter. If Lindbergh\nwere ot write a book about the war, .or bearing on the war it should be excluded from\nthis country as enemy propaganda. His\npresent .works, however, were written some\nyears ago and so far as we know dealt entirely with aviation. They can do no conceivable harm to our country and cause, and\nwe shall be accused of petty intolerance ii we\nthrow them out.\nFreedom is the thing we are fighting for,\nand that includes freedom of the printed\nword. War necessity compels us to exclude\nmatter which might help the enemy by impairing our will and determination, but beyond that point it is unwise to venture,\u2014\nOttawa Journal.\nAn exciting and eventful year lies ahead\nof those of you who have birthdays today. Romantic love affairs or friendships, pleasant\nsurprises, and exceptional financial gain are\nin the offing, but there is also the probability\nof a sharp disagreement. Exceptionally clever,\ngeneroup, sympathetic and full of feeling will\nthe child be who is born on this date. He\nor she also will love to be in the limelight,\nThe fortunes of such a one should be excellent.\nDANGEROUS MAIL\nThose misguided people who have Ignored\nor overlooked the regulations as to the type of\nmail that may be sent overseas should pay\nstrict heed to the warning that has been issued by tb,e Post Office Department. Don't\nput inflammable material in the parcels you\nsend the boys overseas.\nLighter fluid is the substance most commonly inserted in violation of the rules. The\ntemptation may be strong to send a bit of this\nto the soldiers, because there is undoubtedly\na shortage of such things in Britain. The main\nconsideration, however, Is that the parcel shall\nreach its destination, and, more important\nstill, that the .ship carrying it shall not be\ndestroyed en route. One can of lighter fluid\ncould be the cause of such destruction, and\nperhaps the loss of precious lives. It Is certainly worth a moment's thought to prevent\nanything of this kind happening.\nanything of this kind happening.\u2014Windsor\nOnt, Daily Star.\nWOMEN AND BICYCLES\nIt is estimated that some 20,000' bicycle\nlicences will be issued this season by the\nCity of Winnipeg\u2014taking no account of ,the\nsuburbs\u2014and that at least 30 per cent of them\nwill be issued to girl riders.\nSix thousand girl cyclists is quite a number, and automobile drivers may therefore be\nsomewhat alarmed over a recent statement\nby one whose business lt is to observe such\nthings that \"girls go about on bicycles in\nflocks.\"\nToday the girl cyclist is subject to the\nchaperonage of the traffic policeman, whose\nduty it is to see that she obeys the traffic\nlaws, and to*know the reason why If she\ndoesn't.\u2014Winnipeg Tribune.\nWar-25 Years Ago\nBy The Canadian Press\nMay 30, 1916\u2014Successful attacks against\nthe French made by German forces between\nLe Mort Homme nnd Cumieres, Verdun. Aus-\ntrians attacked Russian lines near Gliadki.\nBritish in East Africa penetrated 20\nmiles into enemy territory near Lake Tanganyika.\nTest Yourself        Words of Wisdom\n1. What docs the initial C stand for In\nHerbert C. Hoover's name?\n2. What was Aarnn Burr's conspiracy supposed to have been?\n3. Who was the discoverer of New Zealand.\nTrue politeness requires humility, good\nsense, and benevolence. To think more highly of ourselves than we ought to think, destroys its quickening principle.\u2014Mrs. Slg-\nourney.\nTEST  ANSWERS\n1. Clark.\n2. To form a new empire in the Southwest\nout of Mexican or Louisiana territory.\n3. The Dutch navigator Tasman.\nLetters to\nEditor\nUtters miy be publlihtd ovtr \u25a0 Mm de\nplume, bot th* actual name al the wrltar\nmust ba given ta thf Editor as evidence af\ngood faith. Anonymous letters go In tha\nwaste papar basket\nToo Many Regulations\nAre Breaking Farmers\nSays 'One of the Victims'\nTo the Editor:\nSir-We have been In thla district nearly\n25 yean, and have watched eventa without\nproteit or comment Now, I think, lt la Una\nfor both.\nWhen we came her* ln 1822 th* orchards\nalong thii Lake ware beautifully kapt aad tb*\nfruit business wai flourishing. Today very\nlaw bother to spray, or even to cultivate their\norchards. I know of very few which are self\nsupporting. Some ownen are on reliet Mme\nhave peniioni of one kind or another, and\nothen are fortunate enough to have outalde\nlncoipes. Two or three have government lobs.\nOur friend who expected to find Mr.\nHarrii and hii ranch as well preserved and\nprosperous as he wai 25 yean ago muit be\nan Incurable optimist. I hava ieen prosperous ranches become decadent tn the lait 10\nyean.  He ihould come and take a peek.\nWe uied to watch tha papen each year\nto find out when we ihould spray and what\nsolution to use. If wc did so now, our return)\nwould not cover the expense.\nIt is time the Oovernment dispensed with\nan office which no longer functions. The\ncry ii to uve for our war effort. Here is a\niplendld chance.\nJuit what happened to tha trult induitry?\nThe \"Associated\" wai formed with all of ltl\noverhead expensei and there ceased to be any\nprofit left for the grower.\nWe then turned to vegetables, but the\nprofit in them was very short lived. A faw\nof our more enterprising nelghbon went to\na vegetable growers convention. They claimed\nto represent the district, and voted for the\nnew \"Vegetable Board regulations.\" As a\nmatter of fact, very few Jarmen were even\nconsulted, and certainly would not have voted\nfor them.\nHow many ranchen want to raise fruit to\nsupport the expenses of the Auoclated Growers? Alio, bow many care to rain vegetables\nto support a vegetable inspector, or think it\nworth their while to go through all tbe rigmarole required by these new regulationi?\nThere is no point in letting a price on\nfruit or vegetables unleu a market il tound\nfor them at that price.\nRecently, a hotel keeper received a visit\nfrom an officious looking gentleman who said\nto him, \"You will not be allowed to purchase\nyour vegetablei for your dining-room direct\nfrom the farmer, anymore. You must deal\nwith him through the wholesaler.\"\nThe hotel keeper answered, \"Ii that so.\"\nWell, that may suit me all right, as I recently\npurchased a piece ot land in the country and\nintend to grow my own vegetablei.\"\nThe man answered, \"Nol you can't do thatl\nAs soon as you do so, you become a producer,\nand miist send your vegetables to a wholesaler before they can be used in your dining-\nroom.\"\nThe hotelman's aniwer wai too expressive to repeat, but I think it ll the ume\nanswer any free born Canadian would have\ngiven.\nThey tell us thli is a tree country and\nthen make so many restrictions that lt becomes impossible to make a living.\nThey also say that \"the Farmer Is tha\nback-bone of the country\". These regulationi\nand laws are doing their belt to \"break\" tbe\nFarmers. It might be an intereitlng experiment to find out how long a country can\nexist with a broken \"back-bone\". However,\nwhere one Is a victim of the process, lt Im't\neven funny.\n\"ONE OF THE VICTIMS\"\nNelson, B. C, R. R. No. 1, May 28, 1841.\nEtiquette Hints\nThe phrase, \"request the honor of your\npresence,\" must appear In the invitation to a\nchurch wedding; \"pleasure of your company\"\nis used only for home weddings.\nLack of Better Main\nLake Ferry Service\nIs Strangling Business\nTo the Editor:\nSir-A visit to Crawford Bay would ba\nwell worth while to those who look forward\nto the future of Nelson with some degree ot\nconfidence and yet fall to find the solution to\ndwindling busineu and tourists whilst the rest\nof Canada moves forward.\nLeaving Gray Creek a visitor loon findi\nthe road becomes nothing more than a narrow\nwagon road that might have done duty half\na century ago. In some places only about\neight feet in width is safe for wheeled traffic\nThe holes in the surface at bridges convey\nthe Impression of something abandoned long\nago. At the entrance to Crawford Bay a fairly\nmodern hotel stands Idle, no one caring to\nrisk his neck over the present road to get\nthere, yet strangely enough we are told thii\nroad will soon be a link ln the Southern\nTrans-Canada Highway.\nCrawford Bay with lta glorioui surroundings may well be called the pearl of the Kootenays, a place tourists would come far to visit\nand spend their holidays, ln ever increasing\nnumbers if given fair road condltioni and ferry\nservice. Long hours ot waiting and poor ferry\nservice send many the other way at present\nIt seems hard to realize that for the past\neight years two Ministers of Public Worki\nhave lived ln adjacent terriloiy, who know\nthe urgent necessity of completing this link of\nthe main highway and making its terry runi\nas short and frequent as pouible, but have\nneglected to put in the very few milei of good\nroad necesury to obtain thla result\nIn addition to loss of tourist trade to Nelson, most of the local resident! go East to\ndo their buiineu, u they are unable to return\nfrom Nelson the ume day. Surely a morning\nand evening bua lervice ii long overdue.\nIs it not time Nelson cut the bondi that\nare strangling her busineu and call for Immediate action on this road and ferry service?\nA TRAVELLER\nMay 28.\nDust of Gold\n\"Be not deceived; God ll not mocked:\nfor whatsoever a man soweth, that shall\nhe also reap.... Let us not be weary ln\nwell doing: for ln due season we ihall reap,\nif we faint not\"\u2014Gal. 6: 7, 9.        .\nHow many of ui are honest enough to\nsearch our own hearts to find *t by apy chance\nwe are to blame for any ot the problems In\nwhich we find ourselves?    It Is so euy to\nblame the other fellow, to iee hli faults, ud\nso hard to see how we may have influenced\nhim for evil and been the cause of bitterness.\nAre our thoughts alwayi kind, generous, forgiving?  We need to watch them for\u2014\nWe sow our thoughts and reap our actioni\nWe sow our actions and reap our habits;\nWe sow our habits and reap our characters;\nWe nw our characters and reap our destiny.\nC. A. HALL\nTODAY'S News Pictures\n\t\nHon Behind Nelson's Victory Loan Drive\n\u2022*-\u2014\nA ...\n(HI     -mm*   |pq\n'' *i\nW^\n1\ns>'      *     **}\nOrganizers of Nelion'i Victory Loap drive are H. A. Matthewi.\nNelson organizer, extreme right, N. P. C. Graves, Kootenay District\norganizer, at left of Mr, Matthews, and S. A. Jowett, Assistant organizer, extreme left. Salesman are back row, George Goloff, F. E. Stuart,\nA. R. Hodson, P. E. Poulin, George Dill, Leslie CraufuTd, E. B. Car\u00bb\nrothers and R. E. Crerar. Front row, Douglas Cummins, D. MacNaugh\u00ab\nton, Chairman Names Committee, R. B. (Jack) Morris, Chairman, J. R.\nFleming and S. C. Latornell.\nCreston Family\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Dickson and family of Creston. Left to\nright, standing: Mrs. Payne of Coronation, Alberta, daughter, and\nthree sons Pte. Arthur Dickson, Robert Dickson and Pte. Boy Dickson. The latter joined up shortly after the family group was taken.\n\u2014Larson photo.\nCreston Soldiers\nR. J. Hewitt, Secretary, Is shown outside Nelson Victory Loan\nheadquai.ers in tne Annable Block.\u2014Daily News Photos.\nTroil Drive Organizers\nPtes. Bill and Ardrey Weir, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Dolf Weir of.\nCreston. The latter is in England, but the former wu detained ia\nCanada due a temporary Illness.\u2014Larson photo.\nSeriously 111\nStill Leader\nDistrict organizers of the Dominion Victory Loan, with S. S. McDiarmid, Chairman of the Trail Victory Loan CommUtee. From left\nto right: Dr. Joseph Kania, N. C. P. Graves, Gilbert Stroyan, Mr.\nMcDiarmld and Norman L. Hill.\nFormer Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany, who is reported seriously\nill.\nMon. R. B. Hanson, who yesterday was asked to continue as Conservative House Leader at Ottawa.\nTroll's Victory Loon Campaign Salesmen\nThe Trail Victory War Loan sales force, with S. B. Welliver in\ncharge. Picture taken outside the Victory Loan Headquarters on Cedar\nAvenue, from left to right, back row\u2014Harry Elvin, Glen Cummings,\nOeorge Bergeron, Kenaeth Thomas, Charlea Catalano, Thomai Slinger,\nand S. B. Welliver. Front row, James Skinner, C. E. Stratton, David\nFrieson, Jesse Kemp, Harry Wong, Leonard Goble and George At- .\n. _...        '-\n : ___jmm\n \u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\u2014'\n\u25a0\nMany Floats Will Feature Ihe\nRossland Victory Loan Parade\nROSSLAND, B. C. Msy 29 -\nAccording to the reports of the\nvarious sub-committee chairman\npresented at a meeting ot the Rouland Victory L3\u00bbn Cimmittee held\n\u2022t headquarters Tuesday evening.\nby the end of thla week everything\nwill be 1 nrtadlness for the opening ot the campaign on June 3,\nIn the Victory Loan Parade\nicheduled tor June 2 will appear\nthe Naval Band form Esquimalt.\nthe Rossland' City Band, the Voluntary Defence Corps Bugle Band\nmembers of the Veterans Guard ol\nCanada stationed at Trail, the Mayor\nand most ot the Aldermen. Boy\nScouts and Cubs, Girl Guides and\nBrownies, the Fire Department,\nschool child-en, and at least one\nplatoon ot the Voluntary Defence\nCorps. The Canadian Legion will\nalso parade, as well as the Cadet\nCorps and a bicycle section of the\nlater.\nFloats have been assured from\nthe Junior Board of Trade, the\nJunior Board of Trade Salvage\nCommittee; the Parent-Teacher Association, I.O.O.F., and the Mayflower Mine. Floats are also expected from the West Kootenay\nPower tc Light Company, Rosa-\nland Cooperative Transportation\nSociety, Hunter Bros, Ltd., and the\nnursing staff of Mater Misericordiae\nHospital. Additional floats and dec-\nocrated cars will probably add to\nthis number on the day of the\nparade.\nProgrames for the Victory Loan\nconcert to be presented In the\nCapltol Theatre une 8 have beer,\nprinted, and the Boy Scouts will\nassist in the sale of these.\nThe Torch Ceremony, so successfully staged In other cities on May\n24, will be employed u the balls\nfor a program at th* cenotaph\nwhen the Victory Loan parade hu\nassembled there. Addresses will be\ngiven by prominent residents.\n8PEAKER8 SUPPLIED\nSpeaktn are now being supplied\nto appear before meetings of various organizations In order that the\nparticulan ot the Victory Loan may\nbe aa well known as possible. Spot\nannouncement! have alio bean la-\ncured over Radio Stat'on CJAT,\nand the first of these wai given\nby F. C. Ransom, Chairman of the\nRadii Speakers' Committe*, Tuesday evening. Strictly speaking,\nthese are not \"spot'1 announcements, for the reuon that they are\nof five minutes' duration, rail\npractice will continue in both the\nmorning and evening until th* end\nof the tint week of the drive, at\nwhich timt a ipecial 15-mlnut* program designed for Rowland listener!\nwill be presented.\nSpecial sermons will to preached\nfrom the pulpits of churches\nthroughout the City on \"Victory\nLoan Sunday\", which il June 8.\nMoit of the busineu housei hav;\nleft up the decoration! dliplayed\nfor Victoria Day, 'iut ar* bandi*\ncapped in adding to these displays\nby reason of a shortage of bunting,\nflags, etc. It is expected, however,\nthat addltloial supplies will be on\nhand by the end of thli week.\nL. W. Lulett, Officer Commanding the Voluntary Defence Carpi,\nwas   Tuesday   evening   appointed\nFinal details of the campaign will\nParade Marshal.\nbe worked out at another meeting\nof the committee May 81 at headquarters, ___^___\nOn. Jhn GLVl\nFRIDAY. MAY 30, 1941\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n|:<\u00bb-BBC Ntwi .\n8-15\u2014Questions of th* Hour\n8:80-\u2122 Balladeer\n9:00-Time Signal\n8:8\u00bb-The Art of Living\n9-15\u2014Classics tn Tempo\ntoioO-Morning Matinee\n10:30\u2014CBC Newi\nlj:30-A Friend in Deed\nins-Composer's Comer\nto\nHollywood's Big\nRadio Show\nTONIGHT\nTWELVE WORLD\nFAMOUS SCREEN\nARTISTS\nCKLN\n6:00\nCKLN\nTODAY\n1:00 p.m.\nTalk by H. R. MacMillan\n\"W\u00ab Have What\nIt Takes\"\n6:00 p.m.\n| All-Star Victory Loan\nProgramme\nFrom Hollywood\nAFTERNOON\n18:00\u2014B.C. F\u00bbnn Broadcait\n1J:80\u2014CBC Newi\n13.45-R*corded Profttmm*\nl:00-Talk: \"Wc Hav* wto.' n\nTak\u00abs\"-H. R. MacMillan\nl:15-Wlshart Campbell Sings\n1:30\u2014The Merry Isltndars\nH^-Presenting       ,..._.\n2;oo\u2014Claude Thornhllls Orch.\n2:15\u2014Talk\n2:30-Popular Songi\n2:45\u2014BBC Newi\n3:00\u2014Salon Music\n3:30-Sammy Kay*i Orch.\n3:45\u2014Recital Series\n400\u2014Old World Echoes\n4:30\u2014Piano Recital.\n4:55\u2014Willion Woodslda\nEVENING\no_\u2014All-Sar Programme from\nHollywood\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:1S-Talk on Recruiting\n7:30\u2014Tunes for Today.\n8:0O\u2014WeateTn Varietlei\n8:45-HecIt*l        ,     ' .\n9:00\u2014South American Serenade\n9:30\u2014BBC Newi Reel\n10:00\u2014A Western Voice\n10:15\u2014CBC Newi\n10:30-Dance Orchestra\nCKLN-^NELSON\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nAND THE FOLLOWING:\nMORNING\n7:45-0 Canada\n9:00\u2014Melodiei ln Rhythm\n9:15\u2014Songi from Melody Lana\n10:45\u2014Our Family.\n11:00\u2014Women'i Corner.\nAFTERNOON\n12:25\u2014The Notice Board\n5:00\u2014Radio Birthday Party\n5:30\u2014Evening Varietlei\n5:45\u2014The South American Way\nEVENING\n11:00\u2014God Sav* tha King\nOther periodi: CBC Programmei.\nU. S. NETS' BEST\nNBC-RED\n5:30\u2014Unci* Walter'! Dog Hous*\n6:00\u2014Wings of Destiny\nNBC-BLUE\n7:30\u2014Ben Bernie\n8:00\u2014Grandpappy and hi! Pali\nCOLUMBIA\n6:30\u2014The Al Pearce Show\n8:00\u2014Kate Smith Programme\n10:15\u2014Nightcap Yarni\nFIRST BREAK IN BREAD\nSTRIKE IN PORTLAND\nPORTLAND, Ore., May 28 (API-\nFirst break in Portland's sixday-old\nbakery strike occurred today when\nAFX. union bakeri aigned a new\ncontract with Rotary Bread Stores.\nRotary, a chain company, resumed\noperations at lti five bakerlea this\nmorning.\nAfter the Lacrosse Qame\nDrop in to your favorite\nfountain for a sundae or\na soda of thot famous\nOr, If you go home,\nbe sure to take along\na Brick of the Month\nPALM DAIRIES LIMITED\na\nNIUON DAILY NIW*. NILION. B. ft-FRIDAY MORNINO. MAY 8fl. IM*\nTl'O.\nWar Correspondent ta\nSpeak Canadian Club\n\u2122\"lb on \u00abfl\u00bb\nand Journalist.\naddrustheCa\nMinei. of Mo\nHe hai lust i\n tm\nfrom China\nipent two\nhis blrthplsce, wl ...\nyears covtring tb* war lituation\ntor various newspapers snd periodicals. H* has betn heard la rtotnt\nbroadcasts ov\u00abr tb* CB.C, and hai\nhad recent articles appearing ln tha\nSaturday Night and Msclean'i Mag-\nEngland apd In Europe. He took an\nOxford flnt honon degree In literature.\nR. A. F. Flyers lo\nStart Training\nin U.S. June I\nWASHINGTON, MwJ\u00bb (AP).-\nWar SecreUry Henry Stimson disclosed todsy thtt a far-reaching\nundertaking to train 8000 Royal Air\nForce flyers ln tb* United Statei\nwould start Jun* 7.\nThe flrtt class ot 690 itudenti, all\nfrom the Britiih Isles, is to begin\ninstruction on that date, fallowed\nby ntw groupi at five-week intervals.\nBoth air corps and civilian schools\nwill be uiad to train the RA.F.\npiloti from Britain and the Empire.\nThe War Department explained that\n4000 would be trained annually at\nfighter and bomber pilot! in seven\ncivilian and six army ichooli.\nA lecond group oi 3000 will be\ntrained annually under a British\ncourse ol initruetion at schooli yet\nto be selected. A third group of\napproximately 1000 will b\u00ab trained\nannually aa aerial navigators\nDoukhobors to Do\nLabor Service In\nPlace of Training\nOTTAWA, Mar \u00bb (CWs-OkI-\nentloui objecton, Meiwojiltei and\nDoukhobon In the 21-year-old class\nwill be required to perform labor\nservice in lieu of military training,\nWir Services Minister Gardiner announced in the Houtt ot Commons\n, ...e 21-year-old class now li being called out (or military training,\"\n\u25a0aid Mr. Gardiner.\n\"'Memben of tbat age class whose\nmilitary training ia postponed, as\neither conscientious objecton, Men-\nnonites or Doukhobon now will be\nrequired to render either three or\nfour monthi' labor itrvict in lieu\nof mUitary training and be subject\nto such further labor service ss may\nbe decided in tb* future.\"\nArrangements hav* been madt\nwith the Mines Department to open\ncamps in national park! and in Ontario, where Mennonites and conscientious objecton will be aent tor\nlabor service, where they will be\nsupplied with board and lodging and\npaid SO cent! a day.\nThey muit supply their own clothing.\nIn th* case of Doukhobors, all ol\ntham Jn Weatern Canada, Mr. Oardi\nner said negotiations are being con\nducted wjlh Provincial Governments whereby certain road projects\nwill bt carried od under Provincial\ncontrol and, under the same conditions ts lor conscientious objecton\nand Mennonites, Doukhobon will be\nrequired to work on the roads.\nTh* Minister said it was hoped to\nhav* the campe in operation on June\n15. With on* or two exceptions, they\nwill bt Summer camps.\nGyros to Stage\nAmateur Contest\nOver Air on Wed.\nCalling *l< entertainers, ikilled\ntnd would btt All of you who etn\n\u2022Ing. dance mimic, hog-call, play\nmuiloal   Initrumenti,  etc.,  etc.,\nall agaa.\nDan McNaughton of tbe Nelson\nGyro Club announced Thunday tbat\nthe Gyros would sponsor,an amateur contest for a lull hour from\n8:30 to 8:30 over CKLN' next Wednesday night, terving a double-barrelled purpose ol providing homebrew entertainment for radio listeners and ot being another publicity\nstunt in aid of the Victory Loan\nCampaign, which will have itarted\nMonday.\nPlant tor tb* night lor tb* amateun are still in the formative itage\nbut there'i going to ba a great program.\nTentative plans call for tht conteitanti to be divided into three\nage groups, io that personi of all\narea will have opportunities of winning prizes. Entries are uked to be\nln by Tuesday night\nA meeting ot the directors ot the\nGyro Club will ba held tonight, and\na committee to tak* charga ol the\nprogram will be appointed,\nCANBERRA (CP). - Defying\nmountain!, riven and forests and\nIncreasing mightily as they sweep\nAuatralla, hordes ot Cabbage White\nButterfly have caused wldt havoc\namong cabbaga, cauliflower and\nbroccoli in i*v\u00abral statu.\nJACK GRAY, NIUON AIRMAN,\nFINDS THRILLS IN BRITAIN\nJack Gray ol Ntlion wbo is ln tht\nR.C.A.F., tells of his experience!,\ncrossing the Atlantic and in .Scotland and England in a letter to\nhis parents, Mr. and Mn. J. B. Gray,\nHe mentions having met his brother\nHampton, who is in the Royal Naval\nAir Force, Jack Rldniond of Trail\nand Merlin Llversidge and Jimmie\nHughes ot Nelaon.\n\"At last I can writ* aad Ml you\nall about this new country we are\nnow in. We landed last- Sunday\nmorning. It was really a thrilling\nsight when we went up on deck,\nto iee green hill* of Scotland about\nwbich I had heard io much. No fooling Old, I really fell ln love with\nScotland right Iron the lint. It was\na beautiful Spring day wben we\nfirst aaw land,\" says Airman Gray,\n. \"The vbyage across wif quite uneventful tnd imooth. Wt iaw po submarines and il wt had I need not\niar that we were well protected,\nnitre wert Juit three ot ui together .. . about two or three dayi\nfrom thli ilde though we were met\nby a and boata. They were\ntaking no chances.\n\"The vessel we are on is about\n2800 tons and fairly new, Wt had\nsecond clast quarters aa tht lint\nclan were tor officers. The bunks\nar* not bad although when the\nmighty Atlantic get! rough you tots\nabout like a cart. It wai amasing to\nwatch the other troopship bounding around in the heavy aeas while\nthe battleship hardly wavers. It\nJuat forges itralght through and appean underwater hall tine time.\n\"There were all sorts ol new things\nwhich I had never ieen\u2014auch thingi\na! whalea blowing and porpoises\nroaring and playing about. I slept\nnearly IS hours a day on board as I\nwas lucky to miss guard duty. They\nhad Airforce men spotting for subi.\nThe food wtsn't btd although we\nwere on rations as soon as we were\naboard.\n\"I know now how Columbus must\nhave felt when ht saw land though\nhe had a lot longer than we. A fellow gets pretty tired ot icting nothing but wtter. It wu a little more\nInteresting when we got closer .bert.\nIt was wopdarln} to see thow (Mt\ndestroyers suddenly dart somewhere\nat top speed\u2014boy, thay art fast.\nThty investigated every little fishing Boat and all Whan you se* some\nol th* British Navy you figure\nthere'i something to this \"Britannia\nRul* the'Waves'\nLIKES THE TRAINS\n\"I managed to go ashore before\nthe othen at \u2014  io ment a\npleasant hour walking around there.\nI find many things here not as they\nwer* in Canada but very interesting\nto me. Soon after we got ashore\nwe boarded a train. The next six\nhoun were the most pleasant I ever\nspent on a train. The trains, as you\nknow, are not tbe same ai ours\nbut have little compartment! seating about lix\u2014I like them.\n\"The lint city we came to was\nGlasgow and the trip from\t\nthere was a revelation to me. All\nth* wty people were out waving\nand cheering us onr-and they did\nmun it The people here know\nthere is a war on. I hate to say it\nbut I have never seen anything\nlike it in all my time in Canada. I\nfelt like cheering myself when I uw\nthese women and men in Glasgow\nitanding by ruined homes but still\nwaving ui on. We went from Glugow straight across to Edinburgh\nbut were unable to get out at any\not these placei. What I aaw of Edinburgh I liked very much but Ihe\nopen country is what I liked moit. It\nmade me want to get out and Juit\nitroll among the hills I hope we get\nmoved to Scotland for our training\nfor a couple ol months,\nMEETS BROTHER\n\"Perhaps I had better Interrupt\nmy chronological review to tell you\nol my viiit with Hampton. I wrote\nhim a letter ai soon u I got to\nLondon. Next t wwt to Canada\nHOUM ar^d learned his whereabouts.\nOf coune. on learning be wu only\n30 milei Irom London at a place\ncalled -\u2014 , I got on a train\nand went there. I wu sitting ln the\nmess btvlng a cup ol tea when he\ncame in. It was wonderful meeting\nio for from home. I met iome of\nthose friendl of hii but Jack Diamond ia at another station.\n\"Boy, rm mre proud ot my brother now. He had about 45 houn\nIn the air but tbe real thing is to\nhave a brother wbo is a pilot ln th*\nFl\u00abet Air Arm. Thou fellowi have\nto be really good, ney ara training\nat a R.A.F. itation so thty are getting good training you may be sure.\nHe still hu loti of work ahead before he gets his wings but I am sure\nhe will. Hope to get up to see blm\nagain. One other thing I neglected\nto teU ynu wu that I am at \u25a0 \u25a0\nabout 15 miles from London.\n'To get on with my story, we continued down through Scotland and\ninto England. We ate at Newcastle\nslipper\u2014and then went on again.\nThe train wu blacked out at night\nand when an alarm sounded they\nwere not content with drawn blinds\nEvery light went out. Of coune the\nship wu blacked out all the way\nover.\nTHE SPIRIT OF LONDON\n'1 have been in London twice already now. It It a wonderful experience to aee all theie places about\nwhich we have heard so much. It\nli impossible to imagine the alze ot\nLondon until you have been there.\nWe tre 15 miles trom the heart of\nLondon yet you can aee no spot that\nIsn't lammed with housu all the\nway. London at night is something\ntoo. There are tew ' weak lights\naround to guide you but when an\nalarm sounds lt becomu pitch black\nthere. It la queer when you think\nol being ln the heart ol a big city\nyet there is not a light to be seen.\nThe Piccadilly Circus used to be an\nabsolute blaze ol lighti but not one\nli to be ieen now.\n\"There la something to that song\n\"Till the Lights ol London Shine\nAgain,\" It is going to be a wonderful\ndty when they Jo. You never saw\nanything like the spirit ol the people here. They Just laugh aad uy\nhe will get lt all back and then,\n\u2022ome. It look u though, to me, that\nthe Nazis care little what they\nbomb u there are wrecked building! all oyer London. Another thing\nthat amazu me ii the way they\nclean everything up alter a raid.\nBulldlngi which have been ruined\nara cleaned up and lenced off-\nIt is really amazing. It would do a\nlot of people ln Canada good to see\nLondon snd an air raid\u2014they would\nkhow then what we are lighting\na war for.\nFOOD IS QOOD\n\"The food here we are getting Is\nquite good although there is Uttle\nbutter or sugar and seldom any\nmilk. W\u00ab eat considerably better\nthan tbe civilians though u we are\nsupposed to need it more. One thing\nwhich I am getting already so I hate\nis to mlu and that ii the famous\ntradition of afternoon tea\u2014lt is really Just another meal, but a good one.\n\"I wu surprised when we landed to meet Merlin Livenidge there.\nI also wu talking to Jim Hughes-\nhe is a brother to Kay Hughes who\nworkt in Collinson!. It seems funny.\nYesterday at Canada Home in, Lon\ndon I had a ihort chat with Mn.\nVincent Massey. She wu very nice\nand friendly.\n'Some ol our fellowi apent a few\nhoun with the Royal Family yesterday\u2014were they ever thrilled\u2014King\nGeorge Is mighty popular but Mr.\nChurchill il the real thing here. The\npeople nearly go nuts wben they\nsee him. Another thing I wu pleued at seeing wu the number of\nRooievelt picturu. It is quite common to see a big picture ol Churchill and Roosevelt hanging to\ngether.\nB.C. TRIE FRUITS REACH\nAGREEMENT WITH COVT\nKELOWNA, B. C, May \u00bb (CP)\n\u2014Otfielala of the Federal Department of Agriculture and representatives of the BritWh Columbia\nTree Fruit, Ltd., have reached an\nagreement covering the Okanagan\ngalley's 1041 fruit crop, It wu an\nnounced here lait nlghL\nTermi of the agreement will not\nbe made public, howeven, until\nalter lt hu been approved by the\nMinister of Finance.\nBritish Stop Nazi\nShip Attempting\nto Run Blockade\nLONDON, May 28 (CP) - The\nGerman freighter Lech, 3200 toni,\ntrying to run the Britiah blockade\nfrom a South American port to Occupied France, hu been intercepted\nby a British ship, the Admiralty\nannounced today.\nItalians Say Troops\nLanded on Crete\nROME, May 20 (AP).-The Italian\nHigh Command claimed today it's\ntroopi landed on the Greek Island\nof Crete yeiterday while Fuclst\naircraft attacked British naval units\nin the lurrounding waten.\nIt wu claimed three cruisers\nware hit by torpedoei launched\nIrom the attacking Italian planei\nand another by bombi.\n.    WHAT A TASK IT USED TO Bl,\nNOW IT'S AS SIMPLE AS A, B,C,\nALL YOU DO IS PHONE 38.\nWE DO THE REST\nWest Transfer Co.\nESTABLISHED IN 1899\nWeather Unsafe\nfor Bomber Stunt\nTrans-Canada Airlines official report on the weather condiUans\nwhich mad* it unsafe for tha torch-\ncarrying bomber to circle Nelson\nand U-ail lut Sunday bu been received ln Nelion from A. E. Jukes\nof the B.C. Victory Loan Committee.\nIt reads:\n\"Cloudi broken to overcait over\nthe mountains That type of cloud\nwould be liable to have Icing conditions. Also, th* weather at Lethbridge wu not good. Due to\nsmoke, only one to two milu vis-\nability. The wuther at Calgary\nwu very bad, due to rain and\nsmoke.\"\nThe airlines further stated that 11\nthe weather had become slightly\nwone st Lethbridge the Pilot would\nhave had to fly to Reglna non-stop,\nso that he would not risk wasting his\ngu by climbing down snd then up\nagain to 14,000 feat. Due to the\nicing condition he decided to go\nstraight through to Lethbridge.\nSOLDIERS ON CUARD\nAT AIRCRAFT PUNT\nSAN DIEGO, CalB., May 10 (AP)\n- -Four anti.aircraft guns and a detachment of loldiera of the 216th\nCout Artillery were stationed at\nthe $20,000,000 Cotuolidated Aircraft\nCorp. plant today.\nArmy officen nid the soldien\nwould be on 24-hour duty behind\nthe guns for an indefinite parted.\nCAU RESPONSIBLE\nFOR LOSS OF SHIPS\nOTTAWA, May 29 (CP) \u2014 The\ngal* of cyclonic proportions which\nswept the Great Laku lut Novem\nber wu held to b* directly respon\nsible for th* loss of two Canadian\nlake steamships, th* Anna C. Minch\nand the Novadoc with a lou of 23\nmen, Transport Minister Cardin announced today,\nDEATHS\nVICTORIA-Mrs. Awe L Gordon, 74. Born ln Sutherland's River,\nN. C., sha came her* ln 1880.\nVANCOUVER, Wash.-Herbert J.\nCampbell, 58, veteran Pacific Northwest newspaperman and Editor and\nPublisher of the Columbia for 20\nyean.\nNANAIMO, B. C-Harry Rurh-\nton, outstanding authority on trout\nand \u00abtrum fishing.\nNasli Say Bismarck\nDowned 5 Planei\nMUSI, May 20 W__tt_i Otr-\nnan High Command today claimed\ndestruction of 52,000 tons ol British\nshipping by \"cruiser warfare in\noversus waten\".\nThe daily communique claimed\nalao tb* now sunken battleship Bismarck shot down five British planu\nhut Saturday evening and sank an\nattacking dutroyer two nighti later\nand ut another afire..\n(No planu or destroyers wire reported sunk or damaged ln the official Britiah account of tbe Bismarck chase).\nJunior Chambers\nAre Admitted to\nAssociated Body\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. May 20 -\nJunior Chamber! ol Commerce were\nadmitted to lull membenhlp in the\nAssociated Boardi ol Trade of East-\nean British Columbia,\nThe admission took the form ol\nen amendment to the conitltutlon\nImplementing notice given a year\nago at the Fernie convention.\nLimited membership was luggested, but was considered only briefly,\nthe convention holding there should\nbe no restriction upon the Junior\nbodiu.\nThe Joint invitation of the Nelion\nand Salmo Valley Boards of Trade\nfor the 1942 convention was accepted..\nRossland Defence\nCorps Given Use\nof Fire Equipment\nROSSLAND, B.C., May 28\u2014That\nthe City ot Rossland will give to\nthe Voluntary Defence Corps all\ncooperation and assistance possible\nln the latter's recently announced-\nA.Jt.P. program, wu the asiurance\ngiven by the City Council Monday\nnight. The Corpi had requested,\nthrough Mayor John Gordon, that\nit be given instruction by Fire Chiet\nKenneth Martin, and also that, under Fire Department supervision,\nbe permitted the, use of the fire\ntrucks and other equipment in\ncarrying through the course of Instruction. The Fire Chief, incidentally, volunteered his servicu.\nThe only objection to the icheme\nwai raised by the Chairman of the\nFire, Watar and bight Committe,\nAid. Leo T. Nimsick, who stated\nthat th* fire-fighting equipment\nwould be subpected to extra wear\nand tear,\n' Mayor John Gordon stated that\nthe action of the Corps in endeavouring to lecure A.RP. training was\na commendable one, and should be\nencouraged.\nOn a motion by Aid. J. R. Corner,\nthe Council approved the scheme,\nand the fire trucks and equipment\nwill be used at the discretion of\nthe Fire Chief and the Fire, Water\nand Light Committee.\nVerigin Urges\nDoukhobors Buy\nVictory Bonds\nJohn Verigln, spiritual leader, will\nhead \"the Doukhobor Victory Loan\nlist with his own subscription.\nVictory Loan officials are highly\ngratified by the immediate and\npatriotic response of Doukhobor\nleaden, according to information\nreceived by H. A. Matthews, unit\norganizer at Nelson.\nVerigin is counselling his people\nto support Canada's efforts, and issued a proclamation to them above\nhis signature. He also recommended\nG. Goloff, Deputy Registrar of vital statistics at Brilliant, for the role\nof canvasser. Goloff speaks perfect\nEnglish and will prove an invaluable aide.\nVerigin's proclamation to Doukhobors reads:\n\"The Government of the Dominion of Canada is inviting the people of every walk of life and nationality to invest in a Bond which\nwill have as security the backing\nand assets of the Dominion u f\nwhole.\n\"Therefore there Is no better lecurity to be had ln Canada.\n\"This security is considered so\nsound that all the banks are writing\nto their depositors recommending\nthey transfer their savings into these\nbonds.\n\"The Bondi bear Interest at double\nthe rate at present paid by the\nbanks.\n\"These bonds can, of course, be\nconverted into cuh at any time\ndesired. \u00ab\n\"at a later date a representative\nof tha government will call upon\nyou lor the amount of your invutment\n\"Having personally Investigated\nthis matter, I intend to purchue\nsome ot these bonds myself snd\nrecommend you do the same.\"\n(Sgd.) \"JOHN VERIGIN\nKISS YOUR\nTIRED FEELING\nGOODBYE!\nPepleu Many Suffer Low Blood\nCount\u2014And Don't Know It.\nTb* baffling thins about low blood count\nll thut rou can weigh about aa much u jon\n\u2022Ytt did-*Ttn look healthy and itrong, ret\n-rou can fMl ai If you hut l*ad tn roar\nkit-, dopey, tired and ptpUn.\nLov blood count m\u00abani yoa hay*n't sol\n\u2022Mock rtd blood corpiude*.It U their vlUl\nJob to carry life-giving oxrs\u00abn from your\nlung\u00bb throughout your body. And jut M ft\ntuti oxygen to explode guoline In your\near and makt tha power to tarn ths wheehi,\nM rou moit hara plenty of oxygen to st*\nplode, the energy in roar body and give you\ngoing power.\nGat Dr. Williami Pink Pilla today. Thar\nart world-noted for tha help they g\\it-t In\nInereailni the number and itrength of rad\neorposclae. Then with your blood oount up.\nyou'll feel Ilka bounding up tha etalrt ae if\nyou wer* floating on air. Aik ymir druggist\nfor Dr. WlllUmi Pink Pllla today.\n(Advt.)\n*AQI SEVEN\nJamieson of Rossland McGill Honor\nGraduate; Wins Medalr Fellowship\nROSSLAND, B. C, May 28-Grad-\nuating with honors at McGill University, Montreal, at tha annual\nconvocation today, vu Stewart Edgar Jamieson, son ot Mr, and Mrs.\nEdgar Jamieson ot Rossland, who\nled hU class In the Faculty of Metallurgical Engineering.\nHe also racelvad thi British\nAssociation Medal, tha Sir William\nDawson Research Fellowship in Metallurgical Engineering and tha American Society for Metal's Prize\nfor Metallography and Tbull. Stewart's thesis was written on tttt lead\ndressing process at tha TraU Smelter. In compiling this Impressive\nrecord Stewart gained 14 tint -\nclass honors out of Id subjects stud-\nled and led his class tn 13 out of\nthese 14.\nMr. Jamieson has lud *n outstanding scholastic career through-\nout his school and college years. He\nreceived his High School education\nIn Rossland and then' studied for\nthree years at University of British\nColumbia. He worked a year at the\nYellowknife property of tha Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.,\nand then, as an exchange student,\nwent to McGill where be has stud-\nled the lut two years. Since writing his final examinations Stewart\nhas been touring the Marltlmes, and\nafter the graduation exerclset are\nover at McGill, he will visit for a\nshort time in Hamilton, Ont., before\nreturning to Rossland.\nAnother McGill student, Steve\nDemblcki, of Trail, received hit HL\nA. degree ln Mining Engineering.\nHe already Is the holder of a BSc.\ndegree in mining engineering from\nUniversity of Alberta.\nITALIAN MILITIA\nCHIEF IS REPLACED\nROME, May 29 (AP)r-Replace-\nment of Lt.-Gen. Achille Starace,\nformer secretary of tha Fascist\nParty, u chief of staff of the Fascist mllltla, *u announced officially today.\nMussolini appointed Lt.-Gen Enzo\nGalbiata to the post which Starace bas held since Janauary, 1940,\n\u25a0when Ettore Mutl replaced him u\nparty secretary.\nSees Trail for\nFirst Time In\n(2-Year Period\nTRAIL, B. C. May 28 - Tr\u00bbn had\nan interesting visitor Friday, when\nMrs. Thomu Powers, of Grand\nForks, returned to Trail for her first\nvisit here since 1898.\nMrs. Powers firat came to Ttall\nin 1894, and lived here for two\nyears, when she went to Nelson.\nThere she married Mr. Powers, and\nlater returned to Trail, where Mr.\nPowers worked as a brick muon\nat the Heime smelter. He was on\nthe \"gang\" which constructed the\nfirst stack.\nMr. and Mrs. Powers went to\nFraud Forks ln 1898 and took up\nfarming and have lived ln the\nGrand Forks valley ever since. After\nMr. Powers' death about eight years\nago, Mrs. Powers moved into Grand\nForks whert she is now residing.\nFINDS SITE OF HOME\nTrail has changed unbelievably.\nMrs. Powers said, adding that she\nhad been trying to find where their\nhome had been, near the foot of\nthe old smelter stairway. She felt\nsure she identified the house that\nused to be ne*t door, still on Victoria Street, although her former\nhome had been absorbed by the\nCity's progress.\nWhen she first came to Trail,\nMrs. Powers helped in the opening\nof the old Windsor Hotel, along\nthe waterfront, whioh hu long\nsince been torn down. She lived at\nthe hotel before going to Nelson.\nMrs. Powers also remembered the\nfirst Presbyterian Church, now\nBalfour's Plumbing Shop, which\nwas then located at the corner of\nwhat is now Spokane Street and\nPine Avenue.\nHer husband wu ont of the ori\nginal North Wut Mounted Police\nwho fought their way through the\nCanadian wilderness to establish an\noutpost in Saskatchewan, and at\nhis death, he wu believed to be\nthe last of the hardy band. Since\nthen, Mrs. Powers recalls resdlng\nan article ln an Eutern paper\nwritten by an ex-Mountie in England, telling of his experiences on\nthe same treck to Fort Garry.\nMrs. Powers returned to Grand\nForks, Saturday-morning, with Mr.\nand Mra. Klaus Scheer.\nSenate Approves\nSeizures\nShip\nWASHINGTON. May 28 (AP)-\nThe Senate finally approved and\nsent to the White House today Administration legislation permitting\nthe Government to take over more\nthan 80 foreign ships now lying idle\nin American harbors.\n100 of Bismarck\nCrew Picked Up\nLONDON, May 28 (CP)-Mora\nthan 100 officers and men of tht\nGerman battleship Bismarck were\npicked up after she was sunk Tuuday morning, and a subsequent attack by German aircraft then sank\nthe BritUh destroyer Muhona, tht\nAdmiralty announced today.\nOnt officer and 48 men art missing from the Mashona, the Admiralty said.\nTha Muhona was a 1850-ton vutal at tht Tribal clau and caroled\na normal complement of 240.\nTht Brooklyn Nationals havt lt\nformtr American Leagua baseball\nplayers on their roster.\t\nB.C. ***\n3STM\nRYE,\n8*35^\n'^BiitisliColumbiaDistillery\nThli advertisement la not published\nor displayed by tha Liquor Control\nBoard or by tha Government of\nBriUsh Columbia.\nQuick\nSTRAINS, SPRAINS,\nSORE MUSCLES,\nBRUISES\ntheAmtisepticLimimemt\nif y\nInvite Your\nFriends\n% Now b (he lime to write your\nfriends In the United Statu reminding them lhat Canada welcomes\nguests a usual this summer, and\noffersa wealth of summer attractions.\nlast summer false rumours that wartime conditions In Canada were\nunfavourable lo travelers, got into\ncirculation. Thb summer let the facts\nbe known. Spread the truth among\nyour own friends and htlp Canada's\ntourist revenue, and Canada's power\nto buy American war supplies.\nIMPERIAL BANK\nV \u25a0    OF CANADA\nW.   R.  GRUBBE\nMANAOIR,  NELSON   BRANCH\nJ\n\t\n PAOI  EIGHT.\n\t\n s_^\t\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS   NILtON. B. C-FRIDAY MORNINO.\n\u25a0\nScurvy . .'..',7 ..\nVitamin (Speeds\nHealing Process\nBy LOGAN CLENDING, M.D.\nScurvy in adults in one ot the\ndiseases that was once so common\nthat every physcian had seen many\ncases. Snce we have found out how\nto prevent it\u2014that is, by the use\nof freih citrus fruits\u2014it is among\nthe rarest of diseases. I think I\nhave only seen two cases In my\nlife\u2014one was in a man who insisted\non remaining od a strict sippy diet\nfor ulcer of the stomach for several\nyears after he was advised to desist; and the other, a recluse in the\nmountains, who insisted on living\non crackers and salt pork.\nNot only does Vitamin C deficiency seem to interfere with the\nhealing of wounds, but it also predisposes towatrds post - operative\npneumonias.\nResearches indicate that healing\nin tuberculosis is aided by a high\nlevel of Vitamin C. The healing of\ntuberculosis in the lungs is characterized by, the formations on the\naction of Vitamin C indicate that it\nexerts most of its effect upon the\nfibers of connective tissue. It Is,\ntherefore, reasonable to assume that\nin order to produce healing in tuberculosis, : Vitamin C should be\nexhibited. It has been shown that\npatients whose'bodies have been\n-exhausted of Vitamin C show slow\nhealing.\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nS. G\u2014\"Please tell me if a person\nwho has had childhood tuberculosis,\nnow in her late twenties, would have\ntuberculosis without having fever\nln the afternoon.\"\nAnswer \u2014 It is possible but not\nprobable. To be certain, you should\nnave an X-iray of the chest.\nBig C.Y.0. Rally\nIs Held al Femie\nNATAL, B. C\u2014Some 35 members\nif the Natal-Michel C.Y.O. journeyed to Farnie May 24 where they\njoined in the mass rally held by\nthe Fernie C.Y.O. Here they were\njoined by members from the Creston, Kimberley, Cranbrook, Coleman, Blairmore, Bellevue-Hillcrest\nand Pincher Creek groups. The program was opened by a High Mass\nin honor of,Miss Colleen Hughes,\nwho died recently.\nIn the afternoon two softball\ntournaments were staged with the\nFernie C.Y.O. girls nosing out the\nNatal-Miohel C.Y.O. girls by a 12-11)\nscore in the final while in the final\nof the boys the Natal-Michel C.Y.O.\ndrubbed the Fernie C.Y.O. 12-3. In\nthe preliminary the Fernie boys\ntook the measure of the Coleman\nC.Y.O. boys by a 9-3 score.\nThis was followed by a C.Y.O.\ntrack meet with the Natal-Michel\nC.Y.O. making practically n clean\nsweep Of all the events as they took\nfirst in every event and second in\nall but three events to win the annual C.Y.O. Trophy which was donated by Harry Colgan of Vancouver. This trophy is to be competed\nfor every year with the winning\nC.Y.O. group to stage the rally ot\n.their home grounds. The next rally\nwill take place at Natal-Michel\nnext year.\nThis was followed by a banquet\nwhen Father Sullivan of Coleman\nand Father Wales of Bairmore\nthanked Father Morelli and the\nFernie C.Y.O. on the splendid affair\nthat they had put on. The trophy\nand prize winners were then presented by Mr. Mangan of Fernie\nwith the trophy being taken by\nSports Manager Paddy Dalton on\nbehalf of the Natal-Michel C.Y.O.\nThe evening came to a close with a\nshow bfcing followed by a dance\nwhich wss well enoyed by the huge\ncrowd that was bn hand.\nOTTAWA (CP). \u2014 Twenty-five\npersons were killed and 590 injured\nin Canada \u00abn 19 years while playing with blasting caps. Seventy per\ncent of the casualties were children.\nMaterial Interest\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nWhen a gown is fashioned of an interesting or exquisite fabric,\nbeautifully cut and detailed, it needs but little in the way of embellishment or trimming. As an example of this fashion fact, we present the delightful dinner dress shown here. It is fashioned of a new\nfabric in celanese rayon and silk, a fabric that is Indicative of the increased activity and interest in domestic fabrics. The material has a\npronounced check, somewhat reminiscent of sports weaves, and is\nvery supple. The color is a soft sage green with a twisted girdle in\ntwo-tone orange and apricot taffeta. The skirt is beautifully draped\nand is slit to the knee in front. A low neckline makes an effective\nframe for costume jewelry.\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON. B. C.-Uoyd MacLaren, student at the University of Alberta, arrived from Edmonton to\nspend the Summer with his mother,\nMrs. L. MacLaren.\nMrs. Gibbs of Nelson visited Mr5,\nWells this week. She was here for\nthe Kootenay presbyterial of the\nPresbyterian W. M. S., at St. Stephen's Church, Tuesday,\nMiss Winnie Coleman of Shore-\nacres is a guest of Mr. and Mrs,\nW. F. Burgess.\nCharles Moore, Jr., and Allister\nRoss were holiday visitors at Banff\nand Lake Louise, returning Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. Wes Eddy were\namong those spending the weekend at the Sinclair Canyon hot\nsprings.\nWalter Hoglund left Tuesday to\nvisit at Kimberley.\nWill Wolfman of Lethbridge is a\nguest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nNelson Wolfman.\nMrs. Charles Murrell was hostess\nto the directors of Creston and District Women's Institute at the May\nmeeting Monday. Attending were\nMrs. H. H. Taylor, Mrs. James\nCompon, Mrs. C. F. Hayes and Mrs.\nR. Ibbotson.\nF. Adamson is a Nelson visitor\nthis  week,\nMrs. Foukes and daughter have\nreturned from a six weeks' holiday\nat Agassiz, Spences Bridge and\nCoast points.\nMr. and Mrs. R, Crane of Wynndel were Saturday guests of their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Allan Speers.\nMiss Hcighton, Creston High\nSchool student, spent the weekend\nat her home in Procter.\nMr. and Mrs. Theo Wood, Miss\nIrene and Miss Margaret Brauy aiu\nHarley Brady, returned from a holiday at the hot springs at Sinclair\nCanyon.\nMiss Sarah Clark visited her parents at Wycliffe at the weekend.\nHawkshaw Powell, Jack Goodwin, Charlie Tompkins, Fred Carr\nand Tony Holder made the trip to\nDorothy Thompson Says War Aim of\nDemocracies Is \"Merely to Survive\"\nMONTREAL, May 29   (CP)-The\niirst war aim of the democracies has\nbecome \"merely to survive\" and the\nmost important question of the war\nis \"Who is going to win the world\nrevolution?'' Dorothy Thompson told\nthe 1941 graduating class of McGill\nUniversity today.\n\"It is the question,\" said the noted\nnewspaper columnist, \"of who is going to catch up and revivify the\nbroken but never extinguished\nyearning of the masses of the people for g society that makes sense,\nand that is in harmony with the\nmost characteristic longings of the\n20th century, and that is genuinely\nfounded on peace.\"\nMiss Thompson, awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Literature, was one of five persons to receive honorary degrees at the University's Spring convocation. Dr. F,\nCyril James. Principal and Vice-\nCnancellor, presided and conferred\nthe degrees in the absence of Sir\nEdward Beatty, Chancellor. -\nPrince:- Alice, wife of the Governor-General, and Malcolm MacDonald, British High Commissioner\nto Canada, received degrees of Doctor of Laws, Jean C. J. Mackenzie,\nacting head of the National Research\nCouncil, was awarded a degree of\nDoctor of Science and Dr. Hu Shim,\nChinese Ambassador to the United\nStates ,was given a degree of Doctor of Literature.\nRemarking that Hitler's allies did\nnot want to war with him, only to\n\"gang up with him in his struggle\nfor the elimination of pity from life,\nand that his opponents were unwilling to resort to war. Miss Thompson said Hitler thus had a dual advantage. With natural allies inside\nall countries\u2014\"the ruthless; and\nself-disarmed opponents\u2014 he was\nable to exploit both the worst and\nthe best instincts of men.\"\n'This explains,\" she continued,\n\"why not a civilized nation moved\nuntil the realization broke over the\npeople that aggression was reaching\ntheir very door-steps, and that too\nlong delayed, and with disgust in\ntheir hearts, with hatred for the\nvery weapons they have to use, they\nwould have to fight for mere survival and for the survival of Jhe\nvery dream contained in the conception of peace.\"\nThe first war aim of democracy\nhad become one of survival, \"to\nsave whatever margin we can of territory, of peoples, of instruments,\nout of which we may build the society of the future.\"\nEaton's Order Office\nLeave orders at Nelson or Trail for catalogue\nlines of merchandise. ,\nTHE MODERN WAY TO SHOP\u2014Wide varieties\u2014low prices\u2014fast deliveries. Immediate\nattention and quick service on all orders\nreceived.\n<\"\nT EATON C\n\u25a0   \u25a0       WESTERN        ^1\n.NELSON, B. C.\no\nLIMITED\nCranbrook by bicycle for the Empire Day weekend.\nA. W. Dickinson and H. K. Leg!\nwere amongst the Creston members . of the Board, of Trade who\nwere at Kimberley, Tuesday, for\nthe sessions of the Associated\nBoards of Trade of Eastern British Columbia.\nMr. and Mrs. L. C. Hayworth of\nTaber, Alta, visited Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Eastman. Also in the visiting\ngroup were four Jepperson brothers, also of Taber.\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon Woods of\nNelson were guests of the latter's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Morrow.\nRev. A. S. Partington was at\nWynndel Sunday evening,' where\nhe was speaker at the anniversary\nservice of St. Michael's Anglican\nChurch.\nMr. and Mrs. A. M. McKay of\nBlairmore, Alta., returned Tuesday after visiting the latter's brother and sister-in-law, Dr. and Mrs.\nW. N. Fraser.\nMr. and Mrs. S. G. Clark and\ndaughter, Mary; were at Wycliffe\nfor the weekend, iss Joan Clark returned with them..\nMrs. James Kay of Nelson is a\nguest of Mrs. John Spratt.\nA. F. Rudd has returned from\nTrail where he spent a few days\nattending the Knights of Pythias\ngrand lodge, representing Wild\nRose Lodge, Creston.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Johnson are\nhome from Jaffray where they\nwere visiting their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. Belanger.\nMiss Eleanor Spratt was at Cranbrook for the weekend, 'a guest of\nher sister, Mrs. H. Sainsbury.       ,\nMiss Jean Henderson and Miss\nAnnie Hook visited at Nelson at\nthe weekend, making the trip by\nbicycle.\nMrs. A. L. Palmer is visiting her\ndaughters, Miss Beryl arid Miss\nRuby Palmer, at Vancouver.\nH. A. Powell and James Cook\narrived home Tuesday from Nelson,\nwhere they had been attending the\nregional hospital conference,\nMr. and Mrs. H. Langston and Miss\nDorothy' Wightman and Miss Dorothy Sinclair Smith were visitors\nat Radium for the weekend.\"\nThe May meeting, Tuesday, of\nChrist Church Women's Auxiliary\nwas featured with the presentation of a suitable gift to Mrt. M.\nYoung, a charter member of the\nsociety, who observed her 81st\nbirthday that day.\nWord from Golden tells of the\nmarriage at the Church of Ifngland,\nMay 16, of Miss June, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wigen,\nof Wynndel, to Pte. Ed Argyle, of\nthe R.C.C.S., second son of. Mr,\nPercy Argyle of Creston. The\ngroom had been at the Coast but\non his transfer to Ontario, spent a\nfew days at Golden, near which\ntown the bride has taught school\nthe past year. Mrs. Argyle plans\nto visit her parents next month, before leaving to join the groom in\nEastern Canada.\nKIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY,   B.C.  \u2014   Mrs.  .1.\nGlennle  and   Mrs.  J.  Gower  left\nconvention at Trail.\nThursday to attend the C. W. L.\nWalley Hoglund of Creston is visiting his brother and sister-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Hoglund.\nMiss Jessie Day of the High\nSchool teaching staff returned from\na holiday at Nelson.\nMiss Ford, who has been nursing\nat the McDougall Hospital left Friday for Duncan, V. I.\nK. Black visited Kimberley Monday.\nBuddie Conroy and Eearling Edwards spent the weekend at Sinclair IJol Springs.\nP. Conrad and; 0. Bruch visited at\ntheir homes in Moyie Saturday.\nBROOKLYN. N.Y., May. 29 (CP)\n\u2014Thirty-eight members of the crew\nof the British freighter Ena de Lar-\nringa, torpedoed and sunk 900 miles\noff the coast of South America\nApril 5, joked and sang as they\nproceeded to thore through shark-\ninfested waten in two lifeboats and\nsubsisted on meagre fare, crew\nmembers related today.\nThe men arrived yesterdiy' from\nPernambuco on the Brazilian\nsteamship Buarque. Five shipmates,\nincluding Vincent Meadows, native\nof Canada and former San Francisco police officer, were killed\nwhen the submarine attacked the\nship.\nLillie Refugee Princess Probably\nHie Last Baby lo Be Christened in the\nRoyal Chapel ol Buckingham Palace\nBy GLADYS ARNOLD\nCinidlin Press Stiff Writer\nOTTAWA, May 29 (CP)-A child\nliving in Ottawa\u2014Princess Irene,\ndiughter ot Princess Juliana ot the\nNetherlands\u2014probably wu the last\nbaby baptized ln the Royil Chapel\nof Buckingham Palace.\nIt wu ' Queen Elizabeth, godmother of the little refugee princess, who suggested the service be\nheld there. Now the chapel is ln\nruins, hit try \u25a0 Nazi bomb during\na London air nid.\n\"I have known the Queen since\nshe wu Duchess of York,\" Princess Juliana told The Canadian\nPrest In an Interview. \"I cannot\ntell you how wonderfully kind she\nwu to us when \u25a0 we arrived in\nEngland.\"\nPrincess Irene was born' in August, 1939, but the outbreak of\nwar made it difficult to arrange\na baptismal service in the Netherlands. Then Queen Wilhelmina, tW\nCrown Princess Juliana, her husband Prince Bemhard and their two\nsmall daughters fled to England,\nchased and hunted down by\nmachine-gunning German planes\nwhich bombed roads and harbors.\nPrincess Irene arrived in England at nine months of age, un-\nchristened and \"already out of long\nclothes.\".       ,\nAnd even in the Royal Chapel\nthere wu no long christening robe.\nAs Princess Juliana said, fleeing\nwith only one suitcase meant little\nthought for such things u baptismal dressei,\n\"We just bought here a short\nwhite dress for the service,\" she\nadded.\nPrincess Irene, now almost two,\nand her three-year-old sister Beatrix and a little companion who\naccompanied them from the Netherlands, live a quiet and orderly\nlife in their suburban Rockcliffe\nhome.\nExample . . .\nHome Is Place to\nTeach Tolerance\nBy Q. CLEVELAND MYERS, Ph.D.\nIt is in the home where we need\nto first teach tolerance. Speaking\nrecently before an audience representing a number of different\ngroups, I said that tbe first essential in wise regilious education\nof the child in the home is tolerance and it is best taught by the\nexample of the parents. How can\nwe be truly good with hate in our\nhearts? How can we promote regard, for the inherent rights of\nothers? Only by setting an example bf love and tolerance ourselves.\nNEVER RIDICULE OTHER'S\nBELIEFS\nLet us parents never speak unkindly of any religious faith. When\nwe hear a child in the family ridiculing any religious group or religious practice let ua calmly say\n\"In our home, you know, we never\nsay auch things,\" and then be sure\nthis Is so. I wish teachers would do\nlikewise.\nTo be always tolerant toward the\nreligions of others does not mean\nwe must be indifferent or disloyal\nto our own. On the contrary, we\nshould be proud of oa- religion or\nphilosophy ot life.\nEXAMPLE THE BEST\nTEACHER\n\u2022 If we can prove to children that\nour faith works and makes us lovable and easy to live with, they\nwill be Inclined to give it a serious\ntrial themselves. What we need\ntoday is more people with convictions and the stuff of character to\nlive by them, so long, of course, as\nthey do not Interfere with the convictions of anybody else and his\nright to believe.\nSOLVING PARENT PROBLEMS\nQ. \"Yout- articles on arithmetic\ninformed me for the first time that\nthe basic addition and subtraction\nfacts did not mount up into millions of combinations. Please send\nme the 100 addition and 100 subtraction facts. Enclosed is a self-\naddressed envelope with a three-\ncent stamp on it,\nA. They were sent,' and with\npleasure. They are sent to anyone who writes me as this mother\ndid, enclosing the stamped and\nself-addressed envelope, at 239 East\n45th Street, New York City.\nQ. When are we parents most\nlikely to exhort the child concerning his conduct?\nA. When we're aire leut fit to give\nit and he least ready to profit from\nit. We tend to make painful the\nvery things we want the child to\nchoose to do, rendering him less\nready, therefore, to choose our\nway.\nQ. How should vegetables be\ncooked?\nA. Vegetables should be cooked\nIn Just enough water to keep them\nfrom burning, the kettle being covered with a tight fitting Ud, A\ngood way to know when they are\ndone is to taste them, pvercooking\ndestroys some of the vitamins. The\ncooked vegetables should be put\nthrough a  sieve before they  are\nserved to the baby.\nQ. Should a child ever be induced to memorize anything he\ndoesn't understand?\nA. Yes; sometimes, if It can be\nmade a satisfying experience, as\napplied to beautiful gems of literature and terse statements of ideals,\nSome of the rarest bits of literature\nthit you and I learned by heart in\nearlier years have grown more\nmeaningful and beautiful as wc\nhaVe grown older.\nAffliction ...\nOpen Letter fo\n(rippled Girl\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nDEAR MISS CHATFIELD:\nliave you ever known a girl with\none leg who had lots of dates, enjoyed herself and then got married?\nI am like every other young person:\nI want a home, a sense of belonging to somebody but it looks\nas though I shall never have these\nthings. When I was five I suffered\na bone infection and in an effort\nto stop the infection my leg was\namputated just below the hip. I\nwas cured but now I wish I had\ndied. I walk on crutches, haven't\nenough stump to wear an artificial\nleg,\nI am told that I'm a beauty. I\nhave plenty of girl friends, wnich\nshows I haven's a bad disposition.\nThese girls try to get dates for\nme but ihe truth is a boy Is ashamed\nto be seen with a cripple girl.\nI have a fine job with a good\nsalary and I dress smartly \u2014 even\nwear one high heel shoe though it\ncauses me a great deal ot trouble.\nI do everything I can to look dainty\nand feminine but it is all useless.\nIs there any hope?\nVICTIM\nANSWER\nMy dear girl, the lame, the halt\nand the blind get married and live\nhappily ever alter. There seems\nto be no physical handicap that in\nitself, keeps a girl from getting\nmarried, ox from living a useful,\nexciting life. It isn't exaggeration\nto say that whenever a letter like\nyours appears in this column, many\nletters come in from persons afflicted in the same way. And of\ncourse only those who have overcome their handicaps trouble to\nwrite.\nFirst thing to be done is to try\nagain to see it the artificial leg is\nout of the question. One firm might\nturn you down and another attempt\nto fit you. While you are exhausting\nevery means to get rid of the\ncrutches you should remember the\nonly thing that can defeat you is\nyour attitude twoard your affliction.\nNot minimizing the personal tragedy which the loss of a leg is to\na girl, hot minimizing the disa-\nappointment at having no toy\nfriends, you can begin now to live\ninstead of wishing you were dead.\nFor every affliction there is compensation. Unless we are altogether\nselfish, suffering gives us a siio-\nlime sympathy and tenderness with\nothers which means we will love\nand be loved. And there are satis\nfactory substitutes for boy friends\ntoo: girl friends, animal pets and\nSERIAL STORY .,\nBy Allen Eppes\nEYELESS EDEN\nCHAPTER THIRTY\n(Continued)\n\"Brave girl,\" said Joel somewhat\nhuskily. 'Tirave, wonderful little\nEvel\"\n\"No, not that, Joel,\" Eve said.\n\"Just a girl who tried to take it on\nthe chin . . , that's all.\"\n\"You're brave,\" Joel insisted, \"and\nsweet\u2014darned .tweet, I have never\nseen a girl I admired as much,\nEve. I'm getting fonder of you\nevery moment. Tve never felt quite\nlike this before. Darned if I don't\nbelieve I'm\u2014falling in love.\"\n\"Joel!\" Eve exclaimed, laughing\nsoftly. \"Yo. mustn't let your sense\not chivalry and sympathy get you\ninvolved.\"\n\"It's no joking matter, Eve.\"\nEve saw the seriousness which\nhed come to Joel's sun-tanned face.\n\"I'm sorry, Joel,\" she said. \"I didn't\nmean to be flippant Shall we dance\nnow?\"\n\"Yes, let's do,\" Joel said. He\npushed back his chair and went\naround to pull out Eve's. \"And\nthanks a lot for opening up to me.\nI'm glad you felt that you could.\"\n\"But maybe I ihouldn't,\" Eve\nsaid, u they moved out into the\nspace cleared for dancing. \"Maybe\nit's cowardly to burden others with\na tele of woe.\"\n\"I uked tor it,\" nid Joel. \"It does\none good now and then to blow off\nsteam.\" They danced in silence for\ni moment md then Joel asked:\n\"Did you teU Bill ibout Carey\nWatts?\"\n\"I didn't mention any names,\"\nsaid Eve. \"But I thought it Would\nmake BUI fee] tea badly If he\nknew that he wasn't the only one\nwhose marriage had been called\noff.\"\n\"I see.\"\n\"And, oddly enough,\" Bve said,\n\"and carrying coincidence still farther, Bill looks i lot like Carey. It's\nalmost uncanny at times. It's rather\nlike suddenly looking up and finding that Carey has come back.\"\n\"Does Bill know that?\"\n\"Yes\/t said Eve. she smiled. \"I'm\nafraid he didn't like being told that\nhe looked like the man 1 might have\nmarried. I'm afraid it did something to his ego.\"\n\"Don't let that botiier you,\" said\nJoel in a somewhat hard voice.\n\"Bill's ego can take a lot.\"\n\"That's not very kind of you,\nJoel,\" Eve said.\n\"No. I know it Isn't. I'm sorry,\"\nWhen their dinner was over they\nstrolled out upon the wide terrace.\nThere was a moon. It was washing\nthe world in silvery radiance, turning the golf links that stretched out\nat their feet into a carpet of luminous white.\nMusic came to their ears from the\nbig room behind them.\nThey stood close together beside\nthe rough stone parapet, looking off\n'into the mountains that towered up\nfrfom the very edge of the grounds\nwhich surrounded the massive stone\nstructure. (\n\"Eve,\" Joel said, \"whit would you\nsay if I told you I was falling in love\nwith you?\"\n, \"I'd say you mustn't!\" Bve replied.\n\"And ,I'd mean it, Joel. Please don't\nfall In love with me\u2014please.\"\n\"Good heavens, Bve, would it be\nas bad u all that?\"\n\"No, Joel. But 1 mean love hurt\nme. Tm afraid off -It.\u2014I don't think\nI want inything to do with love.\"\nJoel slipped nil arm about her\nwaist, drawing her nearer to him.\n'That'i not fiir,\" he said. \"You\nmustn't Judge, sll men by one.\"\n\"It's not that, Joel,'' Bve .said\nquickly. \"It's Just that\u2014that I don't\nwant to go through with It again;\nwith falling ln love, 1 mean.\"\n\"Do you still love the other man?\"\n\"I'm not sure. I wish 1 were!\"\n(To Be Continued)\n}\nNew Hat and Bag\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nLovely Peggy Diggins models a delightful new hat and an impressive and useful handbag. The forward-tilted hat, which still\npersists because Ihe girls find it becoming, is of black cire satin, embellished with a luscious white rose and dark green leaves, all\nmeshed over with black fishnet veiling. The bag is of black antelope.\nIt features a large pancake compact which fits into a speical compartment on the bag and serves as an ornament when not at work.\nCanada Faces\nGas Rationing\"1\nTORONTO, May 19 (CP1-Q. R.   j\nCottrelle, Oil Controller in the De-   i\npartment, of Munitions and Supply,\nsaid in a ititement here todiy thit   I\nit is \"necessiry to control\" pricei   '\nof guoline and that \"we are faced\nwith a curtailment in consumption\nwhether we like rationing or not   j\nMr. Cottrelle said he could not\nsay when gasoline price control\nwould come into eftect\nIt is doubtful if oil rationing\nwould be extended to homes in\nEastern Canada now using that\nfuel, sild Mr, Cottrelle. However,\nthe situation in British Columbia is\ndifferent. All oil supplies for that I\nprovince ire shipped in by tankers.\nThere are a lot of big buildings ia\nBritish Columbia on oil heating.\nThey may have to go on coal u a\nmatter of necessity as the oil may\nnot be available.\"\nGet earlier crop*\nHotkaps\nHOTKAPS are waxed\npaper cones, easily set out\nover seed or growing\nplants. A \"miniature Hothouse.\"\nWrite for full information\nand descriptive catalogue.\nSMITH, DAVIDSON &\nWRICHT, LTD.\nVancouver,   B, C.\nhobbies  that occupy head, hands\nand heart.\nFinally a crippled girl should\nrealize that while a lad in his early\ntwenties might be sensitive about'\ndating her, after she has reached i\nthe age where she will he companionable with older men, there's\nstrong probability that romance may\ncame \u2014 provided of course she's\nkept a sweet spirit and a pleasant\npersonality to go along with her\npretty face.\nProblems of general interest sub-:\nmitted by readers will be discussed\nin this column. Letters unsuitable\nfor .publication will' be answered\npersonally provided they contain\nstamped, self-addressed envelopes.\nAll names are held in confidence.\nWrite Miss Chatfield, in care of\nthe Nelson Daily News,\nMary Alexander\nCastlegar Queen\nCASTLEGAR, B. C.-Surrounded\nby Iris mixed with yellow broom,\nlilac and columbine and with a\nhuge colored crown edged with\nbracken as a background, Miss Mary\nAlexander was crowned Queen of\nthe May at the May Day Dance\nsponsored by the Lillian Killough\nChapter I.O.D.E. and held in the\nCoronation Hall.\nWhile the orchestra played,\n\"There'll Always Be an England,\"\nFay Borden, Shirley Taylor, Joyce\nSchiavon, Stella Erickson, Gay\nWallner, Dawn Jenks and Donna\nMuirhead, daintily attired, strewed\nflowers in the path of the Ex-\nQueen, Mrs. R. Moat (Helen Magee).\nThree princesses, Misses Memory\nHuggins, Pearl Dams and Eva Peterson, preceded the Queen-elect to\nthe dais. Master Archie Shafonsky\nin a white sailor suit carried the\ncrown on a white satin cushion.\nQueen-Elect Mary wore a gown\nof white tulle over which had been\nplaced the traditional robe of wine\nvelvet lined with white satin, and\nsupported by Robert Rinke, Glen\nJones, Ronald Whittle and Clifford\nIronmonger as train bearers. Little\nMisses Betty McArthur and Donna\nWallner attired in yellow and blue\nfloor-length dresses and carrying\ncolonial bouquets attended Queen\nMary.\nEx-Queen Helen placed the crown\non the head of Queen-Elect Mary\nand Princess Pearl then presented\nthe newly-crowned queen with a\nlarge bouquet of red roses.\nQueen Mary in a well chosen\nspeech expressed her thanks to tlie\nLillian .Killough Chapter I.O.D.E.\nfor sponsoring the May Queen festivities and ' to all those who had\nassisted in the election.\nMrs. D. A. Shea, Regent nf the\nChapter, congratulated the Queen\non behalf of the Chapter and the\nresidents of Castlegar. She also\nthanked the Princess for their assistance in the program and presented them and the Queen with\nlovely rings from the Chapter.\nSixteen small girls in pastel\nshaded dresses entertained the\ngathering with the traditional May\nPole Dance, after which the procession retired.\nWinners of the draw were Miss\nJean Sommers, Castlegar, the chair,\nJohn Kennedy, Robson, smokers\nStand, Willie Barrow, Nakusp, the\nlamp.\nBaptist Pastor Calls\nfor United Stand\nST. THOMAS, Ont., May 29 (CP)\n\u2014Dr. T. T. Shields, Pastor of Jarvis Street Baptist Church, Toronto,\naddressing the 82nd session of the\nGrand Orange Lodge of Ontario\nWest last nignt, called for organization of a \"British-Canadian Party\"\nto rally all loyal Canadians and declared that Protestants should ty\nmore determined than ever to stand\ntheir ground.\nDr. Shields declared Canada\nshould have 500,000 men overseas io\nsupport the armies in the Middle\nEaat, and charged this was not an\naccomplished fact \"because the hierarchy of Quebec is holding us bacst\nin every way.\"\nW. I. STAND POPULAR\nAT KASLO CELEBRATION\n\u2022 KASLO, B. C\u2014The' refreshment\nstand conducted by the Kaslo and\nDistrict Women's Institute in Vimy\nPark Saturday was well patronized\nA nice amount was added to the\nfunds of the Society. The Pippi\ndent, Mrs. William Whittaker wos\ngeneral convener of all coninnu\ntees, Mrs. A. MacGillivray was\ncashier and others assisting were\nMrs. P Butler, Mrs. M. A. Tinkes;\nand Mrs. Stocking, Sr.\nAt your grocer's\u201418 of\nIN to tht package \u2014\nnlso Tender Leaf Tea In\n7- and 12-oz. packiges.\nOlssnd.d tot P\u00abit\u00ab- 1\" CisssssJ\nCERTO lakes tht\nGUESSWORKout of\nJAM and J EUY,\nMAKING\nENSURES JAMS AND JELLIES\nTHAT SET PERFECTLY.. TASTE\nBETTER.. COST LESS!\nHOW CERTO\nSAVES YOU\nTIME, MONEY\nWORK, WORRY\n__-&\nSts Quick arid Easy\u2014It tikes such a short\ntime to make jam or jelly with Certo. For\njam you need give only a one-minute to two-\nminute full rolling boil \u2014for jelly only \u25a0\nhalf-minute to a minute.\nSo Economical\u2014Since very little juice has\ntime to boil away, you get up to one half\nmore jam or jelly from an equal amount\nof fruit.\nFresh fruit Tosfe-Natural Colour\u2014Boiling\ntime is so short it cannot effect the natural\ntaste or darken the colour. Your jams and\njellies retain both the colour and taste of\nthe luscious fresh fruit.\nSun Results\u2014With Certo yon get tested,\neasy-to-follow recipes. Use exactly and you\ncan be sure of good results . . . Always!\nCXi_.-J.si\nmm\nLOOK FOR\nHunk of 72\nT * t I \u2022 A\nIt nr I pe t\nundtr tho\nlabel of\nevery Ctrto\nbottlo.\nE4I\n3 out ot 4 Jam ons) J.lly\nChamplom UM CDITO\nMrs. Ira S. Slmpion ot Oxford,\nN.S.\u2014Prlztwinntr ot Oxford\nExhibition\u2014wrltsi.i \"I hav*\nuud Ctrto for MViral ysrari\nand find It'a great aid In\nmaking |.lll.t and |am. I\nhav. lakers several prim at\nrae.nl exhibitions and cannot\npralM Certo ttw highly.\"\nCERTO  IS FRUIT  PECTIN\n-a natural substance   EXTRACTED   FROM   FRI\n\\_____l_______tM\n'in f i\u00ab i iiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiUrtliin\n^jii^jj\niijJftj^A^J^\n \t\ni>\u00abwij\u00abt<iiw.iip.i   IUI...I.!     ..\n\u00bb\u25a0 , \u25a0 i\nIrs. J. Knoeplll of Nelson Catches\n17 Lbs. 12 Ozs. Fish to Take Ladies'\nSection Leadership in Trout Derby\nFine tucceu for fishermen con-\nued on Kootenay Lakt last week-\n1, lt wts revealed in reports trom\nb vsirious weighing stations of the\ntte) Club't Kootenay Lake Trout\nm.\nWhile no fish were reported reich-\nl Uie 20-pound mtrk, there were\nwy fipe trout caught, including\ne weighing 19 pounds 12 ounces\nught by C. W. Fawcett of Trail\nid mother 10 pounds 7 ounces\nuded by Henry Davis ot Castles'. There were several others more\nin 15 pounds.\nOnt of tht lirger flih of the\nweekend wtt brought In by Mrt.\nJ, A. Knoepfll of Nelson, ind It\nenabled her to tikt the leid in\nthe ltdiei' notion from Mrt. H. L.\nJonei of Spokine. Tht Nelion\nlady'i catch wat only four ounces\nundtr 18 poundi, compared to the\n17-pounder to the credit of Mrt.\nJonet.\nT THOMAI'\nFish weighed ln at 0- C. Thomas'\nation at Balfour follow:\nJack Boyce, Nelson\u20148 lbs. 10 on.\nilight oft stacks May 20 at 3:30\nin. with Gibbs Glendon Stewart\no. 8. Cloudy.\nH. Hughes, Nelson\u20145 lbs. 15 oza.\naa mile out from Outlet May 21 at\npjn. Windy and hazy.\nAndy Speirs, Nelson\u201418 lbs. 4 ozs.\nmght oil Irvine Creek May 25 at\np.m. with Gibbs Stewart No. 4.\nRudy.\n0. J. Maarsund, South Slocan\u2014\ntoee fish, 11 lbs. 8 ozs., 6 lbs. 9\nks., and 6 lbs, 13ft ozs., caught at\nfootenay Bay,' Coffee Creek and\npot Bay May 24 at 8 p.m. and\nlay 23 at 10 a.m. with Gibbs Glen-\nbn Stewart No. 5. Bright.\n[Mrs. T. McLaughlin, Nelson\u2014Two\nth, 11 lbs, 9 ozs., and 5 lbs. 6 ozs..\ntight at Coffee Creek and Pilot\nay May 24 at 7 p-m. and May 25 at\nI noon with Gibbs Egg Spoon.\nGtorge Ronmark, Nelson \u2014 Two\nsh, 8 lbs. 8 ozs., md' 13 lbs. 8 ozs.,\nmght otf stacks May 24 at 2:50\na. and 4:30 VM. with Gibbs Stew-\nrtNo. 4. Bright, \u2022\nE. E. Hopwood, Nelson\u201411 lbs. 9\nii\u201e caught at Riondel May 25 at 3\nm. with home-made copper tpoon.\nCRaicllffe, Nelson\u20147 lbi. 18 ozs.\nMght ft Irvine Creek May 25 at 2\nn. with Gibbs Stewart No. 4.\noudy and windy.\nFred Johnson, Nelson\u2014Two fish,\nlbs. 7 ozs., and 14 lbs. 3 ozs., at\nueW's Bay and Pilot Bay May 25\n8!80 a.m. snd 6 p.m. with Gibbs\n\u2022Wtrt No. 5. Bright.\nC. W. Fiwcett, Trail\u201419 lbs. 12\na,, caught at Outlet May 22 at 6\nm. with Gibbs Stewart No. 3,\nSht\nT BELL'S\nFish weighed In at R. Bell's stain at Balfour follow:\nB. Townshend, Willow Point\u201411\nt. t *m., caught at Lime Quarry\niy 27 at 2 p.m. with Gibbs Stew-\ni No. 4. Cludy.\nA. B. Collinson. Nelson-13 lbs. 6\nis., caught at Pilot Bay May 23 at\npjn. irtth Gibbs Stewart No. 4-\nright.\nJim Riesterer, Nelion-7 lbs. 14\nozs., etuglit at Kootenty Bay May\n24 it lHOim. with Gibbs Stewart\nNo, 3. Bright.\nJ. R. Riesterer, Nelson, 8 lbs. 5\nozs. ciught it Indlm Creek Mty 24\nat 2:40 p.m. with Gibbs Stewart\nNo. 8. Cloudy.\nChris A. L. Jensen, Sheep Creek\n-10 lbs. 8 ou. caught at Pilot Bay\nMay 24 at 1 p.m. with Ruby-Eye\nWiggler. Cloudy.\nChris A. L. Jensen, Sheep Creek\n\u20149 lbs. 8 ou. caught at Pilot Bay\nMay 23 at 12:30 p.m. with Ruby-Eye\nWiggler. Bright.\n0. S. Godfrey,\nou. caught at Pilot Bay May 24 at\nS. Godfrey, Nelson\u201413 lbs. 2\n4:30 pjn. with Gibbs Stewirt No. 4.\nCloudy.\nJ. R, Riesterer, Nelton\u201418 lbs. 8\nozs, caught at Woodberry Creek\nMay 25 at 1 p.m. with Gibbs Stewart No. 5. Bright.\nAT BURNS'\nFish weighed in at J. W. Burns'\nstation at Ainsworth loUow:\nHenry Davis, Castlegar\u201419 lbs.\n7 ozs. at Riondel May 24 at 7 p.m.\nwith Ontario spinner. Dull.\nGeorge Hobbs, Ainsworth\u201412 lbs.\n4% ozs. at Alniworth May 25-at 8:15\np.m. with home-made lure. Dusky.\nC. Howe, TraU\u201416 lbs. 12 ozs.\ncaught at Riondel May 23 at 12 noon\nwith Water Witch lure. Very bright:\nPhilip Coleman, Riondel\u20147 lbs.\n11 ozs. caught at Deanshaven May\n22 between 4 and 5 p.m. with Gibbs\nStewart No. 5. Bright.\nPhilip Coleman, Riondel\u201410 lbs.\n11 ozs. caught at Deanshaven May\n22 between 4 and 5 p.m. with Gibbs\nStewart No. 5- Bright.\nAT HEISE'S\nFish weighed in at Tom Heise's\nstation at Balfour follow:\nW. H. Saunders, Trail\u20147 Ibs. 4\nou. caught at Queen's Bay Point\nMay 27 at 4:30 p.m. with homemade twin spinner. Cloudy.     .\nMrs. J A. Knoepfll, Nelson\u201417\nlbs. 12 ozs. caught at light house at\nOuUet May 27 at 12 noon with\nGibbs Stewart No. 4. Very duU.\nJake Knoepfll, Nelson\u20147 lbs. 2\nozs. caught at Pilot Bay May 27 at\n2:30 with Gibbs Stewart No. 4.\nCloudy.\nDr. A. C. Major, Procter-11 lbs.\n4 ozs. caught between Lime Rocks\nand Pilot Bay May 27 at 4 p.m. with\nGibbs Stewart No. 4. Cloudy.\nAT CARLSON'S\nFish weighed in at Carlson's station at Queen's Bay foUow:\nGunnar Erickson, Rossland \u2014 6\nlbs. caught at Coffee Creek May 24\nat 6 p.m. with Jack Lloyd lure.\nBright.\nH. D. Foster, Nelson\u201417 lbs. 2\nozs. caught at Queen's Bay May\n21 at 8 p.m. with Gibbs Stewart\nNo. 4. Bright.\nSwan Lundgren, Ymlr\u20147 lbi. 10\nozs. \"caught at Coffee Creek May\n21 at 6 p.m. with Gibbi Stewart\nAT HEU8TON'8\nFish weighed ln at J. Heuston's\nstation it Fraser's Landing foUows:\nGeorgt Lynch, Nelson\u201413 Ibs. 8\noz. caught in Smelter Bay May 23\nat 9 a.m. with Gibbs Stewart No. 4.\nBright\nreslon Had Fine.\nRecord in Meet\nOfflBrOtf, B. C. - Scoring 11\n, places in 22 events, and pick-\nIt up the occasional second and\ni&d prize, Creston athletes dom-\nlated Ute doings at Fernie at the\neekend at the annual field day of\nie high schools of Kootenay-\noundary. annexing a total of 87.5\nolnts. Of nine sUver trophies that\nere awarded six came to Creston\nid Kimberley took home three.\nCreston's outstanding winners\n\" Mary Imhoff ln Uie senior di-\nision, who wat tint'in both the\nroad and high Jump. In the juniors\nrtnk Rota won the 880-yard wn\n\" pole vault In thi latter event\nLbroke tht junior record, clear-\nifeet tft Indies.\n|ton winnings were;\ners \u2014 girls relay, boys pole\n'oyt shot put girlt 100 yards,\n'l jump, girls oroad jump,\nj \u2014 boys 880 yards, broad\n, pole vault boys relay, girls\n1942 meet will be held at\n-OSm\nhe   outstanding   triumph   wu\n\" ' celebrated at a Victory ai-\nat the High School audi-\nHum Monday morning, at which\nt Chattf'\nTry Today's\nWette\nBlue Blade\n\u25a0vt Our Expensei\njxjTtK-rl For Juit a few more\n\u25a0 daya you can try today's\nHut Gillette Blade free. Thii\nada has edges of a radically\nr kind. Your dealer has had\nfot months ... but if you\naven't tried it, don't miss this\nnee.  Ask  for the  special\npneknge with free blade\nattncheil. Satisfac-\ni guaranteed or\nyour money back.\nf #C IP Ml ft I \u25a0\u25a0\nto\"\nKtktfiWltt\n5'-25c\nWith 1 Free Blade\nIO For 50, Wilh 2 Fr,\nPrincipal S. J. Graham spoke in\nhigh praise of the outstanding work\nof Uie athletes and the handling of\nthe students by Ben Crawford.\nB.A., wbo had charge of the field\nevents, and Fred Martello, who\nhandled the track competition*\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\n(Auoclated Press Sporti Writer)\nNEW YORK, May 20 (API-Rumor Foundry: We suppose reports\nthat some ot the Cincinnati Reds\naren't speaking to each other are\njuit part of the gossip that always\ngoes along with a slump. . . . The\nWashington Boxing Commission\nsays it paid Arthur Donovan 8150 to\nreferee Louis-Baer. Ray C. Alvis,\none of the promoters, says Donovan\ngot a grand. Which is right, and k's\nAlvis, who made up the difference?\nCRASHING THE \".400\"\nTed Williams of the Red Sox\npounded that apple for a very neat\n.400 in his first 30 games .. . which\nled Mel Webb to sign as foUows in\nthe Boston Evening Globe:\nThia is the tale of Teddy the Great\nWho hits 'em early and hits 'em\nlate,\nWho's blazed away with hli truity\nbat\nTo the tune of a cool .400 flat.\nTRAMP, TRAMP, TRAMP\nHank Greenberg's outfit is marching 15 miles par day from Fort\nCustei, Mich, to Camp Forreit,\nTennessee. . , . Good crowds turn\nout at every stop. At one, signs were\nbeing carried around reading, \"Here\ncomes the army\u2014\u00abnd Greenberg.\"\n. , . Ben Chapman says the reason\nWashington aired him was his 812,-\n000 salary. Clark Griffith merely\nsays, \"We are still on the market\nfor a hard-hitting outfielder.\" , . .\nP.S.: Chapman closed at .255. . . .\nProf. Moe Berg, the linguilUc coach\nof the Red Sox, interviewed Maurice\nTillet (the Angel) and reports the\n'Angel speaks the best French he's\nheard since he was in Paris several\nyears ago Moreover, M. Tillet itruck\nBerg as a cultured and educated\ngentleman, even if he is uglier than\nTony Galento.\nThis advertisement it not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoird oi by the Government o(\nBrilish Columbia.\n-NILION PAILY NIWI  NILSON   B. C.-FRIDAY MORNINO. MAY SB. 1841\u2014-\nBOXING RESULTS\n(By Tha Auoolitid Pratt)\nNEW  HAVEN,  Conn. - Angelo\nRadano, 136, Norwilk, Coun., outpointed Bobby  (Poison) Ivy, 131,\nHartford, Conn, (8),\nSt. Paul's Hands\nLeague Leaden\na 12-3 Setback\nSt. Paul'l once again roi* into tht\nrole of giant-killers Thursday evening at the Junior High when thay\ntrimmed the leaders ot thi Nelson\nBoys' Church Softball Leagjii, thi\nProspectors, 12-3.\nBUI Brown fo tha mound md\nDenis Bill tormed the battery for\ntha winning team, Brown setting\nfour ot the Projectors down on\nstrikes, Len BusheU, shortstop, and\nBall each hammered out homi runi\ntor the winnen.\nErnie Colman and Chuck Drench\nshared thtt mound chores for the\nProspectors and shared seven strikeouts between them.'\nThe game was a real duel for four\ninnings, the Prospectors getting all\ntheir trans in tha fourth frame to\ngo in front 3-2.\nScore by lnningi:\nProspectors .........        000 300 0\u2014 8\nSt. Paul's  002 04) x\u201412\nLineups follow:\nProspectors \u2014 Bernard Jarbeau,\nFrank Kohar, Corky Ball, Erni\u00bb Col-\nmanl, Chuck Flrench, Henry Choauette 1, Bernard Kelley 1, Bob\nHunden and George DeGirolamo.\nSt Paul's\u2014Albert Brown 3, Len\nBusheU 1, William Brown 1, Denis\nBall 2, Rev. Foster HUllard, Fred\nBfown, Stan Edey 1, Al Frocklage\n2, and Martin McLennan 2.\nBombers to Play\nPucksters Today\nHigh School Blue Bombers and\nPucksters will meet ln a Nelson\nMen's Softball League game at\nRecreation Grounds this evening.\nBombers were beaten In their\nInitial League start againit C.Y.O.,\nbut the Puckttars carne through\nwith six runs in the last half ot the\nninth to nose out the Catholics in\ntheir first test ot the season. Savoy\nHotel, the League's other team,\nwon't get into action until Sunday\nagalnit C.Y.O.\nBoth teams wlU use tha ume\npitchers as in their first game, Ernie\nColman for the Bombers and Len\nBicknell for the Pucksters. Bob Collinson will citch lar Colmin, whUt\nJesse Setby, Manager ot the Pucksters, will be behind thi platt for\nthe hockey pliyers.\n(row Ball Will\nStart on Sunday\nNATAL, B.C.-The annual meeting of the Crow's Nest Pass Baseball League took place recently at\nBlairmore where the league reorganized tor the 1041 baseball season. Four .teams were idmitted to\nthe league, Blairmore, Coleman,\nNatal-Michel ind Kimberley, the\nlatter replacing the defunct Fernie\nteam.\nIt was decided that all Kimberley home games wUl be played as\ndouble-headers with each other\nCrow team to cut down on,expenses\nwhile Kimberley will play a game\nwith each team while on Uie road.\nJ. McDoughal and A. Tiberg ot\nBlairmore were reelected President\nand Secretary-Treasurer.\nThe Natal-Michel Buffaloes won\nthe Crow's Nest Pass League championship along with the Ringland\nCup last year whUe Blairmore won\nthe Goddard Cup.\nNatal-Michel wiU play its opening\ngame at the Natal ball park June 8\nwhen Kimberley makes its first\nswing into the Pass for a two-game\nseries. The League wUl commence\non June 1 when Coleman Pucksters\nJourney to Kimberley for two\ngarnet:\nFollowing is the schedule:\nJune 1\u2014Coleman at Kimberley,\ndouble-header.\nJune 8\u2014Kimberley at Blairmore;\nKimberley at Natal-Michel.\nJune 11\u2014Coleman at Blairmore.\nJune 15\u2014Blalrmore at Kimberley,\ndouble-header; Natal - Michel at\nColeman.\nJune 18 \u2014 Blalrmore at Natal-\nMicheL\nJune 22\u2014Kimberley it Colemin;\nKimberley it Natal-Michel.\nJune 25\u2014Natal-Michel at Blalrmore.\nJuly 8 - Natal-Michel at Blalrmore.\nJuly 0\u2014Coleman at Blalrmore.\nJuly 13\u2014Natal-Mlchel at Kimberley, double-header; Blairmore at\nColeman.\nJuly 10-Colemw at Natal-Michel.\nJuly 20\u2014Kimberley at Coleman;\nKimberley at Blalrmore.\nJuly 23\u2014 Natal-Mlchel at Coleman.\nJuly 27 \u2014 Colemin it Nitil-\nMichel.\nJuly 30\u2014Blairmort at Coleman.\nAug. 3 \u2014 Blalrmore at Natal-\nMichel.\nAnnual Track Meet\nHeld at Invermere\nINVERMERE, B. C. \u2014 The annual sports day for the diatrict\nschools was held in the Fairgrounds\non the afternoon of May 22, when\nschool children and high school\nstudents from Athalmer-fnvermere,\nWindermere, Wilmer, Edgewitw\nand Radium Hot Springs participated.\nNo individual prizes were iwirded, but ribbons were given to tha\nwinners of first, second and third\nplaces, and the point system wu\nused to determine the winners of\nthe Junior and Senior Girls and\nBoys cups.\nThe sports progrim was well organized and was run off wltb little\ndelay. By arranging thit High\nSchool studenU assist in running oft\nthe Junior events, tht sequence wu\nkept to ichedule tnd the result wat\na highly satisfactory mett.\nIt was unfortunate thtt tfter to\nmuch preparatory work on the part\nof the teachers tnd tuch in excellent turnout ot chUdrtn, that more\npirenti did not mikt the effort to\nattend. Only ope such School Sport\nDay is held each year.\nA complete list of winners in the\ndifferent eventi tnd the winners of\nthe cups for Inler-school compeUUon will be dven neit week.\n-P\u00bb8F NINI\nGolden Bears and Leafs\nRaise Curtain on Boxla\nTonight in Civic Arena\nScuby Arrives to Play\nGoal for Leafs on\nEve of Game\nTRAIL IS HEADED\nBY INDIAN STAR\nBoy lacrone In tht Kootenayi\nbowi in for 1941 In Ntlson tonight\nwhen the finely-conditioned Miple\nLeafs tingle with I formidable\nGolden Burt' iggngitlon from\nTrill. Game-time ll 1:18 It thi\nCivlo Areni.\nRight on tht tvt of tonlght't\nopening engagement, Bill Scuby,\ntht Letfi' long-twilted Import\nfrom Ntw Westminster Salmonbellies, trrlvtd, tnd thi Nelion\nminigement, gave \u2022 big ilgh of\nrelief ind complete contentment.\nJudged tht mut promising goil-\ntender on tht Cout, Scuby It ttlll\nIn hit teem, 8 ftet till, ind 186\npoundi.\nAs soon as Bill got into Nelson on\nthe evening train, he was hustled\ndown to the Arena for a workout so\nthat he might become, accustomed\nto his new surroundings. A few of\nthe other Leafs were out too, although it wasn't a regularly scheduled workout,\nWIDE-OPEN LACROSSE\nJack Bishop, Coach of the Leafs,\nhas had his team practising steadily\nfor a month now, and they are in\ngood condition. Their legs are in\ngreat shape, to serve them in the\nwide-open style they in to display\nthis season.\nBishop dou not plan to play this\nyear, but he wlU be aviiltble whenever the emergency arrives. Behind\nthe team he has chosen for tonight,\nht hu i number at fine substitutes,\nind they will see a lot of icUon this\nSummer so is to keep the regultrs\nhustling til the time.\nWith Scuby on the scene, the\nLeafs have three of the last year\nSalmonbalUes. Joe Gallicano played\nlut year with the Fishmen at centre,\nand had a great rookie year. He first\nplanned to play there again this\nseuon, but he is awaiting his call\nto the Air Force, and he choie to\ntpend hit lait civilian dayi ln Nelson. He expects to be around aU\nSUmmer. Bert Bryant, a really\ndynamic rearguard and driving\nforce, spent the season ot 1938 in\nNelson, but has since played for\nNew Westminster.\nAWAIT CALLS\nJohn (Pro) Dingwall is in the\nsame boat as Gallicano, awaiting\nhis caU to serve King and Country,\nbut he too wiU likely be here all\nseason. He will play on the same\nline on one of the wings with his\ncousin, Ian, a Leaf veteran, with\nGalicano at centre and Bill Town\nsend, another husky home-brew, at\nrover.\nThi othtr line will bt pivoted\nby young Jimmy Ecclei, who li\ntabbed ii \u2022 coming bill cirrler\n\u2022long tht pattern of tht Golden\nBean' Mircui Smith. It li Jlmmy'i\nflrtt yttr In Senior compiny, On\ntht wlngi he will hivt Art Hill,\nstarting hli lecond season, md\nGlen Price, hli flrtt yetr u I\nregulir. Hill wound up lut seuon\nlike t houie i-flre, tnd wai the\nLtaft' top performer In the lait\nstages of 1940. Price li proving \u2022\nBILL TOWNSEND\nOne of the Leafs' several married\nplayers! BUI hai developed into one\nof the League's top performers in\nhis several years with the Nelson\nclub. He starts the 1941 season as\nfirst-string rover.\ngreat substitute for Hirold Mtyo\nnow In the Army. Both tre built\nthe same, and Price ll ihowlng the\ntame aggressiveness and danger\nout ityle of pity,\nMilburn Feeney, a tough customer from Salmo, will start on the\nLeafs' defence with Bryant. Feeney\ncreated quite a reputation for his\nruggedness while playing the last\ncouple of seasons in Salmo Valley\nlacrosse. Bud Cooper and Everett\nKuhn, -two repeaters, are on the\nother defence line.\nTrail, with the exception of tljsjlr\nbig Indian, Paul Seymour from\nNorth Shore Indians at the Coast,\nwill present much the same club\nas last year. Coached by Hughie\nMiller again, they still have the\nKendall brothers, including Bob, the\nmost valuable player in the League\nin 1940, the Sammartinos, and the\nTuriks.\nSpokane Indians Get\na New Righthander\nSPOKANE, Wash., May 29\u2014Manager Ray Jacobs announced John\nLewis, nangy righthander with the\nYakima club in 1938 and 1939, would\njoin the Spokane team next Tuesday at salem. He won 12 and lost 7\ngames for Yakima In 1938.\nThe army took one of Spokane's\ncatchers when Jack Roche was order to report to King City, Calif., to\naccept an appointment in the Army\nAir Corps.\nHOW THEY 60 TO BATTLE TONIGHT\nTRAIL\nLouis Moro\nPaul Seymour\nJim Kendall\nRoland Sammartino\nBooney Sammartino\nMarcus Smith\nDes Hood\nAlternates:\nTrail\u2014-Chuck Casey and Bill Turik, defence; Bobby\nKendall, rover; Nick Turik, centre; Gene Pagnan and Ralph\nTemple, wings.\nNelson\u2014Bud Cooper and Everett Kuhn, defence; Regie\nMiller, rover; Jimmy Eccles, centre; Art Hill and Clen Price,\nwings.\nReferees\u2014Pete Bonneville, Nelson; Curly Wheatley,\nTrail. Timekeepers\u2014T. R. Wilson and D. C. Chamberlain,\nNelson. Scorer\u2014Slim Porter, Nelson.\nPOSITION\nNELSON\nCoal\nBill Scuby\nDefence\nBert'Bryant\nDefence\nMilburn Feeney\nRover\nBill Townsend\nCentre\nJoe Gallicano\nHome\nIan Dingwall\nHome\nJohn Dingwall\nFrench Aces for 500-MUe Speedway\nSpeciil permiulon hid to be obtained from the French Government\u2014or their German overlords\u2014for these two crack racing\ndriven, Rene Lebegue, left, and Jean Treavoux, right, to travel to\nAmerica to participate ln the annual Indianapolis 900-mile speedway\nclassic. They are pictured after landing from a trans-ocean clipper\nln New York. The race wUl be held today.\nWork Progresses\non Butler Park\nTRAIL, B. a, Hay 20-Work en\nButler Pirk hu progressed to tha\nfencing stage, tad thi tenet will bt\nerected u soon u the lumbar ir.\nrives. ' '   .    , .\nRingwood Hooks\nBeaver Swimming\nin the Columbia\nTRAIL, B. C, Mty 20 - Trail't\nsuper-fish itory, as related by J. G.\nRingwood, JU9 Rivenide Avenue,\nSecretary of the Tnil Rod and\nGun Club, took place it the foot of\nthe Columbia River Bridge sear\nElks Park, on May 17.\nMr. Ringwood, fishing with a\nWickham Fancy fly, snagged on to\na beaver which waa swimming\ndown river. The beaver tore away,\nleaving fur on the end of the hook,\nand started to climb up the bank.\nSeveral other witnesses, including\nMrs. J. A. Kerr, her daughter, Mrs.\nJ. Langllle, and K. Lund, itw tht\nbeiver when Mr. Ringwood celled\nout. Disturbed by Uie commotion,\nthe beaver ran back into the river\nand swam downstream.\n\"I know a lot of. people wont\nbeUeve me. but I have the piece\nof fur, and the witnesses to substantiate my itory,\" stated Mr,\nRingwood, who added that he hid\npliced the under-fui from the hook\nunder i miscrosoope, and the hair\nwm even finer than the feather\nhackle on the hook.\nOrioles Defeat\nNewark Again\n' NEWARK, N. J., May 29 (AP) -\nA double by Gene Corbett with\ntwo out in the ninth inning climaxed a four-run rally which gave Baltimore Orioles their fourth straight\nInternational league victory over\nNewark Bears today. The score was\n0-7.\nBaltimore    0U1\nNewark       7 12   1\nCollier, Midkiff, - (6), Springer\n(7), Weaver (7), Kerr (9) and Redmond; Washburn, Christopher (8),\nGettel (9) and Sears.\nSYRACUSE, May 29 (AP) -Behind a four-hit pitching of Roy Henshaw, Jersey City scored a 2-0 victory tonight over Syracuse, sweep\ning the three-game series and ex\ntending the chiefs' losing itreak to\nnine games.\nJeney City    2  1\nSyracuse        0   4\nHenshaw and Blaemire; Hinekle,\nNelson (9) and Hartje.\nBAIL STANDINGS\nAMERICAN\nW LPct.\nCleveland     29 15 .659\nChicago     \u201e  22 16 .579\nNew York 22 18 .550\nDetroit     21 20 .512\nBoston .\u201e  18 18 .500\nPhiladelphia   10 21 .475\nSt. Louis      13 24 .351\nWashington  14 26 .350\nNATIONAL\nSt. Louis - 30   9 .769\nBrooklyn  27 12 .692\nNew York  20 14 .588\nChicago  1  16 20 .444\nCincinnati   17 22 .426\nPittsburgh 13 20 .384\nBoston- _  12 22 .353\nPhiladelphia   10 28 .278\nBatting Leaders\n(By The Aitooltted Prett)\nBatting (three leaders ip each\nleague);\nG AB R H Pet.\nWilliams, Red Sox 33 114 28 48 .428\nTravis, Senators .. 37 150 30 58\" .387\nReiser, Dodgers .. 26 93 20 36 .387\nDickey, Yankees .. 29 109 13 41 .376\nSlaughter, Cards.. 39 157 31 37 .363\nHack, Cubs   36 130 35 45 .354\nHome runs: American League-\nYork, Tigers, 10; National Leagui\nOtt, Giants, 11.\nRuns batted in: American League\n\u2014York, Tigers, Gordon, Yankees,\nKeller, Yankees, 37; National League\n\u2014Nicholson, Cubs, 38.\"\nBaseball Scores\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nMinneapolis     7 13   0\nSt Paul     2 11   0\nTauscher and Giuliani; Hlldebrand, Clemensen (7), Stratum (9)\nand Beuer.\nIndianapolis     7 14   1\nLouisville     8 11   6\nStarr, Gill (5) and Pasek; Sayles\nRich (7) ScheeU (8) and Glenn.\nMUwaukee     1   7   0\nKansas City     8 11   2\nKoslo, Dickinson (8) and Hayworth, Garbark (8); Wemloft and\nKerase.\nToledo      4   9   0\nColumbus      6   7   1\nWirkkala, Whitehead (7) and\nSpindel; Groxzickl, Hader (8) and\nPoland.\nMany Boats Out From\nKaslo for \"Big Ones\"\nKASLO, B. C. \u2014 The weekend\nsaw practically every available boat\nin Kaslo plying the waters of Kootenay Lake in the vicinity of the\nCity, and many fine catches were\nmade with fish ranging from five to\n15 pounds in weight.\nDr. W. Leonard of Trail landed a\ntt pound salmon. C. Butcher, of\nRossland, Charles Barrat of Nelson, Ted Rice and W. McLeary of\nTrail and Frank Hanson ot Kaslo\nwere among the many to land fish\nof aU sizes.\nMajor Cecil Key Hutchinson, 64.\ntwice winner of St. George's challenge cup, one of the most valued\ngolf trophies in existance, is dead.\nFormer Scottish Internstlonal goiter, Major Hutchison reached the\nfinal of the British \\mateur Championship, losing on the 36th green\nto Robert Maxwell.\nBRAKE RELINING\nWe have tht proper machinery\nfor regrlndlng brake thoet.\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 Biker tt Nelion, B.(C.\nFeller Blanks Detroit M lor MnU\nWin ol Season; Sox Blank Browns;\nCardinals Win Tenth Straight Game\nRapid Robert Feller improved hii\nreputation yesterday u Cleveland's\nslump breaker by blanking Detroit\nTigen 9-0 for his 10th victory ot\nthe teuon and extending to X Ms\nstring ot scoreless innings.\nIn recording his fifth consecutive .victory tnd third itralght\nshutout, Feller permitted only two\nTigen to advance beyond tint\nbue while scattering ieven\ntingles, The Indians Muted Tommy Bridges and Floyd Giebell,\ntheir 1940 nemeils, tor 13 Mts, including Ken Keltner's fourth-inning homer, Ml sixth ot the year.\nOperating without Jimmy Foxx\ntheir slumping slugger,who wu\nbtnehed it his own regueit, the Red\nSox squared a four-game terlej with\nPhiladelphia Athletics by pounding\nJack Knott for a 6-4 victory.\nRain washed out a five-run rally\nby New York Yankees In the sixth\ninning and ended their American\nLeague game with Wuhington Senaton ln a 2-2 tie when the score reverted to the fifth inning.\nA fourth-inning lingle by Chet\nLaabs spoiled a no-Mt game for BUI\nDietrich u Chicago White Sox shut\nout St Louis Browns 4-0. Only two\nother Brownie batsmen got on base,\nGeorge McQuinn, who wilked in\nthe first inning, and Johnny Luca-\ndello, who drew a pass in the fourth,\nEqualling a previoui winning\nstreak, the NaUonal League-leading\nCardinals captured their 10th\nstraight game, and their fifth ip a\nrow by one run, staving off Cincinnati Reds 10-9.\nThe Reds, last year'i world champions and this season's big disappointment, threw practically everything they had Into the game. Manager Bill McKechnie shook up his\nbatting order and used five pitchers.\nIt took the Cardi' fourth double\npliy of thi gime to muff t ninth\n(By Tht Ctntdian Preu)\nInning rally after the Rede had\n\u2022oorid thru runt. With runnen\nen flrtt and ueond, big Ernie\nLombirdl lined Into the twin killing.\nThe combination of youth and age\nIn the Qlantt' bttttry\u2014JJ-yeir-old\nBob Cirpenter pitching ind 40-yiar-\nold GiNy Hartnett catching -\nbrought New Yotk a 9-2 triumph\nover Boiton Bravu.\nCarpenter gave tour hits and both\nBoston runi In the first inning and\nthen allowed only one single during\nthe next eight Innin. Hartnett hit\na home rum and three singlu in\nfive timu at bat and drove in tour\nof the Giants' runi,\nAMIRICAN\nCleveland  '.    0 1J  1\nDetroit          \u00ab  M\nFeller ind Hemsley; Brldgei,\nGlebell (6) md Tebbetti.\nPhllidelpMi   4  \u00ab  1\nBoston        \u00abW   0\nKnott, Harrii (8) and Hayei; Dob-\nton, Rybi (9) md Pytlik.\nNew York    1  J  \\\nWuhlngton   \u00bb \u00ab ?\n(Gime called end ot 9th iccount\nof riin)\nRusto ind Dlckiy, Rour (5); Sundra and Evans.\nSt. Louis   0  1  -\nChicago    4  \u00ab  2\nCaster, Allen (8), TVotter (8) and\nFerrell; Dietrich and Tresh.\nNATIONAL\nCincinnati    8 1J J\nSt LouU  10 14  1\nThompson, Turner (3), vander\nMeer (4), Beggs (4), Hutchings (7)\nand Lombardi; M. Cooper, Krlst\n(4), Shoun (9), Hutchlnion (9) and\nMancuso.\nBoiton   --    \\ \u2022  |\nNew York     9 13  0\nPoitdel, Sulllvtn (J), Umtnni\n(!) and Berru, Mui (7); Carpenter\nand Hartnett.\nBall League Is Delayed Unlil Butler\nPark Ready; No Game Sun. In Nelson\nTRAIl,, B. Os, Miy 2\u00bb-\"ButleiT\nPirk won't bl rudy for buebill\nuntil the md of June,\" Wlih Mil-\nburn, Coich of the Trill Cirdintli, uld today. Tht grandstand\nhu been torn down, tnd tht ntw\none hu yet to bt erected, it wtll\nai a ftnee around tha ptrk. It\nhid been expected thit thli work\nwould be completed by tht beginning of June, but It hu been\ndelayed temporarily.\nMilburn Hid thit ilthough tht\nCard! had been practising regu\nlirly. there wti no chmce -\nfielding \u2022 team for t gtme ...\nNelion thli Sundiy. However, he\nttld negotiations wert under wty\nto play In Nelion June 8.\n'There will be no game here\nSunday,\" T. Con Cummins, President of the Nelson Baseball Club,\nstated Thuriday night. \"I'm sorry\nto keep Nelson ball fans waiting\nfor a game, but I absolutely haven't\nbeen able to get either Trail or\nRossland over here.\"\nHe had hoped to open Uie West\nKootenay League with a game in\nNelson Sundsy against Trail. However, when the Cards were unable\nto come, he tried to get Rossland,\nwithout success.\n\"I phoned Joe Morasco tonight, Cummins said. \"But he\nclaimed that the Miners needed\nRed Tulloch and George Petrunia\nfor their battery, but that they\nstill wouldn't come to terms.\nWithout them, Rossland didn't\nwant to come to Nelson Sunday\n\"Another thing, Morasco said that\nTrail was Interested only In independent baseball, games now and\nthen. We wouldn't be very much\ninterested in this sort at a setup,\nnor would Rossland, so the best\nthing would be to disband.\nTRAIL HA8 PRACTICI\n\"However, I also got hold ot Wish\nMilburn at TnU, and he uid that\nthey had a practice tonight, with\nabout Va or 19 players turning out,\nalthough Les Chruteneen wu the\nonly pitcher on hand. They expect\nBogstie out in a day or eo, so they'll\nbe aU set,\n\"I told Wish that until their ball\npark was ready, we'd bring them\nover here u often u they'd want\nto come, and split the gate so is\nto cover their traveUlng expenses.\nHe seemed to think that would be\nall right, and said they'd like to\ncome nere Sunday after next. Most\nof the playen are playing softball\nthis Sunday, to they can't come\nhere then.\"\n'Cummins stated that the Club\nwould attempt to make % trade of\nSundays with the Nelson cricketers, since the Recreation Grounds\nthat day had been allotted to the\nCricket Club.\nIn the meantime, \"Lefty\" Mydansky called practices of the Nelson\nteam for Sunday afternoon at 1\no'clock, and Tuesday and Thursday\nat 5:30.\nTottenham Hotspurs beat West\nHam 5-4 ln a football Cup Final,\nbut the game wu played on the\nIsle of Wright instead of at Wembley and playen were prisonen\nfrom Parkhurst Prison. Wearing\nshirts given to the priion sports\nclub by Uie Tottenham and West\nHam, the teams competed for i\ncup given by a former prison chaplain.\nLindsay Offered Bout\nNEW YORK, May \u00bb (CPJHPro-\nmoter Jack AUen of the Toronto\nBoxing Club wid todty he hid offered Ken Lindsay, Vancouver\nbantamweight, a 10-round bout with\neither Johnny Gaudei of Winnipeg\nor Nels Broadhead of Hamilton.\nBroadhead recently scored a technical knockout over Eddie Petrln of\nMontreal, Canadian bantamweight\nchampion, in a non-tlUe bout\nAllen said if Lindiiy accepted the\notfer, the bout would be fought the\nlut week in June.\nNEWCASTLE-ON-TYNI, May 2\u00bb\n(CP Cable)\u2014Sergetnt Jtck London\nof the Roytl Air Force icored a\nthree-round knockout over Larry\nGains, former Empire heavyweight ,\nboxing champion, in a icheduled 10-\nround bout here lut night.\nThe aging Negro, formerly of Toronto, resident of England for many-\nyears and sergeant in the British\nArmy, wat on the defensive from\nthe opening beU.\n^^*K>\n# Don't let old-fashioner! under-\ngarments wear vou out any more.\nPut on JOCKEY md keep your\n\u2022fter-lreikfut feeling of pep ini\nfreedom ill dty. Euy to liuniler\n\u2014need no Ironing. All iiset.\nThree lengthi. Populir price. Get\nJOCKEY from your detler todtj.\neNO-BUTTONJ\ne NO-GAP\n\u2022 NO-MNO\n\u2022 NOMJIK\n\u2022 OENUI MAU\nSUPPOM\nWE CARRY A FULL LINE\nOF MOODIES\nUNDERWEAR\nEMORY'S\n.    LIMITED\n^^t_____^___\ntaunt, . ...\n' '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'hrrMtiM^liiMlft.)' '\nm\n -NELSON DAILV NEWS  NILSON   B. C.-F1IDAY MORNINO   MAV 30   1941-\nSoft Figure'\nFlattering Dress\nTJiMkut TMmtlfL\nPATTERN S677\nLovely lines for a lovely lady\u2014\nin an entrancing new Marian Martin dress made from Pattern 9677.\nA dress to provoke those welcpme\n\u2022how-slim-you've-grown' remarks\nfrom everyone. There's clever designing through the bodice, where\ntwo panels start just below the\ncool, low sweetheart neck and\nflow smoothly down into a wide,\ncurving waistband. Each side-\nfront bodice section is soft and\nfull-cut, with darts at the shoulders and gathering above the\nwaist The skirt has a single smart\npanel down the front; the short\nsleeves are straight or tucked.\nLace all around the neck and\naleeves adds daintiness. Another\nsuggestion is to make the panels\nand waistband in attractive contrast. Do start this frock soon!\nPattern 9677 may be ordered\nonly in women's sizes 34, 36, 38,\n42, 44, 46 and 48. Size 36 requires\nVA yards 39 inch fabric and 2I,\u00ab\nyards lace edging.\nSend twenty cents for this Mar-\nIan Martin pattern. Be sure to\nwrite plainly your size, name, address and style number.\nSend your order to The Dally\nNews, Pattern Department, Nelson. Pattern will be sent to your\nhome within 10 days.\n\u2666\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n1 reckon Nature times it. By\nthe time a man succeeds well\nenough to get proud, he loses\nenough hair to keep him\nhumble.''\nPlant Winter\nRadishes in July\nBy DEAN  HALLIDAY\nRadishes to be good, need to be\ngrown rapidly and used as soon as\nthey are large enough. This is best\naccomplished by frequent plantings\nof small amounts.\nRadishes do not require garden\n\u2022pace of their own since the small\nearly red variety can  be planted\nLACGC WIWWBR\nRADISH\nSummer and winter rarliihu\nmixed with seeds of carrots, parg-\nnips.or salsify. The radishes will\ngerminate quickly, marking the row\nlong before the other vegetables\nsprout. When the radishes are ready\nthey can be pulled up, allowing\nample space for tlu 'development\n\u00bb\n\u2022Embroider Bright Laura Wheeler\nMonograms on Your Linens\n<OHl HH NHDUCRAFT SUMO, \u00bb*.\nINITIALS PATTERN   2866\nSo simple to do\u2014so colorful when done\u2014you'll find these initials\nJust the thing for blouse, handkerchief, or household linens. Use\nvaried colors or Just shades of one color throughout. Pattern 2866 contains a transfer pattern of two 2Vi inch and two lit inch alphabets;\nillustrations of stitches; color schemes.\nSend twenty cents for this pattern to The Nelson Dally News,\nNeedlecraft Dept., Nelson. Write plainly pattern number, your name\nand address. Pattern will be mailed to your home within 10 days.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n13. A tatter SI. Calcium\n14. Abound (sym.)\nM.Swttt M.Inabun-\nsufastanoe dance\n19. Rough lava 38. Land\n22. Ticldod measures\n23. Jogs 38. PenalUes\n24,AState 40.dtnt)t\n26. Not sharp\n27. Planted\n28. Averse est\nthree feet\n29. Explode\nM. Obstructs\n41. To fust\npartly\n43. Tuna\n45. Chargt tor\nservtoet\n1 BBSli WB_-\\ '\nmm\u00ae\nr. 111\u00bb: =1\nsis ms\nK V d|-;\nsararcrs\ny  n!3iiH\nWiS   s^Iii\nas s__\nian g\nEBB  BS\nWr_E\nsssptEB\nmm\nWB_\nasisiicon simp\ngi  HE\nf-ti   ii.\u00ab'.>.\nj Elra Jj\naaai bb\n-&_*& '\nsimsii&ii\naoBH\nsiisa\nglgpg\n\u2022.nu-\nurawii   His'i'ia  I\nA0BO88\n1. SUtcbes\n5. Slide\n9. Egress\n10. Needy\n11. Quote\n12. Poker\n18. Kind of\napple\nIS. COOWUMt\nn. sun\n18.Vegetahle\n20. Europium\n(sym.)\n21 Earth\ngoddess\n22. Securing\nwtth cleats\n28. Suppose\n26. Feminine\nname\nXI. NaUl\n29. Endow\n10. Voided\nescutcheon\n21. Greek letter\n82. Untamed cata\n84. Gallium (sym.)\n38. Typo measure\n37.Ntgerlaaa\n88. Distant\n29. Unable to\nhear\n42. Molluaka\n44. Sod\n46. Italian river\n47. A Great Ukt\n48. Row\n49. Valut\n80. Comfort\nDOWN\nl.Safa\n2. To Bve\nl.Humortafs\n4. Spires\n5. Retort\n6. Solitary\n,7. Particle\n8.Subtcrfug\u00ab\nCBTFTOqOOnt--A trnm-tptm Sootottea\nAEPSP   OM  JPSOA   KOAITYA   PJORPRBP,\nMVA   AEPSP   OK   RT   PJORPRBP   KGAETVA\nNTJP   JPSOA-TQ   STBEPCTVBQTYW.\nYetterday'* Cryptoqnotc: MEMORY STRENGTHENS AS TOU\nLAY BURDENS UPON IT, AND BECOMES TRUSTWORTHY AS\nYOU TRUST rr-sDE QUINCY.\nHOW TO WORK CRYPTOQUOTES\nCryptoquotes are quotations of famous persons written ln olpher.\nA substitute character has replaced the original letter. For instance,\nan \"R\" may substitute for the original \"E\" throughout the entire\ncryptoquote, or a \"BB\" may replace an \"LL\". Find the key and follow\nthrough to the solution.\n5--30\nCONTRACT . . .\nMm BE TOO DMUU'l*\nIF SOMEBODY asks you what\nyoa would to In a particular situation, it may pay yon to Indicate\na bit ot doubt, There are some bidding sequences to complex that\nthe greatest players will admit\nthey are not quite sure what they\nwould clo. Either decision may\nprove profitable' or costly, and\nonly thom claiming clairvoyant\npowen or tome mpeeme kind ot\nInteffigenoc may pose ae knowing\npotUwtys-)ast  what  should  be\ntAKR\n8\nV J\u00ab55\n\u2666 \u00bb\n\u2666 Q105 2\n4Q987642\n4AMTSI\n. Moot\n\u00bbAQ4\n\u2666 K J34\n+ A K8\u00ab\n2\n\u2022\u00bb1098TJ\n\u2666 Q\u00abr\n+ J97 4\nIA\nPans\nPass\nPane\n-*\u25a0\nVett\ntai        Pan\n1* \u00bb\u2666\nPin        1#\nDM Paa\nat\nWuulUut you oonatofir It pretty\n.tart lor North lo keep from injecting that diamond orercaH,\nafter he had pftswed once? And\nthen, after he wea doubled, could\nyoa Warn* hhn fpr then bidding\nhis aevov-cftfd spade unit? Even\n\u25a0after Weat had bid K? Certainly\nnot, tf yoa knew Weat aa a player\nwho txxtakxnMf \u00abUcks in a mck\nAnd then, after ttat had bean\nwOBsMtdt toct what woaM yoa do\ntn Buattfa poattron ? WoaW yoa let\njpnrpaKmr pstvyttln the salt hi\nBy Shepard Barclay\nwtdch yoe held a singleton jack,\ninstead ot the one in which you\nbad three cards headed by the\nqueen? Would you have any way\nof knowing he would be eet only\ntwo tricks at the 2-Spadea and\nftur at the 3-Diamonds? You\nsurely would not\nIf you feel like catling any of\nthese players palookas, just note .\nthat West was Theodore A. Light-\nner, North Myron Fuchs, East Oswald Jacoby and South Robert A.\nMcPhenjan, and that they were\nbattling their hardest In the final\nof the Vanderbilt cop.\nAt tbe other table of the match.\nWett opened the deal with 1-\nSpade, so North, Howard Schen-\nken, did not gtt a chance to make\naa overran at only two after having onct passed. Hence he never\ngot in the bidding. East and\nWeet therefore played at 3-No\nTrumps, making five, for 460\npointa, whereas Schenken's teammates scored 1,100 points where\nthe bidding waa aa ahown above.\n4>Q JT\u00ab\u00bb\n4V10 8 4 2 2\n+ A\n4>M42\nt\u00bbJ7B\n\u2666 J !> 5\n\u00ab9842\nN.\n4.K8J\n\u00bbA8J\n\u2666 K7 6\n+ KJ102\n\u2666 A\u00bb\nfK 10 8 88\n\u2666 AQ\n\u2666 Q8T8\nfDeater; East Both afcka vet-'\nnerable.)\nIf East opens thli deal with\n1-Club, South ultimately geta into\n2-No Trumps and West leads the\nchib 8, why should Sooth figure\nout the logical line of: ptay which\nwill make fail contract Diao an\nlueutlkA7\nof tht other vegetables.\nAbout June, sow the long, white\nvarieties of radishes as fillers in\nthe space where the earliest peas\nor lettuce have matured. White Icicle and Long White Vienna varieties stand She hot, weather better\nthan most other radishes.\nIn July plant the Winter radishes,\nAs shown in the Garden-Graph they\ngrow to a large size. They should\nbe dug up before frost and stored\nlike turnips, '\nThe winter radishes are not as\nwell known as they deserve to bt.\nThey can be eaten raw, but are\nmore appetizing when cooked in\nthe same manner as turnips.\nLONDON (CP). - For skill, en-\nterpise and resource \"in successful\nentcrpises apainst enemy submarines' several officers and men of\nthe destroyers, Vanoc. Walker and\nCamellia have received war decorations.\nCOMIC   AND   ADVENTURE   STRIPS...\nJANE ARDEN\nBy Monte Barrett and Russell Roil\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManui\n, READ TW|S-R\u00bb.DCV-*IVE \"PHONEP\nTHEOq^TbR-HEU. BE RIGHT\nOVER-HE SAJD NOT TO WORRV-\n*XJR HfeARING HAS U=FTmSj-\nBKAUSE VOUR VOICE IS 60NE-\nHPU-RX THAT IKI NO TIME\u2014 *\nHENRY\nBy Carl Andersoi\nDONALD DUCK\nBy Walt Disna\nKING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED\nBy Zane Gre\nBLONDIE\nBv Chic Youn\n\u2014 : '.   \u25a0\nt\n\u25a0i^__^_^___^ t tm ij.^\ni^iuMm\n \u2014m\nw-mr_\u2014-\u2014\t\n|H|^^mg|\n-\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS   NELSON.  B'. C.-FRIDAY  MORNINO   MAY SO. 1941\t\nP\u00bb0&   ELEVEN\nCLASSIFIED   ADVERTISING\nWHERE BUYER AND SELLER MEET\nMaim Oatlji Nrma\nTelephone 144\nTrail: K. Lowdon 716-V\nClassified Advertising Rates\nUc per line per insertion.\n44c per line per week (8 consecutive Insertions for cost of 4).\n|1.43 per Unea month (26 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines per insertion).\nBox numbers lie extra This\ncovers any  number  of  times.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nISc per line, first insertion and\n14c each subsequent Insertion\nALL   ABOVE    RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\n8PECIAL LOW RATES\nNon commercial Situations\nWanted for 25c for any required\nnumber of  lines for  six  days\npayable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\n8Ingle copy   $  .05\nBy carrier, per week       2.\nBy carrier, per year    13.00\nBy Mail:\nOne month      -   $ .75\nThree months      2.00\nSix monthi        4.00\nOne year        8.00\nAbove rates apply in Canada,\n, United States and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nBaewhere and in Canada where\nextra postage is required one\nmonth $1.50, three monthi $4.00,\nalx months $8.00, one year $15.00.\nBIRTHS\nSTURGESS-To Mr. and Mrs. T.\nL Sturgess, Bralorne, B. C, a daugh-\n|r, May 28. Mrs. Sturgess was for-\nlerly Maxine Chapman of South\nbean.\nteOMPSON-To   Mr.   and  Mrs.\npiarles  Stewart Thompson, Trail.\nTratl-Tadanac Hospital May 18.\ndaughter, Joyce Lorraine.\n\u2022To Mr. and Mrs. James\nTrail, at Trail-Tadanac Hos-\n14, a daughter,\t\nii\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Ernest\nTrail, at Trail-Tadanac Hospi-\nly 19, a daughter.\t\nNSON-To Mr. and Mrs\ni -Johnson, Trail, at Trail-Tad-\n| Hospital, May 20, a son.\n[LIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nw        SUPPLIES, ETC.\n-To Mr, and Mrs. Morton\npaps, Trail, at Trail-Tadanac Hos-\n|tal May 20, a son\nBIUDBURY-To Mr. and Mrs.\nlomas Bradbury, Trail, at Trail-\nidanac Hospital May 22, a son.\nj6NES-To Mr. and Mrs. W.\nnes, at Mater Mlsericordiae Hos-\ntal. Mav 23. a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nI Applications will not be conildered from persons engaged in\nthe production of war supplies\n{'ANTED-RELIABLE MIDDLE-\n\u2022|ed woman or girl for housework. 910 Edgewood Aye.\t\n[ANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED GIRL\ntor general housework. 312 Silica\nStreet.\nXfateb a* 6nce, man for\ndairy. Must be good milker. Apply\nDuncan Dairy, Trail, B. C.\nANTED:  SOMEONE TO PLOW\nDisc, or harrow two lots. 1007 4th.\nSL\nANTED  -  MAN   FOR   FARM\n't. $30 mo. with board Se room\n\"63 Daily News.\t\nMAKERS. EXPERIENCED\nonly need apply. Cady Lum-\nrsnd Pole Co. 560 Baker St.\nI\nIanted IMMEDIATELY - BOY\n\u25a0for poultry farm. $15 and board\nlApply A. Lamond, Fruitvale.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for noncommercial advertisements un-\nder this classification to assist\npewpTe seeking employment\nOnly 29c (or one week 16 days)\ngivers any number of required\nnes Payable in advance Add\n10c If box number desired\nRespectable woman desir-\nTas full charge. Used to farm work\naaring for children, cooking for\njoen. State wages and full partic-\nlulars to Miss L. Eppard, Kimber-\n(X*y, B. C\n\u25a0SPECTABLE WOMAN WISHES\n\u25a0work. Will care for elderly lady\nlor gentlemen Good housekeeper\n\u2122\u2014 cook. Box 469 Daily News\nPERIENCED GlRL WANTS\njousework immediately. Box 502\nPally News\nfe\u00abAN WANTS WORK BY THE\niour. Mrs  E, Clark, Phone 94.\nlOPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\n|R SALE: 20-ACRE LAND LAR\nfBst part wood, other part cleared\nnd partly cleared. Lge 3-room\nie at 49 Creek' $1100 or $8011\nllh   Apply 1002 Hoover St\n8D FARM LANDS FOR SALE\neasy  terms in  Alberta and\nkatchewan. Write for full in-\nnatlon to 908 Dept of Natural\n(KSources C  P R. Calgary, Alta\nPR RENT OR SALE-BUNGA-\npw, 3 bedrooms, furnace, stone\nttndation, garage. Five lots, fruit\n*\u00bb Ph 9 or call 532 Baker St.\n.__ HOUSE FOR SALE.\nose in. Low price. Apply Noble\nSotel\nCELLENT BUY ON STANLEY\nStreet. $1750 2 bedrooms Corner\nbropertv C W   Appleyard\nBR SALE - HOUSE 4 ROOMS\nTerms Applv Rtierkrrt's Anlflry\nMill Si  n.nv i2R  Nelmn  H C\nbR SALE~MOa COTTAGE~OjJ\nKootenay Lake, one m'le from\nKelson. W. K. Clark, R.R. 1.\nLOANS, INSURANCE. ETC.\n1 CAN PLACE FUNDS IN GOOD\nKirst mortgages with best of security Interest 6 per cent and 7 per\nlent. Payable yearly, half yearly\nlor monthly   See us.\nROBERTSON   REALTY\n[JNDS  AVAILABLE ON  YORK\n\u25a0hlre plan   1st  mortgages Nelson\nproperty   monthly   reductions   C\nAppleyard\n'BOATS AND ENGINES\nI 1ST  ARRIVED   SHIPMENT  OF\nDiesel Engines   Central Truck &\njuipment. 702 Front St., Nelson,\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n\"OOVERNMENT  LIQUOR  ACT\"\n(Section  28)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION  FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER\nOF BEER LICENCE\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN\nthat on the 23rd day ot June next.\nthe Undersigned intends to apply\nto the Liquor Control Board for eon-\nsent to transfer of Beer Licence No\n5335. issued in respect of premises\nbeing part of a building known as\nCosmopolitan Hotel, situate at Ymir\nBr'tish Columbia, upon tbe lanas\nknown and described as Lot two (2)\nBlock twenty-six (26), Map 640. Nelson Land Registration District, in\nthe Province of British Columbia\nfrom Carl Evald Lykkegaard to\nByron Clarence Mclsaac, of Ymir.\nBritish Columbia, the Transferee.\nDATED at Ymir, British Columbia, this 23rd day of May, A.D. 1941.\nB. C. McISAAC,\nApplicant and Transferee.\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 160)\nIN THE MATTER OF Blocks 2, S, 4\n5, 6 and 7 of Lot 2355. Kootenay\nDistrict, Plan 759, save and except\nthose parts of Blocks 4, 5 and 6\nsubdivided by Plan 964.\nProof having been filed ln my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 4936-A to the above mentioned lands in the name of M chael\nCharles Monaghan and bearing date\nthe 16th of October, 1905,1 HEREBY\nGIVE NOTICE of my intention at\nthe expiration of one calendar month\nfrom the first publication hereof to\nissue Provisional Certificate of Title\nin lieu of iuch lost Certificate Any\nperson having any information with\nreference to such lost Certificate of\nTitle la requested to communicate\nwith the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B. C, this\n1st day of May. 1941.\nA. W. IDIENS,\nRegistrar.\nWILL MAKE  1911  YOUR\n\u2022'BANNER YEAR\"\nTHOUSANDS of poultry keepers\nin Western Canada will vouch for\nthe vigor and productivity ot these\nchicks Whether you raise 25 or 5000\nchicks, you must get RESULTS\nThis year decide to get chicki from\ntamous British Columbia floclta Expert breeding and management is\nyour guarantee of a healthy flock\nUnsexed Pullets\n$ 9.00   $19.00\n11.00     23.00\nPer 100 chicks:\nR St S Leghorns\nR St S Super Leg'ns.\nRocks.  Reds and\nN. Hamps 10.00    *0.0O\nSup. Reds. N. Hampi    12.00    22.00\nLight Sussex 12.00     22.00\nLower prices on 900 and over.\nFree  books: \"Banner  Year*  Book\nand \"Raising Chicks for Profit\"\nRemember\u2014It's results that count\nRuropft$\u00abr><UH\nBOX N. LANGLEY PRAIRIE. B.C\nRUSH DELIVERY - HAMBLEY\nElectric Chicks Thousands hatching each week for prompt delivery\nmost breeds. Write, wire, phone\nor call High quality Govt Approved Chicks at competitive\nprices J. J Hambley Hatcheries.\n607. 1st St  E.. Calgary. Alta.\nKttODU ISLAND RED CHICKS.\nFinest quality stock. 25\u2014$2; 50\u2014\n$4; 100\u2014$8., also started chicks\nmonth old and up. George Game,\nTriangle Poultry Farm, Armstrong, B;- C,\nR.O.P. SiRED B. X PULLETS,\nHampshires\u20148 wks., 79c; 6 wks\n70c. R. I. Reds six wm\u201e 70c. Leghorns 6 wks., June 10th,\u201409c. T\nNeale. R. R.l, Nelson.\nBABY CHICKS, RHODE ISLAND\nReds and New Hampshires Good\nutility stock. Approved and bloodtested. $8 per 100. John Goodman\n1655 Giiley Ave. New Westminstei\nWAN 1 ED-GOOD SOUND GEN-\ntle horse for ranch. 1500 pounds\nor over. C. A. Amundson, Mirror\nLake. B. C.\t\nfor sale: g'6o6 'YOutaG WR-\nsey cnw. Phone 667L3.\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nA free Room For Rent' card\nwill be provided al The Daily\nNews office to persons advertising Rooms for Rent in this\ncolumn\nCOMFORTABLE STEAM HEATED\nhouse keeping rooms In Annable\nBlock for rent R W Dawson.\nAgent  557 Ward Street.\nWArtXSD: SMALL HOUSt FRUIT'\npreferred, near city. Good tenant,\nsm'l rent. Box 551, Daily Nana.\nFOR RENT: CLEAN COMFORT-\nable room in private home, Cloae\nin. $10 mo. Phone 908R.\nLAHGE APARTMENT, 3 BEl)\nrooms electric range and refrigerator Johnstone Block\nFOR RENT - 3 ROOM HOUSE\nwith garden. Apply D. Maglio\nPhone 808L. _j\t\nFOR  RENT:   APT.   ON  GROUND\nfloor. Private hath. Petty Apts.\nFOR \"RENT-FURN,  ISKP.   RM\npriv  home 1)04 Stanley. Ph  158L.\n3 ROOM FURN SUITE FOR RENT\nClose in $18 Appleyard\nSTUCCO HOUSE FOR RENT FUR-\nnace  close in  406 Sllira Street.\nA\" HOME FOR THOSE ~SWW\nfrom home Sirathcona Hotel Apts\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modem\nfrigidaire equipped suites\t\nFOR RENT. 5 ROOM HOUSE\nt-\\o*e- in. Phone 231R1.\nTO RENT-2-ROOMED FURNISH-\nf*\\ suite  Stirling Hotel\nSee Kerr Apartments First\nROOM AND BOARD\nFOR RENT: THRF* ROOMS. BED\nand breakfast. Box 541 Daily\nNews.\nAUTOMOTIVE,,..\nMOTORCTSMl BICYCLES\nof the\nUSED CARS    ,'.\nSee these to appreciate there are\nnone better.\n1939 Dodge Luxury Liner. 4 door\ntouring sedan. Low mileage.\nOne owner. Heater and other\naccessories. &_ _ ftff\nPrice.  2b 1 ltft)\n1940 Plymouth 2 door touring sedan.   One   owner.   Excellent\ncondition.\nPrice\n$1125\n1939 DeSoto Custom 4 door touring sedan. Low mileage One\nowner. New tires. (PI Qr7P\nRadio, heater, etc. tB J u I D\nSPECIAL\nWeekend  Buy.\n1938 Ford Fordor Sedan\nLovely C7QK\ncondition.   tB i iJO\nSOWERBY.\nCUTHBERT\nLIMITED\nOpp. Post Office and Hume Hotel.\nAEROMAT1C METER FOR AUTO-\nmible, truck, tractor, bus and marine engines. More Power! More\nSpeed; 25 per cent More Mileage'\nSend for information. Agents. Exclusive territory open. Write Box\n163, Vancouver. Canada.\n'37 PONTIAC SEDAN: HEATER.\nMechanically A-l. Finished in\npleasing Mentone Brown. In perfect condition. A guaranteed car\nat only $890. Nelson Transfer Co.,\nLtd.\nTKADE rOR CAR, ONE INTER-\nnational ton and a half truck, good\nrubber, good condition. Grain box\nApply C. McMahon or Burma\nCafe. Creston, B. C\nFOR SALE V-8 PANEL DELIVERY\nGood running condition, heavy\nduty tires, heater, good buy at\n$300. Ph. 247L\n1935 FORD SEDAN IN GOOD\nshape. $465. Interior Motor Finance Corporation, 554 Ward St.\n'28 AND '29 CHEVROLET PARTS\nCity Auto Wreckers, Baker St.\nNelson, B  C. \t\n1936 V-8 FORD ENGINE. NELSON\nAute Wrecking. Phone 946.\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP Al\nAimer Hotel Qpp C. P. R Depot\nSALVATION ARMY. IF Y O U\nhave 2nd hand clothes, footwear\nfurniture to spare please Ph 618L\nFOR A BETTER DEAL IN USED\ngoods of all kinds\nSee CHESS first\nWANTED-FREE TRANSPORTA-\ntion to Penticton May 31 or June\n1   Ph. 590R.\n$15 -FUR COATS RELINED\nGlazed minor repairs Free storage Polar Furs Ltd. 548 Granville\nSt.  Vancouver\nWANTED - GOOD CLEAN COT-\nton rags, not less tiian 12 inches\nsquare, 9c lb. F. O B. Nelson\nDaily News\nMEN - REGAIN VIGOR. PEP -\ntrx Vitex. 25 tablets $1.00. Personal drug sundries 24 for $1.00 Supreme Razor Blade Sharpener 35c\nSharpens blades perfectly. J. Jensen, Box  324. Vancouver,  B.C\nATTENTION! YOU MAY ASK 3\nquestions I have helped many I\ncan help you Send 25 cents with\nname and birth date to Gretta\n1012 Haro, Vancouver. B C\nMEN'S DRUG SUNDRIES SEND\n$100 for 12 samples, plain wrapped. Tested Guaranteed and prepaid Free Novelty price list\nPrinceton Distributors. P. O Box\n61  Princeton, B C\n25c - The Photo Mill - 25c\nP O  Box 335. Vancouver\nRolls developed and printed, 25c\n5x7 Enlargement Free\n12 reprints 5x7 enlargement, 35c\nYOUR \"siCK FRIEND\" OR RELA-\ntive in the hospital will enjoy\nreading the Dally News. Phone\n144 ,and have a copy delivered\neach morning\nSPECIALI-MEN'S PERSONAL\nDrug Sundries. Finest Quality.\nTested. Guaranteed. 12 for 50c assorted, including world's funniest\nJoke novelty snd catalogue of\nSundries and Novelties. Western\nDistributors, Box 24, Dept. NC.\nRegina. Saskatchewan\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-\ned. any size 6 or 8 exposure, roll\n25c, With 5x7 enlargement 30c.\nWe have hundreds of regular.\nsatisfied customers all over the\nWest, One day service done ln a\nreally modern, air conditioned\nPhoto Finishing Plant, established over 30 years. One trial will\nconvince you of our superior\nworkmanship Krystal Photos.\nWilkie. Saskatchewan.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE  YARD\n1st Avenue end Main St\n Vancouver. B C\nFOR SALE: WAPNER-STUXlTT\nprojector, model 377-A 16 mm.\nsuitable for school or entertain-*!\nment  A. D. Paoazian.\nPIPE FITTING TUBES 5 SPE-\ncial low prices Active Trading Co\n916 Powell St    Vancouver   B  C\nLOST AND FOUND\n.M,.^lSi^,ssL;,^,s,^^\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything telephone\nThe Daily \"News A\" \"Found\" Ad\"\nwill be Inserted without cost to\nyou.  We  will collect  from  the\nowner.\ni__.__--....;.,i___m^,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS and MINE AGENTS\nHAROLD S, ELMES, ROSSLAND\nB.C. Provincial Assayer, Chemlat\nIndividual representative for ahlp\npers at Trail Smelter,\nA.\" J. BUIE, INDEPENDENT MINE\nrepresentative. Full time attention given shippers' interest.\nBox 54, TraU, B. C.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nJ. R, MCMILLAN, D. C NEURO-\ncalometer. X-ray. McCulloch Blk.\nDR. WILBERT BROCK, D. C. 542\nBaker Street, Phone 969,\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD C AFFLECK, P.O. BOX 104\nTrail, B. C. Surveyor and En-\ngineer, Phone \"Beaver Falla.\"\nR.W. HAGGEN, MINING & CIVIL\nEngineer; BC. Land Surveyor.\nRossland and Grand Forks, B.C\nINSURANCE  and   REAL  E8TATE\nR. W DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance. Rentals. 557 Ward Street.\nAnnable  Block, Phone  197.\nC. D. BLACKWOOD AGAMIES\nInsurance, Real Estate. Phone 99.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\t\nH. E. DILL, FIRE. AUTO, ACCI-\ndent Insurance. 532 Ward Street.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNEfTTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding, motor rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St.\nCORSETIERE8\nSPENCER    CORSET1ERE,    MISS\nShirley Boomer. 217 Gore, Ph. 669L\nOPTOMETRIST8\nW. E. MARSHALL\nOptometrist\n1458 Bay Ave., Trail       Phone 177\n8ASH   FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S     SASH      FACTORY\nhardwood merchant, 273 Baker St.\nSECOND  HAND  STORES\nWE BUY. SELL AND EXCHANGE.\nWhat have you? Ph. 534, Ark Store\nFARM, GARDEN O NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nEARTHENWARE FOUNTS FOR\nooultry, 1 gal. size; Galvanized\nCone & Saucer founts; Glass saucer and Tin saucers for screw top\nfruit jars; grit & shell boxes. The\nBrackman-Ker Millg. Co., Ltd.\nFARMERS CHECK YOUR FARM\nimplements now and order early\nWe c?rry Cockshutt, Frost ano\nWood Farm Machinery and repairs. Nelson St District Farmers\nSuoplv Company. P. O. Box 6\nNelson, B   C. or Phone 174.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npa a Active Trading Company\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C\nWANTED: CREAM SEPARATOR\nGood condition. Box 520 Daily\nNews.\t\nSHIP   L'S   YOUR   HIDES\nMorgan. Nelson ,B. C.\nTT\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nIN MANITOBA WILL SELL OR\ntrade for business anywhere in B.\nC, barber shop, beauty parlor,\npool room, also living quarters attached Box 571 Daily News.\nSelling Forces\nWheat Price Down\nCHICAGO, May 29 (AP)-Selling\nincreased in the wheat pit today,\nforcing prices downward as much\nas two cents a bushel to the lowest\nlevels since May 12. At the low point\nprices showed net losses of about 7\ncents since establishment of the\nyear's peaks May 19.\nWheat closed Bi-24 cents lowar\nthan yesterday, July 93%-%, September 954-%; corn 14-14 down.\nJuly 73 Mi, September 74%; oats Vi\nlower to V. higher.\nTENDERS ACCEPTED\nFOR TREASURY BILLS\nOTTAWA, May 29 (CP). - The\nBank of Canada today announced\non behalf of Finance Minister llsley\nthat tenders have been accepted for\nthe full amount of $40,000,000 Dominion of Canada treasury bills due\nAug. 29. Average discount price of\nthe accepted bills was $99.85469 and\nthe average yield was .584 per cent.\nCanadian Industry After the War WHI Be on a Much\nBrooder Basis\nThe Canadian branch of an American hosiery mill, ona of the recent imported industries.\nMONTREAL     STOCKS\nINTUSTRIALS\nCan Celanese '         20\nCan North-Power         54\n18\n32 %\n6%\n\"B\"\nCan Steamship pfd\nCon Min & Smelt\nDom Steel St Coal\nDominion Textile   69\nDryden  Papa-   4%\nFoundation C of C   11\nGatineau Power pfd  _. 75\nHoward Smith Paper   11\nImperial Oil   9%\nLake of the Wood*  12\nNational Brew Ltd   22\nNat Brew pfd    374\nm\n9%\n12%\n8%\n70\n145\n186\n196\n174\nNova Scotia    272\nRoyal      1524\nTcs-onto           245\nCurb\nleauharnois Corp      94\n10\n2%\nPrice Bros\nQuebec Power\nShawnigan W St P .\nSouth Can Power ...\nSteel of Can pfd \t\nBANKS\nCommerce    \u2014.\nDominion\t\nImperial    \t\nMontreal\nB C Packers\nCons Paper Corp\nDtsrrri&cnna Paper A      S\nLake Sulnhite.\nMitchell Robt '\nWalker Good & W\n90\n9\n334\nBy JAMES M0NTAGNE8\nCentral Press Oanadlan Writer\nAfter the War Canada ia due for\nan industrial expansion similar to\nthat which took place following the\nFirst World War, but this time the\neconomic transformation will be on\na broader scale. European Industrialists and scientists will bring\nnew specialized industries to the\nDominion. Canada's non-agricultural Industries will increase to account\nfor more than their present 75 per\ncent of Canadian income, and the\nDominion's permanent defence\nforces will keep in operation a part\nof the varied armament factories\nwhich have grown up with the present war.\nThese are the opinions of C. M,\nShort, Assistant Secretary of the\nCanadian Bank of Commerce, one\nof Canada's outstanding economists.\nBasing his views on tne Industrial\nexpansion which followed the First\nWorld War and the Increased Industrial tempo of the past decade, he\nfeels that after the present war\nCanada will tend to come closer to\nUnited States industrialization\nwhere only 10 per cent of the country's wealth now comes from agriculture.\n\"In the last war Canada's main\narmament production was In the\nmanufacture of munitions,\" Mr.\nShort stated. \"This time, partly because of the industrialization following the First World War, Canada is manufacturing a much more\nvaried line of armaments, in fact\nnearly everything but airplane and\ntank motors, While, after the war\na lurge number of these factories\nwill close up in the period of postwar adjustment, a number qf them\nwill remain open to supply a standing army for coastal defences. This\nmay not be a large army, possibly\nabout 100,00<rmen. In addition, Canada will maintain a large navy, not\nnecessarily of battleships and large\ncruisers, but destroyers and small\ncoastal defence vessels. An Air\nFoace to work in conjunction with\nthese two defence forces will also\nbe maintained on a full strength\nbasis. The armaments needed oy\nthese forces will keep a number of\nwar industries going.\"\nPointing out that this was really\nno time for definite forecasts, he\nsaw at least a two-year period of\npost-war adjustment, perhaps more\neconomically painful than that following the First World War. This\nreadjustment period would not start\nimmediately after hostilities ended,\nbut some time later. Dependent on\npolitical developments, this postwar adjustment period might even\nequal the five-year period following the last war, when Canada's economy was largely a matter of export of raw materials with Imports\nof many manufactured products.\nHAD TO  BECOME\nINDUSTRIALIZED\nIn the intervening years many\nnations have atriven to become\nself-sufficient, in raw materials,\nlargely agricultural, of which Canada had large exportable surpluses,\nand the Dominion has, as a result,\nhad to become more industrialized,\nthus better able to meet her own\nneed for manufactured materials.\nIn the past decade Canada has\nchanged from a predominantly agricultural country to one based on\nagriculture, mining, forestry, fisheries and manufactures. It is not\nexpected that agriculture will again\naccount for more than a quarter\nof the annual income, especially\nsince there has been little expansion in the past 10 yeara in the\narea under cultivation. In the development of new types of enterprise which lifted Canada to a\nhighly   industrialized  plane,   there\nNEW   YORK   STOCKS\nAmerican Can        78Vi   79\nAm Smelt Se Ref    404   404\nAmer Telephone      1504 150%\n36%\n135i.\n3%\n34%\n70\n3%\n85%\n17%\n84\nAmerican tobacco ........   62%\nAnaconda      284\nBaldwin    13%\nBait Se Ohio          34\nBendix Aviation     S44\nBeth Steel     694\nCanadian Pacific      34\nChrysler    634\nCon Gas N Y -    17%\nC Wright pfd      8%\nDupont    -.   143% 1444\nEastman Kodak  _.... 1214 1224\nGen Electric  28%\nGen Foods     35%\nGeneral Motors -  37\nGreat Nor pfd  25%\nHowe Sound   294\nInter Nickel      M4\nInter Tel & Tel     2\nKenn Copper  354\nMont Ward\nNash Motors\t\nN Y Central     ...\nPackard Motors\nPenn R R \t\nPhillips Pete\t\nPullman   .  \t\nRadio Corp\n334\n4\n124\n24\n244\n404\n'll\n37%\n37\nSafeway Stores _.\nStan Oil of N J -.\nStudebaker  -     4%\nTexas Corp    _  894\nTexas Gulf Sul  32%\nUnion Carbide      684\nUnion Oil of Cal  13%\nUnited Aircraft  37%\nUnion Pacific   -... 774\nU S Rubber     ,  20'*\nU S Steel  33\nWes' Klectric     86\nWest Union       23\nWoolworth          26%\nYellow Truck  _  13\n284\n36\n374\n26\n29%\n24%\n24\n354\n334\n44\n12%\n2%\n24%\n404\n27%\n3%\n38V4\n374\n4%\n39%\n33%\n69\n13%\n38%\n79\n21\",\n53%\n86%\n234\n26%\n134\nwere many peacetime advantages,\nincluding a much greater range of\ncommodities for domestic use and\nfor export. A similar development\ncan be expected after this war, especially in view of the greatw diversity of new types of Industries\nbuilt here aa a result of our armament production.\nNEW INDUSTRIES\nWILL COME\n\"After the poet-war adjustment,\"\nMr. Short continued, \"many of the\narmament factoriea whioh will have\nto close down at the end of the war\nmay be reopened for peacetime requirements; new industries will\ncome to Canada ea a result of immigration of skilled specialists,\nscientists, industrialists and others\nfrom Europe, people who will want\nto live outside that danger zone.\nNew industries will also come from\nCanadian sources in the march of\ninventive progress. Canadian capital will help open up some of theae\nclosed armament plants for European - originating industries. Already, as a result of pre-war politi\ncal unrest in Europe, we have new\nindustries in Canada brought by\nrefugee European Industrialists,\nproducing materials which wa formerly imported.\n\"There may be a large influx of\nselects*! people from Europe after\nthe war, aside from the specialists.\nCanada, according to all authorities,\nwill need that larger population.\nWe now have Governmental aervices capable of looking after a\npopulation three tiroes as large as\nat present.\"\nDuring the firat year of the war\nCanada increased her volume of\nexports by 13 per cent, more tfian\nany other cduntry except the United\nStates. In other countries, due to\nwar industries, industrial plant has\nalso been increased as In Canada.\nThere will be keen competition\nfor Canadian Industry after the\nwar to hold the export volume\nincreases gained during thla war.\nThe reconstruction of Continental\nEurope and the United Kingdom\nwill require great quantities of materials, some of which undoubtedly\nwill oome from Canada.\nFew Montreal Stocks\nFail to Hold Ground\nMONTREAL, May 29 (CP).\u2014Most\nissues traded in the final hour on\nthe stock market today held their\nground but here and there recessions were registered.\nDryden, St. Lawrence Core, common, National Steel Car and Canadian Car were off fractions in newsprint.\nShawinigan was firmer among\nutilities, while in the miscellaneous\nsection Imperial Tobacco slipped Vt.\nMELBOURNE (OP).\u2014More than\n160,000 Australians applied for enlistment in the Royal Australian\nAir Force In 96 weeks \u2014 an average\nof one application every 34 minutes.\nVANCOUVER   STOCKS\nMINES:\nBig  Missouri         M      \u2014\nBralorne       9.65    9.65\n.01\n2.40\nJ014\n.01\nBridge River Con\nCariboo Gold  _\nDentonia     -\nFairview Amal \t\nGeorge  Copper \t\nGolconda   \t\nGold Belt  -\nGrandview    -\nGrull Wihkane \t\nHedley Mascot \t\nHome Gold \t\nIndian Mines    -\nInter Coal tc Coke ....\nIsland   Mountain   ....\nKoot  Belle\t\nMinto Gold \t\nPend   Oreille\n2.30\n.01\n.004\n.14\n.04\n.71\n.11%\n\/\u00bb%\nM\n.004\n.00%\n.34\n.80\n.20\n.01%\n1.37\n.064\n.124\n.004\n.30\n.014\nPioneer Gold     2.05    1.19\nPorter  Idaho\nPremier  Border  ....\nPremier Gold\nReeves MacDonald\nRelief   Arlington   ..\nReno Gold \t\nSalmon Gold  \t\nSheep  Creek   \t\nSilbak   Premier   ....\nTaylor B R\t\nWesko Mlnea \t\nWhitewater   \t\nYmir Yankee Girl ..\nOIL8\nA P Cona \t\nAmalgamated  \t\nAnaconda      \t\nAnglo Canadian ....\nBrit Dominion \t\nCalgary  tt Ed  \t\nCommonwealth   \t\nCalmont   \t\nCommoil   \t\nExtension   \u2014\nFirestone   Pete   \t\nHighwood Sarcee ..\nHome   \t\nMadison   \t\nMar Jon \t\nMcDougall Segur ..\nMill City Pete \t\nModel\t\nMonerch Royalties\nRoyal  Can   \t\nRoyallte \t\nSouthwest Pete \t\nSpooner       \t\nUnited   \t\nVanalta \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nCaoltal  Estates   \t\nCoast Breweries\n.004\n.01%\n.90\n.10\n.014\n.11\n.004\n.80       -\n-      .80\n.02\n.02\n.02\n.004\n.004\n.00%\n.09\n.004\n.06\n.004\n.04 \u2014\n.50 .55\n.06 -\n1.06 \u2014\n.17 \u2014\n.13 -\n.17 22\n- .13\n- .04\n.08 ' -\n1.6\n.00'i\n.04\n.04\n.12\n.03\n.07\n18.00\n.10\nmm  -\n.02\n.03\n1.25     lj\n1.75\n.014\n.01\n.15\n.034\nPacific Coyle        .25      \u2014\nWall St. Denotes\nRising Trend\nNEW YORK, May 29 <AP).-The\nstock market absorbed its vitamins\nmore or less synthetically today but\nmanaged to work up moderate rls\ning energy in several departments.\nClosing gains wera small for\nmany leaders although 1 to 2 points\nwere tacked on scattered Issues in\ngenerally slack dealings. Transfers\nwere around 350,000 shares.\nAnother flurry in aircrafts, coming after mid-day, helped prop some\nother faltering groups.\nA little ahort covering brokers\nsaid, in preparation tor tomorrow's\nholiday when major exchanges will\nrecess, tended to steady trends.\nMotor Financing\nFigurei Show Gains\nOTTAWA, May 20 (OP)-Fin.\nancing of motor vehicles in Canada\nduring April was up 28 per cent ln\nnumber and 43 oer cent in dollar\nvolume compared with the sane\nmonth in 1940, the Dominion Bureau\nof Statistics reported today. Total\nvolume of financing during April\nexceeded that in any month since\nJanuary 1032, when Bureau records\nin this division began.\nDIVIDENDS\nDominion Glass Company Limited, common 1% per cent, preferred\n1% per cent, for quarter ending\nJune 30.\nBell Telephone Company of Canada, $2.\nCanadian Oil Companies, preferred, 2 per cent.\nNational Breweries Limited, 10\ncents and, preferred, 44 centa.    \u2022\nGeneral Weakness\non Toronto Market\nTORONTO, May 29 (CP).-The\nToronto Stock Market registered\ngeneral weakness in slow action today after looking promising in tha\nopening stage. Losses were narrow\nthroughout.\nAunor, Pickle Crow, Preston,\nBeattie, MacLeod - Cockshutt, Senator Rouyn, Hard Rock, Upper Canada, were lower while Lake Shore\nand Wright-Hargreaves were slightly higher.\nNarrow recessions In base metals\naffected Hudson Bay, Sudbury\nBasin, Sherritt and Chromium.\nThree penny oils, Calmont, Foundation and Prairie Royalties, declined fractions and Anglo-Canadian\nwas oft a cent to 52. Other Western\noils held unchanged.\nDull Trading on\nWinnipeg Market\nWINNIPEG, May 29 (CP) .-Fairly liberal selling by outside Interests and elevators pinned wheat futures prices to their minimum levels\nthrough* a dull session on Winnipeg\nGrain Exchange today. May wheat\nis pegged at 73%, July at 774 centa\na bushel.\nTraders appeared discouraged by\nthe lack of export Interest in Canadian wheat and a drop in wheat\nvalues at Chicago.\nBuenos Aires prices were about\nunchanged.\nOats and barley held about unchanged as Southern houses made\nlight purchases. Scattered selling\nclipped about a cent from rye and\ntwo cents from flax.\nFew Prict Changes\nin Active Coast Day\nVANCOUVER, May 29 (CP) \u2014\nFew price changes were registered\nduring fairly active trading on Vancouver Stock Exchange today.\nTransactions totalled 13,330 shares.\nIn the golds Bralorne at 9.85 advanced 10 and Golconda closed fractionally higher at 4%. Privateer at\n90 and Cariboo Gold Quartz at 2.30\nwere unchanged.\nCalgary le Edmonton Oil at I.M\nfirmed a cent and Calmont gained\na fraction at 144. Highwood Sarcee\nat S and Royal Canadian at 7 remained unchanged.\nPend Oreille, lone trader among\nthe base metals, eased a oent at 1.39.\nMETAL MARKETS\nLONDON, May \u00bb (AP). - Btt\nsliver 23 7-16d, up 1-16. (Equivalent,\n42.50 cents.)\nMONTREAL\nBar gold In London waa unchan*\ned at $37.54 an ounce la Canadian\nfunds, 106s ln British representing\nthe Bank of England's buying price.\nThe fixed $35 Washington prlc*\namounted to $38.90 In Canadian.\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 12.78|\ntin 40.75; lead 9.50, sine 5.651 antimony 12.25.\nNEW YORK ___ ^_,_\nCopper steady) elwtrolytw and)\n12.00; tin firm; spot and nearby\n52.25; forward 92.00.\nLead steady) spot, Htm Torh\n8.85-90.\nZinc steady] Eaat 8L loula spot\nand forwan\nDOW JONB AVERACEI\n30 Industrials\n20 rails\n19 utilities\nTORONTO STOCK  QUOTATIONS\nMINES!\nAldermae Copper\nAmm Gold\nAnglo Huronian\nArntfield Gold ..\nAunor\nBagamac Rouyn \t\nBase Metals Mining\nBeattie Gold Mlnea .\nBidgood Kirkland ...\nBig Missouri -.\nBtJbjo Mines\nBralorne Mines  -mmm.\nBuffalo Ankerite  .\u2014,\nBunker Hill Extension _\nCanadian Malartic  \u2014.\nCariboo Gold Quarts \u2014.\nCastle Trethewey .._.___\nCentral Patricia  \u2014\u2014\nChromium M * \u25a0 \u2014\u2014\u2014\nCoast Copper  - \u2014\nConiaurum Minea -\u2014\u2014.\nCons M It S  \u2014\nDome Mines  \u201e..\u00bb__\u2014\nDorval Siscoe ...- \u2014\u2014\u2022\nEast Malartic   \u25a0\nEldorado Gold ......-...\u2022\u2014\u00bb\nFalconbridge Nickel -.\u2014.\nFederal Kirkland  \u2014\u2014-\nFrancoeur Oold  - .    -\nGillies Lake  -\u2014\u2014\nGod's Lake Oold \u2014\u2014\nGold Belt     \u2014\u2014\nGrandoro Mines  \u2014.\nGunnar Gold \t\nHard Rock Gold\t\nHarker Gold \u2014\u2014\nHollinger   \t\nHowey Gold --\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 \t\nHudson Bay M Se 8 ___\nInter Nickel  \u2022-\u2014\nJack Waite \t\nJacola Gold\nKerr Addiaon   MJ\nKirkland Lake    .\u2122\nLake Shore Minea  lojo\nLeitch Gold   \u2022\u00ab\nLebel Oro Minea ~x  M\nLitUe Long Lac  _  J-JJ\nMacassa Mines    ?\u25a0\u00bb?\nMacLeod Cockshutt  -    1.4B\nMadsen Red Uke Gold\nMandy   \u2014\nMclntyre Pore  _\nMcKenzie Red Lake ...._\nMcVtttie Graham . :\t\nMcWatters Gold\t\nMining Corp  _\u201e_\u00ab__\nMoneta Pore  _____\nMorris Kirkland   \t\nNipissing Mining\t\nNoranda\nO'Brien Oold  \u2014\nOmega Gold   -\nPamour Pore  \u2014\nPaymaster Cona\t\nPend OreUle  \u2014\nPerron Gold  -\nPickle Crow Oold ....\nPioneer Gold  \t\nPremier Gold\nPowell Rouyn Oold\nPreston East Dome ..\nReeves MacDonald ..\nReno Gold Mines   ...\nRoche Long Lac \t\nSan Antonio Gold   ...\nShawkev Gold\nSheep Creek Gold ..\nSherrtt Gordon \t\nSladen Malartic \t\n.53\n.05\n47.00\n1.06\n.044\n.19\n.71\n.40\n.02\n1.09\n50.50\n.50\n.114\n.96\n.18\n1.38\n1.32\n2.28\n210\n.90\n.54\n2.80\n.10\n.10\n.03\n2.20\n.014\n.75\n.63\n,16\nSt Anthonr ....\nSudbury Basin \t\nSullivan Cona \t\nSylvanite  .\u201e.,.,\u2014\nTeck-Hughee Qotd .*.\nTOburn OoM\nTowagmag _\nVenturei\nUna*\n13\\_\nWaite Amulet\nWright Hargrearsi __\nYmlr Tanka* Girl\nOILI\nAjax -        ,10M|\nBrit Amafican  _____   16.25\nChemical  Reeeawfh    _      .1*\nImperial  - _     9.80\nInter Pet*     M.68\nTexas Canadian _       Si\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power        110\nBell Telephone    _     144\nBrazilian T L A P _        61\nBrewers & Dist\nBrewing Corp ..\nB C Power A ..\nB C Power B ....\nBuild Prod \t\nCanada Bread  -    1.85\nCm Bud Malting ...\nCan Car le Fdy\t\nCan Cement \t\nCan Dredge _._\t\nCan Malting \t\nCan Pacific Rly \u201e._\nCan Ind Aloohol\t\nCons Bakeries  \t\nComnos \t\nDominion Bridge \t\nDom Tar Se Chsjm ..\nDist Seagram* \t\nFanny Farmer\t\nFord of Canada \t\nGen Steel Wares ......\nGoodyear  Tire   \t\nGypsum L Sc A \t\nHamilton Bridg* _.,\nHiram Walker \t\nImperial Tobacco ...\nLotilaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nKelvinator   \t\nMaple Leaf Milling .\nMassey Harris \t\nMontreal Power \t\nMoore Corp\t\nNat Steel Car\nPage Hersey   100\nPower Corp    3%\nPressed Metals  _ 7\u00ab*\nSteel of Can   65\nII1ITIIII1IITTIT1II1IIII'\nGrenville H. Grimwood\nPROVINCIAL ASSAYERS\nMETALLURGICAL CHEMISTS\nPHONE 616\n189 Baker St.      Nelson, B. C.\nitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitn\nProtect your BOAT FITTINGS\nwith\nCHROME PLATE\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nLauritz Bldg.\nNelson. B.C.\n_^Mm_______A\n__m_________________\n^^\n^Jdfa^l\n \t\nPAGE TWELVE-\n'    jlm-J* Mt frmt-H\nVivien       lau>ie\u00abc*\nHIGH * OLIVIER\n*7mI\/moo*\nMAmm*\/,\nEXTRA \u2014 Wslt Disney's \"TIMBER\"\n\"MEN OF LIGHTSHIP NO. 61\"\nUnivenal News\nFeatun\nAt:\n2:40'\n7:00\n9:45\nCIVIC\nTODAY and SATURDAY <\nMat 12c-30c Eve. 1Sc-42o\nMATINEE TODAY AT 2:00\nComplete Shows 2-7-9:00\nLONDON (CP). - High wartime unemployment bas resulted in\na balance of \u00a354.W4J77 (248,406,-\n696) ln Britain's Unemployment Insurance Fund but it is announced\nthere will be no unemployment\nbenefit increase or reduction In\ncontributions.\nLET A   WANT-AD  SEBV1   YOU\nSPECIAL CLEARANCE\nGLADIOLI\n251 Doz.\nLARGE CLEAN BULBS\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug. Co.\nPHONI 81      nilson. b. a\nWheat Conference\nPlanned in Wash.\nWASHINGTON, Way 28  <AP)-\nThe United States State Department\ndisclosed plans today to call an international conference in Washing-\nOTTAWA (CP) .-Imports to Bermuda trom Canada, the British\nWest Indies and South America\nshowed definite gains ln 1940, with\nheavy declines In those from the\nUnited Kingdom and U. S.\nGrenfelPs\nBaked Salmon Steak\nFOR AN  EXCELLENT FRIDAY\nDINNER\nFrom Factory Direct to You\nDEMAND GENUINE Parts for replacement and you'll be sure\nof getting the BEST and the MOST ECONOMICAL!\nOur stock of GENUINE PARTS and ACCESSORIES for all\nmakes of cars is most modern, to take care of your immediate\nrequirements.\nPhone\n35\nNelson Transfer Co. Ltd.\nSALE ENDS Monday, June 2\nGREATEST\nUSED CAR\nBARGAINS\nOFTHEYEAR\n1937 FORD Tudor\n $635\nNew Tires. Perfect\nCondition\t\nWire offering the BiGGrsr trade-in allowances in our history:\nHere's your bit dunce to get savings like these. Ifnmedi-     .,, E\u00aby terms.\nitely sale is over regular prices will previiL Every car lut Think it over... you won't get bargain prices like theie.\nbeen priced fot quick, sale. Trade-in allowances ire boosted       igain (bf l long, long time.\n1940 Ford Deluxe Sedan\nRadio, Heater and Defroster, 6 ply tires.\nRun only four thouiand \u2022tlfi\/IC\nmiles    $1U4D\n1939 Chev. Master\nDeluxe Coupe\nHeater and defroster. New tires. Mechanically perfect. tQ7't\nPriced at   \u00abrVIU\n1938 Ford\nSpecial Tudor\nNew tires. Cood paint and\nupholstery.   Mechanically\nPriced at \u00abP\/4j\n1934 Ford\nDeluxe Coupe\nHeater and rumble seat.\nNew ,935 J425\nengine\n1937 Ford\nDeluxe Fordor\nHeater and many\nextrai\t\n$685\n1934\nDeluxe\nGood tirei.\nperfect.\nPriced at .\nFord\nFordor\nMechanically\n....$395\nTRUCK BARGAIN\n1938 Ford panel delivery. DeLuxe cab\nheater and extrai. *VJA.^_\nGuaranteed     \u00abP'\u2122\n1935 Ford\nDeluxe Tudor\nRoomy trunk. A real clean\ncar allround tC9^\nModel A Coupe\nNew tirei. New brakei.\nGood shocki.\nLicenced   ..\n$155\nTRUCK BARGAIN\n1938 Ford two ton cab and chanit. New\ntirei. Thoroughly\nreconditioned\t\n$745\nQueen City Motors Limited\nPhone 43\nFORD, MERCURY DEALERS\nNelion, B. C.\nPublic Analyst\nE. W. Wlddowion\n301-305 Joiephlne 8t.   Nelion, B. C.\n____&M-mm-m&-mVMtm--_-\n.. MAV \u00bb\n' tha wheat fur-\n_.j. dlacloiura waa ln releaje ol\nan exchanie of note* between the\nUnited Statu and Canada In connection with Preildent Rooievelt'i\naction yesterday ln Imposing Import\nquotas on wheat from Canada and\nother countries.\n1M1-\nm#t#ii_mt***pit*it*-*>t&m\nDon't Say BREAD - Say\nHOOD'S\nSUPREME MILK BREAD\nGRAY'S\nModern Fountain Servlca\n580 BAKER STREET\nWatch tor tha\nSUGAR BOWL\nSPECIALS\nIn Tomorrow'e Paper\nADRIEKNE COSMETICS\nFACI POWDIR\nLIPSTICK\nROUGI\nHXMIOUAUTY _\nFor Discriminating ladies.\nSold only at your Rexall store.\nCity Drug Co.\n. Phone M lox 46B\n g\u2014\ntiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM\nFOR NEWS OF DAY AND\nOTHER BACK PAGE AM\nSee Page Two\nIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII11I\nWKmm-------m-tKn_WK_W-W_tmWmmW-_m-W.'L\n\u25a0w_\u2014W_w_mwmmm_w_w____-_m_\nLight Cool\nForm Fitting Scants\nThey make a fellow feel years younger, these Woods Scants. For they're\ntailored to give that welcome combination of roomy comfort and snug-to-\nyour-figure fit.\n501 a Garment\nEMORY'S\nLIMITED\nThe Man't Store\nROYAL CANADIAN\nNAVAL BAND\nIN NELSON MONDAY JUNE 2nd\nThis band from Esquimalt is one of the outstanding naval\nbands in Canada. COME AND HEAR IT.\nCOME AND CHEER IT.\nVICTORY LOAN\nFree Concert\n1>A hour program, with brief speech on\n\"Canada's Supreme Hour\" by Harold\nBrown of Victoria, one of Western Canada's greatest orators.\nCome and hear the boys In blue at\nCivic Arena\u20148 to 9:30 p.m.\nNo admission; no collection,\nDance follows ln Recreation Hall Immediately after free concert.\nVICTORY   LOAN\nNaval Band Dance\nEVERYONE WELCOME\nln\nCivic Centre Recreation Hall\nMonday night 9:30 to 1 a.m. The swing\nstring section or the band was leader of\nthe Royal York Hotel orchestra, one of\nCanada's finest dance orchestral, before\njoining the navy.\nCOME AND DANCE TO THE\nSNAPPY SWINCY MUSIC THAT\nDANCERS LOVE.\nADMISSION 501.\nUSE NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING FIRST\nAnd Do a Real Selling job\nBuilders Supplies\nSAND\u2014GRAVEL\u2014BRICK\nPORTLAND CEMENT\nPLASTERING MATERIALS\nACE TEX BOARD\nWATERPROOFING CEMENT\nCEMENT PAINTS\nASPHALT EMULSIONS\nINSULATION\nROOFING MATERIALS\nBURNS\n'LUMBER i. COAL CO.\nCorner Josephine and Baker Streets\nBARGAINS\nIn Used BABY PRAMS and\nCOOK STOVES\nHome Furniture Exchange\n413-Hall St Phone 1032\nHave the job Done Right\nSeo\nVIC GRAVES\nI\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nI\n1928 DODGE 4-DOOR SEDAN\nVictory Six. Oneowner. Licenced,\n4-wheel hydraulic brakes. Excellent > ply tires. C'J'JC\nPrice      9**J\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Hume Hotel and Poit Office\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arts Building\n1938 FORD PANEL DELIVERY\nDeluxe cab. Heater and defroster.\nConditional to give new C*7,4C\ntruck transportation    V\/IS\nQueen City Motors\n561 Josephine St.    Limited    Ph. 43\nMACO CLEANERS\nHats Cleaned and\nBlocked\nPhons 288\n327 Baker\nGET THE\nFURNACE\nPut in working order NOWI\nR.H. Maber\nPhone 858      610 Kootenay St\nR. W. Dawson\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPHONE 197\nTHE ANNABLE BLOCK\nLAMBERT'S\nPHONE\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHardware Company, Limited\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nSHELF\u2014HEAVY HARDWARE\u2014MINE SUPPLIES\nMILL SUPPLIES\u2014SPORTING GOODS\u2014BUILDING\nMATERIALS\u2014ZONOLITE  INSULATION\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR BAPCO PAINTS\nBox 399\nSenior Lacrosse League\nOPENING GAME\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA\u2014TONIGHT\nNELSON vs TRAIL\nAdmission: Adults, Including tax\u201430c. Children under 18\u2014Including tax\u201416c. Reserved seats, Including tax\u201460c.\nWE8T END DOOR OPEN AT 7:48 GAME AT 8:18 8HARP\nNext fame scheduled for Nelson, Friday,' June 13.\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nPHONE 10 OR 11\nNABOB\nlrf       ^\u25a0cad.-tU'tt\nROAST   BEEF,   MIAT   and\nCHICKEN LOAF:        AJA\nPremium, Ib .sliced  . tJl*\nCOOKED HAM:           **ttA\nPremium, '\/, Ib.     \"'T\nPORK  SAUSAGES:     \u2022\"\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u00ab\u25a0,\nLittle Pig, Lb. cello .   **--\u25a0>\nM\nIr\n2\n[abob Co\u00a3fe<\n,\u00a3:'*'\u2022\u2022:... 99\ni\n:\nGLASS CLEANER:       \\ftA\nAero, 8 oz. bottle   **r\nSprayer to fit,             f QA\nPrloe    ***\nLEMON OIL:                 f QA\nAero, 8 oz. bottle    ... *'r\nEUREKA  BLEACH:     *%gA\n2 bottlea  **>\nKITCHEN TOWELS:    f QA\nJiffy, roll   **>\nPUREX: Lsrge             f}A\nrolls, 3 for  *Jr\nMARSHMALLOWS:    Nabob,\n16 oa. cello,                 Vhi*\nPkg.   **V\nPEANUT    BRITTLE:    Kay,\n16 oz. cello,                 *_S-_tA\nPkg      **V\nTOFFEE:  Macintosh,  Assorted, Individually          2Qf?\nwrapped, Ib.               **r\nCHEE8E  TANGS:  Christie's,\ncello,                          IM\n2 pkgs.      33Y\nFIG BARS: Ormond'i, ft A\n14 oz. cello, okg.         **V\nSHOESTRING   POTATOES:\nNalley's,                      1QA\n2 tins  \"trr\nSOCKEYE   SALMON:    MtA\nNabob, Vt*, 2 tlni *Jy\nPILCHARDS: Habob,   *ynA\n16 oz. tins, 2 tor m*T\nCHICKEN HADDIE:     \\QA\nNabob, tin   *'*\nASPARAGUS     TIPS     and\nENDS: Nabob,             tCA\n10 ot. tins, 2 for      *<*>\nCORN FLAKES: Sugar <y<*A\nCrisp, 3 pkgs.  s,*9r\nTEA:  Star Orange  Pekoe, \u25a0\ngood tea at a good      HO\/\nprice. Lb               V*T\n8ALAD   DRESSING:   Miracle\nWhip,                           ^gj\n32 oi. Jar  W\nPREM: A new pork specialty\nby Swift's, Ideal for break\nfatt, dinner, sand-      _wtd\nwlches, 12 oz. tin         *-*T\nOUlSttftlteh\nSPECIAL OFFERl\nQUART NO-RUBBING\nWITH MOP\n9*\nMilei  Floor  Wtxlnt  ttty I\nBOTH   FOR\nONLV   .\nALL GOODS PURCHASED TODAY AND   |\nSATURDAY WILL BE CHARGED TO   I\nJUNE ACCOUNTS\nFIVE ROSES\nFLOUR\n24 Ib. uck\n99c\n49 Ib. lick\n$1.93\n98 Ib. uck\n$3.55\nDATE md NUT BREAD:\nCrosse A Black- <%QA\nwell's, 2 tins _ **>\nPEANUT BUTTER: In handy\nglass tumblers, Ml*\nSqulrrell, 2 for           \u00ab1\u00bb\nPRUNES: Nabob, extra fQA\nlarge, 2 Ib, box            **T\nTOMATO JUICE: Libby's,\n10 oz. tins, flA\n4 for  - *Sy\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE: f-JA\nFascination, 2 for       **T\nNECTAR BERRIES: Some,\nthing new and really ]Q(*\nnice, 16 oz. tin      ''^\nFrench's Mustard\u2014\nJ 5!?..;.. We\nDAD'S   COOKIES:   Assorted\nall   packed   for   overseas\nshipment,                     AAt*\nEach    *\u00bb\u00a3\nSODA BISCUITS: 1. B. C, 40\noz. wooden box,         JC**\nEach :  i'T\n8TRAWBERRY JAM: gtkA\nNabob, pure, 4 Ib. tin  JrV\nTOMATO KETCHUP: Nabob,\n12 oz. bottles, -JQA\n2 for  -**r\nPORK and BEAN8: Libby's,\n16 oz. tins,                    tQA\n4 for  *9*\nNabob Canned Vegetable Special\nPEAS: Nabob, Sieve 4, 16-oz. tins, 2 for   29e\nCORN: Nabob Golden Bantam, 16-oz. tins, 2 for   29c\nCUT GREEN BEANS: Nabob Kentucky Wonder,\n16-or. tins, 2 for   290\nOR ALL 6 TINS OO.\nFOR     OJC\nCANNED FRUIT SPECIAL\nPEACHE8; Royal City Halves, 16-oz. tins, 2 for  38c\nPEARS: Lunchour, 16-oz. tins, 2 for        29e\nAPRICOTS: Golden Area, Australian, 16-oz. tins, 2 for  ... 36c\nOR ALL 6 TINS\nFOR  \t\n93c\nSTAR QUALITY PRODUCE\nNEW POTATOES:\nm\n2#\n7 Ibs.\nBEET GREENS:\nFresh local, 3 lbs,\nRADISHES, GREEN\nONIONS: 8 bch\t\nLEAF LETTUCE:\nLb.\t\nNEW CABBAGE:\nLb\t\nNEW CARROTS:\n3 bunchei  \u2014\nWatermelon, Grapes, Cherries,\nSpinach,\nNEW BEETS:\n2 bunchei ...\n 25e\nLocal,    fAft\nAPPLES:    Fancy   wrapped\nOkanagan, Newtowns, fCl*\n6 lbs.  Or\nAPPLES:     Delicious\nGrand Forks,\n8  lbs\t\nGRAPEFRUIT:\nCalifornia, 6 for\nCANTALOUPE:\nFrom California, 2 for\nSTRAWBERRIES:\nB. C, 2 cups\nDICED BEETS: Libby's,\n16 oz. tins, tCA\n2 for            OV\nMIXED  VEGETABLES:\nLibby's, Ideal for        }M\nsalad. 16 oz., 2 tins       JJT\nfor silks, woolens, all line things\nTOMATOES: B. C. Hot House, Ib.\nAvooados, Sweat Potatoes, Asparagus, Rhubarb, Lettuce, Celery,\nNaw Beets, New Turnlpi, Cauliflower, eto.\n* Jh, Sb*- 5-toi.vuf, *\nNelion'i Finest Food (tore\nH. A. D. Greenwood, Prop.\nPerfection\nCocoa\nLb. ..,\nVi Ib.\n27*\n15*\nl\n\u25a0v\nJK^hsStU.. .    \u25a0  ,.      ..l__L___t____r,*i-^*:.r^mmm---------m--l\n\u25a0\n\u25a0    :.     .\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0\u25a0\nl^__.'\nm\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1941_05_30","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0414628","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1941-05-30 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1941-05-30 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}